Crossmichael Parish Church

One of its burial enclosures has on its east face an ornately carved memorial for William Gordon of Greenlaw, which is itself independently listed at Category A.

As of 2022[update] the church is still in regular use as a place of worship, and its former hearse house is owned by a community group and used as an information centre.

[3][4] There are raised galleries on Tuscan columns, and box pews, some named for important local heritors including the Gordons of Kenmure and the Copelands of Danevale.

[3][8] The church's hearse house, at the bottom of the knoll on its west side on the level of the street, has been converted into a local history centre.

[1] The oldest part of the current building is the tower, which is seventeenth-century, possibly as old as the 1611 bell (made by John Burgerhuys) that hangs in it.

[8] In 2018, Dumfries and Galloway Council sold the church's hearse house to the Crossmichael Community Trust for a nominal fee, so that it would be turned into an exhibition space.

A carved memorial
The memorial to William Gordon of Greenlaw
A church with a round tower
The church viewed from the south
An information centre
The Old Hearse House information centre