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The 76 acre Pittencrieff Park lies within the Royal Burgh of Dunfermline, in the Kingdom of Fife, Scotland.    Know locally as Pittencrieff Glen, the park was formerly the privately owned Pittencrieff Estate.

Dunfermline is the ancient capital of Scotland.    It is the burial place of several Scottish monarchs including King Robert the Bruce.

The Royal Burgh of Dunfermline is steeped in history, and boasts a Benedictine Abbey dating back to the 12th Century.

Dunfermline is also the birthplace of Andrew Carnegie, the industrialist and philanthropist.    As a child growing up in Dunfermline, Andrew Carnegie was forbidden from playing in the grounds of the Pittencrieff Estate by the Laird.    After becoming a successful industrialist and philanthropist, in 1902, Andrew Carnegie bought the house and estate, and donated the whole property to the cty as a public park where all the children could play.    Today, Pittencrieff Glen is a beatifully landscaped park and contains a statue of Andrew Carnegie.

For further information on:

The Andrew Carnegie Birthplace Museum, click on www.carnegiebirthplace.com

Dunfermline and Pittencrieff Glen, click on http://2dunfermline.co.uk/index.php?PageID=1&CATEGORY2=Pittencrieff+Park

A current perspective on The Glen, click on www.saveourglen.com 

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