Glen Affric, also written Glenaffric, was part of the lands of the
Clan Chisholm and the
Clan Fraser of Lovat from the 15th to the mid 19th centuries. By the early 15th century, Lord Lovat had passed the lands to his son Thomas who in turn passed it on to his son, William, who was recorded in ''
Burke's Landed Gentry Scotland'' as William Fraser, first
Laird of Guisachan. In 1579, Thomas Chisholm, Laird of
Strathglass, was imprisoned for being a Catholic. By the 18th century, the
title deeds of Glen Affric had been a source of feuding, with the
Battle of Glen Affric taking place in 1721.
Dudley Marjoribanks, later Lord Tweedmouth was a rich Liberal
MP who took a long lease on shooting rights over much of Glen Affric in 1846 and, by 1856, had acquired ownership of the Glen Affric Estate from "Laird Fraser" whose family had built the original Guisachan
Georgian manor house around 1755. The estate held over at the time of its transference from the
Clan Chisholm to Lord Tweedmouth. By the 1860s, Lord Tweedmouth, as the new laird, had much enlarged the house, using Scottish architect Alexander Reid, who designed many buildings on Tweedmouth's vast Glen Affric Estate, including an entire village—
Tomich—and the Glen Affric Hunting Lodge, described in appearance as
"castle-like". Tweedmouth had enjoyed shooting rights over much of Glen Affric since 1846, and, following his acquisition of the estate he initiated the first breed of
golden retrievers at kennels near Guisachan House. He put the retrievers to good use at the
shooting parties he hosted when at Glen Affric Lodge. The retrievers were sent to other estates when, for some months of the years 1870–71, he leased the Glen Affric Estate to Lord Grosvenor. In 1894
Edward Marjoribanks, 2nd Baron Tweedmouth had inherited the Glenaffric and Guisachan estates from his father. His wife, the Baroness Tweedmouth, was born Lady Fanny Spencer-Churchill, the daughter of the
7th Duke of Marlborough, and died at Glen Affric Lodge in 1904. Known in the highlands as the Lady of Glenaffric and Guisachan, she was reported to be a "lover of the
golden retriever dog". The
Duke and Duchess of York are reported in
The Graphic, 25 September 1897 to have visited the Guisachan Estate in Strathglass, including Glen Affric Lodge. Lady Tweedmouth's nephew
Winston Churchill also came to visit the estate in 1901, and amused himself learning how to drive a car in the grounds.
Clan Marjoribanks' ownership ended with Edward’s son,
Dudley Churchill Marjoribanks, who became 3rd Lord Tweedmouth in 1909. He and his wife had two daughters, but no male heir. For the next few years, until 1918, the estate was owned by the family of
Newton Wallop, 6th Earl of Portsmouth (1856–1917).
Marmaduke Furness, 1st Viscount Furness owned the estate throughout the 1920s and 30s. The entire property, then consisting of , had been sold by 1936 to a Mr Hunter. It was he who resold the Glen Affric deer forest to the west and a large area of grazing land to the Forestry Commission.
Lady Islington acquired the Guisachan portion of the estate in 1939 but let the property go to ruin. In 1962 the Guisachan estate was bought by a descendant of the Frasers of Gortuleg. In 1990, this later generation laird wrote a booklet concerning his Fraser ancestors who had once owned Guisachan—
Guisachan, A History by Donald Fraser.
Provost Robert Wotherspoon was recorded as owning Glen Affric Estate in 1951, having purchased it in 1944 and selling the "majority of its ground to the Forestry Commission" in 1948. His son, Iain Wotherspoon was listed as living at Glen Affric Lodge in 1958.
Glen Affric tartan In April 2023, a fragment of cloth known as the "Glen Affric tartan" went on display at the
V&A Dundee museum, on loan from the
Scottish Tartans Authority. The tartan, which measures , contains faded colours including green, brown, red, and yellow. Discovered in the early 1980s in a
peat bog near Glen Affric, it is dated to approximately 1500–1600
AD making it Scotland's "oldest-known true tartan", having been preserved in the bog for over 400 years. In January 2024, a group of tartan experts announced that they had recreated the tartan, with the assistance of dye analysis,
carbon-14 dating and a detailed study of the original cloth fragment. ==Current ownership==