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Tour
Abernyte
"ABERNYTE,
parish in Sidlaw district, Perthshire, mainly about 2 miles north-north-west
of Inchture railway station. Post town, Inchture. Acres, 2532.
Real property in 1880-81, £3011. Pop. 275. The surface is
mostly hilly, and rises from about 300 to about 1155 feet above
sea-level. A free church serves Abernyte and Rait. The public
school has about 75 scholars."
Wilson, Rev. John The Gazetteer of Scotland by Rev. John Wilson,
1882
The
South Sidlaws village and parish of Abernyte is not so well known
as it deserves to be, sitting in its wide, south-facing, hanging
valley between the Carse of Gowrie and Strathmore, 9 miles west
of Dundee and 2 north-west of Inchture. It is a pleasant place,
but to call it a village is almost a misnomer. One gets the impression
that the Abernyters are notably fond of walking. For its various
sections are all so wide apart as to be extraordinary, scattered
over a network of side-roads in the laps of the green hills. All,
however, have fine and extensive views, especially south-eastwards
through the gap in the hills to the carse and the open sea at
the mouth of the Firth of Tay. King's Seat is in this parish,
and presides over all, at 1236 feet the highest point of the South
Sidlaws, with an ancient chambered cairn and enclosure at its
summit.
The
major parts of scattered Abernyte lie dotted along the B.953 Inchture
to Balbeggie road, threading the very attractive fertile glen,
shut in on three sides by green hills. The first we come to, from
the south, is the former Free Church and manse, now converted
into a large garage establishment, and seeming as odd as must
have been the church to be isolated thus. Then, half a mile on,
at a road junction, is the Milton and school with some cottages;
and a little way farther up still, another group of houses as
a cross-roads. A quarter-mile on, built on higher ground, is the
largest section of the village, still growing with modern houses.
Then, away more than another half-mile to the east, passing Abernyte
House and its rather strangely set-down walled garden, is the
very detached Kirkton, with the parish church and a large, whitewashed
and fine-looking manse facing out over the sinking braesides to
the south, all under the wooded craigs of Rossie Hill.
The
church is an old foundation rebuilt in 1736. There is a parish
record declaring: "December 4 1664, the whilk day Mr. Andrew
Shippert was admitted minister of Aberneit, by Mr. Robert White,
minister at Instur, being authorized by my Lord Bishop of Dunkelden
to that effect. Collected that day 7 shillings two pennies."
The said bishop was himself contemporaneously minister of St.
Madoes parish, along the Carse, nimbly straddling circumstances.
There are some old tombs in the graveyard.
Abernyte
parish boasts sundry antiquities. There are not a few cairns,
one of which used to stand in the manse glebe, with bones found
under it. These were said to commemorate a battle between the
Grays of Fowlis and the Boyds of Pitkindie, just up the road-though
it seems much more likely that they are of prehistoric origin.
On a hill called Glenny Law, as well as cairns, is said to be
a stone circle of seven stones; and at Stockmuir, one of nine.
On an ancient map north of Ballairdie, were marked the remains
of a castle named Carquhannan, though locally called Balchuinnie,
with a spring near by designated the King's Well. This may well
have been Scotland's only King Edgar, for a mile or so down the
road southwards is the rather unusual hamlet of Baledgarn (pro
nounced Bal-egger-ny) bearing the name of Edgar, 4th son of Malcolm
Canmore, anointed king in 1001, and who built a castle on the
hill just above here, still called Castlehill. Boethius declares
it was "foundit by Edgar in Gowry, wha gat certane landis
fra the Erle of Gowry, and annexit his name to the castle".
Baledgarno,
however, as a village, only dates from the early 19th century;
and an attractive place it is, lying on either side of a falling
burn just to the west of the policy wall of the Rossie Priory
estate. But this hamlet did not grow; it was made. The 8th Lord
Kinnaird decided to leave Drimmie House, down near the present
A.85 road, and build a great new mansion up on a terrace in his
splendid park-land, under Rossie Hill, this in 1807. Unfortunately
the old village of Rossie seems to have offended his sensibilities.
Not that it cluttered the site, being fully half a mile away to
the east, and not very evident from the new palace. But these
were the days of great lords and large gestures, and for better
or worse the village was bodily removed a mile to the west. Oddly
enough, the old market cross was left behind, and still stands
in lonely splendour by its burnside in the open parkland, with
the former village church, now the family burial-chapel, on the
yew-clad hillock behind. The cross has a four-stepped plinth,
and on top of its shaft is a highly unusual finial in the form
of four lions and unicorns back-to-back, beneath inscribed R.H.
and K.G. 1746. The significance of these initials is not clear.
A single standing-stone projects from the turf a few yards to
the west, which also must have been in the village street. The
Kinnairds' chapel is kept in good repair, and within, amongst
the memorials of the family, is a splendid Celtic cross-slab,
highly decorative, with horsemen, animals and intricate ribbon
ornamentation. These cross-slabs, another of which stands at St.
Madoes Church, 9 miles to the south-west, date from the period
A.D. 800-1000, it is thought, and are of Celtic-Pictish origin.
Rossie
Priory itself, standing in a magnificent position in finely-rising
parkland, is still a most handsome mansion although greatly reduced
in size in recent years. It contains many treasures, and remains
the seat of the Lords Kinnaird. Highly unusual is the pend which
passes through the middle of the house, so that a visitor may
drive right through from one side and driveway to another. The
predecessor of this great house and Drimmie also, is the red-stone,
late 16th century castle of Moncur, which still stands in a ruinous
state, within the estate, about a mile to the south, near an attractive
pond and visible from the main A.85 road. It has been a fine fortalice,
liberally equipped with gun-loops, built on the Z-plan, with a
notable hall fireplace and great chimney-stack.
To
the east of Rossie, in a field, is another monolith called the
Falcon Stone, allegedly one more of those landmarks which the
Hay's hawk alighted upon, after the Battle of Luncarty in 990,
in its over-flying of the lands the Hays were to gain as reward
for their part in the battle-an active and useful bird. Probably,
however, the stone has a much earlier significance.
Behind
wooded Rossie Hill is the estate hamlet of Knapp, tucked away
in a quite secret valley threaded by a side-road. Here is an unusual
feature - a 17th century doocote turned into a cottage. Farther
north, on the high ground of Dron, is a Pictish fort on the hilltop.
And to the east, at the farm of Dron, are the ruins of a 12th
century chapel, formerly attached to Coupar Angus Abbey. Only
two gables remain, by the burnside, but that to the west has a
fine, tall pointed archway.
North
of this point, the land climbs to a high and lonely moorland plateau
area, part of Longforgan parish, around the 65o-foot contour,
scattered with ancient Scots pines and other wind-blown trees,
gorse and heather. In its remote centre is the small loch of Redmyre.
It is hard to believe that this lofty wilderness is only 7 miles
from busy Dundee.
Inchture
Just
south of the busy A.85 dual-carriageway between Perth and Dundee,
7 miles west of the latter, is the village of Inchture. As its
name implies, once an island in the flooded Carse of Gowrie. It
must have been a very low island, for its eminence is hardly noticeable
in the level flats; indeed the church and churchyard are alleged
to be built up 6 to 8 feet artificially, presumably to afford
suitable burial facilities in the early days. Tuir, in Gaelic
means a dirge, or lament for the dead, and it may be that the
original inch got its name thus; although another claimed derivation
is innis-t-ear, the island to the east. Today there is a neat
red-stone estate-type village, with church, school, hotel and
a shop or two, all under an avenue of tall old trees, and rather
attractive.
The
parish church is distinctly ambitious for so small a community;
but the parish itself is fairly large, and now incorporates the
former parish of Rossie. The Gothic building dates from 1834,
and is unusual in having handsome red ashlar stone at front and
sides, but only harling at the rear, an economy the present author
has not seen elsewhere in a church. It stands amongst many ancient
gravestones, with another Kinnaird vault below the building, additional
to that at the old chapel at Rossie.
Most
of the antiquities of this parish are in the higher ground of
the Rossie area, and dealt with under that name. A battle was
allegedly fought near the ruined castle of Moncur, across the
main road to the north of the village, in 728, when in a civil
war Hungus, or Angus, defeated Nectan and gained the leadership
of the Picts.
The
Parish covers 5330 acres, of which no fewer than 1200 are described
as foreshore or have been reclaimed from the firth. A long dead-straight
road of 2 miles runs down over the rich flat cornlands to salt
water at Powgavie. Pow or poll is the name given to the sluggish
streams or stanks which drain the carse. At Powgavie there was
formerly a harbour, once quite important, where there was a hamlet
and alehouse, all now gone and only a sea of reeds and rushes
remaining. At low tide, the Powgavie Burn winds its way out through
the mud-flats and sandbanks of Dog Bank for almost three miles.
Some of the farms in these fertile carselands have odd names-such
as Maggotland, Mammiesroom, Waterbutts and Unthank. At Grange,
3 miles south-west of Inchture, there is a sizeable community,
amongst scattered orchards and broiler-houses. Inchture district
is famous for the cultivation of strawberries. All this Carse
of Gowne, of course, claims the title of the Garden of Scotland.
Kinnaird
There
are many Kinnairds in Scotland, the name meaning merely the head
of the height. But there is only one actual parish and village
of the name. It is one of those picturesque little communities
which nestle in the south-facing folds of the Carse Braes, overlooking
the plain of Tay and Gowrie, standing about two miles west of
Inchture. Here there is a quite delightful little village, with
parish church and manse, all overlooked and dominated by a tall
castle. The parish rises from the 5o-foot level in the carselands
almost to the 1000-foot contour at Blacklaw; so there is much
of climbing, green hillsides, hanging woods and splendid vistas.
There was formerly another village at Pitmiddle, much higher on
the Braes, to the north-east about a mile; but this, like a number
of other Gowrie villages has dwindled into obscurity with the
draining of the level plain, and the roads in consequence tending
to abandon the heights. There is still a large wood of that name.
Kinnaird
village itself sits on broken hillside terraces beside the ravine
of its own burn, facing south amongst its orchards, with no village
street or scheme of lay-out, but no less attractive therefor.
Some of the cottages still retain their thatched roofs. The church
dates only from 1815, and is a plain but pleasing building of
red stone, with a watch-house; presumably it was necessary to
counter the activities of body-snatchers even in this peaceful
and arcadian spot. The Threipland of Fingask burial-place flanks
the church door.
Kinnaird
Castle, not to be confused with the much larger seat of that name
in Angus, is much more in evidence here than is usual, not hidden
away in any large wooded estate but soaring impressively on an
open green knoll above the village, still occupied and in good
order. It is an interesting and dramatic place, a tall, red-stone
keep of the 15th century with earlier nucleus, thick-walled, with
a small projecting tower or buttress at one corner, which is not
a stair-tower, as it seems, and highly unusual, its summit forming
a watch-chamber at high parapet level. Another unusual feature
is the two-storeyed 17th century addition to the east-for this
is not actually attached to the keep. It contains an old kitchen
with an enormous arched fireplace 13 feet wide by 6 deep, with
an outside service window, evidently for viands to be pushed through
for the castle's family. Hot dishes cannot have been a speciality
at Kinnaird.
It
is claimed that one Randolph Rufus obtained, from William the
Lyon, these lands in 1170; and his descendants took their name
therefrom. One, Sir Richard Kinnaird of that Ilk, married his
son Reginald to the heiress of Sir John Kirkcaldy of Inchture,
and so gained these neighbouring carselands, in the time of Robert
III. Just when the Kinnairds moved to live at Moncur Castle, nearer
Inchture (now itself a ruin and abandoned by them for Rossie Priory
in the vicinity) is not clear. But Sir Patrick Threipland, 1st
Baronet of Fingask, bought Kinnaird in the 17th century. Just
beforehand, in 1617, James VI on a rare return visit to Scotland,
spent some days hunting from here. Later the castle became ruinous,
but happily was restored towards the close of the last century.
If
you would like to visit this area as part of a highly personalized
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