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Pollok House is open every day
throughout the year except 25 / 26 December and 1 / 2 January.
Entry is free to the Servants' Quarters all year and a charge is
made for visiting the upstairs part of the House only during the
summer months from 1 April to 31 October.
It is remarkable that a country house like Pollok House has
survived, as it is within 15 minutes' drive of central Glasgow. The
tranquillity of its surroundings allows visitors to enjoy the
beauty and benefits of the countryside without travelling outside
the city.
The Trust's aim is to present the House as a living house and home.
The House is presented broadly as it would have been around 1930
when all the major changes had been made to the property. The
Maxwell family lived in the house until 1966 when it was gifted to
the City of Glasgow by Mrs Anne Maxwell Macdonald. Originally
opened as a City Museum, it was passed in 1988 to the Trust, who
now manage the property on behalf of Glasgow City Council. Since
the Trust became involved, the House and contents have been
redisplayed to create a more lived-in feel.
The busiest part of the House at any time of the year is the vast
Servants' Quarters in the basement. Even when the Maxwells lived
here this was the case, for there were 48 indoor staff to look
after 3 family members after the house was expanded around 1900.
Today the basement houses the Kitchen Restaurant and the range of
shops. As you walk down the dramatic main corridor to the
restaurant you sense the scale of operations needed to keep the
House functioning. Half the visitors come solely to the restaurant
because of its reputation for home baking and fresh local produce,
but to get the full effect you need to visit the upstairs to
appreciate the full impact of the differences for family and
servants.
The House is famous for its spectacular collection of paintings
collected by one member of the family, Sir William Stirling
Maxwell, in the mid-19th century. Although a visit to the House
centres on the father and son - Sir William and Sir John - who
expanded the small Georgian house into the property we see today,
the family have connections to the estate dating back to 1270. The
lively plasterwork and classical proportions stress the country
mansion style, but the small scale of the main Georgian house makes
it seem very habitable - most visitors could easily move in!
The paintings include major examples of the work of William Blake
and one of the finest collections anywhere of the art of Spain at
the zenith of its power from 1500 -1700, The Golden Age.
Information around the House will help you understand the history
and the purpose of this art. You will realise that political spin
is nothing new.
Features
The well-known Kitchen Restaurant now occupies the original
kitchens of this elegant country mansion, which is set in
attractive formal gardens and extensive parkland but in the heart
of Glasgow. Pollok House offers extensive views of woodland,
parkland, farmland and designed landscape.
Read more about Pollok House MORE INFO
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