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Innerpeffray Castle

This castle is in the Perth and Kinross Council and the Crieff Parish.
Scheduled Monument record on the Portal.
Listed Building record on the Portal.

Description

The castle is an L-shaped structure, with the main block aligned from north to south, and with the wing projecting from the south end of the west face; the spacious stair that connected the main levels was within a projection set in the re-entrant angle. The tower was of two principal storeys above the basement, though there appears to have been an extra storey in the wing, reached by a small stair corbelled out in the angle between the wing and the stair projection.

The basement is divided into a series of four barrel-vaulted chambers, with a corridor interconnecting three of them; the fourth, in the wing, was the kitchen, and has retained its fireplace and bread oven. There are a number of shot-holes of inverted key-hole type at basement level. At first floor level the hall occupied about two-thirds of the main block, with the dais probably at its northern end, and with the fireplace in the west wall; on the evidence of chases in the masonry, it seems the dais end of the hall may have been lined with wainscot. There are two rooms off the southern end of the hall, one in the main block and the other in the wing; these probably served as the inner and outer chambers of the owner's lodging.

It seems likely that the main body of the castle was built in the central decades of the sixteenth century, but that it was modified in the early seventeenth century. The chief surviving evidence for those modifications is now the five large rectangular windows piercing the east wall of the hall and outer chamber.

A courtyard was enclosed on the west side of the castle, which would presumably have contained a number of ancillary buildings. It was entered by a gateway immediately adjacent to the north-west-corner of the castle, of which one jamb and arch springing survive. The castle is likely to have been surrounded by extensive outer courtyards and gardens. Possible traces of these appear to be evident to its north on a number of aerial photographs, though the large first-floor windows to the hall and outer chamber suggest there would also have been gardens on the east side.

History

It is not known when there was first a residence on the site of the present castle, though there was certainly a house of some kind by the later thirteenth century; at that time it was owned by the earls of Strathearn, who are known to have signed charters here. The estates appear to have been in the hands of the Mercer family in the fifteenth century, but by the start of the following century they had passed to the Drummond family; it was presumably on this site that John, the first Lord Drummond, lived when he established a college in the nearby church in 1505-7.

The basis of the present building was presumably established after 1543, when the estates were granted to John Drummond, and by 1554 there are references to a fortalice and manor. Further extensive works are said to have been carried out in 1610 for John Drummond, first Lord Madderty, in about 1610. The Drummonds of Innerpeffray appear to have been a family with wide intellectual interests, and in 1680 the third Lord Madderty established a library within the secularised collegiate church. This was removed to the adjacent purpose-built library in 1758-62.

Status

The castle is substantially complete to the wall head on all but the east side, though there have been localised collapses of masonry, including the wall between the two chambers and most of the stair.

Conservation Options

The castle is not currently a candidate for restoration, but it is included in the register as an example of the type of structure that could lend itself to restoration and modern occupation without excessive difficulty. Its relative completeness would mean that it could be restored with a high degree of authenticity.

Bibliography

J Gifford, The buildings of Scotland, Perth and Kinross, New Haven and London, 2007, p 426

D MacGibbon and T Ross, The castellated and domestic architecture of Scotland, vol 2, Edinburgh, 1887, pp 193-5

R Oram and G Stell, Lordship and architecture in medieval and Renaissance Scotland, Edinburgh, 2005, pp 26-32

J. Zeune, The long pause? a reconsideration of Scottish castle-building c1480-1560, (unpublished typescript), Munich, 1984, p 4

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