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Keltybridge
Colliery (19th Century), Engine House (19th Century)
Site Name Keltybridge
Classification Colliery (19th Century), Engine House (19th Century)
Canmore ID 79193
Site Number NT19NW 36
NGR NT 1390 9527
NGR Description NT 1390 9527 and NT 1393 9533
Datum OSGB36 - NGR
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/79193
- Council Fife
- Parish Beath
- Former Region Fife
- Former District Dunfermline
- Former County Fife
Field Visit (30 August 1991)
NT19NW 36 1390 9527 and 1393 9533
The sites of two coal pits and an engine house depicted on the 1st edition of the OS 6-inch map (Fife & Kinross, 1856, sheet 30), to the W of Kelty Bridge are now occupied by a modern house.
(Cleish91 92-3)
Visited by RCAHMS (SPH) 30 August 1991.
Ground Survey (29 August 2009 - 28 September 2009)
NT 105 945 (centred on) A desk-based assessment and walkover survey of Blairadam Forest were undertaken to enable the FCS to make informed decisions on the management of the cultural heritage within it. The forest lies W of the M90 motorway, near Kelty, and measures c12sqkm. Sites identified in the assessment were visited over several days between 29 August and 28 September 2009. The survey found that many of the boundaries that once belonged to Blairadam estate can still be identified in the forest. The boundaries (comprising tree-lined banks, ha-has and walls), belong to the designed landscape created by the Adam family over three generations between 1733 and 1834. It was possible, in many areas, to distinguish between three different phases of boundary alterations. The survey also found extensive mining remains along three different burns, some of which may date to the medieval period. The most extensive of these remains was an area of bell pits dating to the 18th century and possibly earlier. Later mining remains included a possible 19th-century mine almost hidden along the Kelty Burn, as well as remains of Blairenbathie Colliery and a later drift mine dating to the 1940s. The ruins of two farmsteads were found on the periphery of the forest close to the large opencast mine, as well as a possible WW2 watchtower. Other sites of interest included several reservoirs, waterworks and dams, the ruins of two cottages, and a great many quarries. As part of the study a suite of GIS shape files and a database were created to help with future mitigation.
Archive: RCAHMS
Funder: Forestry Commission of Scotland
Tamlin Barton, David Perry, Ray Cachart and David Bowler - Alder Archaeology Ltd