c. 1861 The house itself was built from 1470, featuring a fine wooden gallery and
hand-painted ceiling. It had belonged to Walter Reidpath whose grandson John Arres inherited it and left it to his daughter Mariota Arres in 1556. She married James Mosman, a goldsmith. Her father-in-law
John Mosman, also a goldsmith, had refashioned the crown of Scotland for
James V. In 1567
James Mosman was converting a piece of
Mary, Queen of Scots' jewellery when she was imprisoned in
Lochleven Castle. He remained loyal to Mary when she was exiled in England. Mosman worked in
Edinburgh Castle with
James Cockie making coins for Mary's supporters who held the castle during the
'Lang Siege'. The two goldsmiths valued the
jewels of Mary, Queen of Scots which remained in the castle, so they could be used as security for loans. When the Castle surrendered in August 1573, Mosman was charged with counterfeiting, for which he was hanged, quartered and beheaded. The house was forfeit for the treachery, and was given in the name of
James VI of Scotland to James Carmichael younger of that ilk. The carvings were discovered behind woodwork in 1849, and restored in 1850 by
Alexander Handyside Ritchie. The building was restored again in 1984. Over the next few centuries many decorations and paintings were added, and the house and its contents are now a museum. The building is owned by the
Church of Scotland and is now administered as part of the new, adjacent
Scottish Storytelling Centre. ==Association with John Knox==