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Eaglesham

Eaglesham (/ˈɡəlsəm/ EE-gəl-səm) is a village in East Renfrewshire, Scotland, situated about 10 miles (16 km) south of Glasgow, 3 miles (5 km) southeast of Newton Mearns and south of Clarkston, and 4 miles (6.4 km) southwest of East Kilbride.

Eaglesham
Eaglesham
Eaglesham
Location within East Renfrewshire
Eaglesham
Eaglesham (East Renfrewshire)
Population3,470 (mid-2020 est.)[1]
OS grid referenceNS573519
Community council
  • Eaglesham and Waterfoot
Council area
Lieutenancy area
CountryScotland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townGLASGOW
Postcode districtG76
Dialling code01355
PoliceScotland
FireScottish
AmbulanceScottish
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament
List of places
UK
Scotland
55°44′22″N 4°16′24″W / 55.739444°N 4.273333°W / 55.739444; -4.273333

The 2011 census revealed that the village had 3,114 occupants, down 13 from the 2001 census (3,127). Eaglesham is distinctive in being built around the Orry, a triangular park area of common land about 13 mile (540 m) in length, interspersed with trees and divided in the centre by the Eaglesham Burn. The ancient seat of the Earls of Eglinton. In the 17th century Eaglesham was a small market town. Today's village[2] was founded in 1769 by Alexander Montgomerie, 10th Earl of Eglinton. It had at one time handloom weaving and a cotton-mill. Many of its buildings are category B or C listed buildings, and the planned village area is a conservation area. Eaglesham was designated Scotland's first outstanding conservation area in 1960. It is likely that there has been a place of worship here since the 5th or 6th centuries.

The village is an example of an early Scottish planned village.

History edit

Origin of the name edit

The name Eaglesham means a 'settlement with a church or belonging to a church'. The first element is from the Gàidhlig word "eaglais" for 'church', a loan-word from French "église." Changing "eaglais" to "eagle" is a common anglicisation of Scottish placenames (eg. Eaglesfield in Annandale). The second element derives from Old English hām (settlement; cf. Scots hame, English home)

The Middle Ages edit

The parish of Eaglesham formed part of the district of Mearns, and together with other lands were bestowed to Walter fitz Alan, Steward of Scotland (1106 - 1177), a member of the FitzAlan family, by David I. It is almost certain that Walter granted Eaglesham to Robert de Montgomerie, one of his principal followers, who appears to have originated from the Shropshire lands of the FitzAlans.[3]

Situated in the Orry, is the Motte or Moot Hill, a flat-topped mound situated on the north-west bank of the Eaglesham Burn in the Orry used for judicial and local assemblies.

In 1361, Sir John de Montgomerie of Eaglesham and Eastwood married Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Hugh de Eglinton and niece of King Robert II. Sir John obtained the baronies of Eglinton and Ardrossan upon Sir Hugh's death in 1374. Afterwards the Montgomeries made Eglinton Estate their chief residence. In 1388, Sir John de Montgomerie captured Sir Henry Percy at the Battle of Otterburn. It is believed that Sir John accepted a ransom for his prisoner and built Polnoon Castle on a small hillock on what appears to be an earlier motte. Polnoon Castle was refurbished for occupation in 1617 but was ruined by 1676.

17th century edit

Following a period of peace and relative stability in Scotland during the reign of King James VI, religion continued to be a major issue. The Calvinistic Covenanter movement was founded as a reaction against the efforts of King Charles I to forcibly introduce High Church Episcopalianism inspired by the Caroline Divines and a hierarchy of Bishops into the Church of Scotland. The population of Renfrewshire was predominantly in favour of the National Covenant and Alexander, 6th Earl of Eglinton signed the covenant. Covenanters faced steep fines or even the threat of execution for expressing their faith and held their religious services (conventicles) in secret.

Alexander Montgomerie, 8th Earl of Eglinton obtained an Act of Parliament in 1672 for an annual fair and weekly market. By the time the New Statistical Account for Scotland[4] was published in 1845 the weekly market had long been discontinued and a flower show was held in place of fairs. The fair was revived in 1961 and in recent years is held bi-annually in May or June and traditionally opens with a procession parading through the village.

18th and 19th centuries edit

 
Ruins of the Orry cotton mill

Until the 18th century, Scotland's villages were little more than settlements loosely organised around fermtouns. In 1769 Alexander, 10th Earl of Eglinton, began the work of developing the old Kirktoun of Eaglesham into a planned village. However it was his successor, Archibald, 11th Earl of Eglinton, who largely saw Alexander's plans through to completion. The Earl planned his new village with two ranges of houses built around the Orry, an area of common land (Orry is from the Scots word, aurie meaning area), divided in the centre by the Eaglesham Burn. Tacks were offered on 900 year leases. As a result of agricultural improvements, displaced workers became tradesmen or weavers in the village.

Eaglesham flourished during the age of agricultural and industrial improvements.[5] Surgeons, shopkeepers and traders such as coopers; grocers; wrights; smiths; boot and shoe-makers supplied the needs and demands of the increasing population. Churches met the religious needs of the inhabitants, schools provided education.

Handloom weaving became the main industry until the establishment of a water powered cotton spinning mill in the village in 1791. The Orry cotton spinning mill at its peak employed around 200 people. The mill burned down and was rebuilt several times before being destroyed by fire in 1876 and was never rebuilt. Without work many of the mill workers drifted away and their homes lay empty.

After seven centuries of ownership, the Montgomerie family's finances foundered and Eaglesham Estate was put on the market in 1835. The Estate was finally sold for £217,000 in 1844 to Allan Gilmour, Sr. and James Gilmour.

East Renfrewshire Council's archives hold an unpublished manuscript "Graham's Eaglesham Essay" which details the history of the village at this time.

20th century edit

By the early 20th century, The Eaglesham Estates[6] were heavily burdened and together with the considerable debts left by Allan Gilmour were advertised for sale in the late 1920s. Angus Gilmour transferred the common area of the village of Eaglesham in 1929 to the parish council at his death. By the late 1930s many of the houses were in a state of disrepair. A letter-writing campaign was started and by the 1950s a worldwide appeal was launched for funds towards Eaglesham's conservation. Such was the success of the campaign, that the village was designated the first outstanding conservation area in Britain on 12 August 1960.

 
The wreckage of Rudolf Hess' Messerschmitt Bf 110D, after crashing at Bonnyton Farm on 10 May 1941

A remarkable event during World War II was the landing of Rudolf Hess[7] at Eaglesham on 10 May 1941. Shortly after 11 p.m. a Messerschmitt Bf 110 aircraft crashed at Floors Farm with an airman bailing out and landing at Floors Farm. David McLean, a local ploughman, ran out of his cottage at the rear of Floors Farm after hearing an aeroplane crashing and saw a parachutist coming down. McLean assisted the slightly injured airman back to his cottage. The airman, a German officer, identified himself as Captain Albert Horn. Horn was arrested and subsequently taken to the 3 Battalion Home Guard Headquarters at Busby then briefly Giffnock Police Station before being transferred to Maryhill Barracks in Glasgow and other locations before finally being to transported to P.O.W. Reception Station, Abergavenny, South Wales where he remained for the duration of the hostilities. Horn turned out be Deputy Führer Rudolf Hess. Hess apparently claimed that he had flown to Britain with a message for the Duke of Hamilton in an attempt to persuade the British government to restore peace but in poor light mistook his intended destination of Dungavel House near Strathaven as Eaglesham House. Hess was tried as a war criminal at Nuremberg where an International Military Tribunal found him guilty on two counts of 'concerted plan or conspiracy' and 'crimes against peace'. He spent the rest of his life imprisoned in Spandau Prison, Berlin.

The village today edit

Eaglesham Heritage Trail opened on 3 September 2011, a project of Eaglesham & Waterfoot Community Development Trust. The trail consists of interpretation panels located throughout the village, explaining the history of the area from the 11th century to the present day. The village today is served by a primary school, churches, library and a number of local services such as garages, shops, restaurant, tearooms and the historic Eglinton Arms Hotel. Linn Products operate a state-of-the-art Hi-Fi production plant on the site of the former Eaglesham House.[8] The majority of children of secondary school age attend either Mearns Castle High School, Newton Mearns or St Ninian's High School, Giffnock; state schools which have consistently ranked among the best in Scotland over many years. Clubs and societies include Eaglesham History Society, Eaglesham Amateurs football team, Eaglesham Angling Association Angling,[9] Eaglesham Bowling Club and Walton Angling Club. The opening of the Glasgow Southern Orbital Road in 2005 generated considerable environmental benefits by reducing through traffic and creating a cleaner, safer environment for the local community.

Places of interest edit

 
Eaglesham Parish Church

Eaglesham Parish Church edit

It is probable that there has been a place of worship here since the 5th or 6th century. The present church was designed by Robert McLachlane and completed in 1790. The church was originally a small octagonal building and later extended. A memorial to Covenanters Robert Lockhart and Gabriel Thomson who were shot by Highlandmen and Dragoons under the command of Archibald MacAulay for their adherence to the Solemn League and Covenant as they returned from a coventicle on 1 May 1685, stands in the kirkyard.

St Bridget's Church edit

In 1857, a Roman Catholic church was established mainly for Irish immigrant workers in the cotton mill. St. Bridget, born in 451 at Faughart near Dundalk is the patroness of the church. The church has a huge canvas of the Deposition of Christ from the Cross by de Surne.

 
Polnoon Lodge, Gilmour Street

Polnoon Lodge edit

Polnoon Lodge was originally built as a hunting lodge in the early 18th century by Alexander, ninth Earl of Eglinton.[10] Following the sale of the Eaglesham Estate in 1844 to Allan and James Gilmour, the lodge was used as the Polnoon Estate office[6] for a short period of time before being let. By the 1920s the lodge operated as a temperance hotel and later on as a boarding house. An annexe was used as a meeting room for local groups and societies. The lodge lay empty by the 1960s and was renovated by Renfrew County Council as housing for the elderly. The restoration work won a Civic Trust Award in 1971. One of the houses in Cheapside Street is a miniature of the lodge and was once occupied by the Eaglesham Estate factor.[11][12]

 
Montgomery Street

Montgomery Street edit

Montgomery Street was once known as South Street and commemorates the Montgomeries, the Earls of Eglinton and later Earls of Winton who owned Eaglesham Estate for seven centuries.[13]

 
Polnoon Street

Polnoon Street edit

Polnoon Street was once known as North Street and borrows its name from Polnoon Estate. Sir John de Montgomerie built a castle at Polnoon with the poind money that he received for the release of Lord Percy following the Battle of Otterburn.[13]

 
The Orry

Motte Hill edit

A motte beside the Eaglesham Burn (NS5751) in the Orry is a flat-topped mound situated on the north-west bank of the Eaglesham Burn. It is known locally as Moot Hill. The south-east side was truncated in the late 18th century by the building of the Orry cotton spinning mill, resulting in the removal of at least a third of the site.[14] It was used by the local community as a site for meetings and festivals.[15]

 
Deil's Wood cairn

Deil's Wood edit

The Deil's Wood cairn[16] stands on the summit of a low but prominent ridge 350 metres (380 yd) east of Bonnyton farmsteading.

Views in and around Eaglesham edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Mid-2020 Population Estimates for Settlements and Localities in Scotland". National Records of Scotland. 31 March 2022. Retrieved 31 March 2022.
  2. ^ Dobin, Alexander (1791–1799). The Statistical Account of Scotland, No. XI Parish of Eaglesham (County of Renfrew). Edinburgh: M. Creech. p. 120.
  3. ^ Barrow, GWS (1973). The Kingdom of the Scots: Government, Church and Society From the Eleventh to the Fourteenth Century. New York: St. Martin's Press. p. 344.
  4. ^ Colville, William (1834–1854). New Statistical Account of Scotland, Parish of Eaglesham. Edinburgh: William Blackwood & Sons. p. 402.
  5. ^ Pigot & Co., J. (1837). National Commercial Directory of the whole of Scotland and of The Isle of Man. London: J. Pigot & Co. p. 697.
  6. ^ a b Hill, Alistair R. (1991). (PDF). Alistair R. Hill. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 September 2008. Retrieved 16 November 2009.
  7. ^ "Secret Wiki Scotland". Rudolf Hess Flight. Retrieved 14 March 2011.
  8. ^ "RCAHMS Eaglesham". Canmore. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
  9. ^ . Eaa.myfishingclub.co.uk. Archived from the original on 27 September 2013. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
  10. ^ "Portal to the Past: East Renfrewshire's Heritage Collection". Heritage record: Polnoon Lodge prior to renovation. Retrieved 14 March 2011.
  11. ^ "Geograph Britain and Ireland - Polnoon Lodge OS grid NS5752". Geograph.org.uk. 20 August 2009. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
  12. ^ "Portal to the Past: East Renfrewshire's Heritage Collection". Heritage record: Polnoon Lodge circa 1903. Retrieved 13 March 2011.
  13. ^ a b Mallard, Kenneth. "Geograph Britain and Ireland". Eaglesham - The story of an 18th century planned village. Retrieved 13 March 2011.
  14. ^ Mallard, Kenneth. "Geograph Britain and Ireland". Eaglesham - The story of an 18th century planned village. Retrieved 16 March 2011.
  15. ^ "RCAHMS Moat or Motte Hill". Canmore.rcahms.gov.uk. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
  16. ^ "Deil's Wood". ScotlandsPlaces. Retrieved 22 March 2011.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Eaglesham at Wikimedia Commons
  • Eaglesham - The story of an 18th century planned village
  • Vernacular Building in Eaglesham
  • Bessie'e Neuk, Eaglesham Moor

eaglesham, other, uses, disambiguation, gəl, səm, village, east, renfrewshire, scotland, situated, about, miles, south, glasgow, miles, southeast, newton, mearns, south, clarkston, miles, southwest, east, kilbride, show, east, renfrewshirelocation, within, eas. For other uses see Eaglesham disambiguation Eaglesham ˈ iː ɡ e l s e m EE gel sem is a village in East Renfrewshire Scotland situated about 10 miles 16 km south of Glasgow 3 miles 5 km southeast of Newton Mearns and south of Clarkston and 4 miles 6 4 km southwest of East Kilbride EagleshamEagleshamShow map of East RenfrewshireEagleshamLocation within East RenfrewshireShow map of Glasgow council areaEagleshamEaglesham East Renfrewshire Show map of East RenfrewshirePopulation3 470 mid 2020 est 1 OS grid referenceNS573519Community councilEaglesham and WaterfootCouncil areaEast RenfrewshireLieutenancy areaRenfrewshireCountryScotlandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townGLASGOWPostcode districtG76Dialling code01355PoliceScotlandFireScottishAmbulanceScottishUK ParliamentEast RenfrewshireScottish ParliamentEastwoodList of places UK Scotland 55 44 22 N 4 16 24 W 55 739444 N 4 273333 W 55 739444 4 273333The 2011 census revealed that the village had 3 114 occupants down 13 from the 2001 census 3 127 Eaglesham is distinctive in being built around the Orry a triangular park area of common land about 1 3 mile 540 m in length interspersed with trees and divided in the centre by the Eaglesham Burn The ancient seat of the Earls of Eglinton In the 17th century Eaglesham was a small market town Today s village 2 was founded in 1769 by Alexander Montgomerie 10th Earl of Eglinton It had at one time handloom weaving and a cotton mill Many of its buildings are category B or C listed buildings and the planned village area is a conservation area Eaglesham was designated Scotland s first outstanding conservation area in 1960 It is likely that there has been a place of worship here since the 5th or 6th centuries The village is an example of an early Scottish planned village Contents 1 History 1 1 Origin of the name 1 2 The Middle Ages 1 3 17th century 1 4 18th and 19th centuries 1 5 20th century 2 The village today 3 Places of interest 3 1 Eaglesham Parish Church 3 2 St Bridget s Church 3 3 Polnoon Lodge 3 4 Montgomery Street 3 5 Polnoon Street 3 6 Motte Hill 3 7 Deil s Wood 4 Views in and around Eaglesham 5 References 6 External linksHistory editOrigin of the name edit The name Eaglesham means a settlement with a church or belonging to a church The first element is from the Gaidhlig word eaglais for church a loan word from French eglise Changing eaglais to eagle is a common anglicisation of Scottish placenames eg Eaglesfield in Annandale The second element derives from Old English ham settlement cf Scots hame English home The Middle Ages edit The parish of Eaglesham formed part of the district of Mearns and together with other lands were bestowed to Walter fitz Alan Steward of Scotland 1106 1177 a member of the FitzAlan family by David I It is almost certain that Walter granted Eaglesham to Robert de Montgomerie one of his principal followers who appears to have originated from the Shropshire lands of the FitzAlans 3 Situated in the Orry is the Motte or Moot Hill a flat topped mound situated on the north west bank of the Eaglesham Burn in the Orry used for judicial and local assemblies In 1361 Sir John de Montgomerie of Eaglesham and Eastwood married Elizabeth daughter of Sir Hugh de Eglinton and niece of King Robert II Sir John obtained the baronies of Eglinton and Ardrossan upon Sir Hugh s death in 1374 Afterwards the Montgomeries made Eglinton Estate their chief residence In 1388 Sir John de Montgomerie captured Sir Henry Percy at the Battle of Otterburn It is believed that Sir John accepted a ransom for his prisoner and built Polnoon Castle on a small hillock on what appears to be an earlier motte Polnoon Castle was refurbished for occupation in 1617 but was ruined by 1676 17th century edit Following a period of peace and relative stability in Scotland during the reign of King James VI religion continued to be a major issue The Calvinistic Covenanter movement was founded as a reaction against the efforts of King Charles I to forcibly introduce High Church Episcopalianism inspired by the Caroline Divines and a hierarchy of Bishops into the Church of Scotland The population of Renfrewshire was predominantly in favour of the National Covenant and Alexander 6th Earl of Eglinton signed the covenant Covenanters faced steep fines or even the threat of execution for expressing their faith and held their religious services conventicles in secret Alexander Montgomerie 8th Earl of Eglinton obtained an Act of Parliament in 1672 for an annual fair and weekly market By the time the New Statistical Account for Scotland 4 was published in 1845 the weekly market had long been discontinued and a flower show was held in place of fairs The fair was revived in 1961 and in recent years is held bi annually in May or June and traditionally opens with a procession parading through the village 18th and 19th centuries edit nbsp Ruins of the Orry cotton millUntil the 18th century Scotland s villages were little more than settlements loosely organised around fermtouns In 1769 Alexander 10th Earl of Eglinton began the work of developing the old Kirktoun of Eaglesham into a planned village However it was his successor Archibald 11th Earl of Eglinton who largely saw Alexander s plans through to completion The Earl planned his new village with two ranges of houses built around the Orry an area of common land Orry is from the Scots word aurie meaning area divided in the centre by the Eaglesham Burn Tacks were offered on 900 year leases As a result of agricultural improvements displaced workers became tradesmen or weavers in the village Eaglesham flourished during the age of agricultural and industrial improvements 5 Surgeons shopkeepers and traders such as coopers grocers wrights smiths boot and shoe makers supplied the needs and demands of the increasing population Churches met the religious needs of the inhabitants schools provided education Handloom weaving became the main industry until the establishment of a water powered cotton spinning mill in the village in 1791 The Orry cotton spinning mill at its peak employed around 200 people The mill burned down and was rebuilt several times before being destroyed by fire in 1876 and was never rebuilt Without work many of the mill workers drifted away and their homes lay empty After seven centuries of ownership the Montgomerie family s finances foundered and Eaglesham Estate was put on the market in 1835 The Estate was finally sold for 217 000 in 1844 to Allan Gilmour Sr and James Gilmour East Renfrewshire Council s archives hold an unpublished manuscript Graham s Eaglesham Essay which details the history of the village at this time 20th century edit By the early 20th century The Eaglesham Estates 6 were heavily burdened and together with the considerable debts left by Allan Gilmour were advertised for sale in the late 1920s Angus Gilmour transferred the common area of the village of Eaglesham in 1929 to the parish council at his death By the late 1930s many of the houses were in a state of disrepair A letter writing campaign was started and by the 1950s a worldwide appeal was launched for funds towards Eaglesham s conservation Such was the success of the campaign that the village was designated the first outstanding conservation area in Britain on 12 August 1960 nbsp The wreckage of Rudolf Hess Messerschmitt Bf 110D after crashing at Bonnyton Farm on 10 May 1941A remarkable event during World War II was the landing of Rudolf Hess 7 at Eaglesham on 10 May 1941 Shortly after 11 p m a Messerschmitt Bf 110 aircraft crashed at Floors Farm with an airman bailing out and landing at Floors Farm David McLean a local ploughman ran out of his cottage at the rear of Floors Farm after hearing an aeroplane crashing and saw a parachutist coming down McLean assisted the slightly injured airman back to his cottage The airman a German officer identified himself as Captain Albert Horn Horn was arrested and subsequently taken to the 3 Battalion Home Guard Headquarters at Busby then briefly Giffnock Police Station before being transferred to Maryhill Barracks in Glasgow and other locations before finally being to transported to P O W Reception Station Abergavenny South Wales where he remained for the duration of the hostilities Horn turned out be Deputy Fuhrer Rudolf Hess Hess apparently claimed that he had flown to Britain with a message for the Duke of Hamilton in an attempt to persuade the British government to restore peace but in poor light mistook his intended destination of Dungavel House near Strathaven as Eaglesham House Hess was tried as a war criminal at Nuremberg where an International Military Tribunal found him guilty on two counts of concerted plan or conspiracy and crimes against peace He spent the rest of his life imprisoned in Spandau Prison Berlin The village today editEaglesham Heritage Trail opened on 3 September 2011 a project of Eaglesham amp Waterfoot Community Development Trust The trail consists of interpretation panels located throughout the village explaining the history of the area from the 11th century to the present day The village today is served by a primary school churches library and a number of local services such as garages shops restaurant tearooms and the historic Eglinton Arms Hotel Linn Products operate a state of the art Hi Fi production plant on the site of the former Eaglesham House 8 The majority of children of secondary school age attend either Mearns Castle High School Newton Mearns or St Ninian s High School Giffnock state schools which have consistently ranked among the best in Scotland over many years Clubs and societies include Eaglesham History Society Eaglesham Amateurs football team Eaglesham Angling Association Angling 9 Eaglesham Bowling Club and Walton Angling Club The opening of the Glasgow Southern Orbital Road in 2005 generated considerable environmental benefits by reducing through traffic and creating a cleaner safer environment for the local community Places of interest edit nbsp Eaglesham Parish ChurchEaglesham Parish Church edit It is probable that there has been a place of worship here since the 5th or 6th century The present church was designed by Robert McLachlane and completed in 1790 The church was originally a small octagonal building and later extended A memorial to Covenanters Robert Lockhart and Gabriel Thomson who were shot by Highlandmen and Dragoons under the command of Archibald MacAulay for their adherence to the Solemn League and Covenant as they returned from a coventicle on 1 May 1685 stands in the kirkyard St Bridget s Church edit In 1857 a Roman Catholic church was established mainly for Irish immigrant workers in the cotton mill St Bridget born in 451 at Faughart near Dundalk is the patroness of the church The church has a huge canvas of the Deposition of Christ from the Cross by de Surne nbsp Polnoon Lodge Gilmour StreetPolnoon Lodge edit Polnoon Lodge was originally built as a hunting lodge in the early 18th century by Alexander ninth Earl of Eglinton 10 Following the sale of the Eaglesham Estate in 1844 to Allan and James Gilmour the lodge was used as the Polnoon Estate office 6 for a short period of time before being let By the 1920s the lodge operated as a temperance hotel and later on as a boarding house An annexe was used as a meeting room for local groups and societies The lodge lay empty by the 1960s and was renovated by Renfrew County Council as housing for the elderly The restoration work won a Civic Trust Award in 1971 One of the houses in Cheapside Street is a miniature of the lodge and was once occupied by the Eaglesham Estate factor 11 12 nbsp Montgomery StreetMontgomery Street edit Montgomery Street was once known as South Street and commemorates the Montgomeries the Earls of Eglinton and later Earls of Winton who owned Eaglesham Estate for seven centuries 13 nbsp Polnoon StreetPolnoon Street edit Polnoon Street was once known as North Street and borrows its name from Polnoon Estate Sir John de Montgomerie built a castle at Polnoon with the poind money that he received for the release of Lord Percy following the Battle of Otterburn 13 nbsp The OrryMotte Hill edit A motte beside the Eaglesham Burn NS5751 in the Orry is a flat topped mound situated on the north west bank of the Eaglesham Burn It is known locally as Moot Hill The south east side was truncated in the late 18th century by the building of the Orry cotton spinning mill resulting in the removal of at least a third of the site 14 It was used by the local community as a site for meetings and festivals 15 nbsp Deil s Wood cairnDeil s Wood edit The Deil s Wood cairn 16 stands on the summit of a low but prominent ridge 350 metres 380 yd east of Bonnyton farmsteading Views in and around Eaglesham edit nbsp Orry Mill wheel pit nbsp Millhall Mill from Polnoon Farm nbsp Polnoon Castle motte nbsp Large masonry block with mortarReferences edit Mid 2020 Population Estimates for Settlements and Localities in Scotland National Records of Scotland 31 March 2022 Retrieved 31 March 2022 Dobin Alexander 1791 1799 The Statistical Account of Scotland No XI Parish of Eaglesham County of Renfrew Edinburgh M Creech p 120 Barrow GWS 1973 The Kingdom of the Scots Government Church and Society From the Eleventh to the Fourteenth Century New York St Martin s Press p 344 Colville William 1834 1854 New Statistical Account of Scotland Parish of Eaglesham Edinburgh William Blackwood amp Sons p 402 Pigot amp Co J 1837 National Commercial Directory of the whole of Scotland and of The Isle of Man London J Pigot amp Co p 697 a b Hill Alistair R 1991 A Short Account of the Family of Gilmour of Eaglesham PDF Alistair R Hill Archived from the original PDF on 8 September 2008 Retrieved 16 November 2009 Secret Wiki Scotland Rudolf Hess Flight Retrieved 14 March 2011 RCAHMS Eaglesham Canmore Retrieved 26 September 2013 Eaglesham Angling Association Eaa myfishingclub co uk Archived from the original on 27 September 2013 Retrieved 26 September 2013 Portal to the Past East Renfrewshire s Heritage Collection Heritage record Polnoon Lodge prior to renovation Retrieved 14 March 2011 Geograph Britain and Ireland Polnoon Lodge OS grid NS5752 Geograph org uk 20 August 2009 Retrieved 26 September 2013 Portal to the Past East Renfrewshire s Heritage Collection Heritage record Polnoon Lodge circa 1903 Retrieved 13 March 2011 a b Mallard Kenneth Geograph Britain and Ireland Eaglesham The story of an 18th century planned village Retrieved 13 March 2011 Mallard Kenneth Geograph Britain and Ireland Eaglesham The story of an 18th century planned village Retrieved 16 March 2011 RCAHMS Moat or Motte Hill Canmore rcahms gov uk Retrieved 26 September 2013 Deil s Wood ScotlandsPlaces Retrieved 22 March 2011 External links edit nbsp Media related to Eaglesham at Wikimedia Commons Eaglesham The story of an 18th century planned village Vernacular Building in Eaglesham Bessie e Neuk Eaglesham Moor Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eaglesham amp oldid 1172172056, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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