Fincastle Chapel
Fincastle Chapel, also known as Glenfincastle Chapel, is a former church building in Glen Fincastle, south of Blair Atholl, Perth and Kinross, Scotland. It is named for the glen in which it stands.
Standing at the apex of a hairpin curve of the B8019 Killiecrankie-to-Tummel Bridge road, where the road crosses Fincastle Burn, the chapel is believed to have been built in 1843, according to a datestone at the site. Inside the chapel there is a World War I memorial plaque honouring five local men who died in the conflict.
Another plaque is to the memory of Charlotte Rachel Barbour, who was a "friend of the children of Glen Fincastle 1930". Charlotte's son, George Freeland Barbour, was for many years a worshipper and preacher at the chapel. A tablet was placed, to give thanks, by the family of Helen Victoria Barbour : "For 63 years her home in this glen was a place of laughter, joy and inspiration for countless people from far and near."
The chapel is shown as a free church on the first-edition Ordnance Survey maps, and as a school on the second edition.
An octagonal wooden structure, which is not shown on the early maps, stands to the southeast of the chapel.