Glasgow Times

ANDERSTON IN PICTURES TIMES PAST

- Ann Fotheringh­am ann. fotheringh­am@ heraldandt­imes. co. uk

DID you know The Beatles played in Anderston in 1963?

The world’s biggest pop band began a three- night mini tour of Scotland, supported by Mike Berry, and Freddy Starr and the Midnighter­s, at Glasgow Concert Hall.

The building was formerly Anderston’s Gaiety Cinema, originally known as the Victoria Music Hall, then the Tivoli Variety Theatre. It opened in 1899 and became a full cinema in 1935.

Our picture, taken in January 1963 by staff photograph­er Arthur Kinloch, shows then Lord Provost Jean Roberts officially opening the new concert hall which was the replacemen­t for St Andrew’s Halls, which burned down in 1962.

The Fab Four’s visit is just one of a long list of fascinatin­g facts about the history of this famous area of Glasgow. Around 300 years ago, a community of handloom weavers created the village of Anderson Town on what is now the area around the Kingston Bridge.

Named after founder James Anderson, the lands which eventually became known as Anderston were then sold to wealthy local merchant John Orr of Barrowfiel­d in the 1740s and became an important centre of the textile trade.

Documents held in Glasgow City Archives show that this area became an important industrial hub, home to Delftfield Pottery, the Verreville Glassworks and the Anderston Brewery ( or ‘ great brewery’ as it was also known) which opened in 1752. The area was denoted a ‘ burgh of barony’ and had its own town council. In 1846, with Argyle Street now packed with shops and houses, Anderston was absorbed back into the City of Glasgow.

In the 1960s, a comprehens­ive redevelopm­ent plan demolished much of Anderston to make way for the inner ring road, to the dismay of many.

Around 114 acres were cleared for the new road and new housing.

“When it is completed,” our sister newspaper, then called The Glasgow Herald, said, “it will be a new town within the city, with its local shops as well as its department stores and supermarke­ts, and its local public houses, as well as a huge hotel.”

Our archives are full of photograph­s which show the mass demolition and rebuilding which took place, such as this image ( above right) of constructi­on work on the Kingston Bridge in 1969.

This image ( below right) shows the beginning of the Clydeside Expressway at North Street and Stobcross Street.

Over the decades, myths and stories have swirled around Anderston’s ‘ lost graveyards’.

There were several churches in Anderston, include St Mark’s Free Church in Cheapside Street ( pictured here in 1848 or 1849) and Anderston Old in Heddle Place.

The constructi­on of the M8 meant churches had to be demolished and graves moved to other cemeteries in the city, including Lambhill and Linn. Over the years, claims that not all the burials were moved have led to suggestion­s there are still bodies buried deep in the concrete foundation­s of the motorway.

The rather grisly rumour that several underworld crime figures who disappeare­d in the 60s were offed and buried within the Kingston Bridge foundation­s also persists, despite no remains ever being found.

Glasgow has a number of Billy Connolly murals, but this one is a little bit different. Installed on a gable end at the bottom of Little Street in Anderston ( below left), it measures around six metres by four metres and was created using 1.5 miles of steel rods. Artist Andy Scott was commission­ed to produce the work to mark the end of phase one of Sanctuary Scotland’s £ 50 million regenerati­on of Anderston. It was unveiled on November 22, 2011, and while the Big Yin did not attend, he said he was “happy and humbled” by the “unexpected honour.”

The last regular tram service in Glasgow ran on September 1, 1962, and for the following three days a special service operated between Auchenshug­gle and Anderston Cross. Pictured above is one of the last trams to run in the city.

During the redevelopm­ent of Anderston, one of the area’s bestknown pubs was also lost – but not entirely...

Ruxton’s Bar on Elderslie Street ( pictured above) in 1971, had been a fixture in the community since 1867.

However, it did not disappear completely thanks to a Lanarkshir­e antiques dealer.

Tony Kierney bought the pub’s interior, including Victorian gantry, advertisin­g mirrors and elegant curved bar, and sold it all to a TV studio in California...

Send us your memories of Anderston by emailing ann. fotheringh­am@ glasgowtim­es. co. uk or writing to Ann Fotheringh­am, Glasgow Times, 125 Fullarton Drive, Glasgow G32 8FG.

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