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Latitude: 55.5132 / 55°30'47"N
Longitude: -4.4862 / 4°29'10"W
OS Eastings: 243111
OS Northings: 627185
OS Grid: NS431271
Mapcode National: GBR 3H.TM8H
Mapcode Global: WH3QQ.2P0D
Plus Code: 9C7QGG77+7G
Entry Name: Bachelors' Club, Sandgate Street, Tarbolton
Listing Name: Tarbolton, Sandgate, Burns Bachelors' Club Including Boundary Wall
Listing Date: 14 April 1971
Category: A
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 354094
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB19689
Building Class: Cultural
Also known as: Tarbolton, Sandgate Street, Club
ID on this website: 200354094
Location: Tarbolton
County: South Ayrshire
Electoral Ward: Kyle
Parish: Tarbolton
Traditional County: Ayrshire
Tagged with: Architectural structure Cottage Thatched cottage
North (Entrance) Elevation: central square-headed entrance; panelled timber door; single window to left (with timber shutter), additional entrance (panelled timber door to right); two single windows at first floor with Bachelors' Club plaque between.
East (Side) Elevation: single window to left at ground floor; single window to right at first floor (timber shutter to ground floor window). Recessed stair to outer left provides access to first floor; timber handrail.
South (Rear) Elevation: external stair provides access to first floor; flanking single windows at first floor; infilled opening to left at ground floor. Single windows at ground and first floor to outer left.
Small-paned timber windows (some sash and case). Reed-roofed; painted brick gablehead stacks; circular cans (to left only).
Interior: reconstruction of use from Burns' day (see Notes). Ground floor: divided into byre and kitchen use. Stone floor; timber dado ceiling; dado panelling to bed to south wall; byre to west wall; plain corniced fireplace and grate to east wall. First floor: debating room. Timber floor; whitewashed flat ceiling. Plain square-headed fireplaces to east and west walls.
Boundary Wall: whitewashed boundary wall to east of house.
Robert Burns formed a debating society for himself and six other young men in 1780. The first subject discussed was whether to marry for looks or fortune. It was here in 1781 that he was initiated into Freemasonry. Owned by John Richard, wright of Tarbolton in Burns' day, the property was acquired by the National Trust for Scotland in 1938 and formally opened in 1951 after restoring the two floors to their former uses.
It is among a relatively small number of traditional buildings with a surviving thatched roof found across Scotland. A Survey of Thatched Buildings in Scotland, published in 2016 by the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings (SPAB), found there were only around 200 buildings of this type remaining, most of which are found in small rural communities. Thatched buildings are often traditionally built, showing distinctive local and regional building methods and materials. Those that survive are important in helping us understand these traditional skills and an earlier way of life.
Listed building record revised in 2021 as part of the Thatched Buildings Listing Review.
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
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