The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)
Tiffany window installed at long last
A Tiffany tribute to Andrew Carnegie has been installed in Dunfermline Abbey Church, a century after his death.
The Dunfermline-born philanthropist commissioned the world-famous New York Tiffany Studios to create a stained glass window in commemoration of his parents and siblings in 1913.
The steel magnate wanted it to be placed in the historic abbey in the heart of his home town.
But his dream was unfulfilled for more than 100 years as the heritage body of the day, HM Commission for Ancient Monuments, deemed the pastoral view unacceptable for the kirk.
The artwork, described as “breathtaking” by great-greatgrandson Charles Thomson, lay in storage for years before finding a home in the Carnegie Hall in Dunfermline.
It was later moved to a café extension at the theatre before finding a new home at the headquarters of the three Carnegie trusts based in Scotland.
With the centenary of Carnegie’s death approaching, it was felt the time had finally come to try to fulfil his wishes.
Following discussions with all parties, and with finance from the Dunard Fund and Carnegie Corporation of New York to restore the window, it has now been installed in the church.
Carnegie’s great-grandson William Thomson told the guests assembled for the unveiling: “He wished for it to be here but he died before that was possible, and was not to know what the next 100 years would bring.
“With the centenary of his death, many of us thought about marking it in a way he would have approved of.
“It is wonderful to see it coming here at last.”