Blacket House

Gatehouse Classification - Not available

Has been described as a Questionable Peel-house, and also as a Gentry tower-house

There are masonry ruins/remnants remains

NameBlacket House
Alternative NamesBlacket Tower; Blackwood Tower; Blackethouse; Blackwoodhouse
Medieval County
Historic CountryDumfriesshire
Modern AuthorityDumfries And Galloway
1974 AuthorityDumfries and Galloway
Civil ParishMiddlebie

For successor and present country house (NY 2432 7432), see NY27SW 24.
(NY 24338 74369) Blacket House (NR) (Remains of) (OS 25 map (1899))
A ruined tower, 21 ft x 15 ft 6 ins, with a projecting staircase wing 10 ft 6ins by 12 ft 6 in at Blacket or Blackwood House, near the modern house of the same name. On the lintel of the short wing is the date 1663. Foundations of NE and SE walls of the main block each with indications of a narrow short hole, remained in 1912. Blackethouse is mentioned in 1584. (RCAHMS 1920).
Generally as described and planned by RCAHMS except that the NE and SE walls stand to roof height. On the inside lintel of the short wing is the inscription 17 GB IK 14, possibly suggesting an addition or alteration to the earlier structure. Name 'Blacket House' confirmed. (Visited by OS (RD) 19 October 1967)
No change to previous field report. (Visited by OS (IA) 21 February 1973)
Listed as tower. (RCAHMS 1997) (Canmore)

Architecture Notes
Description:
Ruined L-plan tower house. Jamb survives to full height, with crow-stepped gables and stone-slabbed roof, only fragments of tower walls survive and these show signs of rebuilding.
Coursed rubble, with ashlar dressings. Door in re-entrant angle, chamfered openings light stair, larger openings and flight-holes at top level, (converted in 19th century as dovecot and as a study, circa 1950). Wall extends obliquely from W side (stone mask set above angle) with gateway, outer lintel dated 1663, inner lintel dated 1714.
Elliptical marble memorial to Pearce Smith who died in Naples, 1797.
Notes:
Inscribed lintels also bear initials of members of the Bell family.
1404 incised date is bogus. Said to be home of Bell, who killed fair Helen of Kirkconnel Lea (although contradicted in Groome GAZETTEER, n.d

2nd ed vol IV pp 417-8).
References:
RCAHM, INVENTORY OF DUMFRIES, 1920. no 460.
De-listed September 2009
Information from Historic Scotland. (Canmore)

The monument comprises Blacket House Tower, also known as Blackwood House, which is of medieval date, visible as an upstanding ruin. The monument is situated on a plateau above the W bank of the Kirtle Water at about 80m OD.
John Bell of Blackwoodhouse is on record in 1459 and 1465, the Bell family having settled near Middlebie at the beginning of the 15th century. Blacket House Tower appears to date from the second half of the 16th century; William 'Red-Cloak' Bell is documented as being of 'Blacathous' in 1583/4. Its situation provides commanding views along the Kirtle Water from Old Kirkconnel to Wyseby and Bonshaw, which allowed the Bells to keep a watchful eye on their Irving and Graham neighbours. The tower is depicted on the Aglionby's Platte as 'Ye Blacketthowse' in 1590, and on the Pont map as 'Black-wood hous' in c.1595-96.
Evidence suggests that the building was originally rectangular in plan, comprising three storeys and a garret; the ground floor and a substantial portion of the S wall appear to date from the original construction. The walls are 1.2m thick and the ground floor was most probably vaulted. Atypically, the entrance appears to have been located at the SW end of the SE wall rather than as part of the wheelstair at the E corner.
The stair wing is likely to date to the early 17th century, forming an L-plan and superseding the original entrance with an unusual double rebate for an iron yett and wooden door and also a substantial drawbar slot. Part of a parapet remains, but it is unclear if it followed the form of the 16th century tower. One of its openings on its SE elevation was probably enlarged at this time. Some linear features are visible beneath the lawn to the SW which may indicate the presence of further ranges.
It is likely that the tower was enlarged in 1663: a lintel bearing this date, with the initials IB and II for John Bell and Jean Irving, was later re-used. Only part of the S wall of the extension remains, set at an angle to the W corner. Further work appears to have taken place in the early 18th century given the existence of a 1714 datestone. The tower was sold in 1775 and changed hands on a number of occasions subsequently. When Blacket House was built to its immediate SW in 1835, the tower was described as being 'ruinous'. It was then converted into a folly and the datestones built into a 'doorway' situated to the W of the tower. Later, pigeonholes were added to the stair wing to create a doocot, whilst a study conversion dates to about 1950.
The area proposed for scheduling comprises the remains described and an area around them within which related material may be expected to survive. It is irregular in plan with maximum dimensions of 67.5m WNW-ESE and 64.5m NW-SE, as marked in red on the accompanying map. The NE side is defined by the cliff edge, the SW side and SW part of the SE side by the gravel driveway and the NW side by a slight boundary feature in the lawn. The surfaces of all paths, to a depth of 300mm, is excluded from the scheduling to allow for routine maintenance. (Scheduling Report)

Gatehouse Comments

Although the current ruinous remains are of a three storey building with garret of the original C16 building only a basement really survives and it is not really clear if this was a tower of several storeys or a peel of a chamber over byre type, although a tower house does seem most likely.
Has a water chute over the entrance.

- Philip Davis

This site is a scheduled monument protected by law

This is a Not listed listed building protected by law

Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid ReferenceNY2433874369
Latitude55.05802
Longitude-3.18603
Eastings324338
Northings574369
Length21'
Width"15'6"""
Dimensions Comment
VaultProbably
Vault Comment
Orientation33
Orientation Comment
Wall Thickness 11.2m
Wall Thickness 2
Map1590, A Platt of the opposete Borders of Scotland to ye west marches of England(The Aglionby Platt) British Library online Gallery and Old Cumbria Gazetteer (see also Gatehouse Essay 'The Aglionby Platt')
HolderWilliam 'Red-Cloak' Bell
HyperLink HyperLink HyperLink

No photos available. If you can provide pictures please contact Castlefacts

Books

  • Maxwell-Irving, A.M.T., 2014, The Border towers of Scotland 2: Their Evolution and Architecturep. 108
  • Coventry, M., 2008, Castles of the Clans: the strongholds and seats of 750 Scottish families and clans(Musselburgh)
  • Coventry, M., 2001, The castles of Scotland(Musselburgh)
  • Maxwell-Irving, A.M.T., 2000, The Border towers of Scotland: their history and architecture: the West Marchp. 77-8 no. 9
  • RCAHMS, 1997, Eastern Dumfriesshire: an archaeological landscape(Edinburgh) p. 116
  • Gifford, J., 1996, The Buildings of Scotland: Dumfries and Galloway(Yale University Press Pevsner Architectural Guides)
  • RCAHMS, 1981, The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland. The archaeological sites and monuments of Ewesdale and Lower Eskdale, Annandale and Eskdale District, Dumfries and Galloway Region(RCAHMS Archaeological sites and monuments of Scotland 13)
  • RCAHMS, 1920, The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments and Constructions of Scotland. Seventh report with inventory of monuments and constructions in the county of Dumfries(Edinburgh) p. 159 no. 460 online copy
  • Hyslop, J. and Hyslop, R., 1912, Langholm as it was: a history of Langholm and Eskdale from the earliest timesp. 320- online copy

Journals

  • Maxwell-Irving, A.M.T., 1997, 'The tower-houses of Kirtleside' Transactions of Dumfriesshire and Galloway Natural History and Antiquarian SocietyVol. 72 p. 55-67 online copy
  • Ellis, H., 1829, 'Copy of a manuscript tract addressed to Lord Burghley, illustrative of the Border topography of Scotland, AD 1590, with a platt or map of the Borders taken in the same year' ArchaeologiaVol. 22 p. 161-71 online copy