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Culross, 7 Mid Causeway, Bishop Leighton's House

House (17th Century)

Site Name Culross, 7 Mid Causeway, Bishop Leighton's House

Classification House (17th Century)

Canmore ID 92417

Site Number NS98NE 79

NGR NS 98660 85915

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/92417

Ordnance Survey licence number AC0000807262. All rights reserved.
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Digital Images

View up Mid Causeway with Bishop Leighton's house to the right.
View up Mid Causeway with Bishop Leighton's house to the right.View from NEView from WSWView from WSWBishop Leighton's House, Ground and 1st floor plans "as existing"View of rear from Low Causeway, from South East.View from NE

Administrative Areas

  • Council Fife
  • Parish Culross
  • Former Region Fife
  • Former District Dunfermline
  • Former County Fife

Architecture Notes

See also 5 Mid Causeway

Activities

Photographic Survey (1938)

Photographs of buildings in Culross, Fife by the Ministry of Works c1938.

Standing Building Recording (2 August 2012 - 3 August 2012)

NS 98660 85915 A historic building survey was undertaken 2–3 August 2012 in advance of re-harling work at the Category A listed Bishop Leighton’s House (7 Mid Causeway), Culross. The survey included a full drawn record of the S gable of the building (following removal of cement harling) and a basic survey of the harled E and W frontages. A brief assessment was also undertaken of the visible early features in the building, including the roof space.

The masonry of the S gable had been constructed largely in one phase, with subsequent minor modification. The numerous modifications to the stonework visible at the current openings in the E and W elevations shows they are structurally complex. A notable feature was the skew-put to the street frontage at the SW angle, upon which a previously unrecorded date and initials – 1565. DP – are apparent. This is the earliest recorded date upon a building in Culross. A timber stair, which rises from the first floor to the former attic rooms, now redundant, was recorded in the roof space.

The assessment of building concluded there were a number of major construction phases; the original 16th-century construction, a remodelling perhaps in the later 17th century, and a possible further episode of refurbishment, represented by a series of detailed panelled interiors, fireplaces, etc. Later occupation saw the subdivision and decline of the property before a further refurbishment under Ian G Lindsay for the NTS in 1953 and 1970–1. Much historic fabric is now obscured by later finishes and linings associated with these later works.

Archive: RCAHMS

Funder: The National Trust for Scotland

Kenneth Macfadyen, Addyman Archaeology

Tom Addyman,

2012

OASIS ID - addymana1-132217

References

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