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Recording Your Heritage Online

Event ID 566045

Category Descriptive Accounts

Type Recording Your Heritage Online

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/566045

LITTLE GOVAN

The pre-Reformation Little Govan - or Bridgend, named after a 14th-century bridge - was feued by the Church in 1579 to the merchant Provost George Elphinstone, who built a house in his barony there on the flat plain by the river. The City, together with the Trades House and Hutchesons' Hospital, bought the barony, which was ruled by a Glasgow bailie until annexed by the City in 1846. In 1790 the barony was split between the three owners: the City taking the old Gorbals village and land around Main Street; the Trades House took lands to the west, from Eglinton Street as far as West Street, for Tradeston (see p. 00); while most of the land to the east of Eglinton Street, as far as Oatlands and Polmadie, were taken by Hutchesons' Hospital, much becoming Hutchesontoun. The Hospital Trustees later sold some land to the west of Crown Street to James Laurie, for Laurieston

OLD GORBALS

Gorbals in the 1840s was such a hotbed of quarrels and disturbance that it became known as 'Little Ireland'. In the 1870s Glasgow City Improvement Trust demolished the old Gorbals village, Elphinstone's Tower and St Ninian's Chapel, building new tenements, designed by Alexander Thomson, around a new Gorbals Cross. They also provided a central clock tower and underground public toilets. Population had grown rapidly, reaching 40,000 in the combined areas by 1890 and, with the arrival of vast numbers of destitute immigrants, 'made down' or subdivided tenements became the norm, alongside 'back to back' building on back lands. The population in the 1930s reached 90,000. Redevelopment, following slum clearance in the 1960s, was not successful; much of that has also gone, and with it much of the population

Taken from "Greater Glasgow: An Illustrated Architectural Guide", by Sam Small, 2008. Published by the Rutland Press http://www.rias.org.uk

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References