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Field Visit

Date 20 August 1958

Event ID 921573

Category Recording

Type Field Visit

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/921573

The remains of Woodrae, Woodray, or Woodwray Castle were cleared away in 1819 when two sculptured cross-slabs with symbols were recovered from the foundation.

One of the slabs was lost by 1854, but the other was presented to Sir Walter Scott and is now in National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland (NMAS) presented by Lt Col Maxwell-Scott of Abbotsford in 1924 (Accession no. IB 202).

It is an upright cross-slab 5'9" high by 3'4" at base tapering to 2'9" at the top by 5" thick. The front bears the cross with interlacing and beasts. The back, divided into two panels, bears symbols, horsemen etc. (This slab is so like those from Aberlemno (NO 522 555) only 1/2 mile away, that it must have come from there.) It had apparently been used as a slab for the kitchen floor.

No trace of the castle remains, its site being rough pasture.

The dovecot has been a typical late 17th to 18th century lean-to with crow steps. The walls are intact but it is unroofed.

A Jervise 1859; J R Allen and J Anderson 1903; Proc Soc Antiq Scot 1924; Visited by OS (JLD) 20 August 1958.

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