Argaty is a farm estate located just over a mile northeast of Doune, Stirling, Scotland. The present Argaty House dates from the 19th century with baronial additions in the 1860s and 1920s, but was largely destroyed by fire in April 2011.
Argaty farm is host to central Scotland's only red kite feeding station where visitors can come and watch the birds, recently reintroduced to their former natural habitat through a program managed by the RSPB and Scottish Natural Heritage.
In 1982 ownership of Argaty House and the farm estate were separated.
After the forfeiture the Crown granted the lands of Argaty to one John Sinclair, Esquire to the King's Chamber. The property then passed to Sinclair's younger daughter who married Patrick Home (also spelled "Hume") of Polworth, and Argaty thus came into the possession of the Home family. Burke, p.169 Retrieved March 2012
In 1758 Argaty was inherited by the Maryland planter and Loyalist politician George Hume Steuart of Annapolis, Maryland, second son of George Steuart and Mary Hume. Steuart also held extensive lands in Maryland and, at the outbreak of the Revolutionary War in 1775, he was forced to leave America and return to Scotland, dividing his estates among his family. His son, also named George Hume Steuart (1747–1788), inherited Argaty estate in his turn, changing his name to George Steuart Hume.Nelker, p.24. Presumably the estate was entailed.
On Hume's death in 1788, Argaty passed to George Steuart Hume's infant daughter Sophia. Hume's younger brothers Charles and James Steuart, by now citizens of the fledgling United States of America, brought a claim against their infant niece Sophia for the inheritance of Argaty, but were not successful.
A shorthorn bull named Alban, raised by Mr G. H. M. Binning-Home of Argaty and calved in 1868, appears in Coate's Herd Book, Volume 19, the publication of the Shorthorn Society of the United Kingdom. Coates, George, p.3, Coates's Herd Book, Volume 19, Shorthorn Society of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Retrieved March 2012 At this time the estate acquired something of a name for breeding shorthorn cattle. History of Argaty at Fraiser Raitts Webspace Retrieved March 2012
Administratively Doune is today under the control of Stirling Council.
On 30 April 2011 a fire broke out in Argaty House, almost completely gutting it. The Central Scotland Fire and Rescue Service estimated the next day that 90% of the building was totally destroyed. BBC News online, 1 May 2011. Retrieved 6 May 2011. stv news 1 May 2011 Retrieved March 2012
Argaty House, Lodge and grounds were purchased in 2022. It is now a private family home. There is no access to the ruin of Argaty House which is protected by security measures due to its hazardous condition.
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