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Water
Architecture
Harbour
Scotland
Sea
Reflections
Fife
St. Andrews
Kingdom of Fife


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The North Pier - St. Andrews Harbour

The North Pier - St. Andrews Harbour
Perhaps best enlarged

The North Pier is a classic example of Scottish vernacular harbour work. It comprises a pier of rubble construction, with a substantial bulwark on its seaward face, to protect the wide quay from over-topping seas in heavy weather. The course of the pier is somewhat crooked, reflecting the strategy of the builders to construct it from strong point to strong point along the natural rock skerry which forms its foundation. The dry-stone, rubble construction of this pier gives it great character and the surfaces reveal many examples of repairs to the pier, using a variety of different strategies for placing the stones. The outer, seaward face of this pier contains in places re-used stone with rolled moulded margins, presumably coming from the ruined castle or cathedral in the 18th and 19th centuries.

The North pier has a number of important features along is length, including cyclopean stone mooring pawls, stone stairs leading to the bulwark and a stone slipway in the harbour where the pier joins the Shorehead quay. There is also a stone-built ramp at the root of the pier leading down onto the shore. This ramp is of indeterminate age but it connects with a rock-cut roadway leading towards the castle, where there was an important landing beach. The outer, seaward end of the North pier is of 19th and 20th century date, reflecting efforts to improve the access to the harbour in heavy weather. It is of typical Victorian and later cement construction, much more rectilinear than the earlier work at the shore-ward end. This later extension is fitted with cast-iron mooring pawls.

St Andrews Harbour has in its day known commerce with all parts of Europe. In medieval times the town traded widely, principally with the Low Countries. At its peak, the harbour may have berthed as many as 300 ships. But it fell into disuse with the opening of the railway. It dates from the 13th century and retains much of its medieval form. The main pier, extending out into the North Sea, was rebuilt with stone taken from the Cathedral in 1656. It is along this pier the University students traditionally walk after Sunday service from St Salvator's Chapel in North Street.

Gabriella Siglinde, Tere79 Sa, Amelia, Fred Fouarge and 23 other people have particularly liked this photo


Latest comments - All (26)
 Doug Shepherd
Doug Shepherd club has replied
Thanks very much Annemarie.

Best regards, Doug
5 years ago.
 Doug Shepherd
Doug Shepherd club has replied
Thanks very much for your generous comments Erich.

Best regards, Doug
5 years ago.
 Doug Shepherd
Doug Shepherd club has replied
Thanks for your visit Colin. Memories from our early days can be strange, in my case very fragmented - are they real or imagination. This view of the harbour has changed very little since I first saw it back in the fifties, maybe the scene has triggered something in your memory!

Best wishes, Doug
5 years ago.
 Amelia
Amelia club
I well remember these creels containing lobsters on the way to the Fisher School every day. I don't think much is caught here these days. Just another smell: Laundry - Gasworks - Harbour. ;-)
5 years ago.
 Doug Shepherd
Doug Shepherd club has replied
Thanks so much for your visit and YS Amelia. Quite a combination of smells;-))

All the best, Doug
5 years ago.

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