“And red-prow’d fisher-boats afar are
spied
In south-east, tilting o’er the jasper main,
Whose wing-like oars, dispread on either side,
Now swoop on sea, now rise in sky again.”
As has been already mentioned, most of the
inhabitants of the burgh of Kilrenny dwell in that portion of it which
is known as Cellardyke, or Nether Kilrenny, and which has recently
been made a quod sacra parish. It and the two Anstruthers, although
managed by different municipal bodies, form, in point of fact, one
long continuous town, stretching along the coast-line for nearly a
mile and a-half. By road, Cellardyke is four miles from Crail.
Name.—Mr Beat supposed that
Cellardyke derived its name “from a range of cellars along the shore,
built for preparing fish for exportation.” In this he was probably
right, although, in an Act of Parliament, passed in 1649, it is called
Silverdicks. There may sometimes be a good deal in a name, for, in
1585, the council and community of East Anstruther referred to the
erection of Kilrenny and “porte of Skynfischtoun.”
Erection of the Burgh.—Patrick
Adamson, one of the tulchan archbishops of St Andrews, as lord of the
regality of that see, assigned to John Betoun of Balfour on the 8th
of July 1578 the port called the “skynfast heavyne,” within the town
of Kilrynnie, with the customs, anchorages, profits, and emoluments of
the same; and erected the said town into a free burgh of that
regality. The reddendo to the Archbishop and his successors was 6s 8d
Scots. Betoun seems to have set immediately to the improving of the
port. For the King confirmed the infeftment, on the 24th of the
following January, in respect that he had “buyldit and reparit” the
haven, to the comfort and commodity of all seafaring people, being
chiefly moved thereto for the preservation of divers of the lieges,
whom he had seen with their “schippis and boittis” in great hazard
“with tempest of evil! wathir,” and who had their relief by the
commodity of the haven. As he intended still further to repair it, at
“greit and sumptuus chairges,” the King and three Estates of
Parliament confirmed the infeftment and erection into a burgh of
regality, on the 11th November 1579.
Dimission of the Burgh.—Though only
a burgh of regality, Kilrenny sent a commissioner to Parliament so
early as 1612, and consented by its deputy in 1651 to a union with
England. But, in the Conference between a Committee of the English
Parliament and Deputies from Scotland, on the 28th of October 1652, it
was stated that the burghs of Crail, Anstruthers Easter and Wester,
and Kilrenny, who had assented at Dalkeith, “being but petty meane
burghs,” situated on the sea, and most of their inhabitants employed
in fishing at the time of the meeting at Edinburgh, thought their
presence the less necessary, as they had been ordinarily dispensed
with by Parliament in the like case. The absence of the deputies was
accordingly excused on the ground of poverty. In 1654, Kilrenny is
mentioned as one of thirteen Fife burghs which were to have a joint
representative in Cromwell’s Parliament. Dire experience, however,
soon proved that it was no empty honour to be numbered among the royal
burghs. In 1672, Gideon Murray of Pitkirie was entrusted with “the
humble petition of the Inhabitants of Kilrinnie,” signed by nine
individuals, two of whom have added bailie to their names, and four
councillor. It bears that they did never “compt in Exchecker or make
ane AEque as a Burgh Royall,” neither can they find magistrates, nor
bear the burden of a royal burgh. They allege that their privileges
are derived from the lairds of Balfour, on whose lands their houses
are built, and whose burgh of barony they are. Though they had been
represented in some late Parliaments, that was owing to “the
tumultuariness and rebellion of the late times,” wherein some factious
persons, desiring to have votes, did entice some of their inhabitants
to sit in Parliament. The present inhabitants were young men, who,
until the last twenty days, had never considered their predecessors’
rights, but continued in the course of those who formerly lived within
these bounds. Gideon was instructed to resign in his Majesty’s favour,
to remain with him and his successors for ever, all right and
privilege which they might be conceived to have as a burgh royal. The
King and Parliament understanding their low and impoverished condition
accepted of the surrender, and ordained that they be no longer held as
a royal burgh, nor liable to any burden as such. But they were not to
enjoy the benefit of this Act, until they paid their part of the
twelvemonth’s cess just granted to the King, and also their
proporfioli of all other burdens imposed before and which they were
due. Yet, six years later, the Convention of Estates continued the
cess and stent on them as before, and as they were daily threatened to
be quartered upon by the collector, they had again to petition
Parliament in 1681. They piteously relate that they have not the least
trade imaginable, having neither common-good, ship, bark, nor boat
wherewith to trade, except “three or four hand lyne yoills ;“ and
humbly crave the King and Parliament to discharge the collector from
troubling them for payment of the cess. Their petition was remitted to
the Privy Council with power. In 1685, it was ordained that the burgh
should be expunged out of the Rolls being now no burgh royal by Act of
Parliament.
Re-exaltation—At the meeting of
Estates in 1689 the burgh was represented by George Beaton, and having
continued to send a member to Parliament without being objected to, it
was grouped with the four neighbouring burghs, in 1707, by the Act
settling the manner of electing the 16 peers and 45 commons to
represent Scotland in the Parliament of Great Britain. Like some of
its neighbours, however, it proved unworthy. In 1767, according to
Morison’s Dictionary, the Town Councils of Kilrenny, Pittenweem, and
West Anstruther, “and of Kilrenny in particular, were composed of low
indigent persons incapable to resist any money temptation. And it is
proved against them, that they were unanimously resolved not to
neglect the opportunity of the ensuing election to sell themselves to
the highest bidder.” In these degenerate days, by the sett of the
burgh, the old Council elected the new. In 1828, the burgh was
disfranchised, and managers were appointed by the Court of Session.
Brighter days have more than revived its former prosperity, and now it
is under the enlightened government of a provost, two bailies, a
treasurer, and five councillors, who also act as Police Commissioners
and Local Authority.
Fishing.—Reference
has already been made (see page 5) to the petition presented to
Parliament by Crail and Kilrenny in 1661. Mr Beat, who wrote the old
statistical Account of Kilrenny, and who was born in the parish in or
about 1711, and spent the greater part of his life in it, says that
“within his remembrance, vast quantities of large cod, ling,
haddocks, herrings, holibut, turbot, and mackarel, have been caught
here; but the fisheries are now miserably decayed. He can remember,
when he was a young man, that he numbered no less than 50 large
fishing boats, that required 6 men each, belonging to the town of
Cellardykes, all employed in the herring fishery in the summer
season. He can recollect that he saw such a number of boats throwing
their nets at one time as he could not number, but heard that the
collector of the customs at Anstruther at that time, who kept an
account of them, said they amounted to 500, being gathered together
from all quarters to this shore; and the winter fishery was
proportionally great. He has seen 10 or 12 large boats come into the
harbour in one day, swimming to the brim with large cod, besides 30,
40, or 50, strung upon a rope fastened to the stern, which they took
in tow; and, what will hardly be credited, many a large cod’s head
lying for dung on the land. At that time, a gentleman in Dunbar had
the largest cod in tack for 4d. each, on this proviso, that every
inhabitant of the parish should be at liberty to pick the best fish
for their own use at his price; and of all the thousands he ever saw;
the largest were bought for 4d. So strong is the contrast
between that time and this, that not only few or no fish are caught,
but, to the amazement of every body, the haddocks seem to have
deserted this coast; and for two years past it has become a rarity to
see one.” It is said that fish, even after being cooked, prefer to be
swimming. Perhaps that may be one of the reasons why the 24 small
brewers in Cellardyke, whom Mr Beat remembered, dwindled down in his
latter days “to two or three, owing to the decay of the fishery.” Had
he been told, in the midst of his gloomy outlook, that, in less than a
century, Cellardyke was to hold a foremost place among the fishing
towns of the country, that it was to have a great fleet of splendid
sea-going boats, that it was to have a magnificent harbour close at
hand, and that its sons would be famed for their skill and daring, the
old man would have thought that it was all too good to be true, and
that it was even more incredible than his own reminiscences about the
big cods’ heads.
Harbour.—The port of Skinfast-haven
and its’ improvement by John Betoun have already been referred to. It
is situated at the eastern extremity of the town, and is incidentally
mentioned by John Betoun of Balfour, some time captain of the Castle
of St Andrews, in a narrative concerning his title-deeds and property
seized by Norman Leslie, at the slaughter of the Cardinal in 1546.
Writing in 1710, Sibbald says that Cellardyke “hath a little
harbour.” It was reported, in 1833, that £1200 advanced by the Board
of Trustees for the improvement of fisheries, and £500 raised by the
town, had been expended in building new quays, to the injury rather
than the improvement of the harbour. Several prominent rocks, to the
eastward of the haven, are known as the Cardinal’s Steps.
Town Hall.—Cellardyke is indebted
for this roomy and handsome building to the generous liberality of Mr
Stephen Williamson and Messrs David and George Fowler, who erected it
at a cost of fully £3500. Messrs Hall & Henry, St Andrews, were the
architects. The day on which it was opened—Wednesday, the 19th of
September 1883—will long be remembered in the burgh. It is partly
built on the site of the old Hall and grim Jail. The old Cross has
been re-erected against the west front.
Population, Public Institutions, &c.—In
1811 the population was only 804, in 1861 it had increased to 1893, in
1871 it was 2285, and in 1881 it was 2628, of whom 464 were fishermen.
There are two schools, an Established Church, a Free Church Hall, a
branch of the National Bank, a cod-liver-oil work, an oil-skin
factory, a saw-mill, and 3 fishing-gear factories. Though the whole
town is redolent with the odour of tar, bark, and fish, the prevailing
sea-breezes are refreshing, and an air of homely comfort and thriving
industry pervades the place. Rodger Street, which is newly finished,
is entirely occupied by fisher-folk. Considering the nature of their
calling, this street may be almost described as—grand! The fishermen
as a rule are shrewd, intelligent men. One of them, William Smith, has
just published a small book, entitled, The Lights and Shadows of a
Fisher’s Life, which conveys a great deal of interesting information,
in a very simple, unpretentious manner. Those who are interested in
this great branch of our national food-supply should consult the
Annual Reports of the Fishers, Board for Scotland. They are eminently
readable and instructive. Those who like more “swing and go” will
enjoy Mr George Gourlay’s Memorials of Cellardyke. He is gifted with a
free fancy and a flowing pen.
Click here to see
pictures of Cellardyke