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

Cults

In addition to the parish church, there was also a United Secession church in Pitlessie and a Free Church at Balmalcolm (in Kettle parish).

The Old Statistical Account (written in the 1790s) does not mention any dissenters from the Established Church.

The New Statistical Account (written in 1838) gives this information:

  • Established Church - 150 families, 678 persons, 348 communicants
  • United Associate Synod - 29 families, 136 persons
  • Relief Synod - 13 families, 57 persons
  • Original Burgher Synod - 2 families, 8 persons
  • Independents --3 families, 8 persons
  • 2 or 3 families not attached to any religious denomination
  • A Dissenting Chapel in Pitlessie in connection with the United Associate Synod
  • 25 years ago there was an Independent Chapel in Pitlessie, since converted into dwellings, and the congregation attaching themselves for the most part to either the Established Church or to some other Dissenting communion.

The 1865 Ecclesiastical Directory lists the parish church, the United Presbyterian Church (at Pitlessie) and the Free Church (Kettle and Cults).

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

Details of church history:

  • Cults Parish Church:

The church of Cults (Fife) belonged to the College of St Salvators, St Andrews, prior to the Reformation. A minister is first recorded in 1563. The current church was built in 1793 and enlarged in 1835. It was in the Presbytery of Cupar and Synod of Fife. In 1963 the congregation was linked to that of Kettle. In 1983 the congregations of Collessie and Ladybank, and Cults and Kettle were united under the name Howe of Fife.

  • Kettle Free church, Kettle and Cults United Free, Balmalcolm Church of Scotland:

Kettle and Cults Free Church was formed at the Disruption by adherents in the two parishes, who built a church on the border between them, about a mile from Kingskettle. It passed successively to the United Free Church and the Church of Scotland, in the latter case as Balmalcolm, which almost immediately united with Kettle East and Kettle West as Kettle in 1930. The UFC charge was in the presbytery of Cupar and the synod of Fife and Angus.

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