Greenan Castle
Greenan Castle is a dramatically situated ruined sixteenth-century Kennedy family tower house on a coastal clifftop south of Ayr, its walls rising directly from the cliff edge with the sea visible below and views extending north to Ayr and south toward Ailsa Craig. The Kennedy family's dominance of Carrick, including this coastal fortification overlooking Ayr harbour and the lower Firth of Clyde, was central to the medieval history of Ayrshire. The castle fell out of use following the decline of Kennedy power in the seventeenth century, and the combination of abandonment and coastal erosion has created the precarious and atmospheric ruin visible today. The county is the birthplace of Robert Burns, Scotland's national poet, and the Burns Trail links the various Ayrshire sites associated with his life and work.