Towie Barclay, a picturesque tower house castle, lying just a few miles southeast of Turiff, in Aberdeenshire, has the qualities you would dream of in a Scottish castle. Walking over the threshold is like stepping back in time, with much of the interior in keeping with how it would have looked in the 16th century. For over 50 years the Ellington family have been custodians of Towie Barclay and made it their family home.
The site of the castle was gifted to Clan Barclay in the 11th century by Malcolm III of Scotland and there is evidence that there has been a dwelling there since the 12th century. The present structure, in the form a traditional keep with rib and groin vaulted interiors, was completed in 1593. The castle remained in the Barclay family until 1752, when it was sold to the Earl of Findlater, and then some years later in 1792, to Robert Gordon’s Hospital in Aberdeen.
Karen and Marc Ellington, both from the USA, purchased the property in 1972, when it was a desperately overgrown ruin, which had lain empty for over 200 years. The story began in Oregon, in 1967, when Karen and Marc jumped on a flight to Glasgow to avoid Marc being drafted into the US forces to serve in the Vietnam war. Marc was a folk signer and musician, who recorded with the likes of Fairport Convention and Byrds. Between gigs the couple explored Scotland. They first visited Towie Barclay in 1969 and fell in love with the red sandstone building. “When I first saw Towie Barclay I saw not what it was but what it could be” reflected Marc in 2017. They went on to buy it in 1972 for £4,000, which was every penny that they had.