Tobacco Merchant's House
The Tobacco Merchant's House is an 18th-century villa at 42 Miller Street in Glasgow's Merchant City and the last surviving Virginia tobacco merchant's house in Glasgow. It was built by John Craig in 1775. The building was extensively renovated in 1994-5 and now serves as the offices of the Scottish Civic Trust.
History
18th Century
The two-storey-and-attic, five-bay simplified Palladian town house was originally built by the Glasgow architect John Craig for himself. He purchased the land from Robert Hastie, an American merchant. Craig was the son of a timber merchant and listed himself as ' 'architect to His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales'. Craig sold the house to the tobacco importer Robert Findlay of Easterhill in 1782. At that time Miller Street was the location of the private homes of a number of prosperous Glasgow merchants.19th Century
Findlay's son, Robert Findlay Jr., developed the nearby Virginia Buildings used by early-19th-century tobacco traders in Glasgow. Findlay Jr. sold 42 Miller Street to the family firm of Findlay, Hopkirk and Co. during this development. The house was later occupied by William Connel, who joined the business then trading as Findlay, Duff and Co. The firm went bankrupt sometime in the 1820s and the property at 42 Miller Street was taken over by the Thistle Bank.Throughout the 1820s the building was used by a number of tenants. It was the premises of the merchant John Fyfe, the writer W.C. Gordon, Alliance Fire and Life Assurance, the counting house of John Bryce, who also had wine cellars and a tea warehouse nearby, accountant Alexander Mein, junior merchant John Morrison, merchants Pearson, Walker, & Co., and Thomas Bryce Buchanan of Boquhan.
In 1843–4, 42 Miller Street was the premises for the office of the Bankhead Colliery, Mr. R.H. Simpson, Coalmaster; the writer James Simpson; and Ebenezer Steven & Co., cotton spinners and power-loom cloth manufacturers. In 1856-7 the building was the office of the City & Suburban Gas Company.