St Conan's Tower

St Conan's Tower is a 19th-century granite-built country house, near Lochawe in Argyll and Bute, Scotland.

Designed and built by architect, author and antiquarian Walter Douglas Campbell, a young brother of Archibald Campbell, 1st Baron Blythswood, St Conan's Tower was intended as a winter home for the family.[1] The granite for the house was quarried from Ben Cruachan, overlooking Loch Awe.[1] The Tower has been used variously since its sale by the Douglas Campbell family in 1924 as a family home, a youth hostel, a bed and breakfast establishment, and then back to a family home plus holiday apartment business. Walter Douglas Campbell also designed St Conan's Kirk and Innis Chonain House. He remained unmarried. His sister, Helen used St Conan's Tower for various house-parties.


Footnotes

  1. "St Conan's Tower Apartments". Archived from the original on 2007-06-22. Retrieved 2007-08-24.

gollark: Theft is surprise communism.
gollark: taxation is thefttheft is taxation
gollark: I don't trust myself to not randomly lose a USB stick.
gollark: And you need to enter specific characters of the password, so you can't use a password manager.
gollark: For their online banking thing, you need a password, but it's limited to 16 characters.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.