Robert Louis Stevenson's
parents, Thomas and Margaret (neé Balfour) leased
Swanston Cottage for a dozen years or so, for the period
of their only son's late 'teens and twenties (1867 until
1880).
The present village and small thatched single storey cottages
was restored by the City Council in 1964. Above Swanston
Village across the golf course, there is a small wood known
as the “T” Wood. This was planted in the late
eighteenth century by the then laird of Mortonhall as a
memorial to a member of the house who fell in battle.
Robert Louis Stevenson tells a quaint story in his “Edinburgh
Picturesque Notes”, about a distiller of whisky who
had his distillery at Bowbridge, which was in a north easterly
direction from Swanston, down the hill beyond the Fairmilehead.
He and the Exciseman, who was appointed to assess and levy
duty on Distiller’s whisky stocks, were reputed to
have been good friends and each time the Exciseman went
to inspect the distiller’s stocks he used to start
playing the tune “Over the hills and far away”
on his whistle a short distance away, to warn the distiller
of his arrival, thus enabling his friend to have time enough
to load his excess stock onto his horse drawn cart and whisk
it away to a secret hiding spot in the hills. In the meantime
the distiller’s wife would greet the Exciseman with
a hint of surprise at his arrival and invite him in to the
house. The Distiller would slip in through a back door after
having hidden his stock. After the Exciseman had inspected
his friend’s modest stock of whisky and all the necessary
papers had been signed, they would together enjoy a liberal
but lawful dram and the sumptuous meal prepared by the Distiller’s
wife. Thereafter the Exciseman would set off on his long
walk back to Edinburgh, well fortified with ‘one for
the road’, and the Distiller would go and retrieve
his hidden cargo! A ‘lawful dram’ can still
be enjoyed today at one of many pubs dotted around Swanston,
of which one is the Fairmilehead Inn – steeped in
fascinating history!