Tour Scotland Video Meeting A Big Truck While Driving On Single Track Road In Fife



Tour Scotland travel video of meeting a big truck while driving on a single track road on ancestry genealogy, history visit to Fife. I just had to reverse back to an entry to a field. A single track road or one lane road is a road that permits two way travel but is not wide enough in most places to allow vehicles to pass one another, although sometimes two compact cars can pass. This kind of road is common in rural areas across the United Kingdom and elsewhere. The term is widely used in Scotland, particularly the Highlands, to describe such roads.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Video May Drive To Ceres Fife



Tour Scotland video of a sunny May drive East on the A914 road then South on the A916 road to Wemysshall Road on ancestry visit to Ceres, Fife, Scotland. The name signifies " place to the west " from the Gaelic Siar meaning " west ", probably in relation to St Andrews. Robert Fleming Gourlay was born March 22, 1778 in Craigrothie in the Parish of Ceres. He received a Master of Arts degree from the University of St. Andrews and studied agriculture at the University of Edinburgh. In 1817, his wife inherited some land in the Niagara District of Upper Canada and he travelled there via New York City, expecting to return by the Fall. He returned to England and published A General Introduction to a Statistical Account of Upper Canada in 1822. In 1856, he returned to his property in Canada and ran unsuccessfully for a seat in Oxford in Canada West. He returned to Edinburgh, Scotland, and died there in 1863.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Video May Drive Behind Double Decker Passenger Bus To Freuchie Fife



Tour Scotland video of a sunny May drive East on the B936 road behind a double decker passenger bus through Newton of Falkland on ancestry visit to Freuchie, Fife, Scotland. Freuchie is a village at the foot of the Lomond Hills, and near Falkland. The nearest major town is Glenrothes located 4 miles to the South. The name derives from the Scottish Gaelic, fraoch, meaning heather. Freuchie was once used by the Royal family as a place of banishment from the Court when it was in nearby Falkland Palace.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Video May Drive To Pitlessie Fife



Tour Scotland video of a sunny May drive East on the A914 road through Kettlebridge and Balmalcolm on ancestry visit to Pitlessie in The Cults of Fife, Scotland. Cults best known son was Sir David Wilkie, born 1785, died 1841, born in Cults Church manse. His father was parish minister, and while Wilkie lived at Cults, characters in the parish served as models for his paintings Pitlessie Fair in 1804 and the 'Village Politicians in 1806.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Old Photograph The Glebe Selkirk Scotland

Old photograph of people walking on The Glebe in Selkirk, Borders, Scotland. Glebe land in Scotland was subject to an Act of Parliament in 1925 which meant that it would be transferred little by little to the General Trustees of the Church of Scotland. William Wallace, was declared guardian of Scotland in the town. Bonnie Prince Charlie, the Marquess of Montrose and the Outlaw Murray all had connections with the town.



All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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