UNIQUE COTTAGES

Carefully Selected Scottish Holiday Homes in Beautiful Locations

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Carefully Selected Scottish Holiday Homes in Beautiful Locations


 

More about Lower Largo

Lower Largo

What most people know about the East Neuk of Fife is that it is home to some of the finest golf courses in the world - especially Lundin Links, and of course, farther up the coast the famous St Andrews.

However the little fishing towns that line the coast have other interesting connections.  One in particular is Lower Largo, a one street village that was the birthplace of the real Robinson Crusoe.

His name was Alexander Selkirk, sometimes spelt Selcraig, who was born in 1676 in 101 Main Street, a two storey stone house that is marked today by a stone statue of him standing on a plinth and staring out to sea.

His father was a respectable tanner and shoemaker but the son was unruly from the beginning and as a young man he was summoned before the church congregation for behaving indecently in church.  He got into a fight there with his elder brother and caused outrage both by what he did and what he said.

Before sentence could be passed on him however, he ran away to sea and sailed as a privateer, more or less a pirate.  It seems he was just as difficult a customer on sea as on land because in 1703 he fell out with the captain of a ship called the Cinque Ports and was put ashore on an uninhabited island in the Juan Fernandez archipelago, 300 miles off the coast of Chile.

When he was abandoned, he was given a musket, gunpowder, carpenter's tools, tobacco, a knife, his clothes and a Bible.  With no companions - for there was no Man Friday - he survived for four years before being rescued by another British ship, the Duke, under the captaincy of William Dampier who recognised Selkirk, having sailed with him before.

Amazingly Selkirk then went back to sea and made a lot of money from privateering so when he returned to Lower Largo in 1717 he was dressed in such finery that his family did not recognise him.  The call of the sea was too much for him however and quite soon he went back again but died of yellow fever off Africa in 1721, aged only 45.
At some time in his career, Selkirk is thought to have met the author Daniel Defoe who was so taken with his castaway story that he made it into a novel  (inventing Man Friday).  It was "Robinson Crusoe" published in 1719 and one of the world?s first best sellers. 

Going to sea was a tradition in both Lower and its neighbouring town Upper Largo.  Not only did 30 fishing boats sail out of Lower Largo's harbour during Selkirk's time, but Upper Largo was the birthplace and eventual retirement home of a famous 16th century admiral, Sir Andrew Wood, known as "The Scottish Nelson" who inflicted many great defeats on the navy of Henry V111.

Wood ended his career as commander of King James 1V's great battleship, the Great Michael, and then retired to his home town where he built a castle that was linked to the sea by a canal.  Because he hated walking or riding on land, he was rowed up and down the canal whenever he wanted to leave home.  Traces of the canal and the ruins of his home can still be seen in the town.


List of holiday cottages:



Dunedin Cottage

Dunedin Cottage  Lower Largo, Fife

Sleeps: 4, Bedrooms: 2

  • No Smoking
  • Short Breaks available
  • Pet Friendly

Is a 300 year old terraced cottage just yards from the shore in the pretty village of Lower Largo in the East Neuk of Fife. Snug and comfortable inside, and with a decked terrace to the front where you can sit and watch the boats in the estuary, Dunedin Cottage is an ideal base for a relaxing family holiday.


The Crusoe Apartment

The Crusoe Apartment  Lower Largo, Fife

Sleeps: 5, Bedrooms: 3

  • No Pets
  • No Smoking
  • Sorry no short breaks

A holiday in a little bit of history! The Crusoe Apartment, in the picturesque village of lower Largo, 13 miles from St Andrews in the East Neuk of Fife, is in the very place where the original Robinson Crusoe, Alexander Selkirk, was born in 1676. Now beautifully modernised and refurbished, it offers excellent holiday accommodation with modern comforts that Selkirk could scarcely have dreamed of during his years on that desert island. There is sand aplenty, though, and the beach is only a minute's walk from the cottage.