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Calderwood, East Kilbride

Calderwood is a neighbourhood of the Scottish new town of East Kilbride, in South Lanarkshire. It lies on its north-east edge and is one of the largest areas of the town.

Aerial view of Calderwood from the north-east, 2012
Aerial view of Calderwood from the south-west, 2017

Location edit

Calderwood is the second oldest planned neighbourhood in East Kilbride,[1] built about 1950, shortly after The Murray. Most initial residents moved in from condemned housing in Glasgow.[2] It is the town's largest residential area, forming most of the East Kilbride East multi-member electoral ward, which had a recorded overall population of 14,308 in 2019;[3] the remainder of the neighbourhood (west of Calderwood Road, east of the Kingsway dual carriageway bypass, including Maxwellton) is in the East Kilbride Central North ward. The one directly neighbouring area is St Leonards to the south. Calderwood is divided from the East Mains and Village areas to the west by the bypass – there are no direct road-traffic links, only two underpasses beneath the road and a footbridge over it.

History edit

The area includes Hunter House Museum at Long Calderwood Farmhouse, once the home of the 18th-century medical and zoological pioneers William and John, who were famous anatomists.[2][4] In 2011 the museum building was bought by the neighbouring Calderwood Baptist Church and converted into the "Hunter House Cafe", a space for the community and church use.[5] The building and estate had belonged to the Hunter family since the 17th century, when it relocated from nearer to East Kilbride Kirkton Park.[6][7] The extant buildings date from the late 17th to 19th centuries, with a 20th-century extension from the building's time as a museum.

The area includes Calderwood Glen, the northern section of Calderglen Country Park. This was widely praised as a picturesque and romantic attraction in the 18th and 19th centuries, and by the early 1900s recognised as a renowned beauty spot in the West of Scotland.[8] Calderwood Castle, demolished by the Royal Engineers in 1951 after more than a decade of decline,[9][10] was home for nearly five centuries to the Maxwells of Calderwood, including Sir James, second husband of Lady Margaret Cunningham, the memoirist and correspondent.[11] The Calderwood area was sketched by the 18th-century artist Paul Sandby, and visited several times by British and foreign aristocracy, including Princess Mary Adelaide and the Crown Prince of Denmark.[12][13] A second view by Paul Sandby shows Calderwood Linn, a waterfall currently known colloquially as Castle Falls, discovered in April 2015.[14] Alongside a sister sketch, the wash drawing represents the earliest known view of Calderwood and of East Kilbride.[15]

Much of Calderwood Glen forms a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) for palaeontology and geology, designated on 1 August 1990. [16][17] It is also known for endemic woodland species of flowers, mosses and fungi in pockets of natural and semi-natural ancient woodland, once parts of the primeval woodland of Central Scotland.[18][19] Calderwood Glen was noted for scarce flora by botanists who surveyed the region, including Hennedy, Hooker, Hopkirk, Lee, Patrick and Ure, and whose findings were all included in an edited regional survey of 2016.[20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28]

Maxwellton Conservation Area edit

The 18th–19th-century weaving village of Maxwellton survives as the western part of the Calderwood neighbourhood. Once a rural community, it was the main area of settlement in the Barony lands of the ancient Calderwood Estate, where from 1400 until about 1900, the Maxwells of Calderwood were the main landed family.[29][30][31] Maxwellton became prominent locally and nationally from the 1960s onwards, when a dispute broke out between residents and the East Kilbride Development Corporation, which sought to condemn the settlement as a slum and demolish it to make way for part of the East Kilbride new town development.[32][33][34][35] The Burgh Council of East Kilbride sided with the villagers, and with backing from the National Trust For Scotland, the campaign over subsequent years saved most of the village on historic, architectural and aesthetic grounds.[36][37] Maxwellton village then joined the early statutory conservation areas in Scotland, after nearby Eaglesham in 1968.[38]

The campaign to save the village reached cabinet level in the House of Commons and gained national publicity, mostly due through Judith Hart MP and Fred S. Mitchell.[39][40][41] Mitchell was a memoirist, a topographical historian for Calderwood and a Maxwellton resident, on the reference staff of the Mitchell Library in Glasgow.[42][43] After the rescue, the village began to receive backing from the Development Corporation originally intent on its destruction. The result was the national press sponsoring the restoration of one derelict cottage – thereafter referred to locally as the Express Cottage, as the Scottish Daily Express issued regular national coverage of its attempts to restore the house to fashionable conservation standards.[44] The interest in the village then led over a thousand buyers to bid for the 23 run-down Maxwellton cottages.[45][46] The efforts to restore the village and the Development Corporation's publicity led to an unveiling of the show cottage by the Marchioness of Bute, which received national press coverage.[47]

Along with a townscape of weaving cottages, Maxwellton preserves the original Calderwood Estate's endowment school, founded by Sir William Alexander Maxwell, 8th Baronet of Calderwood, in 1839.[48][49] This was seen as advanced for its time in providing funds, materials and facilities for a superior educational experience and extensive provisions for educating the poor. The school received an annual endowment from the Barony of Calderwood to support pupils and teacher salaries.[50] The advances by Sir William sufficed for Maxwellton School to be cited and studied several times as an issue in the history of education in Scotland.[51][52] It is now a private dwelling named Alma, classed as a Category B listed building.[53][54]

Facilities edit

The Calderwood area has the John Wright Sports Centre, named after a prominent 1960s new-town provost and offering a full-length athletics track opened in 1972.[55] Calderwood Square is the main neighbourhood centre for retail and food outlets,[56] Nearby amenities include Calderwood Community Hall,[57] the Alison Lea Medical Centre,[58] and the Moncreiff Church of Scotland parish church, named after a prominent disruption minister connected with East Kilbride and Calderwood, Sir Henry Wellwood-Moncreiff, 10th Baronet.[59] Calderwood had a local library that has since been converted into a place of worship: the East Kilbride Islamic Centre.[60][61]

Housing edit

The original housing in the area (each with plumbing and electricity and separate bathrooms and kitchens – a noted improvement for residents used to overcrowded, crumbling inner-city city slums) followed a similar pattern to other parts of the town:[1] individual dwellings were mainly in short terraced rows facing onto streets, or less commonly with an access road and parking area skirting the houses, accessed by footpaths and sometimes with a communal green space.[1] Flats also featured, constructed in either a traditional-style common close with individual balconies, usually three storeys high, or in standalone angular blocks of three or four storeys off a central stairway, providing 9, 12 or 16 apartments. This type grew increasingly commonplace in the 1960s as the neighbourhood was extended and efforts went into meeting ambitious housebuilding targets with less space available than before.[1] Six tower blocks of 15 storeys were built in two clusters in the north of the area, providing a total of 522 residences.[62][63]

Current schools edit

Calderwood has five primary schools: Long Calderwood Primary, Maxwellton Primary, Hunter Primary, Greenburn Primary (catering to children with special needs), and St Leonards R.C. Primary. Under South Lanarkshire's Schools Modernisation Programme beginning in the mid 2000s, these were rebuilt and modernised.[64][65]

Until the summer of 2007, there was a secondary school in the area named Hunter High School. As part of a modernisation programme, this was merged with the nearby Claremont High School in St Leonards to form Calderglen High School, next to the former Claremont High campus. The Hunter High building was demolished. Most of the land where Hunter High and the older Hunter Primary stood has been built over by modern housing, including Gamekeeper's Wynd.[66]

Notable people edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d In Pictures: East Kilbride Memories - Housing of tomorrow, East Kilbride Connect, 24 June 2016.
  2. ^ a b East Kilbride - old and new, South Lanarkshire Council
  3. ^ Electoral Ward: 'East Kilbride East', Scottish Government Statistics
  4. ^ East Kilbride, Maxwellton Road, Hunter House, Canmore
  5. ^ Lawn, Pamela (9 April 2013). "New chapter for Hunter House as church takes ownership of site". STV News. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  6. ^ W. Fraser, The Cartulary of Pollok-Maxwell, 1875, various numbered charter entries.
  7. ^ "Hunter House". www.calderwoodbaptist.co.uk. Calderwood Baptist Church. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
  8. ^ T. C. F. Brotchie, The Borderlands of Glasgow (Glasgow, c. 1922).
  9. ^ F. S. Mitchell, Maxwellton Village & Calderwood Estate: With Notes on the Glen of Torrance, 1984, ms.
  10. ^ "The Tottering Tower of Calderwood", Hamilton Advertiser, 12 November 1951.
  11. ^ J. Gasper, "Cunningham, Lady Margaret (died c. 1622)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford, UK: OUP, 2004. Retrieved 15 Nov 2015. Pay-walled.
  12. ^ C. K. Cooke, ed., A Memoir of Her Royal Highness Princess Mary Adelaide Duchess of Teck, vol. I, London: John Murray, 1900, pp. 168–169.
  13. ^ Glasgow Citizen, 15 June 1844.
  14. ^ "Young historian to write book about Calderglen after finding lost sketch of East Kilbride beauty spot". Daily Record. 28 April 2015.
  15. ^ "Young historian finds lost sketch of East Kilbride beauty spot", East Kilbride News, 28 April 2015.
  16. ^ Scottish Natural Heritage, Calder Glen Site of Special Scientific Interest, Site Management Statement
  17. ^ NatureScot SSSI Database
  18. ^ "Calderwood Glen, 27th April 1907", Transactions of the Natural History Society of Glasgow, New Series vol. 8, [1905–1908]. The Glasgow Natural History Society, 1911) p. 241.
  19. ^ Inventory of Scotland's Ancient Woodland [dataset], hosted by the Scottish Government's Environmental Map.
  20. ^ D. Ure, The History of Rutherglen and East-Kilbride, Glasgow: David Niven, 1793.
  21. ^ W. Patrick, A Popular Description of the Indigenous Plants of Lanarkshire, Hamilton: James Thomson, 1831.
  22. ^ T. Hopkirk, Flora Glottiana, Glasgow: John Smith & Son, 1813.
  23. ^ W. J. Hooker, Flora Scotica, London: Archibald Constable & Co./Hurst, Robinson & Co., 1821.)
  24. ^ R. Hennedy, The Clydesdale Flora, 5th ed. revised by T. King, Glasgow: Hugh Hopkins, 1891.
  25. ^ G. F. Elliot, et al., Fauna, Flora & Geology of the Clyde Area, Glasgow: Local Committee for the Meeting of the British Association, 1901.)
  26. ^ "Calderwood Glen, 27th April 1907", Transactions of the Natural History Society of Glasgow, New Series vol. 8, [1905–1908]. Glasgow: The Glasgow Natural History Society, 1911. p. 241.
  27. ^ J. R. Lee, The Flora of the Clyde Area, Glasgow: John Smith & Son Ltd, 1933.
  28. ^ P. Macpherson, The Flora of Lanarkshire, Newbury: Pisces Publications, 2016.
  29. ^ W. Fraser, Memoirs of the Maxwells of Pollok, vol I., Edinburgh: privately published, 1863, p. 460.
  30. ^ F. S. Mitchell, Maxwellton & Calderwood Estate, with Notes on the Glen of Torrance, ms. 1984.
  31. ^ T. E. Niven, East Kilbride: The History of Parish and Village, Glasgow: Guthrie and Lang Limited, 1965, p. 13, 190.
  32. ^ "Council want plan for Maxwellton scrapped", The Glasgow Herald, 6 December 1966.
  33. ^ "Minister in fight to save village", The Glasgow Herald, 15 March 1969.
  34. ^ "The Maxwellton Scandal", The Architectural Review, 1 May 1970, vol. 148 issue 880, pp. 387–388.
  35. ^ 'The Maxwellton Scandal [reply]' in The Architectural Review, vol. 148, issue 881, 1 July 1970, p. 64.
  36. ^ Letter from General Secretary for The National Trust For Scotland, addressed to F. S. Mitchell, 19 January 1970, part of East Kilbride & District Historical Archive, Ref: F15/Mitchell/Maxw/Doc-111.
  37. ^ "Maxwellton – Solution At Last?", East Kilbride News, 6 February 1970.
  38. ^ Conservation areas: 50 years of protecting Scotland's built heritage, The Scotsman, 14 November 2017.
  39. ^ "M.P. Wants to Meet Maxwellton People", East Kilbride News, 17 January 1969.
  40. ^ Letter from Rt Hon. Mrs Judith Hart MP to Mr Robert Wallace, 19 February 1970, as part of East Kilbride & District Historical Archive, Ref: F15/Mitchell/Maxw/Doc-116A.
  41. ^ F. S. Mitchell, The Fight to Save Maxwellton Village, ms., East Kilbride & District Historical Archive, Ref: F15/Mitchell/Maxw.
  42. ^ F. S. Mitchell, "History and Topography", W. A. G. Alison, et al. The Mitchell Library, Glasgow, 1877–1977, Glasgow: Glasgow District Libraries, 1977, pp. 98–110.
  43. ^ W. Niven, "The Calderwood Chronicles - part five - Calderwood Castle and Estate", East Kilbride News, 9 November 1999.
  44. ^ "Everyone wants an old cottage", Scottish Daily Express, 11 September 1970.
  45. ^ "Take the hint", Scottish Daily Express, 11 September 1970, part 2.
  46. ^ "Blueprint for a do-it yourself dream cottage", Scottish Daily Express, 29 August 1970.
  47. ^ Annual Report of the East Kilbride Development Corporation for the Year Ended 31st March 1972, Edinburgh: HMSO, 1972.
  48. ^ T. E. Niven, East Kilbride: The History of Parish and Village, Glasgow: Guthrie and Lang Limited, 1965, p. 190.
  49. ^ National Records of Scotland, Disposition by Sir William A. Maxwell, Bart. of Calderwood to himself, April 1841.
  50. ^ T. E. Niven, East Kilbride: The History of Parish and Village, Glasgow: Guthrie and Lang Limited, 1965, p. 190.
  51. ^ W. Hendry, Education in the Parish of East Kilbride, and in East Kilbride in Particular, 1872–1897, unpublished dissertation, c. 1980s.
  52. ^ H. Moncreiff, "Parish of East Kilbride", The New Statistical Account of Scotland, vol. vi. [Lanark], Edinburgh: William Blackwood and Sons, 1845, pp. 899–900.
  53. ^ W. Niven, "Maxwellton Endowed School", East Kilbride News, 10 June 1998.
  54. ^ Historic Environment Scotland. "181 Maxwelton Avenue, Alma, including gatepiers and boundary walls (LB1025)".
  55. ^ John Wright Sports Centre, South Lanarkshire Leisure, 2013.
  56. ^ Historic Environment Scotland. "East Kilbride, Calderwood Road, Calderwood Square, General (181560)". Canmore.
  57. ^ Hall Calderwood Hall, South Lanarkshire Leisure and Culture.
  58. ^ Alison Lea Medical Centre, 2011
  59. ^ Moncrieff Parish Church.
  60. ^ South Lanarkshire: Calderwood Library, 2012.
  61. ^ 'New Islamic centre in East Kilbride to open its doors to community, East Kilbride News, 22 August 2018.
  62. ^ Calderwood 15, 16, Tower Block | University of Edinburgh
  63. ^ , Emporis
  64. ^ 'Schools are up to scratch', East Kilbride News, 1 January 2020
  65. ^ Council's £1.2 billion school modernisation programme ends in Hamilton, Daily Record, 5 January 2020
  66. ^ Affordable homes to be built on old Hunter High site, East Kilbride News, 15 October 2013.
  67. ^ Clarke, Norma. "Baillie, Joanna (1762–1851)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 26 April 2021.
  68. ^ G. R. Mather, Two Great Scotsmen: The Brothers William and John Hunter, Glasgow: James Maclehose and Sons, 1893, p. 21.
  69. ^ J. Struthers, The Poetical Works of John Struthers: With Autobiography, vol. I, London: A. Fullarton and Co., 1850, pp. x and xcix.
  70. ^ Blood and Glitter: 70 Years of the Citizens Theatre, BBC Documentary, 2015
  71. ^ Julie Wilson Nimmo, IMDb biography

55°46′27″N 4°09′47″W / 55.7741°N 4.1630°W / 55.7741; -4.1630

calderwood, east, kilbride, calderwood, neighbourhood, scottish, town, east, kilbride, south, lanarkshire, lies, north, east, edge, largest, areas, town, aerial, view, calderwood, from, north, east, 2012aerial, view, calderwood, from, south, west, 2017, conten. Calderwood is a neighbourhood of the Scottish new town of East Kilbride in South Lanarkshire It lies on its north east edge and is one of the largest areas of the town Aerial view of Calderwood from the north east 2012Aerial view of Calderwood from the south west 2017 Contents 1 Location 2 History 2 1 Maxwellton Conservation Area 3 Facilities 3 1 Housing 3 2 Current schools 4 Notable people 5 ReferencesLocation editCalderwood is the second oldest planned neighbourhood in East Kilbride 1 built about 1950 shortly after The Murray Most initial residents moved in from condemned housing in Glasgow 2 It is the town s largest residential area forming most of the East Kilbride East multi member electoral ward which had a recorded overall population of 14 308 in 2019 3 the remainder of the neighbourhood west of Calderwood Road east of the Kingsway dual carriageway bypass including Maxwellton is in the East Kilbride Central North ward The one directly neighbouring area is St Leonards to the south Calderwood is divided from the East Mains and Village areas to the west by the bypass there are no direct road traffic links only two underpasses beneath the road and a footbridge over it History editThe area includes Hunter House Museum at Long Calderwood Farmhouse once the home of the 18th century medical and zoological pioneers William and John who were famous anatomists 2 4 In 2011 the museum building was bought by the neighbouring Calderwood Baptist Church and converted into the Hunter House Cafe a space for the community and church use 5 The building and estate had belonged to the Hunter family since the 17th century when it relocated from nearer to East Kilbride Kirkton Park 6 7 The extant buildings date from the late 17th to 19th centuries with a 20th century extension from the building s time as a museum The area includes Calderwood Glen the northern section of Calderglen Country Park This was widely praised as a picturesque and romantic attraction in the 18th and 19th centuries and by the early 1900s recognised as a renowned beauty spot in the West of Scotland 8 Calderwood Castle demolished by the Royal Engineers in 1951 after more than a decade of decline 9 10 was home for nearly five centuries to the Maxwells of Calderwood including Sir James second husband of Lady Margaret Cunningham the memoirist and correspondent 11 The Calderwood area was sketched by the 18th century artist Paul Sandby and visited several times by British and foreign aristocracy including Princess Mary Adelaide and the Crown Prince of Denmark 12 13 A second view by Paul Sandby shows Calderwood Linn a waterfall currently known colloquially as Castle Falls discovered in April 2015 14 Alongside a sister sketch the wash drawing represents the earliest known view of Calderwood and of East Kilbride 15 Much of Calderwood Glen forms a Site of Special Scientific Interest SSSI for palaeontology and geology designated on 1 August 1990 16 17 It is also known for endemic woodland species of flowers mosses and fungi in pockets of natural and semi natural ancient woodland once parts of the primeval woodland of Central Scotland 18 19 Calderwood Glen was noted for scarce flora by botanists who surveyed the region including Hennedy Hooker Hopkirk Lee Patrick and Ure and whose findings were all included in an edited regional survey of 2016 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Maxwellton Conservation Area edit The 18th 19th century weaving village of Maxwellton survives as the western part of the Calderwood neighbourhood Once a rural community it was the main area of settlement in the Barony lands of the ancient Calderwood Estate where from 1400 until about 1900 the Maxwells of Calderwood were the main landed family 29 30 31 Maxwellton became prominent locally and nationally from the 1960s onwards when a dispute broke out between residents and the East Kilbride Development Corporation which sought to condemn the settlement as a slum and demolish it to make way for part of the East Kilbride new town development 32 33 34 35 The Burgh Council of East Kilbride sided with the villagers and with backing from the National Trust For Scotland the campaign over subsequent years saved most of the village on historic architectural and aesthetic grounds 36 37 Maxwellton village then joined the early statutory conservation areas in Scotland after nearby Eaglesham in 1968 38 The campaign to save the village reached cabinet level in the House of Commons and gained national publicity mostly due through Judith Hart MP and Fred S Mitchell 39 40 41 Mitchell was a memoirist a topographical historian for Calderwood and a Maxwellton resident on the reference staff of the Mitchell Library in Glasgow 42 43 After the rescue the village began to receive backing from the Development Corporation originally intent on its destruction The result was the national press sponsoring the restoration of one derelict cottage thereafter referred to locally as the Express Cottage as the Scottish Daily Express issued regular national coverage of its attempts to restore the house to fashionable conservation standards 44 The interest in the village then led over a thousand buyers to bid for the 23 run down Maxwellton cottages 45 46 The efforts to restore the village and the Development Corporation s publicity led to an unveiling of the show cottage by the Marchioness of Bute which received national press coverage 47 Along with a townscape of weaving cottages Maxwellton preserves the original Calderwood Estate s endowment school founded by Sir William Alexander Maxwell 8th Baronet of Calderwood in 1839 48 49 This was seen as advanced for its time in providing funds materials and facilities for a superior educational experience and extensive provisions for educating the poor The school received an annual endowment from the Barony of Calderwood to support pupils and teacher salaries 50 The advances by Sir William sufficed for Maxwellton School to be cited and studied several times as an issue in the history of education in Scotland 51 52 It is now a private dwelling named Alma classed as a Category B listed building 53 54 Facilities editThe Calderwood area has the John Wright Sports Centre named after a prominent 1960s new town provost and offering a full length athletics track opened in 1972 55 Calderwood Square is the main neighbourhood centre for retail and food outlets 56 Nearby amenities include Calderwood Community Hall 57 the Alison Lea Medical Centre 58 and the Moncreiff Church of Scotland parish church named after a prominent disruption minister connected with East Kilbride and Calderwood Sir Henry Wellwood Moncreiff 10th Baronet 59 Calderwood had a local library that has since been converted into a place of worship the East Kilbride Islamic Centre 60 61 Housing edit The original housing in the area each with plumbing and electricity and separate bathrooms and kitchens a noted improvement for residents used to overcrowded crumbling inner city city slums followed a similar pattern to other parts of the town 1 individual dwellings were mainly in short terraced rows facing onto streets or less commonly with an access road and parking area skirting the houses accessed by footpaths and sometimes with a communal green space 1 Flats also featured constructed in either a traditional style common close with individual balconies usually three storeys high or in standalone angular blocks of three or four storeys off a central stairway providing 9 12 or 16 apartments This type grew increasingly commonplace in the 1960s as the neighbourhood was extended and efforts went into meeting ambitious housebuilding targets with less space available than before 1 Six tower blocks of 15 storeys were built in two clusters in the north of the area providing a total of 522 residences 62 63 Current schools edit Calderwood has five primary schools Long Calderwood Primary Maxwellton Primary Hunter Primary Greenburn Primary catering to children with special needs and St Leonards R C Primary Under South Lanarkshire s Schools Modernisation Programme beginning in the mid 2000s these were rebuilt and modernised 64 65 Until the summer of 2007 there was a secondary school in the area named Hunter High School As part of a modernisation programme this was merged with the nearby Claremont High School in St Leonards to form Calderglen High School next to the former Claremont High campus The Hunter High building was demolished Most of the land where Hunter High and the older Hunter Primary stood has been built over by modern housing including Gamekeeper s Wynd 66 Notable people editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Joanna Baillie poet and dramatist 67 Matthew Baillie physician 68 69 William and Jim Reid musicians The Jesus and Mary Chain Ally McCoist footballer Rangers and Scotland Julie Wilson Nimmo actress 70 71 better source needed References edit a b c d In Pictures East Kilbride Memories Housing of tomorrow East Kilbride Connect 24 June 2016 a b East Kilbride old and new South Lanarkshire Council Electoral Ward East Kilbride East Scottish Government Statistics East Kilbride Maxwellton Road Hunter House Canmore Lawn Pamela 9 April 2013 New chapter for Hunter House as church takes ownership of site STV News Retrieved 2 February 2016 W Fraser The Cartulary of Pollok Maxwell 1875 various numbered charter entries Hunter House www calderwoodbaptist co uk Calderwood Baptist Church Retrieved 21 April 2021 T C F Brotchie The Borderlands of Glasgow Glasgow c 1922 F S Mitchell Maxwellton Village amp Calderwood Estate With Notes on the Glen of Torrance 1984 ms The Tottering Tower of Calderwood Hamilton Advertiser 12 November 1951 J Gasper Cunningham Lady Margaret died c 1622 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford UK OUP 2004 Retrieved 15 Nov 2015 Pay walled C K Cooke ed A Memoir of Her Royal Highness Princess Mary Adelaide Duchess of Teck vol I London John Murray 1900 pp 168 169 Glasgow Citizen 15 June 1844 Young historian to write book about Calderglen after finding lost sketch of East Kilbride beauty spot Daily Record 28 April 2015 Young historian finds lost sketch of East Kilbride beauty spot East Kilbride News 28 April 2015 Scottish Natural Heritage Calder Glen Site of Special Scientific Interest Site Management Statement NatureScot SSSI Database Calderwood Glen 27th April 1907 Transactions of the Natural History Society of Glasgow New Series vol 8 1905 1908 The Glasgow Natural History Society 1911 p 241 Inventory of Scotland s Ancient Woodland dataset hosted by the Scottish Government s Environmental Map D Ure The History of Rutherglen and East Kilbride Glasgow David Niven 1793 W Patrick A Popular Description of the Indigenous Plants of Lanarkshire Hamilton James Thomson 1831 T Hopkirk Flora Glottiana Glasgow John Smith amp Son 1813 W J Hooker Flora Scotica London Archibald Constable amp Co Hurst Robinson amp Co 1821 R Hennedy The Clydesdale Flora 5th ed revised by T King Glasgow Hugh Hopkins 1891 G F Elliot et al Fauna Flora amp Geology of the Clyde Area Glasgow Local Committee for the Meeting of the British Association 1901 Calderwood Glen 27th April 1907 Transactions of the Natural History Society of Glasgow New Series vol 8 1905 1908 Glasgow The Glasgow Natural History Society 1911 p 241 J R Lee The Flora of the Clyde Area Glasgow John Smith amp Son Ltd 1933 P Macpherson The Flora of Lanarkshire Newbury Pisces Publications 2016 W Fraser Memoirs of the Maxwells of Pollok vol I Edinburgh privately published 1863 p 460 F S Mitchell Maxwellton amp Calderwood Estate with Notes on the Glen of Torrance ms 1984 T E Niven East Kilbride The History of Parish and Village Glasgow Guthrie and Lang Limited 1965 p 13 190 Council want plan for Maxwellton scrapped The Glasgow Herald 6 December 1966 Minister in fight to save village The Glasgow Herald 15 March 1969 The Maxwellton Scandal The Architectural Review 1 May 1970 vol 148 issue 880 pp 387 388 The Maxwellton Scandal reply in The Architectural Review vol 148 issue 881 1 July 1970 p 64 Letter from General Secretary for The National Trust For Scotland addressed to F S Mitchell 19 January 1970 part of East Kilbride amp District Historical Archive Ref F15 Mitchell Maxw Doc 111 Maxwellton Solution At Last East Kilbride News 6 February 1970 Conservation areas 50 years of protecting Scotland s built heritage The Scotsman 14 November 2017 M P Wants to Meet Maxwellton People East Kilbride News 17 January 1969 Letter from Rt Hon Mrs Judith Hart MP to Mr Robert Wallace 19 February 1970 as part of East Kilbride amp District Historical Archive Ref F15 Mitchell Maxw Doc 116A F S Mitchell The Fight to Save Maxwellton Village ms East Kilbride amp District Historical Archive Ref F15 Mitchell Maxw F S Mitchell History and Topography W A G Alison et al The Mitchell Library Glasgow 1877 1977 Glasgow Glasgow District Libraries 1977 pp 98 110 W Niven The Calderwood Chronicles part five Calderwood Castle and Estate East Kilbride News 9 November 1999 Everyone wants an old cottage Scottish Daily Express 11 September 1970 Take the hint Scottish Daily Express 11 September 1970 part 2 Blueprint for a do it yourself dream cottage Scottish Daily Express 29 August 1970 Annual Report of the East Kilbride Development Corporation for the Year Ended 31st March 1972 Edinburgh HMSO 1972 T E Niven East Kilbride The History of Parish and Village Glasgow Guthrie and Lang Limited 1965 p 190 National Records of Scotland Disposition by Sir William A Maxwell Bart of Calderwood to himself April 1841 T E Niven East Kilbride The History of Parish and Village Glasgow Guthrie and Lang Limited 1965 p 190 W Hendry Education in the Parish of East Kilbride and in East Kilbride in Particular 1872 1897 unpublished dissertation c 1980s H Moncreiff Parish of East Kilbride The New Statistical Account of Scotland vol vi Lanark Edinburgh William Blackwood and Sons 1845 pp 899 900 W Niven Maxwellton Endowed School East Kilbride News 10 June 1998 Historic Environment Scotland 181 Maxwelton Avenue Alma including gatepiers and boundary walls LB1025 John Wright Sports Centre South Lanarkshire Leisure 2013 Historic Environment Scotland East Kilbride Calderwood Road Calderwood Square General 181560 Canmore Hall Calderwood Hall South Lanarkshire Leisure and Culture Alison Lea Medical Centre 2011 Moncrieff Parish Church South Lanarkshire Calderwood Library 2012 New Islamic centre in East Kilbride to open its doors to community East Kilbride News 22 August 2018 Calderwood 15 16 Tower Block University of Edinburgh Calderwood Emporis Schools are up to scratch East Kilbride News 1 January 2020 Council s 1 2 billion school modernisation programme ends in Hamilton Daily Record 5 January 2020 Affordable homes to be built on old Hunter High site East Kilbride News 15 October 2013 Clarke Norma Baillie Joanna 1762 1851 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Retrieved 26 April 2021 G R Mather Two Great Scotsmen The Brothers William and John Hunter Glasgow James Maclehose and Sons 1893 p 21 J Struthers The Poetical Works of John Struthers With Autobiography vol I London A Fullarton and Co 1850 pp x and xcix Blood and Glitter 70 Years of the Citizens Theatre BBC Documentary 2015 Julie Wilson Nimmo IMDb biography 55 46 27 N 4 09 47 W 55 7741 N 4 1630 W 55 7741 4 1630 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Calderwood East Kilbride amp oldid 1195517252, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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