The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Pub’ s gable end mural raises a glass to area’ s long mining heritage

- NEIL HENDERSON

A30ft tribute to Fife’s coal mining heritage has been unveiled in the former pit community of Comrie.

The painting, which covers the entire gable end of the White Gates pub in the village, was revealed yesterday.

The new mural features a Comrie miner as well as the pit’s winding towers, which dominated the local skyline for decades until it closed in 1986.

Also included in the art is Comrie pit’s ornamental fountain and fish pond, which was thought to be the only mine in the UK to boast such a feature.

Wull Morris, who has owned the White Gates pub since 1999, said he wanted public art to commemorat­e miners for a long time before work began.

“Mining is ingrained in the history of Fife, especially in Comrie and I’ve been trying to find the best way to celebrate that,” he said.

“Plenty of my regulars pitched in with ideas and once I’d talked through a few with the artist the result is what we now have on the side of the pub.

“Comrie was unique and the only pit to have its own fish pond.

“One of the requiremen­ts was that definitely had to be in the finished work.”

And Wull is delighted with the completed art, which cost £5,000 to create.

He said: “It’s everything I wanted and so much more – it’s brilliant.”

Mining in the area can be traced as far back as 1860, while the main Comrie Colliery brought its first coal to the surface shortly after it opened in 1939.

At the time of constructi­on, Comrie was the new showpiece pit of the Fife Coal Company, consisting of two 130m shafts.

By 1948 the colliery was

producing 1,600 tonnes of coal per day and employing around 1,000 people.

It later operated under lease from 1964 until its eventual closure.

The final painting was completed by Glenrothes-based artist, Donna Forrester.

Donna’s other public works include mural tributes to Kelty boxer Connor Law and Black Watch soldier Paul Lowe, which adorns Kelty Ex-serviceman’s Club building.

As a member of Kelty Street Art Collective she and fellow artist Celie Byrne were also responsibl­e for the recent overhaul of Dalgety Bay underpass.

Overcoming her fear of heights, Donna completed the artwork in under two

weeks, painting the entire wall by hand.

Donna said: “Wull and Catherine from the White Gates pub gave me a rough brief that needed to include a miner, the fish pond and the winding towers, so this is what I came up with.

“I designed the scene using a cyanotype colour effect which took 11 days to finish.”

The mural, visible to motorists as they enter Comrie along the A907, has been given the seal of approval by locals.

Among them is former miner Alex Moffat, who worked in the Comrie pit for 17 years until it closed.

He said: “It’s a fantastic piece of work which will help remind future generation­s of the mining history Fife is famous for.”

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 ?? ?? LEGACY: Artist Donna Forrester in front of the giant Comrie mining mural with White Gates pub landlord Wull Morris and his wife Catherine Campbell. Pictures by Steve Brown.
LEGACY: Artist Donna Forrester in front of the giant Comrie mining mural with White Gates pub landlord Wull Morris and his wife Catherine Campbell. Pictures by Steve Brown.

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