School project

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This is a school project done by my daughter when she was 12 years old. She spent a lot of time researching and going through old title deeds for the hotel.

History of the Lancaster Hotel by Kathleen Ramage

The Lancaster Hotel is on the Esplanade next to St. Columba cathedral and from its front rooms you can look down the Firth of Lorne, almost all the way to Easdale and across to Lismore, Ardnamurchan and Mull. It is made from sandstone and the roof is made of slate which came from the slate quarry at Easdale. The Back buildings which are now staff quarters (originally the Stables) are made of Drumvargie stone.

When it was built In 1850 by a Mr. I. Gibson, it was a modest sized house.  It had a large Garden and there was stables at the back for the owners horses. At this time there were not many other houses near it and Corran Brae, which now leads to Dunollie housing estate and Park Primary School, did not exist – St Columba Cathedral was not there either. The house even had another name, Glen Lyon lodge.

In 1869 the house was sold to a Mr. Duncan McGregor. I can’t find out much about him and only know that he lived in the house for nine years before selling it to the Oban Congregational church in 1878. Under their ownership it was used as a manse for the reverend Charles Whyte. The church sold the house after only seven years to a Mr. Albert Wood Esquire Again not much is known about him, but he must have liked it there because he stayed there for fourteen years. In 1899 Mr. wood sold the house and it became the Royal Highland Yacht Club and was no longer known as Glenlyon Lodge.

The Royal Highland Yacht Club owned the building for forty years and under their ownership a few alterations were made. They built the front extension – the bit that goes towards Oban Bay Hotel – and is now rooms 1,2,3,and 4 on top, and the resident’s lounge on the bottom. This was done in 1910. Next in 1921, they added the mock Tudor front – the black and white bits. During the 48 years the building had a colourful history, not least being made into the Officer’s mess for the R.A.F. during the Second World War. Lord Louis Mountbatten, Prince Charles’s uncle (who was killed by an I.R.A. bomb) visited the club and stayed there and even wrote a letter to a friend in the lounge on the same writing table that is still there. We also have the ship’s bell and clock and in the bar we still have the brass bell patrons used to get the attention from the bar staff – it is still used for the same thing. At the front of the building (above the word Lancaster) there is a plaque showing a highland warrior with a shield and a sword. This was carved by Major John Sutherland of Oban as a tribute to another Oban Man, Sergeant James Y. Turnball. He was awarded the Victoria Cross (after he had died) for the brave things he did in the First World War (1914-18). The plaque was put up around 1930 and stayed there until a few years ago when it was decided by my Grandpa to take it down and preserve it and put a copy in its place. The real one is now in a frame and is hanging in the reception of the hotel for everybody to see and remember Sergeant Turnball’s bravery. Before the war Sergeant Turnball worked for the firm of Mr. Wm Chalmers of Oban.

In 1947. However, the royal Highland Yacht club sold the building to two sisters, Margaret and Mary McDonald and the building changed its name again It was the McDonald sisters who gave the building its present name of the Lancaster Hotel. The sisters used to run the Lancaster In Glasgow and decided to re-name the building after the Glasgow hotel. Together they ran the Oban hotel until 1964 when my Granny and Grandpa (John and Sheenac Ramage) bought the hotel from them. Before settling here Granny and Grandpa had owned the Taynuilt hotel and The Inshaig Park hotel in Easdale. When they moved here my Auntie Mary was only seven, my Dad only four, and my Uncle Jim wasn’t even born yet.

One of the first things my Grandparents did was to extend the hotel by building the long wing which goes up Corran Brae and has the rooms 14 to 21 and also build the Cocktail and Lounge bars –this was done in 1966. At this time the front changed – the hedges and the garden were taken away and a new entrance was added and the front car park and the rockery were made too. It was at this time my Dad had his hand and foot prints made in cement. His prints can still be seen behind the plants at the front door, beside the white seat. In 1966 the old stables were converted into the staff quarters and a Granny flat was build for my Dad’s Granny Campbell (my Great-Grandmother) – this is where my Granny and Grandpa live today In 1970 the kitchen was extended and the Laundry added at the back. In 1975 the swimming pool was built and at that time it was the only pool in Oban – The sauna and rooms 24 – 28 were added. In 1983 the Jacuzzi was added to the pool area and all the rooms had private bathrooms added- this was still before my sisters and me were born – my Dad was engaged to my Mum. They were married in 1984 and my Dad and Mum live at the Lancaster. In 1985 the dining room was extended and so was the front entrance. Over the next few years several structural problems were fixed – new beams in the lounge roof, a new roof for the pool, the Lounge bar was changed and the sauna was replaced. My sisters and me also arrived and now three generations of the same family live here. In 1996 my Mum got the pump house for the pool redone and has been adding bits to it ever since, The last thing to be done (happening now) is the solarium roof being fixed and as soon as that is done we will be getting a new Steam Room – which will hopefully be in before Christmas. That is the history of the Lancaster as far as I’ve been able to find out, my Mum and Dad and Grandparents have all helped me to find this information and even dug out the deeds for the building which goes right back to when it was first built. If I had more time I might have been able to read more of the deeds, but some of the writing was funny and the words they used strange, especially in some of the oldest bits. I hope you have found this history as interesting as I did, but the thing I like is that it is not finished yet.

 

 

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Last modified: April 19, 2002