Strathtyrum is a 400-acre (160 ha) country estate in the north-western outskirts of St Andrews, Fife, Scotland. It is accessed via the A91.[1][2]
Etymology
The name Strathtyrum was recorded as Trestirum in 1190,[3] and may rooted in either a Gaelic or Pictish etymology.[3] The first element is either Gaelic treabh or Pictish *trev, cognates both meaning "farm, estate, town" (c.f. Welshtref),[3] assimilated to Gaelic srath, "valley".[3] The second element is possibly Gaelic tioram, "dry",[3] or else an adaptation or translation of an earlier Pictish form.[3]
The adjacent property of St Andrews Links on the northern side of the estate was acquired by James Cheape in 1821 and sold by his brother's grandson, also named James Cheape, to The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews in 1893.[7][8][9] Control of St Andrews Links was regulated by an act of Parliament in 1894 and another in 1974 which resulted in the creation of the St Andrews Links Trust.[10] The Strathtyrum Course of St Andrews Links, which was opened in 1993, was built on land that was previously part of the estate and sold to the St Andrews Links Trust by Mrs Gladys Cheape in 1986.[1][7] The Strathtyrum estate was subsequently inherited by Henry Ismay Cheape.[2][11]
Buildings
There are several buildings on the estate including the main residential building Strathtyrum House located opposite the Old Course at St Andrews, a Category Alisted building built in the 18th century.[12][13] It is a Georgian building three storeys high accompanied by riding stables, a mausoleum and a large walled garden.[2][5][14] It was the rented country residence of publisher John Blackwood who died there in 1879.[1][15][16]
^ abcLamont-Brown, Raymond (2006). St Andrews: City by the Northern Sea. Edinburgh: Birlinn. p. 116. ISBN9781841584508. Retrieved 18 January 2016. After the Reformation, Strathtyrum estate was resumed by the Crown and conferred on the family of the Duke of Lennox. By 1596 the estate passed to James Wood of Lambieletham and was later assumed by the Inglises who sold it to Archbishop James Sharp in 1669; Sharp's dwelling has long vanished. Soon after this the estate was subdivided and in 1782 Strathtyrum was acquired by James Cheape.