ACTIVITIES Archives - SGHET https://sghet.com/category/activities/ South Glasgow Heritage and Environment Trust Fri, 01 Sep 2023 09:01:38 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://i0.wp.com/sghet.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/cropped-SGHET-300x300.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 ACTIVITIES Archives - SGHET https://sghet.com/category/activities/ 32 32 193624195 #HeritageNights talk: Discovering south Glasgow histories through Glasgow City Archives + SGHET AGM 2023 https://sghet.com/discovering-south-glasgow-histories-through-glasgow-city-archives-sghet-agm-2023/ https://sghet.com/discovering-south-glasgow-histories-through-glasgow-city-archives-sghet-agm-2023/#respond Fri, 28 Jul 2023 16:01:59 +0000 https://sghet.com/?p=9623   Join us for a special #SouthGlasgowHeritageNights talk on Thursday 31st August and discover how our amazing City Archives reveal south Glasgow’s rich and multi-layered past – followed by our open AGM – BOOK NOW   The presentation will share a short introduction telling the story of Glasgow and its Archives, and will provide examples […]

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Join us for a special #SouthGlasgowHeritageNights talk on Thursday 31st August and discover how our amazing City Archives reveal south Glasgow’s rich and multi-layered past – followed by our open AGM – BOOK NOW

 

The presentation will share a short introduction telling the story of Glasgow and its Archives, and will provide examples of some of the main sources for local and family historians – and anyone interested in local histories – using examples from the city’s south side.

Find out how the City Archives illuminate Glasgow’s fascinating past, and how they can help in uncovering the people, places and stories that matter to you.

Our guest speaker, Dr Irene O’Brien, is the City Archivist and Records Manager at the renowned Glasgow City Archives.

Dr O’Brien and her team are the Keepers of the City’s History, providing access to the collections both in person and remotely, connecting citizens to Glasgow’s wonderful history.

The talk will be followed by a short Q&A.

 

SGHET AGM 2023

 

South Glasgow Heritage & Environment Trust’s annual general meeting – open to all!

Refreshments will be served.

Join us for a quickfire round-up of SGHET’s current state-of-play in our ‘Review of the Year’, discover what’s on the horizon, hear about different ways to get involved, and have your say…. Plus, members can vote in our Board elections.

 

TICKETS

 

FREE but places are limited – BOOK HERE.

 

VENUE: The Deepend Govanhill Baths Community Trust, 21 Nithsdale St, Glasgow, G41 2PZ

 

EVENT TIMINGS:
6.50pm – Doors Open / Registration
7pm – Welcome & Main Presentation: Discovering South Glasgow Histories Through Glasgow City Archives
8.05 – Refreshments served: drinks & snacks
8.10 – SGHET AGM
8.35pm – Ends

 

Photos of Vogue Cinema in Govan, Pollok House, Millbrae Bridge & Newlands Church, and the Kinning Park Co-operative Society stores on Bridge St – copyright of Glasgow City Archives.

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Cathcart Heritage Trail walks including Glasgow Doors Open Days Festival 2023 https://sghet.com/cathcart-glasgow-heritage-trail-walks-2023/ https://sghet.com/cathcart-glasgow-heritage-trail-walks-2023/#respond Sun, 07 May 2023 20:00:27 +0000 https://sghet.com/?p=9566 Cathcart Heritage Trail walks 2023   Join us on Friday 15th or Saturday 16th September as part of Glasgow Doors Open Days Festival 2023! The sights, sounds and scents of scenic Cathcart are perfectly in tune with this year’s Festival theme: ‘The Sensory City’… and as always, water, whether the White Cart that powered the […]

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Cathcart Heritage Trail walks 2023

 

Join us on Friday 15th or Saturday 16th September as part of Glasgow Doors Open Days Festival 2023!

The sights, sounds and scents of scenic Cathcart are perfectly in tune with this year’s Festival theme: ‘The Sensory City’… and as always, water, whether the White Cart that powered the bygone mills and fuelled the growth of this once remote village, or the rain, which may precipitate on our walk, is an elemental factor in the Glasgow experience.

Booking required – book here on Eventbrite when bookings open at 10am on Friday 1st September.

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Join us on Saturday 1st July at 1.30pm for the first of our #SouthGlasgowHeritageTrails walks of the summer, and our first guided walk in this picturesque Southside locality.

The rich history, bygone industrial heritage, and dramatic natural landscape of the former village of Cathcart make it the unique place it is today…

Come along to learn about castles and churches, royalty and rebellion, bygone industrial mills and workers cottages, artists and architects, drumlins, roads and railways – all of which played their part in the timeline of a humble village that became a stylish Victorian suburb of Scotland’s only metropolis.

Local resident & heritage enthusiast Dougie McLellan will lead the tour, and provide images of paintings, lost mills, and bygone streetscapes which the tour will traverse that cast Cathcart in a new light, joining the dots between its current ambience and remarkable genesis – with the ever-flowing waters of the White Cart river snaking around the area and through the centuries being a key character in its own right.

#CathcartHeritageTrail on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter

NB: Our events book-up quickly – follow us on Eventbrite to be notified instantly when bookings open for this and other events.

 

The view eastwards from the Old Snuff Mill Bridge in Cathcart with an old, well-preserved tenement block respelendent in the January sunshine
The view from the old Snuff Mill Bridge over the White Cart river in Cathcart

 

Find the full Glasgow Doors Open Days Festival programme here: https://glasgowdoorsopendays.org.uk/

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#HeritageNights talk: Taps aff? What happened after the 1988 Glasgow Garden Festival https://sghet.com/2023-talk-taps-aff-what-happened-after-the-1988-glasgow-garden-festival/ https://sghet.com/2023-talk-taps-aff-what-happened-after-the-1988-glasgow-garden-festival/#respond Sun, 05 Mar 2023 20:18:13 +0000 https://sghet.com/?p=9509 Talk: Taps aff? What happened after the 1988 Glasgow Garden Festival   Join us at 6.50pm on Thursday 27th April at The Deep End on Nithsdale St for the second of our 2023 #SouthGlasgowHeritageNights events – an illustrated talk from the After The Garden Festival team, followed by Q&A.   Places are limited – BOOK […]

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Talk: Taps aff? What happened after the 1988 Glasgow Garden Festival

 

Join us at 6.50pm on Thursday 27th April at The Deep End on Nithsdale St for the second of our 2023 #SouthGlasgowHeritageNights events – an illustrated talk from the After The Garden Festival team, followed by Q&A.

 

Places are limited – BOOK HERE

The 1988 Garden Festival changed how the world saw Glasgow, and how it saw itself. It lives on only in people’s memories as the buildings, objects and artworks from this temporary event are gone forever – or are they?

Join Urban Prehistorian Kenny Brophy, Project Maestro Lex Lamb, and Holder of the Official Garden Festival Umbrella Gordon Barr to learn how they have used crowdsourcing to build an ever growing digital record of the hundreds of pavilions, sculptures and attractions that made up the Festival.

 

Photo of the After The Garden Festival project team on the former Festival site, copyright of The Sunday Post.
ATGF’s Gordon, Kenny & Lex at the former 1988 Glasgow Garden Festival site © The Sunday Post

“Items and memories are scattered across the globe with stories to tell: from the large (the Coca-cola Roller Coaster, now in Suffolk), to the small (a Garden Festival tea-towel, now in Papua New Guinea); we’ve identified surviving artefacts, ephemera and even some of the original plants and gardens that delighted visitors over that unforgettable summer, more than thirty years ago.

We’ll outline what we’ve learned so far about how the 1988 Festival was put together, taken apart and spread around the world, with the help of hundreds of individual submissions and leads, with plenty hidden in plain sight closer to home – and we’re learning more every day!

But we still haven’t found the giant tap, sorry.”

To donate directly to support the ATGF project please visit: https://tinyurl.com/AtGF1988

[Header image kindly reporoduced with permission. Photograph © Donald Whannell]

Book your tickets here on Eventbrite

 

TIMINGS:

6.50pm – Doors Open / Registration
7pm – Illustrated talk from the ATGF team followed by Q&A
8.15pm – Ends

More #SouthGlasgowHeritageNights coming soon

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#HeritageNights talk: Uncovering Slavery ‘From Glasgow to the Caribbean’ https://sghet.com/talk-uncovering-slavery-from-glasgow-to-the-caribbean-stuart-nisbet/ https://sghet.com/talk-uncovering-slavery-from-glasgow-to-the-caribbean-stuart-nisbet/#respond Wed, 01 Mar 2023 20:17:29 +0000 https://sghet.com/?p=9491 Talk: Uncovering Slavery ‘From Glasgow to the Caribbean’   Join us at 6.50pm on Wed 22nd March at The Deep End on Nithsdale St for the first of our 2023 #SouthGlasgowHeritageNights events – a presentation from guest speaker Dr. Stuart Nisbet, followed by Q&A.   Places are limited – BOOK HERE Over the past year, […]

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Talk: Uncovering Slavery ‘From Glasgow to the Caribbean’

 

Join us at 6.50pm on Wed 22nd March at The Deep End on Nithsdale St for the first of our 2023 #SouthGlasgowHeritageNights events – a presentation from guest speaker Dr. Stuart Nisbet, followed by Q&A.

 

Places are limited – BOOK HERE

Over the past year, Glasgow, Edinburgh, and Dundee have revealed buildings, streets and memorials linked to transatlantic slavery. How do we find out more? Come along and find out, through an illustrated talk by Dr. Stuart Nisbet.

Based on a personal journey to uncover the truth about Scotland and Slavery, the event will also include discussion of Dr. Nisbet’s first novel The Book of Here and There, which he will be signing after his presentation.

Dr. Stuart Nisbet is well known in the area for his local history publications. For more than 20 years, he has also been one of the leading researchers on Scotland and slavery. In 2015 Stuart had a chapter in the first detailed book on Scotland and slavery: Tom Devine’s Recovering Scotland’s Slavery Past.

He notes, ‘Black lives not only matter in Scottish history, they had a huge impact in the development of the Scotland that we live in today. Unlike other cities and countries, Glasgow and Scotland have barely begun to come to terms with the human cost of chattel slavery. Indeed, we are still at the stage of counting numbers. Hopefully, in the process, we can begin to hear the voices. For, without them, the numbers are meaningless.’

 

Signed copies of Stuart Nisbet’s book ‘The Book of Here and There’ will be available to purchase at the event for £10 (cash payment only).

Book your tickets here on Eventbrite

TIMINGS:

6.50pm – Doors Open / Registration
7pm – Presentation from Dr. Stuart Nisbet followed by Q&A and book signings
8.15pm – Ends

More #SouthGlasgowHeritageNights coming soon

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Remembering the Future: Govanhill history & heritage project for young people https://sghet.com/remembering-the-future-govanhill-history-heritage-project-for-young-people/ https://sghet.com/remembering-the-future-govanhill-history-heritage-project-for-young-people/#respond Fri, 13 Jan 2023 12:00:55 +0000 https://sghet.com/?p=9435 A new activity-based project – ‘Remembering the Future’ – kicks off on Thursday 19th January offering a series of free, creative and exploratory workshops and other events for young residents of Govanhill and surrounding neighbourhoods.   The workshops will explore art as a way to come together, examine local histories, and share personal stories and […]

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A new activity-based project – ‘Remembering the Future’ – kicks off on Thursday 19th January offering a series of free, creative and exploratory workshops and other events for young residents of Govanhill and surrounding neighbourhoods.

 

The workshops will explore art as a way to come together, examine local histories, and share personal stories and cultural experiences.

Comprised of ten sessions especially tailored for young people (aged 10 to 21 years old) the project will take place at The Deep End Govanhill Baths Community Trust, 21 Nithsdale St, G41 2PZ every Thursday from 5pm-7pm, starting on Thursday 19th of January through to Thursday 23rd March.

During these free sessions, participants will get to try out and explore different artistic techniques and processes with the aim of creating an art collection to be exhibited and held within Govanhill Baths’ new building and its archive.

A unique opportunity for school pupils and upward to get hands-on in multiple ways with a local project, Remembering the Future will offer various activities through which to learn more about both the wider history of the area and Govanhill Baths itself, including printmaking, creative writing, pottery, drawing, photography, a guided walk and a museum visit.

At the end of the programme participants will be given the chance to share their work and experiences in an exhibition and event.

The collection will represent and reimagine Govanhill’s history with the aim of reclaiming and occupying its future, engaging with themes of belonging and cultural heritage.

Light refreshments will be available at each session alongside the workshops’ activities and conversations for everyone to enjoy.

Spaces will be limited for the sessions, on a first come first served basis, so early booking is advised.

More information & booking form:

https://www.govanhillbaths.com/remember/

About the project facilitators:

Paria Goodarzi and Francisco Llinas – both artists, researchers and social practitioners – are currently working with Govanhill Baths Trust as part of Creative Scotland’s Culture Collective residency programme. Govanhill Baths is a member of the national Culture Collective network and have a team of artists working with the local community and interpreting the theme of ‘Occupy!’.

 

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South Glasgow heritage trail walks August and September 2022 https://sghet.com/heritage-walks-august-september-2022/ https://sghet.com/heritage-walks-august-september-2022/#respond Thu, 04 Aug 2022 22:08:41 +0000 https://sghet.com/?p=9223 Join us for three walking trails:… get into exploring the past, present and future of these historic Southside areas.   Queen’s Park & Mary Queen of Scots Heritage Trail ~ Sunday 21st August (2-4pm) & Sunday 11th September (2-4pm) Queen’s Park opened as a public park in September 1862… so September 2022 marks its 160th […]

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Join us for three walking trails:… get into exploring the past, present and future of these historic Southside areas.

 

Queen’s Park & Mary Queen of Scots Heritage Trail ~ Sunday 21st August (2-4pm) & Sunday 11th September (2-4pm)

Queen’s Park opened as a public park in September 1862… so September 2022 marks its 160th Birthday!

Originally called the South Side Park, it was Glasgow’s third public park, a place designed to allow people to escape the ‘carbonacious vapors’ that hung over the industrial city and breathe some clean air.

Yet the area that is now a much-loved recreational space has a much longer history, going back centuries. Join Bruce Downie and Harry Sittlington of South Glasgow Heritage and Environment Trust to explore the recent and not-so-recent history of the park named after Mary, Queen of Scots.

BOOK HERE:  https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/queens-park-mary-queen-of-scots-heritage-trail-160th-anniversary-special-tickets-409528549917

 

Art Deco Laurieston – Dead or Alive?’ Sunday 18th September (2-3.30pm)

 

Cumbrae House doorcase in Laurieston, Glasgow

 

As part of Glasgow Doors Open Days festival 2022 join us to explore the Southside’s unsung Art Deco quarter.

As the ‘moderne’ style’s two-decade Centenary begins to take centre stage, find out how these buildings have contributed to the city’s past and present and how – post-pandemic and in a climate emergency as we rethink cities and the reuse of buildings – they could support Glasgow’s future…

Beacons of change from a tumultous period in Glaswegian and global history, can these last Art Deco buildings connecting the Gorbals and Tradeston act as catalysts for positive change in our modern city in flux?

From grit to glamour, and decline to rebirth, join us to unlock their secrets and superpowers.

BOOK HERE:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/art-deco-laurieston-dead-or-alive-doors-open-days-festival-2022-tickets-344788069397
(bookings open 1st September at midday, register on Eventrite to be notified when they open)

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The Women of Cathcart Cemetery talk + SGHET AGM 2022 https://sghet.com/women-of-cathcart-cemetery-sghet-agm-2022/ https://sghet.com/women-of-cathcart-cemetery-sghet-agm-2022/#respond Wed, 29 Jun 2022 14:11:10 +0000 https://sghet.com/?p=9191 Join us on Thursday 25th August for the first of our Southside #HeritageNights to discover the stories of remarkable women buried in the celebrated Cathcart Cemetery on Glasgow’s southern fringe – followed by our annual AGM – BOOK NOW.   Cathcart Cemetery is a picturesque 43 acre late Victorian Garden Cemetery in the Southside of […]

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Join us on Thursday 25th August for the first of our Southside #HeritageNights to discover the stories of remarkable women buried in the celebrated Cathcart Cemetery on Glasgow’s southern fringe – followed by our annual AGM – BOOK NOW.

 

Cathcart Cemetery is a picturesque 43 acre late Victorian Garden Cemetery in the Southside of Glasgow with an estimated 15,000 gravestones. Each one tells the story of lives, loves and losses; of stories played out on a global and domestic scale.

 

It’s the final resting place of early pioneering footballers, clinicians, industrialists and entertainers – but most of the stories uncovered so far are of the prominent men of the time. This talk shifts the focus to cast light on some of the pioneering women buried in the cemetery’s grounds…

Against the backdrop of a brief history of the Cemetery’s unique design and development, discover the stories of these celebrated figures – world-famous singers and musicians, daughters of emigrants, artists who were witnesses to the cruelllest acts of inhumanity and suffragettes who fought and died for the rights of women.

The talk will be followed by a short Q&A.

Speaker: Jacqui Fernie, Co-Chair, Friends of Cathcart Cemetery

 

SGHET AGM 2022

 

South Glasgow Heritage & Environment Trust’s annual general meeting – open to all!

Join us for a quickfire round-up of SGHET’s current state-of-play, find out what we’ve been doing in our ‘Review of the Year’, discover what’s on the horizon, and have your say…. Plus, members can vote in our Board elections.

 

TICKETS

 

FREE but places are limited – BOOK HERE.

 

VENUE: The Deepend Govanhill Baths Community Trust, 21 Nithsdale St, Glasgow, G41 2PZ

 

EVENT TIMINGS:
6.50pm – Doors Open / Registration
7pm – Welcome & Main Presentation: The Women of Cathcart Cemetery
8.05 – 5 minute break
8.10 – SGHET AGM
8.45pm – Ends

 

Header image credit: photograph of a statue in Cathcart Cemetery by Michael Paley, from our #SouthsideLockdownLens project archive collection.

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Art Deco Laurieston – Dead or Alive? https://sghet.com/art-deco-laurieston-dead-or-alive/ https://sghet.com/art-deco-laurieston-dead-or-alive/#comments Sat, 28 Aug 2021 19:06:35 +0000 https://sghet.com/?p=8878 An outdoor walking tour of Art Deco buildings in Laurieston on Sunday 19th September for Glasgow Doors Open Day 2021 – discover renowned and hidden gems, their history & future!   The 2020s mark the start of a two-decade global Centenary of Art Deco and Streamline Moderne architecture. From Mumbai and Shanghai to Havana and […]

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An outdoor walking tour of Art Deco buildings in Laurieston on Sunday 19th September for Glasgow Doors Open Day 2021 – discover renowned and hidden gems, their history & future!

 

The 2020s mark the start of a two-decade global Centenary of Art Deco and Streamline Moderne architecture. From Mumbai and Shanghai to Havana and Glasgow, the ‘moderne’ style has left an indelible mark on more cities than you’d think… but is how is it faring in Glasgow’s inner southside?

 

Starting from Bridge Street station we’ll see a range of buildings in Laurieston – some lost, some reborn with a new purpose, some fraying in the backstreets, and some hiding in plain sight.

Along the way you’ll hear about life in 20s and 30s Glasgow, discover the enterprising architects and innovative design trends of the buildings, and get a flavour of this unsung Art Deco Quarter south of the Clyde.

As Art Deco’s Centenary begins to take centre stage, find out how these buildings have contributed to the city’s past and present and how – post-pandemic and in a climate emergency as we rethink cities and the reuse of buildings – they could support its future…

 

FREE but places are limted & registration required – BOOK HERE
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/art-deco-laurieston-dead-or-alive-tickets-165593627999

EVENT TIMINGS & INFO:

Date: Sunday 19th September 2021

Meeting point: Bridge Street Subway station entrance 1.55pm

Time: Walk starts at 2pm prompt, please arrive on time. Walk ends approximately 3.45pm.

Accessibility: Walk includes several traffic light crossings on busy roads, an incline at one point, and a lot of walking. It may not be fully accessible for wheelchair users or those with walking aids.

Please check the weather forecast for the day of this event. Waterproof clothing / footwear may be required.

 

This event is part of Glasgow Doors Open Day 2021 festival. For the complete programme visit https://glasgowdoorsopendays.org.uk/

Find South Glasgow Heritage & Environment Trust on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

 

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First Hampden Park archaeological dig https://sghet.com/first-hampden-park-archaeological-dig/ https://sghet.com/first-hampden-park-archaeological-dig/#comments Wed, 16 Jun 2021 16:45:39 +0000 https://sghet.com/?p=8621 D-DAY 1 07 June 2021   History teacher and new SGHET board member Thomas Oldham digs into the archaeological excavation at First Hampden Park and what the Archaeology Scotland volunteers are hoping to find at the old site of the world’s first international football stadium …   So, it’s day one here at First Hampden. The […]

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D-DAY 1 07 June 2021

 

History teacher and new SGHET board member Thomas Oldham digs into the archaeological excavation at First Hampden Park and what the Archaeology Scotland volunteers are hoping to find at the old site of the world’s first international football stadium …

 

So, it’s day one here at First Hampden. The tension is palpable and the excitement bubbling, ahead of what is expected to be a special and historic moment for Scottish football. The away team are wearing yellow and have arrived early – though their captain appears to be running a little late – that’s Kieran (Manchip, not Trippier), from Archaeology Scotland…

Kieran is a friendly and enthusiastic guy, and even has time to have a wee blether with me as we walk through the tunnel (of verdant green) towards his team (of volunteers…OK, OK, I’ll stop now)… Annoyingly he has already started answering my deep philosophical questions – he knows what idiots like me think of archaeology and is already infecting me with his enthusiasm. My inhibitions are not at all connected to the fact I’m English.

 

Surely there is no actual site of the fantastical early drubbing of England by Scotland (5-1) in 1882? Surely the English built the first purpose built international football stadium somewhere in England; and surely the English invented the passing game that we know today…It turns out First Hampden might have something to say about all that.

 

 

Quite what evidence they are hoping to find of the 5-1 drubbing I’m not sure, copious amounts of yeast from spilled celebratory pints? Huge chunks of chewed tobacco spat from nervous English mouths? Maybe a trophy?! Maybe there’s bleedin’ treasure down there! Who knows?

 

I am currently sitting in my loftily placed media box high in the North stand (i.e. my flat on Kingsley Avenue). As I look down, the team are now standing around in a circle (beautifully planted by volunteer gardeners David and Tahitia McCabe) and are discussing tactics and having a wee stretch. The topic of temperature drifts in the wind – it is uncharacteristically warm for a home game!

So, to ‘pitch’ out the week’s dig to you, the work will involve two plots in the beautiful Kingsley Gardens, an ultrasound scanning of the Hampden Bowls bowling green, and a dig in the trees in Queen’s Park recreation ground between the railway and skate park.

 

The bowling green ultrasound aims to seek out the centre spot and maybe some old pitch lines like penalty areas. The recs dig aims to find evidence of the grandstand. And the rose garden dig hopes to find remains of the clubhouse.

 

We have maps, know roughly where all this was (before the sleepy Cathcart circle line rudely blasted its way across Southside), know what happened here, and therefore why it is such a significant site. So, why dig here? I ask.

 

 

Being an oft-harsh critic, a historian, and a history teacher who spends their life desperately drawing out explanation, explication, and justification from begrudging, opinionated teenagers, I really, really want to know why we (humanity) bother with things like this. Hopefully we will start to find some answers from this enthusiastic and open-minded bunch of (mostly volunteer – much respect!) archaeologists. It can’t just be an opportunistic moment to get coverage for the bowling club, via a tournament programme filler during Scotland’s first international tournament in a generation, can it?

 

As we walk and talk, Kieran excitedly says he doesn’t even know what size this pitch was, or how big the penalty areas were. No wonder Scotland won 5-1, aware of England’s ‘prowess’, they probably just put the penalty spot 30 yards up the pitch!

A little later on I catch up with the team deep in the woods of the recreation ground. I finally ask Kieran why they are here and what they hope to find. While politely ‘understanding’ my scepticism of digging for things we know about and have a clear map of, his enthusiasm for the dig is palpable and catching.

 

First and foremost it’s about finding things that relate to the structures he says – it would be really great to find traces of the old clubhouse, that’s the dream! That is, a piece of the foundations from what they think is the same building that now serves as clubhouse to Hampden Bowls (give or take the odd extension).

There is also talk of trying to find a piece of old turnstile – Hampden was the first ground to have had them! Kieran laughs. He’d even be chuffed with a button or two, at which point Detectorists is mentioned and, like that, a ring pull emerges from the top layer (date unkown, probably Irn Bru). Most importantly though it is about deepening that sense of place and the layered history of Southside Glasgow, something that we at SGHET also care a lot about.

Meanwhile, the team have taken the top layer off their plot and are in good spirits. So far, the artefact tray has a piece of a till (!) and a lovely old Glasgow brick from Paterson and Sons (which once stood at 522 Pollokshaws Road near the junction with Albert Drive where Scottish Ballet now is).

 

After a wee chat about how to smash a till open and who might have been robbed, the brick leads the conversation. This brick correlates with others used in late 19th century Glasgow. Is it a remnant of the grandstand? Or a piece of railway construction material? Or just a random old brick? Whatever it’s from, a locally made 19th century brick seems a fitting first find to start this session of industrial archaeology.

 

By Thomas Oldham, SGHET Board Member.

You can find out more about Scottish brickmaking here and more about Archaeology Scotland’s excavations at First Hampden here.

Read: First Hampden Park dig part 2 ~ discoveries and speculations

Crosshill at 150

This article is also part of a series of local history and heritage coverage we are publishing to coincide with the 150th Anniversary of the founding of Crosshill in 1871 as an independent police burgh before being annexed to the city of Glasgow in 1891. See #Crosshill150 on social media,

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Pollok’s Story: G53Together https://sghet.com/polloks-story-g53together/ https://sghet.com/polloks-story-g53together/#respond Wed, 09 Dec 2020 17:00:54 +0000 https://sghet.com/?p=8029 From the battlements of Crookston Castle on the South West fringes of the city, Greater Pollok’s neighbourhoods peek out from between trees and parklands. Your eye can follow the Levern Water as it winds its way through thickets of small community green spaces and towering urban woodland that divides an assortment of dwellings from the […]

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From the battlements of Crookston Castle on the South West fringes of the city, Greater Pollok’s neighbourhoods peek out from between trees and parklands. Your eye can follow the Levern Water as it winds its way through thickets of small community green spaces and towering urban woodland that divides an assortment of dwellings from the medieval to the municipal.

 

Despite a long and proud history, the Pollok story that most people are familiar with is one of post war housing, of growing up in a community on the margins, a community that was overlooked and easy to ignore. At G53Together, we’re planning on changing that narrative through a fuller telling of Pollok’s story. In telling that story we want to celebrate our community and shape its future, by understanding its past, both the good and the bad.

Today’s Pollok owes much of its existence to Sir John Stirling Maxwell, the 10th Baronet of Pollok, who sold a 746,368 acre site of fields and farms from his family lands to the City of Glasgow Corporation for the sum of £111,712 and 15 shillings in 1937. Working with some visionary Corporation Officials, they set to work on creating Pollok as a prototype community. Pollok is Glasgow’s first large scale housing scheme. It was fastidiously considered and confidently planned; Stirling Maxwell saw to that. In the year following the sale of the land, he writes in his book Shrines and Homes of Scotland:

 

“It is at last realised that the creation of a new suburb entails more than the mere erection of rows of houses – the indefinite extension of a large city, without attempt to preserve the beauty of the countryside or provide space for recreation, can end in nothing but discontent and calamity.”

 

The plan was to create a community, not just houses. Key to the plan was the inclusion of open community green space with local shops, schools and other amenities.

A report from the Corporation’s Housing Department in October 1937 details the desired hopes for the area to include “pleasure walks and garden plots which will give health and delight to many” “romping space for children” to play and explore among the “sylvan beauties” and “extensive woodlands.” The report further details the “central idea” of Pollok as the “foremost garden suburb in the City” with 50% of the total area of land “set apart as open space”.

 

It was a revolution of civic thought.

 

In the decades that followed, the Pollok project would suffer cutbacks and blows. The vision was bulldozed in favour of higher density, lesser quality, flat roofed, cramped, damp, cheaper housing. But people continued to arrive and Pollok became a home to tens of thousands of people; several generations of families have passed over the threshold of these homes.

 

Throughout those times, Pollok suffered from a lack of hope and an absence of belief. And that’s understandable when so much of what made the community was robbed from it. Schools and community centres, local shops and whole neighbourhoods have been wiped from the map. The last farm and parts of an ancient woodland were levelled for a motorway.

 

But the seed of a new idea has been planted. Covid-19 and isolation has in a strange way brought the community back together. It has given Pollok a new boldness and a growing sense of self resilience. We’ll be enabling a new sense of community spirit and empowerment through G53Together, a community collective of organisations, charities, housing associations and local residents.

 

While our focus for now is on covid-19 recovery, from next year, G53Together and our community partners will turn our attention to working to protect Pollok’s rich inheritance, to remembering the people and places that have shaped our community, to celebrating our heritage, and enhancing our green and public space.

 

If you want to be part of the dialogue and help build Pollok’s future, visit www.g53together.scot or like and follow our social media @G53Together (Facebook / Twitter).

 

By councillor David McDonald.

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