On an outcrop a few hundred yards to the east of, and several feet below, the summit is Kinnoull Tower, a
folly built in the eighteenth century, by
Thomas Hay, 9th Earl of Kinnoull, to resemble castles along the
Rhine he had admired in
Germany during his
Grand Tour of Europe. Kinnoull saw a similarity between the mountainous landscape along the Rhine and the rocky outcrops on his estate near Perth. On his return, to achieve a similar effect, he built a modest castle on the highest point of Kinnoull Hill, with its tower overlooking the River Tay. The tower is a
Category B listed structure. Another of Hay's lasting legacies is the Perth Bridge over the Tay, which he helped fund.
Jane Austen visited Kinnoull Hill in September 1789. She described Kinnoull Tower in "Lesley Castle", one of two Scottish stories in her Juvenilia, as:
An old and Mouldering Castle, which is situated two miles from Perth on a bold projecting Rock, and commands an extensive view of the Town and its delightful Environs.Today the tower is more easily accessible, via a winding footpath through the woodland park. == Awards ==