The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Families were moved – then came home to same address

- STEPHEN EIGHTEEN

Agroup of Fife residents hold the unique position of being displaced three miles while retaining their address and many of their neighbours.

Residents of the 64-home Gray Park were decanted after the Mossmorran petro-chemical project was given the go-ahead in 1979. Their homes were later demolished.

Amid big local opposition the decision was made to offer residents a home on a new Gray Park three miles away, on the northern edge of Cowdenbeat­h.

There were dozens of takers, including Margaret Ford and Margaret Bremner, who lived on the same block at old Gray Park and are neighbours at new Gray Park.

“We have been neighbours since we were at school,” says Margaret Ford, 73.

“I like Margaret being my neighbour and it goes back 70-odd years,” says Margaret Bremner, 75. “We still go out every month together and meet up with some of the other girls who used to stay in Gray Park so we reminisce.”

It is thought 10 of the 50 homes are still lived in by residents of the old estate.

A detailed insight into life on the old Gray Park is provided by Maureen Kennedy, in her book Moss Marion.

Maureen lived in Chapel Street and recalls visiting Gray Park as a five-year-old in the 1960s.

“The Gray Park houses were well before their time,” she writes. “Hot and cold water, large kitchen sinks, usually two. Two bedrooms were the average, with at least one having a coal fire. Each house also had a front and large back garden.

“We lived in Chapel Street then which had all the amenities but on a smaller scale.

“I used to be quite envious of these houses, which seemed to ‘rise’ out of nowhere when arriving. I thought the peace and quiet was a great thing at that age.”

Maureen has a lot of sympathy for the residents forced out of their homes by the ethylene plant.

“They were subjected to horrific treatment,” she writes. “Put out of their existing homes and into cold damp caravans or similar. This was during one of the coldest winters.

“The people of Old Gray Park fought on for a long time after, eventually being granted new Gray Park.

“I feel it is so sad that after all they endured there is still to this day nothing to commemorat­e the original old Gray Park – where people were born, lived and died.

“Some kind of memorial stone should have been erected to show the existence of their hamlet – the hamlet they all loved so much.”

She is pressing Fife Council for a memorial to be built on the site.

When Margaret Ford recently returned to old Gray Park the memories came flooding back.

To the outsider the setting was an unexceptio­nal, unused green space with a path sufficient­ly establishe­d to enable walking without obstructio­n.

But for Margaret, now 73, the desolate landscape prompted memories of her childhood to come flooding back.

“My house was just here,” she says. “I think of my old dog that I buried in the garden.

“You went up the street and there was a circle you went around. Now there’s nothing.”

Margaret Ford’s father worked at Fordell William Pit. She was born in Cowdenbeat­h and moved to 59 Gray Park in 1953 when she was five.

“It was out in the wilderness,” she recalls. “The kids went out in the morning – you just played and came back when you were starving.

“We had a community hall, dances and Christmas parties. If anybody needed

any help the neighbours were always there.”

In May 1983 she became one of the first to move to new Gray Park after her parents took up the offer of a new home.

“It was a wrench to leave because everybody knew each other,” she says. “We knew about having to leave for four years and as people died the homes were left empty.

“Some people left to go to Glenrothes, others to Dunfermlin­e.

“I am quite happy at the new Gray Park. We are close to everything now. We have good walks and are close to Cowdenbeat­h town.”

Margaret Bremner took an indirect route between the old and new Gray Parks.

She grew up in number 63 with her parents James and Violet Davidson and gran.

In 1976, aged 30, she married and moved to Hill Street, Cowdenbeat­h.

The day she gave birth to her daughter Claire, in the early 1980s, was the day her parents moved from old to new Gray Park, next to Margaret Ford.

After a spell at Leuchatsbe­ath Drive in Cowdenbeat­h and then three years in Glenrothes, Margaret moved to the new Gray Park in her parents’ home.

“I wished I’d never moved from old Gray Park to Cowdenbeat­h,” she says. “I liked the community.

“It was a wee hamlet, we were out in the country. If you were a bairn you could play safely because there was so much fresh air and not so much traffic.

“The new Gray Park is not the same community and more people here go out to work and don’t have time to share a cup of tea.

“You don’t see anybody because they’re in their cars whereas folk didn’t have that at the old Gray Park.

“The old-fashioned ways were good.”

Not only was the old Gray Park loved by those who grew up there, it provided a welcoming home for incomers.

David Hunter grew up in Lochore and moved to No 47 in the 1970s because his wife Beth wanted to stay on the road where she had grown up.

“I got on so well with everyone,” he says. “I was so welcome here. If I fell out with my wife I would have a pint with her older brother George.”

Beth was born to Elizabeth and Thomas Laing at No 58 in 1958. She has great memories of growing up in old Gray Park with older brothers Richard and George.

“I remember my dad would go about making soup and my mum had a dumpling in the fire for four days,” she says.

“I used to follow my big brothers about and nobody bothered us. It was a place where you didn’t have to keep up with the Joneses because there were no Joneses.

“We had a rag man, a butcher and baker who came up with their horses.

“Bessie was a gran to all of us. She used to babysit me on Saturdays and would cook apples and make dinner for me at dinner time when I was at school.”

Beth Hunter, 63, was delighted Fife Council found a place on old Gray Park for her and David to move into.

“I was over the moon to stay,” she says.

The couple were also grateful to be rehoused in new Gray Park, where they raised children Laura, 42, and Michael, 35.

“I was happy to move because there were rats in my home and I was terrified,” says Beth. “I got the council to come out – I had to tape the noise of the rats.”

Margaret Graham was part of a big family unit.

She was brought up at old Gray Park by her parents, William and

“It was out in the wilderness – you just played and came back when you were starving

Helen, who were married at Auchtertoo­l Parish Church in 1936.

Also living there were five of Helen’s sisters.

“We used to get the bus from old Gray Park to Cowdenbeat­h Broad Street School. I then went to Moss Side School,” says Margaret, now 74.

“Most of the men at old Gray Park were miners or worked in Rosyth Shipyard or Burntislan­d Aluminium Works.

“These days we talk about employment and unemployme­nt but I have little recollecti­on of anyone being unemployed.

“You could go to anybody’s house and it was like a big family community.

“A lot of people had big gardens and grew food like potatoes, onions and leaks.”

Margaret now lives at new Gray Park.

James Moffat lives in Stirling but sometimes takes a trip down memory lane to old Gray Park.

Now 74, he was born in Cowdenbeat­h and moved from prefab housing to 48 Gray Park when he was aged five.

He was raised there by parents David and Maria Moffat. Nearby was his gran, who lived at No 63.

Maria worked at Sharp drapers in Cowdenbeat­h High Street. She currently lives in a care home in Kinghorn.

“It was a nice place to live, particular­ly as it was so compact and everybody knew everybody else,” James says.

“There were a fair number of children there and it was a safe place to stay.

“Throughout the summer we played ‘palldies’, which was like hopscotch. There were always chalk marks in Gray Park where the marks were.

“We didn’t have an Xbox or a mobile phone but we always made our own entertainm­ent. We were never bored.”

James moved away with his parents in 1963, when he was 16.

He got a teacher training qualificat­ion and was principal lecturer in electrical engineerin­g at Lauder Technical College in Dunfermlin­e.

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 ?? ?? HOMES AWAY FROM HOME: Top, left to right, James Moffat, Margaret Ford, Margaret Bremner, Beth Hunter, Dave Hunter and Margaret Graham at new Gray Park; the site of old Gray Park. Above, Beth Hunter.
HOMES AWAY FROM HOME: Top, left to right, James Moffat, Margaret Ford, Margaret Bremner, Beth Hunter, Dave Hunter and Margaret Graham at new Gray Park; the site of old Gray Park. Above, Beth Hunter.

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