The "Land" (sited at 481 and 483
Lawnmarket) was originally built in 1550, but was bought and redeveloped in 1617 by a prosperous Edinburgh merchant and
burgess, Thomas Gledstanes, and his wife, Bessie Cunningham. The work was completed in 1620, and includes elaborate painted ceilings. These were later covered over with plaster, but are uncovered today. Its prominent siting on the
Royal Mile (between
Edinburgh Castle and the
Palace of Holyrood) and the extent of its accommodation mark out the affluence of its mercantile owner. Today, the restored building allows an insight into varieties of Edinburgh life of the period. The cramped conditions of the Old Town, and the physical size of the lot, meant that the house could only be extended in depth or in height. As a result, the house is six storeys tall. Issobell Johnston was their servant, and ran the tavern on their behalf. There are records of her purchasing large amounts of alcohol from John Riddoch for resale, something that was common for servants at the time. Riddoch died aboard ship in November 1632 in sight of
Leith and his will lists the kind of goods they sold, including raisins, figs, ginger, sugar, sugar candy, laundry starch and smalt, cinnamon, liquorice, and clay tobacco pipes. Andrew Pringle had the shop after Riddoch, while his servant Alison Hume managed the tavern. By 1636 Gladstones shared ownership with the merchant and shipowner
David Jonkin, and their tenants included two lawyers, Andrew Hay and John Adamson. David Jonkin had been fined for breaking Edinburgh's market regulations in 1624 when it was discovered he was buying imported food in
Burntisland to profiteer during a famine. He supported the
Scottish Covenant in 1639 by selling firearms to the
Earl of Argyll and buying a warship in Holland.
William Struthers and witchcraft In the 1630s, Gladstone's Land was also inhabited by
William Struthers, an episcopalian minister at Saint Giles cathedral. He was a prominent member of the
Church of Scotland, and a supporter of both
James VI and I and
Charles I. Struthers played a role in the trial of Marion Muir, an accused witch. Marion had been accused of witchcraft alongside two other women, Helene Hamilton and Marion Lumisdane, after unsuccessfully being evaluated for a 'hypochondriac disorder.' Struthers heard one of several possible confessions. ==Restoration as a historic building==