Difference between revisions of "Dundrennan"

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"Dundrennan, 1694, boasts Victorian oriels.<ref>[[Pride, Kingdom of Fife|Pride, ''Kingdom of Fife'']], page 88.</ref>
 
"Dundrennan, 1694, boasts Victorian oriels.<ref>[[Pride, Kingdom of Fife|Pride, ''Kingdom of Fife'']], page 88.</ref>
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==Previous residents==
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Mrs Brown, died 1927 aged 58. Schoolteacher and first lady member of the Town Council. Wife of ex-Bailie John Brown. Well-known for for organising ability.<ref>[https://historicfalkland.scot/chronicle/Year%201927.pdf Chronicle of 1927],"Local Lady's Death", page 88, referencing to an article in ''Fife News''</ref> She organised collection of sphagnum moss for treating wounds during the Great War/<ref>Information from local resident</ref>
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==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
<references />
 
<references />

Revision as of 17:07, 21 October 2021

Building summary
Dundrennan 1.JPG
Name Dundrennan
Address Horse Market, Falkland
Postcode KY15 7BG
Date 1694
OS grid ref NO253072
Latitude & longitude 56°15'7"N 3°12'25"W

Dundrennan is a house in Horsemarket, Falkland.

Compare the lintel with that on the Lomond Pharmacy (same initials, a year earlier).

HES listing details[1]
Reference: LB31322 Date: 12/01/1971 Category: C
Address/Site Name

Dundrennan, Horsemarket

Description

Dated WF EB 1694 IF at lintel. 2-storey stuccoed with margins, Victorian 1st floor ariel [sic] bays.

Statement of special interest

Cobbled area

Re-categorised as C(S) from B for Group (2006).

Further references

"In Horsemarket, Dundrennan is dated 1694 but has acquired large Victorian oriels."[2]

"Dundrennan, 1694, boasts Victorian oriels.[3]

Previous residents

Mrs Brown, died 1927 aged 58. Schoolteacher and first lady member of the Town Council. Wife of ex-Bailie John Brown. Well-known for for organising ability.[4] She organised collection of sphagnum moss for treating wounds during the Great War/[5]

Notes

  1. HES listing page for LB31322. "ariel" ia presumably a typo for "oriel".
  2. Gifford, Fife, page 221.
  3. Pride, Kingdom of Fife, page 88.
  4. Chronicle of 1927,"Local Lady's Death", page 88, referencing to an article in Fife News
  5. Information from local resident

Further images