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Aberdour

Aberdour photos (15 available)

Old photo of Aberdour

Aberdour maps (1 available)

Old map of Scotland

Aberdour books (4 available)

Aberdour memories

Be the first to add a memory of Aberdour.

You can also read memories of nearby places in Fife below.

Fife memories

The outdoor pool.......................

Spending all day at the pool/beach when I was a kid.

Would go in the sea, run along to the pool, jump in the shallow end ( cos you were getting a bit cold by this time ) and bliss, it was like being in a sauna. mmmmm

Hurrying home to get a quick bite to eat then back down to pool, pulling soaking wet costume back on again. Yeuch!!!

Also remember having midnight bathing/galas, team games, i.e. diving for tins of fruit.

Those were the days................ great times.
A memory of contributed by Liz McAuley

School days

I lived in Mossgreen, Crossgates in the 60s. My first school was in Mossgreen, it had only 3 classrooms and 1 of the classes was taken by the headmaster Mr Suttie. Mr and Mrs Suttie lived in the headmaster's house next to the school and Mrs Suttie was a teacher at Crossgates Primary.
A memory of contributed by mary nelson

Carefree Childhood Days

I remember 'guddling' for trout in the Teal Burn in Auchtertool.  Most of the lads in the village tried it at one time or another. When we caught one we would measure it by placing the nose of the trout on our finger tips and the tail along our arm towards the elbow. The aim was to catch one that reached all the way up to the elbow but of course we never did. After all we were growing lads and each year our arms would be a little longer. Anyway there wasn't a trout big enough in the Teal.
Also my brother Jack taught me how to catch rabbits bare handed. We would go into a farmer's field and there ...read more here
A memory of contributed by Harry Robertson

Remember

I grew up in Kirkcaldy and this castle and its grounds was a great mass of interesting places to hide, climb and explore.  It was in effect our playground between the years of 1984 through to 1988.  Even the local high school (Viewforth) used the park grounds to the left of the castle and still does for cross country.
A memory of Kirkcaldy contributed by carolyn haxton

Extracts From Aberdour & Fife books

Aberdour, 1897

A packed steamer is kept firmly alongside the pier as the Master on the bridge plots her progress carefully. She is either about to put warps ashore or has just taken them aboard. The length of the boat is fairly substantial compared to the head of the jetty, so she requires delicate and careful manoeuvring if she is to be handled
An extract from from"Picturesque Harbours Photographic Memories".

Aberdour, Steamer at the Pier 1897

Excursion trips flourished on the east coast of Scotland until 2 August 1914, when the Admiralty effectively closed the Firth of Forth to non-essential shipping. Well-patronised excursions had included Leith to the Fife resorts and then up to Dundee, and Leith to Alloa and Stirling. Those short of funds could take a non-landing trip to Burntisland for 10d return. One of the companies active on the Forth was the Galloway Saloon Steam Packet Co. Founded in June 1886, it was acquired a few years later by the North British Steam Packet Co, a subsidiary of the North British Railway. However, the GSSPCo retained its old title, and was left very much to its own devices. Between 1886 and 1900 the Forth was livened up when the GSSPCo broke away from the more sombre liveries of the day: it gave its paddlers lavender-coloured hulls with a red waterline, white paddle-box facings, yellow funnels and varnished woodwork.
An extract from from"Victorian and Edwardian Maritime Album".

Aberdour, the Stone Pier 1900

A packed steamer is kept firmly alongside the pier as the Master on the bridge plots her progress carefully. She is either about to put warps ashore or has just taken them aboard. The length of the boat is fairly substantial compared to the head of the jetty, so she requires delicate and careful manoeuvring if she is to be handled safely.
An extract from from"Times Gone By".

Aberdour, the Stone Pier 1900

A packed steamer is kept firmly alongside the pier as the Master on the bridge plots her progress carefully. She is either about to put warps ashore or has just taken them aboard. The length of the boat is fairly substantial compared to the head of the jetty, so she requires delicate and careful manoeuvring if she is to be handled safely.
An extract from from"Countryside Poems".

Aberdour, the Stone Pier 1900

Aberdour in the Kingdom of Fife, lies between Burntisland and Dalgety Bay, just across the Firth of Forth from Edinburgh. Its name means ‘mouth of the water’, and with its two beaches, natural harbour and 13th-century castle, it has long been popular with visitors. It is described in the 1906 Baedeker as ‘a favourite little sea-bathing place, with an old castle and the ruins of a Norman church’. In this view, an excursion steamer from Leith lies at the end of the curving stone pier.
An extract from from"Scotland".