Field Visit
Date 3 February 1921
Event ID 1114484
Category Recording
Type Field Visit
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1114484
Cramond Tower.
Within the parks of Cramond House, and only a few yards distant from the mansion, stands the ruin of Cramond Tower, which probably dates from the late 15th or early 16th century. The site, which is at the mouth of the Almond, has been in occupation from an early period. The tower is, on plan, an oblong measuring externally 21 feet 8 inches from north to south by 24 ¾ feet from east to west; from the south-east angle there projects a circled stair-tower. Beneath the wall-head there are four storeys, of which the lowest and the uppermost are ceiled with barrel-vaults.
The tower is, to-day, freestanding, as it was originally, but at one period of its existence there stood against the east wall a three-storeyed addition, while a four-storeyed extension was reared against the west wall; against the north wall there may have been a two-storeyed addition. These outbuildings communicated with the main building on the upper floors, but only the western communicated at basement-level. The masonry of the tower is freestone rubble with dressed corners, and shell pinnings are extensively employed. The entrance is at ground level in the south wall at its junction with the stair-tower. The doorway has had a semicircular head, rebated, like the jambs, to accommodate outer and inner doors, but the outer rebate of the head has subsequently been cut upwards to accommodate a rectangular in place of a circled door-head. Above the entrance is a small lintelled window with arrises chamfered like those of the doorway. The upper windows are also lintelled and have their arrises variously rebated and chamfered. The stair lights are narrow.
In rear of the entrance a lobby, contrived within the thickness of the south wall, gives access to the basement on the north through an obtusely pointed arch-headed doorway, and to the staircase on the east through a lintelled doorway. The stair is a vice 2 feet 6 inches wide; it ascends from ground level to the extrados of the upper vault, where it has terminated in a cap-house. In passage it gave access to the single chamber, contained on each floor.
The basement floor is beneath the entrance level. The chamber measures 15 feet 7 inches by 11 feet 10 inches, is ceiled with a pointed barrel vault, and, at present, is lit only from the window above the entrance, though the access to the west outbuilding may originally have been a light. The first-floor chamber or hall had in each wall a window, lintelled externally, but with segmental scontion arches; two windows, on being closed up, were utilised as cupboards, the fronts being panelled in Memel pine. At the southern light the sill has been lowered, and the wall in which it is set is thinned to increase the floor area, the impending wall above being borne, not on an arch, but on timber beams. In the west wall is the fireplace, which, at a subsequent period, was contracted. The original jambs, which are rounded at the arris, are flush with the wall face; the projecting hood is borne on a thin stone lintel, supported by corbels at either end. The original stone kerb remains in situ. Within the embrasure of the adjoining window, which subsequently became an access to the west outbuilding, is a slop drain. The second floor had a window to north and to south, and a third formed in the breast of the fireplace. The southern window has stone seats at the jambs. The fireplace retains its stone kerb and has a projecting hood. The lintel is arched segmentally and is borne on two corbels. At the south end of the east wall is a mural garderobe, which had a seat and, presumably, a soil flue. The third storey is ceiled with a semicircular barrel-vault and is lit from the east only. The window lintel is corbelled to reduce its span. The outer surface of the vault is densely covered with vegetation which obscures any features that may exist.
The enclosing wall of the kennels [NT17NE 273], which lie some 60 yards west of the tower, contains masonry which is at least as old as the 17th century; at the south-east corner of the enclosure is a vaulted cellar, off which and to the east lay a second structure. The access between these is filled in, and in the infilling is a stone which exhibits Roman diamond dressing.
HISTORICAL NOTE.-The original tower was probably that of the bishops of Dunkeld (1). In 1507 there is a note in the episcopal records of ‘repair of the place of Crawmound’ (2).
RCAHMS 1929, visited 3 February 1921.
(1) See Note on No. 37; (2) Rentale Dunkeldense (Scot. Hist. Soc.), p. 246.