Lochhouse Tower
Lochhouse Tower near Moffat in Dumfries and Galloway is a well-preserved sixteenth-century peel tower in the agricultural uplands of Annandale, one of the more complete examples of the smaller defensive tower type characteristic of the Scottish-English Borders and the southern upland zone of Dumfriesshire. The tower was associated with the Johnstone family, one of the powerful Border reiver clans who dominated Annandale throughout the later medieval and early modern periods. The valley of Annandale is one of the main routes through the Southern Uplands between the Clyde valley and the Solway Firth. The town of Moffat nearby is a small spa town of Victorian character in a dramatic upland setting, and the surrounding hills and the Grey Mare's Tail waterfall to the northeast provide exceptional walking country in the Scottish Southern Uplands.