Burntisland Station
Burntisland Station is a memorial in Fife, North East Scotland, Scotland. Burntisland Station is situated nearby to Burntisland railway station, as well as near the community center Parish Church Halls.| Tap on a place to explore it |
Places of Interest Nearby
Highlights include Burntisland railway station and Burntisland Parish Church.
Burntisland railway station
Railway station
Photo: Paul McIlroy, CC BY-SA 2.0.
Burntisland railway station is a railway station in the town of Burntisland, Fife, Scotland. The station is managed by ScotRail and is on the Fife Circle Line.
Burntisland Parish Church
Church
Photo: Kim Traynor, CC BY-SA 3.0.
Burntisland Parish Church is a church building in the Fife burgh of Burntisland, constructed for the Church of Scotland in 1592. It is historically important as one of the first churches built in Scotland after the Reformation, with a highly distinctive and apparently original square plan.
Rossend Castle
Photo: Kevin Rae, CC BY-SA 2.0.
Rossend Castle is a historic building in Burntisland, a town on the south coast of Fife, Scotland. Rossend Castle is situated 1,500 feet west of Burntisland Station.
Places in the Area
Nearby places include Burntisland and Kinghorn.
Burntisland
Photo: AlasdairW, CC BY-SA 3.0.
Burntisland is a port on the north coast of the Firth of Forth, in Fife in central Scotland, with a population of 6600 in 2020. Its west side is industrial and formerly had ship-building, but its east is a small seaside resort and commuter town for Edinburgh.
Kinghorn
Town
Photo: BesigedB, CC BY-SA 3.0.
Kinghorn is a town and parish in Fife, Scotland. A seaside resort with two beaches, Kinghorn Beach and Pettycur Bay, plus a fishing port, it stands on the north shore of the Firth of Forth, opposite Edinburgh. Kinghorn is situated 2½ miles east of Burntisland Station.
Aberdour
Photo: AlasdairW, CC BY-SA 3.0.
Aberdour is a small town on the coast of Fife in central Scotland, and nowadays a commuter town for Edinburgh, with a population in 2011 of 1633.
Burntisland Station
- Type: Memorial
- Inscription: “Burntisland’s first station was opened in 1847 by the Edinburgh and Northern Railway with a ferry to Granton and thence by train to Edinburgh. The world’s first train ferry service started on this route in 1850.”
- Category: historic site
- Location: Fife, North East Scotland, Scotland, United Kingdom, Britain and Ireland, Europe
- View on OpenStreetMap
Latitude
56.05739° or 56° 3′ 27″ northLongitude
-3.23341° or 3° 14′ 0″ westOpen location code
9C8R3Q48+XJOpenStreetMap ID
node 6157161211OpenStreetMap feature
historic=memorial
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Satellite Map
Discover Burntisland Station from above in high-definition satellite imagery.
Places with the Same Name
Discover other places named “Burntisland Station”.
Notable Places Nearby
Highlights include Parish Church Halls and St Columba’s Parish Churchyard.
Nearby Places
Explore places such as Burntisland and Leo du Feu.
Fife: Must-Visit Destinations
Delve into Dunfermline, St Andrews, Kirkcaldy, and Glenrothes.
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About Mapcarta. Data © OpenStreetMap contributors and available under the Open Database License". Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license, except for photos, directions, and the map. Photo: AlasdairW, CC BY-SA 3.0.