Winter Drive To Parish Church Inverkeithing Fife Scotland
Tour Scotland winter travel video of a drive along the High Street to the parish church of St. Peter on visit to Inverkething in West Fife. There has been a church on this site since the fifth century, when St. Erat, who was a follower of St Ninian, established a small church here. This was later replaced by a Norman church in the twelfth century, but it appears that St. Erat continued as the dedication.The church and its associated lands were granted to Dunfermline abbey in the twelfth century. After this, in the early thirteenth century, the Norman church was replaced by a Gothic building. The tower on the western side of the church was added in the fourteenth century. The church was destroyed by fire in 1825 and replaced by the present building. The four sided lead spire was added in 1852, having replaced the earlier 1731 spire which was probably stone built. The four gabled dormers which encase clock faces were added in 1883.
Old Photographs Of Rosyth Firth Of Forth Fife Scotland
Tour Scotland wee video of old photographs of Rosyth, Scottish Gaelic: Ros Fhìobh, meaning headland of Fife, a town on the Firth of Forth, three miles south of the centre of Dunfermline, Fife. The area is best known for its large dockyard, formerly the Royal Naval Dockyard Rosyth, construction of which began in 1909. The town was planned as a garden city with accommodation for the construction workers and dockyard workers. Rosyth and nearby Charlestown were major centres of shipbreaking activity, notably the salvage of much of the German fleet scuttled at Gutter Sound, Scapa Flow[ nd the Cunard Line's RMS Mauretania. Rosyth Castle is a Scottish tower house which originally stood on a small island in the Firth of Forth accessible only at low tide, and dates from around 1450, built as a secure residence by Sir David Stewart, who had been granted the Barony of Rosyth in 1428. The tower house was enlarged and extended in the 16th and early 17th centuries. In 1572 it was attacked by men from Blackness Castle on the southern shore of the Firth of Forth and it was occupied in 1651 by Oliver Cromwell's army after the Battle of Inverkeithing. It remained a Stewart residence until it was sold in the late seventeenth century to David Drummond of Invermay. It ultimately ended up in the possession of the Earl of Hopetoun and from the eighteenth century onward remained unoccupied. It became Admiralty property in 1903 and as the result of land reclamation lost its waterfront position, becoming marooned within the dockyard. HMS Caledonia was a shore based Royal Navy training establishment located within the naval dockyard at Rosyth, and was responsible for artificer apprentice training from 1937 to 1985, with many thousands of young men said to have undergone training at the establishment.