Age: 0
Oorzaak: Influenza and Bronchitis, Cardiac Failure
Hij is getrouwd met Helen C Shepherd.
Zij zijn getrouwd op 28 februari 1868 te Beath Manse, Beath, Fife, Scotland, hij was toen 17 jaar oud.Bron 1
Kind(eren):
1. http://www.aboutscotland.co.uk/Fife/greenhead.html
2. http://www.scotlandsplaces.gov.uk/search_item/index.php?service=RCAHMS&id=79236
Skellyheads
Organisation The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland
Alternative Name(s)
Canmore ID 79236
Site Type FARMSTEAD
County KINROSS-SHIRE
Parish PORTMOAK (PERTH AND KINROSS)
Council PERTH AND KINROSS
NGR NT 1907 9890
Latitude, Longitude 56.175841N, 3.305141W
Images 0
Archaeological Notes
NT19NE 46 1907 9890
The remains of Skellyheads farmstead are situated to the W of a disused quarry. It comprises the shell of a gabled cottage and parts of two other buildings set around a yard. The standing gable of the building on the E side of the yard has a small opening with a projecting sill, presumeably indicating the presence of a pigeon loft. The farmstead is depicted on the 1st edition of the 6-inch map (Fife & Kinross, 1856, sheet 23) as 'ruins'.
(Cleish91 361)
Visited by RCAHMS (SH) 17 September 1991.
The farmstead, comprises one roofed building and one partially roofed building annotated 'Ruins' as depicted on the 1st edition of the 6-inch map (Fife & Kinross, 1856, sheet 23).
Information from RCAHMS (AKK) 9 June 2000
3. http://Fifefhs.org/Records/familyhistories.htm
also see
KINGLASSIE MINE ROOTS (1995), and KINGLASSIE VILLAGE: A MINING PEDIGREE (Forward Press, 2000)
are collections of both prose and verse on Kinglassie written by Andrew Farmer (b 1939), who has had a number of works published on this mining village. They both give some family history, including family photographs. The family`s origins lie in the hamlet of Knockmore in Leslie parish, where one Alexander Farmer (the author`s great-great-grandfather) was born on 11 March 1823, one of the younger children of Robert Farmer and Cecilia Greig. By 1851 this Alexander Farmer had settled in Hill of Beath, married to Susan Page and was working as a ploughman. From there, two of his sons, Andrew Farmer (b 1850, who married Helen Shepherd in 1868) - the author`s great-grandfather - and Francis Farmer (b 1858, who married Christina Low in 1878), and their respective families moved into the Kinglassie area as miners, Francis via the hamlet of Redwells, where he worked as a coachman domestic to Alexander Mitchell, the owner of Redwells Farm. Andrew`s son, also Andrew Farmer (1874-1950) had come to Kinglassie as a little boy from the Hill of Beath, and commenced his mining career at Kirkness Colliery in 1886 at the age of 12; for 60 years, until he retired in 1946, he worked with the Fife Coal Company at Bowhill (6 years) Dunnikier (1 year) and Kinglassie (33 years), as well as spending 3 years at the Muiredge Colliery at Buckhaven. The author`s father, Alexander Farmer (1912-1981), began his working career at Kinglassie Colliery in the 1920s, when he was 14 years of age, and apart for a gap for war service in the Royal Air Force (1938-1946), he remained there until 1964, when ill health forced him to move out into an open-air job, from which he subsequently retired in 1977. He worked underground as a colliery fireman, responsible for gas detection by safety lamp and, when Kinglassie Colliery closed in 1966, the author inherited his safety lamp. The author, Andrew Farmer, was a teacher from 1962 until 1990, when he was forced to retire on medical grounds following injuries received in a serious road accident whilst on holiday in Amsterdam. On the maternal side, the author`s great-grandmother was Agnes Steel (b 1865, Flowers of May Cottage in Kinglassie parish, on the back road to Leslie), married in 1885 to Alexander Marshall, a ploughman from Kettle, and the couple raised 10 children while moving around various farms in the Fife area. Their eldest daughter was Margaret Marshall (born on the farm of Nether Stenton, also in Kinglassie parish, in 1885), the author`s grandmother, who married John Mathieson (1880-1941), a miner originally from the Lothian coalfields, who divided his labours for over 40 years between the colleries at Bowhill and Dundonald; an injury underground and associated ill-health shortened his life. His son was Alexander ("Sandy") Mathieson (1916-2003), who worked at Bowhill Colliery for 35 years from leaving school in 1930 until its closure in 1965. Other published works on Kinglassie by Andrew Farmer are Lamping the Flame (1997); Coalfields, Callisthenics, Classrooms et al (1999) and When Coal was King (2004); as well as a typescript manuscript of poems, Shadows in the Dark (1986), for circulation among family and friends.
FIFE FAMILY HISTORY SOCIETY JOURNAL NEW SERIES No 30 Spring 2014
“LIVES RISKED - LIVES SAVED - LIVES LOST”
MINE RESCUE SERVICES IN FIFE
A TRIBUTE By Andrew Farmer
Formed in 1872 by taking over existing coal companies on the Cowdenbeath area, the Fife Coal Co`s aim was to develop established pits and sink new ones across the county. This it did very successfully over the remaining decades of the century.
But the first decades of the new century, the 1900s, saw serious safety problems arising quite independently in a number of old collieries. The decade began very badly in 1901.
At Hill of Beath Colliery in Feb 1901 7 men, including 5 would-be rescuers, died from carbon monoxide poisoning. The source was an underground fire, thought to have been safely sealed, which had unknowingly continued to smoulder.
Later that year, on 26 Aug 1901, a much more dramatic and publicly witnessed disaster occurred on Mossmorran Moor, on the outskirts of Cowdenbeath. The workings of Donibristle Colliery had long encroached beneath the moor. On that fateful day, procedures carried out by 2 workmen had broken through the rock roof, and a mix of moss, peat, and rain water had rushed in. These 2, and 2 others working at the same level, were overwhelmed and lost their lives. At another level, the oversman, Rattray, and 3 others, decided to investigate the disturbance. These 4 would-be rescuers were never seen again.
Over the next few days, under the direction of the manager and at team from Bowhill Colliery, safety fences were erected - to keep a crowd of watchers back - and, using a makeshift cage, attempts were made to reach 6 more trapped men, by entering through the whole chasm in the moss. One attempt succeeded in bringing out 5 men, but led to the trapping of 2 rescuers.
On 29 August, one man, Robert Law, a miner from Cowdenbeath, volunteered to be lowered into the huge hole himself. He succeeded in bringing all 3 men to the surface. A heroic feat indeed.
In all, 8 men died: 4 rescuers from the work-force; and the original 4 workmen. So dramatic were the events of that August 1901 that a little ballad was composed - and is still sung - about the self-sacrifices of oversman, Rattray, and his 3 fellow rescuers, Messrs McDonald, Hynd, and Patterson.
And, then, later in the decade, this happened.
Cowdenbeath No 10 was also known as Kirkford Pit. In July 1907, 3 men, including 18-year old William Oster, were preparing for the restart after the holidays. They were “redding” (clearing) a roof fall, when another fall buried them. Helped by one of the struggles of his colleagues, young Ostler managed to break free.
The roof fall had also extinguished their lamps, leaving them in total darkness. However, Ostler found their pony, and set out, badly injured, to get help. But the pony had other ideas, and made for its stall, and would go no further. The stables were still some distance from the pit bottom. The youngster then crawled along a nutch rail and eventually reached the down shaft.
However, the pit bottomer was working on the surface. He heard repeated signalling, and descended to find Ostleer lying in a pool of his own blood. He had a massive head injury. He was taken to the surface, and a rescue party set out to help his 2 companions. One had died in the roof fall.
There was great admiration for Ostler`s heroism, and astonishment that the injured youngster had travelled so far in total darkness to seek help for his colleagues.
But the effort had taken its toll. He collapsed into seme-consciousness next day, and sadly died 5 days later.
These 3 colliery incidents, involving both loss of life of workman and rescuers, reflects what was long known in coalmining circles. Miners had no hesitation in putting their own lives at risk in their efforts to reach trapped colleagues.
Perhaps the Kirkford Pit incident and the heroism of young William Ostler motivated a few executive minds. The Fife Coal Co set about formalising rescue practices within and between collieries. They established the first rescue station in Scotland in 1910 - a whole year before the Scottish Mines Act, 1911, made it compulsory for coalowners to do the same nationally.
That first rescue station was in Cowdenbeath, in the basement workshops of the newly built Beath High School, at the toip of Stenhouse Street. Its first Superintendent was David Beveridge, an experienced first aider from Bowhill Colliery, a pit that seemed at the forefront of rescue practices.
Indeed, in 1913, it was a team from Bowhill which was called to a fire at Cadder Pit, near Glasgow, because of lack of rescue centres outside Fife. Despite the time it took for them to get there, they were still able to rescue the men who would otherwise have died. A successful outcome and testament to Fife`s wisdom in setting up early colliery rescue teams.
The work of training miners in rescue techniques continued for many years at Beath High School workshops - and at Mossbeath Colliery for practical work in situ. Ironically, despite being built on what was thought to be a safe site, Beath High School was slowly and visibly sinking. The workings of No 7 and
No 8 Pits lay beneath it. It was examined by a Royal Commission in 1925, and declared to be the worst case of subsidence they had examined in Fife. However, Beath High, in its basement workshops, continued as an important mine rescue training centre for another decade.
In 1936, Cowdenbeath Mining School was finally completed, and was soon established not only as a centre for training mining apprentices, but also where experienced miners learned mine rescue techniques. At that time, in the mid 1930s, Cowdenbeath was the central hub of the Fife`s coalmining industry. It was central to the county`s most productive collieries; it had offices, workshops, and laboratories all contributing to the development of the industry. The establishment of its own Mining College was the technological icing on the cake. Fife, with its huge spread of collieries and associated villages, was one enormous coal producing communal entity. But how long could it survive?
War was again on the horizon. Coal in greater quantities would be needed - as would the miners to dig it out. Fife had its own solution to the first. It established a number of “drift mines” - shallower than usual, with coal seams being reached and extracted by narrow gauge rail, the coal being mechanically hauled to the surface, for dumping and washing, in special hutches. The idea of rail extraction had been gleaned from a visit to the USA by Fife Coal Co officers in the early 1930s.
The problem of manpower became critical a few years into the war. It became a national issue, with a political solution. Ernest Bevin, then the Minister for Power and War in the Coalition Government, devised a solution in 1943. Every 10th conscript, randomly selected, was channelled into mining work after 6 weeks training. There were 50,000 men, between the ages of 18-25 years, dubbed “Bevin Boys,” employed 1943-48. It kept miner numbers up, both during and after the war.
Post-war, there were also important political changes afoot. Nationalism became the name of the game. On 1st January 1947, known as “Vesting Day,” the coalmining industry was nationalised, and the National Coal Board (NCB) came into being. The Fife Coal Co, and other associations like it throughout the UK, simply ceased to exist.
To mark its inevitable demise, and to commemorate its long reign in Fife since 1872, it produced a weighty volume entitled: “Record Book of Veteran Employees in Service with The Fife Coal Company.” It was published in August 1945, and presented to 242 of its existing veteran work-force. The criteria for receipt was to be at least 65 years of age, and still working after 40 years of continuous service with the Fife Coal Co.
I am in proud possession of an original copy, inherited - as his oldest Grandson - through my paternal grandfather, Andrew Farmer. This now brings me on to a more personal and family viewpoint of the foregoing exposition on mine rescue development in Fife.
POSTSCRIPT
In researching into the history of the Mine Rescue Services in Fife, I was struck by now much of it was reflected in Farmer family over the last three generations, viz: my grandfather, my father, and myself. Judge for yourselves.
My earliest recollection of my paternal grandfather, Andrew Farmer, is in 1945, when Dad was demobbed from War Service in the Middle East, and we returned to our Pit Rows house in Kinglassie. Grandad was a gnarled, pipesmoking, and usually unshaven old miner. Born in 1874, in Hill of Beath - to colliery working parents, Mum on the pithead - as the 2nd son of 4 in family of 11, Grandad`s mining career began in 1886, aged 12 years, at Kirkness Colliery beside his father. By 1945, he had worked at a number of Fife collieries including Bowhill (6 years) and Kinglassie (34 years). In 1945, and still working, he easily met the Fife Coal Co`s criteria of “veteran employee” and inclusion in its long-service “Record Book”
Grandad worked at Bowhill Colliery during the 1900s, until Kinglassie began producing coal in 1910, and was therefore privy to its initiatives in first-aid practices and rescue techniques. Their manager controlled the surface rescue at Donibristle in 1901, and they provided the mine rescue superintendent, David Stevenson, in 1910, based in the Beath High School basement workshops, - the first rescue centre in Scotland.
In 1924, Grandad lost his youngest brother, Francis Farmer, in a shot-firing accident at Kinglassie. Perhaps this increased his support for first-aid practices and rescue issues below ground even more. And he had a receptive ear in his middle son of 5, also Andrew Farmer (my father), whose own mining career began, aged 14, at Kinglassie in 1926. Dad was intelligent, very practical, and physically fit, and he soon mastered the details of first-aid, through formal evening classes - and annual practical tests - and he occasionally attended rescue stations in Cowdenbeath. Recreationally, he and colleagues formed a team of first-aiders which participated in area competitions organised by St Johns Ambulance Brigade.
From my own perspective, I became acutely aware of Dad`s experience in first-aid when he saved the life of my young friend, Robert, who had accidentally impaled himself, at the neck, on loose roof-wire on a partly demolished air raid shelter in the Pit Rows. Dad expertly and coolly, stemmed the copious flow of blood, until an ambulance arrived to take Robert to Victoria Hospital. The wire had just missed his carotid artery.
I knew that Dad often attended classes in Cowdenbeath, at the Mining College, and then, in August 1950, I began to do so myself. I had successfully negotiated the Fife Qualifying Examination at 11 years, which entitled me to a high school education at Beath High School. For the next 7 years, until 1957, I took craft classes in its basement, and lived daily with its on-going sinking disposition. The subsidence of 50 years was terminal. A new school elsewhere was inevitable. But Grandad was pleased with my school progress.
“With a good education,” he said, “you won`t hve to crawl my coal seams of fear.” His words were to become reality within a few weeks.
On Thursday, 7 September 1950, at Knockshinnoch Colliery, in Ayrshire, a mining disaster was unfolding. A hug inrush of moss and peat had flooded through a fractured surface and into the mine workings below, trapping 129 miners. Rescue teams from all over Scotland, including Cowdenbeath, sped to the scene. Dad went with them. The 3-day rescue process is too detailed and lengthy to describe here, but we provided a synopsis.
The initial inrush of moss and peat had engulfed 13 men working nearby. They were never found. The remaining 116 miners, working a few miles away at a much lower level, found themselves trapped behind a wall of poisonous gas (fire-damp) flooding out from old workings disturbed by the surface fracture. The situation was critical; they would soon run out of air. In essence, each man was brought out, wearing at Salvus breathing mask (as used by the fire brigade in smoke-filled premises), and led to safety by rescue teams. It had been exhausting round the clock work. But the combined expertise of rescue teams and firemen had won the day, and had saved 116 lives.
Grandad listened intently as Dad told him the rescue. Back in 1901 he had attended the similar Donibristle disaster, and knew the heroic Robert Law personally. A few weeks later, at home, Grandad quietly passed away on October 11 1950, aged 76 years.
Within these 76 years he had been married for 52 of them, had raised 8 children, and entertained 17 grandchildren - including me - and had contributed 60 years of mining work, mostly underground, to the Fife Coal Co.
On the introductory page of of his presentation copy of “Record Book of Veteran Service Employees of the Fife Coal Company (published 1945), is inserted this quotation by Burns:
“Scotia! My dear, my native soil! For whom my warmest wish to Heaven is sent! Long may thy hardy sons of rustic toil Be blest with health, and peace, and sweet content”
Therein follows 103 pages of 242 Fife miners, including Grandad - with individual photographs, plus short biographies, with personal interests. Grandad`s was farming, in his spare time. The book then concludes on its final page, with this poignant quotation, again from Burns:
“From scenes like these old Scotia`s grandeur springs, That makes her lov`d at home, rever`d abroad; Princes and lords are but the breath of Kings, And honest man`s the noblest work of God”
Andrew Farmer | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Helen C Shepherd |
Record for Andrew Farmer/ Ancestry.com
Name: Andrew Farmer
Gender: Male
Marriage Date: 28 Feb 1868
Marriage Place: Beath, Fife, Scotland
Spouse: Helen Shepherd
FHL Film Number:6035516
AlexanderFarmer Head MarriedMale37 1824Ploughman Leslie, Fife, Scotland
SusanPage Wife MarriedFemale42 1819His Wife Strathmiglo, Fife, Scotland
AndrewFarmerSon UnmarriedMale11 1850Scholar Fife, Scotland
MarjoryFarmerDaughter UnmarriedFemale 8 1853Scholar Fife, Scotland
AlexanderFarmerSon UnmarriedMale 6 1855Scholar Fife, Scotland
FrancisFarmerSon UnmarriedMale 3 1858- Fife, Scotland
SusanFarmerGrand Daughter UnmarriedFemale 3 1858- Stirlingshire, Scotland
Record for Alexander Farmer
Name: Alexander Farmer
Age: 28
Estimated birth year: abt 1823
Relationship: Head
Spouse: Susan Farmer
Gender: Male
Where born: Leslie, Fife
Parish Number: 410
Civil Parish: Beath
County: Fife
Address: Dykenook
Occupation: Farm Servant
ED: 2
Page: 2
Household schedule number: 5
Line: 1
Roll: CSSCT1851_85
Household Members:
Name Age
Alexander Farmer 28
Susan Farmer 33
Margaret Farmer 8
Ceily Farmer 5
Robert Farmer 3
Andrew Farmer 9 Mo
William Collier 3 Mo
Record for Andrew Farmer
Name: Andrew Farmer
Age: 40
Estimated birth year: abt 1851
Relationship: Head
Spouse's name: Helen Farmer
Gender: Male
Where born: Beath, Fife
Registration Number: 464
Registration district: Portmoak
Civil Parish: Portmoak
County: Kinross
Address: Skellie Head Dwelling House
Occupation: Engine Driver (Colliery)
ED: 5
Household schedule number: 43
Line: 11
Roll: CSSCT1891_142
Household Members:
Name Age
Andrew Farmer 40
Helen Farmer 43
Janet Farmer 23
Andrew Farmer 17
Mary Farmer 14
Helen Farmer 12
Robert Farmer 9
Elizabeth Farmer 6
Margrate Farmer 4
Georgina Farmer 2
Record for Andrew Farmer
Name: Andrew Farmer
Age:21
Estimated birth year: abt 1864
Relationship: Head
Spouse's name: Helen C Farmer
Gender: Male
Where born: Beath, Fife
Registration Number: 410
Registration district: Beath
Civil Parish: Beath
County: Fife
Address: Crosskeys
Occupation: Labourer
ED: 3
Household schedule number: 84
Line: 18
Roll: CSSCT1871_70
Household Members:
Name Age
Andrew Farmer 21
Helen C Farmer 23
Janet B Farmer 3
Alexander Farmer 1
Record for Andrew Farmer
Name: Andrew Farmer
Age: 31
Estimated birth year: abt 1850
Relationship: Head
Spouse's name: Helen Farmer
Gender: Male
Where born: Beath, Fife
Registration Number: 464
Registration district: Portmoak
Civil Parish: Portmoak
County: Kinross
Address: Greenhead of Arnot Mansion Cottage
Occupation: Agricultural Labourer
ED: 4
Household schedule number: 16
Line: 7
Roll: CSSCT1881_128
Household Members:
Name Age
Andrew Farmer 31
Helen Farmer 33
Janet Farmer 13
Alexander Farmer 11
Susan Farmer 9
Andrew Farmer 7
Mary Farmer 4
Helen Farmer 2
Record for Andrew Farmer
Name: Andrew Farmer
Gender: Male
Birth Date: 10 Jun 1850
Baptism Date: 23 Jun 1850
Baptism Place: Beath, Fife, Scotland
Father: Alexander Farmer
Mother: Susan Page
FHL Film Number: 1040150
Record for Andrew Farmer
Name: Andrew Farmer
Age: 50
Estimated birth year: abt 1851
Relationship: Head
Spouse's name: Hellen Farmer
Gender: Male
Where born: Beath, Fife
Registration Number: 440
Registration district: Kinglassie
Civil Parish: Kinglassie
County: Fife
Address: Kinglassie
Occupation: Forester
ED: 2
Household schedule number: 61
Line: 22
Roll: CSSCT1901_140
Household Members:
Name Age
Andrew Farmer 50
Hellen Farmer 53
Mary Farmer 24
Hellen Farmer 22
Lizzie Farmer 16
Maggie Farmer 14
Georgina Farmer 12
Francis Farmer 9
Cecillia Farmer 7
1923 FARMER, ANDREW (Statutory Registers Deaths 440/ 1) Kinglassie
Deaths in the Parish of Kinglassie in the County of Fife 1923.
Andrew Farmer
Labourer
Married to Helen Shepherd
1923 January First 9H 45M. P.M.
Braehead, Kinglassie. M. 72 years
Parents: Alexander Farmer,
Ploughman (deceased)
Susanna Farmer
M.S. Page (deceased)
COD: Influenza and Bronchitis, Cardiac Failure
certified by A. Ramsay Wright, M.B.C.D.
Inf. Andrew Farmer, Son (present)
Registered
January 2nd, Kinglassie
John Rankine,
Registrar