The projection or “aisle” on the south side of the church has also contained a private gallery, with a fireplace in the south wall. The mouldings of the doorway indicate seventeenth or eighteenth century work.
There are no windows in the north wall, but some portions of the masonry are of ashlar work and may be of the period of the south-west angle.
The belfry, the vane of which bears the date of 1794, is a comparatively late addition. It is supported on corbels projecting from the inside of the wall.
Fig. 1602.—Terregles Church after Restoration.
Fig. 1603.—Terregles Church before Restoration.
TERREGLES CHURCH, Kirkcudbrightshire.
This curious structure (Fig. [1602]) is situated about two and a-half miles north-west from Dumfries. It was erected by the fourth Lord Herries shortly before his death in 1583.