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Church History information for Falkland and places above it in the hierarchy

Falkland

In addition to the parish church in Falkland, there were also a Burgher Congregation (later United Presbyterian) at Freuchie; a Free Church in Falkland (Falkland East); a United Free Church (Scott Memorial) at Freuchie; and a branch of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in Freuchie.

The Old Statistical Account (written in the 1790s) gives this information about Dissenters:

  • Members of the Established Church - 1860
  • Seceders - 338.

The New Statistical Account (written in 1845) gives this information:

  • There are 3 dissenting places of worship - 2 in Falkland and 1 in Freuchie.
  • The number of dissenters is not large, the 2 congregations in Falkland being very small.

The 1865 Ecclesiastical Directory lists the parish church, the Free Church, and the United Presbyterian Church at Freuchie.

Information and pictures of the churches at the Scottish Churches website.

Details of church history:

  • Falkland Church:

The church of Falkland, which was known of old as Kilgour, belonged prior to the reformation to the Priory of St Andrews and the kirk session records ministry from 1565, in the person of Alexander Mure. In 1431 the parish church was rebuilt by the Prior of St Andrews, the preceding building having been destroyed by fire in around the year 1425, and in the early years of the 16th cent a new church termed, 'the new church of Falkland ', was erected. The old church at Kilgour survived until 1825 when its foundation stones were dug up to be used for alternative purposes, and 'the new church of Falkland' was in turn replaced by the present day building in 1850. In 1981, the kirk session of Falkland, which sat within the Presbytery of Cupar until the restructuring of the Presbyteries in 1976 when it became part of the Presbytery of St Andrews, established a link with Freuchie.

  • Freuchie Church (Freuchie West):

The parish church of Freuchie was opened for worship on the 15th October 1876 and the parish itself was disjoined from that of Falkland, and erected quoad sacra on the 15th March 1880. Following the 1929 union of the Church of Scotland and the United Free Church, Freuchie Parish church, (which was termed for a time after the 1929 union, Freuchie West) established a link between the years of 1935 and 1949 with the former United Free Church congregation of Freuchie Scott Memorial. Freuchie was later linked with Falkland in 1981. The kirk session sat within the Presbytery of Cupar, until the restructuring of the presbyteries in 1976, when it became part of the Presbytery of St Andrews.

  • Falkland Free and United Free Church:

At the Disruption in 1843 the minister of Falkland Parish Church, along with a number of his congregation, adhered to the Free Church and the first Falkland Free Church communion service took place on the West Green on 16 July 1843. During the initial months the congregation worshipped in the Congregational Church, and latterly in the town hall, until a church was erected and opened in March 1845. Following the union of the United Presbyterian Church and the Free Church of Scotland in 1900, Falkland Free Church became the United Free Church of Falkland and following the 1929 union of the Church of Scotland and the United Free Church, Falkland U.F. was termed Falkland East Kirk Session. Falkland East later went on to unite with the charge of Falkland Old, under the name of Falkland, and after this union the East church was converted for use as a church hall.

  • Freuchie Burgher Congregation (later United Presbyterian, then United Free - Scott Memorial Church)

A meeting place on the site of the present day Lumsden Hall was erected in 1795 in connection with the Associate (Burgher) Presbytery of Perth. This congregation later became the United Presbyterian congregation. The United Presbyterian Church was built in 1869 with seatings for 520 and replaced the 1795 meeting place. In time, the United Presbyterian Church became the United Free Church. The church building was named the Scott Memorial Church.

Fife

A census of Religious Worship and Education was taken in 1851 at the same time as the census of population. A table of statistics about the churches in Fife at this time is available here.

The Fife Post has useful pages listing the churches in Fife in 1861, 1893 and 1903. (look under Genealogy)

Information on historic churches at the Scottish Churches website.

The Churches of Britain and Ireland site has photographs of many churches in Fife. More are needed - can you help?

Scotland

Scotland - Church History - links and information.

UK and Ireland