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St Conan’s Kirk

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Address
  
Dalmally PA33 1AL, UK

Phone
  
+44 1838 200298

Opened
  
1930

St Conan’s Kirk

Similar
  
Kilchurn Castle, Scottish National War Mem, Cruachan Power Station, Loch Awe railway station, Glenorchy Parish Church

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St conan s kirk loch awe argyll 2016


St Conan’s Kirk, Church of Scotland, is located in Loch Awe, Argyll and Bute, Scotland. It is situated on a crag high above the water amid vegetation which includes roses, honeysuckle, and ivy, and is surrounded by large trees. It was established as a chapel of ease by the Campbells of Innis Chonan. St Conan's Tower is 0.5 miles (0.80 km) away. The church is protected as a category A listed building.

Contents

It is renowned for the fragment of bone that is rumoured to have come from Robert the Bruce, King of Scotland.

Architecture and fittings

It was designed by the self-made architect Walter Douglas Campbell, and built in 1881-6; with renovation in 1906. The heavy oak beams in the cloister are believed to have come from the (then) recently broken up wooden battleships, HMS Caledonia and HMS Duke of Wellington. An eccentric blend of church styles, from ancient Roman to Norman, it is built of local stone. It consists of a nave and chancel, with the chancel-stalls being canopied. Large, unsmoothed boulders of granite from nearby Ben Cruachan, form the piers which carry the chancel arch, and the transepts make the Sacred Cross. There is also a tower and spire.

Fittings include a small organ. One old window from South Leith Parish Church was re-used at St Conan's.

References

St Conan’s Kirk Wikipedia