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Green Edges

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Point 1

The elaborate Louise Carnegie Memorial Railings and Gateway were installed in 1929 to honour Andrew Carnegieโ€™s wife, Louise.

The design incorporates Louiseโ€™s initials, together with three letters โ€˜Mโ€™ for Margaret Morrison, Andrew Carnegieโ€™s mother, Margaret Carnegie their daughter and Margaret Miller, their grand-daughter.

In February 1942, metal railings from around Pittencrieff Park were surrendered for use in the war effort but these rather special railings were subsequently given a reprieve by Dunfermline Town Council.

Today the Louise Carnegie Gates are paved with Caithness slabs and make a grand entrance to the park.

point 1 additional info boards
Pittencrieff Park
Pittencrieff Park (or The Glen as it is known locally) is a wonderful green space close to the heart of the city. The 80 acre park was gifted to the people of Dunfermline in 1903 by its famous son Andrew Carnegie who was born close by. As a boy growing up in Dunfermline, young Andrew had been banned from the then-private Pittencrieff Estate. After he made his fortune, he took great delight in buying Pittencrieff House and Estate and gifting it to the people of his hometown. He described it as โ€˜the most soul-satisfying public gift I ever made, or ever can makeโ€™. Look out for the beautifully illustrated information boards as you go round, you can also find more information about the park onlineย here. Interesting note! The name Pittencrieff comes from the Gaelic Pit-an-craib Pit in Gaelic and Pitt in English signify a hollow while in Pictish Pit may mean a parcel of land or an estate; craib is from the Gaelic craoibh, pronounced creiv, meaning a tree or of the trees. So Pittencrieff would mean land or estate of the trees.

Content on this site was sourced from:
Fife Council, Carnegie Dunfermline Trust, Fife Coast and Countryside Trust, ONFife, Your Guide to The City of Dunfermline