heritage Archives - SGHET https://sghet.com/tag/heritage/ South Glasgow Heritage and Environment Trust Fri, 25 Aug 2023 19:37:15 +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 heritage Archives - SGHET https://sghet.com/tag/heritage/ 32 32 193624195 #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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Sustainable Stories: Community Archives & Heritage Group #COP26 conference Govanhill https://sghet.com/sustainable-stories-community-archives-heritage-group-cop26-conference-govanhill/ https://sghet.com/sustainable-stories-community-archives-heritage-group-cop26-conference-govanhill/#respond Thu, 28 Oct 2021 22:30:09 +0000 https://sghet.com/?p=8971 Join us and groups from all over Scotland for this free event on Wednesday 10th November in the Southside during COP 26 to discover and explore a range of stories from community archives and heritage initiatives that capture the age of change and environmental crisis we’re living through – event open to all…   BOOK […]

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Join us and groups from all over Scotland for this free event on Wednesday 10th November in the Southside during COP 26 to discover and explore a range of stories from community archives and heritage initiatives that capture the age of change and environmental crisis we’re living through – event open to all…

 

BOOK HERE (free but registration required): https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/community-archives-heritage-group-scotland-network-conference-cop26-tickets-167455093693

 

VENUE ADDRESS:
The Point Community Hub, 180 Queen’s Drive, Glasgow G42 8QD (1 minute walk from Queen’s Park train station and Pollokshaws Rd)

 

Deirdre Molloy and Romy Galloway from SGHET will present on ‘Digital Dilemmas: Creating a Sustainable & Accessible Community Archive‘ sharing their archive design research findings and touching on some of SGHET’s key archive collections, including Southside Memories, Southside Lockdown Lens, and Pollok Free State.

 

Pollok Free State passport front and back cover
Pollok Free State passport cover – SGHET archive Pollok Free State collection

 

In turn, they’ll explore some of the challenges digitisation and digital activity in general presents for a climate-conscious heritage archives sector, and to communities already being affected by the consequences of the climate crisis.

 

'Be nice Govanhill' painted on boarded up window at The Bell Jar, Govanhill by William Dixon 6th June 2020
Boarded up window at The Bell Jar, Govanhill by William Dixon 6th June 2020 – SGHET archive Southside Lockdown Lens collection

 

The event (9.30am-4pm) offers a varied programme of presentations, workshops and a ‘one-minute-mayhem’ session of rapid fire talks, plus refreshments. During the breaks attendees can browse a range of heritage stalls including ours, at which we’ll have our South Glasgow Heritage Trails guidebook on sale (cash only).

 

For those who can’t make it in person, there’s also a livestream of the event accessible from anywhere, bookable below.

 

BOOK HERE:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/community-archives-heritage-group-scotland-network-conference-cop26-tickets-167455093693

 

SPEAKER LINE-UP & EVENT SCHEDULE:
https://www.scottisharchives.org.uk/explore/community-archives/community-archives-and-heritage-group-scotland/sustainable-stories-capturing-an-age-of-change-in-community-archives/

 

TIMINGS:
9.30am – Registration & tea/coffee
10am-4pm (with 12.30-1.30 lunch break) – Conference programme

 

Follow the organisers Community Archives & Heritage Group Scotland on Twitter for updates:
https://twitter.com/CArchivesScot

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Our Southside Flat Renovation Story https://sghet.com/our-southside-flat-renovation-story/ https://sghet.com/our-southside-flat-renovation-story/#respond Sat, 17 Oct 2020 09:16:14 +0000 https://sghet.com/?p=7772 We always knew we wanted to return to Scotland to live, having spent 8 years in Edinburgh after university and then moved to Wales. Fast forward 20-odd years, with a redundancy and in need of a change in lifestyle, we found ourselves viewing a tired-looking little flat in Shawlands. The plan was to have somewhere […]

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We always knew we wanted to return to Scotland to live, having spent 8 years in Edinburgh after university and then moved to Wales. Fast forward 20-odd years, with a redundancy and in need of a change in lifestyle, we found ourselves viewing a tired-looking little flat in Shawlands. The plan was to have somewhere we could treat as a base to go off on other adventures – mainly walking and scuba-diving trips.

 

We knew we wanted a project, and our very knowledgeable friend helped guide us towards some of the better opportunities – for example our street is one of the very few which has a bay window in the kitchen as well as at the front.  We didn’t want anywhere where internal walls had been knocked down, and as keen cooks, wanted a dining kitchen. We wanted somewhere ‘with potential.’

We are rather unusual in that the majority of people around Shawlands are young first-time buyers or renting. So generally speaking, not a lot of money is spent on them. We stumbled on this attitude very early on, when a kitchen fitter tried to encourage us to build a fake wall across the bed recess to make it easier for the standard size kitchen units to fit. He tutted at our love of the curved walls and wonky alcove. We didn’t use his services. A well-meaning neighbour came for a look and declared that there was no point in doing what we were planning because ‘you’ll never get the money back.’

 

 

All the major work was completed while we were still living in Cardiff. Clearing and selling our house alternated with weeks of concentrated effort, getting covered in plaster dust, exhausting ourselves with stripping off layer after layer of wallpaper, thick gloss paint and botched DIY jobs. There were some pleasant surprises –

the original front door was in good condition behind a plywood panel and the original clockwork bell mechanism just needed cleaning to make it work again.

The orange pine and glass shelves in the sitting room were easy enough to remove so we could reinstate an authentic-looking press using antique glass doors given to us as a housewarming present. Other discoveries were more frustrating – a high cupboard built for no apparent purpose in the hall had been fitted by hacking off chunks of coving and pulling off one side of door architrave. When we ripped out the kitchen units in front of the bay window, we discovered that pieces of window frame were missing.  They’d been chopped off to save the bother of fitting kitchen worktop around them.

Our intention was to combine the best bits of the flat’s heritage with some twenty first century touches so it didn’t feel as though we were living in a museum. 

 

We had lengthy discussions about the doors, which were orange pine with glass panels. Sourcing original 5-panel doors was clearly going to be a huge challenge – Glasgow Reclamation informed us that they rarely got hold of any the right size, so the chances of getting a set were pretty low. We came to the conclusion that changes like that were part of the flat’s life and we were OK with it. So I painted them instead, and with some beautiful antique doorknobs on them, they look great.

 

We were very glad when Neil from Clydebuilt joinery, who built the new press, mentioned Express Timber Mouldings in Paisley as a possible source of the old patterns for architraves.  Being new to Glasgow, we had very few contacts and our knowledge base was zero. We trotted down there with a chunk of door surround, left it there for them to look at and within an hour had a call to say they had the original cutters and could easily run some more up to match our existing material at a very reasonable cost.

 

Of course it wasn’t always straightforward – the boiler got condemned and the microbore pipework needed to be replaced. That meant a whole new central heating system, more damage to the floorboards and endless discussions about the boiler. It was located in full view of the doorway into the kitchen. I was not happy about it staying there. We agreed to get it moved into the utility room out of the way. But new gas safety standards put paid to that – our original fitter made a mistake with the measurements and we were told we either had to seal up the windows to give the necessary air gap or leave the boiler where it was.  Tears were shed. Then the wonderful Mike at Glenlith Interiors came up with a genius idea. He designed a combined cupboard/doorway assembly which hid the boiler (and gave us storage space underneath) and gave us a new door into the utility room which remains one of the highlights of the kitchen!

 

Once we had engaged Mike Cunningham, the kitchen was plain sailing. He really ‘got’ what we wanted to do – a kitchen that had a heritage feel to it, with units that felt a little like furniture as this would be a dining room as well. We also wanted to use every scrap of space, so bespoke was the way to go. With a very keen cook in the family, we also wanted high-end equipment. A combi steam oven and space-age cooker hood were therefore given pride of place.

The bathroom is the only unashamedly modern room in the flat, but even there we tried to retain some sense of its history by mounting the tiles vertically to give a look of tongue-and-groove.  We needed a practical space for rinsing dive kit so when JP from Coiremanich tiling arrived and pronounced that we needed to get rid of the bath and turn the whole area into a wetroom, we were sold!

 

With the ‘bones’ completed, we could start to look at decorating. While I am willing to tackle most things, I wasn’t so confident about the colour scheme. I’d bought some curtain fabric on eBay and had a rough idea of the sort of look I was after. The person to bring it together was Anna, the colour consultant from Farrow and Ball, who gave us so many ideas and encouraged us to be braver with colours than we might otherwise have been.

Many packets of Polyfilla and rolls of lining paper later, and I finally had wall surfaces that were fit to be painted.  The colours really brought everything together and created a cohesive look, which I wanted considering you can stand in the hall and see into all the rooms at the same time. The last task was to make all the curtains and blinds. I found vintage William Morris and Sanderson on eBay, blind fabric in Remnant Kings, and finally it was all done. Not without a fair amount of swearing and unpicking when the curtains didn’t want to hang properly, but I got there.

 

The finished flat is exactly what we’d hoped for and more. From being a base to explore from, with Covid-19 lockdown, it turned into our safe little nest. It continues to repay the time and effort we put in and I can’t see us wanting to leave here for a very long time.

 

Sarah Bowen,

Bellwood Street

Guest Blog

Read our post on the history and design of Southside tenements.

 

 

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