Claypotts CastleDundee City • DD4 8TB • Castle
Claypotts Castle is a located one mile north-west of Broughty Ferry, near Dundee on the east coast of Scotland. The castle is a Z-plan tower house, with a rectangular block with round towers at two of the diagonally opposite corners. This was a popular design in the sixteenth century and allowed for defenders to fire along the faces of the main block from both towers. Claypotts was more of a residential building than a defensive structure though. There are two turnpike stairs (one for the family, one for the staff) in the angles created by the towers. The domestic stair runs right from ground level to the attic. The towers are fairly plain until they reach the square garret chambers perched at the top. It is now in the care of Historic Scotland.
The castle was originally built by John Strachan between 1569 and 1588. In 1601 the Strachan family sold the castle to Sir William Graham of Ballunie who later sold it to Sir William Graham of Claverhouse. The castle became the property of the crown in 1689 after the death of the then current owner Viscount Dundee John Graham of Claverhouse at the battle of Killiecrankie. In 1694 the castle was gifted to James Douglas, 2nd Marquess of Douglas. Ownership later passed to the 13th Earl of Home through marriage who later gifted the castle to the state in 1926.
Dudhope CastleDundee City • DD3 6TU • Castle
Dudhope Castle is located on Dundee Law in Dundee, Scotland. The castle was originally a smaller tower house built in the late 13th century by the Scrymageour family. This was replaced around 1460 and then further extended in 1580 to its current L-plan structure with circular towers. In the 1980s the castle was redeveloped and is now in use as offices, a conference centre as well as housing the University of Abertay Business School.
The Scrymageour family sold the castle in 1668 to John Graham of Claverhouse (the following year John Graham died in battle leading the Jacobites to victory at Killiecrankie). In 1792 the castle was rented out for use as a woolen factory. In 1795 the park and the grounds were leased to the Board of Ordnance, who used Dudhope as a barracks for 95 years, from 1796 to 1879. Additional buildings were constructed, including a hospital, officers quarters, stables and guard-rooms. The castle was used as accommodation for 400 soldiers. The Board of Ordnance abandoned the castle in 1881. In council of Dundee bought the grounds and opened them up as a park in 1895. The building was later occupied by the Ministry of Works.
Broughty CastleDundee City • DD5 2TF • Castle
Broughty Castle is a striking tower fortress perched on a rocky promontory jutting into the Firth of Tay at the village of Broughty Ferry, now an eastern suburb of Dundee. It stands as one of the most visually commanding castles in eastern Scotland, its sturdy stone keep rising directly from the water's edge and visible for miles across the estuary. Today it functions as a free museum managed by Leisure & Culture Dundee, exploring the history of the castle itself, the local fishing heritage of Broughty Ferry, and the story of Dundee's whaling industry, which made this stretch of coast prosperous and distinctive in the nineteenth century. The combination of dramatic setting, well-preserved architecture, and genuinely absorbing exhibits makes it one of the more rewarding heritage stops in the Tayside region.
The castle's origins date to 1496, when Andrew Gray, the second Lord Gray, began construction of the tower house following a grant of land at the point of Broughty. Its position was no accident — whoever controlled the promontory controlled movement across the Tay at one of its narrower crossings, and the strategic value of the site was recognised and contested repeatedly across the centuries. During the rough wooing of the 1540s, when English forces under the Duke of Somerset invaded Scotland to press Henry VIII's claim for a marriage between Edward VI and the young Mary Queen of Scots, English troops seized Broughty Castle in 1547 and held it for several years. The occupation was bitterly resisted by the Scots, and French forces allied to Scotland eventually helped recapture it in 1550. The episode left a deep mark on the local collective memory and underlines the castle's role as a genuine military flashpoint rather than a merely decorative fortification.
The structure passed through several hands over the following centuries, falling into decline and partial ruin before being substantially remodelled in the mid-nineteenth century. Between 1861 and 1862 it was acquired by the British government and rebuilt as part of a coastal defence network, given a new artillery battery and fitted out to guard the Tay against naval attack. It was reactivated for this purpose again during both World Wars, with gun emplacements watching over the estuary against the threat of enemy shipping. The War Department eventually handed it over to Dundee Corporation in 1969, and it was subsequently restored and opened to the public. The layers of construction — medieval tower, Victorian military overhaul, twentieth-century use — are legible in the fabric of the building itself, giving it an architectural complexity that rewards close attention.
In person, Broughty Castle has a raw, elemental quality that many inland castles lack. The wind off the Tay is almost always present, salt-tinged and forceful, and at high tide the water laps close to the base of the walls with a persistent rhythmic sound. The stonework is grey and weathered, darkened with age and moisture, and the castle sits low enough to the water that sea birds — gulls, cormorants, sometimes eider ducks — are constant companions. Climbing the interior tower offers views across the Firth that on a clear day extend to the Angus coastline to the north and the Kingdom of Fife to the south, with the long arching span of the Tay Rail Bridge visible to the west. Inside, the rooms are cool and stone-floored, with display cases set into chambers that still feel unmistakably functional rather than decorative.
Broughty Ferry itself is a charming and affluent village that in the Victorian era was known as the "jelly jar" of Dundee — a place where wealthy jute and linen merchants built substantial villas away from the smoke and noise of the city. The main street running down to the waterfront is lined with independent cafes, restaurants, and small shops, and the sandy beach stretching east of the castle is genuinely pleasant in good weather. The harbour nearby retains its working character, and the sense of a distinct community with its own identity, separate from and yet absorbed into greater Dundee, is palpable. Carnoustie and its famous golf links lie a short distance up the coast, and the city of Dundee itself, with the V&A Design Museum and RRS Discovery, is only a few miles to the west.
Visiting is straightforward and, crucially, free of charge. The castle is well served by public transport — Broughty Ferry railway station is a short walk away, on the line between Dundee and Arbroath, and several bus routes connect the village to the city centre. Those arriving by car will find some on-street parking along the seafront, though it can be competitive in summer. The museum is closed on Thursdays and Fridays, which is worth checking before visiting, and the upper floors and tower can involve narrow stairs that may present difficulty for visitors with limited mobility. Summer visits offer the best weather and the longest daylight hours, when the light on the Tay can be genuinely spectacular, but the castle in winter has its own austere appeal, particularly when the estuary mist rolls in.
One of the more unusual aspects of the castle's museum collection is its dedicated coverage of the Antarctic whaling and exploration expeditions that departed from Dundee in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries — including the 1892 Dundee Whaling Expedition and the city's deep connection to polar exploration more broadly. This gives Broughty Castle's exhibits an unexpectedly global reach, linking a small promontory on the Tay to some of the most remote waters on earth. It is the kind of hidden depth that makes the place linger in the memory long after a visit, a reminder that even a compact local museum can carry stories of extraordinary scope.