IT'S been a seven year campaign but Christmas will come early for Suzi Ross with the confirmation that the peacocks will get the Freedom of Dunfermline.

She heads the volunteers who look after the city's iconic birds and, after discovering they didn't have the official title, has been pushing hard for recognition of Pittencrieff Park's most famous residents.

The City of Dunfermline area committee agreed a motion on Tuesday and Fife Council will ratify the decision on December 7, with an official presentation ceremony to follow.

Suzi, from the Peacocks in Pittencrieff Park group, told the Press: "We've all been smiling so much our cheeks are sore!

Dunfermline Press: The peacocks will officially be granted the Freedom of the City of Dunfermline on December 7.The peacocks will officially be granted the Freedom of the City of Dunfermline on December 7. (Image: Fife Council)

"It means everything to me and all the volunteers.

"I've been fighting for this for the last seven years, since I first started looking after the peacocks.

"Everyone kept saying the birds have got the freedom of Dunfermline but I wasn't sure and so we spent hours and hours in the library going through all these council papers.

"There was nothing to say they had it - there is a constitution from 1907 that says there must be a peacock in the park at all times - but the Carnegie Dunfermline Trust didn't have anything either."

The council said it was too early to say if the award will be a certificate, plaque or even giant key but committee convener, Cllr James Calder, said: "This is the first time we'll present a city award so it's really important we set a good precedent. It should be something special."

Suzi added: "We're ecstatic that they'll get freedom of the city as the birds are iconic to Dunfermline and this gives them their rightful recognition.

"They do get around, the Seven Kings, the City Hotel and the Glen Tavern, I'm usually in one of those pubs to get the birds back out!

"They're so funny. The more you spend time with them the more you see they've all got their own individual personality, it's great to be working with them."

Cllr Derek Glen tabled the motion and said that the birds were first introduced to Dunfermline by Henry Beveridge in 1905 following a trip to India.

One of the first members of the Carnegie Dunfermline Trust, he brought them to the park which had been gifted to the town by Andrew Carnegie only three years earlier.

Cllr Glen added: "Of the park, Beveridge wrote 'And here too is paradise when the citizens of Dunfermline may wander with an open heart and drink in all the restfulness of time content. And a park without animals is no paradise'.”

"More recently we saw the outpouring of sentiment - both anger and charity - after the attack on two of the peacocks last year.

Dunfermline Press: A beautiful photo of the peacocks resting on the rooftops in Dunfermline.A beautiful photo of the peacocks resting on the rooftops in Dunfermline. (Image: Bob Smart)

"And the huge sum of money raised in response to the attack on Malcolm and Louis.

"This shows us their value to the people of Dunfermline.

"Suzi Ross and the Peacocks in Pittencrieff Park group have done a sterling job through some very trying times to keep the peacocks safe and well."

He added: "There was a popular belief that the peacocks already had the freedom of the town - although I understand that research has not been able to provide evidence of this.

"This does not seem to matter to the peacocks themselves, though: you'll have seen the pictures of them popping in to their 'local', The Glen Tavern; and during the election campaign last year I was asked by a resident on Limekilns Road to help with a couple of the peacocks that were heading along the rather narrow pavement down towards the rugby club!"

Cllr Glen said the idea to grant the freedom of the city to the peacocks was first put forward by Central Dunfermline Community Council, after city status was confirmed last summer, and received popular support.

He said this included backing from the Friends of Pittencrieff Park, MP Douglas Chapman - "who promoted the idea in the Dunfermline Press" - and Provost Jim Leishman.

He added: "This may seem frivolous as we're more than a decade into austerity and our residents now face a second winter, not just of discontent, but worse, with a cost of living crisis and the prospect of energy bills rising.

"But as councillors, we also need to both recognise and demonstrate the value of city status - this is one small way in which we can help to get that ball rolling."

Cllr Calder seconded the motion and said: "The peacocks have been a beloved symbol of our city for almost 120 years now.

"This is the first time we've looked to utilise our new powers as an area committee to recommend that the freedom of the city be granted and I think the birds will be a worthy recipient."