Uig Tower

From Wikishire
Jump to: navigation, search
Uig Tower

Inverness-shire

Uig Tower 20090608.jpg
Type: Folly
Location
Grid reference: NG39556335
Location: 57°35’5"N, 6°21’33"W
Village: Uig
History
Built 1860
Folly
Neo-Norman
Information

The Uig Tower, also known as Captain Fraser's Folly, is a nineteenth century folly above Uig on the island of Skye in Inverness-shire. It is a Category B listed building.[1]

Location

The Uig Tower stands along the A87, which connects Portree and Uig, about a mile south of Uig. The tower is positioned on the south-eastern side of the bay on its southern headland opposite Rubha Idrigil.[2]

History

Major William Fraser became the owner of the Kilmuir Estate in 1855[2] and the tower was constructed around 1860 at a place where the local tenants had to go to pay their rents to his Factor.

Fraser was, like many other landlords in the Highlands, notorious for his contribution to the Highland Clearances, during which tenants were evicted so the land could become available for large-scale sheep farming. The folly is still associated by locals with the Clearances. Fraser lived in a large house called Uig Lodge, which was washed away in a flood in 1877 shortly after the conclusion of the clearances.[2]

In 1884, Fraser attempted to evict a family at Garafad in Staffin during a rent strike. Fraser called for help from the Government to break the strike, claiming that the local people were in rebellion. In November 1884 a flotilla of naval ships arrived in Uig Bay and the police and marines took up positions in Uig. However, strike was not broken, the family remained in their home, and the police and military left shortly thereafter.

The tower was later turned into a family home, but this was abandoned in the 1950s.

Construction

The Uig Tower is a round tower of two floors and was built in Norman style. The tower has narrow vertical slits instead of windows. The gaps resemble loopholes of a castle through which arrows could be fired on attackers, although it has no defensive function and was built purely as a show of wealth. On the outside, the gaps are decorated with cross shapes.

The tower is no longer owned by the Uig Hotel but by a local landowner.

Outside links

Commons-logo.svg
("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Uig Tower)

References

  1. Uig, Round Tower (Category B) - Listing detail (Historic Environment Scotland)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 CANMORE (RCAHMS) record of Uig Tower