Innerpeffray,
Madderty and Kinkell. These areas of the great and wide tract
of mid-Strathearn lie between Gask and Crieff, the first two
on the north side of the Earn, Kinkell on the south. Although
they contain no true villages, they have always had their own
importance in Scotland's story, their names recurring again
and again over the centuries. These are level, fertile lands,
between the Ochils and the Highland hills, dotted with farms,
woodlands and old estates.
Innerpeffray
is a strange place to find down at the end of a mile-long and
unmetalled side-road, near the steep banks of the river, a place
packed with history and interest, yet not even a hamlet. Here,
there is a nationally-renowned ancient library, a pre-Reformation
chapel of some distinction, an early endowed school and a ruined
castle. The chapel was old in 1508, when it rebuilt by the first
Lord Drummond, father of James IV's love, Margaret Drummond,
as a Collegiate foundation, and long used as the burial-place
of that great family, later Earls of Perth. It is a typically
long and low, two apartment building, with stone-slated roof,
warm sandstone dressings and moulded doorways. There is a niche
high on the east gable, and a leper's squint in the north wall,
where the unfortunates could watch the celebration of Mass without
entering the church. Also a stone altar, part of a painted ceiling
and a priest's loft.
Nearby is
the handsome whitewashed 18th century building which houses
the famous Innerpeffray Library, the oldest surviving public
library in Scotland, and still open to the public. There are
about three thousand volumes shelved in a fine, well-lit room
on the upper floor, many of great age and value, one of the
most interesting being the great Marquis of Montrose's personal
pocket Bible, in French, bearing his autograph. The library
was founded in 1691 by David Drummond, 3rd Lord Madderty, Montrose's
brother-in-law, who also endowed the school in an adjoining
building. Many of the books were added, about sixty years later
by Robert Hay Drummond, Archbishop of Canterbury, who had inherited
Innerpeffray and other great estates, and who erected the present
library building.
The castle
is not often visited, being not visible from the rest, on lower
ground at a bend of the river to the east. It is ruinous, but
the main features survive, a commodious L-planned house of the
early '7th century, built by James Drummond, first Lord Madderty,
younger brother of the 3rd Lord Drummond, and whose nephews
became Earls of Perth and of Melfort, and ruled Scotland between
them, for James VII in London. Grazing cattle alone now inherit
all this circumstance.
Madderty
parish covers nearly five thousand acres in mid-strath, its
comparatively modern church having no village nearer than the
hamlet of St. Davids, a mile away. But this must have been a
highly populous area once, for just to the north-east is the
site of the Abbey of Inchaffray, one of the great ancient religious
houses of Scotland--now, alas, only a few neglected fangs and
fragments of masonry, mostly of fairly late date, with rubbish
dumped around. Yet this was the most favoured endowment of many
Scottish kings, an Augustinian foundation of great influence
and wealth, founded by Gilbert, 3rd Earl of Strathearn in 1200.
Its famous Abbot Maurice was Bruce's great supporter, who celebrated
the Mass before the Scots army at Bannockburn, and carried the
Brecbennoch of Columba throughout the battle. Another Abbot
was killed at Flodden. At the Reformation the huge lands were
erected into a temporal lordship for the infant James Drummond,
aforementioned, who became 1st Lord Madderty. It is shameful
that a people so attached as the Scots to their history should
abandon so many of their ancient monuments to utter neglect.
Not far to the east is the most attractive small fortified laird's
house of Williamstoun, now a farmhouse and in excellent condition.
It dates from the mid-, 7th century, with stair-tower and watch-chamber
reached by a tiny turnpike in an angle-turret. It was built
for the heir of Oliphant of Gask, who insisted on marrying the
minister of Trinity-Gask's young daughter, instead of the 45-year-old
sister of the Marquis of Douglas, and so was disinherited of
Gask in favour of his younger brother.
Also in
Madderty are two Roman camps, flanking Innerpeffray on either
side of the river; and two of the nine Signal Stations mentioned
under Gask. And there is, not far away, the oddly-named former
railway station of Highlandman, 2 miles south-east of Crieff.
Kinkell
is now best known, probably, for its bridge over the Earn--
for there is not another between Crieff and Dalreoch on the
main A.9, a stretch of nearly a dozen miles. But it was a place
of some importance once--a parish, indeed, and a notorious one:
Oh, what
a parish, what a terrible parish,
Oh, what a parish is that of Kinkell;
They hae hangit the minister, drowned the precentor,
Dang doon the steeple and drucken the bell!
This alludes
to the 17th century Reverend Richard Duncan, who was convicted
of child-murder and executed at Muthill, 4 miles away, much
to the anger of his parishioners, and just before the reprieve
they had sought reached Strathearn. The said parishioners thereupon
drowned the precentor in the Earn--presumably they considered
him the guilty party, though the dead child was found under
the minister's fireplace--and sold the church bell, possibly
to pay the expenses of the reprieve.
The ruined,
ancient pre-Reformation chapel of St. Bean is still there, near
the Machany Water's confluence with Earn, in a cottage garden,
with its overgrown graveyard around it, another typical two-apartment
building, with no particular features. Just across the road
is the lumpish and very plain yellow-washed successor, which
was formerly a United Presbyterian church. The fine bridge itself
hump-backed, four-arched and picturesque, is half a mile to
the north-west.