The Brisbane Aisle (NS 220247, 659447) is a small 17th century free-standing burial vault, built for the Shaws of Kelsoland (aka Brisbane) and situated in the grounds of the 'Largs Old Kirk', Largs, Ayrshire, Scotland.[ British Listed Buildings. Retrieved : 2011-02-04]
History
Built for the Shaws of Kelsoland, this category A listed building became the burial vault of the Brisbane family sometime after 1695. The date 1634 as inscribed on a heraldic datestone at the east side of the structure, above a sealed portal. A heraldic panel is inscribed with "P.S" and "I.S", indicating the Shaws of Kelsoland. An armorial device with mullets (stars) for the Shaw and annulets (rings) for the Montgomeries of Braidstone is present. A carved armorial device on the west side carries the initials "P.S./I.M./I.S".
[Arch Col Ayrshire and Wigton, Page 58.] Thomas Brisbane, 1st Baronet GCH, GCB, FRS, FRSE (23 July 1773 – 27 January 1860) a British soldier, colonial governor and astronomer, is interred within the aisle.
Description
The aisle is small and rectangular in plan, gabled, with finely squared ashlar masonry,
bolection moulding at the wallhead, and
cavetto moulded skewputts and apex stones. The east-facing gable carries 19th-century exterior wall-mounted marble memorial panels with block pediments. The striking slab roof is at a lower pitch than the steeply pitched gable ends, probably as a result of repairs.
The Skelmorlie Aisle
The
Skelmorlie Aisle stands to the east of the Brisbane Aisle, also a category A listed building and containing a notable
monument built by a local landowner, Sir Robert Montgomerie of Skelmorlie Castle, seventh laird of
Skelmorlie as a burial site for himself and his wife, Dame Margaret Douglas.
[Clan Montgomery Society, p. 7] The aisle was added to the old
kirk (church) of Largs in 1636.
Access
The nearby Skelmorlie Aisle is in the care of Historic Scotland. Admission to the Brisbane Aisle is free; both the kirkyard and museum are open from late May to early September from 2.00pm to 5.00pm.
Notes
Sources
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Archaeological Collections of Ayrshire and Wigton, 1989, vol 6.
External links