Tom Beaver and the Tarviteers III - world premiere at Cupar Golf Club
Viv Collie, Chair of Cupar & North Fife Tourist Association
Viv Collie, Chair of Cupar & North Fife Tourist Association and Director of Fife Food Network at Fife Tourism Partnership's Open Day event on 6th November 2012
April Drive From St Andrews On Visit To Cupar Fife Scotland
Tour Scotland video of part of an April drive West on the A91 road from St Andrews on ancestry visit to Cupar, Fife
Cupar to Edinburgh train.
Arrival of Scotrail train at Cupar rail station North Fife.
North Fife Videos
Director: Peter Mannox
February Drive From Cupar To West Sands Beach St Andrews Fife Scotland
Tour Scotland video of February drive from Cupar East on the A91 road to West Sands Beach on ancestry visit to St Andrews, Fife
Cupar Public Discussion
Live from Cupar Public Discussion
Cupar Foal Show 2009
The North of Fife Foal Show - 93rd Annual Show. Class 1 - Senior Colt Foal featuring Arradoul Balvenie
Scottish Highland Games Parade Bonnygate Cupar Fife Scotland
Tour Scotland video of St Andrews Pipe Band marching ahead of the Scottish Highland Games parade up the Bonnygate on visit to Cupar, Fife. Parade included past Chieftains, Games President, Honorary President and Officials with Chieftain carrying Games Flag marched from the church to Duffus Park.
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Dairsie Castle Fife Scotland
video of Dairsie Castle Fife Scotland
Crawford Priory.... very cool staircase
Crawford Priory is a country house about 2 miles south west of Cupar, Fife, Scotland. It is a former residence of the Earls of Crawford, Earls of Glasgow and Barons Cochrane of Cults. It lies just outside the village of Springfield.
Originally built as Crawford Lodge by the 21st Earl of Crawford in 1758, it was substantially enlarged and extended in the early nineteenth century by a sister of the 22nd Earl, Lady Mary Lindsay Crawford.
Lady Mary engaged architects David Hamilton, and then James Gillespie Graham, to redesign the building in the gothic style, adding buttresses, turrets and pinnacles effecting the look of a priory, although it had had no religious history.[1]
Lady Mary's heirs, the Earls of Glasgow, further developed the house. In 1871 the 6th Earl of Glasgow built a chapel in the east front. However huge debts forced the 7th Earl to sell off all his estates in order to retain the family seat at Kelburn, near Largs.
The house then passed to the politician Thomas Cochrane, son-in-law of the 6th Earl of Glasgow. Cochrane was created Baron Cochrane of Cults in 1919. Further remodelling was undertaken in the 1920s by Reginald Fairlie, including the removal of the porte cochere to the west front. After the death of the 2nd Baron in 1968 the house was closed, and gradually fell into disrepair and ruin. There are no significant remains of the internal gothic design save a cast iron balustrade in the D-shaped main stairhall in the east side of the building.
Spring Drive From Guardbridge Through Dairsie To Cupar Fife Scotland
Tour Scotland video of a Spring road trip drive from Guardbridge through Dairsie on ancestry visit to Cupar, Fife. David Finlay VC, born 29 January 1893 was from Guardbridge. He was the son of a shepherd named George Finlay and his wife Susan Small. He was 22 years old, and a lance corporal in the 2nd Battalion, The Black Watch Royal Highlanders, British Army during the First World War when was a Scottish recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. Finlay was later promoted to the rank of sergeant. He was killed in action in Mesopotamia on 21 January 1916 and is remembered on the Basra Memorial. There is a memorial stone in the children's play park in the north end of Guardbridge his home village. Dairsie is a village and parish in north east Fife, located 3 miles from Cupar on the A91 Stirling to St Andrews road which developed principally around the industry of weaving. Colonel Robert Hope Moncrieff Aitken VC was born in Cupar on 8 February 1826. He was the son of John Aitken and Jane Christie, of Cupar. He was a Scottish recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.He was 31 years old, and a Lieutenant in the 13th Bengal Native Infantry, Bengal Army during the Indian Mutiny when the following deeds took place for which he was awarded the VC: He died in 1887 and is buried in the Eastern Cemetery at St Andrews on the upper terrace.
Outhouse in the rough
Mr Matthew Whitehoue attempting to drive off the tee at the 6th hole at Cupar Golf Course, Scotland 2007 (The Oldest 9 hole course in the world)...a classic
April Drive To Lordscairnie Castle Near Cupar Fife Scotland
Tour Scotland video of an April drive to Lordscairnie Castle, near Cupar on ancestry visit to Fife. Little remains of the original keep and tower of the 15 or 16th century building which was built for the Earls of Crawford. The loch which used to surround the castle has been drained and it is said that treasure is buried nearby. The 4th Earl of Crawford is said to be seen playing cards with the devil at midnight each New Year's Eve.
Vintage Cars On The Road To Cupar Fife Scotland
Tour Scotland video of vintage cars on the road to Cupar, Fife.
Drive From Crail To Cupar Fife Scotland
Tour Scotland video of a cloudy, rainy drive from just outside Crail on ancestry visit to Cupar
fife road trip part 2
Strathmiglo (Scottish Gaelic: Srath Mioglach) (Ordnance Survey grid reference NO214101) is a village and parish in Fife, Scotland on the River Eden. It lies on the old A91 road from Milnathort to Cupar and St. Andrews but was bypassed by a new road to the north in the 1970s. The population is around 1000. Nearby settlements include Auchtermuchty and Falkland.
The civil parish has a population of 1,274 (in 2011).[1]
Strathmiglo is sometimes thought to have belonged to the Mormaers of Fife in early times. Before 1350 it had become the centre of the shire of Strathmigloshire. It became a burgh of barony in the 16th century, by which time it belonged to the Scotts of Balwearie. Prior to the Reformation it was the site of a Collegiate church. The village has several houses dating from the early 18th century.
The economic life of the burgh in early times was linked to nearby Falkland Palace. In the 18th and 19th centuries the textile industry was important, as was boot-making in the 20th. The tollbooth of 1734 is a prominent landmark and there is a Pictish stone by the cemetery. The latter probably dates from the 9th century and shows a pair of legs (with toes) and stomach above. The upper torso and head are missing as the upper part of the stone is broken and missing. The explanatory plaque inexplicably and impossibly describes it as a carving of a tuning fork.
Cupar and Fife potato gathering
Cupar and Fife potato gathering
Dances with Russia, Collect for Vodkad
There you arney, there your not.
Just you average Thursday night out in Cupar with busking Russian/Polish, campfire singing nuggets!