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Pitmilly

Pitmilly is the site of a former estate located five miles south-east of St Andrews, Scotland. Its historical significance is threefold. It has been inhabited from ancient times; artifacts continue to be recovered from the Neolithic, Bronze and Iron Ages and a well-known barrow (burial mound) Tumulus from the Bronze Age still exists there. It is connected to Clan Hay in that Eva of Pitmilly, the Celtic heiress to these lands,[1] married William II de Haya, a Norman, in the 12th century C.E., with the couple becoming the progenitors of that Scottish clan. Finally, for over seven centuries, it was owned by the important Monypenny family.[2][3]

Pitmilly Law

Pitmilly Lands edit

The name, Pitmilly or Pitmillie, has been used for centuries, but many variants occurred in earlier times. These include Petmullin, Pitmulin, Pethmolyn, and Pitmaulin. They probably reflect the P-Celtic, Scottish Gaelic, Scots and Latin languages, coupled with no great desire for consistency in spelling and the modification of place names that occurs so often. The prefix pit is derived from the P-Celtic word, pett,[4] meaning a piece of land, and is very common in place-names in this part of Scotland. The second part of the name means mill, regardless of its various forms. Pitmilly means, therefore, a piece of land by the mills, and indeed, there are still ruined mills at Pitmilly.

The Pitmilly Lands lie on both sides of the Pitmilly Burn, a stream that joins the larger Kenly Water, just before the latter reaches the North Sea between Craig Hartle and Babbet Ness on the east Fife coast. The lands on the east side of the Pitmilly Burn border that sea. In order to define further the Pitmilly Lands as they have been known through the centuries, it is helpful to note that in the early 20th century, before it was broken up, the Pitmilly estate consisted of the manor house with its grounds, known as Pitmilly House, several farms, a flax mill and a grist mill, both of which may have been ruins then, and a fisherman's bothy. The farms, all of which are identified on the 2008 Ordnance Survey map, are Boghall, Falside, Hillhead, Morton of Pitmilly and Kilduncan. A possible source of confusion is that the Kenly Water has sometimes been known, and shown on maps, as Pitmilly Burn, but it seems clear that the Pitmilly Burn of the Pitmilly Lands is a tributary stream.

A study of the cartography of the region from 1642 onwards[5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13] shows the different naming of Pitmilly Burn and Kenly Water by individual mapmakers. In one map the two streams reach the North Sea separately. It also shows that a manor house existed at Pitmilly in 1775 and that the present farms in the region have existed for a long time, with the same names. One map refers to Pitmilly mills in the plural, which explains why two different mills have sometimes individually been referred to as Pitmilly Mill. The spelling of Pitmilly varies only slightly. In addition to Pitmilly, the name is found as Pitmilli, Pitmil (possibly as an abbreviation) and Pit Mille. The family name, Moneypenny, appears on a map in 1775.

History before the arrival of the Normans edit

Artifacts have been recovered from the Neolithic, Bronze and Iron Age s, indicating that Pitmilly has been inhabited since at least the Neolithic Age. Beatson[14] and Wright,[15] in The Statistical Accounts of Scotland of 1791-99 and 1834–45, respectively, described stone coffins, containing human bones, on the shore of Kingsbarns parish, which includes Pitmilly. They stated that the tombs were thought to be of Danes, i.e., Viking raiders, but Beatson appears dubious. From these descriptions, there is no doubt that the tombs were really Bronze Age cists. Pitmilly Law, a Bronze Age burial barrow, now with trees growing on its summit, is a local landmark on the Pitmilly estate. An article by Skinner in 1869 discusses the finding of six empty cists there.[16] In 1867, he had discussed nearby cists on the Pitmilly estate that contained skeletons.[17] Around 2004, an early Bronze Age cist was discovered just outside the ruins of Pitmilly House during road work; it contained a skeleton and a food vessel of the Yorkshire vase tradition.[18] Neolithic carved stone balls have been found in several locations in Scotland and in 2006 one was recovered near Pitmilly Law.[19]

There appears to be no historical record, specifically, of Pitmilly from the Bronze Age to when the Normans arrived in Scotland. The Picts lived and farmed there, as nearby St Andrew developed into an important ecclesiastical center. Robert Sibbald,[20] writing in 1710, states that there were some obelisks of rough stone on higher ground, just south of the former site of Inchmurtach, a country residence of the Bishop of St Andrews Archbishop of St Andrews, and now the site of Kenlygreen. That location would presumably place them on the Pitmilly Estate. He quotes "the great antiquary, Mr. Maule", as believing that these were the monuments of some great men killed in battle with the Danes. This conclusion may be valid because the Danes (Vikings) frequently invaded these shores. However, it is also possible that the stones were menhirs erected by the Picts. Such stones are common in Scotland.

Countess Ada and Pitmilly edit

In the latter half of the twelfth century, Countess Ada de Warenne, William I of Scotland's mother, made two grants concerning land that she owned at Pitmilly to the St Andrews Cathedral Priory.[21][22][23][24] King William subsequently confirmed both grants.[25]

The Hays and Pitmilly edit

William II de Haya, the first recorded de Haya in Scotland, married Eva of Pitmilly no later than 1171.[26] Little is known about Eva, except that she was the heiress to land at Pitmilly which she brought into the marriage. However, this marriage was important because it was the beginning of the family that became Clan Hay. In 1172, William II de Haya leased one ploughgate in Pitmilly to St Andrews Cathedral Priory and its hospital for twenty years at an annual rent of half a merk of silver.[27] The brief association of the Hays with Pitmilly essentially ended when, shortly after William's death around 1201, Eva and their son, David, after a dispute with the canons of St Andrews Cathedral Priory, quitclaimed the land to the priory, but retained the annual rent of half a merk of silver.[28] The land in question was part of Eva's tocher (dowry) and is known to be Falside from the rubric on King William's charter. Falside still exists as a farm in Pitmilly. However, nothing remains at Pitmilly of whatever residence Eva's family occupied there, if indeed they did live there in the 12th century.

The Monypennys and Pitmilly edit

The centuries-long association of the Monypennys with Pitmilly began in 1211, when Thomas, Prior of St Andrews, granted a charter of the lands of Pitmilly to Richard Monipennie, quam Malisius tennit.[20] The former was probably a Norman knight, while Malisius (Malise of Pitmilly) was the tenant renting the land at the time. In 1296, along with the other Scots gentry and landowners, John de Monypenny of Pitmilly signed the so-called Ragman Rolls by which he swore fealty solely to Edward I of England.[29] Had he not done so, he would have forfeited his lands and suffered other severe penalties. There appears to be little historical record of Pitmilly, as opposed to the Moneypenny family, during the following centuries. Sibbald,[20] writing in 1710, notes the existence of the house, one mile east of Kingsbarns, of a very ancient family of the name of Monipenny. Ainslie,[30] in 1775, depicts on his map the square area of the grounds and house, labeling them as "Pitmilly Coll" and "Moneypenny". The Pitmilly House, of which records exist, was built in three stages.[31] The first two, adjoining, blocks were apparently built in the 18th century. The third stage, a block added to the front of the house, was built in the typical style of a Georgian mansionGeorgian architecture in 1818, the architect being Robert Balfour of St. Andrews. National Monuments Record of Scotland have found no evidence that an earlier house stood on this specific site. However, stone wall fragments from another large structure have been described to the south-east of this house[citation needed] and may have been part of an earlier residence. They no longer exist. Pitmilly is not mentioned in either the 1791-99 Statistical Account of Scotland[32] or in the New Statistical Account, published between 1834 and 1845.[15] However, Slater's Directory,[33] circa 1852, mentions Pitmilly as a very ancient seat in the northern part of Kingsbarns parish, while the Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland in 1865[34] notes the presence of Pitmilly as an estate with a mansion. The last Monypenny to live at Pitmilly was Charlton James Blackwell Monypenny, 1867–1947, who immigrated to South America in 1902,[35] when he is still identified as the owner.[34] The Monypenny family later sold Pitmilly House and the farms on the estate.[36]

Pitmilly after the Monypennys edit

Pitmilly House was taken over during World War II as a billet for Women's Royal Naval Service (WRNS).[37][38] After the war it operated as a hotel[39] under several owners, but ultimately these businesses failed and the house, which was said to be haunted by a particularly active poltergeist,[36] deteriorated badly. It burned in 1967,[36] with much of the building material subsequently being salvaged to build houses in Kingsbarns. Pitmilly now exists as good agricultural land, with the farms of the former estate still operating. Of these, Morton of Pitmilly has been renovated as a self-catering holiday resort. The most important landmark is Pitmilly Law. The ruins of two mills and of a fisherman's bothy on the estate remain. Hillhead Mill was a grist mill, on which the date 1716 is still evident, and is located at the junction of Pitmilly Burn and Kenly Water. Crail Mill was a flax mill with an adjacent miller's house (which still bears the date 1790), located a few hundred yards upstream from Hillhead Mill. There is a large, marshy pond to the west of the miller's house, probably representing the retting pond for the flax. Some confusion in nomenclature exists because both mills have on occasion been referred to individually as Pitmilly Mill. Little of Pitmilly House itself is left. Pitmilly West, built in 1975 on the site of the west gate house, operates as bed and breakfast. The other three gatehouses, the walls surrounding the grounds, pathways through the grounds, as well as ruins of the stables and the bowling alley remain. The Gate Lodge has been refurbished to a high standard; the East Lodge is in its original, Georgian, condition, while South Lodge is completely ruinous. Several photographs of the Pitmilly area as it is now can be found on Geograph Britain and Ireland at Grid Square NO5713 and adjacent squares[40] The local beach is unofficially called Pitmilly Beach with the Fife Coastal Path running along that beach and then entering the valley of Kenly Water, past the Pitmilly mills.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Although Eva is usually referred to as a Celtic heiress,her parentage and, therefore, her ethnicity, have not been established.
  2. ^ Balfour 1909, p.275.
  3. ^ Black 1946, p.609.
  4. ^ Roberts 1997, p.10.
  5. ^ Gordon 1642.
  6. ^ Blaeu 1654.
  7. ^ Moll 1745.
  8. ^ Ainslie 1775 Fife.
  9. ^ Ainslie 1745 Fife and Kinross.
  10. ^ Greenwood 1828.
  11. ^ Thomson and Johnson 1820.
  12. ^ Ordnance Survey 1926.
  13. ^ Ordnance Survey 2008.
  14. ^ Beatson between 1791 and 1799, p.254.
  15. ^ a b Wright between 1834 and 1845, p.92.
  16. ^ Skinner 1869.
  17. ^ Skinner 1867.
  18. ^ Bronze Age food vessel History Scotland Magazine, 2004.
  19. ^ TT.103/06.
  20. ^ a b c Sibbald 1710, p.348.
  21. ^ . The first was for work on the new church and its lighting. It consisted of the annual rent for the land of one silver merk, which Countess Ada stipulated that the tenant, Malise of Pitmilly and his successors, should pay
  22. ^ Carta Comitifle Ade. de tota tra de pethmulin.Registrum Prioratius Sancti Andree, p.208. See Bruce, 1941.
  23. ^ In her second grant, Countess Ada granted the land to the priory and its hospital (in modern terms, a boarding house for pilgrims to St Andrews)
  24. ^ Carta Comitifle Ade de una coarca de petmulin. Registrum Prioratius Sancti Andree, p.209. See Bruce, 1841
  25. ^ Barrow, Scott 1971, charter 29, pp.139-40 and charter 170, p.233
  26. ^ Balfour 1906, pp.555-7.
  27. ^ Carta Willielmi de Haya de terra in Petmulyn. Registrum Prioratus Sancti Andree. p.313. See Bruce 1841
  28. ^ Barrow, Scott 1971, charter 435,1201-1205
  29. ^ Connolly 1866, p.337.
  30. ^ Ainslie Fife 1775.
  31. ^ Pitmilly House,National Monuments Record of Scotland,1967.
  32. ^ Beatson between 1791 and 1799.
  33. ^ Slater 1852, p.?
  34. ^ a b Groome 1833-6, p.206.
  35. ^ "Monypenny, Charlton James Blackwell (MNPY889CJ)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  36. ^ a b c Macintyre 2008.
  37. ^ . Women who were stationed there have confirmed this.
  38. ^ The information in this section is mainly from local sources.
  39. ^ Pitmilly Hotel, Fife,1964 www.flickr.com/photos.
  40. ^ Geograph 2008.

References edit

  • (Map). Ainslie, J. Archived from the original on 27 June 2009. Retrieved 3 October 2008.
  • Counties of Fife and Kinross with the Rivers Forth and Tay, 1775 (Map). Ainslie, J. Retrieved 3 October 2008.[permanent dead link]
  • Balfour, J.P. (1906). The Scots Peerage, Vol.III. Edinburgh: D.Douglas.
  • Balfour, J.P. (1909). The Scots Peerage, Vol.VI. Edinburgh: D.Douglas.
  • Barrow, G.W.S, editor; Scott,W.W. (1971). Regesta Regum Scottorum Vol II; The Acts of William I, King of Scots, 1165-1214. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
  • Beatson, J. (1791–1799). "Parish of Kingsbarns (County of Fife)". The Statistical Accounts of Scotland, 1791-1799: 254. Retrieved 19 December 2008.
  • Black, G.F. (1946). The Surnames of Scotland, their origin, meaning, and history. New York: The New York Public Library.
  • (PDF). History Scotland Magazine (March/April, 2004): 12. 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 June 2008. Retrieved 4 October 2008.
  • Bruce, O.T.(ed) (1841). Liber Cartarum Prioratus Sancti Andree in Scotia; E Registro Ipso in Archivis Baronum De Panmure Hodie Asservato.
  • Connolly, M.F. (1866). Biographical Dictionary of Eminent Men of Fife. Cupar, Scotland: John C Orr.
  • (Map). Gordon, J. Archived from the original on 28 June 2009. Retrieved 3 October 2008.
  • Fifae Vicecomitatus, The Sherifdome of Fyfe.1654 (Map) (In Blaeu's Atlas of Scotland, 1654 ed.). Gordon, J and Blaeu, J. Archived from the original on 5 May 2013. Retrieved 23 November 2008.
  • Groome, F.H. (1833–1836). "Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland,Vol. 5". Edinburgh: Thomas J. Jack, Grange Publishing Works. from the original on 5 June 2011. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Map of the counties of Fife and Kinross,1828 (Map) (London, Sharp, Greenwood and Fowler, 1828. ed.). Greenwood,C., Fowler,W., Sharp,T. Archived from the original on 5 May 2013. Retrieved 3 October 2008.
  • Macintyre, L. (31 October 2008). "Pitmilly House,by Boarhills: 'Poltergeist Manor' (see page 7)" (PDF). Retrieved 27 December 2008. [dead link]
  • "Map of the area around Pitmilly". Geograph British Isles. 2008. Retrieved 28 December 2008.
  • The Shires of Fife and Kinros, 1745 (Map) (London, Bowles and Bowles ed.). Moll,H. Archived from the original on 5 May 2013. Retrieved 3 October 2008.
  • (Map). Ordnance Survey Maps One-inch "Popular" edition, Scotland, 1921-1930. Archived from the original on 3 October 2011. Retrieved 19 December 2008.
  • (Map). Ordnance Survey, U.K. Archived from the original on 16 May 2008. Retrieved 4 June 2008.
  • "Pitmilly Hotel,Fife(1964)". Flickr. Retrieved 29 December 2008.
  • . Archived from the original on 6 October 2011. Retrieved 27 December 2008.
  • Roberts, J.L. (1997). Lost Kingdoms. Celtic Scotland and the Middle Ages. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
  • Sewell, R. "Monypenny of Pitmilly". Robertsewell.com. Retrieved 26 December 2008.
  • Sibbald, R. (1710). Sibbald,R. The history, ancient and modern, of the sherrifdoms of Fife and Kinross. Edinburgh(Reprinted in 1803 at Cupar, Scotland): James Watson.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  • Skinner, R. (1869). "Notice of Excavations at Pitmilly Law, and Elsewhere on the South-East Coast of Fife". Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. 8: 55–58. Retrieved 24 December 2008.
  • Skinner, R. (1867). "Note of stone kists recently discovered in the neighbourhood of St Andrews" (PDF). Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. 7: 255–6. Retrieved 24 December 2008.
  • Slater, I (1852). Slater's (Kelly's) Royal National Directory and Topography of Scotland, etc. Manchester. Retrieved 26 December 2008.
  • (Map) (In Thomson, J. The Atlas of Scotland, Edinburgh, J.Thomson & Co., 1820. ed.). Thomson, J. and Johnson, W. Archived from the original on 11 July 2009. Retrieved 23 November 2008.
  • . 2006–2007. Archived from the original on 18 July 2011. Retrieved 30 November 2008.
  • Wilkie, J. (1931). Bygone Fife. Edinburgh: Blackwood and sons.
  • Wright, G. (1834–1845). "Parish of Kingsbarns". The New Statistical Accounts of Scotland, 1834-1845. Retrieved 19 December 2008.

"Pitmilly House, Report FIR/9/1,1967-11-16". Edinburgh: National Monuments Record of Scotland. 1967. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

pitmilly, site, former, estate, located, five, miles, south, east, andrews, scotland, historical, significance, threefold, been, inhabited, from, ancient, times, artifacts, continue, recovered, from, neolithic, bronze, iron, ages, well, known, barrow, burial, . Pitmilly is the site of a former estate located five miles south east of St Andrews Scotland Its historical significance is threefold It has been inhabited from ancient times artifacts continue to be recovered from the Neolithic Bronze and Iron Ages and a well known barrow burial mound Tumulus from the Bronze Age still exists there It is connected to Clan Hay in that Eva of Pitmilly the Celtic heiress to these lands 1 married William II de Haya a Norman in the 12th century C E with the couple becoming the progenitors of that Scottish clan Finally for over seven centuries it was owned by the important Monypenny family 2 3 Pitmilly Law Contents 1 Pitmilly Lands 2 History before the arrival of the Normans 3 Countess Ada and Pitmilly 4 The Hays and Pitmilly 5 The Monypennys and Pitmilly 6 Pitmilly after the Monypennys 7 Notes 8 ReferencesPitmilly Lands editThe name Pitmilly or Pitmillie has been used for centuries but many variants occurred in earlier times These include Petmullin Pitmulin Pethmolyn and Pitmaulin They probably reflect the P Celtic Scottish Gaelic Scots and Latin languages coupled with no great desire for consistency in spelling and the modification of place names that occurs so often The prefix pit is derived from the P Celtic word pett 4 meaning a piece of land and is very common in place names in this part of Scotland The second part of the name means mill regardless of its various forms Pitmilly means therefore a piece of land by the mills and indeed there are still ruined mills at Pitmilly The Pitmilly Lands lie on both sides of the Pitmilly Burn a stream that joins the larger Kenly Water just before the latter reaches the North Sea between Craig Hartle and Babbet Ness on the east Fife coast The lands on the east side of the Pitmilly Burn border that sea In order to define further the Pitmilly Lands as they have been known through the centuries it is helpful to note that in the early 20th century before it was broken up the Pitmilly estate consisted of the manor house with its grounds known as Pitmilly House several farms a flax mill and a grist mill both of which may have been ruins then and a fisherman s bothy The farms all of which are identified on the 2008 Ordnance Survey map are Boghall Falside Hillhead Morton of Pitmilly and Kilduncan A possible source of confusion is that the Kenly Water has sometimes been known and shown on maps as Pitmilly Burn but it seems clear that the Pitmilly Burn of the Pitmilly Lands is a tributary stream A study of the cartography of the region from 1642 onwards 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 shows the different naming of Pitmilly Burn and Kenly Water by individual mapmakers In one map the two streams reach the North Sea separately It also shows that a manor house existed at Pitmilly in 1775 and that the present farms in the region have existed for a long time with the same names One map refers to Pitmilly mills in the plural which explains why two different mills have sometimes individually been referred to as Pitmilly Mill The spelling of Pitmilly varies only slightly In addition to Pitmilly the name is found as Pitmilli Pitmil possibly as an abbreviation and Pit Mille The family name Moneypenny appears on a map in 1775 History before the arrival of the Normans editArtifacts have been recovered from the Neolithic Bronze and Iron Age s indicating that Pitmilly has been inhabited since at least the Neolithic Age Beatson 14 and Wright 15 in The Statistical Accounts of Scotland of 1791 99 and 1834 45 respectively described stone coffins containing human bones on the shore of Kingsbarns parish which includes Pitmilly They stated that the tombs were thought to be of Danes i e Viking raiders but Beatson appears dubious From these descriptions there is no doubt that the tombs were really Bronze Age cists Pitmilly Law a Bronze Age burial barrow now with trees growing on its summit is a local landmark on the Pitmilly estate An article by Skinner in 1869 discusses the finding of six empty cists there 16 In 1867 he had discussed nearby cists on the Pitmilly estate that contained skeletons 17 Around 2004 an early Bronze Age cist was discovered just outside the ruins of Pitmilly House during road work it contained a skeleton and a food vessel of the Yorkshire vase tradition 18 Neolithic carved stone balls have been found in several locations in Scotland and in 2006 one was recovered near Pitmilly Law 19 There appears to be no historical record specifically of Pitmilly from the Bronze Age to when the Normans arrived in Scotland The Picts lived and farmed there as nearby St Andrew developed into an important ecclesiastical center Robert Sibbald 20 writing in 1710 states that there were some obelisks of rough stone on higher ground just south of the former site of Inchmurtach a country residence of the Bishop of St Andrews Archbishop of St Andrews and now the site of Kenlygreen That location would presumably place them on the Pitmilly Estate He quotes the great antiquary Mr Maule as believing that these were the monuments of some great men killed in battle with the Danes This conclusion may be valid because the Danes Vikings frequently invaded these shores However it is also possible that the stones were menhirs erected by the Picts Such stones are common in Scotland Countess Ada and Pitmilly editIn the latter half of the twelfth century Countess Ada de Warenne William I of Scotland s mother made two grants concerning land that she owned at Pitmilly to the St Andrews Cathedral Priory 21 22 23 24 King William subsequently confirmed both grants 25 The Hays and Pitmilly editWilliam II de Haya the first recorded de Haya in Scotland married Eva of Pitmilly no later than 1171 26 Little is known about Eva except that she was the heiress to land at Pitmilly which she brought into the marriage However this marriage was important because it was the beginning of the family that became Clan Hay In 1172 William II de Haya leased one ploughgate in Pitmilly to St Andrews Cathedral Priory and its hospital for twenty years at an annual rent of half a merk of silver 27 The brief association of the Hays with Pitmilly essentially ended when shortly after William s death around 1201 Eva and their son David after a dispute with the canons of St Andrews Cathedral Priory quitclaimed the land to the priory but retained the annual rent of half a merk of silver 28 The land in question was part of Eva s tocher dowry and is known to be Falside from the rubric on King William s charter Falside still exists as a farm in Pitmilly However nothing remains at Pitmilly of whatever residence Eva s family occupied there if indeed they did live there in the 12th century The Monypennys and Pitmilly editThe centuries long association of the Monypennys with Pitmilly began in 1211 when Thomas Prior of St Andrews granted a charter of the lands of Pitmilly to Richard Monipennie quam Malisius tennit 20 The former was probably a Norman knight while Malisius Malise of Pitmilly was the tenant renting the land at the time In 1296 along with the other Scots gentry and landowners John de Monypenny of Pitmilly signed the so called Ragman Rolls by which he swore fealty solely to Edward I of England 29 Had he not done so he would have forfeited his lands and suffered other severe penalties There appears to be little historical record of Pitmilly as opposed to the Moneypenny family during the following centuries Sibbald 20 writing in 1710 notes the existence of the house one mile east of Kingsbarns of a very ancient family of the name of Monipenny Ainslie 30 in 1775 depicts on his map the square area of the grounds and house labeling them as Pitmilly Coll and Moneypenny The Pitmilly House of which records exist was built in three stages 31 The first two adjoining blocks were apparently built in the 18th century The third stage a block added to the front of the house was built in the typical style of a Georgian mansionGeorgian architecture in 1818 the architect being Robert Balfour of St Andrews National Monuments Record of Scotland have found no evidence that an earlier house stood on this specific site However stone wall fragments from another large structure have been described to the south east of this house citation needed and may have been part of an earlier residence They no longer exist Pitmilly is not mentioned in either the 1791 99 Statistical Account of Scotland 32 or in the New Statistical Account published between 1834 and 1845 15 However Slater s Directory 33 circa 1852 mentions Pitmilly as a very ancient seat in the northern part of Kingsbarns parish while the Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland in 1865 34 notes the presence of Pitmilly as an estate with a mansion The last Monypenny to live at Pitmilly was Charlton James Blackwell Monypenny 1867 1947 who immigrated to South America in 1902 35 when he is still identified as the owner 34 The Monypenny family later sold Pitmilly House and the farms on the estate 36 Pitmilly after the Monypennys editPitmilly House was taken over during World War II as a billet for Women s Royal Naval Service WRNS 37 38 After the war it operated as a hotel 39 under several owners but ultimately these businesses failed and the house which was said to be haunted by a particularly active poltergeist 36 deteriorated badly It burned in 1967 36 with much of the building material subsequently being salvaged to build houses in Kingsbarns Pitmilly now exists as good agricultural land with the farms of the former estate still operating Of these Morton of Pitmilly has been renovated as a self catering holiday resort The most important landmark is Pitmilly Law The ruins of two mills and of a fisherman s bothy on the estate remain Hillhead Mill was a grist mill on which the date 1716 is still evident and is located at the junction of Pitmilly Burn and Kenly Water Crail Mill was a flax mill with an adjacent miller s house which still bears the date 1790 located a few hundred yards upstream from Hillhead Mill There is a large marshy pond to the west of the miller s house probably representing the retting pond for the flax Some confusion in nomenclature exists because both mills have on occasion been referred to individually as Pitmilly Mill Little of Pitmilly House itself is left Pitmilly West built in 1975 on the site of the west gate house operates as bed and breakfast The other three gatehouses the walls surrounding the grounds pathways through the grounds as well as ruins of the stables and the bowling alley remain The Gate Lodge has been refurbished to a high standard the East Lodge is in its original Georgian condition while South Lodge is completely ruinous Several photographs of the Pitmilly area as it is now can be found on Geograph Britain and Ireland at Grid Square NO5713 and adjacent squares 40 The local beach is unofficially called Pitmilly Beach with the Fife Coastal Path running along that beach and then entering the valley of Kenly Water past the Pitmilly mills Notes edit Although Eva is usually referred to as a Celtic heiress her parentage and therefore her ethnicity have not been established Balfour 1909 p 275 Black 1946 p 609 Roberts 1997 p 10 Gordon 1642 Blaeu 1654 Moll 1745 Ainslie 1775 Fife Ainslie 1745 Fife and Kinross Greenwood 1828 Thomson and Johnson 1820 Ordnance Survey 1926 Ordnance Survey 2008 Beatson between 1791 and 1799 p 254 a b Wright between 1834 and 1845 p 92 Skinner 1869 Skinner 1867 Bronze Age food vessel History Scotland Magazine 2004 TT 103 06 a b c Sibbald 1710 p 348 The first was for work on the new church and its lighting It consisted of the annual rent for the land of one silver merk which Countess Ada stipulated that the tenant Malise of Pitmilly and his successors should pay Carta Comitifle Ade de tota tra de pethmulin Registrum Prioratius Sancti Andree p 208 See Bruce 1941 In her second grant Countess Ada granted the land to the priory and its hospital in modern terms a boarding house for pilgrims to St Andrews Carta Comitifle Ade de una coarca de petmulin Registrum Prioratius Sancti Andree p 209 See Bruce 1841 Barrow Scott 1971 charter 29 pp 139 40 and charter 170 p 233 Balfour 1906 pp 555 7 Carta Willielmi de Haya de terra in Petmulyn Registrum Prioratus Sancti Andree p 313 See Bruce 1841 Barrow Scott 1971 charter 435 1201 1205 Connolly 1866 p 337 Ainslie Fife 1775 Pitmilly House National Monuments Record of Scotland 1967 Beatson between 1791 and 1799 Slater 1852 p a b Groome 1833 6 p 206 Monypenny Charlton James Blackwell MNPY889CJ A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge a b c Macintyre 2008 Women who were stationed there have confirmed this The information in this section is mainly from local sources Pitmilly Hotel Fife 1964 www flickr com photos Geograph 2008 References editCounty of Fife 1775 Map Ainslie J Archived from the original on 27 June 2009 Retrieved 3 October 2008 Counties of Fife and Kinross with the Rivers Forth and Tay 1775 Map Ainslie J Retrieved 3 October 2008 permanent dead link Balfour J P 1906 The Scots Peerage Vol III Edinburgh D Douglas Balfour J P 1909 The Scots Peerage Vol VI Edinburgh D Douglas Barrow G W S editor Scott W W 1971 Regesta Regum Scottorum Vol II The Acts of William I King of Scots 1165 1214 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press Beatson J 1791 1799 Parish of Kingsbarns County of Fife The Statistical Accounts of Scotland 1791 1799 254 Retrieved 19 December 2008 Black G F 1946 The Surnames of Scotland their origin meaning and history New York The New York Public Library Bronze Age Food Vessel Pitmilly Fife PDF History Scotland Magazine March April 2004 12 2004 Archived from the original PDF on 9 June 2008 Retrieved 4 October 2008 Bruce O T ed 1841 Liber Cartarum Prioratus Sancti Andree in Scotia E Registro Ipso in Archivis Baronum De Panmure Hodie Asservato Connolly M F 1866 Biographical Dictionary of Eminent Men of Fife Cupar Scotland John C Orr Fyfe Shire DCXLII Fifa provincia noviter delineata Auctore Jacobo Gordonio fo R G a Strathloch Fifa provincia noviter delineata Fife shire 1642 Map Gordon J Archived from the original on 28 June 2009 Retrieved 3 October 2008 Fifae Vicecomitatus The Sherifdome of Fyfe 1654 Map In Blaeu s Atlas of Scotland 1654 ed Gordon J and Blaeu J Archived from the original on 5 May 2013 Retrieved 23 November 2008 Groome F H 1833 1836 Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland Vol 5 Edinburgh Thomas J Jack Grange Publishing Works Archived from the original on 5 June 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Map of the counties of Fife and Kinross 1828 Map London Sharp Greenwood and Fowler 1828 ed Greenwood C Fowler W Sharp T Archived from the original on 5 May 2013 Retrieved 3 October 2008 Macintyre L 31 October 2008 Pitmilly House by Boarhills Poltergeist Manor see page 7 PDF Retrieved 27 December 2008 dead link Map of the area around Pitmilly Geograph British Isles 2008 Retrieved 28 December 2008 The Shires of Fife and Kinros 1745 Map London Bowles and Bowles ed Moll H Archived from the original on 5 May 2013 Retrieved 3 October 2008 Sheet 64 Dundee amp St Andrews Map Ordnance Survey Maps One inch Popular edition Scotland 1921 1930 Archived from the original on 3 October 2011 Retrieved 19 December 2008 Grid reference at center NO583127 Map Ordnance Survey U K Archived from the original on 16 May 2008 Retrieved 4 June 2008 Pitmilly Hotel Fife 1964 Flickr Retrieved 29 December 2008 Pitmilly House from Millar Fife in Scotland s Lost Country Houses Archived from the original on 6 October 2011 Retrieved 27 December 2008 Roberts J L 1997 Lost Kingdoms Celtic Scotland and the Middle Ages Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press Sewell R Monypenny of Pitmilly Robertsewell com Retrieved 26 December 2008 Sibbald R 1710 Sibbald R The history ancient and modern of the sherrifdoms of Fife and Kinross Edinburgh Reprinted in 1803 at Cupar Scotland James Watson a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Skinner R 1869 Notice of Excavations at Pitmilly Law and Elsewhere on the South East Coast of Fife Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 8 55 58 Retrieved 24 December 2008 Skinner R 1867 Note of stone kists recently discovered in the neighbourhood of St Andrews PDF Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 7 255 6 Retrieved 24 December 2008 Slater I 1852 Slater s Kelly s Royal National Directory and Topography of Scotland etc Manchester Retrieved 26 December 2008 Fife with Kinross Shire 1820 Map In Thomson J The Atlas of Scotland Edinburgh J Thomson amp Co 1820 ed Thomson J and Johnson W Archived from the original on 11 July 2009 Retrieved 23 November 2008 TT case number 103 06 Neolithic carved stone ball Pitmilly Law Fife 2006 2007 Archived from the original on 18 July 2011 Retrieved 30 November 2008 Wilkie J 1931 Bygone Fife Edinburgh Blackwood and sons Wright G 1834 1845 Parish of Kingsbarns The New Statistical Accounts of Scotland 1834 1845 Retrieved 19 December 2008 Pitmilly House Report FIR 9 1 1967 11 16 Edinburgh National Monuments Record of Scotland 1967 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pitmilly amp oldid 1175034279, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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