Glasgow Visitor Guide - Colin Baxter Glasgow Insight Pocket Guide

 City of Glasgow


Trongate
Glasgow - A Portrait Glasgow from the Air


Photographs of the Trongate

 in the city centre of Glasgow


Trongate Steeple in Glasgow

Trongate Steeple at Glasgow Cross

Trongate is one of the oldest streets

in the city of Glasgow.

Located in the area of the Merchant City,

known as "Old Glasgow", 

it is on the main route into the city centre

 from the East End.

Trongate begins at Glasgow Cross, 

the original centre of medieval Glasgow,

marked by the Tolbooth clock tower. 

Map of Glasgow


Trongate in Glasgow

Trongate in Glasgow

Heading to the west it becomes Argyle Street, 

the most southerly stretch

of Glasgow's "Golden Z" shopping area.

( Buchanan Street and Sauchiehall Street

form the other two arms of the Z )




Glasgow Cross Station






Glasgow Cross Station







Building in Trongate in Glasgow

Building in Trongate in Glasgow




Building in Trongate in Glasgow

Building in Trongate in Glasgow





Tolbooth Steeple in Glasgow

Tolbooth Steeple at Glasgow Cross

The Clock Tower was part

of the original City Chambers

( destroyed by fire in 1926 )



Tolbooth Steeple in Glasgow

Tolbooth Steeple

at Glasgow Cross





The Old Tolbooth Steeple in Glasgow

Old Tolbooth Steeple

at Glasgow Cross




Trongate in 1868

Trongate in 1826




Trongate in 1826

Trongate in 1826



Trongate in Glasgow

Old Glasgow - Trongate 




Trongate in 1900

Trongate in 1930




Trongate in 1930

Trongate in 1930




Merchant Square in Glasgow

Merchant Square

 in Glasgow



Merchant Square in Glasgow

Merchant Square

 in Glasgow



Merchant Square in Glasgow

Merchant Square

 in Glasgow





Building in Trongate in Glasgow

Building in Trongate

 in Glasgow




Building in Trongate in Glasgow

Britannia Music Hall

  113-117 Trongate

One of the oldest remaining music halls in Britain.

 Built in 1857/58






City Halls in the Merchant City area of Glasgow

City Halls

 in the Merchant City area

 of Glasgow


Art Deco building in the Merchant City area of Glasgow

Art Deco building

 in the Merchant City area

of Glasgow




Whistlin Kirk  in East End of Glasgow

St Andrew's-by-the-Green

The Whistlin' Kirk

built 1750-1752

the oldest surviving Episcopal Church in Scotland.
It was also the first church in Glasgow
to install an organ for public worship,
resulting in the nickname, "Whistlin' Kirk"
or the "Kist o' Whistles”.

In Turnbull Street near Glasgow Green





Whistlin Kirk  in East End of Glasgow

St Andrew's-by-the-Green c1820




GLASGOW'S LEGACY OF A TRANSATLANTIC TRADE

Glasgow merchants said little about the morality of the slave trade that swelled their coffers’.
Dissent against a petition to abolish the slave trade was lead by the Reverend Lapslie of Campsie, an enemy of the “black-nebs”, as the friends of political reform were nicknamed.
It was argued that it was wrong for the Kirk to step outside the ecclesiastical sphere and become involved in “political” matters.
However, the
petition sparked a lengthy debate in the Glasgow Courier, between Senex and A Friend to Mankind, with both using scripture to support their arguments.
Thirty years later, with the movement for the emancipation of slaves gathering pace, William Smeal, a Gallowgate tea merchant, founded the Glasgow Anti-Slavery Society,
which became one of the most active in Britain.
The Smeal Collection in the Mitchell Library holds several visual representations of slavery - one a depiction of a black slave on a plantation
with the inscription: “Am I not a man and a brother?”
Smeal’s own radicalism is reflected
in the fact his daughter, Jane Smeal, was involved in setting up a Glasgow Ladies’ Emancipation Society in the 1830s.
Whether ethical capitalism is feasible or not is contested to this day.
 In the 19th century, the
phrase would have provoked more extreme opinions. It’s certainly clear that during the American Civil War, three decades on, Clyde
steamers were smuggling goods through the blockades of the south -  and making rather a lot of money along the way. The heritage of the
Confederate flag and the Ku Klux Klan is, of course, another field of historical debate many Scots would prefer to stay clear of.
The development of the modern nation state and the interactions of commerce, science and morality with social change proved equally
problematic in the 20th century and seem as conspicuous as ever in the early 21st. How will Glasgow, no longer an imperial city, respond to the pressing moral questions of today’s modernity‘?



PLACES IN GLASGOW ASSOCIATED WITH THE SLAVE TRADE:

Glassford Street

John Glassford, one of the foremost tobacco lords, purchased Shawfield Mansion, off Argyle Street, in 1760.
Glassford Street was laid out on the site of the house and garden.
The Trades Hall was built on the west side of this street in the 1790s.



Buchanan Street

By 1730, Andrew Buchanan was the most successful tobacco importer in Glasgow.
He was one of six merchants who founded the Ship Bank, the city's first bank, and had other business interests in Glasgow.



Ingram Street

Archibald Ingram started out in Glasgow as a street vendor then married an armourer's daughter, Janet Simpson, and became a Glasgow burgess through her right.
When she died in 1742 he married Rebecca Glassford, sister of John.



Dunlop Street

Colin Dunlop of Carmyle was another of Glasgow's "Virginia Dons" and another founding partner of the Ship Bank.
His town residence, although much changed is now the oldest surviving building on Argyle Street.



Gallery of Modern Art

The building which now houses the Gallery of Modern Art was originally the splendid townhouse, built in 1778, of William Cunninghame, another tobacco baron.



The Tobacco Merchant's House

Robert Finlay of Easterhill bought this house in 1782;
it was restored by the Scottish Civic Trust in 1995.



Other locations

Other names connected to the tobacco trade include Virginia Street, Jamaica Street, Tobago Street and the Kingston Bridge.




Map of Glasgow

Map of Glasgow

Glasgow Buildings Gallery Photo Gallery

<< Back : Glasgow Index : Next >>



Scotland Index : Scottish Peaks

Glencoe | Ben Nevis | Knoydart | Isle of Skye | Isle of Arran | The West Highland Way

The Eastern Highlands | The Central Highlands | The Southern Highlands | The NW Highlands


Adventure Travel : Worldwide Mountaineering : Site Index

fb icon  google+ icon Linkedin icon  twitter










Guide Books & Maps - Scotland:-


Western Scotland & the Western Isles OS Road Map Northern Scotland OS Road MapSouthern Scotland OS Road MapGlasgow Popular Hills - Map



Glasgow - A Portrait Wee Book of Glasgow  Glasgow from the Air  Glasgow - No Mean City  Lost Glasgow  Glasgow - The Real Gorbals Story   

Glasgow Visitor Guide - Colin Baxter Itchy Insider's Guide to Glasgow Glasgow Footprint Pocket Guide Glasgow Insight Pocket Guide Glasgow Guide Pub Companion Glasgow Scotland's Highlands & Islands - Rough Guide Scotland - Rough Guide

Glasgow Insight Pocket GuideCollins Street Map of GlasgowGlasgow: Then & NowThey belonged to Glasgow Phillips Street Atlas of Glasgow & West Central Scotland Glasgow: The Photographic Atlas100 Hillwalks around Glasgow 50 Walks in Glasgow & SW Scotland

Visit Scotland - Touring Guide Scotland: Where to Stay - Hotels & Guest Houses Scotland: Where to Stay - Bed & Breakfast Rough Guide ScotlandScottish Highlands & Islands - Rough Guide Scotland - Lonely PlanetScotland's Highlands & Islands - Lonley Planet Great Glasgow StoriesGlasgow & Surroundings - Insight Guide

West Highland Way: Official GuideWest Highland Way: Rucksac ReadersWest Highland Way: TrailblazerThe West Highland WayWest Highland Way: Footprint MapWest Highland Way - Map West Highland Way - Map West Highland Way Wet Highland Way - Official Guide

Munro Almanac The High Mountains of Britain and Ireland The Munros: Scottish Mountaineering Club The Isle of Skye The Isle of Arran Wilderness Walks Ski Mountaineering in Scotland

More Wilderness Walks 50 Best Routes on Skye and Raasay Skye - W.A.PoucherMagic of the Munros Mountaineering in Scotland and Undiscovered Scotland by W.H.MurrayA Long Walk on the Isle of Skye

Classic Climbs - Central & Southern Highlands The Isle of Arran Lonely Planet, Walking in ScotlandPathfinder Guide: Skye and NW Highlands WalksPathfinder Guide: Fort William and Glen Coe Walks Rambler's Guide: Ben Nevis and Glen Coe50 Best Routes on Skye and Raasay - Chris Townsend









Google Analytics







Google Analytics

extremetracking
 eXTReMe Tracker


extremetracking
Sitelock caingram.com
SiteLock
Sitelock
Sitelock caingram.info
SiteLock
Sitelock