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Cameron, Fife

Cameron is a parish in eastFife, Scotland, 3½ miles south-west ofSt Andrews.[1]

Cameron
Cameron is located in Fife
Cameron
Cameron
Location withinFife
Population415 
OS grid referenceNO4845011646
Council area
Lieutenancy area
CountryScotland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townLeven, St Andrews
Postcode districtKY9 and KY16
PoliceScotland
FireScottish
AmbulanceScottish
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament
List of places
UK
Scotland
56°17′40″N2°50′04″W / 56.294437°N 2.8344780°W /56.294437; -2.8344780
Cameron Parish Church

It is bounded on the north by the parish of St Andrews, on the east byDunino, on the south byCarnbee andKilconquhar, and on the west byCeres. From east to west it is 5 – 6 miles long and in breadth about 4 miles.[2]

The earliest forms of the name are from the twelfth century and appear asCambrun. The etymology of the name is uncertain: it may derive fromPictish,Scottish Gaelic, or be a Gaelicised Pictish name. The first element could thus be Gaeliccam or its Pictish cognate *cam (both meaning 'crooked'), and the second element could be a Pictish word *brun, cognate with Welshbryn ('hill'), or Gaelicbruinne ('chest, front, breast') or perhapsbrú ('belly'). The later development of the name was influenced by the widespread Scottish personal nameCameron (from Gaeliccam shròn 'crooked nose').[3]

It contains the hamlets ofLathones, Denhead (first mentioned in 1581, from Scotsden, 'steep valley', andheid, 'head or end', thus 'the end of the steep valley')[4] and Radernie (first mentioned in 1329, from Gaelicràth 'ring-fort' and an uncertain second element, possibly Gaelicàirne 'sloe',feàrnach 'alder', orÈirinn 'Ireland').[5][6]

Parish of Cameron (1900)
Cameron Reservoir

The civil parish has a population of 415[7] and its area is 9325 acres.[1] It is also a Community Council area. The number of community councillors to which each area is entitled is determined by population and Cameron is therefore entitled to eight councillors.[8][9]

Cameron was originally part of the parish of St Andrews, but was erected into a separate parish in 1645 by act of parliament and the first minister of the parish, George Nairne, was inducted in 1646.[2] With theLocal Government (Scotland) Act 1894 the Parish Council was established. It ceased in 1930 when parish councils in Scotland were abolished,[10] but civil parishes persist for census and other non-administrative purposes.

The church is nearly in the centre of the parish, just north of Cameron Burn as its leavesCameron Reservoir. It was built in 1808 to a plain design, replacing the old church on the same site which was in a very ruinous state. The church is covered in blue slate, with a belfry on the west gable.[2][11] Ecclesiastically the parish is now linked to the parish of St. Leonards in the town of St Andrews, with the minister covering both churches.[12]

The most significant mansion in the parish is that of Mount Melville, former residence of the Melville family, which lies just inside the northern boundary of the parish.[2] It was acquired in 1698 for General George Melville of Strathkiness[13] and the present house was constructed in 1820-1821.[14] The house and grounds continued in Melville family ownership until 1901. In 1947 Mount Melville house and gardens were acquired by Fife County Council with the mansion becoming a maternity hospital known as Craigtoun Hospital. The gardens were then established asCraigtoun Country Park.

During the 19th century, the burgh of St Andrews implemented several poorly planned schemes to provide a public water supply to the town, but problems were resolved in 1911 when they built Cameron reservoir, in the centre of the parish, which supplied water to St Andrews from then[15] until the early 2020s.

References

edit
  1. ^abGazetteer of Scotland, publ, by W & AK Johnston, Edinburgh, 1937. Article on Cameron. Places are presented alphabetically
  2. ^abcdThe New Statistical Account of Scotland by the Ministers of the Respective Parishes, Vol. IX Fife-Kinross. Publ. William Blackwood & Sons, Edinburgh, 1845; article on Cameron
  3. ^Simon Taylor and Gilbert Márkus,The Place-Names of Fife, 5 vols (Donington: Tyas, 2006-12), III 90.
  4. ^Simon Taylor and Gilbert Márkus,The Place-Names of Fife, 5 vols (Donington: Tyas, 2006-12), III 463-64.
  5. ^Simon Taylor and Gilbert Márkus,The Place-Names of Fife, 5 vols (Donington: Tyas, 2006-12), III 125.
  6. ^Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland, by Francis Groome, 2nd edition 1896; article on Cameron
  7. ^Census of Scotland 2011, Table KS101SC – Usually Resident Population, publ. by National Records of Scotland. Web sitehttp://www.scotlandscensus.gov.uk/Archived 24 December 2015 at theWayback Machine retrieved March 2016. See “Standard Outputs”, Table KS101SC, Area type: Civil Parish 1930
  8. ^Cameron Community Councilhttp://www.cameroncc.org.uk/Archived 9 June 2016 at theWayback Machine retrieved May 2016
  9. ^Fife Community Council web site showing Cameron community council area www.fifedirect.org.uk/CommunityCouncils retrieved May 2016
  10. ^Local Government (Scotland) Act 1929
  11. ^Web site of Historic Environment Scotland (formerRoyal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland),Cameron KirkArchived 1 April 2019 at theWayback MachineCanmore retrieved 2 April 2019
  12. ^St Andrews Presbytery web sitehttp://www.standrewspresbytery.org.uk/standrewschurches.cfm?ChurchID=18Archived 11 June 2016 at theWayback Machine retrieved May 2016
  13. ^Historic Environment Scotland."Craigtoun (GDL00117)". Retrieved2 April 2019.
  14. ^"Dictionary of Scottish Architects - DSA Building/Design Report (May 2, 2015, 9:15 am)".scottisharchitects.org.uk.Archived from the original on 11 June 2016. Retrieved16 May 2016.
  15. ^Patterson, Stephen (1989)."Control of Infectious Disease in Fife (PhD Thesis)"(PDF). St Andrews Research Repository. p. 95.Archived from the original on 10 November 2023.

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