The Georgian House
The Georgian House is a perfectly preserved time capsule from 1796, showcasing exactly how Edinburgh's wealthy merchants lived during the city's Golden Age.
About The Georgian House
The Georgian House is a perfectly preserved time capsule from 1796, showcasing exactly how Edinburgh's wealthy merchants lived during the city's Golden Age. You'll walk through authentic rooms filled with original Chippendale furniture, family portraits, and even the china they actually used for dinner parties. The National Trust for Scotland has recreated everything down to the last teacup, so you're seeing genuine 18th-century domestic life, not a sanitized museum version.
The self-guided tour flows naturally through three floors, starting with the grand drawing room where the family entertained guests, then up to private bedrooms with four-poster beds and washstands. The kitchen downstairs feels surprisingly modern for 1796, with its range of copper pots and clever storage solutions. What strikes you most is how lived-in everything feels, as if the Lamont family just stepped out for afternoon tea.
Most visitors rush through in 30 minutes, but you'll miss the best details that way. The wine cellar and servants' quarters tell the real story of how these households actually functioned, complete with original bells that summoned staff from different rooms. Adult admission costs £7, concessions £5.50, and it's genuinely worth the hour-long visit if you're curious about social history rather than grand architecture.
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