Seton Castle was built in the late 1700s on the site of
Seton Palace, which was demolished in 1789. The palace, near Longniddry, on the Firth of Forth, formerly belonged to the
Earls of Winton and was a popular retreat for
Mary, Queen of Scots. She spent time at the palace after the murder of her second husband, Lord Darnley; they had also spent their honeymoon there. The date when the original palace was built is uncertain but it was located on the lands of Seton and Winton. The palace was burnt by the English army in May 1544 after the
burning of Edinburgh. Historical records indicate that it was the most magnificent palace in Scotland in the 17th century. Kings James VI and Charles I were entertained at the palace. It was damaged and burned out again during the 1715 Jacobite Rising The palace was demolished in 1789. Lt Col Alexander Mackenzie of the
21st Dragoons, eldest son of Alexander MacKenzie of Portmore, Peebleshire commissioned
Robert Adam in the summer of 1789 to build a new mansion that would become Seton Castle. The remains of the old building were demolished and cleared by 1790, with the exception of the vaulted ground floor which remained. Stone from the old palace was used when building the new mansion. By December 1789 working drawings were completed and the building contract was awarded to Thomas Russell. The construction occurred between 12 November 1789 and the summer of 1791.
John Patterson, Robert Adam's Clerk of Works in Scotland, who later became a competent architect in his own right, reported to Adam in a letter of 26 April 1790 that the old building had been demolished and cleared. The property is adjacent to
Seton Collegiate Church which is now in the care of
Historic Scotland. The house was
category A listed as Seton House and the surrounding grounds designated in 1987. It was described as a castellated late-
Georgian house, one of the most striking of Robert Adam's late houses in the castle style. It was made up of several shaped towers around a curved wall enclosing the courtyard which is entered by a central archway. The report in 1987 states, "only the walls of the famous formal gardens of the 16th and 17th century remain [of the original palace]". The Listing document describes the building as follows. "The main block of the house is joined by thick screen walls to the wings, and an entrance court is enclosed by a further fortified screen wall linking the two wings. It has classical interior details, and is accorded high value." ==Owners==