272 High Street, Methil KY8 3EQ | |
01334659339 | |
Methil Heritage Centre Website | |
Facebook information can be found here | |
A popular community museum with a permanent display about the Levenmouth area.
Come and enjoy our programme of exhibitions, tea room and museum shop which stocks a selection of local history books and souvenirs (the only book shop between St. Andrews and Kirkcaldy!).
Housed in an old post office, the museum is one of only handful of buildings around the world that contains a King Edward VIII plaque from 1936’s year of Three Kings. You can find out more about the building on the Friends of Methil Heritage website.
A fine Renaissance palace with an extensive formal garden and one of Britain’s oldest tennis courts
READ MOREDunfermline Abbey has a special place in the nation’s heart. Laid to rest here are some of Scotland’s great kings and queens – including Robert the Bruce.
READ MOREGet a sense of what it would have been like to live in Culross Palace in its prime, with original painted woodwork and beautifully restored 17th- and 18th-century interiors.
READ MOREAbbot House is a beautiful ‘A’ listed building, dating back to at least the 16th Century, situated within Dunfermline’s Heritage Quarter.
READ MORESt Andrews Castle was a bishop’s palace, a fortress and a state prison during its 450-year history.
READ MOREHill of Tarvit is a wonderful example of Edwardian stately living and also has the only exclusively hickory golf course in the UK.
READ MORESt Andrews Museum is a stunning Victorian mansion nestled in the grounds of Kilnburn Park.
READ MORELaw’s Close is a category A-listed 16th Century Merchant’s House with spectacular period decoration on Kirkcaldy’s High Street.
READ MOREExplore the ruins of a Cistercian monastery of the 1200s, once home to a community of monks and lay brothers.
READ MOREAn independent charity-run museum covering the history of the Scottish fishing industryand how it became such an important part of the lives of so many Scots.
READ MOREExplore the remains of Scotland’s largest and most magnificent medieval church. Even in its ruinous state, the cathedral remains a prominent landmark highly visible from the sea.
READ MOREGet up close to what is possibly Scotland's oldest standing castle. Aberdour Castle was built in the 1100s and went on to serve generations of three noble families – including a Regent of Scotland!
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