The name Dalserf is thought to have come from the main patron saint of the parish St Serf.
The Dal is derived from the Gaelic dail meaning field or meadow, thus Dalserf field of Serf.
St Serf was an early saint associated with a number of Scottish places including Culross in Fife, but was also known to have worked in the Clyde valley. The site of the old Kirk at Dalserf built in 1655
is thought to be the location of St Serf's earliest church, although he is reputed to have ended his days in Dunning in AD 543
Below are Pictures of the village as it is today.  A heritage preserved by the local villagers, and well worth a visit


The village looking down towards the Church
Dalserf Village
Monumental Inscriptions

Dalserf Village
Dalserf Churchyard
Dalserf Families 1755
Dalserf Mortcloths
Dalserf Day Book
Dalserf Covenanters
Frame Family Gravestones
Frame Family Genealogy
Frame DNA Project
Lanarkshire Miscellany
Genealogy Poems
Mining Poems

Larkhall Cemetery Lairs
The Folk of Larkhall
Old Larkie Town
Larkhall Pit info & deaths
Larkhall 1932 Depression
Larkhall 1942
Larkhall Stories-Newspaper
Larkhall Heritage
Larkhall Poems
Dalserf &Larkhall Miscellany
Blacklady Of Broomhill

Edinburgh City
Greyfriars Kirkyard
Greyfriars Bobby
Greyfriars Ghosts
Greyfriars Covenanters
Edinburgh Photos
Marlins Wynd
Edinburgh Vaults
Scottish witchcraft
Provosts of Edinburgh
Edinburgh Tollbooth

St Fillans Aberdour Cem
East Wemyss Macduff
Buckhaven Photos
The Wood Family Largo
Coaltown Of Wemyss
Wemyss, Photos
Fife Pit Disaster 1901
Balgonie Castle

Fulton's of Ayrshire
Ayrshire Misc
Genealogy Links
Daughter of Robert Burns
Robert Burns and the haggis

Beauly Priory
Scottish war memorials
Holy Trinity Pitlochry
Fort George Nr Inverness
Burrowhead
Kirk "O" Shotts
Worthies Tales
The Australian Cemeteries
Message Boards
Lockerbie Pan Am 103
Surplus Births & Marriages
Scottish Recipes
Battle of Cullodon
Brodie Castle
Elgin Cathedral
The Parish of Dalserf covers an area of approximately 11square miles, it lies on the West bank of the River Clyde, which forms it's East and North East boundary, to the West and South West the River Avon and Cander Water.
The Parish was also known as Machanshire, coming from one of it's patron Saints, St Machan.
The name Dalserf is thought to have come from St Serf it's main and primary Saint. Dal coming from the Gaelic Dail, meaning field or meadow and the Saxon word Shire, means division hence.
Dalserf Field of Serf.
The old Church at Dalserf, which sits in the Clyde Valley is thought to be the site of St Serf's earliest Chapel. Affectionately known as the Auld Grey Mother Kirk, a name given by the Rev William Peebles Rorison one of the longest serving ministers. The church was one of the first of the reformed faith and was built during the Covenanting Period in 1655, now T shaped, was originally rectangular, Roman workings lie underneath the Old Kirkyard at Dalserf Church.

The Parish of Dalserf has a strong link to the Roman occupation of Scotland. They were in Scotland 80 - 100 A.D.
They advanced through Scotland following the Rivers, such as the Clyde. They gave the name Strathclyde to the region and Clydesdale to the immediate area, hence the Clyde Valley.
Britons lived in this part of Scotland and the tribe known as the Dammoni Tribe, relations between them and the Romans was relatively harmonious to the point, at the battle of Valldeum fought in the Germanic area, volunteer Britons from this area fought with the Romans. The Roman exit from Scotland took place during the 6th century.

St Serf is the main Saint for the Parish and by how the Parish is supposed to have attained it's name St Serf Field of Serf. He is also associated with there parts of Scotland such as Culross in Fife and Stirlingshire, although he spent most of his life in the Clyde Valley. Son of the King of the Picts King Brudei, his father was the King of Canaan. Educated in Alexandria he came to the country of his mother to work in Scotland, giving up the offered exalted post of Pope, to work here.   St Serf is thought to have died in Dunning around 543 A.D. he was the teacher and mentor of St Mungo or St Kentigern as he is also known, and Glasgow's motto through St Mungo being the patron saint of Glasgow is "Glasgow shall flourish by the preaching of the word"
Other dedicated men have passed throughout this part of Scotland at different times, leaving their mark and teachings on men such as, St Ninian who went on to Stirling, St Mungo who went on to Glasgow , St Columba, so much associated with the Holy Island of Iona. St Cuthbert, who went on to Edinburgh and St Patrick associated with Ireland and Wales.
The other main Saint for the Dalserf Parish is St Machan, who's main centre was Dalserf, his alter stood for many years in Glasgow Catherdral but was destroyed during the reformation.

1947 While excavation work was being done at Patrickholme on the Stonehouse side of the Viaduct, workman's tools unearthed human remains hidden in a concealed, long since sealed chamber. The chamber consisted of decorated urns, which held cremated human remains of human adults and children. Also in the chamber were necklaces and combs. The remains of the Beaker People who are the first known recorded inhabitants of the Dalserf Parish 1300 -1700 B.c middle Bronze Age. Evidence of their habitats had been found and recorded South of the Parish at Cairn Cockle and living on the edge of the Nethan and Cander Water.


Dalserf Kirk sessions
Dalserf Census
Clyde Valley Photos
Dalserf Remembered
Ian kenny gallery