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Monkcastle, sometimes known as Old Monkcastle formed a small estate in the Parish of
Kilwinning Kilwinning (, sco, Kilwinnin; gd, Cill D’Fhinnein) is a town in North Ayrshire, Scotland. It is on the River Garnock, north of Irvine, about southwest of Glasgow. It is known as "The Crossroads of Ayrshire". Kilwinning was also a Civil Pa ...
, North Ayrshire lying between Kilwinning and Dalry on the A737. The property was originally held by the Tironensian monks of
Kilwinning Abbey Kilwinning Abbey is a ruined abbey located in the centre of the town of Kilwinning, North Ayrshire. History Establishment of the Abbey Kilwinning was a Tironensian Benedictine monastic community, named after Tiron in the diocese of Chart ...
and was probably the site of the abbot's country retreat. The 17th-century Monkcastle is a category B listed ruin, although it has been consolidated and stands next to a private house, constructed from the converted old home farm buildings. The 19th-century mansion of Monkcastle House is nearby, and is also category B listed. The castle may have been used as a dower house or retreat.


History

Timothy Pont Rev Timothy Pont (c. 1560–c.1627) was a Scottish minister, cartographer and topographer. He was the first to produce a detailed map of Scotland. Pont's maps are among the earliest surviving to show a European country in minute detail, from an ...
, in about 1606, described Monkcastle as "a pretty fair building veill planted".


Abbots of Kilwinning

Monkcastle was the administrative centre for the north-west portion of the extensive estates held by the monks of
Kilwinning Abbey Kilwinning Abbey is a ruined abbey located in the centre of the town of Kilwinning, North Ayrshire. History Establishment of the Abbey Kilwinning was a Tironensian Benedictine monastic community, named after Tiron in the diocese of Chart ...
. Rents were collected here, leases arranged, etc. It was associated with the monk's mill at Craigmill, Dalry.Hay, Page 11 The commendator abbot, Alexander Hamilton, became the Duke of Chatelherault, and under this French title he obtained the tower of Monkland,Campbell, Page 226 later Monkcastle, from the last abbot, Gavin Hamilton. He also obtained Dalgarven, Auchenkist, and Birklands. Monkcastle was a "part of the ancient halydom of Kilwinning, which about this time was beginning to be parcelled out by the Abbots, to whoever would best remunerate them for the ostensible gift, foreseeing that their own possession was becoming doubtful and unsteady." Alexander passed the property to Claud, his third son, who became Commendator of Paisley, at the age of ten, duly ratified and approved by Pope Julius III in 1553;Douglas, Page 1 this may account for the mitred head which appears in a panel above the doorway, together with other sculptures, typical of early 17th-century castles and also found at sites such as Barholm, Ardblair, and Dundarave. Salter sees two of the carvings as being lizards with human heads.Salter, Page 54 They appear to be more like
head lice The head louse (''Pediculus humanus capitis'') is an obligate ectoparasite of humans. Head lice are wingless insects that spend their entire lives on the human scalp and feeding exclusively on human blood. Humans are the only known hosts of thi ...
.


Monkcastle

The ruins of Monkcastle are in woodland to the west of the A737 trunk road on the right bank of the River Garnock, south of Dalry and north of Kilwinning and represent a small, late 16th century laird's house which has replaced earlier structures; a Monkcastle is recorded in 1536.Love, Page 53 The castle measures around 48 ft by 18 ft, standing two storeys high, with a central staircase tower projecting, and rising one storey higher. The entirely ruinous interior has extensive brickwork and concrete supports; the ground floor is vaulted. The entrance door is unusually wide and low, with carvings above. The building is domestic, rather than military in style, with corbie-stepped gables and stones laid in courses. In 1895 Smith records the castle ruins as having been recently restored, suggesting consolidation work. The Rev. William Lee Kerr in 1900 described the castle as ruinous and made reference to cellars ''"which can still be traced underground."'' No such cellars are visible today (2011). Nearby the ruins there are said to be the jumbled remains of an ancient dovecot,Smith, Page 61 in appearance more like an ice house. The OS map shows a formal garden to the south of the castle ruins. Rob Close sees similarities with Crosbie Castle, Prestwick.


Monkcastle House

Alexander-William Miller built the surviving Monkcastle House nearby, circa 1820, probably designed by the architect David Hamilton and similar in architectural style to Swindridgemuir.Close, Page 89 John Campbell Arbuthnott, 16th Viscount of Arbuthnott married in 1949 Kathleen Maude Eginton Grant, only child and heiress of Charles Edward Grant of Monkcastle. Monkcastle House is in 2010 the private dwelling of Sir Charles Stuart-Menteth, 7th Baronet of Closeburn and Mansefield.


The estate

In 1866 the estate amounted to around 360 acres. William Campbell Miller died intestate at the age of fifteen in 1857. At the time of his death his town residence was Saxe Coburg Hall, Edinburgh, and the following properties were listed in the inventory of his estate: Baidlandhill and Windyedge in the parish of Dalry; Hill of Fergushill, Kilwinning parish; Craighead, and Craighead Mill; High Monkcastle and Low Monkcastle; Hillend; Mansion House Grange; Cottages at Old House; Crofthead; Heatterhill; Bannock; and Monkridding House. Under the ownership of the Grant family the farms were progressively sold off until only the core of the estate remained. An old lane, probably built by the monks for their tenants, ran from the monk's mill at Craigmill in Lynn Glen via Craighead and then down to Monkcastle via High Monkcastle, joining the road to Kilwinning Abbey itself. In 1691 the ''Hearth Tax Rolls'' record the following people and hearths on the estate: Montcastell housse 6; Martha Docheon 1;James Miller, Bryheid 1; Robert Miller, Cragmylne (In margin "no payet") 1; Robert Boyll 1; Robert Gaven 1; George Logane 1; William Miller 1; John Wilsonne 1; John Stewart 2. The "Black Man"'s path ran from Old Monkcastle to Monkcastle House, named after a servant of the Grant's of Monkcastle House, Antonio Escazio, who walked this route regularly. It is not known which country this individual came from, however San Antonio de Escazu is a town in Costa Rica; he is buried in Kilwinning Cemetery. An old cholera pit is located in the grounds of nearby Monkcastle House, dating from the 1830s. Alexander-William Miller was an enthusiastic agricultural reformer and actively controlled the farming of most of the Monkcastle estate. He encouraged 'spade husbandry' and regularly achieved a crop of sixty to seventy bushels per acre, whilst with the plough only thirty was generally produced.


The Monkcastle lairds


The Hamiltons

Lord Claud Hamilton, third son of Alexander, was created
Lord Paisley Lord is an appellation for a person or deity who has authority, control, or power over others, acting as a master, chief, or ruler. The appellation can also denote certain persons who hold a title of the peerage in the United Kingdom, or a ...
on 20 July 1552. He was a great adherent to the cause of Queen Mary and after the
Battle of Langside The Battle of Langside was fought on 13 May 1568 between forces loyal to Mary, Queen of Scots, and forces acting in the name of her infant son James VI. Mary’s short period of personal rule ended in 1567 in recrimination, intrigue, and disast ...
his lands were confiscated and passed to Lord Semple who ''exercised all around a severe military discipline, displaying every violence and oppression on that power can do, to maintain a precarious position.'' By 1573 the lands had been returned to Lord Claud Hamilton.Douglas, Page 2 Claud's son, James, was created
Earl of Abercorn Earl () is a rank of the nobility in the United Kingdom. The title originates in the Old English word ''eorl'', meaning "a man of noble birth or rank". The word is cognate with the Scandinavian form '' jarl'', and meant "chieftain", particula ...
, Baron of Paisley, Hamilton, Mountcastle (sic), and Kilpatrick in 1604Dobie, Page 330 or 1606; in the same year he was appointed as one of the commissioners to ''treat of an union with England.'' In 1621, James, second earl, inherited the ''8 merk lands of old extent of Monkcastle''. In 1648, the lands of Upper and Lower Monkcastle and others passed to James, Duke of Hamilton. At this time (1661) Hugh, Earl of Eglinton, still claimed the lands as a right of superiority in his role of 'Lord of Erection' of Kilwinning Abbey. In 1673, Ann, Duchess of Hamilton, and Susanna, Countess of Cassilis, were heirs of these lands to their father, James, Duke of Hamilton.Dobie, Page 331


Hay, Wallace, Cuninghame, Coleman, and others

The Earl of Abercorn sold the lands to George Hay, who then conveyed them to the Lairds of Dunlop and Pitcon. John Wallace, minister of
Largs Largs ( gd, An Leargaidh Ghallda) is a town on the Firth of Clyde in North Ayrshire, Scotland, about from Glasgow. The original name means "the slopes" (''An Leargaidh'') in Scottish Gaelic. A popular seaside resort with a pier, the town mark ...
, obtained the Monkcastle lands and his son, George, sold them to an advocate, Adam Cuninghame. Adam's sister, Jean, sold the lands to Alexander Miller in 1723 with the permission of her husband, David Forrester of Denovan. The property in 2010 is owned by Major John Coleman.


The Millers

Alexander Miller obtained the lands of Monkcastle and Craigmill in 1723. Alexander Miller was a merchant and burgess of Glasgow, dying shortly after his purchase of the estate. His father was William Miller and had two sons, the other being William, also a merchant in Glasgow.Paterson, Page 510 The property passed to his elder brother, William Miller, who married Jean Nimmo of Bridgehouse in Linlithgow in 1727, acquiring through this marriage Netherhill House, in the parish of
Torphichen Torphichen ( ) is a historic small village located north of Bathgate in West Lothian, Scotland. The village is approximately 18 miles (20 km) west of Edinburgh, 7 miles (11 km) south-east of Falkirk and 4 miles (6 km) south-west of Linlithgow. ...
. He died in 1757 at the age of 97, leaving two sons. The estate passed to the elder son, William, who in 1773 married Agnes Cunninghame, daughter of George Cuninghame of Monkredding. Agnes inherited one third of the estate of Monkredding when her brother, Fergusson Cuninghame, died without heir. On William’s death in 1802, he was succeeded by his only child, William Alexander Miller (known as Alexander). Alexander Miller married Warner, daughter of Patrick Warner of Ardeer, and had nine children. He died in 1828, and was succeeded by his eldest son, William. William Miller died in 1802, he was succeeded by his only child, William Alexander Miller (known as Alexander). Alexander Miller married a daughter of Patrick Warner of Ardeer, and had nine children. Alexander died in 1828, and was succeeded by his eldest son, William. William Miller, born in 1801, was a member of the Faculty of Advocates, a commissioner of supply in Ayr, as well as provincial grand master of the Freemasons in Ayr. He married Anna Maria Campbell in 1830 and had three sons and two daughters. The two older sons predeceased him, and upon the death of William Miller in 1846, the estate passed to his youngest son, William Campbell Miller. William died intestate at the age of fifteen in 1857 and the estates passed to his sisters. His town residence had been Saxe Coburg Hall, Edinburgh. Monkredding, and an equal share of the combined estates, passed to Agnes Miller as the eldest sister. In 1802 her son William Alexander inherited, married the second daughter of Patrick Warner of Ardeer and had a son William, who inherited in 1828. William Alexander, who had lived at Monkcastle, married Anna Maria, second daughter of Admiral Campbell of the Portuguese Navy. William Campbell Miller died unmarried in 1857 and his sisters inherited. Eliza Maria Louisa had married Thomas Miller Walnut of the 74th Highlanders and Alexandrina Georgina Campbell of Monkcastle had married Keith McAlister of Glen-bar, Argyllshire and lived at Monkredding. The family motto was 'Forward' and the crest a ''lion erect, holding in his paws a cross meline of the second''.


Industry and transport

The monks established a network of tracks that linked their properties, one of which ran via Dalgarven Mill to Monkcastle and onto Craigmill via Craighead. Such tracks were necessary for many reasons, not least the obligation of
thirlage Thirlage was a feudal servitude (or astriction) under Scots law restricting manorial tenants in the milling of their grain for personal or other uses. Vassals in a feudal barony were thirled to their local mill owned by the feudal superior. Peo ...
, by which tenants had to take their corn to be ground at the mills held by the monks.


Minerals


Monkcastle fireclay mine

Until 1945 the Douglas Firebrick Company Ltd had its works located where the Wilson Car Auction company now trades (2010).Douglas Firebrick Company Limited.
/ref> A double track narrow gauge railway, working through a gravity driven 'cable and pulleys' system ran from the works to the fireclay mine on the lands of High Monkcastle. The surface of the
inclined plane railroad Incline, inclined, inclining, or inclination may refer to: *Grade (slope), the tilt, steepness, or angle from horizontal of a topographic feature (hillside, meadow, etc.) or constructed element (road, railway, field, etc.) *Slope, the tilt, steepn ...
was paved with firebricks, for employees to walk up the tracks to get to the main Dalry to Kilwinning road where they could catch a bus. The small brick structure gave them shelter from the weather, while they waited.


Bessie Dunlop of Lynn

On 8 November 1576, midwife Bessie Dunlop, resident of Lynne, in Dalry, was accused of sorcery and witchcraft. She answered her accusers that she received information on prophecies or to the whereabouts of lost goods from a Thomas Reid, a former barony officer in Dalry who died at the
Battle of Pinkie The Battle of Pinkie, also known as the Battle of Pinkie Cleugh ( , ), took place on 10 September 1547 on the banks of the River Esk near Musselburgh, Scotland. The last pitched battle between Scotland and England before the Union of the Crow ...
some 30 years before. She said she first met him while walking between her own house and the yard of Monkcastle, and after a discussion he disappeared through a hole in a wall or dyke, apparently too small for a normal person to pass through. Bessie also met with the warlock Laird of Auchenskeigh at a thorn tree near to Monkcastle. She said she was trained by her “familiar” on how to make and use ointments to heal livestock and people. She was said to have cured and advised various people from poor children to gentry. As a “wise woman” her strange efforts at the time attracted the attention of the law. Her abilities were more akin to today’s current psychics, and with an understanding of medicinal herbs, she was identified in a time of witchcraft hysteria. It resulted in a conviction and the tragic outcome was that she was burnt at the stake at Castle Hill in Edinburgh in 1576. Alternatively, she is said to have been burned at the stake at Corsehillmuir, just outside Kilwinning.


Monkcastle Glen

A rocky glen runs up from Monkcastle with a significant waterfall and a listing as part of a
Scottish Wildlife Trust The Scottish Wildlife Trust is a registered charity dedicated to conserving the wildlife and natural environment of Scotland. Description The Scottish Wildlife Trust has well over 35,000 members. The Scottish Wildlife Trust acquired its first ...
local site for nature conservation. The glen was partly formed from quarrying work for freestone.OS Maps
Retrieved: 2010-10-03
A previous course of the Monkcastle Burn can still be followed and this probably resulted from the quarrying intruding into the original course of the burn at the head of the glen resulting in a waterfall and the burn then following the bed of the glen itself. The geology consists of Carboniferous limestone, macroporphyritic
basalt Basalt (; ) is an aphanitic (fine-grained) extrusive igneous rock formed from the rapid cooling of low-viscosity lava rich in magnesium and iron (mafic lava) exposed at or very near the surface of a rocky planet or moon. More than 90 ...
, and an overlay of basalt and boulder clay. The quarry workers are thought to have made used of Old Monkcastle as office space for storage, etc. The OS maps show that quarrying had ceased by the start of the 20th century. The woodland policies at Monkcastle are classified as one of the relatively few North Ayrshire 'Ancient Woodland' sites. Aspen (Populus tremulans) has been recorded here; liverworts, ferns, and mosses are common due to the conditions of continuous high humidity. The
Scottish Wildlife Trust The Scottish Wildlife Trust is a registered charity dedicated to conserving the wildlife and natural environment of Scotland. Description The Scottish Wildlife Trust has well over 35,000 members. The Scottish Wildlife Trust acquired its first ...
(SWT) have designated Monkcastle as part of Listed Wildlife or Local Site for Nature Conservation (LSNC) number 27, together with Monkcastle House, Dalgarven and Smithstone. Aspen (
Populus tremula ''Populus tremula'' (commonly called aspen, common aspen, Eurasian aspen, European aspen, or quaking aspen) is a species of poplar native to cool temperate regions of Europe and Asia, from Iceland and the British IslesJames KilkellIrish native ...
) is the most notable species present, however the presence of Broad-leafed Helleborine ( Epipactis helleborine) indicates a woodland containing many mature deciduous trees of some habitat value, together with wet flushes containing yellow flag iris, soft rush, lesser spearwort and golden saxifrage.


Mick's Pond

An area of open water known as Mick's Pond was created for John Coleman by Michael McMorn in the 2000s to the north and this site has been successful in attracting a good number and diversity of waterfowl to the habitats created. Several hardwood trees within the policies have been added to the
Woodland Trust The Woodland Trust is the largest woodland conservation charity in the United Kingdom and is concerned with the creation, protection, and restoration of native woodland heritage. It has planted over 50 million trees since 1972. The Woodland Tr ...
s 'Ancient and Notable Trees' register.


Micro-history

In February 1903 the Ardrossan and Saltcoats Herald recorded that "Through the kindness of Mr and Mrs Grant of Monkcastle, the tenentry and servants were entertained to their annual supper and dance on Friday evening. Over 50 were present". In 1780 it was legally settled that the right of the superiority deriving from the Duke of Hamilton was stronger than that arising from the Earl of Eglinton. In the 'Memorables of Robin Cummell' the castle is said to have built by the ''"Wee Pechs, langsyne."'' Pechs are translatable as pygmies, picts, or essentially the 'wee folk'. The 'Monkcastle' element of the title 'Duke of Abercorn, Paisley and Monkcastle' has transmogrified into 'Mountcastle' and several streets in
Edinburgh Edinburgh ( ; gd, Dùn Èideann ) is the capital city of Scotland and one of its 32 council areas. Historically part of the county of Midlothian (interchangeably Edinburghshire before 1921), it is located in Lothian on the southern shore of t ...
have acquired this version of the placename.Tranter, Page 49 J. Archibald Brownlie of Monkcastle married Jessie Clark daughter of Robert Clark. Captain Alexander Montgomerie lived at Monkcastle House in the 20th century. Kilwinning Monkcastle was the name of a local football club, formed as a senior team in 1883 and disbanded in 1900 due to mounting debts. James Allan, born at Monkcastle, played successively for Monkcastle, Kilwinning, Queen’s Park, and appeared occasionally for (Glasgow) Rangers. Mr Miller of Monkcastle was one of the official guests at the Eglinton Tournament of 1839.Aikman, Page 8


See also

*
Bessie Dunlop of Lynn Bessie Dunlop, Elizabeth Dunlop or Elizabeth Jack (died 1576), was an Ayrshire farmer's wife who was 'burned at the stake' at Edinburgh for the crime of sorcery, witchcraft, incantations, etc. Her case was unusual in the amount of fine detail re ...
* Towerlands, North Ayrshire


References

;Notes ;Sources # Aikman, James (1839). ''An Account of the Tournament at Eglinton''. Edinburgh: Hugh Paton. # Campbell, Thorbjørn (2003). ''Ayrshire. A Historical Guide''. Edinburgh: Birlinn. # Chalmers, Alexander (1885). ''Domestic Annals of Scotland''. Edinburgh: W & R Chambers. # Close, Robert (1992), ''Ayrshire and Arran: An Illustrated Architectural Guide''. Pub. Roy Inc Arch Scot. . # Coventry, Martin (2010). ''Castles of the Clans''. Musselburgh: Goblinshead. . # Davis, Michael C. (1991). ''The Castles and Mansions of Ayrshire.'' Ardrishaig: Spindrift Press. # Dobie, James D. (ed Dobie, J.S.) (1876). ''Cunninghame, Topographized by Timothy Pont 1604–1608, with continuations and illustrative notices''. Glasgow: John Tweed. # Douglas, Robert (1764). ''The Peerage of Scotland.'' Edinburgh: R. Fleming printers. # Finnie, E. (1985). ''The House of Hamilton: Patronage, Politics and the Church in the Reformation Period.'' Innes Review. V. 36. No. 1. # Hay, John (1967). ''Kilwinning Parish. A Short History.'' Session of the Abbey Church. # Love, Dane (2003). ''Ayrshire : Discovering a County. Ayr'' : Fort Publishing. . # Love, Dane (2009). ''Legendary Ayrshire. Custom: Folklore: Tradition''. Auchinleck: Carn. . # MacGibbon, T. and Ross, D. (1887–92). ''The castellated and domestic architecture of Scotland from the twelfth to the eighteenth centuries'', V.4, Edinburgh. # McMichael, George (1895). ''Notes on the Way Through Ayrshire. Ayr'' : Hugh Henry. # Ness, John (1990). ''Kilwinning Encyclopedia.'' Kilwinning & District Preservation Society. # Paterson, James (1863–66). ''History of the Counties of Ayr and Wigton. V. - II - Cunninghame''. Edinburgh: J. Stillie. # Salter, Mike (20060). ''The Castles of South-West Scotland.'' Malvern: Folly. . # Service, John (1913). ''The Memorables of Robin Cummell''. Paisley: Alexander Gardner. # Tranter, Nigel (1977). ''The Fortified House in Scotland. Volume 3, South-West Scotland.'' Edinburgh : The Mercat Press.


External links


Video and narration - History of Monkcastle Glen

Parks & Gardens
Retrieved: 2010-11-18
Francis Frith Collection
Retrieved: 2010-11-18

Retrieved: 2010-12-14 {{Castles in North Ayrshire Buildings and structures in North Ayrshire Kilwinning