By any chance, have you stumbled upon the headstones of either Charles Ross (b. 1795 d. 1862), or Christian More Ross (b. 1800, d. 1862-1869) during your indexing?
Hi Chris soyyr nothing on my index, for the above.
Piece: SCT1851/426 Place: Dysart -Fife Enumeration District: 7
Civil Parish: Dysart Burgh Ecclesiastical Parish, Village or Island: Dysart Burgh
Folio: 0 Page: 27 Schedule: 140
Address: -
Surname First name(s) Rel Status Sex Age Occupation Where Born Remarks
ROSS Charles Head M M 56 Flaxdresser Midlothian - Edinburgh
ROSS Christian Wife M F 51 Flaxdressers Wife Fife - Pathhead
ROSS James Son U M 21 Flaxdresser Fife - Pathhead
ROSS Thomas Son U M 18 Flaxdresser Fife - Pathhead
Charles & Christian married 7.11.1824 Dysart
these children by them were buried in Pathhead Fuears Cemetery
Ross Dysart Dunnikier 21.9.1825 Un baptised child of Charles Ross Flaxdresser
Charles ROSS Dysart Dunnikier 22.3.1830 age child of Charles Ross Flaxdresser
Charles ROSS Dysart Dunnikier 20.8.1839 child son of Charles Ross Flaxdresser
there is no headstone for Charles & Christian there, but changes have taken
place in the cemetery over the years,or they may not have been able to afford a Headstone.
from
http://fifefhs.org/Records/pathheadfeuars.htmThe Pathhead Feuars' Burial Ground at the end of the Commercial Street was originally granted to the Dunnikier (as Pathhead was then known) Feuars on 31st July 1684 by John Watson and his wife, Euphan Orrock, as a burying-place for the inhabitants of the town and lands of Dunnikier. The ground was enclosed in January 1707, and extended on 10th July 1740, when Mr James Oswald gifted adjoining land. A further extension came in 1828, when the Feuars purchased from John Robertson's heirs the adjoining garden, about 1/5th of which was added to the old ground, and divided up into 126 lots, each lot containing 3 grave-breadths. Thus, there was formed the present Pathhead, or Dunnikier, Churchyard, which measures approximately half an acre [Note: the Churchyard is not to be confused with another, also known as Kirkcaldy Pathhead, but otherwise known as Ravenscraig, or Nether Street, Burial Ground].
It has been calculated by the Pathhead Feuars' Trust that between 1684 and 1960 (estimating 25 deaths per year for the unrecorded years of 1684-1707) that there were over 11,000 interments in the burial ground. This number would seem to be correct, as Brodie has calculated some 7100 interments between 1707 and 1860.
Perhaps they may have been removed in 1862, when the burial ground was levelled and the headstones placed in an orderly manner.
I have photographed this Cemetery as my son happens to live next to it,
there are a number of Ross's buried their.
NorrieG