crosshill Archives - SGHET https://sghet.com/tag/crosshill/ South Glasgow Heritage and Environment Trust Fri, 22 Sep 2023 10:33:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://i0.wp.com/sghet.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/cropped-SGHET-300x300.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 crosshill Archives - SGHET https://sghet.com/tag/crosshill/ 32 32 193624195 #HeritageNights talk: Southside House Histories – Strange Affray at Crosshill https://sghet.com/talk-glasgow-southside-house-histories-strange-affray-at-crosshill/ https://sghet.com/talk-glasgow-southside-house-histories-strange-affray-at-crosshill/#respond Wed, 13 Sep 2023 18:58:31 +0000 https://sghet.com/?p=9723 Talk: Southside House Histories – ‘Strange Affray at Crosshill’: architecture and social mobility in late 19th-century Glasgow   This special #SouthGlasgowHeritageNights talk on Thursday 19th October focuses on Dr Ailsa Boyd’s research related to her own house in the Southside of Glasgow by tracing the histories of architect Robert Duncan (c.1840-1928) and the Battersby family. […]

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Talk: Southside House Histories – ‘Strange Affray at Crosshill’: architecture and social mobility in late 19th-century Glasgow

 

This special #SouthGlasgowHeritageNights talk on Thursday 19th October focuses on Dr Ailsa Boyd’s research related to her own house in the Southside of Glasgow by tracing the histories of architect Robert Duncan (c.1840-1928) and the Battersby family.

Free but places are limited – BOOK HERE.

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When researching my own home in the Southside of Glasgow, I discovered that one of the first people to live in it had been the perpetrator of a fatal incident in 1897. After looking further into the family’s story, I discovered a fascinating tale of social mobility, from poverty in the industrial Gorbals to middle-class comfort in Pollokshields and a doctor’s surgery in the turreted tenements of Parkhead Cross.

100 Dixon Avenue, Glasgow with overlay Photograph: Gregory Rankine

The Battersby family exemplify the social, economic and educational developments of the late nineteenth century, with six of the children, including girls, benefitting from a university education. But my semi-detached house is just one location in a network of built heritage across Glasgow.

The architect was Robert Duncan (c.1840-1928), little known today, but he designed some of Glasgow’s most distinctive buildings. Not only did he build streets of terraces and tenements around Crosshill, but villas, churches, warehouses, a hospital, Cooper’s grocers and the building best known as the Locarno ballroom. People like the Battersbys and Duncan created the Victorian and Edwardian Glasgow still evident in the built heritage which we walk past every day.

– Dr Ailsa Boyd

The talk will be followed by a short Q&A

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Dr Ailsa Boyd is an independent writer and lecturer in 19th century art, design and literature, with a particular interest in the decoration of the homes we live in and imagined spaces.

Website: https://ailsaboyd.wordpress.com

Threads: @ailsaboyd@threads.net

 

TICKETS

Book your tickets on Eventbrite

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

 

EVENT TIMINGS:
6.50pm – Doors Open / Registration
7pm – Welcome & Main Presentation:  Southside House Histories – ‘Strange Affray at Crosshill’
8.15 – Ends

 

[Header image: 96-100 Dixon Avenue Glasgow. Photograph: Ailsa Boyd 2021]

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First Hampden Park dig part 2: discoveries and speculations https://sghet.com/first-hampden-park-dig-part-2-discoveries-speculations/ https://sghet.com/first-hampden-park-dig-part-2-discoveries-speculations/#respond Wed, 30 Jun 2021 23:08:53 +0000 https://sghet.com/?p=8702 First Hampden Park dig part 2: discoveries and speculations   History teacher and new SGHET board member Thomas Oldham reports from the second half of the 7-day archaeological excavation at the site of First Hampden Park in Crosshill and reveals where they got to with exploring and mapping the world’s first modern football stadium … […]

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First Hampden Park dig part 2: discoveries and speculations

 

History teacher and new SGHET board member Thomas Oldham reports from the second half of the 7-day archaeological excavation at the site of First Hampden Park in Crosshill and reveals where they got to with exploring and mapping the world’s first modern football stadium …

 

Firstly, apologies for the delay in getting out report number 2. After the excitement of the first day, day two of the dig in Queen’s Park Recs. came to a quick halt after asbestos was found. From painful personal experience I can confirm that this is not stuff that we need to look any further into. It is horrible, should have been banned long before it was.

 

 

With the first pit’s findings inconclusive, attention then shifted to the geophysics work on the bowling green and Kingsley Gardens. And this is where my quip about ‘why dig?’ in my previous report comes home to roost…

Despite having a map seemingly showing us exactly where the pitch was, the digital mapping suggests it was actually a wee bit north and east. Or maybe other physical landmarks have also shifted a little? Either way, things were starting to show that everything is/was not quite as it seems in the archives. And this is why we dig!

 

First Hampden Pavilion foumdations reveealed in archaeological dig

 

With the new geophysics data in hand, the Kingsley Gardens dig began in earnest. Three plots were staked out and the turf was lifted (meanwhile the gardeners politely peeped to check their flowerbeds were untouched). Over time, all three sites revealed something quite flummoxing – a single plain of broken halves of bricks. Again, this is why we dig!

My instant instinct was that this was evidence of an early ‘astroturf’ – a pitch design to allow water to drain quickly through the turf and also maintain a good level surface.

 

Probable foundations of previous Hampden tennis courts sited here

 

Kieran and others from Archaeology Scotland had their own hypothesis – these bricks may actually have been the foundations of the stadium perimeter. After a lot of chat, digging and reflection on the wider history of the site they realised that this layer was probably the foundation of tennis courts that had been on the site.

 

First Hampden Pavilion cross section view

 

Whatever is found in a dig can always be interpreted in a number of ways to support different hypotheses or versions of history, but therein is the joy of archaeology and history – however scientific and factual all the information laid in front of us is, something is always left to the imagination, or still has a question mark next to it.

We are invited to dream and wonder, and however recent the history under Kingsley Gardens, our imaginations were still wandering freely.

 

Downwards view of First Hampden Pavillion archeaological plot

 

On Sunday 13th June 2021, on the site of the First Hampden Park, we were once again left to speculate, to theorise and to dream. Who knows what future investigations will reveal and confirm!

While football might not be coming home in its most visceral and physical form in 2021, we Scots / Glaswegians / Southsiders / Crosshill folk can remain safe in the knowledge that the game’s roots are snugly tucked up under some roses and neatly trimmed grass in the Southside of Glasgow.

 

First Hampen Park bricks uncovered in archaeological dig

 

As we at SGHET are a living, breathing and perpetually curious local heritage organisation I’d like to invite anyone with memories, knowledge or photos of Kingsley Gardens and First Hampden Bowling Club to share in the comments or get in touch with us directly.

Speculation and imagination are fun but knowledge and personal memories or stories are also great and we’d love to build on the various glimpses into and windows on the past that this archaeological dig has opened up.

 

By Tom Oldham

 

Images by Tom Oldham (SGHET) and Kieran Manchip (Adopt-a-Monument Project Officer, Archaeology Scotland)

Read Part One: First Hampden Park Archaeological Dig

Find out more about about the First Hampden Park archaeology project at: https://hampdencollection.com/4326-2/

Follow Adopt-a-Monument and Hampdeners on Twitter

Discover more about the footballing history of First Hampden, Second Hampden and more on guided walks at https://glasgowfootballtour.com/walking-tour

Crosshill at 150

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

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