The Herald - The Herald Magazine

From this office, Temperance League waged war against the demon drink

- WORDS: STEPHEN KERSHAW PICTURES: AUDREY BIZOUERNE & GERMAN ALJABJEV

FOR a very upright and sober organisati­on – one dedicated to the downfall of the demon drink – The Scottish Temperance League certainly choose an exuberant design for their offices. The League was founded in Glasgow in 1844 and was based initially at 108 Hope Street, which became known as The Scottish Temperance League Offices. Later use has seen the building occupied by the Daily Record (converted in 1919 by Keppie & Henderson) and more recently, The Abbey National.

The offices on the upper floors remain occupied and a shop on the ground floor, a paean to Harry Potter, called The Root of Magic, sells film merchandis­e, snacks, drinks and potions.

The building is constructe­d from red Dumfriessh­ire sandstone and was designed and built by the architects James Salmon & Son in 1893-4, the design being attributed to James Gaff Gillespie, a joint recipient, incidental­ly, along with Charles Rennie Mackintosh, of the Glasgow Institute of Architects Prize in 1889.

Occupying a plot between St Vincent Lane and Renfield Lane,

108 Hope Street, is small in comparison to its neighbours but what it lacks in height, it more than makes up for in detail.

The building has been described as Flemish Renaissanc­e or FrancoFlem­ish and its ornamentat­ion has been remarked upon. It has been suggested that a building belonging to an organisati­on such as The Temperance League might have gone for a more sombre design. But when have anti-alcohol campaigner­s been accused of lacking a sense of fun?

The front elevation has many interestin­g details; on the ground floor, flanked by engaged Corinthian columns are two tall, arched windows with cherub masks in the keystones of each arch. Doors at either side of the ground floor windows are topped with corbels and cornices.

On the first floor, sculpted roundels, reminiscen­t of the

Renaissanc­e roundels of Andrea della Robbia, frame a large oriel window.

These are medallions with relief sculptures of draped, crouching female figures holding discs inscribed with the dates, between which, The League were active in their campaigns.

On the second floor behind a balustrade, there are two long rectangula­r, centre windows, with stone mullions and transoms.

Very stylised, very long, Corinthian pilasters stretch the full height of the second and third floors, drawing the eye upwards, from the rectangula­r windows of the second floor, to the arched windows of the third, both with stone mullions and transom windows.

Two rectangula­r relief panels with shields, both flanked by winged cherubs, fill the gap between the second and third floor windows. On the left panel there is a lion rampant and on the right the Glasgow Coat of Arms.

Between the arched windows of the 3rd floor is a roundel showing a protruding female head and below the rectangula­r windows of the second floor there is another highrelief sculptural element in the form of a cherub mask, more of which can also be seen on the pilasters.

The fourth floor is an attic, with a two-stage Flemish gable fronting onto Hope Street.

This gable end is an elaborate element, with curved stone buttresses which rise to the top of the building.

Within the gable end there is an exceptiona­lly large, central arched window, with stone mullions, transomed as before.

There are three figures, one at the pinnacle, representi­ng Temperance, one on the third floor on the left, representi­ng Fortitude, and one on the right, representi­ng, Faith.

Each holds a Temperance Shield for protection. The figures and all sculptural details were the work of Glasgow sculptor Richard Ferris.

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 ?? ?? The red sandstone building has been described as Flemish Renaissanc­e or Franco-Flemish and it has many interestin­g details
The red sandstone building has been described as Flemish Renaissanc­e or Franco-Flemish and it has many interestin­g details

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