Provost Skene’s House nestles between the new buildings and giant plant pots of Aberdeen. This post details a visit from 2023.
It’s been a long time since I’ve visited the 16th century townhouse. In fact, it’s been a very long time since I’ve been in the city centre. In recent years trips to Aberdeen have been illness or hospital related.
There have been a few changes.
Marischal College
The fountains in front of Marischal College are new:
My father worked in the building when I was a child, and there were regular family trips to the Anthropological Museum there. This was later called the Marischal Museum, and it’s no longer open to the public. You can, however, browse online exhibitions.
Provost Skene’s House
History
Dating from 1545, the house has been lived in by a variety of people over the centuries. Provost Skene owned it in the 17th century, and Hanoverian troops used it during the Jacobite rebellion of 1745. The Duke of Cumberland stayed there on his way to Culloden. It’s been a museum since 1953. See a more thorough history of the house here.
Museum
The museum used to be set up with rooms furnished in different eras: Edwardian bedrooms and Victorian sitting rooms, that sort of thing. It now houses an exhibition of noteworthy people from Aberdeen, and many of the displays are digitised. I rather miss the harpsichords and harps of the previous arrangement.
The Glass Floor
The glass floor in the cellar is still there, and I’m glad about that. The room was previously a coffee shop, and walking over the floor was a highlight for me as a child. I may not have been frightened when locked in a witch’s hoosie, but this floor scared me in an exhilarating sort of way.
I put the scary floor into the castle of my books. The quote below is from Fouetté, the third and final title of A Dancer’s Journey, and it describes how the glass used to look in Provost Skene’s House.
Eerie green light still shone up from below the glass, showcasing the museum pieces in the floor: barrels, bottles, various metal implements, a cauldron. The glass had been replaced, of course, and part of it given proper hinges, not like back then when…
I had to cut the quote short there, because: spoilers. The floor is no longer lit up.
The Painted Gallery
The highlight of the house for me now is the Painted Gallery. It has not changed, apart from the removal of the Mouseman benches.
Like the Wine Tower in Fraserburgh, this is a place that may have been used as a post-Reformation Catholic chapel.
The ceiling depicts the life of Christ. Below is the Entombment, with a kilted gentleman standing to the right.
Something else that has not changed is the smell of Provost Skene’s House. It’s quite strong and distinctive. I think it might be caused by the use of some sort of speciality wood preserver or furniture polish.
I walk across the flagstone floor of Provost Skene’s.
And then stroll between the old and the new.
I prefer the old.
The Angry Man
Let’s finish with an angry man. He was originally situated on the wall of a 19th century bakery in the city. It was shut down due to its close proximity to a sewer; the baker blamed his neighbours for the closure, and pointed his angry face at them. He now glares at everyone as they walk past Provost Skene’s House.
SISTERS AT THE EDGE OF THE WORLD
Set in 1st century Scotland, SISTERS AT THE EDGE OF THE WORLD includes the battle of Mons Graupius between the Romans and the Caledonian tribes. The book features a neurodivergent main character and some rather complicated romance…
“Ethereal and spellbinding…” Historical Novel Society
Read the article Roman Aberdeenshire features in author’s new book from Grampian Online.
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Beautiful. Thanks, Ailish.
I’m glad you liked it 🙂
What a fascinating house with so much history. The juxtaposition of old and new is remarkable. Thanks for the tour.
Glad you enjoyed it 🙂
So interesting! Thank you for taking us to these curious places that far away people such as I may never see, or smell, or hear being there. You describe for all the senses.
I’m glad you liked it, Julie. I realise I missed out how creaky the floor of that gallery is!
I think the test of a “travelogue” post is – would I like to visit? And, I would. Love the ‘Angry Man”. I could erect one of those.
I hope you get the chance to visit the angry man 🙂
I love the work that’s gone into so many of these old buildings.
They are quite intricate.
What a fascinating house, even the door invites exploring.
I love those studded doors.
I can see why the glass floor was a vivid memory for you.
It was a little disappointing that it’s no longer lit.
Yet another wonderful and fascinating travel guide
Thank you 🙂
Wonderful tour. Thanks for sharing.
Glad you liked 🙂
Impressive building with a fascinating history, Ailish. Thanks for sharing your knowledge. 🙂
I’m glad you liked it, Tim 🙂
Too long since last in Aberdeen – As for the witch’s hoosie . Godmother lived in Lancaster, staying with her, I was locked in a castle dungeon – (part of the tour!) – Total darkness – thinking of the Lancashire witches and their fate. Unforgettable…
That sounds like an incredibly intense experience!
Interesting floor. A very long time ago I lived (as in couch surfing) in the groundskeeper’s house at Philbrook, a sort of American castle, now an art museum. There is a longer version that involves an Elvis impersonator and drummer, but I’ll save that. Regardless, like any good castle it had a glass floor. For dancing. Built in the 1920s. https://www.shutterstock.com/image-photo/tulsa-nov-12-2021-interior-view-2077110835
Cool stuff.
That is an absolutely gorgeous floor!
And flashing multi colored when lit. Disco fifty years before disco!
I would love to dance on it!
Wonderful memories and beautiful photos.