Hawthornden was a property of the
Abernethy family from the 13th century, and passed to the
Douglases in the 14th century. The earliest parts of the castle date from the 15th century, and include a large three-storey tower, and the south curtain wall of a triangular courtyard. The castle was sacked twice by the
Earl of Hertford in 1544 and 1547 during
The Rough Wooing. In 1540 John Douglas sold trees from Hawthornden wood to
James V as timber for his ships. The castle was later sold to Sir John Drummond, one of
King James VI's ushers. His son, the poet
Sir William Drummond of Hawthornden, was born here, and he later extended the castle. The L-shaped north range is his work, dated 1638, and probably replaced earlier buildings on this side of the courtyard. He was visited here in 1618 by English poet
Ben Jonson. In the following century
Dr Johnson visited Hawthornden. This house has been much altered, including a major modernisation of the mid-19th century. The arms of the Abernethy family were installed above a door in 1795, by Dr
William Abernethy Drummond,
Bishop of Edinburgh. The bishop also added a memorial in honour of his ancestors Sir William Drummond and Sir Lawrence Abernethy of Hawthornden. Hawthornden Castle was owned by the Drummond dynasty until the early 1970s. It was left to the butler when the last Drummond died, then sold to Douglas Adamson, a well known and respected fine art and antiques dealer from Edinburgh, and his family, who turned it back into a home. The house was also open to the public. The Adamson family lived there until the mid-1980s when Douglas Adamson died. The Castle was then sold to
Drue Heinz, the widow of
H. J. Heinz II. Architects Simpson and Brown undertook a restoration of the castle in the 1980s. Heinz, a patron of the arts, made it into a place for writers to peacefully live and work, called the Hawthornden Literary Retreat. Recent restoration work has used reclaimed stone available from the demolished
Caledonian Railway station in
Edinburgh. The castle and caves are a Category A
listed building. ==Architecture==