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Dysart, Fife

Dysart (/ˈdzərt/ listen ; Scottish Gaelic: Dìseart) is a former town and royal burgh located on the south-east coast between Kirkcaldy and West Wemyss in Fife. The town is now considered to be a suburb of Kirkcaldy. Dysart was once part of a wider estate owned by the St Clair or Sinclair family. They were responsible for gaining burgh of barony status for the town towards the end of the 15th century.

Dysart

A view of Dysart harbour with Harbourmaster's House and the remains of St Serf's Church being visible to the north-east
Dysart
Location within Fife
OS grid referenceNT305935
Council area
Lieutenancy area
CountryScotland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townKIRKCALDY
Postcode districtKY1
Dialling code01592
PoliceScotland
FireScottish
AmbulanceScottish
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament
List of places
UK
Scotland
56°08′N 3°07′W / 56.13°N 3.11°W / 56.13; -3.11Coordinates: 56°08′N 3°07′W / 56.13°N 3.11°W / 56.13; -3.11
Dysart Harbour in 1854 by Sam Bough RSA

The first record of the town was made in the early 13th century, its initial role being to settle civil matters between the church and landowners. During the middle of the 15th century, trade with the Low Countries began for salt and coal exportation. In the 16th and 17th centuries, trade expanded to the Baltic Countries. Dysart acquired two nicknames: "Salt Burgh" and "Little Holland" as a result.

Following the sudden decline of the town's harbour caused by the closure of the Lady Blanche Pit, the town was amalgamated into the royal burgh of Kirkcaldy under an act of parliament in 1930. Urban clearance during the 1950s and 1960s saw large parts of the historic town demolished for new housing. Demand from the town's residents meant that part of the historic town — most notably the 16th-century and the 18th-century houses of Pan Ha' opposite the harbour — were salvaged and preserved for future generations. Today, Dysart retains an individual character within the boundary of neighbouring Kirkcaldy.

History

The name of the town derives from the Scottish Gaelic, dìseart, meaning "a hermitage or religious retreat", which itself was a loan-word from the Latin, desertum, meaning "a desert or deserted place".[2] This is most likely linked to Saint Serf, who lived as a hermit in a cave in the area in the 8th century.[3]

Prior to the 16th century, little is known about the history of the town.[4] The earliest record of the town's existence is a document about a papal decision between Dysart Kirk and Dunfermline Abbey in 1220.[4][5] Another record followed in 1245, this time about the reconsecration of Dysart Kirk undertaken by David de Bernham of St Andrews.[6] The initial role of the town, like many communities in Scotland, was to serve the church and landowners by resolving civic matters and dealing individually with property issues.[7][8]

The first port has been said to date as far back as 1450. This helped the export of coal and salt with the town's trading partner, the Low Countries. A man-made harbour was eventually built, but could only be used at low tide with limited space.[9] The damage caused by the jetty which was commonly known as the "east haven of Dysart" temporarily cut short the function of the east pier in the mid-17th century.[9] The harbour was later extensively rebuilt in 1829-31 with the assistance of Robert Stephenson, to include an inner basin with a nearby quarry at the harbour head and an extension of the east pier which would be raised and pointed southwards.[10][11]

During the 16th and 17th centuries, the town went through hard times with many residents, particularly skippers, being killed in the wars of covenanting (1644–1645) and the five-year occupation of Oliver Cromwell between 1651 and 1656. However, the salt trade prospered between the town and its two trading partners – Netherlands and the Baltic Countries with production thriving between 1570 and 1630.[6] Subsequently, the town was given two nicknames: salt burgh (for the salt industry keeping the fish fresh for export) and later Little Holland (for the Dutch influence in Dysart's buildings inspired by the shipowners who went there).[12][6][13] The first coal pit in the town - known as Lady Blanche - opened towards the end of the 16th century. Two new pits – Frances and Randolph – would follow by the middle of the 17th century as coal began to succeed the salt trade.[6][14] Meanwhile, the harbour was revived with the imports of wine and spirits being sent to other harbours at Leith, Dundee and Perth. The town's prosperity declined in the late 17th century and by 1715 the disrepair of the harbour was noted.[15]: 210–211  Food shortages resulting from the export trade led to the town becoming a centre of the 1720 food riots, with estimates of 1,000 to 2,000 protestors on the streets[15]: 193–194  and troops being overpowered and disarmed.[16]

In the 1920s, the owners of the harbour, the Earl of Rossyln's Coal Company, put pressure on the town council to deepen the harbour for use of larger ships.[17] The council was plunged into financial ruin after the coal company refused to pay for the work in excess of £500. Many ships went instead to Buckhaven and Methil, where they received a quicker turnaround than in Dysart.[18] The closure of the uneconomic Lady Blanche Pit in 1929, proved to be the end of the town's coal trade from the harbour.[6][17][18] The lack of revenue from Dysart's harbour forced the town to merge with Kirkcaldy under a private act of parliament in 1930.[17]

Dysart Golf Club (now defunct) was founded in 1897. The club and course closed at the time of WW2.[19]

Today, Dysart is considered to be a north-eastern suburb of Kirkcaldy and the village forms one of 48 conservation areas in Fife. Important landmarks in the village include the Dutch influenced houses on Pan Ha'; the six-storey St Serf's Church Tower; Dysart Tolbooth and the Francis Collery gearhead which is situated on the northern boundaries. An £11 million pound scheme has been started by The Townscape Heritage Initiative (THI) and Conservation Area Grants Scheme (CARS) to regenerate Dysart over a period of five years, due to be completed in 2014. This will include repairing historic buildings and structures such as Dysart Tolbooth and Dysart Harbour as well as providing new housing and meeting environmental needs.[20]

Church

The pre-Reformation church in Dysart was dedicated to St Serf and was close to St Serf's Cave where he supposedly lived as a hermit. It was under command of the Collegiate Church of St Mary in St Andrews. A replacement church was built in 1802.[21]

A second Free Church was built in 1874 designed by Campbell Douglas.[22]

Parish ministers: Robert Danielston (1560–1565); Andrew Forester (1565–1574); George Scott (1574–1582); John Young (1582–1584); Thomas Wood (1584); William Murray (1584–1616); William Nairn (1616–1630); James Wilson (1643–1661); John Robertson (1661–62); John Anderson of Balram (1663–1707); David Pitcairn (1708–1757); Patrick Muirhead DD (1757–1807); his son George Muirhead (1807–1816); Peter Brotherston (1816–1828); David Murray (1828–1850); William Muir (1850–1864); James Simpson (1865–1901) blind; John Waugh Gibson, second charge (1865–1906); Hugh Menzies (1907–?).[23]

Governance

The Sinclair or St Clair family have held the position of feudal superiors or barons of the burgh of the estate of Dysart since 1407.[6][10] They were responsible for gaining Burgh of barony status towards the end of the 15th century.[12][10] Royal burgh status in the town has long been disputed.[10] A main reason for this being the area was a commercial background.[6] A missing charter was only confirmed in a charter granted by James VI in 1587. However the title was indeed granted to Dysart in 1594 with the honour of having a seat in the parliament.[6][24] A dispute between the St Clair family and the town inhabitants about the right to use the moorland resources was referred to the Convention of Royal Burghs in 1694 and was resolved only in 1718.[15]: 211 

Originally St Serf's Church was the meeting place of the town council, until this moved to Dysart Town House in 1877. The provost and town council met at this location once a week right up to the time of the loss of royal burgh status, when the town was amalgamated into Kirkcaldy in 1930.[25] The town's former coat of arms was represented by an oak tree. This stood for the memory of the three trees planted in Dysart wood for the three Sinclair brothers. According to the tale, one night in the woods, the brothers were robbed and then killed each other. The site of Dysart Wood is most probably Ravenscraig Park.[26]

Landmarks

The whole of Dysart is a conservation area. This was designated by the former Kirkcaldy District Council (KDC) on 8 May 1978. Dysart Tolbooth on the High Street, erected in 1576, is the centrepiece of Dysart's historic buildings. This was once used as a public weigh-in and measures house; guards house and eventually a prison built as an extension in 1617.[25][27][28] The building was also known to keep explosives. When this was occupied by Oliver Cromwell's troops in 1651, one of them accidentally dropped a match into a barrel of gunpowder (which was abandoned by a Dysart merchant) causing the roof to be blown apart.[29][30] The upper part of the building was rebuilt between 1733 and 1734 with an ashlar bell-chamber and a stone ogile roof.[27][31] The neighbouring Dysart Town Hall was once used as the meeting place for the provost and town council.[30]

 
St Serf's tower and Pan Ha'

Other significant landmarks in the town include the 16th and 18th century painted dwellings on Pan Ha'; the six-storey St Serf's church tower and the harbour. Pan Ha', or to give the full title, Pan Haugh, means low-lying ground of the salt pans - hence the expression, "to carry saut to Dysart".[32] Many of the houses have been restored by the National Trust for Scotland between 1968 and 1969 under the "little houses scheme".[27][33] During the restoration of the former Bay Horse Inn at Pan Ha', once the residence of a son of Lord Sinclair, two renaissance painted ceilings were discovered and are still retained by Historic Scotland.[34] The Duke of Holstein visited the Sinclair house in 1598.[35]

St Serf's church tower on Shore Road dates from around 1500, is considered to be one of Scotland's finest examples of a battlemented church tower.[36] This is the only remaining part of St Serf's Church, which was abandoned in 1802 and largely cleared away for the building of Shore Road in 1807.[17][36]

The red headgear of the Francis Colliery is a landmark marking the northern boundaries of the town.[17][32][36]

Dysart House, formerly the seat of the Earl of Rossyln, overlooks the harbour. The earliest section of the house is the south range built for General James St Clair between 1755 and 1756, for which it is believed that the Adam Brothers provided the chimney pieces and the design. The house was extended between 1808 and 1814 to include new rear wings.[37] The three-storey harbourmaster's house in the grounds of the harbour dates from around 1840.[38] Originally known as the shore house, this was used to store cargo from incoming ships, before being used by the harbourmaster.[38] Today, the house is home to the headquarters of the Fife Countryside and Coast Trust and also has a bistro, shop and provides internet access.

Notable residents

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 March 2007. Retrieved on 3 August 2008
  2. ^ "Dysart". Fife Place-name Data. Retrieved 18 June 2020.
  3. ^ Ross, David, 1943- (2007). Scottish place-names. Birlinn. p. 29. ISBN 9780953021307. OCLC 213108856.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ a b Kirkcaldy District Council Community Programme, Dysart, pp.5–6.
  5. ^ Swan and McNeill, Dysart – A Royal Burgh p.76.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Eunson Old Dysart and East Kirkcaldy pp.3–4.
  7. ^ Robert Brodie (1863). Historical Sketches of Pathhead and Vicinity. Kirkcaldy District Council.
  8. ^ Swan, Jim and McNeill, Carol Dysart – A Royal Burgh p.12.
  9. ^ a b Swan, Jim and McNeill, Carol Dysart: A Royal Burgh p.17.
  10. ^ a b c d Swan, Jim and McNeill, Carol Dysart – A Royal Burgh pp.11–14.
  11. ^ Eunson Old Dysart and East Kirkcaldy
  12. ^ a b Pearson, John M. Around Kirkcaldy pp.24–25.
  13. ^ Swan, Jim and McNeill, Carol Dysart: A Royal Burgh
  14. ^ Kirkcaldy Civic Society (2005). Kirkcaldy Remembered, 2nd edition. Nonsuch Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1-84588-386-7.
  15. ^ a b c Whatley, Christopher (October 1999). "The Union of 1707, Integration and the Scottish Burghs: The Case of the 1720 Food Riots". Scottish Historical Review. 78 (206): 192–218. doi:10.3366/shr.1999.78.2.192. JSTOR 25530901. PMID 22276330.
  16. ^ Black, Jeremy (1999). Britain As A Military Power, 1688-1815. Routledge. p. 41. ISBN 9781135360801.
  17. ^ a b c d e "Dysart Conservation Area Appraisal and Management Plan" (PDF). Fife Council. April 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  18. ^ a b Swan, Jim and McNeill, Carol Dysart – A Royal Burgh pp.28–29.
  19. ^ "Dysart Golf Club", "Golf’s Missing Links".
  20. ^ "Dysart Townscape Heritage Initiative (THI)" (PDF). April 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2009.[permanent dead link]
  21. ^ Fasti Ecclesistae Scotia p.85
  22. ^ "Dysart Parish Church - Kirkcaldy and Dysart, Fife - Places of Worship in Scotland | SCHR". www.scottishchurches.org.uk. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  23. ^ Fasti Ecclesistae Scotia p.87
  24. ^ Omand The Fife Book
  25. ^ a b Swan and McNeill, Dysart: A Royal Burgh p.113.
  26. ^ Fife Council, Kirkcaldy's History, Its Places and Its Famous Folk, p.12.
  27. ^ a b c Walker and Ritchie, Fife, Perthshire and Angus – 2nd edition pp.84–85.
  28. ^ Civic Society, Kirkcaldy Remembered p.119.
  29. ^ Civic Society, Kirkcaldy – A History and Celebration p.18.
  30. ^ a b Dysart Trust, The Dysart Trail pp.2–4.
  31. ^ Pride, Kingdom of Fife p.61.
  32. ^ a b Dysart Trust, The Dysart Trail p.8.
  33. ^ Gifford Fife – The Buildings of Scotland pp.260–261.
  34. ^ Bath, Michael, Renaissance Decorative Painting (NMS: Edinburgh, 2003), p. 247.
  35. ^ Robert Chambers, Domestic Annals of Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1858), p. 297
  36. ^ a b c Lamont-Brown Fife in History and Legend p.150.
  37. ^ Gifford Fife – Buildings of Scotland pp.288–291.
  38. ^ a b Swan and McNeill Dysart: A Royal Burgh p.23.

Bibliography

  • Jim Swan and Carol McNeill (1997). Dysart: A Royal Burgh. The Dysart Trust. ISBN 0-9530213-0-0.
  • Eunson, Eric (1998). Old Dysart and East Kirkcaldy. Stenlake Publishing. ISBN 1-84033-051-1.
  • Walker and Ritchie (1997). Fife, Perthshire and Angus.
  • Cummingham, And S. Dysart: Past and Present. Scottish Temperance Life Assurance Company.
  • Muir, William,. ed., Notices of the Local Records of Dysart, Maitland Club (1853)

External links

  • Gazetteer for Scotland entry for Dysart
  • National Archives record on "Dysart and Ravenscraig Barony", and records for Dysart Burgh, Dysart Parish Church, Dysart Parish Hearse Society, and Dysart Parish Horticultural Society
  • Dysart on FifeDirect
  • Fife Placenames entry
  •   Media related to Dysart, Fife at Wikimedia Commons

dysart, fife, dysart, listen, help, info, scottish, gaelic, dìseart, former, town, royal, burgh, located, south, east, coast, between, kirkcaldy, west, wemyss, fife, town, considered, suburb, kirkcaldy, dysart, once, part, wider, estate, owned, clair, sinclair. Dysart ˈ d aɪ z er t listen help info Scottish Gaelic Diseart is a former town and royal burgh located on the south east coast between Kirkcaldy and West Wemyss in Fife The town is now considered to be a suburb of Kirkcaldy Dysart was once part of a wider estate owned by the St Clair or Sinclair family They were responsible for gaining burgh of barony status for the town towards the end of the 15th century DysartScottish Gaelic Diseart 1 Little HollandA view of Dysart harbour with Harbourmaster s House and the remains of St Serf s Church being visible to the north eastDysartLocation within FifeOS grid referenceNT305935Council areaFifeLieutenancy areaFifeCountryScotlandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townKIRKCALDYPostcode districtKY1Dialling code01592PoliceScotlandFireScottishAmbulanceScottishUK ParliamentKirkcaldy and CowdenbeathScottish ParliamentKirkcaldyList of places UK Scotland 56 08 N 3 07 W 56 13 N 3 11 W 56 13 3 11 Coordinates 56 08 N 3 07 W 56 13 N 3 11 W 56 13 3 11Dysart Harbour in 1854 by Sam Bough RSA The first record of the town was made in the early 13th century its initial role being to settle civil matters between the church and landowners During the middle of the 15th century trade with the Low Countries began for salt and coal exportation In the 16th and 17th centuries trade expanded to the Baltic Countries Dysart acquired two nicknames Salt Burgh and Little Holland as a result Following the sudden decline of the town s harbour caused by the closure of the Lady Blanche Pit the town was amalgamated into the royal burgh of Kirkcaldy under an act of parliament in 1930 Urban clearance during the 1950s and 1960s saw large parts of the historic town demolished for new housing Demand from the town s residents meant that part of the historic town most notably the 16th century and the 18th century houses of Pan Ha opposite the harbour were salvaged and preserved for future generations Today Dysart retains an individual character within the boundary of neighbouring Kirkcaldy Contents 1 History 2 Church 3 Governance 4 Landmarks 5 Notable residents 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Bibliography 8 External linksHistory EditThe name of the town derives from the Scottish Gaelic diseart meaning a hermitage or religious retreat which itself was a loan word from the Latin desertum meaning a desert or deserted place 2 This is most likely linked to Saint Serf who lived as a hermit in a cave in the area in the 8th century 3 Prior to the 16th century little is known about the history of the town 4 The earliest record of the town s existence is a document about a papal decision between Dysart Kirk and Dunfermline Abbey in 1220 4 5 Another record followed in 1245 this time about the reconsecration of Dysart Kirk undertaken by David de Bernham of St Andrews 6 The initial role of the town like many communities in Scotland was to serve the church and landowners by resolving civic matters and dealing individually with property issues 7 8 The first port has been said to date as far back as 1450 This helped the export of coal and salt with the town s trading partner the Low Countries A man made harbour was eventually built but could only be used at low tide with limited space 9 The damage caused by the jetty which was commonly known as the east haven of Dysart temporarily cut short the function of the east pier in the mid 17th century 9 The harbour was later extensively rebuilt in 1829 31 with the assistance of Robert Stephenson to include an inner basin with a nearby quarry at the harbour head and an extension of the east pier which would be raised and pointed southwards 10 11 During the 16th and 17th centuries the town went through hard times with many residents particularly skippers being killed in the wars of covenanting 1644 1645 and the five year occupation of Oliver Cromwell between 1651 and 1656 However the salt trade prospered between the town and its two trading partners Netherlands and the Baltic Countries with production thriving between 1570 and 1630 6 Subsequently the town was given two nicknames salt burgh for the salt industry keeping the fish fresh for export and later Little Holland for the Dutch influence in Dysart s buildings inspired by the shipowners who went there 12 6 13 The first coal pit in the town known as Lady Blanche opened towards the end of the 16th century Two new pits Frances and Randolph would follow by the middle of the 17th century as coal began to succeed the salt trade 6 14 Meanwhile the harbour was revived with the imports of wine and spirits being sent to other harbours at Leith Dundee and Perth The town s prosperity declined in the late 17th century and by 1715 the disrepair of the harbour was noted 15 210 211 Food shortages resulting from the export trade led to the town becoming a centre of the 1720 food riots with estimates of 1 000 to 2 000 protestors on the streets 15 193 194 and troops being overpowered and disarmed 16 In the 1920s the owners of the harbour the Earl of Rossyln s Coal Company put pressure on the town council to deepen the harbour for use of larger ships 17 The council was plunged into financial ruin after the coal company refused to pay for the work in excess of 500 Many ships went instead to Buckhaven and Methil where they received a quicker turnaround than in Dysart 18 The closure of the uneconomic Lady Blanche Pit in 1929 proved to be the end of the town s coal trade from the harbour 6 17 18 The lack of revenue from Dysart s harbour forced the town to merge with Kirkcaldy under a private act of parliament in 1930 17 Dysart Golf Club now defunct was founded in 1897 The club and course closed at the time of WW2 19 Today Dysart is considered to be a north eastern suburb of Kirkcaldy and the village forms one of 48 conservation areas in Fife Important landmarks in the village include the Dutch influenced houses on Pan Ha the six storey St Serf s Church Tower Dysart Tolbooth and the Francis Collery gearhead which is situated on the northern boundaries An 11 million pound scheme has been started by The Townscape Heritage Initiative THI and Conservation Area Grants Scheme CARS to regenerate Dysart over a period of five years due to be completed in 2014 This will include repairing historic buildings and structures such as Dysart Tolbooth and Dysart Harbour as well as providing new housing and meeting environmental needs 20 Church EditThe pre Reformation church in Dysart was dedicated to St Serf and was close to St Serf s Cave where he supposedly lived as a hermit It was under command of the Collegiate Church of St Mary in St Andrews A replacement church was built in 1802 21 A second Free Church was built in 1874 designed by Campbell Douglas 22 Parish ministers Robert Danielston 1560 1565 Andrew Forester 1565 1574 George Scott 1574 1582 John Young 1582 1584 Thomas Wood 1584 William Murray 1584 1616 William Nairn 1616 1630 James Wilson 1643 1661 John Robertson 1661 62 John Anderson of Balram 1663 1707 David Pitcairn 1708 1757 Patrick Muirhead DD 1757 1807 his son George Muirhead 1807 1816 Peter Brotherston 1816 1828 David Murray 1828 1850 William Muir 1850 1864 James Simpson 1865 1901 blind John Waugh Gibson second charge 1865 1906 Hugh Menzies 1907 23 Governance EditThe Sinclair or St Clair family have held the position of feudal superiors or barons of the burgh of the estate of Dysart since 1407 6 10 They were responsible for gaining Burgh of barony status towards the end of the 15th century 12 10 Royal burgh status in the town has long been disputed 10 A main reason for this being the area was a commercial background 6 A missing charter was only confirmed in a charter granted by James VI in 1587 However the title was indeed granted to Dysart in 1594 with the honour of having a seat in the parliament 6 24 A dispute between the St Clair family and the town inhabitants about the right to use the moorland resources was referred to the Convention of Royal Burghs in 1694 and was resolved only in 1718 15 211 Originally St Serf s Church was the meeting place of the town council until this moved to Dysart Town House in 1877 The provost and town council met at this location once a week right up to the time of the loss of royal burgh status when the town was amalgamated into Kirkcaldy in 1930 25 The town s former coat of arms was represented by an oak tree This stood for the memory of the three trees planted in Dysart wood for the three Sinclair brothers According to the tale one night in the woods the brothers were robbed and then killed each other The site of Dysart Wood is most probably Ravenscraig Park 26 Landmarks Edit Dysart Tolbooth The whole of Dysart is a conservation area This was designated by the former Kirkcaldy District Council KDC on 8 May 1978 Dysart Tolbooth on the High Street erected in 1576 is the centrepiece of Dysart s historic buildings This was once used as a public weigh in and measures house guards house and eventually a prison built as an extension in 1617 25 27 28 The building was also known to keep explosives When this was occupied by Oliver Cromwell s troops in 1651 one of them accidentally dropped a match into a barrel of gunpowder which was abandoned by a Dysart merchant causing the roof to be blown apart 29 30 The upper part of the building was rebuilt between 1733 and 1734 with an ashlar bell chamber and a stone ogile roof 27 31 The neighbouring Dysart Town Hall was once used as the meeting place for the provost and town council 30 St Serf s tower and Pan Ha Other significant landmarks in the town include the 16th and 18th century painted dwellings on Pan Ha the six storey St Serf s church tower and the harbour Pan Ha or to give the full title Pan Haugh means low lying ground of the salt pans hence the expression to carry saut to Dysart 32 Many of the houses have been restored by the National Trust for Scotland between 1968 and 1969 under the little houses scheme 27 33 During the restoration of the former Bay Horse Inn at Pan Ha once the residence of a son of Lord Sinclair two renaissance painted ceilings were discovered and are still retained by Historic Scotland 34 The Duke of Holstein visited the Sinclair house in 1598 35 St Serf s church tower on Shore Road dates from around 1500 is considered to be one of Scotland s finest examples of a battlemented church tower 36 This is the only remaining part of St Serf s Church which was abandoned in 1802 and largely cleared away for the building of Shore Road in 1807 17 36 The red headgear of the Francis Colliery is a landmark marking the northern boundaries of the town 17 32 36 Dysart House formerly the seat of the Earl of Rossyln overlooks the harbour The earliest section of the house is the south range built for General James St Clair between 1755 and 1756 for which it is believed that the Adam Brothers provided the chimney pieces and the design The house was extended between 1808 and 1814 to include new rear wings 37 The three storey harbourmaster s house in the grounds of the harbour dates from around 1840 38 Originally known as the shore house this was used to store cargo from incoming ships before being used by the harbourmaster 38 Today the house is home to the headquarters of the Fife Countryside and Coast Trust and also has a bistro shop and provides internet access Notable residents EditRobert Beatson Lady Angela Forbes Rev George Muirhead John Pitcairn William Pitcairn Sir Norman Walker William Wallace mathematician John McDouall Stuart explorerSee also EditDysart Parliament of Scotland constituency References EditNotes Edit Scottish Parliament Gaelic Placenames C E PDF Archived from the original PDF on 17 March 2007 Retrieved on 3 August 2008 Dysart Fife Place name Data Retrieved 18 June 2020 Ross David 1943 2007 Scottish place names Birlinn p 29 ISBN 9780953021307 OCLC 213108856 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Kirkcaldy District Council Community Programme Dysart pp 5 6 Swan and McNeill Dysart A Royal Burgh p 76 a b c d e f g h Eunson Old Dysart and East Kirkcaldy pp 3 4 Robert Brodie 1863 Historical Sketches of Pathhead and Vicinity Kirkcaldy District Council Swan Jim and McNeill Carol Dysart A Royal Burgh p 12 a b Swan Jim and McNeill Carol Dysart A Royal Burgh p 17 a b c d Swan Jim and McNeill Carol Dysart A Royal Burgh pp 11 14 Eunson Old Dysart and East Kirkcaldy a b Pearson John M Around Kirkcaldy pp 24 25 Swan Jim and McNeill Carol Dysart A Royal Burgh Kirkcaldy Civic Society 2005 Kirkcaldy Remembered 2nd edition Nonsuch Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 1 84588 386 7 a b c Whatley Christopher October 1999 The Union of 1707 Integration and the Scottish Burghs The Case of the 1720 Food Riots Scottish Historical Review 78 206 192 218 doi 10 3366 shr 1999 78 2 192 JSTOR 25530901 PMID 22276330 Black Jeremy 1999 Britain As A Military Power 1688 1815 Routledge p 41 ISBN 9781135360801 a b c d e Dysart Conservation Area Appraisal and Management Plan PDF Fife Council April 2009 Retrieved 7 January 2010 a b Swan Jim and McNeill Carol Dysart A Royal Burgh pp 28 29 Dysart Golf Club Golf s Missing Links Dysart Townscape Heritage Initiative THI PDF April 2009 Retrieved 7 January 2009 permanent dead link Fasti Ecclesistae Scotia p 85 Dysart Parish Church Kirkcaldy and Dysart Fife Places of Worship in Scotland SCHR www scottishchurches org uk Retrieved 3 June 2021 Fasti Ecclesistae Scotia p 87 Omand The Fife Book a b Swan and McNeill Dysart A Royal Burgh p 113 Fife Council Kirkcaldy s History Its Places and Its Famous Folk p 12 a b c Walker and Ritchie Fife Perthshire and Angus 2nd edition pp 84 85 Civic Society Kirkcaldy Remembered p 119 Civic Society Kirkcaldy A History and Celebration p 18 a b Dysart Trust The Dysart Trail pp 2 4 Pride Kingdom of Fife p 61 a b Dysart Trust The Dysart Trail p 8 Gifford Fife The Buildings of Scotland pp 260 261 Bath Michael Renaissance Decorative Painting NMS Edinburgh 2003 p 247 Robert Chambers Domestic Annals of Scotland vol 1 Edinburgh 1858 p 297 a b c Lamont Brown Fife in History and Legend p 150 Gifford Fife Buildings of Scotland pp 288 291 a b Swan and McNeill Dysart A Royal Burgh p 23 Bibliography Edit Jim Swan and Carol McNeill 1997 Dysart A Royal Burgh The Dysart Trust ISBN 0 9530213 0 0 Eunson Eric 1998 Old Dysart and East Kirkcaldy Stenlake Publishing ISBN 1 84033 051 1 Walker and Ritchie 1997 Fife Perthshire and Angus Cummingham And S Dysart Past and Present Scottish Temperance Life Assurance Company Muir William ed Notices of the Local Records of Dysart Maitland Club 1853 External links EditGazetteer for Scotland entry for Dysart National Archives record on Dysart and Ravenscraig Barony and records for Dysart Burgh Dysart Parish Church Dysart Parish Hearse Society and Dysart Parish Horticultural Society The Fife Coastal Path website Harbourmaster s House website Dysart on FifeDirect Fife Placenames entry Media related to Dysart Fife at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dysart Fife amp oldid 1126102650, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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