Part of the Glen was a royal hunting forest. From the 1450s, laws protected the forest area and restricted the rights of tenants on surrounding lands to encourage deer for the hunt. A flat mound called "Tom Buidhe" (the yellow knoll) near the Glen Finglas Reservoir is thought to be the site of the Hunt Hall, first built for James II of Scotland in the 1400s.
James IV came to the Hunt Hall in July 1492. The site was maintained by
Archibald Edmondstone of
Duntreath, keeper of
Doune Castle and the Forests of Menteith and Glenfinglas. In August 1505, James brought tents and pavilions for extra accommodation. He was supplied with dairy goods by two women from Duntreath, and eels and pikes from the
Lake of Menteith. In 1508, James IV wrote to the new keeper of Glen Finglas, William Edmonstone, requiring him to visit the parish kirks around the forests, and proclaim that none should stalk deer in the forests with bows or hunting dogs, or make paths. Edmondstone was to identify offenders, confiscating their livestock and dogs (hounds and raches), and send their names to the king for trial and punishment.
Mary of Guise hunted in the Glen with
James V soon after her arrival in Scotland in August 1538, riding to the Hunt Hall from
Stirling Castle with six ladies in waiting. Mary of Guise returned to Stirling after only a day or two, leaving James to continue his hunting. James V and Mary of Guise returned to the area in September 1539. The pursemaster
John Tennent hired men and horses from
Dunblane to bring their beds from Stirling, while Malcolm Gourlay brought tents from Edinburgh.
Mary, Queen of Scots came to Glen Finglas for three days in September 1563. The
Scottish novelist and poet
Sir Walter Scott (1771–1832) wrote the poem "
Glenfinlas; or Lord Ronald's Coronach" in 1803. The
Glen Finglas Estate was acquired by the
Woodland Trust Scotland in 1996 and is open to the public. The Woodland Trust has restored ancient woodland and created the Great Trossachs Path, one of Scotland's Great Trails, across the estate. == Ruskin and Millais ==