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Smithfield Haa, Strand

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Ordnance Survey licence number AC0000807262. All rights reserved. © Copyright and database right 2025. Public Sector Viewing Terms

General Details and Location

Category
AT RISK
Name of Building
Smithfield Haa
Other Name(s)
Address
Strand
Locality
Postcode
Planning Authority
Divisional Area
Reference No
924
Listing Category
C
OS Grid Ref
HU 66105 91451
Location Type
Rural
HS Reference No
45271

Description

Palladian merchant laird's house comprising 2-storey 3-bay principal block with entrance elevation to W, flanked to N and S by single storey 2-bay pavilions; formal arrangement of walled enclosures linking to byre and store to NE; single storey booth situated at shorefront to W. Random rubble walls with polished, stugged and droved sandstone dressings.

The lands of Smithfield were acquired by James Smith in 1774 from Gilbert Tait against a debt of £70. The house of Smithfield was built by James Smith's son, Gilbert, in 1815. He acted as factor to the Nicolsons for the eastern part of the Brough Estate and was heavily involved in the establishment of the Free Kirk in Fetlar after the Disruption in 1843. The Free Kirk minister stayed at Smithfield until the East Manse was built. Around this period, there was a shop attached to the house and the family traded from there. Gilbert Smith is reputed to have taken oak logs from the cargo of the ship Neptune which was wrecked off Fetlar in 1847. He sank the logs in the Loch of Urie until Customs had dealt with the wreck, and then later used the timbers in the building of Smithfield. Gilbert Smith died in 1866 by which time most of his family had emigrated to Australia. The estate was sold to the Nicolsons in 1874. The roof was removed and used in the refurbishment of Still in 1887, and the stairs were incorporated in the chapel at Brough Lodge. Although currently a roofless ruin (1997), this is a particularly fine example of a merchant laird's house. Its Palladian form is unusually grand for this type of building in Shetland, and its formal relationship with the booth serves as a reminder of the importance of the sea in trade and communication during the 19th century. (Historic Scotland)
Building Dates
1815
Architects
Unknown

Category of Risk and Development History

Condition
Ruinous
Category of Risk
High
Exemptions to State of Risk
Field Visits
25/6/2014
Development History
February 1999: The haa is reported to be a roofless shell. January 2001: Local planners are unaware of any change.
25 June 2014: External inspection finds the building remains a roofless shell but intact and unchanged.

Guides to Development

Conservation Area
Planning Authority Contact
PAC Telephone Number
01595 744762

Availability

Current Availability
Unknown
Appointed Agents
Price
Occupancy
Vacant
Occupancy Type
N/A
Present/Former Uses
Building Uses Information:
Present Use 1: N/A Former Use 1: Residential
Present Use 2: N/A Former Use 2: N/A
Name of Owners
Type of Ownership
Private

Information Services

Additional Contacts/Information Source
Bibliography
Finnie (1990), p79. Fetlar: The Lairds and Their Estates (1993), pp7-9.
Online Resources
Classification
Middle-sized Houses
Original Entry Date
02-FEB-99
Date of Last Edit
07/01/2021