CHURCH of SCOTLAND
AVOCH PARISH CHURCH
Linked with Fortrose and Rosemarkie
Charity No. SCO 03921
HISTORY
The following information is based on a report produced in 1970 to
celebrate the centenary of the present Avoch Parish Church Building.

The Present Church was built in 1870, replacing that of 1670, which
was itself, a successor to a medieval building. The previous two
churches, which were built in a North to South direction, were destroyed
by fire. The present church is built with its axis oriented in an East to
West direction and it has been suggested that the change in direction
may result in better fortune.
The Church is famous for it's beautiful stained glass windows, which
were made by Barnett of Newcastle. The congregation subscribed for
the east windows on either side of the pulpit; the window on the left
depicts the Adoration of the Christ Child and that on the right, the Death
of Christ after the Crucifixion. The round window above the pulpit
depicts the Ascension of Christ surrounded by the Angels. The
Gloriously coloured panels and text of the west window are illustrations
of the Beatitudes. There are four small white roses in the small
triangle-shaped which are thought to represent the white rose of
Rosehaugh Estate. Mr. James Fletcher, the Laird of Rosehaugh
donated this window when the Church was built in 1870.
Many years ago a young painter of Avoch sign-painted "The
Beatitudes" as well as the Lords Prayer in gold on the rear pulpit wall
facing the congregation.
The Vestry has within its walls signs of great antiquity in the form of a
Roman Catholic wine repository or Sacrament House. There are
various theories as to the source of the Sacrament House it may have
come from the Chapel of Our Lady in Ormonde Castle Avoch, or been
provided by the Abbey of Kinloss which had appropriated Avoch Parish
Church in the Middle Ages or it may have been retained from the first
Avoch Church.
James III created his second son, also James (born 1476), Marquis of
Ormond at his baptism; he granted him the Lordship of Ardmeneach in
1481, and elevated him to the Dukedom of Ross in 1487. This same,
Marquis of Ormond resigned his lands, except Ormond, in 1502, having
become 'an ecclesiastic' (Douglas 1813, 416; Origins Parochiales, II, ii
(1855), 542-4).
In the Middle Ages Avoch Parish Church was one of those that had
been appropriated by the Cistercian Abbey of Kinloss on the south side
of the Moray Firth. Abbot Thomas Crystall is known to have repaired it
during his incumbency at Kinloss (1504-28) (Kinloss Recs xlvi, xlix;
Cowan 1981, 92), but whether these building activities included the
provision of the Sacrament House at Avoch is not recorded.
 Pullen and Brayshaw, in their brief history of the church in the Black
Isle, state that in 1670 the church 'was rebuilt under Episcopal rule' and
that the Sacrament House was retained from the 'ancient church', but
give no indication of the source of this information (1927, 9).
The bell that summons villagers to Church on Sundays may also be an
antique. It is said that when Cromwell's men desecrated Fortrose
Cathedral, the bells were put on the deck of a ship for shipment to
Inverness. The ship ran into a storm enroute and the bells were lost
overboard. One was later trawled up in a fisherman's net and installed
in the belfry of the rebuilt Parish Church. It is said the bell is inscribed
with the words ‘Mine name is Anna’
Sir Alexander Mackenzie and James Douglas Fletcher were great
benefactors to the community. Mr Fletcher donated the Moderator's
Chair and the Communion Table.
The vaults of the famous explorer Sir Alexander Mackenzie and family
and the Fletcher Rosehaugh family are in the churchyard.