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Reminiscences
Of Kincardine-on-Forth
"We
canna forget the dear auld hame,
gae wander where we will;
like a sunny beam o' a summers dream
it lingers near us still"
It is difficult to dissociate Kincardine from the parish in which
it is situated and from the adjoining parish of Culross, of which
it once formed a part and I am confident you will excuse me if
my remarks are not entirely confined to the town alone. Referring
in a very few words to the district generally, I may say that
I have no doubt it was well known to the Romans about 1800 years
ago. Apart from the fact that the great Roman wall, situated only
five miles away on the other side of the river, must, in the clear
and smokeless atmosphere of that time, and to the fresh eyesight
of men living an open air life, have been quite visible. There
is indisputable evidence of the residence of the Romans in the
parish within little more than a mile from the town to the north
and close to the Overton Lodge, an extensive Roman cemetery was
discovered when making the approach to the castle and other remains
have been found at different periods at Damend and on the farm
of Newraw close to the east side of the town.
About four hundred years later the great pilgrimage from the district
to the shores of the Clyde may be said to have commenced. It may
not have occurred to you that in coming patron saint on the solemn
authority of tradition we are informed that St. Mungo, who was
born at Culross in 514, was told by an angel that he must leave
Culross and his beloved master, St. Serf and that a great work
of conversion was destined for him in the west country. He accordingly
started on his journey and having travelled up the bank of the
Forth for a considerable way, till he arrived near the spot where
it is now joined by the Teith, he crossed over by dividing the
waters, as Moses did those of the red sea, leaving St. Serf, who
had unavailingly followed him, lamenting on the northern bank.
I haven't heard, ladies and gentlemen, that any of the later pilgrims
had angelic guidance, or have attained the same eminence as St.
Mungo - you couldn't all, of course, become patron saints - but
I think his example is encouraging and may lead you to strive
after the very highest positions attainable in the western metropolis.
The next event of local interest of which we have any knowledge
is the invasion by the Danes, whose camp at the side of the moor
dam is still in evidence, together with the standard stone on
Bordie Moor. As you probably remember, the battle of Bordie, in
which great slaughter on both sides is said to have taken place,
but which appears to have been of an indecisive nature, was fought
in 1038 and the echoes of the tumalt must have rolled over the
forest which covered a great part of the district at that time.
Coming down to 1304 we find another set of invaders in the district,
as in that year Edward the first wintered at Dunfermline and from
thence addressed a letter regarding the occupancy of the castle
of "Tollyalwyn", which is spoken of as a stronghold
then held by the English. About this time also I have no doubt
Wallace was often in the district, as the Torwood, a frequent
retreat of his, was immediately on the other side of the Forth
and in Hamilton's History it is stated that going from Perth in
1298 I think:-
"By Stirling Bridge to march he did not please,
for Englishmen hum there as thick as bees:
but over Airth they ferried hastily
and lurked in a private place hard by".
In Bishop Leslie's history of Scotland, written in 1578, I find
a reference to a "Kinkairne" and as it is traditionally
reported that the district at one time was entirely under forest,
it is quite likely that our Kinkairne is referred to but whether
it is meant, or the parish of Kincardine further west, the reference,
which gives a very graphic description of the original wild cattle
of Scotland may be excused and I make no apology for submitting
it. Bishop Leslie says: -
"In this wood (Torwood) was nocht owlie kye, botoxne and
bules snawquhyte with a mane of a lyone. They mairover war sa
cruel and wylde that from mankynde they abhored in sik a sorte
that quhateuir thing the haundes of men had twechit or the air
of their mouthes had blawn upon, or cudit as we speik, from al
sik they absteined mony dayes thairefter. Farther this oyx or
bull was sa bauld that nocht owly in his yre or quhen he was provoked
walde he ouircum horsemen, but cuin feirit he nothing, naither
tyred me commonlie all men to invade baith with hornes and feit,
ye the dogs quiles with us ar maist violent he regardet nocht,
but walde clate (tear) him with his cluifes or kaithe him on his
hornes. His flexhe was all girssillie, bot of a trimtaist. He
was afortymes a frequent beist in this too wood, but now consumed
through the gluttonie of men only in three places is left, in
the park of Strieuling, the wod of Cummirnalde and of Kinckairne".
I may perhaps here be allowed to make some reference to the old
castle of Tulliallan held in veneration and better known to the
boys of the last generation as the "Auld Place". As
I have just said, the castle was a stronghold in 1304 and afterwards
it came into the possession of the Edmonstones. The co-heiress
of this family, Elizabeth, daughter of Sir James Edmonstone of
Edmonstone (who was great-grandson of King Robert II. The Tulliallan
property having been gifted to the Edmonstone family by Earl Douglas
in 1402 and confirmed to Sir James by Royal Charter in 1456) having
married Sir Patrick Blackadder, younger son of Andrew of Thatilk,
in Berwickshire in the fifteenth century and grandson of the redoubted
borderer, Cuthbert Blackadder of Blackadder Castle, "Chieftain
of the South".
The fate of this Sir Patrick Blackadder, who is described as a
man of chivalry and "And Great Hunter and Halker", is
characteristic of the time. The homes of Wedderburn having forcibly
and unlawfully become possessed of his ancestral estate of Blackadder
in Berwickshire he raised a process of law against them and under
the pretence of submitting the dispute to friends, to have all
difference settled in an amicable way, the Homes appointed a day
to meet Sir Patrick in Edinburgh, Thither accordingly he repaired
without suspicion of treachery, having received warrant of safe
convoy from Archibald Earl of Angus, under the great seal and
accompanied by a small retinue of domestics, fifteen or sixteen
horsemen who usually rode in his train, but was clandestinely
waylaid by a body of fifty horses that lay in ambush near the
Dean within a mile of Edinburgh. Being well mounted he made a
gallant charge and broke through the ambuscade, killing several
with his own hand; but, over powered with numbers, he fled, taking
the road towards the West Port fiercely pursued. On approaching
the city he was surprised by a fresh troop of horses secretly
posted in a hollow, where St. Cuthberts Church, now stands. These
joining in pursuit, he made speed to gain the entrance by the
Nether Bow or the Canongate, but before he could reach the ford
of the loch a party on foot sallied out from another place of
concealment to intercept him. Finding himself beset on all lands
he ventured to take the North Loch - now the site of Prince's
Street Gardens - near to the place called Wallace's Tower on the
Castle Brae, when his horse becoming embogged, he and all his
attendants were basely murdered, this was in the year 1526. It
is especially interesting to a Glasgow-Kincardine audience to
know that a son of Sir Patrick's was the celebrated Robert Blackadder,
created Archbishop of Glasgow in 1488, who built the south transept
of the Cathedral of the city. In 1530 the family must have produced
"a pear of a different tree", as in that year John Blackadder,
the Laird of Tulliallan, was beheaded for the murder of the Abbot
of Culross, who had offended him by letting some lands over his
lead to Erskine of Balgownie.
In 1568 an order is made by the Scottish Privy Council denouncing
certain persons as rebels against the king and regent Murray and
ordering their strongholds to be searched. Among these is "John
Blacater of Tullyallan, the Castell, Tour and Fortalice of Tullyallan".
In 1608 another Laird seems to have had a little difference with
local powers ecclesiastical, as in that year he was fined 500
merk's for striking in the church the Rev. Hendry Forrester, minister
of the parish, with "his Gluiffis upon the face". As
the old parish church at the head of the Kirk Brae was only built
in 1675 this assault must have taken in the church at the Overton
on the ruins of which the mausoleum of the Keith family now stands.
The last proprieter of the name was Sir John who was born in 1596,
he was created by Charles I. A baronet of Nova Scotia and was
in the order of his patent which is dated 18th July 1626, the
fourth Knight Baronet in Scotland, he was a man of profuse and
expensive habits and his fine estate, which with its lime works,
saltpans, etc., yielded a yearly rental of 36,000 Merks, he squandered
away, leaving scarcely anything but an empty title to survive
his prodigality. His effects being seized he fled to the continent
and appears to have been in the French Service in 1651. His lady,
Elizabeth Graham daughter of the Earl of Menteith, had an annuity
of 360 Merks and appears to have resided in Tulliallan Castle
till 1662. After remaining for five generations in the family
the Barony of Tulliallan, well on in the 17th century, passed
into the lands of Sir George Bruce, whose son, Sir Edward became
in 1647 the first of the Earls of Kincardine and in the end of
the same century it was purchased with their other domains by
Colonel John Erskine of Carnock, whose family is now represented
by the genial and much esteemed sergeant-at-arms of the House
of Commons, Mr. Erskine of Cardross. In the last years of the
18th Century in 1798, the estate was purchased from the Black
Colonel's successor by Admiral Lord Keith, whose distinguished
naval career has been well written by Mr. Allardyce and should
be known to every native of Kincardine. As you doubtless know,
Lord Keith was twice married - first, to Miss Margaret Mercer
of Aldie; and secondly, to Miss Thrale, Dr. Johnson's "Queenie".
By his first wife the admiral had a daughter Margaret best known
to the last generation as Lady Keith who married the Conte De
Flahault and whose elder daughter married the Marquis of Lansdowne
and became the mother of the present Marquis, the distinguished
politician, who possessed the estates till they were acquired
by Sir James Sivewright last year.
By his second wife Lord Keith had also a daughter the late Lady
William Osborne Elphinstone, to whom, in default of male issue
by her step-sister, Lady Keith, the estates passed for her lifetime.
Before leaving the old castle and the family of the Blackadders,
I may say that the castle seems to have been in a ruinous condition
for a long period probably over two hundred years, as in MacFarlane's
"Geographical Collection", written in 1722, I find this
reference to it:-
"In the great hall of Tulliallan Castle, near Kincardine,
there formerly hung suspended from one of the bosses of its richly
sculptured roof an ancient bronze kettle, of the most unusual
form, which bore the name of 'The Ladies Purse'. It was traditionally
reputed to be filled with gold and the old family legend bore
that so long as it hung there the castle would stand and the Tulliallan
family would flourish. Whether the Blackadders ever had recourse
to the treasures of the Ladies Purse in their hour of need can
no longer be known, for the castle roof has fallen and the old
race who owned it is extinct. The ancient cauldron, on the safety
of which the fate of the owners was believed to hang, is preserved.
It was dug out of the ruins by a neighbouring tenant and is still
regarded with the veneration due to the fatal memorial of an extinct
race. It measures 8 and a quarter inches in diameter by 5 and
one eighth inches in height as it stands and is simply what would
be called by antiquarians a Roman Camp Kettle and by Scottish
Danes a Brass Kail Pot.
I may say that personally I have never been able to find any trace
of this kettle or its last owner, who I expect would be Mr. Morrison
of Hawkhill, but it would be most interesting to know that it
is still in existence.
Referring to the Castle in their "Castellated and Domestic
Architecture of Scotland", Messrs McGibbon & Ross say:-
"It has been designed as a pleasant residence rather than
a place of strength and thus shows more elegance and taste in
its architecture than is usual in the great but gloomy castles
of the time. This is well illustrated by the fine vaulting of
the ground floor, which surpasses anything of the kind to be met
within a similar building in Scotland".
I am not sure when the castle passed out of the lands of the Blackadders,
but probably the last appearance of any of the family in the parish
was in 1670 when a descendant of the old house, Mr. John Blackadder
the famous covenanting preacher, must have passed close to its
walls. On the 18th June of that year Mr. Blackadder preached at
a conventicle at the Hill of Beath, near Dunfermline and we are
quaintly informed in Aikman's "Persecution" that:-
"Afterwards it not being thought fit that he should stay
on that side of the water, he rode up three or four miles expecting
to get the boat at Limekilns but that having gone over with the
others at the meeting before, he rode forward towards Kingcairn,
where they again essayed to cross at Hoggan's Neuck but the boat
being at the other side they were forced to rise on the Stirling".
A rather pathetic picture this, the stern old covenanter fleeing,
if not from justice, at least from the terrors of the law, and
passing the place where he had doubtless of ten played in his
boyish days!
Passing to more modern history we find that the parish of Tulliallan
consisted originally of the Barony of Tulliallan only in 1673
the Barony of Kincardine Lands of Lurg, Sands and Kellywood were
disjoined from the parish of Culross at the instance of the Early
of Kincardine, with concourse of the King's advocate and solicitor
and the recommendation of the presbytery.
From an entry in the parish register of date the 8th August 1686,
to the effect that "No sermon here (Tulliallan) because the
minister was at Kincardine in the time of the administration of
eucharist there", it would seem that Kincardine had hardly
then become absolutely assimilated with Tulliallan and from an
entry in the following year 24th July 1687, of an outlay, "Item
for morning and four hours drinks to the wrights 000,18,08"
I am afraid the session did not consist of strict abstainers.
Of the early history of Kincardine I must confess that I am unable
to say a great deal. The probability is that the town originally
commenced on the higher ground on the north side and gradually
worked its way out towards the river as ground was reclaimed by
deposit of ashes of the coal consumed in the manufacture of salt
for which the district was famous. As I have already quoted from
MacFarlane the old castle stood close to the sea side and it is
a tradition that the lane shot near Blackhall was originally called
the launch shot and that vessels built in an adjoining dockyard
were from thence launched into the river . Whether or not this
is the case, it is an undoubted fact that a large part of the
modern town must have been reclaimed from the sea and is built
on beds of coal ashes. Taking the area so composed as extending
to only ten acres or 50,000 square yards and the depth of the
ashes at six feet (and I personally have seen them exposed at
least 3 times that depth) we arrive at the fact that something
like 1,500,000 tons of coal must have been consumed to furnish
the foundations for a considerable part of the town. While this
amount is trifling compared to the output of modern pits, it shows
that taking the coals exported into account and considering the
period and appliances available a relatively enormous trade must
have been carried on in mining alone.
The
manufacture of salt would be concurrent with the coal mining and
I am disposed to think that they must have been in operation in
the sixteenth, if not fifteenth century. We have rather tragical
proof of the existence of these industries in 1619, as in that
year, according to Pitcairn's "Criminal Trials":-
"Patrick Cowie in Kincardine, Johnne Dow his servant, Johnne
Anderson, Gordiner Thair and David Miller, Salter in Easter Kincardine,
were tried for taking and keeping of umquhile Thomas Davidson,
Lynd and servant to Alexander Leask in porter, be the space fifteene
dayes in private carcere within the said Patick Cowie's house
and theirfra carrying him to the pit of Tulliallane quair through
want of intertenement he famished and died of hunger and remanent
crymes contenit in the letteres".
I am sorry I am unable to tell you of the fate of Mr. Cowie and
his friends or the punishment they received, if any, but I am
confident that the "Porter" alluded to was situated
at the extreme east end of Damend and I have a suspicion that
the pit of Tulliallane was a shaft inside the old castle, about
18 feet deep by 6 feet diameter, that I had cleared out some years
ago.
MacFarlane, writing in 1722, says:-
"The parish of Tullyallan in the shire of Perth hath to the
E.N.E. the parish of Culross 2 miles distant, in the N.W. and
N. the parish of Clackmannan about three miles distant (which
is the march betwixt the shire of Perth and Clackmannan) on the
south the river Forth where are excellent good salt made in great
quantities, also very good coal in this parish. In this parish
is the town of Kincardine made up mostly of salt pans and the
houses of those that are employed about them".
At
one time there were 35 salt pans in existence, but these has decreased
in number till about 1750, when there were only 23 and I suppose
the last traces of the old "Bucket Pats" would vanish
about 100 years later. Personally I do not remember seeing any
of them, but I have doubt some of the audience will recollect
the remains of the last of them which I believe stood on the Ferry
Green nearly opposite the Howff and close to the railway station.
Of the other industries for which the town seems to have been
famous, I may specially refer to shipping, shipbuilding, stone
quarrying and fishing and a paper on Kincardine would be incomplete
without some reference to its famous Ferry. According to the old
statistical account there was no shipping of any consequence belonging
to the port in the beginning of the 18th century, there being
then only five boats from 10 to 20 tons burden, these were employed
in carrying salt to Leith and importing from thence wood and iron
for the use of the salt pans and in the lime trade. But after
some ship-carpenters had come to settle in it , the spirit of
shipbuilding prevailed so much that in 1740 they had 30 vessels
from 15 to 60 tons. In 1745 several of these were employed in
government service. Fullarton, in his "Gazatteer of Scotland",
published in 1843, states that the port of Kincardine, with the
exception of Leith, was the most considerable on the Forth. As
far back as 1786 it had 91 vessels of aggregately 5461 tons an
excess of Alloa of the same date of 200 tons and more that half
of the tonnage of Leith in that year. In 1830 when prosperity
of the place seems to have reached its zenith, there were upwards
of fifty shipowners in it and in 1839 there existed a Marine Insurance
Association, having a capital of £70,000. In 1842 the tonnage
of vessels belonging to the town was about 9000, the capital invested
being estimated at £108,000. While ships belonging to the
port sailed all over the world, to the East and West Indies, the
Brazils and Australia, probably the bulk of the trade, at least
at one time, was with the Mediterranean and the Baltic and I have
heard regretful allusions made to the time when the Baltic traffic
being closed by ice the ships were laid up for the winter along
the shore and the crews being all at home the place was full of
life and everything went "as merry as a marriage bell".
The shipbuilding, as I have already indicated, appears to have
commenced previous to 1740. In 1786 there were nine vessels on
stocks at one time and about 1815 from 12 to 15. They seem to
have been built for all trades, for the East Indian trade as well
as the Greenland Fishery and as I have already mentioned some
of them had the honour of being employed in government service
in 1745. The last ship would be built about thirty years ago,
the introduction of iron shipbuilding and the want of railway
facilities being fatal to the continuation of the industry.
The memories of these old industries have been long kept green
in the town by such name as the Salters Row, Excise Street and
the Old Girnal, the Horn, the Bay and the Dardanelles and others
which I have no doubt will occur to some of my hearers.
In his "Fringes of Fife" Mr. Geddes tells us that "wide
was once the fame of the close-grained marble - like sandstone
of Longannet and Blair. Old Drury Lane was built of it and in
the seventeenth century the Dutch are said to have sent Hitler
for the stone used in the town house of Amsterdam".
At a later period it supplied material for the erection of the
Royal Exchange, the Infirmary and the Register Officer in Edinburgh
and nearly all the buildings in its own neighbourhood. That an
extensive export trade was carried on in freestone is evident
from the remains of old piers at Longannet, some of which were
a few years ago exposed and used in the repair of the river embankments.
These embankments are themselves worthy of a passing notice. The
west embankment was completed in 1823, measuring over 200 yards
in length and costing £6,100, reclaiming from the sea 152
acres. The east embankment cost over £14,000, was completed
in 1839, reclaimed 214 acres and measures 3040 yards long. With
regard to these works I may be allowed to say that it is fortunate
they were carried out when they were, as with present cost of
labour and the low price of grain it would never have paid to
have undertaken them at the present day.
The cruive or "Crae" fishing seems at one time to have
attained considerable proportions. The fishing season extended
from the month of August till the beginning of March and in lucky
years, such as that of 1783, it was computed that fish to value
of £1,000 Sterling or upwards were caught. At Kincardine
there were about the end of last century 61 Craes, at Botany Bay,
a station half way between Kincardine and Longannet 35 and at
Longannet 83 - altogether 179 Craes. It is reported that:-
"In the darkness and gloom of winter and even amidst all
the horrors of the tempest, the fishing of the cruives exhibits
a very gay and enlivening scene, men and woman of all ages and
in different companies resorting to them and carrying lamps of
flaming charcoal which are seen at a distance through the dark,
moving in all directions accompanied with the mixed cries of emulation,
merriment and hope".
In MacFarlane's "Collection", to which I have already
referred, it is stated that:-
"In 1722 there is a very remarkable (missing word) here great
quantities of sprats known here by the name of garvies which by
reason of their great number are very serviceable to the county
round for 5 or 6 miles" and which he described as a very
good small fish, with which I think we will all agree. The fishing
seems to have received a serious blow by the pollution of river
during the reclamation of Blair Drummond moss, but in any case
the Craes, the last of which some of you may remember as having
been stationed at a short distance north of the ferry pier, would
have been abolished by the Fishery Act prohibiting the existence
of fixed engines in the river.
Mr. Beveridge, in his "History of Culross and Tulliallan",
to whom I have to acknowledge my indebtedness, informs us that
the kirk session seems to have been greatly exercised by the perverse
conduct of many of the parishioners in insisting upon using the
Creases on Sunday. At a session meeting held on 3rd January 1699.
David Wannan and John Turcan, two of the elders, reported that
they had waited on Lord's Night at the Croves with design to have
kept the from being fished, but about 10 'o' clock at night there
came 40 or 50 persons, so that they found it impossible to hinder
them and while endeavouring to do so the rabble threatened to
throw them into the sea.
As the Civil Authorities declined to interfere, the only remedy
left to the session was to excommunicate the evil-doers and this,
they finally resolved to do, but it is probable the very fact
of its being forbidden occupation gave it an additional zest and
that as the prosecution ceased, the practice of sabbath desecreation
in reference to this matter fell also into abeyance.
Whether there was a regular ferry when Wallace crossed the river
in 1298 I am unable to say, but it is quite evident that it was
in operation in 1670, when Mr. Blackadder essayed to cross. Prior
to the railway era, it was the Grand Ferry Station between Fife
and Kinross on the one hand and all the South-West of Scotland
on the other and in its day must have been an institution of great
importance.
Before the introduction of auction marts and the extension of
railway facilities large numbers of horses, cattle and sheep were
annually conveyed across the river to Falkirk Tryst and the regular
carriage of the stage coaches, carriers carts and ordinary country
traffic must have kept the two steamers that used to cross every
ten minutes quite busy enough. The new ferry piers were built
in 1826 and 1827 and of so much importance was the traffic that
at one time the Feuing of the farm of Higginsneuck on the south
side of the ferry was contemplated, a regular plan of streets
being drawn up.
While Kilbagie Distillery actually stood on the Clackmannan side
of the parish march, I think we may regard it, as we do its successor,
the Forth Paper Mills, as a local industry of the time. A hundred
years ago, according to Mr. Beveridge, it was the most extensive
distillery in Scotland, producing more than 3,000 tons of whiskey
annually , for which upwards of 30,000 imperial quarters of grain
were used up, supplying with food about 7,000 cattle in its outhouses
and keeping in cultivation in the neighbourhood for its exclusive
use about 850 acres. The greater portion of what are now the grass
parks of Tulliallan were in the tenancy of the distillery and
one of the in which a great number of pigs is said to have been
kept is still known as "soo" park. Burns has spoken
of the "Dear Kilbagie", an appellation which, however,
is only to be understood as one of affection, seeing that in those
days the whiskey produced here was retailed at a penny a gill,
so that it was an inestimable boon to his own "Jolly Beggars",
who could thus enjoy at Poosie Nancy's Hostelry the happiness
of getting Blin' Fou' for fourpence. About 1818 another distillery
of considerable dimensions existed at Blackhall and one near the
present established church - the house adjoining the latter, now
occupied by tenant of Burnbrae Farm as the farmhouse, being still
known as the Distillery House.
I am able merely to allude to an institution that existed in Kincardine
in 1782 - The Farming Banking Company - of which I have a note
for £1.10/- in my possession, I can give you no further
information about it, but for appearance I may say the note would
not sham the Governor and Company of the Bank of England itself.
Another interesting document I have in my possession is the Voters
Roll of Clackmannanshire for 1832. It is interesting to know that
in the whole constituency of that year there were only 491 voters,
of whom 84, or one-sixth, were in Tulliallan Parish, Alloa only
having 173. It is rather depressing to compare the rolls applicable
to the two places at the present day, as while Alloa has now 2603
voters, or fifteen times more than it had in 1832. Tulliallan
has only quadruples its proportion, having at the present time
only 379 voters.
It may interest you and will not I hope unduly depress you, to
know the population of the town in the decades since 1801:-
In
1801 The Population was 2556
In
1811 The Population was 2950
In
1821 The Population was 3314
In
1831 The Population was 3306
In
1841 The Population was 2875
In
1851 The Population was 2697
In
1861 The Population was 2169
In
1871 The Population was 1983
In
1881 The Population was 1985
In
1891 The Population was 1821
In
1901 The Population was 1675
From this you will see that at no time within the last century
has the population stood at a lower figure and that it is now
practically less by half than it was in 1821. But we have this
consolation that what Kincardine has lost other places - I need
only instance this meeting of Kincardine natives here - have gained.
We know however, that it is always darkest before dawn and I think
we are entitled to hope that with its great natural advantages,
the best roadstead in the Firth of Forth - an anticipation revival
of its coal trade ( from the ashes of which it may be said to
have originally emerged) and with a man like the present Lord
of the Manor at the head of affairs its original prosperity may
soon again return.
In bringing this somewhat incomplete and disconnected papaer to
a close I am aware that I have introduced some uninteresting details
and omitted others of greater importance, but it would be impossible
to exhaust the subject in a single paper without unduly taxing
the patience of any audience. On the eminent men who have been
connected with it, from the Erskines, who founded the Secession
Church, to the one of the greatest chemists of our own day, professor
Dewar and on the old characters of the place - if I may mention
them in the same breath - such as Peggy Tam, Dollar Watt, Mary
Telfer, the Gentle Lammie, Scroggy Jock, Health Rab, Besom Neddy
and Nancy, not to mention a host of others, separate papers might
be read, on the smaller estates that formerly existed as separate
properties, such as Burnbrae, Blawlowan, the Keir with its famous
well, the east park or Kincardine House, anciently the property
of the Callanders, much interesting information should be forthcoming.
The churches and churchyards, the schools and schoolmasters, the
lakie ties and the gallant steamship "Kent", the fair
and the baron bailies; such name places as Craigieman, the Burgess
Brig and Callerten, Meyiston and the Praybrae, all furnish material
for investigation and rumination. Its original connection with
Perthshire and its curious political connection with Clackmannan
and otherwise with Fife, a sort of neither flesh, fowl, nor good
red herring position, all merit reflection and I am sure numerous
other interesting details must occur to most of my audience.
If
you would like to visit this area as part of a highly personalized
small group tour of my native Scotland please e-mail me:
Return
to Fife
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