•
George Gillespie (1613 –1648) was a Scottish theologian and domestic chaplain to John Gordon Ist Viscount Kenmure. •
Robert Burns and his close friend
John Syme stayed here for three days in July 1793 as guest of the then laird John Gordon (at the time
de jure 10th Viscount Kenmure), 1750-1840). •
Rev Robert Nixon (1759–1837), was a Church of England priest and artist. For the last ten years of his life he served as domestic chaplain to Viscount Kenmure at Kenmure Castle where he died on 5 Nov. 1837, aged 78. By his wife Ann Russell he was father of the
Rev. Francis Russell Nixon, first Bishop of Tasmania. It was in Nixon's parsonage at Foots Cray in 1798 that
J M W Turner painted his first painting in oils. •
John Ruskin (1819-1900), art critic and author, stayed with his cousin Joan Agnew and her husband the artist
Arthur Severn (1842-1931) at Kenmure in 1876. •
Cowan Dobson ARBB, RBA (1894–1980) Scottish portrait painter is said to have rented the castle in the 1930s and 1940s to entertain and paint his fashionable portraits and paintings. •
Charles Tate Regan. John Murray was gamekeeper to Lord Kenmure and is remembered for having caught, in 1774 in Loch Ken below the castle, the largest
pike on record, the head of which rested on his shoulder, with the tail trailing on the ground. Its weight was seventy-two pounds, and it measured about seven feet in length. The skeleton of the head was for many years preserved on display in the Billiard Room at Kenmure Castle where it was studied and measured by Charles Tate Regan,
ichthyologist, of the Natural History Museum. Murray died in 1777 and is buried at Kells Churchyard; on his tombstone are carved in relief a gun, fishing-rod, dog and partridge. [http://www.amff.org/john-murrays-pike/ Regan, C. Tate (Charles Tate), 1878-. The Freshwater Fishes of the British Isles. London: Methuen, 1911. ==References==