Difference between revisions of "Stewart Cottage"

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==Special features==
 
==Special features==
<ref name="occ">Information from occupier</ref>
+
 
 
==Extensions==
 
==Extensions==
 
After Robert Stewart bought the house he set about taking out the Earth at the back forming a courtyard and putting in a retaining wall. He put in a back door  and picture windows  to the south to get a view of the hill and get sun and light into the house. At a later date he moved the dormer windows that faced directly into the windows of Bellsehill, from the  front to the back of the house. The house to the east got really dangerous and had a tree growing out of where the roof should be. The council demolished it. The house to the left also fell into disrepair and Bill Duncan asked the neighbours to move the stones. They wheelbarrowed the stones to the dam and that was the start of the dam getting filled in. At the top of the garden was a most ornate red brick building backing on to the cemetery wall. It had long diamond shaped leaded windows at either side of the door and an ornate roof. There was also another building after the  westerly house and before the cemetery gate. Robert Stewart always said it was the narrowest house he ever did see and that it jutted onto the road. The only evidence of it by the 60s was the stairs.<ref name="nbr" />
 
After Robert Stewart bought the house he set about taking out the Earth at the back forming a courtyard and putting in a retaining wall. He put in a back door  and picture windows  to the south to get a view of the hill and get sun and light into the house. At a later date he moved the dormer windows that faced directly into the windows of Bellsehill, from the  front to the back of the house. The house to the east got really dangerous and had a tree growing out of where the roof should be. The council demolished it. The house to the left also fell into disrepair and Bill Duncan asked the neighbours to move the stones. They wheelbarrowed the stones to the dam and that was the start of the dam getting filled in. At the top of the garden was a most ornate red brick building backing on to the cemetery wall. It had long diamond shaped leaded windows at either side of the door and an ornate roof. There was also another building after the  westerly house and before the cemetery gate. Robert Stewart always said it was the narrowest house he ever did see and that it jutted onto the road. The only evidence of it by the 60s was the stairs.<ref name="nbr" />

Revision as of 12:13, 9 December 2020

Building details
[photo awaited]
Name Stewart Cottage
Address High Street West (or West Port), Faklland
Postcode KY15 7BL
Other names
Date Mid-19th century
OS grid ref
Latitude & longitude
Listing Category C
Listing ref LB31289
Listing name High Street, West Port, House (Stewart) Including Garden Walls

Stewart Cottage is a house in High Street West Falkland.

Listing description

Mid 19th century. Single-storey and attic 2-window and centre door snecked rubble; slated alterations and dormer windows at back.

Previous uses

Special features

Extensions

After Robert Stewart bought the house he set about taking out the Earth at the back forming a courtyard and putting in a retaining wall. He put in a back door and picture windows to the south to get a view of the hill and get sun and light into the house. At a later date he moved the dormer windows that faced directly into the windows of Bellsehill, from the front to the back of the house. The house to the east got really dangerous and had a tree growing out of where the roof should be. The council demolished it. The house to the left also fell into disrepair and Bill Duncan asked the neighbours to move the stones. They wheelbarrowed the stones to the dam and that was the start of the dam getting filled in. At the top of the garden was a most ornate red brick building backing on to the cemetery wall. It had long diamond shaped leaded windows at either side of the door and an ornate roof. There was also another building after the westerly house and before the cemetery gate. Robert Stewart always said it was the narrowest house he ever did see and that it jutted onto the road. The only evidence of it by the 60s was the stairs.[1]

Former residents

John (Jake)and Mary Stewart moved from the Castle Shotts into Stewart Cottage in approx 1933. They rented the house from Marys friend Euphemia Downie. At that time Stewart cottage had a house on either side of it. The house to the east was in a bad state of repair. The ladies who owned it used to come up once a year to walk the right of way and Mary would make them a cup of tea and a pancake. The house to east backed straight on to earth at the rear and only had windows on the upper floor. The rear windows were at the same level as the ground. Stewart Cottage was similar with most of the windows facing the front. A close separated Stewart house from the house on the west and the close continued round the back of house to stairs giving right of way access to east house. In 1958 Mary and John swapped houses with Robert Stewart their son. Mary and John moved into Burnside Cottage Balmblae and Robert bought Stewart Cottage from Mrs Downie.

Further references

Notes

  1. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named nbr