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Tour
Inchture In The Carse Of Gowrie
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.
If you would like to visit this area as part of a highly personalized
small group tour of my native Scotland please e-mail me:
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