, formerly a Carmelite monastery, dates from the 1450s
Churches St Mary's Episcopal Church, also known as the Priory Church, is the town's oldest building, built for the
Carmelite Order of
friars in the 1450s. It is the only medieval Carmelite church still in use in the British Isles, and is a
Category A listed building. After the
Scottish Reformation of 1560 it served as the parish church until 1635. In 1890 it was reconsecrated for the
Scottish Episcopal Church. The Old Parish Church on The Vennel dates from 1633 and has an interesting early graveyard. The church became known as the South Church in 1929, and served the
Church of Scotland congregation until 1956, when it united with St Andrew's Church. The old South Church building was sold in 1970 and is now a house. The building which now houses Queensferry Parish Church, located in The Loan, was originally built as South Queensferry United Free Church. Following the union of the Church of Scotland and the
United Free Church of Scotland in 1929, the UF Church became known as St Andrew's Church and the old Church of Scotland congregation as the South Church. The two congregations were united in 1956, becoming Queensferry Parish Church. The Reverend John Carrie was minister from 1971 until his untimely death in 2008. In 1972 he started an annual sponsored walk across the
Forth Road Bridge for
Christian Aid, so far raising over £1,000,000. In 2009 the Rev. David Cameron transferred from
Newton Mearns to Queensferry Parish Church. St Margaret's Roman Catholic church is also located on The Loan. Mass is celebrated daily.
Stately homes •
Hopetoun House – Two miles to the west, a splendid
Georgian stately home designed by the Scottish architects Sir William Bruce and
William Adam and situated in 150 acres (607,000 m2) of parkland. Home to the
Earls of Hopetoun since 1699. •
Dalmeny House – Two miles to the east, Dalmeny House was built by English architect
William Wilkins in 1817 and is the home of the
Earls of Rosebery. It houses the Rosebery and some of the
Rothschild collections. •
Dundas Estate – One mile to the south. A 9-hole
golf course has been established in its parkland since the 1920s. Each year it hosts a "The Life of
Jesus Christ", an
Oberammergau-type open-air
passion play.
Other significant buildings Black Castle is a house on the High Street built in 1626. When the original owner, a sea-captain, was lost at sea, his maid was accused of paying a beggar-woman to cast a spell. Both women were burned for witchcraft. Plewlands House is a 17th-century mansion in the centre of the village. It was restored in the 1950s as flats, and is now managed by the
National Trust for Scotland.
South Queensferry Tolbooth, on the High Street, dates from the 17th century, with a clock-tower built in 1720. The Hawes Inn, dating from the 17th century, lies east of Queensferry, almost under the Forth Bridge on its south side. It features in
Robert Louis Stevenson's 1886 novel
Kidnapped. Opposite the Hawes Inn is the pier which served the ferry (from which the town derives its name) until the opening of the Forth Road Bridge. The pier is now used by tourist boats including the ferry to
Inchcolm. Modern day Orocco Pier, latterly named the Queensferry Arms Hotel, has been a local inn and place of refreshment since 1664. Located opposite the Jubilee Clock Tower, at 17 High Street, its original facade still boasts many of its original features. South Queensferry Cemetery on Ferrymuir Lane at the south end of the town is unremarkable other than for the very large number of Royal Navy war graves, many for casualties of the
Battle of Jutland (1916) who were brought here for burial. It is maintained and operated by the City of Edinburgh Council. It superseded the small graveyard on The Vennel in the centre of town. Opened in March 2007 by
Dakota Hotels, the "black box" seen from the
A90 is a hotel, bar and grill.
Mesolithic settlement In 2012, as part of the excavations for the new Queensferry Crossing, archaeologists excavated the remains of a
Mesolithic dwelling dating to around 10,000 years ago and believed to be the earliest home discovered in Scotland, and possibly the entire UK. Archaeological evidence suggests this early shoreline activity formed part of a longer pattern of human use of the area, indicating that people lived and returned to the site well before its later development as a recognised crossing point on the Firth of Forth.
Schools Queensferry has four primary schools (Echline Primary, Queensferry Primary, St Margaret's RC Primary and Dalmeny Primary) and one secondary school (
Queensferry High School), with Kirkliston Primary also part of its catchment area.
Landmarks The local brewery, Ferry Brewery, makes beers named after landmarks around the town, including the Ferry Crossing and the Three Bridges. ==Transport==