North Queensferry
village in Fife, Scotland, UK
North Queensferry is a village in Fife in central Scotland, with a population of 1076 in 2011. It's on the north bank of the Firth of Forth, at a narrow point that has been a ferry crossing for many centuries. From around 1068 AD, St Margaret wife of King Malcolm III supported the ferry to ensure regular transport from Edinburgh to Dunfermline (then the capital) and to the pilgrimage town of St Andrews. She was a regular traveller and the crossing became known as "Queen's Ferry".
The distinctive railway bridge opened in 1890, to adorn a myriad biscuit tin lids, while the road crossing was by ferry until 1964 when the Forth Road Bridge opened. By the 1990s this was showing its age and in 2017 the Queensferry Crossing (M90) opened. So nowadays trains, trucks and coaches rumble high above the village, which has become a backwater, with the waves lapping gently on its little-used slipway. The main reasons to visit are the walk-through aquarium "Deep Sea World", to walk across the Forth Road Bridge for the views, and for hikes along the Fife Coastal Trail.
This page also briefly describes Inverkeithing two miles north, which is residential and post-industrial but is a minor transport hub.