Sunny Early Winter Coast And Harbour On Visit To Pittenweem East Neuk Of Fife Scotland

Tour Scotland Sunny early Winter travel video of houses and cottages by the coast and the harbour on ancestry visit to Pittenweem in the East Neuk of Fife. Founded as a fishing village around a probably early Christian religious settlement, Pittenweem grew along the shoreline from the west where the sheltered beaches were safe places for fishermen to draw their boats up out of the water. Later a breakwater was built, extending out from one of the rocky skerries that jut out south-west into the Firth of Forth like fingers. This allowed boats to rest at anchor rather than being beached, enabling larger vessels to use the port. The late 17th to early 18th centuries saw a number of notorious witch hunts in Pittenweem by the local minister. The burgh was bogged down in debt and witchcraft was used as an excuse to improve the financial position by seizing the assets of some local women. The Church of Scotland building at the top of the High Street adjoined the Tolbooth which was used as the jail for some of the Pittenweem witches, and the door to the cells can still be seen. It is the studded door at the bottom of the tower. Of interest to folks with ancestry, genealogy or Scottish Family Roots in Scotland. I was raised in Anstruther and spent many days of my youth in this old fishing village on the East coast. The Fife Coastal Path runs from the Forth Estuary in the south, to the Tay Estuary in the north and stretches for 117 miles. A lifeboat was first commissioned in Anstruther in 1865. Since the foundation of the RNLI in 1824 its lifeboat crews have saved over 140,000 lives. All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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