Pittencrieff Park (Dunfermline)

United Kingdom / Scotland / Dunfermline

...or "The Glen", extends to 76 acres and was given in trust by Andrew Carnegie to the people of his birthplace, Dunfermline.
Nearby cities:
Coordinates:   56°4'8"N   3°28'0"W

Comments

  • ahhh nice place
  • Dunfermline’s long history of philanthropy: The people of Dunfermline have been fortunate over a long period of time in being gifted land and buildings by local benefactors. The first such gift that I am aware of, a large tract of monastic land, was gifted them by the Abbot of Dunfermline, Robert of Crail in 1322. The terms of the gift were that many acres of pasture land was gifted to the ordinary people of Dunfermline in perpetuity, to do as they wished with in return for a token annual fee—six pence or a pair of white Paris gloves. Perhaps this well documented act of benevolence by the Abbot of Dunfermline was the ideal that inspired Andrew Carnegie, Dunfermline’s best-known son, to carry out his philanthropy in later life? One thing is certain the Abbot’s gift has all but disappeared over the years as corrupt or lazy stewards of the common good allowed it to be sold or given away. Today very little is left. It is a matter of record that Andrew Carnegie was aware of the purloining of common good land by the landowners of his day. When Andrew Carnegie decided to gift the 70-acre Pittencrieff Park and Glen together with money to support its upkeep in perpetuity—specifically for the people’s leisure—he gave it to a dedicated Trust. Perhaps Carnegie wanted to avoid his gift to the people of Dunfermline going the same way as that of his mentor in philanthropy Robert of Crail. Sadly it appears that the gift Carnegie described as his “most precious” is under threat as it faces development to bail out the cash-strapped Fife Council who took over the stewardship of the park when the designated stewards, the Carnegie Dunfermline & Hero Fund Trustees fell on hard times. Having failed in their bid to attract the Harvard Business School building in the Glen the Trust have not given up their commercial development ambitions. Save Our Glen website is a website set up to take a detailed look at the stewardship of Pittencrieff Park by the Carnegie Dunfermline & Hero Fund Trustees/Fife Council, and to chronicle the threat to the people's park of Pittencrieff and if possible mobilize the people to stop this loss of green space. If the specific terms of gifts to the people can be overturned and reversed by those entrusted with their stewardship, the long tradition of benevolent giving in Scotland will come to an end. What present-day Carnegie would gift land or precious artifacts if they know that these might be sold off to augment their profligate local council’s cash shortfall? Please find the whole story of Pittencrieff Park at: http://www.saveourglen.com/
This article was last modified 10 years ago