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Field Visit

Date 22 November 1996

Event ID 1037326

Category Recording

Type Field Visit

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1037326

The former parish church of Newhills stands on an elevated hilltop site with broad views to the N, E and S. The building, a simple rectangle in plan, measures 20.05m from E to W by 7.45m transversely overall, and is now a roofless shell. However, except for a stretch of the N wall, which has been removed, and the NE and SE quoins, which have been robbed, it remains largely intact to wall-head height. The building is constructed of coursed granite. All openings in the building are of also of granite, and bear a narrow chamfer.

A centrally placed doorway in the E gable gives access to the church. A row of timber sockets for a loft runs across the inner face of the gable at lintel height and continues onto the adjacent sections of the N and S side walls. The loft was lit by an internally splayed, rectangular-headed window in the gable. The gable is surmounted by a ball-finial. The S wall is pierced by five rectangular windows, again internally splayed. An aumbry between the first and second from the E houses a bronze plaque commemorating the church’s construction by George Davidson in 1665. Built into the jamb of the fourth window from the E is a slab commemorating Mr James Howe, minister (d.1768), and his brother Mr Alexander Howe, minister of Methlick and Tarves (d.1765). The fifth window has been built up. The W gable, as with the E, contains a doorway, and above it, a window. The gable is surmounted by the base of a bellcote, now removed.

The church was built between 1662 and 1663 by George Davidson of Pettens, burgess of Aberdeen, who mortified his estate of Newhills to provide for its construction and for the provision of a minister. It was intended to serve the western portion of the large parish of St Machar, but in 1666 this area was disjoined, and erected into a new parish of Newhills. The church continued to serve the parish until 1830 when a building on a new site was constructed. The bell of the present church, which bears the date 1788, may have belonged to its predecessor (Cruickshank 1934, 12-17).

Writing c.1818-20, James Logan described the church as having the pulpit against the S wall, and galleries on three sides. Access to the gallery on the N side was by an external flight of stone stairs. Two sketches by Logan record the inscribed pediment, armorial panel and painted canopy of George Davidson’s pew, which stood on the S side of the church. The Howe monument noted above had already been inserted into its present position in the window splay. The roof of the church was not ceiled. (Cruickshank 1941, 63-7)

Visited by RCAHMS (IF, AW), 22 November 1996.

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