The village takes its name from
Saint Margaret of Scotland, the wife of King
Malcolm III of Scotland, who is said to have established the village to ensure regular
ferry crossings across the Firth of Forth for the benefit of
pilgrims travelling to
St Andrews. Margaret is said to have made her arrival in Scotland here in 1068, and to have regularly used the ferry crossing when travelling between the then
capital Dunfermline, and
Edinburgh Castle. From around this time, the crossing became known as the ''Queen's Ferry''. Margaret died in 1093 and made her final journey by ferry to
Dunfermline Abbey, where she remains buried. Her son,
David I of Scotland, awarded the ferry rights to the
abbey. A settlement was likely around the present site of the village long before Margaret's time. The site of the village, on the narrowest part of the Firth of Forth, with added advantage of the island of
Inchgarvie in between, suggests that it was the natural point of crossing and a vital link to the north of Scotland for centuries before the Queen's Ferry was established. North Queensferry over the centuries remained a small community, with a population of probably no more than 600, and it never achieved the status of
burgh like many of the nearby settlements. Yet the numbers passing through the village daily were huge. From noblemen to commoners, from
Kings to
cattle, all had to use the Queen's Ferry to cross the Forth. It is recorded that
Mary, Queen of Scots, used the ferry on the day she was transported to
Lochleven Castle where she was imprisoned in 1567. In 1651, during
Oliver Cromwell's campaign against Scottish royalist forces, the decisive engagement known as the
Battle of Inverkeithing took place on and around the
isthmus between the North Queensferry peninsula and
Inverkeithing and
Rosyth. The battle gave Cromwell control of Fife and the Firth of Forth. Troops of the
New Model Army under Major-General
John Lambert crossed the Forth from
Leith over several days. They landed at Cruickness, the point to the south of Inverkeithing Inner Bay, and took up position on the Ferry Hills. On 20 July as they moved north across the isthmus they were attacked by the royalist forces under
David Leslie. Fighting spread as far as Pitreavie on the far side of Inverkeithing and was said to have been particularly bloody: reputedly the Pinkerton Burn ran red with blood for days and the heaps of the dead resembled stooks in a harvest field. Lambert was victorious and claimed his men had killed 2000 and taken 1,400 prisoners, although these may be exaggerations. It is believed that the destruction of the Chapel of St James by Cromwell's men took place at this time. In the 18th century, the chapel ground became a cemetery for members of the North Queensferry Sailors' Society. The Town Pier, the main ferry terminus for many years, was designed by
John Rennie and built between 1810 and 1813. The Harbour Light Tower was erected on its current site in 1817 and was designed by
Robert Stevenson- a notable Lighthouse engineer. Until this point a Signal House was used by boats as an aid to navigation. Ferries berthed both at the Town Pier and at the Battery Pier (now beneath the Forth Bridge). To accommodate the deeper draughts of the new, larger steam-powered ferries, Thomas Telford extended Town Pier in 1828 to its present length. The Railway Pier, on the far side of West Bay, was the terminus of the new Dunfermline-North Queensferry Railway which opened in 1877. The Railway Pier was used as one of the northern ferry terminals from 1877 to 1890, and in 1920 it replaced the old Town Pier. The ferry's importance diminished during the 19th century, with an alternative ferry crossing operating for a while between
Burntisland and
Granton. By the 1870s there was an increasing call for a bridge to be built over the Forth. The idea of a bridge across the Forth had been debated frequently in the past, but the depth of the water and the hard
whinstone rock base found underneath had discouraged any attempts. Work on a
suspension bridge of a different design to the current bridge was started by
Thomas Bouch in 1878 but was dropped when faith in Bouch dried up after the
Tay Bridge disaster. A small Lighthouse with a base is all that remains of his design. Work on the current bridge eventually began in 1883, under the supervision of
Benjamin Baker and
John Fowler. The construction of the bridge altered life in North Queensferry drastically. At its peak, the construction of the bridge employed over 4,000 men. The
Forth Bridge was opened on 4 March 1890, by the then
Duke of Rothesay (later to become
King Edward VII).
North Queensferry railway station opened the same year. The ferry crossing continued, and with the coming of the motor vehicle in the 20th century, its importance was restored. By 1960, the Queen's Ferry was handling over two million passengers a year and over 600,000 motor vehicles. This number increased till another bridge was required. The last commercial ferry of the Queen's Ferry was the ship
Robert the Bruce and it left Hawes Pier, South Queensferry on the evening of 3 September 1964, and docked at North Queensferry shortly after. The very next day,
Elizabeth II opened the new
Forth Road Bridge, and 800 years' continual use of the Queen's Ferry were brought to a close. ==Governance==