History in Structure

Galloway Library Including Boundary Walls, 50 Main Street, Colinsburgh

A Category B Listed Building in Kilconquhar, Fife

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Coordinates

Latitude: 56.2205 / 56°13'13"N

Longitude: -2.8479 / 2°50'52"W

OS Eastings: 347515

OS Northings: 703428

OS Grid: NO475034

Mapcode National: GBR 2P.D23N

Mapcode Global: WH7SK.7X35

Plus Code: 9C8V65C2+6R

Entry Name: Galloway Library Including Boundary Walls, 50 Main Street, Colinsburgh

Listing Name: Colinsburgh, 50 Main Street, Galloway Library Including Boundary Walls

Listing Date: 2 September 2009

Category: B

Source: Historic Scotland

Source ID: 400239

Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB51354

Building Class: Cultural

ID on this website: 200400239

Location: Kilconquhar

County: Fife

Electoral Ward: East Neuk and Landward

Parish: Kilconquhar

Traditional County: Fife

Tagged with: Library

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Colinsburgh

Description

Charles Davidson of Paisley, 1903 (dated). Well-detailed single storey and attic, 3-bay library and flatted dwelling closing irregular terrace to E, with Scots Baronial and Wrenaissance references combining to make an important and unusual contribution to Colinsburgh's Main Street. Interior contains rare retention of little-altered reading room. Squared and snecked bull-faced rubble with polished ashlar dressings. Moulded cill course, deep frieze and cornice forming attic cill course and eaves course. Pedimented, barrel-vaulted porch with columns flanking Gibbsian doorpiece under heavily mutuled cornice; segmentally-arched and oculus windows, stone-balustraded balcony between corbelled roundels, keystone and relieving arch. Stone and timber transoms and mullions.

FURTHER DESCRIPTION: asymmetrical elevations. Entrance elevation to S with balconied gabled bay projecting at left; porch in re-entrant angle at centre with steps up to broad 2-leaf panelled timber door below relief carved 'GALLOWAY LIBRARY' and dated cartouche in semicircular pediment; 6-light transomed window to right.

Multi-pane glazing patterns over 2-pane and plate glass lower sashes in timber sash and case windows. Grey slates with terracotta ridge tiles. Banded and coped ashlar stacks with clay cans. Ashlar-coped skews and flat skewputts. Cast iron downpipes with decorative fixings.

INTERIOR: much good interior detail retained including ribbed and vaulted ceilings, decorative cornicing, good joinery work including architraved and pedimented doorpieces, timber panelling and boarded dadoes. Timber fire surrounds with tiled cheeks and cast iron grates, brass door furniture and coat hooks. Porch with decoratively-tiled floor and walls, 2-leaf screen door. Boarded timber toilet cubicle with Shanks & Co china basin and timber seat. Panelled reading room with timber fire surround and cast iron grate, clock in pediment over door.

BOUNDARY WALLS: dwarf saddleback-coped squared rubble and high random rubble boundary walls.

Statement of Interest

The Galloway Library is prominently sited on Colinsburgh's largely vernacular Main Street, contrasting with the more common dark whinstone and colourwashed buildings.

Dated 1903, this is a high quality and well-detailed building which is an important part of Colinsburgh's streetscape. It retains its original library function and as a consequence is remarkably intact and contains good quality joinerywork and a number of fireplaces. Arts and Crafts influence can be found in the brass door furniture.

Colinsburgh was made a burgh of barony in 1686. It is named after its founder, Colin the 3rd Earl of Balcarres. The Library User's Group note that 'The Library was built as part of the Thomas Carstairs Galloway bequest. ' Galloway was a linen merchant who died at the turn of the century and left a large trust to the village of Colinsburgh ' The money for the trust was invested in railways and coal'. Thomas Galloway's bequest 'was to build and maintain the library and provide a librarian and caretaker who lived upstairs'. The library is now run by Fife Council and the caretaker's flat was sold into private ownership in 1992. The Galloway Trust is currently (2009) planning to appoint new trustees.

The architect Charles Davidson worked almost exclusively in the Paisley area. He was born in Forfar and is thought to have been an assistant in Peddie and Kinnear's Edinburgh office until 1875 when he went to Paisley to work on the National Bank and Bank of Scotland. Davidson set up his own practice in Paisley in 1880.

The 2009 postal address for the whole building is No 50 Main Street, but the number on the library door is 48.

External Links

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