A History Within Itself
Clan MacDuff
This
very interesting information prepared for those that want to delve into
a serious study of the Weems family roots. I commend it to you. I am
not sure who MAHAR is but his scholarship is excellent.
Dr. John E. Weems
Although
the MacDuffs Earls of Fife have
always played a prominent part in Scottish affairs, the MacDuff family
is not conspicious in the more recent periods of clan history. Tradition
says that the MacDuff who opposed Macbeth and assisted Malcolm to the
throne of Scotland, was the 1st Earl of Fife. The MacDuffs enjoyed the
privilege of crowning the King and of leading the Scottish army. The
old Earldom of Fife became extinct in 1353 on
the death of the 12th Earl, Duncan but in the following centuries,
seperate families of Duffs and MacDuffs featured prominently. In 1759
William Duff, Lord Braco was created Earl of Fife in the Irish peerage
of Great Britain as Baron Fife. The Earls of Fife built Duff House,
Banff and founded the town of Dufftown in 1817 having a barony from
MacDuff on the Moray Firth. Alexander born in 1849 was Duke of Fife and
Earl of Macduff and became Lord Lieutenant of the county of London.
He
married the daughter of King
Edward VII, Princess Alexandra Victoria in 1889. He was succeeded by
his daughter who married Prince Arthur of Connaught in 1912. In
north-east Fife near Newburgh there is the cross of MacDuff where
according to ancient tradition sanctuary could be claimed by any
kinsman of the MacDuffs.
Another
account of the Clan
BADGE: Lus nam braoileag (vaccineum
vitis idea) red whortle berry.
PIDROCH: Cu ‘a Mhic Dhu.
ANDRO of Wyntoun, in his famous
chronicle, tells the story of the circumstances in which the early
chief of this clan rose to note and power. It was in the middle of the
eleventh century, when Macbeth, one of the greatest Scottish kings,
afterwards to be so sadly defamed by Shakespeare, was in the
seventeenth year of his reign. Macbeth, like the later James I., had
made "the key keep the castle, and the bush the cow " throughout
Scotland. As Wyntoun put it,
As was to happen afterwards in the case of James I., however, Macbeth’s strictness of rule and justice of government made him many enemies among the nobles of his realm, who found themselves subject to law equally with the humblest peasant. In the end it was the king’s insistence on fair play which brought about his downfall.
A
New Look at MacDuff
The
chronicler tells how Macbeth was building his great new castle, of
which the traces are still to be seen, on the little mount of Dunsinnan
in the Sidlaws. For this work of national importance the lieges had to
furnish teams and working parties. As he watched the building, Macbeth
one day saw one of the teams of oxen engaged in drawing timber fail at
its work. On inquiry he was told that the inferior oxen had been
furnished by Macduff, Thane of Fife, and with indignation he threatened
to put the Thane’s Own neck into the yoke and make him draw.
Macduff
knew that the king was apt to be as good as his word, and he forthwith
fled.
He went
first to his castle of Kennachy, then took boat across the Fifth of
Forth from the spot still known from that circumstance as Earlsferry.
At Kennachy his wife, who seems to have been of stouter heart than her
husband, kept the pursuing king in treaty till she saw
Macduff’s boat
safely reach the middle of the Firth. From this occurrence arose the
rule down to a recent period that any fugitive taking boat at
Earlsferry was protected from pursuit till he had made his way halfway
across the Firth.
Macduff
fled to the court of Siward, Earl of Northumbria, where he represented
to Macbeth’s cousins, sons of the late Duncan, King of Scots,
that the
time was ripe for them to secure possession of their father’s
throne.
Duncan’s legitimate sons held back, knowing that they were
Macbeth’s
natural heirs, who must shortly succeed to the crown without effort.
But an illegitimate prince, Malcolm, son of King Duncan and the
miller’s daughter at Forteviot, saw his opportunity, and seized
it.
All the
world knows how, helped by Siward and guided by Macduff, he invaded
Scotland, drove Macbeth from Dunsinnan to Lumphanan on Deeside, and
finally slew him there. Afterwards, Malcolm III. being firmly seated on
his throne, Macduff asked, for his services, three special boons:
first, that in all time coming his descendants should have the
privilege at royal coronations of leading the king to the coronation
chair; second, that, when the kings of Scots made war, the Thanes of
Fife should have the honour of commanding the vanguard; and third, that
if the Thane or his kindred to the ninth degree should slay a man he
should be entitled to remission on payment of a fine, twenty-four merks
for a gentleman and twelve for a yoeman, while if anyone slew a kinsman
of the Thane he should be entitled to no such relief. As a result of
this last boon, as late as 1421 three gentlemen in Fife who could claim
kin with Macduff obtained a remission for the slaughter of Melville of
Glenbervie upon payment of the stipulated fine.
A more
famous occasion on which the Boon of Macduff came into play was at the
coronation of King Robert the Bruce. Duncan, the Earl of Fife of that
time, had married Mary de Monthermer, niece of Edward I. of England,
and was upon the English side, acting as Governor of Perth. His sister
Isabella, however, who had married John Comyn, Earl of Buchan, was an
ardent Scottish patriot, and at Scone in 1306 exercised the right of
her house, and brought the sanction of ancient usage to the ceremony,
by leading Bruce to the place of coronation.
Both the
Thane and his sister suffered from the contrasting parts they played.
Falling into the hands of the English, the Countess of Buchan was
imprisoned by Edward I. in a cage on the walls of Berwick, while Earl
Duncan and his wife were captured by Bruce and imprisoned in the castle
of Kildrummie in Aberdeenshire, where the Earl died in 1336.
Gilmichael,
fourth Earl of Fife, who died in 1139, left two sons, of whom the
elder, Duncan, carried on the line, while Hugo the younger, became
ancestor of the house of Wemyss, which now probably represents the
early thanes and earls of Fife.
Duncan,
twelfth Earl of Fife, who was killed in 1353, was
the last of the direct line of these early thanes. His daughter
Isabella, who died without issue, conveyed the property and title of
the earldom to the third son of King Robert II., who afterwards became
notorious in Scottish history as the first Duke of Albany. During the
Duke’s lifetime the title of Earl of Fife was borne by his son
Murdoch,
and upon the execution and forfeiture of this Murdoch, Duke of Albany,
by his cousin James I. in 1425, the earldom at last became extinct.
The name
Duff is believed to be the Celtic Dubh, which was given as a
descriptive name to any Highlander who might be dark-complexioned, like
Sir Walter Scott’s famous character, Roderick Dhu. The numerous
families of Duff, therefore, who afterwards appeared as respectable
burgesses of Aberdeen and Inverness, may not all have been descended
from the original stock of the Thanes of Fife.
The family of the name which was afterwards to attain most consequence
had for its founder a certain Adam Duff, tenant in Cluny Beg. One of
the two sons of this farmer, another Adam Duff, born about 1598, by his
remarkable shrewdness and sagacity, laid the foundation of the future
greatness of his house. In the wars of Montrose and the Covenanters, he
took part on the Royalist side, and was fined in consequence; but he
died between 1674 and 1677 in possession of considerable wealth. His
eldest son, Alexander Duff, took advantage of the great depression
which prevailed in the country just before the Union with England, and
purchased the lands of many of the old lairds in Banffshire and
Aberdeenshire.
Among
the lands which he obtained on wadset or mortgage, and which the
proprietors were never able to redeem, was Keithmore, a possession of
the Huntly family, from which he took his designation as Alexander Duff
of Keithmore. He also further advanced the family fortunes by marrying
Helen, daughter of Grant of Ballentomb, ancestor of the lairds of
Monymusk. This lady’s prudence and industry, not less than her
wealth,
went far to raise the fortunes of the family. The eldest son of the
pair, again, Alexander Duff of Braco, continued to add to the family
estates, which now included Aberlour, Keith-Grange, and Mortlach. At
the time of the union he was Member of Parliament for Banffshire. He
and his son, William Duff of Braco, were men of great importance in
their district. Among other events in which they were concerned was the
arrest in romantic circumstances of the cateran James MacPherson.
William Duff, however, died without surviving male issue, and the
family estates passed to his uncle, another of the same name. This
individual had already acquired immense wealth as a merchant in
Inverness. According to Cosmo Innes, in Sketches of Early Scottish
History, " he was a man of very general dealings—large and
small. He
could take charge of a commission for groceries, or advance the price
of a barony, on good security.
He had formed extensive connections, and was the first man in the north
who dealt in money on a large scale, and he laid the foundation of a
very noble fortune." This highly successful merchant acquired large
estates in Morayshire, including Dipple and Pluscardine, and was known
as William Duff of Dipple. On the death of his nephew, William Duff of
Braco, in 1718, the older family estates also, as already mentioned,
came into his possession, and when he died himself in 1722 he left his
eldest son the landed proprietor with the largest rent-roll in the
north of Scotland £6,500 sterling all clear.
As a result that son, still another William Duff " of Braco and
Dipple," was M.P. for Banffshire from 1727 to 1734. In the following
year he was made Baron Braco of Kilbride in the peerage of Ireland, and
twenty-four years later was raised to be Viscount Macduff and Earl Fife
in that same peerage. He continued the policy of his family by
purchasing further large estates in the counties of Aberdeen, Banff,
and Moray, and managed all his possessions with much care and ability.
Two
years after his father’s death he rebuilt the castle of
Balveny, and
between 1740 and 1745 he built the splendid mansion of Duff House at a
cost of £70,000. During the Jacobite rebellion in 1745 he
joined the
Duke of Cumberland, and offered the Government his free services in any
way that might be desired. By his first wife, a daughter of the Earl of
Findlater and Seafield, he had no children, but he married again, a
daughter of Grant of Grant, and two of his sons in succession inherited
the earldom.
James, the elder of these, was Member of Parliament Successively for
Banff and Elgin, and was made a peer of the United Kingdom as Baron
Fife in 1790. By careful purchase he nearly doubled the size of the
family estates, and he changed the name of the town of Doune, where
Duff House was situated, to Macduff, procuring for the place at the
same time a royal charter as a burgh. He married the only child of the
ninth Earl of Caithness, but died without male issue, when his peerage
of the United Kingdom of course expired.
His brother Alexander, who succeeded as third Earl in 1809, married a
daughter of Skene of Skene, and in consequence his son James, who
became the fourth Earl, succeeded to the estates of Skene and Cariston
in 1827. This Earl. distinguished himself during the Peninsular War. He
volunteered his services, became a Major-General in the Spanish army
fighting against Napoleon, and was twice wounded, at the battle of
Talavera and at the storming of Fort Matagorda near Cadiz. In
consequence, he was made a Knight of the Order of St. Ferdinand of
Spain and of the Sword of Sweden.
He was also made a Knight of the Thistle and G.C.H., and in 1827 was
made a peer of the United Kingdom as Baron Fife. In private life he was
notable as an art collector, and the towns of Elgin, Banff, and Macduff
owed much to his generosity. He died, however, without issue, and was
succeeded by James, son of his, brother, Sir Alexander Duff of Delgaty
Castle, as fifth Earl. This Earl’s wife was a daughter of the
seventeenth Earl of Errol and Lady Elizabeth Fitz Clarence, daughter of
King William IV. He was Lord-Lieutenant of Banffshire, and was made a
peer of the United Kingdom as Baron Skene in 1857 and a Knight of the
Thistle in 1860.
The only son of this peer, who succeeded him in 1879, was Alexander
William George, sixth Earl Fife, who was to be the last male of the
more modern line. Before succeeding to the peerage he became
Lord-Lieutenant of Elginshire, and he was M.P. for Elgin and Nairn from
1874. He was also Captain of the Corps of Gentlemen at Arms, and was a
highly popular peer. The climax of the fortunes of his family was
reached when in 1889 he married Her Royal Highness the Princess Louise,
eldest daughter of the Prince of Wales, afterwards the late King Edward.
Already,
in 1889, he had been created an Earl of the United Kingdom, and two
days after his marriage he was made a Duke. In 1900, seeing he had no
sons, he was further created Earl of Macduff and Duke of Fife, with
special remainder to his first and other daughters by the Princess
Louise, and their male issue, and in 1905 his wife received the title
of the Princess Royal, while her daughters were ordained to bear the
title of Princess and to rank immediately after all members of the
Royal Family bearing the style of Royal Highness.
A great
sensation was caused, when in 1912, the vessel in which the Duke and
his Duchess, with their two daughters, were sailing to the east, was
shipwrecked in the Mediterranean. None of the family was drowned, but
the Duke’s health gave way, and he died shortly afterwards. He
was
succeeded in the honours and estates of the dukedom by his elder
daughter, Her Highness the Princess Alexandra Victoria Duff, who in the
following year married H.R.H. Prince Arthur of Connaught. The ancient
line of the Duffs, therefore, has now merged in a branch of the
reigning house of these realms.
Among distinguished people of the name of Duff has been the famous
Indian missionary and publicist, Alexander Duff, D.D., LL.D., Moderator
of the General Assembly of the Free Church in 1851, and one of the
framers of the constitution of Calcutta University, who founded the
Missionary Chair in the New College, Edinburgh, and was the first
missionary professor. During the Irish insurrection of 1798 it was
General Sir James Duff, commander of the Limerick District, who
rendered the important service of keeping Limerick quiet.
It was
Robert Duff, who, as senior officer of a squadron in 1759, drew the
French into the main body of the British fleet, and brought about the
battle of Quiberon Bay. He became Commander-in-Chief in Newfoundland in
1775, and as Vice-Admiral co-operated at the siege of Gibraltar in
1779. And Sir Robert William Duff, who for a time bore the name of
Abercrombie, was successively M .P. for Banffshire, a commander in the
Navy, a member of the Liberal Government, a Privy Councillor, and was
made G.C.M.G. and Governor of New South Wales in 1893.
Septs of Clan MacDuff: Duff, Fife, Fyfe, Spence, Spens, Wemyss.
Our thanks to James Pringle Weavers for the following information
MACDUFF (MacDhuibh) was the patronymic of the Celtic Earls of Fife who
claimed a descent from DUBH, King of Scots 962-6. Between Dubh and the
first recorded Earl fact has been obscured by fantasy, largely due to
Shakespeare's 'MacBeth', wherein the Fife inheritance had more than a
passing mention. Of Dubh's line the first recorded Earl was Abbot
Ethelred of Dunkeld, son of King Malcolm III (Canmore) and Queen
Margaret.
From
their kinship to the Crown the Earls gained certain privileges
thereafter known as the "Law of Clan MacDuff", and referred to in an
Act of 1385. By these unwritten 'Laws' they held the right to
inaugurate the King on the Stone of Destiny, of leading the Scottish
army into battle, and rights of sanctuary at Cross MacDuff near
Newburgh in Fife. In 1306, Robert Bruce was 'crowned' at Scone by
Isabel, Countess of Buchan, sister of Duncan, the last MacDuff Earl of
Fife, even though her husband, Comyn, was Bruce's mortal enemy.
In 1425
the Celtic Earldom of Fife passed to the crown. The name of Duff
continued to thrive in lands more northerly than Fife, for numerous
families became established and held considerable lands in Banffshire
and throughout north-east Scotland. The Duffs in Banffshire assumed the
representation of their race and, in time, the chiefship passed to
William Duff (Lord Braco) who was created Earl of Fife and Viscount
MacDuff in 1759.
This
representation became dormant in 1912 with the death of Alexander, 6th
Earl, who had become Duke of Fife in 1889 on marrying the Princess
Louise, daughter of Edward VII. Earlier, in 1757, Lyon Court had
recognised Wemyss of Wemyss as chief of MacDuff, he being the direct
descendant of Gillemichael MacDuff in the 12th century. Clan MacDuff
had been the premier clan of mediaeval Scotland, and the chieftains of
their most prominent branch were hereditary Abbots or Lords of
Abernethy. The chiefship is presently dormant the crest & mottoes
given belong to Duff of Braco,the last identified chief.
Hope this is of some help.
Marhar
The
information below is contained elsewhere in this thesis but it is
important information. I am confident no one is going to plumb the
depths of this every growing document, consequently, I am including it
here. Many thanks to the scholars that worked very hard to prepare it.
JohnWeems
Surname: Wemyss
Recorded as Wemyss, Weems and Wemes, this
is an ancient and noble Scottish surname. It is locational or
territorial from the estate known as "The lands of Wemyss" in the
county of Fife, and according to certain sources the meaning of the
surname is "The caves". What is certain is that it has been recorded
since early medieval times, at the very begining of the creation of
surnames, with Michael de Wemyss being a charter witness on behalf of
the abbey of Arbroath in the year 1202.
Sir
David Wemyss was the ambassador to Norway in 1286, chosen it is said
because he had some grasp on the language. However the family fell foul
of King Edward 1st of England in 1306, when Sir Michael Wemyss chose to
side with Robert, The Bruce, against the appointees of Edward, known as
"The Interregnum Government". It seems that Sir Michael must have
entered into an agreement previously with Edward 1st, which he felt
compelled to break.
In
the long term this does not seem to have done the nameholders any hard
as by the 14th century the clan had achived nobility status being known
as "Wemyss and all that Ilk". Alternative spellings of the surname made
their varied appearance over the centuries including Weems and Weemes
being recorded in 1597 whilst as Oysmes the name is recorded in the
Scots Guards of the king of France in 1550.
©
Copyright: Name Orgin Research www.surnamedb.com
1980 - 2007
(Locality).
First assumed by the proprietors of the lands anciently called
Wemyss-shire, in Fife-shire, Scotland, which contained all that tract
of ground lying between the lower part of the waters of Ore, and the
sea. These lands received their name from the great number of caves
that are there, all along the sea-coast. A cave in the old Gaelic or
Celtic, was called vumhs or wamh; from that these lands received the
name of Vumhs-shire--Wemys-shire. The family of Wemyss derive their
origin from the family of Macduff, Maormor of Fife, in the reign of
Malcom Canmore. The lands now forming the parish of Wemyss, are said to
have been part of the estate of Macduff, Shakespeare's well-known Thane
of Fife.
(origin:
Local) First
assumed by the proprietors of the lands anciently called Wemyss-shire,
in Fife-shire, Scotland, which contained all that tract of ground lying
between the lower part of the waters of Ore, and the sea. These lands
received their name from the great number of caves that are there, all
along the sea-coast. A cave in the old Gaelic or Celtic, was called
vumhs or wamh; from that these lands received the name of
Vumhs-shire--Wemys-shire. The family of Wemyss derive their origin from
the family of Macduff, Maormor of Fife, in the reign of Malcom Canmore.
The lands now forming the parish of Wemyss, are said to have been part
of the estate of Macduff, Shakespeare's well-known Thane of Fife.
Researching
surname origins, and the effort required to trace back even the most
common surname, is quite a daunting task. Yet many genealogists have
the expectation that the research has already been completed, while
others believe there must be a simple formula. As complicated as it is
to locate the true origin of a surname, knowing what country you should
be tracing for your family surnames is an essential element of
research.
For
thousands of years first (or given) names were the only designations
people needed, as the world was much less crowded and every one knew
their neighbors. Over time, it became increasingly difficult to
distinguish individuals who lived relatively close to each other and
possessed the same name.
While
there are several different versions of when surnames were first given,
it is generally agreed by most that the birth of the surname can be
attributed to the Normans [the race, not the family]. In fact, the
Domesday Book of 1086 (referred to in America as the Doomsday Book) was
commissioned for the purpose of designating property ownership, thereby
formalizing taxation, and is a fascinating study of early 11th century
life and family heritage.
Shortly
thereafter, surnames established themselves as part of the bearer's
individuality; and as they were passed down from generation to
generation, they became the symbol of a whole family and all that it
stood for. As surnames were added to baptismal (or given) names, they
began to make ones' identity more specific and helped distinguish
family relationships.
Most
surnames can be traced back to one of five groups: (1) formed from the
given name of the sire (common in English-speaking countries); (2)
arising from physical characteristics or dispositions; (3) derived from
locality or place of residence; (4) derived from occupation (crafts and
trades common during medieval times); or (5) invented for their
pleasing sound, as a nickname, or simply out of necessity.
Over
time, some countries developed specific rules, publishing "Naming
Systems" for use in developing surnames. These systems, for example,
promoted the use of suffixes like I, II, or III, which when used, the
eldest son's name could be the same as that of the father. The Normans
also introduced the Sr. and Jr. suffixes to distinguish father and son.
Regionally
there are commonalties among the way heritable surnames were derived.
The English terminated names with "son", "ing", and "kin", which are
comparable to names prefixed with the Gaelic "Mac", the Norman "Fitz",
the Irish "0", and the Welsh "ap". There are also German, Netherlands,
Scandinavian, and other European surnames of similar formation, such as
the Scandinavian names ending in "sen". In the Slavic countries, the
"sky" and "ski" played the same role.
The
Italians used a variety of prefixes for their naming practices. The
prefix "di" (meaning "of") was often attached to an otherwise ordinary
Christian name to form a patronym; "da" and "di" (meaning "from") often
associated a place of origin; and "la" and "lo" (meaning "the") often
derived from nicknames.
While
these are examples of a structured approach to naming descendants, all
too often other circumstances existed and our ancestors opted for (or
were forced into) an alternate approach.
It
is important to keep an open mind when trying to determine a surname's
origin for genealogical purposes. Specific individuals may have not
known (or cared) about naming customs of their times. Or, in a variety
of instances, they may have voluntarily (or not) accepted a change in
their surname imposed by another party.
Surnames
that seem to defy classification or explanation may be merely a
corruption of ancient forms that have become disguised often beyond
recognition. This may have resulted from ignorance of spelling,
variations in pronunciation, or merely from personal preference. Some
families even came to America without a fixed surname; and emigrants
from continental Europe frequently translated or otherwise modified
their names upon arrival.
If
an eldest son assumed the given name of his father for a surname, as
was the tradition in certain cultures, he would be designated as such
in legal records. On his father's death, however, the son might revert
back to his father's surname for the purpose of inheritance. It is
possible to have multiple documents with the same name, but actually be
different individuals.
Similarly,
the terms "Senior" and "Junior" following a name did not necessarily
imply a father and son relationship. It could have been an uncle and
nephew who had the same name and lived near each other; a grandfather
and a grandchild living together; or even two unrelated individuals
with the same name but of different ages who lived near each other. In
these cases, the suffix merely meant the older and the younger
respectively.
Fascination
with surname origins is common among genealogists. Conversely, how to
make the best use of that information is quite subjective. As with
anything you discover while researching your roots, use the origin of
your surname as a source of clues for where to look and what to be
looking for. If your surname is based on a location, find out more
about that place; an occupation, learn what those skills entailed
(during the respective time period); an ancestor, see if you can trace
the pattern, or physical attributes, look at old photos and see if
anyone fits the description.
submitted by Jock-the-Pom (Thankyou!)
From Dysart, near Kirkcaldy, drive along the
A955 north. To the left is what is left of Frances Colliery and at the
junction with the road to West Wemyss is the octagonal Bowhouse Toll
built in 1800 and rebuilt in 1906.
The A955 skirts the castle and estate of
Wemyss, belonging to the ancient Scottish family of the same name. The
family and three villages take their name from the numerous large
"weems," or caves, along the coastline: some of the caves still exhibit
a variety of inscriptions from the prehistoric double disc symbols to
the graffitti of unfolding ages. The caves were often used as hideaways
for smugglers, outlaws and gypsies, and many have names, like King's
Cave, where King James IV is deemed to have settled a dispute among a
band of his robber subjects during one of his incognito journeys
through Fife. The caves have suffered an incredible civic and public
neglect over the years and have been repeatedly vandalised: now a Save
the Caves Society has been launched to give them some sort of care and
protection.
It was here too in 1610 that George Hay built
Scotland's first glassmaking factory. Wemyss .incidentally, lends its
name to that kind of pottery made in or near Kirkcaldy. Items of
pottery were made by several factories, including Methven & Sons of
Kirkcaldy and the Fife Pottery. One of the characteristics of Wemyss
ware was its lavish floral decoration on toilet sets, mugs, vases etc.
The village of West Wemyss winds its way down
to the shore of the Forth, and although it offers a maritime
appearance, its people long depended on the coal industry. The village
grew up around Wemyss Castle and is now a conservation area. Locals
once referred to the 16th century port and village of West Wemyss as
the "Haven Town of Wemyss" and were proud of its status as a burgh of
barony, granted by King James IV in 1511. West Wemyss Tolbooth is of
the 18th century, replacing the building erected "for the cribbing of
vice and service to crown by David, 4th Earl of Wemyss [1628-1720]".
The old Miners Institute[1927] is now the Belhaven Hotel [1979]
The earliest part of Wemyss Castle dates from
the 14th century, but it has been added to and altered many times and
is still the home of the Wemyss family today. It was at the old Castle
of Wemyss that Mary, Queen of Scots, met Lord Darnley, who was soon to
become her husband in 1566. St Adrians church below the castle along
the shore was built by the Wemyss family in 1895 and it contains a rare
example of a modern alter mural.
At West Wemyss is the southern outlet of
Lochhead Tunnel which was used to transport coal [via a pulley system]
to Coaltown of Wemyss and hence to Methil Dock. To the west of the
village, past the tunnel's sealed entrance, lies the remains of St
Mary's Chapel, a pre-Reformation church, now the burial place of the
Wemyss family.
Coaltown of Wemyss is bisected by the A955
and takes its name from the old mining activity at the Bell pits.
Originally, it was two villages, Easter and Wester, but when the miners
distinctive cottages were expanded by the Wemyss Coal Co in 1860, the
two villages were amalgamated as a "model mining village". The village
also had a public house of the Gothenburg system, now known as the Earl
David Hotel. The rounded houses are an interesting feature of the
village.
The Wemyss School of Needlework was
first established in 1877 at Wemyss Castle by Lady Dorothy Wemyss
and opened its present building in 1880. The School began as a charity
and now repairs old tapestries and undertakes orders for embroidery.
East Wemyss was once called "Castleton"
because of its nearness to MacDuff Castle. This was the original home
of the Wemyss Family before they built Wemyss Castle in the 14th
century. It is believed that MacDuff Castle was the home of MacDuff,
Thane of Fife, from whom the Erskines of Wemyss claim descent.
The term "thane" come from the old English "thegrian" which means "to
serve".
East Wemyss is the home of the Wemyss
Environmental Education Centre, an imaginative venture set up in 1977.
The aim of the centre is to develop an interest in the environment and
a concern for conservation and care: it has a large amount of
interpretive material on local industry, people, history, flora and
fauna.
The church of St Mary's-by-the-Sea at East
Wemyss dates from the 12th century, but it was closed for worship in
1976 and is now a private house, although its graveyard is open to
public access. The village once relied on the Michael Pit for its major
employment. It was opened in 1898 by the Wemyss Coal Co. and closed in
1967.
please email me at
weemsjohn@hotmail.com