Ardgowan Castle

Ardgowan Castle, originally called Inverkip Castle, is located in the grounds of Ardgowan House near Inverkip, Scotland. It is near the Firth of Clyde in Inverclyde, in the former county of Renfrewshire. The three-storey ruin of the 15th century tower house is protected as a category B listed building.[1]

Ardgowan Castle
Ardgowan Castle entrance stair
Coordinates55.9158°N 4.8727°W / 55.9158; -4.8727
Listed Building – Category B
Designated10 June 1971
Reference no.LB13642
Location of Ardgowan Castle in Inverclyde

Location

The castle is sited on a promontory of a raised beach jutting out at a height of 60 feet (18 m) above coastal flats, with a level top defended by steep slopes or cliffs to each side of the point.[2] At one time, this was the location of a watch tower to fend off Viking raiders.[3] Inverkip Castle later became an important medieval fortress.[4]

History

Ardgowan Castle atop south-east facing cliff

Inverkip Castle featured in what was later called the First War of Scottish Independence. In 1301, king Edward I of England sent two armies into Scotland, with the plan that they would meet up at Inverkip. The main force under his own command struck through the east of Scotland, while his son Edward, Prince of Wales, commanded a western army which captured Turnberry Castle and Bothwell Castle, but the armies then met at Linlithgow to overwinter.[4]

In 1302 Robert the Bruce, Earl of Carrick, submitted homage to Edward of England, and on 12 May 1303 Bruce provided forces to a muster at Roxburgh. While Edward invaded the east of Scotland, in July he ordered a contingent including Bruce and Aymer de Valence to press up through Clydesdale, and meet a large seaborne force led by Bruce's father-in-law the Earl of Ulster which attacked Rothesay Castle then besieged Inverkip Castle. By early September the joint force had taken both fortresses.[5][6] Bruce is said to have taken part in the fight to seize Inverkip Castle,[3] and then had the task of getting the siege engines north for the English assault on Stirling Castle: on 16 April 1304 Edward wrote to thank Bruce, referring in particular to the problem of finding "a waggon fit to carry the frame" of "the great engine of Inverkip".[7]

In 1306, Inverkip was held for Edward by the Lothian Scot Sir Adam Gordon. Around mid March the castle was besieged by supporters of King Robert the Bruce, led by Robert Boyd of Cunningham.[8] On 24 July 1306, after Bruce's defeat at the Battle of Methven, Edward gave orders that Sir Thomas Randolph was to be held prisoner in Inverkip castle, supervised by Gordon, with no option of bail: by September of 1307 he had apparently been freed.[9]

When Bruce's ally Sir James Douglas defeated Sir Philip Mowbray in 1307, Sir Philip left his forces and escaped to Inverkip Castle, as described in John Barbour's The Brus:

Sync throu the Largis, him allane
Till Ennerkip the way he tane,
Rigcht to the castell that wes then
Stuffyt all with Ingless men,
That him resaiffyt in daynte.[10]

The English men later escaped from the castle by sea.[11]

The Ardgowan Estate

Ardgowan Castle, to the right of the lawn leading up to Ardgowan House.

In 1403, King Robert III granted the lands of Ardgowan to his natural son, Sir John Stewart.[2] Ardgowan castle, now a ruin, is a tower house built within the site of the earlier castle, and is dated to the late 15th century. It is sited on the south edge of the promontory, perched on a cliff.[8]

In 1667 Archibald Stewart was created a baronet. The 3rd baronet married, in 1730, Helen Houston, heiress of the Shaws of Greenock. Their son Sir John Shaw Stewart, 4th Baronet, commissioned a design for Ardgowan House from the architect Hugh Cairncross.[2] Construction began in 1797, and was completed around 1801, after which the old castle was abandoned. Its ruin was consolidated and repaired in 1936.[8]

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References

  1. Historic Environment Scotland. "ARDGOWAN CASTLE (RUIN), 200 YDS. SW OF ARDGOWAN HOUSE, INVERKIP.  (Category B) (LB13642)". Retrieved 30 December 2018.
  2. Historic Environment Scotland. "Ardgowan (GDL00021)". Retrieved 30 December 2018.
  3. Shaw Stewart, Ludo (9 December 2015). "The History of Ardgowan Estate". Ardgowan House. Retrieved 25 June 2018.
  4. David. R. Ross (1999). On the Trail of Robert the Bruce. Dundurn. pp. 24–25. ISBN 978-0-946487-52-3.
  5. Michael Penman (5 August 2014). Robert the Bruce: King of the Scots. Yale University Press. pp. 103–. ISBN 978-0-300-14872-5.
  6. Colm McNamee (1 November 2012). Robert Bruce: Our Most Valiant Prince, King and Lord. Birlinn. pp. 95–96. ISBN 978-0-85790-496-6.
  7. Alexander Falconer Murison (July 1899). "King Robert the Bruce". Project Gutenberg. Retrieved 22 May 2018.
  8. Historic Environment Scotland. "Ardgowan Castle (41379)". Canmore. Retrieved 30 December 2018.
  9. John Barbour (1 July 2010). The Bruce. Canongate Books. p. 104. ISBN 978-1-84767-594-1.
  10. G Blair (1907) Greenock Street Names: Their History and Romance
  11. Monteith, Joy; MacDougall, Sandra (1981). Gourock, Inverkip and Wemyss Bay. Greenock: Inverclyde District Libraries. p. 38. ISBN 0-9500687-2-1. OCLC 856626917.
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