Ardclach Bell Tower
Ardclach Bell Tower origin
The small door and lack of windows on Ardclach Bell Tower’s ground floor indicates that it was designed as a prison. The floor above, reached by a narrow stone stair, features:
a fireplace in the north wall
pistol holes on each side of the fireplace and on the south wall
a small square window in the west wall
Statement of Significance
You can find out more about Ardclach Bell Tower and the theories about its use by reading our Statement of Significance.
A Covenanter’s watch tower
The bell tower was probably built by Alexander Brodie of Lethen – the initials MGB, likely standing for his second wife Margaret Grant, are carved above the second-floor fireplace.
Alexander Brodie was a noted Covenanter (pledged to uphold Presbyterianism), whose support for the Presbyterian cause led to several attacks on his estate. He may have built the tower as a watchtower and prison in anticipation of further trouble.
The little belfry on the south gable was likely added later, with the construction of the parish kirk, now disused, in a hollow below the knoll.
Discover more on trove.scot
See archive photographs of Ardclach, plus archaeology notes and more on trove.scot.