1
Faodail Restaurant, Kincardine
Faodail translates as ' A lucky find', and so it proved to be.
Image: © Graham Hogg
Taken: 28 Oct 2017
0.01 miles
2
Excise Street
Wheelie bins apart, the streets around the old centre of Kincardine have an old world charm because of the surprisingly high number of 18th-century buildings. The surrounding area has lost much of its architectural integrity over the past two centuries, but this little back street is one that has escaped extensive rebuilding.
Image: © kim traynor
Taken: 20 Jun 2013
0.01 miles
3
Unicorn Inn, Excise Street
A brasserie established in 1639? Surely not. This old inn is the birthplace of the physicist and chemist Sir James Dewar (b.1842), whom we have to thank for the principle behind the vacuum flask. A plaque on the building also informs that he was the first person to liquefy hydrogen gas and the joint inventor of the explosive cordite. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_James_Dewar
Image: © kim traynor
Taken: 20 Jun 2013
0.02 miles
4
House in Excise Lane
One of many listed buildings in the old historic centre of Kincardine. An embedded stone bears the date 1749.
Image: © kim traynor
Taken: 20 Jun 2013
0.02 miles
5
Entry to Coopers Lane
A charming little alleyway running between Excise Street and Keith Street.
Image: © kim traynor
Taken: 20 Jun 2013
0.02 miles
6
Former butcher's premises, Kincardine
The shop sign for Walter Japp, Village Butcher in Kincardine, now a hairdressing salon.
Image: © William Starkey
Taken: 9 Sep 2013
0.02 miles
7
Derelict houses, Excise Lane, Kincardine
Image: © Jonathan Thacker
Taken: 17 Aug 2018
0.03 miles
8
Kincardine
Looking past the post office.
Image: © Richard Webb
Taken: 6 Mar 2015
0.03 miles
9
Shops, Kincardine
Traditional shop signage, sadly the butcher's shop has recently closed.
Image: © Richard Webb
Taken: 15 Oct 2009
0.03 miles
10
Old Chapel, Coopers Lane
A quaint two-storey house with forestair which was once used as an R.C. Chapel, hidden down a narrow alley, no doubt deliberately, at a time of anti-Catholic discrimination. The date 1750 appears on the door lintel. It is Category B-listed and, according to the official record, still in ecclesiastical use.
Image: © kim traynor
Taken: 20 Jun 2013
0.04 miles