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Rutherglen

[3]Rutherglen (/ˈrʌðərɡlɪn/, Scots: Ruglen, Scottish Gaelic: An Ruadh-Ghleann) is a town in South Lanarkshire, Scotland, immediately south-east of the city of Glasgow, three miles (five kilometres) from its centre and directly south of the River Clyde. Having existed as a Lanarkshire burgh in its own right for more than 800 years, in 1975 Rutherglen lost its own local council and administratively became a component of the City of Glasgow District within the Strathclyde region (along with neighbouring Cambuslang).[4] In 1996 the towns were reallocated to the South Lanarkshire council area.[5][6][7][8]

Rutherglen
Town
Main Street, the main shopping area of Rutherglen
Rutherglen
Rutherglen
Location within Scotland
Rutherglen
Rutherglen (Scotland)
Population30,950 (mid-2020 est.)[1]
OS grid referenceNS614616
Lieutenancy area
CountryScotland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townGLASGOW[2]
Postcode districtG73
Dialling code0141
PoliceScotland
FireScottish
AmbulanceScottish
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament
List of places
UK
Scotland
55°49′41″N 4°12′50″W / 55.828°N 4.214°W / 55.828; -4.214

History

Rutherglen received the status of Royal Burgh in 1126 by Royal Charter from King David I of Scotland,[9] who reigned from 1124 to 1153. It gradually diminished in importance as neighbouring Glasgow grew in power and size.[10] The masons who built Glasgow Cathedral are thought to have lodged in Rutherglen.[11][12]

 
Rutherglen's prominence in late mediaeval Lanarkshire is shown in the Blaeu Atlas of Scotland (1654) - Castlemilk House (‘Casteltoun’), Shawfield and Farme Castle are also shown

In the 14th century Walter Stewart, father of King Robert II, was granted Farme Castle. This was located close to Farme Cross in the north of Rutherglen, and stood until the 1960s.[13]

Another castle, Rutherglen Castle, was occupied by an English garrison during the struggle between John Balliol and Robert Bruce for the Scottish crown. It was besieged by Robert the Bruce in 1309 and eventually came into Scottish possession in 1313.[14] It was destroyed by Regent Murray after the Battle of Langside.[15]

Rutherglen was a centre of heavy industry,[16][9][17] having a long coal mining tradition which died out by 1950. In the 18th century, barges carried coal from Rutherglen to Greenock almost ever day.[18] A small shipyard, T.B. Seath & Co., was in operation on the Clyde at the northern edge of the town for several decades.[19][20] The Clydebridge Steelworks, situated between Rutherglen and Cambuslang, began operating in the 1880s and employed thousands by the mid-20th century, but the workforce dwindled to a few dozen by the 20th century and now only refines steel produced elsewhere.[21] J & J White Chemicals (later ACC Chrome & Chemicals) in Shawfield, which was in existence from 1820 to 1967, produced more than 70 per cent of the UK's chromate products including chromic acid, chromic oxide pigment, sodium and potassium chromate and dichromate. Today there is a significant legacy of soluble chromium (VI) waste in the area.[19][22][23]

The town seal's 19th-century Latin motto rendered by Professor George Gilbert Ramsay, "Ex fumo fama" ('fame from smoke')[24] and the local saying from which it derived, "Let Ruglen's lums reek briskly", as well as the deliberately difficult to pronounce alternative "Ru’glen’s wee roond red lums reek briskly"[25] (itself an adaptation of a Scotticism implying a smoking chimney signifying a prosperous, healthy and long life),[26] all refer to the importance of industry and industriousness to the area.[27]

 
Faces of double-sided seal as published in 1793
 
Seal as depicted in 1882
 
Simplified version as seen on festive decorations, 2005

The traditional version of the seal itself contained depictions of the Virgin and Child supported by twin angels (earlier by priests with thistles) and a fishing boat and men in the background.[28] Along with the addition of the motto, in the 1889 official version the boat had a water design added, became more prominent and was placed in a shield at front centre, flanked by the angels with a helmet and mantling above, and the Virgin Mary above that.[24][29][30] Over a century later, a simplified version was produced in 1999 featuring only the boat, the motto and a crown to represent the historic Royal Burgh status (which by then no longer had any legal significance);[31] in the early 21st century, this seal often appears on the local Christmas lights.[32] The ship and crown appear on the similar South Lanarkshire coat of arms, with cinquefoil flowers representing Hamilton and a double-headed eagle for Lanark.

Horse and cattle markets, including the regular Beltane Fair in May and St Luke's Fair in November (accompanied by the baking of sour cakes by locals)[33] were also common and popular until the 20th century, and are the reason for the Main Street being unusually wide.[19][34][35][36][37]

Rutherglen is nowadays primarily a dormitory suburb of Glasgow.[38]

Etymology

The name of Rutherglen, as well as its Scots name Ruglen,[39] is perhaps from Scottish Gaelic An Ruadh-Ghleann 'the red valley'.[19][40] The derivation may also however be Welsh, or Cumbric and mean "the valley of Rydderch". Rydderch – pronounced 'rutherch' – 'ruther' as in 'brother' and 'ch' as in 'loch' – was one of the most famous kings associated with the Welsh-speaking kingdom which centred on Dumbarton.[41][9][10]

Governance

Westminster

A separate constituency in the Parliament of Scotland from the late 16th century,[10] Rutherglen was a parliamentary burgh represented in the UK Parliament as a component of Glasgow Burghs constituency from 1708 to 1832,[10] and as a component of Kilmarnock Burghs from 1832 to 1918. In 1918, the Rutherglen constituency was created, which became Glasgow Rutherglen in 1983. In 2005, Scottish constituencies for the UK parliament were reviewed with many new seats introduced, and the town is now within the Rutherglen and Hamilton West constituency.

Following the 2019 election, Margaret Ferrier is the local MP,[42] replacing Gerard Killen of Scottish Labour who in 2017 had narrowly defeated incumbent Ferrier,[43][44] herself originally elected in 2015.[45][46] Ferrier was a Scottish National Party MP until an incident relating to a breach of the COVID-19 pandemic regulations in October 2020[47] – the SNP whip was withdrawn and she ignored calls to resign, continuing in office as an independent.

Holyrood

In 1999, the Scottish Parliamentary constituency of Glasgow Rutherglen was created, with the same boundaries as the then UK parliamentary constituency. In 2011, The constituency was redrawn and renamed simply Rutherglen (although it also encompasses Cambuslang and Blantyre). Following the 2016 elections, Clare Haughey (SNP) is the MSP for Rutherglen. The defeated incumbent James Kelly (Labour) was elected as a list MSP[48] for the Glasgow region which includes Rutherglen due to the town's proximity to the city.[49] All local representatives have strong personal ties to the area.

South Lanarkshire Council

Administratively, the historic town centre is within the Rutherglen Central and North ward of South Lanarkshire Council,[50][51] which has a population of around 15,000.[52] Taking another ward encompassing the southern parts of the town into consideration,[53] its overall population was approximately 30,000 in 2016. With neighbouring Cambuslang's figures being very similar,[54][55] the many services and amenities shared between the towns should provide for 60,000 residents, many assessed as living in economic hardship.[56][57][58]

Transport

Rutherglen Burgh is served by Rutherglen railway station (opened in 1849), with Croftfoot and Burnside stations closer to southern parts of the town. There are also numerous bus links into Glasgow city centre or other destinations such as Hamilton, East Kilbride, Govanhill and Dennistoun,[59] all services either running directly along the Main Street (which has dedicated public transport lanes for peak times) or close to it via Mill Street / Glasgow Road (A730) to the west, Cambuslang Road (A724) to the north or Stonelaw Road / Farmeloan Road (A749) to the east.[60][61] Glasgow Corporation Tramways operated routes in the area from the early 1900s until the late 1950s.

Completion of the M74 Extension in 2011 meant that there is a six-lane motorway bisecting the northern part of the town, allowing easier access to places such as Glasgow Airport and the English border. Some years after the project was completed, studies show that pollution levels on Rutherglen's densely populated Main Street were still measured consistently at dangerously high levels, despite forecasts that traffic levels on urban streets in areas served by the motorway would reduce.[62][63][64][65]

Media

The local newspaper is the Rutherglen Reformer (owned by Reach plc, with online content presented under the Daily Record banner). The local community radio station is CamGlen Radio.

Geography

 
Map of central Rutherglen published in 1923

The Royal Burgh of Rutherglen has expanded over the years and now encompasses many other neighbourhoods, the majority built after World War II on land which was either farms or rural estates.[66][67]

Since being granted Royal Burgh status by King David I in the 12th century, the town has grown considerably from its origins as little more than a single street,[66][68] and although growth has been hampered to some extent by the proximity of the river to the north and the encroaching Glasgow urban sprawl to the west, it now covers a much larger area than the initial Burgh boundaries,[17][69][70] although the aforementioned restrictions mean its administrative centre with the majority of facilities and the highest population density is concentrated at the north of its overall territory rather than towards the geographic centre (neighbouring Cambuslang has a similar issue: its town centre is in the far west of its territory, with its boundaries with Rutherglen and the river preventing any expansion in those directions).

Historic areas such as Farme Cross, Bankhead and Gallowflat have changed greatly over the years[70][17][69] and the village of Burnside (which falls under the Rutherglen boundary but has its own Community Council) also expanded to share a single suburban settlement with its larger neighbour. More recent post-war developments at Newfield and Burnhill within the older part of town, plus those on the peripheries including Blairbeth, Cathkin, Eastfield, Fernhill, Spittal and Springhall[69] have given the town a frequently changing character. Other than some shopping areas and the large industrial estates in Farme Cross and Shawfield, the neighbourhoods referred to are residential in type; the 1922 book Rutherglen Lore indicates a deliberate intention for the historic Burgh area to be encircled to the south by residential suburbs, while all land to its north would be dedicated to industry, and that remains the case a century later.

Burgh (Main Street) and Clincarthill

The Burgh area includes the old heart of the Royal Burgh of Rutherglen around the ancient and unusually wide,[37] tree-lined Main Street and its environs,[66][70][10] which have been designated a conservation area since 2008.[68] It features several religious establishments, various pubs, shops and restaurants, historic and modern civic buildings and community facilities, all within a dense network of housing, mainly tenements.[19][68] In the 2000s, a webcam focused on the everyday activities at the western end of Main Street was recognised as having among the highest number of views in the world at the time for footage of its type, despite there being no obvious reason for this popularity;[71] the webcam is no longer in operation, although later proposals were made by local civic figures to have another installed.[72]

The dominant architectural feature of the Main Street, on its north side, is the imposing Town Hall built in 1862 to a design by Charles Wilson.[68][73] Having fallen into disrepair and disuse[73][68] the Category A-listed building was refurbished and extended around 2005[74][75][76] and today is a venue for weddings, theatrical performances and exhibitions,[19][77] while still providing some local services.[78]

 
St Mary's bell tower [de] in churchyard (16th century)

Most of the other most important Rutherglen landmarks are in the immediate vicinity of the Town Hall. To its west is Rutherglen Old Parish Church,[19][68] the fourth incarnation of the institution (which has had a building on the site since around 600 AD)[79] constructed in 1902 to a J. J. Burnet design.[80] Between the church and the town hall sits the ancient graveyard (13th century), the St Mary's bell tower [de] (16th century) and its Kirk Port stone entrance (17th century).[19][68][81][82][70] The mediaeval church was said to be the location where William Wallace completed a peace treaty between England and Scotland in 1297, and where John de Menteith subsequently agreed a pact to betray Wallace in 1305,[80] events which are marked by plaques and commemorated annually by Scottish nationalists.[83][84]

On the corner of Main Street and Queen Street outside the church is a statue of Dr. James Gorman (1832–1899), a well-known local surgeon – this was erected in 1901 by public subscription due to his great standing in the area for his actions, including treating the injured after mining disasters.[68][19][81][85] To the rear of the church is a Masonic Hall dating from 1897 and built to replace older premises on Cathcart Road – the group can trace their origins locally back to the 1760s.[86][87]

 
Rutherglen Library and Post Office building (1907)

To the immediate east of the Town Hall is the burgh's public library[68][88] constructed in 1907 to an Edwardian design by Sinclair & Ballantine[89] (technically 'Post Office and Library', but the dedicated post office closed in 2005,[90] with its replacement inside an existing shop further east along the Main Street).[91] A Carnegie library, its main hall to the rear features a stained-glass dome in the roof and oak paneling in the interior.[92] Its first librarian, who also lived in the upper floor, was William Ross Shearer, author of the 1922 book Rutherglen Lore which would come to be considered one of the most important references for the town's long history.[93][94] The building was refurbished in the early 1990s and re-opened once again in 2010 following a further extensive refurbishment which included an expansion into the Post Office section.[90][95] On the wide pavement outside the library is a replica of the town's mercat cross (the original stood nearby from the 12th to the 18th century),[68] erected in 1926 as part of Rutherglen's octo-centenary celebrations, and in memory of a former provost of the burgh. It was earlier the site of the old 'Tollbooth and Gaol' (town hall and prison) which was constructed in the 1760s and demolished in the 1900s.[68][96][70]

Behind the library on King Street is the premises of the local branch of The Salvation Army whose brass band play regularly at the Old Parish Church and who have had a presence in the town since the 1880s;[97] their hall stands roughly on the site of the mediaeval Rutherglen Castle,[98] and replaced a wooden building initially used by the Rechabite Society.[99] The local fire brigade (established 1892) was also based nearby, but since 1970 the local station has been at Cambuslang[100][19] with other stations fairly close at Polmadie and Castlemilk.


Directly across from the Town Hall is St Columbkille's Church [de],[19][101] the current main building of which dates from 1940 (designed by Gillespie, Kidd & Coia),[68] although the congregation was established in 1851 and there has been a documented Catholic presence in the local area since the 6th century.[102] Behind the church are its older halls,[17] previously serving as a school,[103] which was rebuilt internally after a major fire in 2004.[104] To the west of the church, hemmed in by tenements is the 1930s Vogue Cinema, which is the only surviving building of its type in the town, although it was converted to a bingo hall in the 1970s.[105][106][107]

 
Aspire offices, with retained spire of East Parish Church

Other buildings of note include the 128-foot (39-metre) spire of Rutherglen East Parish Church at Rutherglen Cross – the junction of Main Street, Farmeloan Road and Stonelaw Road – which was originally built in 1872 for a Reformed Presbyterian congregation,[108][109][17] closed in 1981 and was converted into the 'Aspire Business Centre' in 2003.[110] Its church halls became a facility used by local community organisations.[111][112] After a new eastern section of Main Street was set out with the removal of old cottages beside the church (this would later be extended through the Gallowflat area), in 1914 a cinema, 'The Pavilion' was constructed there to a design by John Fairweather; later being refurbished in 1930 as 'Green’s Picturedrome', it closed in 1959 although was not demolished until the 1980s.[105][106][107] A further small church (Rutherglen Congregational Church) was also built opposite the cinema; in the wake of the congregation moving on to new premises on Johnstone Drive (where they remain to this day),[113][114][69] its halls were occupied from the late 1930s by the Rutherglen Repertory Theatre, established by Glaswegian actress Molly Urquhart who set up in the town for no particular reason apart from the venue being available. The halls are now apartments (having been the 'Clyde Club' until a 1990s fire) and the theatre company have their premises a few blocks south on Hamilton Road, with many of their performances held at the renovated Town Hall.[115]

Behind the East Church on King Street, once the location of one of the local Stonelaw coal mines in the 19th century,[70][19] is the Rutherglen police station which was built in the mid-1950s; prior to this the local force, established as the Rutherglen Special Constabulary in 1848 (later part of Lanarkshire Constabulary, thereafter Strathclyde Police and today Police Scotland), had their premises and cells in the Tollbooth followed by the new Town Hall.[81] The police station is adjacent to the former district Court and museum[116][69] and was overlooked to the south by 'Royal Burgh House', an office block built in 1998, originally occupied by the local authority which subsequently relocated the services to East Kilbride and Cambuslang[117][118] before the building was largely destroyed by a fire in 2022.[119]

Further west between King Street and High Street, the ornate Rutherglen Evangelistic Institute was completed in 1887[120] with input from local businessmen John White (Lord Overtoun)[121] and Daniel Rodger[122] (brother of the local MP Adam Keir Rodger) and played a significant role in supporting local members in military service during World War I,[123][124] but had fallen out of use and been demolished by the 1940s, with only the later housekeeper's residence still remaining and modern apartments occupying the rest of the site;[19][125] however, the adjacent three-storey Burgh Primary School building (1901)[19][126] has been retained and was converted to a business centre.[127][128] Across the street to the north is Glenburgh Nursery Centre, a modern dedicated council childcare facility for the town centre.[129]

In 2010, Burgh Primary moved from their 1901 building to new premises a few blocks east, still in the heart of town on Victoria Street,[19][130] – this site was previously the location of the Macdonald School: built 1865, used in its later years as an annex for Rutherglen Academy,[131] then as a nursery and community centre, demolished in the 2000s.[90] The new school's mini sports pitch was once the site of the Rutherglen United Presbyterian Church from 1836 until the 1910s[68][132][133] while on the opposite side of King Street sits the current Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster premises, next to a wynd leading to Main Street which has existed for several centuries.

The Mitchell Arcade indoor shopping precinct on the south side of Main Street, built in the early 1970s[68] in place of a block of older tenements on Mitchell Street and Stonelaw Road[81] and a small cinema (the 'Grand Central')[105][106][107][69] was given a makeover in 2014 and renamed the Rutherglen Exchange Shopping Centre;[134][135] it has a rooftop car park and used to feature a daily market. A branch of Boots Chemist occupied a corner site both in the older buildings at Rutherglen Cross and when these were replaced, having a presence at the same location in the town for over a century. The land to the east on Stonelaw Road stood unused for several years until the local council housing office (later a business centre) was constructed there in the 1990s,[136] while as of 2020 the land across the road once occupied by the 'Electric Palace Cinema' (later a billiards hall) has never been built upon.[105][106][107]

A short distance to the west of the Arcade, the contemporary Greenhill Court housing complex[137][138][139] similarly replaced a street of tenements at Regent Street,[81] as well as the Royal Burgh Bakery,[140][141][17][69] home to Paterson's bakers (biscuits and oatcakes) from 1895 until 1971 when the factory became outdated and production moved to Livingston.[140][142]

 
The Picture House pub, an old establishment with modern extension

At what is now the western end of Main Street (since it was shortened by the construction of the dual carriageway bypass first phase in the early 1970s), there are two public houses on its northern side; the 'Vogue Bar' has been present for some decades and is known as a base for local Celtic F.C. supporters;[143] the 'Picture House' is a 2009 expansion of the equally venerable Linn O Dee establishment,[144] taking inspiration for its name from another disappeared cinema, the 'Rio', which was demolished in 1971 to make way for the bypass.[105][106][107] This extensive work on the road network in this part of the town also caused the destruction of the town's medical clinic (services were relocated to a new Health Centre on Stonelaw Road) and many other older residential and commercial buildings, and physically removed the war memorial and a church from the heart of the burgh (see Burnhill). Most of the pubs in Rutherglen are on the north side of the Main Street and to its west, a legacy of the Temperance (Scotland) Act 1913 when the south side of the street and other parts were declared 'dry areas' following local referendums on the issue. The Act was repealed in the 1970s, but it still drew comment in local media in 2012[145] when a textiles shop (previously the local co-operative society's headquarters) on the south side of Main Street opposite the Vogue and Picture House was to be converted into a new Wetherspoons pub ('An Ruadh-Ghleann', taking its name from the Gaelic version of Rutherglen).[40]

There is a high concentration of licensed premises in the vicinity, several with a continuous presence on the same spot since the mid-19th century[17][69] and others which have been forced to relocate but carry the traditions of earlier versions[146][147][148] including the three aforementioned hostelries on Main Street plus 'The Sportsman' on Glasgow Road, 'The Millcroft' and 'Wallace Bar' on the old section of Mill Street and the 'Cathkin Inn' two blocks further south, 'Harleys Sky Bar', 'Gormans' and 'The Burgh Bar' around Queen Street, 'Chapmans' at Rutherglen Cross and the 'Victoria Bar' a short distance further north, plus three dedicated off-sales and additional licensed grocers, and several other premises which were converted from bars to other uses in the early-21st century. As well as the clustering of pubs being explained by historic licensing arrangements, the proximity of Hampden Park and Celtic Park football stadiums also brings some occasional additional custom to the area, which to some extent also accounts for a high number of bookmakers around the Main Street.

While redevelopment saw many of central Rutherglen's older tenements swept away,[69] many of the others also fell into disrepair until work to maintain them was carried out by Rutherglen Housing Action Group, established in 1979.[149][150] This later became the Rutherglen and Cambuslang Housing Association, based at the Aspire Centre and managing hundreds of properties in the area,[151][152] although some like Greenhill Court are still managed directly by the local authority.[153] Despite new projects being undertaken regularly by the organisation in the limited space available in the area, the shortage of homes available for rent became a major issue locally going into the 21st century.[154]

 
View from the main entrance to Rutherglen railway station onto Victoria Street (2016, prior to addition of murals on left wall)

The town's current railway station opened in 1979 is the fourth such provision in the immediate area, with the first (1842–1879 and second (1879–1897)[17] - on what are now the West Coast Main Line tracks which no longer offer a stop in Rutherglen - accessed from either side of Farmeloan Road. The third version (1892–1979) was further west and accessed off Queen Street; it was soon extended in 1896 to include the Glasgow Central Railway line (which is now the Argyle Line served by the current station) which increased the total number of platforms on various lines to twelve,[69] but this gradually reduced until 1964 when the Beeching cuts resulted in the Glasgow Central extension closing, with only two at Queen Street remaining. On the opening of the Argyle Line and new station in 1979 the old station was abandoned, although its crumbling platforms are still visible and its entrance stairway and walkway is linked to its replacement.

Located on an island platform and now directly under elevated M74 motorway, the current station is connected to the Burgh streets via a covered pedestrian overbridge, the main entrance to which on Victoria Street was decorated with murals themed on the history of the town in 2018.[155] Beside this mural to the west is Reuther Hall, a community centre used by a retired ladies group among others,[156] while to the east is the building previously used as the town Employment Exchange - it has been converted into business use, as has the Youth Employment Exchange on King Street, while the local JobCentre service is now based further south at Greenhill Road.

Clincarthill

Lying immediately to the south of the Burgh area between Greenhill Road and Johnstone Drive, Clincarthill rises high over the Main Street offering fine northern views. The area has a distinctive character of its own, with plenty of remaining old sandstone tenements, villas and terraced houses from the late 19th and early 20th century,[17][69] some on the incline accessible only via footpaths. A pedestrian overbridge across the busy Mill Street dual carriageway links Clincarthill with the Bankhead neighbourhood to its west. There are several places of worship in the area: Minhaj-ul-Quran mosque (previously a Scout hall), Rutherglen Baptist Church (established 1889, built 1903) and Rutherglen United Free Church (established 1902, built 1935),[113][114] while the town's JobCentre is built on the site of another (Greenhill Church). Adjacent to this is a vacant plot which was the location of Rutherglen Swimming Pool from 1967 until the 2005 but has lain empty since.[157]

There is also a Catholic primary school (St Columbkille's) in Clincarthill,[158] built on the site of Bellevue House, a children's home run by the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul from 1912 to 1961 which was discredited in the 2018 Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry.[159][160]

Rutherglen Primary Care Centre, the town's public health facility,[161] is located on flatter land south of Clincarthill backing on to Overtoun Park (where another hill forms to the west) and built around 1999 to replace the Rutherglen Health Centre,[162] which it itself had replaced the old clinic on Main Street that was bulldozed to allow construction of the Mill Street bypass road. Rutherglen Maternity Hospital stood adjacent from 1978 to 1998),[163][162] but despite a good record of patient care and only 20 years in operation, it was closed and demolished to alleviate financial burdens in the local health board and concentrate a wider range of services over fewer sites.[164][165] With the hospital constructed on reclaimed park land that had been an excavated part of a mine before being filled in,[69] there was also concern that chromium contamination was present in the ground.[162] The immediate area also features a number of old buildings, including a square block of red sandstone tenements[81] and some grand villas.

Farme Cross

 
Approaching Farme Cross from the south (A749 Farmeloan Road)

Farme Cross is one of the boundary areas of Rutherglen and is surrounded to the north by the River Clyde with Glasgow's Dalmarnock district on the opposite bank, the two sides being linked by iron road and rail bridges dating from the 1890s,[166][167] while it is separated from the old Burgh area uphill to the south by 19th century railway tracks and a 21st century motorway. It originated as the Farme estate crown property which was passed through noble families for centuries. Centred around the Farme Castle,[66][13][168] it became known for coal mining from the early 19th century[169][10][20][170][171][172] under the control of estate owner James Farie, with other industries soon following. The roads through the territory (A724 and A749) meet to join two busy routes between eastern Glasgow to the north, Rutherglen to the south and Cambuslang (via Eastfield) to the east. It was served by Glasgow's tram network providing transport for the workforces, a role still performed by buses.[173]

There are several historic buildings and pieces of street art here,[174] including a set of four carved standing stones ('Boundary Stones' by Richard Brown, 2001) installed in an area of open ground to commemorate the history of the Royal Burgh and its original boundary stones,[175] some of which (dating back to the 18th and 19th century) are themselves still in situ, mostly at Farme Cross and in the southern parts of the town.[19] Another monument ('Slipsteam' by Joseph Ingleby, 2001)[176] alongside the river near Dalmarnock Bridge involves metallic cogged mouldings (featuring designs by local schoolchildren) placed on brick walls and emerging in loops from the ground, and recalls local industry on the Clyde and the contours of the river itself.[177]

 
Farme Colliery's Newcomen atmospheric engine of the early 19th century on display at Summerlee Museum

Businesses at Farme Cross were once many and varied,[17][69] with the energy to operate them supplied by a large power station just over the river,[178][179][180][181] where the nearby Dalmarnock, Bridgeton and Parkhead districts also developed a similar strong industrial profile[182][183] The industries included:[174]

  • the Farme Castle Colliery with two pits, associated row cottages and branch railway – its Newcomen atmospheric engine is on display at Summerlee Industrial Heritage Museum (Coatbridge)[169][172][170][171][184]
  • the Caledonian Pottery[185] which was latterly operated by Hartley's Jams[186] and was later the site of a small steel works; lying in the path of the new motorway construction, it was first subject to an excavation which uncovered the foundations of the original buildings for examination[187][188][189]
  • Scotia Bolt Works[190]
  • three dyeing works (Clyde Bank Works; David Millar & Co / Clydesdale Dye Works; Eastfield Dye Works which later became the Eastfield Chair Works)[191][192]
  • three tube/pipe works (Unicode; James Menzies and Co / Phoenix Tubeworks; and the adjacent James Eadie and Sons / Clydesdale Tube Works, both acquired by Stewarts & Lloyds)[193][194][195]
  • three wire rope works (John Todd & Son / Rutherglen Ropes; John Wilson & Son / Eastfield Ropery; and Clyde Patent Rope Works / Allan, Whyte and Co, acquired by British Ropes)[196][197] the latter of which had a distinctive sandstone office with turret situated on the cross, demolished in the 1990s after falling into disrepair[174][198]
  • two paper mills (Eastfield Paper Mill near the river and the 'Old Farme' steading which has survived to the 21st century, and the larger Clyde Paper Mill off Cambuslang Road),[199][200][201]
  • Adam's Brickworks[202]
  • the Monogram bedding factory[203] (previously used by the EKCO radio equipment company)[204]

By the 1970s, the vast majority of these industries had either severely contracted or in most cases closed altogether,[174] causing severe employment difficulties for the area.[205] The low-lying area was severely impacted by a flood in 1994,[203] as had occurred previously in 1903,[206] resulting in improved prevention measures being introduced.[207] One of the firms which endured into the 21st century, Sanmex Chemicals,[208] eventually left town in the 2010s after a merger with an Ayrshire-based rival.[209] Another, the bottling and distribution arm of The Speyside distillery, had closed a few years earlier.[210] Both sites were soon advertised as new investment opportunities.[211][212]

A Tesco superstore built in the early 21st century on some of the vacant former industrial land between the river and railway lines off Dalmarnock Road (specifically the Phoenix Tubeworks, which had been converted into a trading estate) was later extended to feature two fast-food restaurants.[213] A small light industry development borders the superstore,[214] and this mirrors the changes throughout Farme Cross, with the bustling but dirty factories of the past gradually being replaced by small workshops, business units and modern warehouses and depots, though in some cases with an intervening period of several years as derelict buildings, then cleared brownfield land awaiting development. Regeneration projects (controlled by the Clyde Gateway organisation)[215] accelerated following the completion of the M74 Extension to the Glasgow Region Motorway network in 2011, with Junction 2 directly serving Farme Cross. This led to more ambitious plans being adopted for the area (as well as at Shawfield),[216][217] including the Rutherglen Links environmentally friendly business park,[173][218][219] the main building for which occupies a prominent location off Farmeloan Road,[203][220][221] with further office pavilions further east towards the motorway junction.[222]

Various further commercial proposals have been put forward for the eastern part of this area,[223][224][225] with disused depots levelled and a driving range under construction between 2020 and 2022.[226][227]

Despite its identity being dominated by heavy industry, there has always been a residential aspect to Farme Cross.[69] The oldest surviving examples are the Terrace cottages,[174][228][229] a cluster of four small streets built for local workers by the Glasgow Working Men's Investment and Building Society in the 1880s, the only co-operative housing of this kind in the town and built at angles off the main road, designated as a conservation area in the 1980s.[174] Unusually, the two-storey buildings feature main doors at the front and the back to access flats on different levels - a similar design can be seen in the Colony houses at several locations in Edinburgh.[230][231] Traditional tenements which once stood right on the cross in front of the terraces[232] and opposite on Farmeloan Road were demolished in the mid-20th century,[174] but some slightly newer sandstone tenements remain on the north side of Cambuslang Road and Dalmarnock Road, including a Category C-listed corner block[198] which houses the area's sole public house at ground level (known as 'Tennents' for decades, with a small number of resident clientele, the business suffered as the passing trade from factory workers dwindled, changing hands several times in the early 21st century).[233][234] The area facing this block, where British Ropes once had their turreted offices, was developed as the Lloyd Court apartment complex in the 2000s, the design of which resembles older styles. A small inter-war development of cottage flats around Montraive Street and grey concrete tenements at Barnflat Street and Baronald Street received new neighbours in the early 2000s with the building of around 100 houses at Farme Castle Court (this is actually slightly east of the actual location of Farme Castle).

Rutherglen's Kingdom Hall (established in 1958, rebuilt in 2012) is located in Farme Cross on Baronald Street.[235] Across the street is a playground and a small local community hall. The Farme Bowling Club on Cambuslang Road, which was linked to the nearby Clyde Paper Mill, closed its doors in 2006.[236]

The Cuningar Loop is an area of land south of the River Clyde near Farme Cross. An isolated meander of the river which was once a Glasgow sewage treatment facility,[17] then infilled with rubble from the city's slum clearance programme before being abandoned to become overgrown, it has now been transformed into a woodland park[237] connecting across the Clyde to the City of Glasgow (Dalmarnock) and the Commonwealth Games village development via a new footbridge.

Shawfield

 
Shawfield Smartbridge leading to Dalmarnock

The Shawfield district, the mostly northerly in the town and once a country estate[238] before being converted into a chemicals facility by the White family, is still industrial in nature, but much of it abandoned in the early 21st century due to the collapse of heavy industry generally, and contamination from the Whites Chemical Works in particular.[23][239][240][241][242][243] The Clyde Gateway projects aim to reinvest in this area and create new business parks and make the River Clyde accessible in Rutherglen again[244][245][246] – the town's old port, once home of Thomas Seath shipbuilders which specialised in Clutha ferries and paddle steamers, is located here.[81][247][248] Currently Shawfield Stadium (the former home of Clyde F.C.) hosts greyhound racing; although not immediately noticeable, the building has Art Deco features.

Rutherglen Bridge at Shawfield is the oldest crossing between Rutherglen and Glasgow – specifically the Bridgeton district of the city which was named after the bridge when its construction accelerated industrial growth and trade in the previously agricultural area.[17] Far more recently, a 'smartbridge' for pedestrians and cyclists was built to encourage links between the regenerating Shawfield area and Dalmarnock railway station, also in connection with the 2014 Commonwealth Games, several of the events for which were held nearby at the Emirates Arena.[249][250]

Wardlawhill, Gallowflat and Stonelaw

Wardlawhill

 
Wardlawhill Church / Hindu Temple

Lying across Stonelaw Road east of Clincarthill, the Wardlawhill area includes some older large houses and tenement buildings;[81] a BBC Scotland report found that Wardlaw Drive, the hill's northern slope lined with tenements, ranked seventh among the steepest streets in Scotland.[251] Adjacent to this street, placed at the top of stairs off Hamilton Road and partly built into the hill itself, is the Sri Sundara Ganapathy Hindu Temple (built 1882), previously Wardlawhill Parish Church – the congregation of which merged with the West Parish at Burnhill in 2007,[252][253] the building being sold in 2010.[254] The church halls across the road are still used by local youth groups such as the Boys Brigade.[252][255]

To the south, on the other side of the hill is the Rutherglen Academy building on Melrose Avenue (built 1886)[17] which later became Stonelaw High School and was converted into apartments in 2001.[256][257][19][258][259] Opposite the Academy is a small early 20th century apexed building, originally St Stephen's Episcopal Church, nowadays used as a Masonic Lodge since 1971, after the group's previous premises on Cathcart Street[17] (dating from 1875, latterly also used by the neighbouring Toryglen chapter) were demolished for the Mill Street bypass project.[260][261] The house system of Stonelaw High School used to be named from avenues in the area (Jedburgh, Dryburgh, Melrose and Kelso, taken from the Scottish Borders); however, at the start of the 2018 school year this theme changed to Scottish Islands: Arran, Bute and Skye.

Gallowflat

 
Tumulus at Gallowflat

The Gallowflat area, known locally as East Main Street, features some 1920s cottage flats[262] and tenement buildings, dating from the construction of an extension to the Main Street – although it may appear natural for the route to continue eastwards as it does today, historically Main Street (and King Street) terminated at Farmeloan Road[17] until the project linking it to Cambuslang Road and removing traffic from Hamilton Road through Wardlawhill.[69] A prominent landmark is a tree-covered ancient burial mound[19][263][264] which had been used at one time as an icehouse in the grounds of the grand Gallowflat House (built 1760s, demolished 1910s)[265][266] which was located at the eastern end of today's Reid Street.

Gallowflat Public School (built 1908), later the annexe of Stonelaw High School from 1970 to 1998,[258][259] was also in the area on Hamilton Road[267][268][269] with most of its campus now largely replaced by housing and an elderly persons' care home[270][271][272] aside from one derelict red sandstone block on McCallum Avenue.[273][274] During the 28 years when the Academy and Gallowflat buildings were part of the same school, hundreds of teenage pupils would walk the 400 yards (350 metres) between them several times each day via the very steep Wardlaw Drive and other quiet residential streets.[258]

Stonelaw

 
Stonelaw Parish Church

Stonelaw is the area south of Gallowflat and Wardlawhill and east of the Primary Care Centre, features of which include Rutherglen Bowling Club[275] – having migrated south from its first (1868) site on Greenhill Road in 1902,[276] the organisation then sold the adjoining land for construction of a church in 1907. The imposing red sandstone building which resulted is now known as Stonelaw Parish Church, though it too was built for a congregation relocating from the old part of town,[17] in this case from their premises on King Street built in the 1830s.[133] It was completed in 1912 – a refurbishment over a century later revealed a time capsule dating from the time of construction.[277][278] A further modernisation in 2019 included modification of the main hall's pews, designed to accommodate far more parishioners than recent attendances, into a more flexible system.[279]

There are two other bowling clubs in the vicinity, also dating from the 1900/10s when that part of the town was being developed: Overtoun Park Bowling Club to the west[280][281] and Templeton Bowling Club to the east[282] – originally part of the recreation grounds for the James Templeton & Co textile company which had its main premises on Glasgow Green, the club long outlasted its parent firm and the rest of the grounds are nowadays Stonelaw High School's playing fields.

A mansion house, Eastpark, stood next door to Templeton's (accessed from Buchanan Drive); it was converted to use a nursing home and has continued as part of the Abbeyfield care group,[283][284] although the expansion and modernisation of the business led to the demolition of the old house, with only its conical sandstone gateposts remaining. Also at Buchanan Drive and on the east side of Stonelaw Road approaching Burnside is Woodburn Park, a valley-like wooded green space, previously a quarry.[17] It takes its name from the adjacent Woodburn House which was home to the horticulture department of Langside College for over 60 years before being sold, demolished and replaced by houses and apartments in the 2010s.[285][286]

This neighbourhood has many features of the garden suburb, and is perhaps the most up-market place in Rutherglen, being home to many expensive properties. A development of distinctive quartered villas on Rosslyn Avenue / Dryburgh Avenue date from the 1910s, a few years after the houses at Wardlawhill and Clincarthill were completed as Rutherglen began to expand southwards.[17][69]

The new (1998) site of Stonelaw High School[258][259] and its sports facilities off Calderwood Road[287][288] are on the peripheries of the Stonelaw and Burnside areas and also close to Eastfield. Another local school, Calderwood Primary on Buchanan Drive,[289] is sometimes labelled as being located in the Burnside neighbourhood,[290] although its catchment areas are mainly Stonelaw, Eastfield, Gallowflat and the residential streets around Richmond Drive (mostly bungalows built in the 1930s) that, like the schools, do not fall under any single recognised neighbourhood.[291]

Eastfield

 
View north down Eskdale Drive towards Clydebridge Steelworks

A former mining community and country estate[292][293][20] located off the main road between Rutherglen and Cambuslang,[17] the area was developed for housing in the 1950s.[69] Trinity High School (built in 1970, re-built in 2010)[294] and its sports facilities including public swimming pool[295] are located in Eastfield, which also has two public houses, both off Dukes Road.[296]

To the north of Eastfield and east of Farme Cross is the Clydebridge Steelworks, nowadays operating to a far lower capacity and with a fraction of workers than at its peak points in the mid-20th century when over 3,000 were employed there.[21] Located within a meander of the River Clyde, it was largely inaccessible to civilians until 2011 when the M74 motorway extension was constructed through the middle of its extensive territory. In 2020, the corporation which owned the works announced development plans for the grounds, beginning with a hotel.[297]

Burnhill, Newfield and Bankhead

Burnhill

Burnhill, in the north-west of Rutherglen, directly borders the Glasgow district of Toryglen to its west (along with woodland at the Malls Mire)[298][299][300] and the M74 motorway and West Coast Main Line railway tracks to the north, while its eastern side is close to the Main Street but separated from it by a busy dual carriageway bypass road (part of the A730), built in the early 1970s.

 
View of war memorial facing east

Historically a small network of streets leading west from the Main Street area, becoming increasingly rural in character (Glasgow then expanded in several stages to occupy the countryside between its southern districts and Rutherglen)[301][70][17][69] the construction of the bypass caused the destruction of the area's older buildings at Burnhill Street, Chapel Street, Mill Street and Glasgow Road[81] and also physically isolated one of the town's main landmarks: the Munro United Free Church, whose Category B listed building dates from 1850. Established in 1836, its congregation merged with that of the original West Parish Church when their building nearby (located on Chapel Street, explaining its name) was demolished to build the road and new housing, and in turn this later became West & Wardlawhill Parish following union with another congregation at the other end of town, both having experienced dwindling membership.[68][253][252][302][303] Rutherglen's war memorial – erected 1924, designed by Paul Gray with a bronze figure by sculptor George Henry Paulin[68][304] which originally had a prominent location at the western end of the Main Street – was also left on the 'other' side of the road.[81][305] The two parts of town are now connected via pedestrian underpasses which are prone to antisocial behaviour[306][307][308][309] and occasional flooding.

 
Part of Burnhill's 'White Flats' housing scheme, viewed from Chapel Street (2009 image, since refurbished externally)

Deemed to be an area generally suffering from high levels of deprivation and associated issues,[253][58][310] the 'Burnhill Action Group' based at the West Church is a community-led volunteer group working to improve the locality's environmental conditions, recreational opportunities and facilities.[311][312] The neighbourhood is recognisable for its 'White Flats' housing scheme (two dozen separate 16-apartment blocks, cube-shaped but with sloping roofs, dating from the early 1970s and refurbished externally in 2019 at a cost of £1.6 million)[313] that replaced a development of prefabs.[69] It has a standalone pub at its centre, briefly known as the 'Burnhill Bar' but for most of its history named 'The Fairways'[314][315] which took its name from the fact that the nearby land was once the open fields of Toryglen Golf Club (as well as Blackfaulds Farm) prior to residential use;[316][317] it replaced a far older hostelry in the area, 'Ye Olde Inn', which had been demolished.[318] There is also older (c. 1930) housing off Toryglen Road and Westmuir Place, and grass areas also feature heavily, especially around the mound of Burnhill itself where the Jenny Burn, flowing from Cathkin Braes via Spittal and Bankhead, passes underneath making its way towards the Clyde.

Burnhill is home to the local branch of the South Lanarkshire Council youth club Universal Connections, and also the Celsius Stadium, home to Rutherglen Glencairn F.C.;[19] completed in 2008, it replaced the club's 110-year-old Southcroft Park on the other side of the railway at Shawfield which had been subject to a compulsory purchase order for construction of the M74,[81] although there was sufficient space to build a new social club for the Glens beside the motorway at the original location.[319] The earlier Burnhill Sports Centre, next to the new football ground, was closed and demolished in 2017,[320][321] although the adjacent municipal football pitches remain in use.

Newfield

Lying directly south of Burnhill, Newfield is a neighbourhood also adjoining Bankhead (Rutherglen) and Toryglen and King's Park (Glasgow) – the boundary with the city is difficult to observe from ground level as it involves houses backing onto one another right up to the border in most places; however, as it is a major administrative divide it is clearly marked on maps, with the street names also changing, e.g. Newfield Place becomes Ardnahoe Avenue. There are limited amenities including a pub, and small grassed areas are dotted around between the housing.

The burn flowing through the area provided power to industries in times past,[69] mostly on Cathcart Road, including the Avonbank, Westburn and Burnside weaving factories,[81] the Cathkin Laundry (1894 to 2013),[322] previously the site of a curling pond opened in 1881[323][17] (probably linked to the Carmunnock & Rutherglen Curling Club which still competes today, though not locally based)[324] plant nurseries including Glenroyal – now a small social housing development[325][326] – and the Cathkin Bakery, the production facility for Nairn's (oatcakes and biscuits) until 1978.[327][142] There was a Newfield House and sawmill, although the largest mansion in the area in times past was Muirbank House[328][17] – this is long gone, but a pair of cottages from the same era survive almost hidden in woodland amidst far newer housing.

Falling almost entirely within the Newfield and Bankhead areas is a small modern (c. 2003) residential estate of Westhouse, which keeps the green theme from Glasgow and Rutherglen with gardens throughout. It was built in a former quarry, recalled in the names of the nearby street Quarryknowe and in the 'Old Quarry Bar' on Cathcart Road, although the pub (in one of the few tenement buildings to survive the redevelopment of this sector of the town) is located further east towards Main Street – favoured by Rangers F.C. supporters and themed on the club,[329] it is also close to the local Orange Hall, the 20 District Club.[330] Nearby (at today's Mill Court flats) was Farie Street School[69][331] (built 1875), latterly re-titled as St Columbkille's RC Primary from 1957 until its new buildings opened in Clincarthill in 1969; The Farie Street building was demolished in 1971.[81]

Bankhead and Quigleys

Bankhead is a neighbourhood located south-west of central Rutherglen, with its housing visibly of various ages owing to the burgh's expansion in stages during the 20th century.[17][69] South of Newfield and directly bordering the Glasgow district of King's Park, much of its street grid shares the same design of 1930s grey pebble-dashed cottage flats.[19][332] In addition to an eponymous primary school on Bankhead Road,[333] there is a small row of shops on Wallace Street beside the Mill Street overbridge leading to Clincarthill, and more on Curtis Avenue approaching Toryglen including the 100 Acres pub – an adaptation of 'Hundred Acre Hill', the historic name of the high ground overlooking the area to the west.[332] A further selection of convenience stores is located on Castlemilk Road in the south-west of the area, adjoining King's Park and some of its amenities including its main church. These are known locally as the 'State shops' after the State Cinema, later a bingo venue, which was sited there near to King's Park Avenue, a prominent local landmark from the 1930s until its demolition in the early 21st century.[106][334][332][335] There was previously also a small public library which closed in 2010 (although named King's Park Library, it was on the east side of the road and thus administered by South Lanarkshire Council from 1996).[336]

One surviving feature of Bankhead's rural past is the premises of Mitchell's Farm (earlier known as Crosshill Farm)[81] dating back to at least the mid-19th century,[70][17][69] although its fields on a steep slope were converted into the Cityford housing development around 1990. The Bankhead coal mine was a short distance south-west of the farm.[70][20] The southern end of Bankhead Road terminates at another cluster of small shops and Croftfoot railway station, with a pedestrian footpath leading to the Croftfoot neighbourhood of Glasgow, and the Spittal neighbourhood of Rutherglen. There is another footpath further west at Castlemilk Road, but vehicles cannot use these routes, instead having to travel around Spittal, a detour of 1+12 miles (2.5 kilometres) from Bankhead Road at Croftfoot Station, or via Menock Road, a detour of 1 mile (1.5 kilometres) from Castlemilk Road at King's Park Avenue, to reach the same point on the other side of the tracks.

Once a private estate based around Bankhead House (owned by several generations of the Quigley family, many of whom were doctors),[81] the land between Bankhead and Mill Street at Overtoun Park became a small housing estate in the early 1970s.[337] The town's once-important corn mill from which the road name derives was located a short way east of Bankhead House,[70][81] close to the Quigleys Community Hall of today – a fact commemorated nearby in a plaque placed on the old stone wall of the estate, also noting the completion of the upgrading of that section of the road in 1993 (Average Speed traffic cameras were installed there in 2018 to combat dangerous driving).[338] The mill was powered from the Cityford Burn that flows through most of this side of Rutherglen and is visible here for some distance,[69][339] running north then west to a small pond at Bankhead Road, known as the 'Paddy' (paddling pool),[340] although this is somewhat overgrown and distended and is no longer popular with locals for this recreational purpose as it once was.[341] Flooding in the area in 2004 resulted in extensive remediation works to prevent a repeat.[207]

The King's Park Hotel is located to the south of the neighbourhood off Mill Street, while Rutherglen Cemetery's main vehicle entrance, lodge house and Cross of Sacrifice is a short distance further south past the junction of King's Park Avenue (B762), a 1920s wide boulevard which runs westwards parallel to the railway tracks for 1.6 miles (2.6 km) into the heart of southern Glasgow at Mount Florida / Battlefield.[332]

Overtoun Park

Rutherglen's main public park is close to the geographical centre of the town.[69] Laid out on land donated to the Burgh in 1904 by Lord Overtoun,[342] (whose White's Chemical Works also ruined much of the area by reckless dumping of their toxic byproduct).[22] it was once the location of the annual Landemer Day fair and parade, now confined to the Main Street.[343]

The Category B listed fountain in the park was originally located on Main Street: it had been erected in 1897 to mark Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee but was moved to the park in 1911.[81][344] The bandstand (1914, also Category B listed)[345] was sited at the west side of the park[81][346] until it was removed to be used at the 1988 Glasgow Garden Festival. It was re-sited on a grass area in the centre of the park, but later fell into some disrepair due to a lack of maintenance.[347][346]

The park's children's play area was extended in the 2010s,[348][349] and the park's BMX tracks have been maintained,[350][351] but football pitches were built upon and the tennis courts were turfed over; in 2020, proposals were made by Rutherglen Tennis Club to install covered courts at the same location,[352][353] which would involve a portion of the land being transferred to a private company.[354]

Environmental charity Grow73 have their base beside Overtoun Park Bowling Club,[349][355] and a Friends of Overtoun Park is also active.[356]

Burnside, High Crosshill and High Burnside

 
Looking north on Stonelaw Road at Burnside railway station's east entrance

Burnside is a village within the Rutherglen boundaries which expanded into a leafy commuter suburb.[69][357] It is surrounded by several mid-20th century housing estates, in some cases modernised[358] which are within Rutherglen but not considered to be parts of Burnside as they were built to provide homes for people from other areas of the town, and from Cambuslang, who needed to be re-housed. In contrast to affluent Burnside, parts of these estates are considered to be troubled by poverty and related issues, as asserted by several versions of the Scottish index of multiple deprivation.[58][359]

Centred mostly around Stonelaw Road, Burnside has its own set of shops, church,[360] railway station and primary school. It is also home to a supermarket (once the site of a cinema)[106][361][105] and hotel with a popular bar (East Kilbride Road). There is also a bowling green, and two sets of tennis courts (previously separate clubs, they are both now operated by Rutherglen LTC).[362][363] Much of the traditional residential property was built in the early 1900s from blond and red sandstone.

The local park, Stonelaw Woods,[364][365][81] lies at the northern boundary of the village and takes its name from the demolished Stonelaw Tower (a castellated converted 18th-century coal mine winding engine house)[366] that once stood to the east of Stonelaw Road near Greystone Avenue.[367][368][369][19]

High Crosshill is a quiet residential area of wide avenues built on a steep hill between Burnside and Overtoun Park,[370] which has some views on Broomieknowe Road and includes Rutherglen Cemetery. High Burnside is also a residential area, consisting of high ground to the south of Burnside leading to Cathkin Braes with streets of older houses built in several eras. Some of its properties, particularly some of the oldest off Burnside Road, are very large.[69]

Spittal

 
View west from Mill Street towards Spittal with original housing and more recent elderly daycare centre

Spittal is a post-World War II community which is almost an exclave of the town, bordering the Glasgow areas of Croftfoot to the west and Castlemilk to the south with an area of open ground to the east; it is close to the King's Park Avenue / Bankhead neighbourhood within Rutherglen to the north, but disconnected from it by the Cathcart Circle Lines railway tracks. Built on a mound used as farmland (the farmhouse was located at the junction of Carrick Road and Bute Terrace), the estate was constructed in an oval pattern of streets, with its primary school built at the highest point in the centre (completed in 1955).[69] A development of prefabs on the flatter land to the west were replaced by angular blocks of flats in the early 1970s (as also occurred at other locations including Burnhill, Bankhead and at North Halfway in nearby Cambuslang).[69] A new community centre was built in the early 21st century, close to the older small wooden church. There are also local amenities such as shops – including Post Office – on Kyle Square and a pub-restaurant, 'The Croft',[371] situated exactly on the local authority boundary at Croftfoot.[372]

Two small burns run on either side of Spittal's housing, bordered by grassed areas – one burn runs from Castlemilk Park and the other from further east via High Burnside, both originating on the north slopes of the Cathkin Braes; these waters converge north of Spittal, flowing north to Bankhead and on to Shawfield and the Clyde where it is marked as the Cityford Burn, but colloquially known as the Jenny Burn.[373][339]

In 2016, the area's recreation fields bordering Croftfoot, which had been bequeathed to the community 'in perpetuity' in the 1930s but had been allowed to fall into disrepair over a number of years, were subject to planning applications for new housing.[374] The Croftfield Park development was completed about three years later.[375] A replacement modern AstroTurf football field was added adjacent to the primary school in 2019, although this was several years after the original fields were abandoned and six years after the school itself was replaced (built on its original red blaes pitch),[376] as the old buildings became the temporary home for Bankhead, St Mark's and Burnside Primaries while their facilities were also renewed.[333][377] Just south of Spittal is Kirkriggs School, a Special educational needs facility which is under Glasgow City Council control.[378]

Blairbeth and Fernhill

Blairbeth

 
Drumilaw Road, the main vehicular access to Blairbeth from the north

Blairbeth is a small 1950s local authority housing scheme of tenements and modest terraced houses, generally still with the same appearance as at the time of its construction.[358] It was built around a former rural estate (the house, sited at the top of Kirkriggs Avenue, is long since demolished, as was the entrance lodge house to its north).[69] The neighbourhood has some limited local amenities[379] and small parks, as well as a school, St Mark's RC Primary – its associated church of the same name is located to the south of the housing at the edge of the neighbouring Fernhill area,[380] which has no direct link to Blairbeth for vehicles. The designated non-denominational school for the locality is Spittal Primary, although some children attend Burnside Primary which is equally close.

Also bordering High Crosshill and High Burnside, many of the hillside streets have views over Rutherglen and Glasgow. A large flat grass field to the west of the neighbourhood[69] was popular in the summer months for informal sports , buts its size was greatly reduced by a junction re-alignment in 2016, connecting Croftfoot Road and Blairbeth Road - previously a staggered junction via Fernhill Road with single lanes causing considerable congestion at peak times - into a single crossroads with filter lanes, as part of the Cathkin Relief Road works. To the west of this road is the boundary with the city of Glasgow, denoted visually by the twin castellated stone gates of 'Buchanan Lodge', today a nursing home but historically the north-east entrance to the driveway leading to Castlemilk House;[381][382][69] the mansion no longer exists, although most of the route through its lands (most of which are occupied by the various neighbourhoods of Castlemilk housing estate) is still present as tree-lined footpaths, managed under an award-winning conservation project.[383][384][385] A section of the estate's old boundary wall is also visible near Blairbeth, although sections are crumbling and dangerous.

Fernhill

 
View from upper Fernhill over local houses and refurbished apartment blocks with eastern Glasgow beyond

Fernhill is a housing estate originally built in the 1960s, which underwent a great deal of regeneration in the 2010s.[386][358] It is home to an all-girls private school, the main building for which is the historic Fernhill mansion house. The area is bordered by the Castlemilk housing estate in Glasgow to the west,[387] as well as by Blairbeth, High Burnside and Cathkin within Rutherglen. Fernhill Road bisects the estate and is where the rebuilt local amenities (convenience stores, community centre children's play area, 5-a-side football fields)[388] are found. The estate also has two churches at either end[380][389] and a decorative brick entrance wall off Burnside Road.

The Cathkin Relief Road was completed in 2017 at a cost of £21 million to extend Mill Street from Spittal through the informal parkland between Fernhill and Blairbeth/High Burnside to connect with the existing Cathkin Bypass (A730) and alleviate traffic from other local routes including Fernhill Road.[390][391][392] In 2019, Fernbrae Meadows was opened to the south of Fernhill; formerly Blairbeth Golf Course, the area is a 20 hectares of semi-natural, managed greenspace.[393]

Springhall and Cathkin

Springhall

 
The A749 East Kilbride Road looking north, with Springhall buildings on left

Springhall is a self-contained 1960s local authority housing estate,[394][358] mostly consisting of a compact network of maisonettes, and featuring a community centre and library dating back to the time of the scheme's construction[395] but extensively upgraded between 2019 and 2021.[396][397][398] Below the original library is a small set of local shops.[394] There is also a catholic church[399] and two local schools, St Anthony's RC Primary and Loch Primary,[400] both rebuilt in the 2000s in a mirror image of one another and now share a playground.[401][402] The schools' playing fields are located on the site of a former loch (Boultrie Loch) which was popular for curling and skating in winter.[81][403] A stone sign welcomes visitors into the estate from the entrance off the A749 East Kilbride Road opposite a pub, 'The Braes' (previously the Cathkin Hotel). A short way further south on the Springhall side of the A749 is the unusual white castellated villa 'Elpalet', designed by the housebuilder John McDonald (whose companies constructed thousands of new homes in Glasgow in the 1930s, including hundreds in Burnside),[404][405] to be his own residence. The property is now divided into apartments.[406][407]

A 13-storey tower block (the only building of such height in Rutherglen, although there are 10 towers of the same design in Cambuslang)[408] looms over the centre of the neighbourhood;[409][410] it was built on the site of the Springhall mansion house that once occupied the land,[69] which came to public attention in the 1910s, first when suffragette Frances Gordon was imprisoned for attempting to set the house on fire,[411] then soon afterwards when a contingent of Belgian refugees of World War I were invited to stay there;[412] it was demolished in the 1940s. Adjacent to the tower is a sports pitch in a wire mesh pen.

Cathkin High School, the secondary school affiliated to Loch Primary, is located nearby at the western side of the neighbouring estate of Whitlawburn – administratively this is part of Cambuslang, although shares some amenities with Springhall, with the schemes connected under the main road by a pedestrian underpass. A standalone pre-school facility, Springlaw ELC (intentionally named after both communities as a gesture of unity) was built on a piece of vacant land off Cruachan Road, opening in 2021.[413]

Cathkin

 
Isolated housing development south of Cathkin, accessed via country road to Carmunnock

Cathkin is the southernmost and highest part of Rutherglen, largely comprising a post-World War II estate which underwent a good deal of regeneration of its housing stock in the early 21st century.[414][386][415][358] The estate borders the City of Glasgow (the Cathkin Braes Country Park) and the lands of Carmunnock, the civil parish in which it was historically located along with Fernhill and Spittal)[416] and offers views over the Greater Glasgow valley. There is a small wooded area, Cathkin Woods, near the neighbourhood's eastern boundary with Whitlawburn. Limited amenities include a primary school with community facilities,[417] and a church (located a short way into Fernhill and designed to serve both communities, as was the school) while local shops off Cathkin Bypass / Cuillins Road feature a supermarket, newsagent and betting shop. Like many parts of the town, a new stone and metal entrance sign welcomes visitors entering Cathkin from the bypass road.

The grounds of the old Cathkin House mansion[70][69] (built 1799, and a children's home in the later 20th century)[418][419][420] now converted to apartments, offers views over Rutherglen and Glasgow beyond. The mansion is surrounded by small separate residential developments, primarily of large villas, which also enclose around the buildings of Mid Farm, one of the oldest surviving properties in the area. The ancient Burnside Road at that location no longer has a connection for vehicles with Cathkin Road (the B759) running between the A749 dual carriageway and Carmunnock village via Cathkin Braes Park and Cathkin Braes Golf Club).

Education

Loch Primary and Cathkin Primary are feeder schools for Cathkin High School (built in 1970, rebuilt in 2008),[421][422] which is located at Whitlawburn just outside the Rutherglen boundaries and is primarily the secondary school for Cambuslang. Conversely, two schools located in Cambuslang (James Aiton and Park View) are feeders for Stonelaw High in Rutherglen, along with Bankhead, Burgh, Burnside, Calderwood and Spittal Primaries within the burgh.

Trinity High (to which St Anthony's, St Mark's and St Columbkille's Primaries are affiliated) is the only Catholic secondary school for both towns, as is the case for Rutherglen High School, the local Additional Support Needs facility which shares a campus with Cathkin High.[423][424]

All council-run schools in the South Lanarkshire area were rebuilt between the late 1990s and 2010s.[425]

List of schools

2022–23 pupil roll in parentheses.[423]

Non-denominational

  • Bankhead Primary School, Bankhead Road, Rutherglen, G73 2BQ (310)
  • Burgh Primary School, 41 King Street, Rutherglen, G73 1JY (180)
  • Burnside Primary School, Glenlui Avenue, Burnside, Rutherglen, G73 4JE (378)
  • Calderwood Primary School, Buchanan Drive, Rutherglen G73 3PQ (435)
  • Cathkin Primary School, Burnside Road, Rutherglen, G73 4AA (194)
  • Loch Primary School, Lochaber Drive, Springhall, Rutherglen, G73 5HX (203)
  • Spittal Primary School, Lochlea Road, Spittal, Rutherglen G73 4QJ (151)
  • Stonelaw High School, 140 Calderwood Road, Rutherglen, G73 3BP (1248)

Roman Catholic

  • St Anthony's Primary School, Lochaber Drive, Springhall, Rutherglen, G73 5HX (161)
  • St Columbkille's Primary School, Clincarthill Road, Rutherglen, G73 2LG (279)
  • St Mark's Primary School, Kirkriggs Avenue, Blairbeth, Rutherglen, G73 4LY (158)
  • Trinity High School, Glenside Drive, Eastfield, Rutherglen, G73 3LW (1186)

Private schools

  • Fernhill School, Fernbrae Avenue, Fernhill, Rutherglen, Glasgow, G73 4SG (230 – 5 to 18)

Sport

Football

Rutherglen Glencairn compete in the West of Scotland League First Division. The club was formed in 1896 and has won the famous Scottish Junior Cup on four occasions (1901–02, 1918–19, 1926–27, 1938–39).[426] Glencairn moved into a brand new stadium (New Southcroft Park, currently sponsored by Celsius Cooling and renamed as The Celsius Stadium) situated in the Burnhill area of Rutherglen in 2009[319] following the demolition of the old ground (Southcroft Park), where they had played for over 100 years. The Glencairn Venue building on Glasgow Road, which is on part of the old site[319] – the rest now being under the M74 motorway – is owned by the football club, although the company operating in the building is a separate entity from the club. In 2008, Rutherglen Glencairn won the Central District League First Division with a record points total. The 2009–10 season saw Glencairn record back to back titles when they won the West Region Super League Division One at the first attempt.

Clyde Football Club used to play in the area before moving to the former new town of Cumbernauld. The immediate area could be considered the cradle of Scottish football, with Hampden Park, the national stadium and home to Scotland's oldest football club Queen's Park being close by to the west as well as Cathkin Park, the home of the defunct Third Lanark and not far to the north, Celtic Park, the home of Celtic – all of which (apart from Clyde's former ground) are located in the City of Glasgow.

In addition to men's amateur teams (such as Rutherglen AFC of the Scottish Amateur Football League), the town also had a women's football club, Rutherglen Ladies, which was formed in 1921 and played at a high level throughout the 20s and 30s.[427] More recently Rutherglen Girls FC was founded in 2012 and features three age group teams plus a senior women's team competing in the SWFL, Central/South East Division.

Notable people

Several notable persons born between 1978 and 1998 are 'from' Rutherglen as per their birth certificate, but have only a tenuous link to the town due to being delivered at Rutherglen Maternity Hospital which operated between these years;[163][162][164][165] many children born here would have grown up in Glasgow, East Kilbride or elsewhere.[428]

Artists, actors and media personalities

Politicians

Sportspersons

Others

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  230. ^ Rutherglen, Miller Terrace General view from NE, Canmore
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  233. ^ New community pub on Rutherglen block to take centre stage on local entertainment, 23 March 2019
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Bibliography

  • Rutherglen Lore: Story of an Eight Hundred Year-old Royal Burgh, 1126-1926 by William Ross Shearer, printed in 1922

External links

  •   Media related to Rutherglen at Wikimedia Commons
  • Rutherglen at Undiscovered Scotland
  • Rutherglen at Gazetteer for Scotland
  • Rutherglen: A historical perspective (1885) from the Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland edited by Francis H. Groome

rutherglen, other, uses, disambiguation, scots, ruglen, scottish, gaelic, ruadh, ghleann, town, south, lanarkshire, scotland, immediately, south, east, city, glasgow, three, miles, five, kilometres, from, centre, directly, south, river, clyde, having, existed,. For other uses see Rutherglen disambiguation 3 Rutherglen ˈ r ʌ d er ɡ l ɪ n Scots Ruglen Scottish Gaelic An Ruadh Ghleann is a town in South Lanarkshire Scotland immediately south east of the city of Glasgow three miles five kilometres from its centre and directly south of the River Clyde Having existed as a Lanarkshire burgh in its own right for more than 800 years in 1975 Rutherglen lost its own local council and administratively became a component of the City of Glasgow District within the Strathclyde region along with neighbouring Cambuslang 4 In 1996 the towns were reallocated to the South Lanarkshire council area 5 6 7 8 RutherglenScottish Gaelic An Ruadh GhleannScots RuglenTownMain Street the main shopping area of RutherglenRutherglenShow map of South LanarkshireRutherglenLocation within ScotlandShow map of Glasgow council areaRutherglenRutherglen Scotland Show map of ScotlandPopulation30 950 mid 2020 est 1 OS grid referenceNS614616Lieutenancy areaLanarkshireCountryScotlandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townGLASGOW 2 Postcode districtG73Dialling code0141PoliceScotlandFireScottishAmbulanceScottishUK ParliamentRutherglen and Hamilton WestScottish ParliamentRutherglenList of places UK Scotland 55 49 41 N 4 12 50 W 55 828 N 4 214 W 55 828 4 214 Contents 1 History 1 1 Etymology 2 Governance 2 1 Westminster 2 2 Holyrood 2 3 South Lanarkshire Council 3 Transport 4 Media 5 Geography 5 1 Burgh Main Street and Clincarthill 5 1 1 Clincarthill 5 2 Farme Cross 5 3 Shawfield 5 4 Wardlawhill Gallowflat and Stonelaw 5 4 1 Wardlawhill 5 4 2 Gallowflat 5 4 3 Stonelaw 5 5 Eastfield 5 6 Burnhill Newfield and Bankhead 5 6 1 Burnhill 5 6 2 Newfield 5 6 3 Bankhead and Quigleys 5 7 Overtoun Park 5 8 Burnside High Crosshill and High Burnside 5 9 Spittal 5 10 Blairbeth and Fernhill 5 10 1 Blairbeth 5 10 2 Fernhill 5 11 Springhall and Cathkin 5 11 1 Springhall 5 11 2 Cathkin 6 Education 6 1 List of schools 6 1 1 Non denominational 6 1 2 Roman Catholic 6 1 3 Private schools 7 Sport 7 1 Football 8 Notable people 8 1 Artists actors and media personalities 8 2 Politicians 8 3 Sportspersons 8 4 Others 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksHistory EditSee also List of listed buildings in Rutherglen South Lanarkshire Rutherglen received the status of Royal Burgh in 1126 by Royal Charter from King David I of Scotland 9 who reigned from 1124 to 1153 It gradually diminished in importance as neighbouring Glasgow grew in power and size 10 The masons who built Glasgow Cathedral are thought to have lodged in Rutherglen 11 12 Rutherglen s prominence in late mediaeval Lanarkshire is shown in the Blaeu Atlas of Scotland 1654 Castlemilk House Casteltoun Shawfield and Farme Castle are also shown In the 14th century Walter Stewart father of King Robert II was granted Farme Castle This was located close to Farme Cross in the north of Rutherglen and stood until the 1960s 13 Another castle Rutherglen Castle was occupied by an English garrison during the struggle between John Balliol and Robert Bruce for the Scottish crown It was besieged by Robert the Bruce in 1309 and eventually came into Scottish possession in 1313 14 It was destroyed by Regent Murray after the Battle of Langside 15 Rutherglen was a centre of heavy industry 16 9 17 having a long coal mining tradition which died out by 1950 In the 18th century barges carried coal from Rutherglen to Greenock almost ever day 18 A small shipyard T B Seath amp Co was in operation on the Clyde at the northern edge of the town for several decades 19 20 The Clydebridge Steelworks situated between Rutherglen and Cambuslang began operating in the 1880s and employed thousands by the mid 20th century but the workforce dwindled to a few dozen by the 20th century and now only refines steel produced elsewhere 21 J amp J White Chemicals later ACC Chrome amp Chemicals in Shawfield which was in existence from 1820 to 1967 produced more than 70 per cent of the UK s chromate products including chromic acid chromic oxide pigment sodium and potassium chromate and dichromate Today there is a significant legacy of soluble chromium VI waste in the area 19 22 23 The town seal s 19th century Latin motto rendered by Professor George Gilbert Ramsay Ex fumo fama fame from smoke 24 and the local saying from which it derived Let Ruglen s lums reek briskly as well as the deliberately difficult to pronounce alternative Ru glen s wee roond red lums reek briskly 25 itself an adaptation of a Scotticism implying a smoking chimney signifying a prosperous healthy and long life 26 all refer to the importance of industry and industriousness to the area 27 Faces of double sided seal as published in 1793 Seal as depicted in 1882 Simplified version as seen on festive decorations 2005 The traditional version of the seal itself contained depictions of the Virgin and Child supported by twin angels earlier by priests with thistles and a fishing boat and men in the background 28 Along with the addition of the motto in the 1889 official version the boat had a water design added became more prominent and was placed in a shield at front centre flanked by the angels with a helmet and mantling above and the Virgin Mary above that 24 29 30 Over a century later a simplified version was produced in 1999 featuring only the boat the motto and a crown to represent the historic Royal Burgh status which by then no longer had any legal significance 31 in the early 21st century this seal often appears on the local Christmas lights 32 The ship and crown appear on the similar South Lanarkshire coat of arms with cinquefoil flowers representing Hamilton and a double headed eagle for Lanark Horse and cattle markets including the regular Beltane Fair in May and St Luke s Fair in November accompanied by the baking of sour cakes by locals 33 were also common and popular until the 20th century and are the reason for the Main Street being unusually wide 19 34 35 36 37 Rutherglen is nowadays primarily a dormitory suburb of Glasgow 38 Etymology Edit The name of Rutherglen as well as its Scots name Ruglen 39 is perhaps from Scottish Gaelic An Ruadh Ghleann the red valley 19 40 The derivation may also however be Welsh or Cumbric and mean the valley of Rydderch Rydderch pronounced rutherch ruther as in brother and ch as in loch was one of the most famous kings associated with the Welsh speaking kingdom which centred on Dumbarton 41 9 10 Governance Edit Rutherglen Town Hall Westminster Edit A separate constituency in the Parliament of Scotland from the late 16th century 10 Rutherglen was a parliamentary burgh represented in the UK Parliament as a component of Glasgow Burghs constituency from 1708 to 1832 10 and as a component of Kilmarnock Burghs from 1832 to 1918 In 1918 the Rutherglen constituency was created which became Glasgow Rutherglen in 1983 In 2005 Scottish constituencies for the UK parliament were reviewed with many new seats introduced and the town is now within the Rutherglen and Hamilton West constituency Following the 2019 election Margaret Ferrier is the local MP 42 replacing Gerard Killen of Scottish Labour who in 2017 had narrowly defeated incumbent Ferrier 43 44 herself originally elected in 2015 45 46 Ferrier was a Scottish National Party MP until an incident relating to a breach of the COVID 19 pandemic regulations in October 2020 47 the SNP whip was withdrawn and she ignored calls to resign continuing in office as an independent Holyrood Edit In 1999 the Scottish Parliamentary constituency of Glasgow Rutherglen was created with the same boundaries as the then UK parliamentary constituency In 2011 The constituency was redrawn and renamed simply Rutherglen although it also encompasses Cambuslang and Blantyre Following the 2016 elections Clare Haughey SNP is the MSP for Rutherglen The defeated incumbent James Kelly Labour was elected as a list MSP 48 for the Glasgow region which includes Rutherglen due to the town s proximity to the city 49 All local representatives have strong personal ties to the area South Lanarkshire Council Edit Administratively the historic town centre is within the Rutherglen Central and North ward of South Lanarkshire Council 50 51 which has a population of around 15 000 52 Taking another ward encompassing the southern parts of the town into consideration 53 its overall population was approximately 30 000 in 2016 With neighbouring Cambuslang s figures being very similar 54 55 the many services and amenities shared between the towns should provide for 60 000 residents many assessed as living in economic hardship 56 57 58 South Lanarkshire Council election results detailing local wards 1995 1999 2003 2007 2012 2017 Transport EditRutherglen Burgh is served by Rutherglen railway station opened in 1849 with Croftfoot and Burnside stations closer to southern parts of the town There are also numerous bus links into Glasgow city centre or other destinations such as Hamilton East Kilbride Govanhill and Dennistoun 59 all services either running directly along the Main Street which has dedicated public transport lanes for peak times or close to it via Mill Street Glasgow Road A730 to the west Cambuslang Road A724 to the north or Stonelaw Road Farmeloan Road A749 to the east 60 61 Glasgow Corporation Tramways operated routes in the area from the early 1900s until the late 1950s Completion of the M74 Extension in 2011 meant that there is a six lane motorway bisecting the northern part of the town allowing easier access to places such as Glasgow Airport and the English border Some years after the project was completed studies show that pollution levels on Rutherglen s densely populated Main Street were still measured consistently at dangerously high levels despite forecasts that traffic levels on urban streets in areas served by the motorway would reduce 62 63 64 65 Media EditThe local newspaper is the Rutherglen Reformer owned by Reach plc with online content presented under the Daily Record banner The local community radio station is CamGlen Radio Geography Edit Map of central Rutherglen published in 1923 The Royal Burgh of Rutherglen has expanded over the years and now encompasses many other neighbourhoods the majority built after World War II on land which was either farms or rural estates 66 67 Since being granted Royal Burgh status by King David I in the 12th century the town has grown considerably from its origins as little more than a single street 66 68 and although growth has been hampered to some extent by the proximity of the river to the north and the encroaching Glasgow urban sprawl to the west it now covers a much larger area than the initial Burgh boundaries 17 69 70 although the aforementioned restrictions mean its administrative centre with the majority of facilities and the highest population density is concentrated at the north of its overall territory rather than towards the geographic centre neighbouring Cambuslang has a similar issue its town centre is in the far west of its territory with its boundaries with Rutherglen and the river preventing any expansion in those directions Historic areas such as Farme Cross Bankhead and Gallowflat have changed greatly over the years 70 17 69 and the village of Burnside which falls under the Rutherglen boundary but has its own Community Council also expanded to share a single suburban settlement with its larger neighbour More recent post war developments at Newfield and Burnhill within the older part of town plus those on the peripheries including Blairbeth Cathkin Eastfield Fernhill Spittal and Springhall 69 have given the town a frequently changing character Other than some shopping areas and the large industrial estates in Farme Cross and Shawfield the neighbourhoods referred to are residential in type the 1922 book Rutherglen Lore indicates a deliberate intention for the historic Burgh area to be encircled to the south by residential suburbs while all land to its north would be dedicated to industry and that remains the case a century later Burgh Main Street and Clincarthill Edit See also Rutherglen Castle and Rutherglen Town Hall The Burgh area includes the old heart of the Royal Burgh of Rutherglen around the ancient and unusually wide 37 tree lined Main Street and its environs 66 70 10 which have been designated a conservation area since 2008 68 It features several religious establishments various pubs shops and restaurants historic and modern civic buildings and community facilities all within a dense network of housing mainly tenements 19 68 In the 2000s a webcam focused on the everyday activities at the western end of Main Street was recognised as having among the highest number of views in the world at the time for footage of its type despite there being no obvious reason for this popularity 71 the webcam is no longer in operation although later proposals were made by local civic figures to have another installed 72 The dominant architectural feature of the Main Street on its north side is the imposing Town Hall built in 1862 to a design by Charles Wilson 68 73 Having fallen into disrepair and disuse 73 68 the Category A listed building was refurbished and extended around 2005 74 75 76 and today is a venue for weddings theatrical performances and exhibitions 19 77 while still providing some local services 78 St Mary s bell tower de in churchyard 16th century Most of the other most important Rutherglen landmarks are in the immediate vicinity of the Town Hall To its west is Rutherglen Old Parish Church 19 68 the fourth incarnation of the institution which has had a building on the site since around 600 AD 79 constructed in 1902 to a J J Burnet design 80 Between the church and the town hall sits the ancient graveyard 13th century the St Mary s bell tower de 16th century and its Kirk Port stone entrance 17th century 19 68 81 82 70 The mediaeval church was said to be the location where William Wallace completed a peace treaty between England and Scotland in 1297 and where John de Menteith subsequently agreed a pact to betray Wallace in 1305 80 events which are marked by plaques and commemorated annually by Scottish nationalists 83 84 On the corner of Main Street and Queen Street outside the church is a statue of Dr James Gorman 1832 1899 a well known local surgeon this was erected in 1901 by public subscription due to his great standing in the area for his actions including treating the injured after mining disasters 68 19 81 85 To the rear of the church is a Masonic Hall dating from 1897 and built to replace older premises on Cathcart Road the group can trace their origins locally back to the 1760s 86 87 Rutherglen Library and Post Office building 1907 To the immediate east of the Town Hall is the burgh s public library 68 88 constructed in 1907 to an Edwardian design by Sinclair amp Ballantine 89 technically Post Office and Library but the dedicated post office closed in 2005 90 with its replacement inside an existing shop further east along the Main Street 91 A Carnegie library its main hall to the rear features a stained glass dome in the roof and oak paneling in the interior 92 Its first librarian who also lived in the upper floor was William Ross Shearer author of the 1922 book Rutherglen Lore which would come to be considered one of the most important references for the town s long history 93 94 The building was refurbished in the early 1990s and re opened once again in 2010 following a further extensive refurbishment which included an expansion into the Post Office section 90 95 On the wide pavement outside the library is a replica of the town s mercat cross the original stood nearby from the 12th to the 18th century 68 erected in 1926 as part of Rutherglen s octo centenary celebrations and in memory of a former provost of the burgh It was earlier the site of the old Tollbooth and Gaol town hall and prison which was constructed in the 1760s and demolished in the 1900s 68 96 70 Behind the library on King Street is the premises of the local branch of The Salvation Army whose brass band play regularly at the Old Parish Church and who have had a presence in the town since the 1880s 97 their hall stands roughly on the site of the mediaeval Rutherglen Castle 98 and replaced a wooden building initially used by the Rechabite Society 99 The local fire brigade established 1892 was also based nearby but since 1970 the local station has been at Cambuslang 100 19 with other stations fairly close at Polmadie and Castlemilk Directly across from the Town Hall is St Columbkille s Church de 19 101 the current main building of which dates from 1940 designed by Gillespie Kidd amp Coia 68 although the congregation was established in 1851 and there has been a documented Catholic presence in the local area since the 6th century 102 Behind the church are its older halls 17 previously serving as a school 103 which was rebuilt internally after a major fire in 2004 104 To the west of the church hemmed in by tenements is the 1930s Vogue Cinema which is the only surviving building of its type in the town although it was converted to a bingo hall in the 1970s 105 106 107 Aspire offices with retained spire of East Parish Church Other buildings of note include the 128 foot 39 metre spire of Rutherglen East Parish Church at Rutherglen Cross the junction of Main Street Farmeloan Road and Stonelaw Road which was originally built in 1872 for a Reformed Presbyterian congregation 108 109 17 closed in 1981 and was converted into the Aspire Business Centre in 2003 110 Its church halls became a facility used by local community organisations 111 112 After a new eastern section of Main Street was set out with the removal of old cottages beside the church this would later be extended through the Gallowflat area in 1914 a cinema The Pavilion was constructed there to a design by John Fairweather later being refurbished in 1930 as Green s Picturedrome it closed in 1959 although was not demolished until the 1980s 105 106 107 A further small church Rutherglen Congregational Church was also built opposite the cinema in the wake of the congregation moving on to new premises on Johnstone Drive where they remain to this day 113 114 69 its halls were occupied from the late 1930s by the Rutherglen Repertory Theatre established by Glaswegian actress Molly Urquhart who set up in the town for no particular reason apart from the venue being available The halls are now apartments having been the Clyde Club until a 1990s fire and the theatre company have their premises a few blocks south on Hamilton Road with many of their performances held at the renovated Town Hall 115 Behind the East Church on King Street once the location of one of the local Stonelaw coal mines in the 19th century 70 19 is the Rutherglen police station which was built in the mid 1950s prior to this the local force established as the Rutherglen Special Constabulary in 1848 later part of Lanarkshire Constabulary thereafter Strathclyde Police and today Police Scotland had their premises and cells in the Tollbooth followed by the new Town Hall 81 The police station is adjacent to the former district Court and museum 116 69 and was overlooked to the south by Royal Burgh House an office block built in 1998 originally occupied by the local authority which subsequently relocated the services to East Kilbride and Cambuslang 117 118 before the building was largely destroyed by a fire in 2022 119 Further west between King Street and High Street the ornate Rutherglen Evangelistic Institute was completed in 1887 120 with input from local businessmen John White Lord Overtoun 121 and Daniel Rodger 122 brother of the local MP Adam Keir Rodger and played a significant role in supporting local members in military service during World War I 123 124 but had fallen out of use and been demolished by the 1940s with only the later housekeeper s residence still remaining and modern apartments occupying the rest of the site 19 125 however the adjacent three storey Burgh Primary School building 1901 19 126 has been retained and was converted to a business centre 127 128 Across the street to the north is Glenburgh Nursery Centre a modern dedicated council childcare facility for the town centre 129 In 2010 Burgh Primary moved from their 1901 building to new premises a few blocks east still in the heart of town on Victoria Street 19 130 this site was previously the location of the Macdonald School built 1865 used in its later years as an annex for Rutherglen Academy 131 then as a nursery and community centre demolished in the 2000s 90 The new school s mini sports pitch was once the site of the Rutherglen United Presbyterian Church from 1836 until the 1910s 68 132 133 while on the opposite side of King Street sits the current Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster premises next to a wynd leading to Main Street which has existed for several centuries The Mitchell Arcade indoor shopping precinct on the south side of Main Street built in the early 1970s 68 in place of a block of older tenements on Mitchell Street and Stonelaw Road 81 and a small cinema the Grand Central 105 106 107 69 was given a makeover in 2014 and renamed the Rutherglen Exchange Shopping Centre 134 135 it has a rooftop car park and used to feature a daily market A branch of Boots Chemist occupied a corner site both in the older buildings at Rutherglen Cross and when these were replaced having a presence at the same location in the town for over a century The land to the east on Stonelaw Road stood unused for several years until the local council housing office later a business centre was constructed there in the 1990s 136 while as of 2020 the land across the road once occupied by the Electric Palace Cinema later a billiards hall has never been built upon 105 106 107 A short distance to the west of the Arcade the contemporary Greenhill Court housing complex 137 138 139 similarly replaced a street of tenements at Regent Street 81 as well as the Royal Burgh Bakery 140 141 17 69 home to Paterson s bakers biscuits and oatcakes from 1895 until 1971 when the factory became outdated and production moved to Livingston 140 142 The Picture House pub an old establishment with modern extension At what is now the western end of Main Street since it was shortened by the construction of the dual carriageway bypass first phase in the early 1970s there are two public houses on its northern side the Vogue Bar has been present for some decades and is known as a base for local Celtic F C supporters 143 the Picture House is a 2009 expansion of the equally venerable Linn O Dee establishment 144 taking inspiration for its name from another disappeared cinema the Rio which was demolished in 1971 to make way for the bypass 105 106 107 This extensive work on the road network in this part of the town also caused the destruction of the town s medical clinic services were relocated to a new Health Centre on Stonelaw Road and many other older residential and commercial buildings and physically removed the war memorial and a church from the heart of the burgh see Burnhill Most of the pubs in Rutherglen are on the north side of the Main Street and to its west a legacy of the Temperance Scotland Act 1913 when the south side of the street and other parts were declared dry areas following local referendums on the issue The Act was repealed in the 1970s but it still drew comment in local media in 2012 145 when a textiles shop previously the local co operative society s headquarters on the south side of Main Street opposite the Vogue and Picture House was to be converted into a new Wetherspoons pub An Ruadh Ghleann taking its name from the Gaelic version of Rutherglen 40 There is a high concentration of licensed premises in the vicinity several with a continuous presence on the same spot since the mid 19th century 17 69 and others which have been forced to relocate but carry the traditions of earlier versions 146 147 148 including the three aforementioned hostelries on Main Street plus The Sportsman on Glasgow Road The Millcroft and Wallace Bar on the old section of Mill Street and the Cathkin Inn two blocks further south Harleys Sky Bar Gormans and The Burgh Bar around Queen Street Chapmans at Rutherglen Cross and the Victoria Bar a short distance further north plus three dedicated off sales and additional licensed grocers and several other premises which were converted from bars to other uses in the early 21st century As well as the clustering of pubs being explained by historic licensing arrangements the proximity of Hampden Park and Celtic Park football stadiums also brings some occasional additional custom to the area which to some extent also accounts for a high number of bookmakers around the Main Street While redevelopment saw many of central Rutherglen s older tenements swept away 69 many of the others also fell into disrepair until work to maintain them was carried out by Rutherglen Housing Action Group established in 1979 149 150 This later became the Rutherglen and Cambuslang Housing Association based at the Aspire Centre and managing hundreds of properties in the area 151 152 although some like Greenhill Court are still managed directly by the local authority 153 Despite new projects being undertaken regularly by the organisation in the limited space available in the area the shortage of homes available for rent became a major issue locally going into the 21st century 154 View from the main entrance to Rutherglen railway station onto Victoria Street 2016 prior to addition of murals on left wall The town s current railway station opened in 1979 is the fourth such provision in the immediate area with the first 1842 1879 and second 1879 1897 17 on what are now the West Coast Main Line tracks which no longer offer a stop in Rutherglen accessed from either side of Farmeloan Road The third version 1892 1979 was further west and accessed off Queen Street it was soon extended in 1896 to include the Glasgow Central Railway line which is now the Argyle Line served by the current station which increased the total number of platforms on various lines to twelve 69 but this gradually reduced until 1964 when the Beeching cuts resulted in the Glasgow Central extension closing with only two at Queen Street remaining On the opening of the Argyle Line and new station in 1979 the old station was abandoned although its crumbling platforms are still visible and its entrance stairway and walkway is linked to its replacement Located on an island platform and now directly under elevated M74 motorway the current station is connected to the Burgh streets via a covered pedestrian overbridge the main entrance to which on Victoria Street was decorated with murals themed on the history of the town in 2018 155 Beside this mural to the west is Reuther Hall a community centre used by a retired ladies group among others 156 while to the east is the building previously used as the town Employment Exchange it has been converted into business use as has the Youth Employment Exchange on King Street while the local JobCentre service is now based further south at Greenhill Road Clincarthill Edit Lying immediately to the south of the Burgh area between Greenhill Road and Johnstone Drive Clincarthill rises high over the Main Street offering fine northern views The area has a distinctive character of its own with plenty of remaining old sandstone tenements villas and terraced houses from the late 19th and early 20th century 17 69 some on the incline accessible only via footpaths A pedestrian overbridge across the busy Mill Street dual carriageway links Clincarthill with the Bankhead neighbourhood to its west There are several places of worship in the area Minhaj ul Quran mosque previously a Scout hall Rutherglen Baptist Church established 1889 built 1903 and Rutherglen United Free Church established 1902 built 1935 113 114 while the town s JobCentre is built on the site of another Greenhill Church Adjacent to this is a vacant plot which was the location of Rutherglen Swimming Pool from 1967 until the 2005 but has lain empty since 157 There is also a Catholic primary school St Columbkille s in Clincarthill 158 built on the site of Bellevue House a children s home run by the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul from 1912 to 1961 which was discredited in the 2018 Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry 159 160 Rutherglen Primary Care Centre the town s public health facility 161 is located on flatter land south of Clincarthill backing on to Overtoun Park where another hill forms to the west and built around 1999 to replace the Rutherglen Health Centre 162 which it itself had replaced the old clinic on Main Street that was bulldozed to allow construction of the Mill Street bypass road Rutherglen Maternity Hospital stood adjacent from 1978 to 1998 163 162 but despite a good record of patient care and only 20 years in operation it was closed and demolished to alleviate financial burdens in the local health board and concentrate a wider range of services over fewer sites 164 165 With the hospital constructed on reclaimed park land that had been an excavated part of a mine before being filled in 69 there was also concern that chromium contamination was present in the ground 162 The immediate area also features a number of old buildings including a square block of red sandstone tenements 81 and some grand villas Farme Cross Edit Approaching Farme Cross from the south A749 Farmeloan Road See also Farme Castle Farme Cross is one of the boundary areas of Rutherglen and is surrounded to the north by the River Clyde with Glasgow s Dalmarnock district on the opposite bank the two sides being linked by iron road and rail bridges dating from the 1890s 166 167 while it is separated from the old Burgh area uphill to the south by 19th century railway tracks and a 21st century motorway It originated as the Farme estate crown property which was passed through noble families for centuries Centred around the Farme Castle 66 13 168 it became known for coal mining from the early 19th century 169 10 20 170 171 172 under the control of estate owner James Farie with other industries soon following The roads through the territory A724 and A749 meet to join two busy routes between eastern Glasgow to the north Rutherglen to the south and Cambuslang via Eastfield to the east It was served by Glasgow s tram network providing transport for the workforces a role still performed by buses 173 There are several historic buildings and pieces of street art here 174 including a set of four carved standing stones Boundary Stones by Richard Brown 2001 installed in an area of open ground to commemorate the history of the Royal Burgh and its original boundary stones 175 some of which dating back to the 18th and 19th century are themselves still in situ mostly at Farme Cross and in the southern parts of the town 19 Another monument Slipsteam by Joseph Ingleby 2001 176 alongside the river near Dalmarnock Bridge involves metallic cogged mouldings featuring designs by local schoolchildren placed on brick walls and emerging in loops from the ground and recalls local industry on the Clyde and the contours of the river itself 177 Farme Colliery s Newcomen atmospheric engine of the early 19th century on display at Summerlee Museum Businesses at Farme Cross were once many and varied 17 69 with the energy to operate them supplied by a large power station just over the river 178 179 180 181 where the nearby Dalmarnock Bridgeton and Parkhead districts also developed a similar strong industrial profile 182 183 The industries included 174 the Farme Castle Colliery with two pits associated row cottages and branch railway its Newcomen atmospheric engine is on display at Summerlee Industrial Heritage Museum Coatbridge 169 172 170 171 184 the Caledonian Pottery 185 which was latterly operated by Hartley s Jams 186 and was later the site of a small steel works lying in the path of the new motorway construction it was first subject to an excavation which uncovered the foundations of the original buildings for examination 187 188 189 Scotia Bolt Works 190 three dyeing works Clyde Bank Works David Millar amp Co Clydesdale Dye Works Eastfield Dye Works which later became the Eastfield Chair Works 191 192 three tube pipe works Unicode James Menzies and Co Phoenix Tubeworks and the adjacent James Eadie and Sons Clydesdale Tube Works both acquired by Stewarts amp Lloyds 193 194 195 three wire rope works John Todd amp Son Rutherglen Ropes John Wilson amp Son Eastfield Ropery and Clyde Patent Rope Works Allan Whyte and Co acquired by British Ropes 196 197 the latter of which had a distinctive sandstone office with turret situated on the cross demolished in the 1990s after falling into disrepair 174 198 two paper mills Eastfield Paper Mill near the river and the Old Farme steading which has survived to the 21st century and the larger Clyde Paper Mill off Cambuslang Road 199 200 201 Adam s Brickworks 202 the Monogram bedding factory 203 previously used by the EKCO radio equipment company 204 By the 1970s the vast majority of these industries had either severely contracted or in most cases closed altogether 174 causing severe employment difficulties for the area 205 The low lying area was severely impacted by a flood in 1994 203 as had occurred previously in 1903 206 resulting in improved prevention measures being introduced 207 One of the firms which endured into the 21st century Sanmex Chemicals 208 eventually left town in the 2010s after a merger with an Ayrshire based rival 209 Another the bottling and distribution arm of The Speyside distillery had closed a few years earlier 210 Both sites were soon advertised as new investment opportunities 211 212 A Tesco superstore built in the early 21st century on some of the vacant former industrial land between the river and railway lines off Dalmarnock Road specifically the Phoenix Tubeworks which had been converted into a trading estate was later extended to feature two fast food restaurants 213 A small light industry development borders the superstore 214 and this mirrors the changes throughout Farme Cross with the bustling but dirty factories of the past gradually being replaced by small workshops business units and modern warehouses and depots though in some cases with an intervening period of several years as derelict buildings then cleared brownfield land awaiting development Regeneration projects controlled by the Clyde Gateway organisation 215 accelerated following the completion of the M74 Extension to the Glasgow Region Motorway network in 2011 with Junction 2 directly serving Farme Cross This led to more ambitious plans being adopted for the area as well as at Shawfield 216 217 including the Rutherglen Links environmentally friendly business park 173 218 219 the main building for which occupies a prominent location off Farmeloan Road 203 220 221 with further office pavilions further east towards the motorway junction 222 Various further commercial proposals have been put forward for the eastern part of this area 223 224 225 with disused depots levelled and a driving range under construction between 2020 and 2022 226 227 Despite its identity being dominated by heavy industry there has always been a residential aspect to Farme Cross 69 The oldest surviving examples are the Terrace cottages 174 228 229 a cluster of four small streets built for local workers by the Glasgow Working Men s Investment and Building Society in the 1880s the only co operative housing of this kind in the town and built at angles off the main road designated as a conservation area in the 1980s 174 Unusually the two storey buildings feature main doors at the front and the back to access flats on different levels a similar design can be seen in the Colony houses at several locations in Edinburgh 230 231 Traditional tenements which once stood right on the cross in front of the terraces 232 and opposite on Farmeloan Road were demolished in the mid 20th century 174 but some slightly newer sandstone tenements remain on the north side of Cambuslang Road and Dalmarnock Road including a Category C listed corner block 198 which houses the area s sole public house at ground level known as Tennents for decades with a small number of resident clientele the business suffered as the passing trade from factory workers dwindled changing hands several times in the early 21st century 233 234 The area facing this block where British Ropes once had their turreted offices was developed as the Lloyd Court apartment complex in the 2000s the design of which resembles older styles A small inter war development of cottage flats around Montraive Street and grey concrete tenements at Barnflat Street and Baronald Street received new neighbours in the early 2000s with the building of around 100 houses at Farme Castle Court this is actually slightly east of the actual location of Farme Castle Rutherglen s Kingdom Hall established in 1958 rebuilt in 2012 is located in Farme Cross on Baronald Street 235 Across the street is a playground and a small local community hall The Farme Bowling Club on Cambuslang Road which was linked to the nearby Clyde Paper Mill closed its doors in 2006 236 The Cuningar Loop is an area of land south of the River Clyde near Farme Cross An isolated meander of the river which was once a Glasgow sewage treatment facility 17 then infilled with rubble from the city s slum clearance programme before being abandoned to become overgrown it has now been transformed into a woodland park 237 connecting across the Clyde to the City of Glasgow Dalmarnock and the Commonwealth Games village development via a new footbridge Shawfield Edit Main article Shawfield Shawfield Smartbridge leading to Dalmarnock The Shawfield district the mostly northerly in the town and once a country estate 238 before being converted into a chemicals facility by the White family is still industrial in nature but much of it abandoned in the early 21st century due to the collapse of heavy industry generally and contamination from the Whites Chemical Works in particular 23 239 240 241 242 243 The Clyde Gateway projects aim to reinvest in this area and create new business parks and make the River Clyde accessible in Rutherglen again 244 245 246 the town s old port once home of Thomas Seath shipbuilders which specialised in Clutha ferries and paddle steamers is located here 81 247 248 Currently Shawfield Stadium the former home of Clyde F C hosts greyhound racing although not immediately noticeable the building has Art Deco features Rutherglen Bridge at Shawfield is the oldest crossing between Rutherglen and Glasgow specifically the Bridgeton district of the city which was named after the bridge when its construction accelerated industrial growth and trade in the previously agricultural area 17 Far more recently a smartbridge for pedestrians and cyclists was built to encourage links between the regenerating Shawfield area and Dalmarnock railway station also in connection with the 2014 Commonwealth Games several of the events for which were held nearby at the Emirates Arena 249 250 Wardlawhill Gallowflat and Stonelaw Edit Wardlawhill Edit Wardlawhill Church Hindu Temple Lying across Stonelaw Road east of Clincarthill the Wardlawhill area includes some older large houses and tenement buildings 81 a BBC Scotland report found that Wardlaw Drive the hill s northern slope lined with tenements ranked seventh among the steepest streets in Scotland 251 Adjacent to this street placed at the top of stairs off Hamilton Road and partly built into the hill itself is the Sri Sundara Ganapathy Hindu Temple built 1882 previously Wardlawhill Parish Church the congregation of which merged with the West Parish at Burnhill in 2007 252 253 the building being sold in 2010 254 The church halls across the road are still used by local youth groups such as the Boys Brigade 252 255 To the south on the other side of the hill is the Rutherglen Academy building on Melrose Avenue built 1886 17 which later became Stonelaw High School and was converted into apartments in 2001 256 257 19 258 259 Opposite the Academy is a small early 20th century apexed building originally St Stephen s Episcopal Church nowadays used as a Masonic Lodge since 1971 after the group s previous premises on Cathcart Street 17 dating from 1875 latterly also used by the neighbouring Toryglen chapter were demolished for the Mill Street bypass project 260 261 The house system of Stonelaw High School used to be named from avenues in the area Jedburgh Dryburgh Melrose and Kelso taken from the Scottish Borders however at the start of the 2018 school year this theme changed to Scottish Islands Arran Bute and Skye Gallowflat Edit Tumulus at Gallowflat The Gallowflat area known locally as East Main Street features some 1920s cottage flats 262 and tenement buildings dating from the construction of an extension to the Main Street although it may appear natural for the route to continue eastwards as it does today historically Main Street and King Street terminated at Farmeloan Road 17 until the project linking it to Cambuslang Road and removing traffic from Hamilton Road through Wardlawhill 69 A prominent landmark is a tree covered ancient burial mound 19 263 264 which had been used at one time as an icehouse in the grounds of the grand Gallowflat House built 1760s demolished 1910s 265 266 which was located at the eastern end of today s Reid Street Gallowflat Public School built 1908 later the annexe of Stonelaw High School from 1970 to 1998 258 259 was also in the area on Hamilton Road 267 268 269 with most of its campus now largely replaced by housing and an elderly persons care home 270 271 272 aside from one derelict red sandstone block on McCallum Avenue 273 274 During the 28 years when the Academy and Gallowflat buildings were part of the same school hundreds of teenage pupils would walk the 400 yards 350 metres between them several times each day via the very steep Wardlaw Drive and other quiet residential streets 258 Stonelaw Edit Stonelaw Parish Church Stonelaw is the area south of Gallowflat and Wardlawhill and east of the Primary Care Centre features of which include Rutherglen Bowling Club 275 having migrated south from its first 1868 site on Greenhill Road in 1902 276 the organisation then sold the adjoining land for construction of a church in 1907 The imposing red sandstone building which resulted is now known as Stonelaw Parish Church though it too was built for a congregation relocating from the old part of town 17 in this case from their premises on King Street built in the 1830s 133 It was completed in 1912 a refurbishment over a century later revealed a time capsule dating from the time of construction 277 278 A further modernisation in 2019 included modification of the main hall s pews designed to accommodate far more parishioners than recent attendances into a more flexible system 279 There are two other bowling clubs in the vicinity also dating from the 1900 10s when that part of the town was being developed Overtoun Park Bowling Club to the west 280 281 and Templeton Bowling Club to the east 282 originally part of the recreation grounds for the James Templeton amp Co textile company which had its main premises on Glasgow Green the club long outlasted its parent firm and the rest of the grounds are nowadays Stonelaw High School s playing fields A mansion house Eastpark stood next door to Templeton s accessed from Buchanan Drive it was converted to use a nursing home and has continued as part of the Abbeyfield care group 283 284 although the expansion and modernisation of the business led to the demolition of the old house with only its conical sandstone gateposts remaining Also at Buchanan Drive and on the east side of Stonelaw Road approaching Burnside is Woodburn Park a valley like wooded green space previously a quarry 17 It takes its name from the adjacent Woodburn House which was home to the horticulture department of Langside College for over 60 years before being sold demolished and replaced by houses and apartments in the 2010s 285 286 This neighbourhood has many features of the garden suburb and is perhaps the most up market place in Rutherglen being home to many expensive properties A development of distinctive quartered villas on Rosslyn Avenue Dryburgh Avenue date from the 1910s a few years after the houses at Wardlawhill and Clincarthill were completed as Rutherglen began to expand southwards 17 69 The new 1998 site of Stonelaw High School 258 259 and its sports facilities off Calderwood Road 287 288 are on the peripheries of the Stonelaw and Burnside areas and also close to Eastfield Another local school Calderwood Primary on Buchanan Drive 289 is sometimes labelled as being located in the Burnside neighbourhood 290 although its catchment areas are mainly Stonelaw Eastfield Gallowflat and the residential streets around Richmond Drive mostly bungalows built in the 1930s that like the schools do not fall under any single recognised neighbourhood 291 Eastfield Edit Main article Eastfield South Lanarkshire View north down Eskdale Drive towards Clydebridge Steelworks A former mining community and country estate 292 293 20 located off the main road between Rutherglen and Cambuslang 17 the area was developed for housing in the 1950s 69 Trinity High School built in 1970 re built in 2010 294 and its sports facilities including public swimming pool 295 are located in Eastfield which also has two public houses both off Dukes Road 296 To the north of Eastfield and east of Farme Cross is the Clydebridge Steelworks nowadays operating to a far lower capacity and with a fraction of workers than at its peak points in the mid 20th century when over 3 000 were employed there 21 Located within a meander of the River Clyde it was largely inaccessible to civilians until 2011 when the M74 motorway extension was constructed through the middle of its extensive territory In 2020 the corporation which owned the works announced development plans for the grounds beginning with a hotel 297 Burnhill Newfield and Bankhead Edit Burnhill Edit Burnhill in the north west of Rutherglen directly borders the Glasgow district of Toryglen to its west along with woodland at the Malls Mire 298 299 300 and the M74 motorway and West Coast Main Line railway tracks to the north while its eastern side is close to the Main Street but separated from it by a busy dual carriageway bypass road part of the A730 built in the early 1970s View of war memorial facing east Historically a small network of streets leading west from the Main Street area becoming increasingly rural in character Glasgow then expanded in several stages to occupy the countryside between its southern districts and Rutherglen 301 70 17 69 the construction of the bypass caused the destruction of the area s older buildings at Burnhill Street Chapel Street Mill Street and Glasgow Road 81 and also physically isolated one of the town s main landmarks the Munro United Free Church whose Category B listed building dates from 1850 Established in 1836 its congregation merged with that of the original West Parish Church when their building nearby located on Chapel Street explaining its name was demolished to build the road and new housing and in turn this later became West amp Wardlawhill Parish following union with another congregation at the other end of town both having experienced dwindling membership 68 253 252 302 303 Rutherglen s war memorial erected 1924 designed by Paul Gray with a bronze figure by sculptor George Henry Paulin 68 304 which originally had a prominent location at the western end of the Main Street was also left on the other side of the road 81 305 The two parts of town are now connected via pedestrian underpasses which are prone to antisocial behaviour 306 307 308 309 and occasional flooding Part of Burnhill s White Flats housing scheme viewed from Chapel Street 2009 image since refurbished externally Deemed to be an area generally suffering from high levels of deprivation and associated issues 253 58 310 the Burnhill Action Group based at the West Church is a community led volunteer group working to improve the locality s environmental conditions recreational opportunities and facilities 311 312 The neighbourhood is recognisable for its White Flats housing scheme two dozen separate 16 apartment blocks cube shaped but with sloping roofs dating from the early 1970s and refurbished externally in 2019 at a cost of 1 6 million 313 that replaced a development of prefabs 69 It has a standalone pub at its centre briefly known as the Burnhill Bar but for most of its history named The Fairways 314 315 which took its name from the fact that the nearby land was once the open fields of Toryglen Golf Club as well as Blackfaulds Farm prior to residential use 316 317 it replaced a far older hostelry in the area Ye Olde Inn which had been demolished 318 There is also older c 1930 housing off Toryglen Road and Westmuir Place and grass areas also feature heavily especially around the mound of Burnhill itself where the Jenny Burn flowing from Cathkin Braes via Spittal and Bankhead passes underneath making its way towards the Clyde Burnhill is home to the local branch of the South Lanarkshire Council youth club Universal Connections and also the Celsius Stadium home to Rutherglen Glencairn F C 19 completed in 2008 it replaced the club s 110 year old Southcroft Park on the other side of the railway at Shawfield which had been subject to a compulsory purchase order for construction of the M74 81 although there was sufficient space to build a new social club for the Glens beside the motorway at the original location 319 The earlier Burnhill Sports Centre next to the new football ground was closed and demolished in 2017 320 321 although the adjacent municipal football pitches remain in use Newfield Edit Lying directly south of Burnhill Newfield is a neighbourhood also adjoining Bankhead Rutherglen and Toryglen and King s Park Glasgow the boundary with the city is difficult to observe from ground level as it involves houses backing onto one another right up to the border in most places however as it is a major administrative divide it is clearly marked on maps with the street names also changing e g Newfield Place becomes Ardnahoe Avenue There are limited amenities including a pub and small grassed areas are dotted around between the housing The burn flowing through the area provided power to industries in times past 69 mostly on Cathcart Road including the Avonbank Westburn and Burnside weaving factories 81 the Cathkin Laundry 1894 to 2013 322 previously the site of a curling pond opened in 1881 323 17 probably linked to the Carmunnock amp Rutherglen Curling Club which still competes today though not locally based 324 plant nurseries including Glenroyal now a small social housing development 325 326 and the Cathkin Bakery the production facility for Nairn s oatcakes and biscuits until 1978 327 142 There was a Newfield House and sawmill although the largest mansion in the area in times past was Muirbank House 328 17 this is long gone but a pair of cottages from the same era survive almost hidden in woodland amidst far newer housing Falling almost entirely within the Newfield and Bankhead areas is a small modern c 2003 residential estate of Westhouse which keeps the green theme from Glasgow and Rutherglen with gardens throughout It was built in a former quarry recalled in the names of the nearby street Quarryknowe and in the Old Quarry Bar on Cathcart Road although the pub in one of the few tenement buildings to survive the redevelopment of this sector of the town is located further east towards Main Street favoured by Rangers F C supporters and themed on the club 329 it is also close to the local Orange Hall the 20 District Club 330 Nearby at today s Mill Court flats was Farie Street School 69 331 built 1875 latterly re titled as St Columbkille s RC Primary from 1957 until its new buildings opened in Clincarthill in 1969 The Farie Street building was demolished in 1971 81 Bankhead and Quigleys Edit Bankhead is a neighbourhood located south west of central Rutherglen with its housing visibly of various ages owing to the burgh s expansion in stages during the 20th century 17 69 South of Newfield and directly bordering the Glasgow district of King s Park much of its street grid shares the same design of 1930s grey pebble dashed cottage flats 19 332 In addition to an eponymous primary school on Bankhead Road 333 there is a small row of shops on Wallace Street beside the Mill Street overbridge leading to Clincarthill and more on Curtis Avenue approaching Toryglen including the 100 Acres pub an adaptation of Hundred Acre Hill the historic name of the high ground overlooking the area to the west 332 A further selection of convenience stores is located on Castlemilk Road in the south west of the area adjoining King s Park and some of its amenities including its main church These are known locally as the State shops after the State Cinema later a bingo venue which was sited there near to King s Park Avenue a prominent local landmark from the 1930s until its demolition in the early 21st century 106 334 332 335 There was previously also a small public library which closed in 2010 although named King s Park Library it was on the east side of the road and thus administered by South Lanarkshire Council from 1996 336 One surviving feature of Bankhead s rural past is the premises of Mitchell s Farm earlier known as Crosshill Farm 81 dating back to at least the mid 19th century 70 17 69 although its fields on a steep slope were converted into the Cityford housing development around 1990 The Bankhead coal mine was a short distance south west of the farm 70 20 The southern end of Bankhead Road terminates at another cluster of small shops and Croftfoot railway station with a pedestrian footpath leading to the Croftfoot neighbourhood of Glasgow and the Spittal neighbourhood of Rutherglen There is another footpath further west at Castlemilk Road but vehicles cannot use these routes instead having to travel around Spittal a detour of 1 1 2 miles 2 5 kilometres from Bankhead Road at Croftfoot Station or via Menock Road a detour of 1 mile 1 5 kilometres from Castlemilk Road at King s Park Avenue to reach the same point on the other side of the tracks Once a private estate based around Bankhead House owned by several generations of the Quigley family many of whom were doctors 81 the land between Bankhead and Mill Street at Overtoun Park became a small housing estate in the early 1970s 337 The town s once important corn mill from which the road name derives was located a short way east of Bankhead House 70 81 close to the Quigleys Community Hall of today a fact commemorated nearby in a plaque placed on the old stone wall of the estate also noting the completion of the upgrading of that section of the road in 1993 Average Speed traffic cameras were installed there in 2018 to combat dangerous driving 338 The mill was powered from the Cityford Burn that flows through most of this side of Rutherglen and is visible here for some distance 69 339 running north then west to a small pond at Bankhead Road known as the Paddy paddling pool 340 although this is somewhat overgrown and distended and is no longer popular with locals for this recreational purpose as it once was 341 Flooding in the area in 2004 resulted in extensive remediation works to prevent a repeat 207 The King s Park Hotel is located to the south of the neighbourhood off Mill Street while Rutherglen Cemetery s main vehicle entrance lodge house and Cross of Sacrifice is a short distance further south past the junction of King s Park Avenue B762 a 1920s wide boulevard which runs westwards parallel to the railway tracks for 1 6 miles 2 6 km into the heart of southern Glasgow at Mount Florida Battlefield 332 Overtoun Park Edit Main article Overtoun Park Rutherglen s main public park is close to the geographical centre of the town 69 Laid out on land donated to the Burgh in 1904 by Lord Overtoun 342 whose White s Chemical Works also ruined much of the area by reckless dumping of their toxic byproduct 22 it was once the location of the annual Landemer Day fair and parade now confined to the Main Street 343 The Category B listed fountain in the park was originally located on Main Street it had been erected in 1897 to mark Queen Victoria s Diamond Jubilee but was moved to the park in 1911 81 344 The bandstand 1914 also Category B listed 345 was sited at the west side of the park 81 346 until it was removed to be used at the 1988 Glasgow Garden Festival It was re sited on a grass area in the centre of the park but later fell into some disrepair due to a lack of maintenance 347 346 The park s children s play area was extended in the 2010s 348 349 and the park s BMX tracks have been maintained 350 351 but football pitches were built upon and the tennis courts were turfed over in 2020 proposals were made by Rutherglen Tennis Club to install covered courts at the same location 352 353 which would involve a portion of the land being transferred to a private company 354 Environmental charity Grow73 have their base beside Overtoun Park Bowling Club 349 355 and a Friends of Overtoun Park is also active 356 Burnside High Crosshill and High Burnside Edit Main article Burnside South Lanarkshire Looking north on Stonelaw Road at Burnside railway station s east entrance Burnside is a village within the Rutherglen boundaries which expanded into a leafy commuter suburb 69 357 It is surrounded by several mid 20th century housing estates in some cases modernised 358 which are within Rutherglen but not considered to be parts of Burnside as they were built to provide homes for people from other areas of the town and from Cambuslang who needed to be re housed In contrast to affluent Burnside parts of these estates are considered to be troubled by poverty and related issues as asserted by several versions of the Scottish index of multiple deprivation 58 359 Centred mostly around Stonelaw Road Burnside has its own set of shops church 360 railway station and primary school It is also home to a supermarket once the site of a cinema 106 361 105 and hotel with a popular bar East Kilbride Road There is also a bowling green and two sets of tennis courts previously separate clubs they are both now operated by Rutherglen LTC 362 363 Much of the traditional residential property was built in the early 1900s from blond and red sandstone The local park Stonelaw Woods 364 365 81 lies at the northern boundary of the village and takes its name from the demolished Stonelaw Tower a castellated converted 18th century coal mine winding engine house 366 that once stood to the east of Stonelaw Road near Greystone Avenue 367 368 369 19 High Crosshill is a quiet residential area of wide avenues built on a steep hill between Burnside and Overtoun Park 370 which has some views on Broomieknowe Road and includes Rutherglen Cemetery High Burnside is also a residential area consisting of high ground to the south of Burnside leading to Cathkin Braes with streets of older houses built in several eras Some of its properties particularly some of the oldest off Burnside Road are very large 69 Spittal Edit View west from Mill Street towards Spittal with original housing and more recent elderly daycare centre Spittal is a post World War II community which is almost an exclave of the town bordering the Glasgow areas of Croftfoot to the west and Castlemilk to the south with an area of open ground to the east it is close to the King s Park Avenue Bankhead neighbourhood within Rutherglen to the north but disconnected from it by the Cathcart Circle Lines railway tracks Built on a mound used as farmland the farmhouse was located at the junction of Carrick Road and Bute Terrace the estate was constructed in an oval pattern of streets with its primary school built at the highest point in the centre completed in 1955 69 A development of prefabs on the flatter land to the west were replaced by angular blocks of flats in the early 1970s as also occurred at other locations including Burnhill Bankhead and at North Halfway in nearby Cambuslang 69 A new community centre was built in the early 21st century close to the older small wooden church There are also local amenities such as shops including Post Office on Kyle Square and a pub restaurant The Croft 371 situated exactly on the local authority boundary at Croftfoot 372 Two small burns run on either side of Spittal s housing bordered by grassed areas one burn runs from Castlemilk Park and the other from further east via High Burnside both originating on the north slopes of the Cathkin Braes these waters converge north of Spittal flowing north to Bankhead and on to Shawfield and the Clyde where it is marked as the Cityford Burn but colloquially known as the Jenny Burn 373 339 In 2016 the area s recreation fields bordering Croftfoot which had been bequeathed to the community in perpetuity in the 1930s but had been allowed to fall into disrepair over a number of years were subject to planning applications for new housing 374 The Croftfield Park development was completed about three years later 375 A replacement modern AstroTurf football field was added adjacent to the primary school in 2019 although this was several years after the original fields were abandoned and six years after the school itself was replaced built on its original red blaes pitch 376 as the old buildings became the temporary home for Bankhead St Mark s and Burnside Primaries while their facilities were also renewed 333 377 Just south of Spittal is Kirkriggs School a Special educational needs facility which is under Glasgow City Council control 378 Blairbeth and Fernhill Edit Blairbeth Edit Drumilaw Road the main vehicular access to Blairbeth from the north Blairbeth is a small 1950s local authority housing scheme of tenements and modest terraced houses generally still with the same appearance as at the time of its construction 358 It was built around a former rural estate the house sited at the top of Kirkriggs Avenue is long since demolished as was the entrance lodge house to its north 69 The neighbourhood has some limited local amenities 379 and small parks as well as a school St Mark s RC Primary its associated church of the same name is located to the south of the housing at the edge of the neighbouring Fernhill area 380 which has no direct link to Blairbeth for vehicles The designated non denominational school for the locality is Spittal Primary although some children attend Burnside Primary which is equally close Also bordering High Crosshill and High Burnside many of the hillside streets have views over Rutherglen and Glasgow A large flat grass field to the west of the neighbourhood 69 was popular in the summer months for informal sports buts its size was greatly reduced by a junction re alignment in 2016 connecting Croftfoot Road and Blairbeth Road previously a staggered junction via Fernhill Road with single lanes causing considerable congestion at peak times into a single crossroads with filter lanes as part of the Cathkin Relief Road works To the west of this road is the boundary with the city of Glasgow denoted visually by the twin castellated stone gates of Buchanan Lodge today a nursing home but historically the north east entrance to the driveway leading to Castlemilk House 381 382 69 the mansion no longer exists although most of the route through its lands most of which are occupied by the various neighbourhoods of Castlemilk housing estate is still present as tree lined footpaths managed under an award winning conservation project 383 384 385 A section of the estate s old boundary wall is also visible near Blairbeth although sections are crumbling and dangerous Fernhill Edit Main article Fernhill South Lanarkshire View from upper Fernhill over local houses and refurbished apartment blocks with eastern Glasgow beyond Fernhill is a housing estate originally built in the 1960s which underwent a great deal of regeneration in the 2010s 386 358 It is home to an all girls private school the main building for which is the historic Fernhill mansion house The area is bordered by the Castlemilk housing estate in Glasgow to the west 387 as well as by Blairbeth High Burnside and Cathkin within Rutherglen Fernhill Road bisects the estate and is where the rebuilt local amenities convenience stores community centre children s play area 5 a side football fields 388 are found The estate also has two churches at either end 380 389 and a decorative brick entrance wall off Burnside Road The Cathkin Relief Road was completed in 2017 at a cost of 21 million to extend Mill Street from Spittal through the informal parkland between Fernhill and Blairbeth High Burnside to connect with the existing Cathkin Bypass A730 and alleviate traffic from other local routes including Fernhill Road 390 391 392 In 2019 Fernbrae Meadows was opened to the south of Fernhill formerly Blairbeth Golf Course the area is a 20 hectares of semi natural managed greenspace 393 Springhall and Cathkin Edit Springhall Edit The A749 East Kilbride Road looking north with Springhall buildings on left Springhall is a self contained 1960s local authority housing estate 394 358 mostly consisting of a compact network of maisonettes and featuring a community centre and library dating back to the time of the scheme s construction 395 but extensively upgraded between 2019 and 2021 396 397 398 Below the original library is a small set of local shops 394 There is also a catholic church 399 and two local schools St Anthony s RC Primary and Loch Primary 400 both rebuilt in the 2000s in a mirror image of one another and now share a playground 401 402 The schools playing fields are located on the site of a former loch Boultrie Loch which was popular for curling and skating in winter 81 403 A stone sign welcomes visitors into the estate from the entrance off the A749 East Kilbride Road opposite a pub The Braes previously the Cathkin Hotel A short way further south on the Springhall side of the A749 is the unusual white castellated villa Elpalet designed by the housebuilder John McDonald whose companies constructed thousands of new homes in Glasgow in the 1930s including hundreds in Burnside 404 405 to be his own residence The property is now divided into apartments 406 407 A 13 storey tower block the only building of such height in Rutherglen although there are 10 towers of the same design in Cambuslang 408 looms over the centre of the neighbourhood 409 410 it was built on the site of the Springhall mansion house that once occupied the land 69 which came to public attention in the 1910s first when suffragette Frances Gordon was imprisoned for attempting to set the house on fire 411 then soon afterwards when a contingent of Belgian refugees of World War I were invited to stay there 412 it was demolished in the 1940s Adjacent to the tower is a sports pitch in a wire mesh pen Cathkin High School the secondary school affiliated to Loch Primary is located nearby at the western side of the neighbouring estate of Whitlawburn administratively this is part of Cambuslang although shares some amenities with Springhall with the schemes connected under the main road by a pedestrian underpass A standalone pre school facility Springlaw ELC intentionally named after both communities as a gesture of unity was built on a piece of vacant land off Cruachan Road opening in 2021 413 Cathkin Edit Isolated housing development south of Cathkin accessed via country road to Carmunnock Cathkin is the southernmost and highest part of Rutherglen largely comprising a post World War II estate which underwent a good deal of regeneration of its housing stock in the early 21st century 414 386 415 358 The estate borders the City of Glasgow the Cathkin Braes Country Park and the lands of Carmunnock the civil parish in which it was historically located along with Fernhill and Spittal 416 and offers views over the Greater Glasgow valley There is a small wooded area Cathkin Woods near the neighbourhood s eastern boundary with Whitlawburn Limited amenities include a primary school with community facilities 417 and a church located a short way into Fernhill and designed to serve both communities as was the school while local shops off Cathkin Bypass Cuillins Road feature a supermarket newsagent and betting shop Like many parts of the town a new stone and metal entrance sign welcomes visitors entering Cathkin from the bypass road The grounds of the old Cathkin House mansion 70 69 built 1799 and a children s home in the later 20th century 418 419 420 now converted to apartments offers views over Rutherglen and Glasgow beyond The mansion is surrounded by small separate residential developments primarily of large villas which also enclose around the buildings of Mid Farm one of the oldest surviving properties in the area The ancient Burnside Road at that location no longer has a connection for vehicles with Cathkin Road the B759 running between the A749 dual carriageway and Carmunnock village via Cathkin Braes Park and Cathkin Braes Golf Club Education EditLoch Primary and Cathkin Primary are feeder schools for Cathkin High School built in 1970 rebuilt in 2008 421 422 which is located at Whitlawburn just outside the Rutherglen boundaries and is primarily the secondary school for Cambuslang Conversely two schools located in Cambuslang James Aiton and Park View are feeders for Stonelaw High in Rutherglen along with Bankhead Burgh Burnside Calderwood and Spittal Primaries within the burgh Trinity High to which St Anthony s St Mark s and St Columbkille s Primaries are affiliated is the only Catholic secondary school for both towns as is the case for Rutherglen High School the local Additional Support Needs facility which shares a campus with Cathkin High 423 424 All council run schools in the South Lanarkshire area were rebuilt between the late 1990s and 2010s 425 List of schools Edit 2022 23 pupil roll in parentheses 423 Non denominational Edit Bankhead Primary School Bankhead Road Rutherglen G73 2BQ 310 Burgh Primary School 41 King Street Rutherglen G73 1JY 180 Burnside Primary School Glenlui Avenue Burnside Rutherglen G73 4JE 378 Calderwood Primary School Buchanan Drive Rutherglen G73 3PQ 435 Cathkin Primary School Burnside Road Rutherglen G73 4AA 194 Loch Primary School Lochaber Drive Springhall Rutherglen G73 5HX 203 Spittal Primary School Lochlea Road Spittal Rutherglen G73 4QJ 151 Stonelaw High School 140 Calderwood Road Rutherglen G73 3BP 1248 Roman Catholic Edit St Anthony s Primary School Lochaber Drive Springhall Rutherglen G73 5HX 161 St Columbkille s Primary School Clincarthill Road Rutherglen G73 2LG 279 St Mark s Primary School Kirkriggs Avenue Blairbeth Rutherglen G73 4LY 158 Trinity High School Glenside Drive Eastfield Rutherglen G73 3LW 1186 Private schools Edit Fernhill School Fernbrae Avenue Fernhill Rutherglen Glasgow G73 4SG 230 5 to 18 Sport EditFootball Edit Rutherglen Glencairn compete in the West of Scotland League First Division The club was formed in 1896 and has won the famous Scottish Junior Cup on four occasions 1901 02 1918 19 1926 27 1938 39 426 Glencairn moved into a brand new stadium New Southcroft Park currently sponsored by Celsius Cooling and renamed as The Celsius Stadium situated in the Burnhill area of Rutherglen in 2009 319 following the demolition of the old ground Southcroft Park where they had played for over 100 years The Glencairn Venue building on Glasgow Road which is on part of the old site 319 the rest now being under the M74 motorway is owned by the football club although the company operating in the building is a separate entity from the club In 2008 Rutherglen Glencairn won the Central District League First Division with a record points total The 2009 10 season saw Glencairn record back to back titles when they won the West Region Super League Division One at the first attempt Clyde Football Club used to play in the area before moving to the former new town of Cumbernauld The immediate area could be considered the cradle of Scottish football with Hampden Park the national stadium and home to Scotland s oldest football club Queen s Park being close by to the west as well as Cathkin Park the home of the defunct Third Lanark and not far to the north Celtic Park the home of Celtic all of which apart from Clyde s former ground are located in the City of Glasgow In addition to men s amateur teams such as Rutherglen AFC of the Scottish Amateur Football League the town also had a women s football club Rutherglen Ladies which was formed in 1921 and played at a high level throughout the 20s and 30s 427 More recently Rutherglen Girls FC was founded in 2012 and features three age group teams plus a senior women s team competing in the SWFL Central South East Division Notable people EditSee also Category People from Rutherglen Several notable persons born between 1978 and 1998 are from Rutherglen as per their birth certificate but have only a tenuous link to the town due to being delivered at Rutherglen Maternity Hospital which operated between these years 163 162 164 165 many children born here would have grown up in Glasgow East Kilbride or elsewhere 428 Artists actors and media personalities Edit Dave Anderson actor musician and playwright 429 Janet Brown actress and comedian known for her impressions of Margaret Thatcher 9 Steven Campbell artist 430 Andy Cameron comedian 431 Robbie Coltrane actor and comedian 9 Dougie Donnelly sports TV presenter 432 Gary Erskine comic artist 433 Jack Jester born Lee Greig professional wrestler former ICW heavyweight champion 434 Jayd Johnson actor 435 one of her major roles in The Field of Blood TV series was adapted from novels by Denise Mina which are largely set in Rutherglen 436 437 Scott Kyle actor 438 George Logan Hinge and Bracket television comedy double act 439 Mamie Baird nee Baird journalist married TV broadcaster Magnus Magnusson their family home was in the town and was where children Jon Magnusson and TV news presenter Sally Magnusson grew up 282 Alistair MacLean television script writer teacher at Gallowflat High School 440 Tom McGrath playwright and jazz pianist 9 Matt McGinn folk singer born in the Calton but lived in Rutherglen for many years wrote songs which mention Rutherglen such as Ru glen Jean and Rosy Anna 441 Edwin Morgan poet 442 Frank Quitely born Vincent Deighan comic artist 443 Richard Rankin actor and comedian born Richard Harris starred in popular TV shows such as Burnistoun Taggart and Outlander 444 Audrey Tait drummer for hip hop band Hector Bizerk and rock band Franz Ferdinand 445 Dougie Thomson the bass guitarist for Supertramp from 1972 to 1988 446 Midge Ure of the band Ultravox 447 Politicians Edit Marie Cassidy state pathologist for Ireland 448 David Fleming politician and judge 449 Clare Haughey SNP MSP for Rutherglen 450 Ged Killen Labour MP for Rutherglen 451 John Mason SNP MSP 452 Baron Tommy McAvoy Labour politician House of Lords Life peer 8 John Campbell White also known as Baron Overtoun Lord Overtoun 19 22 son of James White also partner in the Whites firm His successor William James Chrystal is mentioned in a plaque on Main Street for contributions towards the Old Parish Church 19 453 Sportspersons Edit Steve Archibald Scotland international footballer clubs included Tottenham Barcelona 454 Archie Baird footballer Aberdeen and World War II POW 455 Alec Bennett Celtic Rangers and Scotland footballer 456 Bob Davidson footballer Dundee 457 Paul di Giacomo footballer Kilmarnock 458 Simon Donnelly international footballer Celtic 459 Stuart Dougal football referee 460 Jimmy Dunn footballer Leeds United 461 Scott Forrest Commonwealth Games rugby international 462 Allan Forsyth footballer Dundee United 463 Mary Gilchrist chess player 464 Tommy Grozier footballer Plymouth Argyle 465 Bobby Harvey footballer Clyde 463 Brogan Hay footballer Glasgow City Rangers 466 Drew Henry snooker player 467 Harry Haddock international footballer Clyde 468 Niall Hopper footballer Queen s Park 469 Archie Jackson Australian cricketer 470 Colin Jackson Rangers and Scotland defender born in Glasgow and raised in Aberdeen but lived in Rutherglen for most of his life 471 Thomas Leather Australian cricketer 472 Stevan McAleer racing driver 473 Collette McCallum international footballer for Australia 474 Amy McDonald international women s footballer 475 Jimmy McMenemy Celtic and Scotland footballer won 11 league titles and 7 Scottish Cups 456 Stephen McKeown footballer Partick Thistle 476 Brian McPhee footballer Airdrie 477 Bobby Murdoch Celtic midfielder one of the Lisbon Lions in 2016 a plaque and display was unveiled at the Town Hall honouring his achievements 478 Billy Murdoch brother of Bobby played for Kilmarnock 479 John Moir American basketball champion 480 Jack Mowat football referee oversaw 12 domestic cup finals and the 1960 European Cup Final 481 John Rae international footballer Third Lanark 456 Willie Robb international footballer Rangers 456 Peter Roney footballer Bristol Rovers 482 Steven Saunders international footballer Motherwell 483 Sandy Stewart footballer Airdrie 484 Dick Strang footballer Darlington 485 Alan Trouten footballer 486 Duncan Weir Scotland international rugby union player began career at Cambuslang Rugby Club 487 Others Edit John Dickson Covenanting field preacher and prisoner for 6 years on the Bass Rock 488 William Gemmell Cochran statistician 9 Jonathan Saunders fashion designer 489 James White lawyer and a partner in J amp J White Chemicals statue in Cathedral Square Glasgow 23 References Edit Mid 2020 Population Estimates for Settlements and Localities in Scotland National Records of Scotland 31 March 2022 Retrieved 31 March 2022 List of UK post towns Evox Facilities Archived from the original on 19 February 2012 Retrieved 22 February 2012 MacDonald Hugh 2023 Rambles Round Glasgow annotated 21st Century ed Glasgow Hephaestion Press p 22 ISBN 9781916490932 New Local Government areas Hansard 22 October 1973 Retrieved 4 November 2018 Irene Maver Modern Times 1950s to The Present Day gt Neighbourhoods The Glasgow Story Retrieved 4 November 2018 Scotland s Landscape City of Glasgow BBC Retrieved 4 November 2018 Rutherglen residents not interested in Glasgow return Daily Record 9 April 2017 a b From a pawnbrokers to Parliament Tommy McAvoy looks back on a career that took him to the House of Lords Marc McLean Daily Record 11 September 2018 Retrieved 1 January 2022 a b c d e f g Local and family history Rutherglen history in the making South Lanarkshire Council a b c d e f The Statistical Account of Lanarkshire page 373 Society for the Benefit of the Sons and Daughters of the Clergy W Blackwood 1841 Harvard University MacDonald Hugh 2023 Rambles Round Glasgow annotated 21st Century ed Glasgow Hephaestion Press p 79 ISBN 9781916490932 Foreman Carol 1997 Street Names of the City of Glasgow Edinburgh John Donald p 1 ISBN 0859764826 a b Farme Old Country Houses of the Old Glasgow Gentry 1878 MacDonald Hugh 2023 Rambles Round Glasgow 21st Century ed Glasgow Hephaestion Press p 82 ISBN 9781916490932 MacDonald Hugh 2023 Rambles Round Glasgow 21st Century ed Glasgow Hephaestion Press p 83 ISBN 9781916490932 Rutherglen Lanarkshire A Vision of Britain through Time Retrieved 15 August 2018 via University of Portsmouth a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x OS 25 inch Scotland 1892 1905 Explore georeferenced maps National Library of Scotland MacDonald Hugh 2023 Rambles Round Glasgow annotated 21st Century ed Glasgow Hephaestion Press p 22 ISBN 9781916490932 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w An A to Z of Rutherglen Then and Now Bill McLennan Rutherglen Heritage Society 2018 a b c d Scientists propose five drilling sites in Rutherglen to prove disused mines hold key to heating homes Daily Record 25 April 2018 a b Inside Cambuslang s Clydebridge steelworks Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer 11 May 2011 Retrieved 2 March 2020 a b c Overtoun Park should be stripped of its name MP says Daily Record 27 March 2019 a b c Whites Chemical Company Rutherglen Heritage Society a b The Town Council Seals of Scotland Rutherglen page 263 Alexander Porteous 1906 via Electric Scotland From Glasgow to South Lanarkshire Life And Work Magazine December 2018 via Pocket Mags Lang may yer lum reek Best ever Scottish phrases The Sunday Post 5 November 2015 Part of Sessional Orders in the House of Commons Part of Sessional Orders in the House of Commons Gregor Mackenzie 3 November 1964 via They Work For You Of the Borough of Rutherglen its Charters Set Antiquities amp c Part VIII pp 78 89 History of Rutherglen and East Kilbride David Ure 1793 via Random Scottish History Postcard 1980 Approximate Rutherglen Historical Society AUS via Victorian Collections Retrieved 15 November 2021 Can you help solve the mystery of town s flag Jonathan Geddes Rutherglen Reformer 9 December 2015 via PressReader Rutherglen Heraldry of the World Retrieved 15 November 2021 Lights are alright Daily Record 31 December 2008 An ancient and peculiar Rutherglen custom The Making of St Luke s Cakes The Anecdotage of Glasgow Robert Alison 1892 via Electric Scotland History of Drinking The Scottish Pub since 1700 Anthony Cooke Edinburgh University Press 2015 ISBN 9781474407366 Main St Rutherglen 1895 Virtual Mitchell Old Photograph Horse Fair Rutherglen Scotland Tour Scotland a b Horse Fairs Colin Findlay Rutherglen Heritage Society 2020 Mid 2016 Population Estimates for Settlements and Localities in Scotland National Records of Scotland Retrieved 27 June 2019 List of railway station names Newsnetscotland com 18 August 2011 Retrieved 16 November 2012 a b An Ruadh Ghleann Wetherspoons Ainmean Aite na h Alba Gaelic Place Names of Scotland Database Gaelicplacenames org Archived from the original on 28 July 2014 Retrieved 16 November 2012 Election 2019 Rutherglen amp Hamilton West BBC News 13 December 2019 Kerr Aiden 9 June 2017 Labour gain first Scottish seat from SNP in election STV Group Retrieved 11 July 2017 Spooner Murray 9 June 2017 Labour takes Rutherglen and Hamilton West Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer Trinity Mirror Retrieved 11 July 2017 Election 2015 Rutherglen amp Hamilton West BBC News 8 May 2015 Retrieved 11 July 2017 Dickie Douglas 8 May 2015 Rutherglen and Hamilton West election results SNP s Margaret Ferrier takes Labour hotspot with 52 per cent of the vote Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer Trinity Mirror Retrieved 11 July 2017 MP Margaret Ferrier s Covid Parliament trip indefensible BBC News 1 October 2020 Retrieved 1 October 2020 Scottish Parliament election 2016 constituency result Rutherglen The Scotsman 6 May 2016 Retrieved 11 July 2017 Boundary changes create new Rutherglen seat but area remains in Glasgow region Daily Record 2 June 2010 Map ward 12 Rutherglen Central and North PDF South Lanarkshire Council 4 May 2017 Retrieved 23 July 2018 Rutherglen Central and North Police Scotland Retrieved 23 July 2018 South Lanarkshire City Population 30 June 2016 Retrieved 23 July 2018 Map ward 11 Rutherglen South PDF South Lanarkshire Council 4 May 2017 Retrieved 13 March 2020 Ward map 13 Cambuslang West PDF South Lanarkshire Council 4 May 2017 Retrieved 13 March 2020 Map ward 14 Cambuslang East PDF South Lanarkshire Council 4 May 2017 Retrieved 13 March 2020 Rutherglen and Cambuslang communities at top of list of most deprived areas in Scotland Edel Kenealy Daily Record 8 September 2016 Shock stats show Rutherglen has more unemployment highest rate of alcohol and drug admissions and more social work referrals than anywhere else in South Lanarkshire Daily Record 19 December 2018 a b c Rutherglen and Cambuslang areas among Scotland s poorest according to Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation stats Daily Record 12 February 2020 Bus passengers in Cambuslang and Rutherglen having to pay nearly double what they do in East Kilbride Daily Record 25 May 2017 Frequency Guide PDF First Glasgow 1 January 2018 Retrieved 10 March 2020 Glasgow Network Map PDF First Glasgow 1 January 2018 Retrieved 10 March 2020 Rutherglen made an Air Quality Management Area after pollution levels exceed national guidelines Daily Record 14 December 2015 Impact of M74 extension through Rutherglen and Cambuslang continues to divide five years on Daily Record 30 June 2016 Rutherglen named as pollution hotspot Daily Record 7 February 2018 Rutherglen town centre listed as one of South Lanarkshire s worst areas for air pollution Daily Record 28 January 2020 a b c d Military Maps of Scotland 18th century Roy Lowlands 1752 55 Explore georeferenced maps National Library of Scotland Northern Part of Lanarkshire Southern Part Top section John Thomson s Atlas of Scotland 1832 National Library of Scotland a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Rutherglen Conservation Area Character Appraisal South Lanarkshire Council 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah OS National Grid Maps 1944 1967 Explore georeferenced maps National Library of Scotland a b c d e f g h i j k OS Six inch 1st edition 1843 1882 Explore georeferenced maps National Library of Scotland Rutherglen main street is webcam wonder BBC News 14 December 2009 Campaign for return of popular Rutherglen webcam Daily Record 19 December 2017 a b Rutherglen Town Hall Dictionary of Scottish Architects Portfolio Rutherglen Town Hall Honeyman Jack amp Robertson Chartered Architects How Rutherglen Town Hall was brought back to its best Daily Record 4 March 2015 Rutherglen Town Hall 10 Reasons To Choose This Scottish Wedding Venue White Rose Wedding Venues Rutherglen Town Hall South Lanarkshire Leisure and Culture Licensing and Registration Office Rutherglen South Lanarkshire Council Grave concern over historical Rutherglen site Daily Record 24 April 2013 a b The Historical Background to the Site of Rutherglen Old Parish Church Rutherglen Old Parish Church 13 November 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Old Rutherglen Rhona Wilson Stenlake Publishing 1996 ISBN 9781872074726 Glasgow Rutherglen Main Street Rutherglen Old Parish Church Rutherglen Tower And Fragments Of Old Church Canmore William Wallace betrayal spot in Rutherglen to be marked The Scotsman 22 January 2016 Scottish nationalist group hold Lanarkshire event to remember betrayal of William Wallace Jonathan Geddes Daily Record 9 August 2022 Dr Gorman Statue Undergoing Restoration Daily Record 13 March 2013 20 24 Queen Street and 115 King Street Masonic Hall British Listed Buildings Lodge Rutherglen Royal Arch 116 Glesca Pals 159 161 163 Main Street Rutherglen Post Office and Library Historic Environment Scotland Carnegie Libraries Scottish Style Scotcities a b c No parking at Rutherglen town hall Daily Record 11 February 2009 Rutherglen post office finally open again Daily Record 3 December 2018 Historic Library Tour Sat 8th August 2015 2 3pm Rutherglen Heritage Rutherglen Lore Tennent Family Website New Display William R Shearer amp Rutherglen Lore Rutherglen Heritage Society 27 October 2015 Rutherglen Library officially opened Daily Record 24 March 2010 Glasgow Rutherglen Town Hall Canmore Rutherglen Salvation Army Major reckons organisation is just as relevant now as when it was started Daily Record 12 July 2015 Glasgow Rutherglen Castle Canmore Museums Browse the Collection King Street South Lanarkshire Leisure and Culture Burgh of Rutherglen Fire Brigade The History of Scottish Fire Brigades Glasgow Rutherglen Main Street St Columbkille s Roman Catholic Church Canmore Parish History St Columbkille s Church Rutherglen SCIAF to mark 50th anniversary at St Columbkilles Daily Record 25 January 2015 St Columbkilles Church Hall Rutherglen CRGP Limited a b c d e f Rutherglen s movie hall past Daily Record 2 September 2009 a b c d e f g The Picture Houses of Rutherglen Rutherglen Heritage Society 2020 a b c d e Rutherglen cinemas Scottish Cinemas and Theatres Project East Church Rutherglen Reformed Presbyterian Church GENUKI Glasgow Rutherglen 18 Farmeloan Road Rutherglen East Church Canmore Rutherglen East Church remembered after pictures belonging to old minister give snapshot to the past Daily Record 8 March 2015 Talks could lead to permanent base for Rutherglen community trust Daily Record 8 May 2014 Number 18 What s on Lanarkshire a b Rutherglen church marks 114th anniversary of founding Daily Record 31 May 2015 a b Brief History Rutherglen Congregational Church History Rutherglen Repertory Theatre Police plan to take over former Rutherglen courthouse Daily Record 19 January 2018 Rutherglen s Planning Building Standards and Roads Office move to East Kilbride Daily Record 23 March 2011 Royal Burgh House 380 King Street Showcase Property Fire crews tackle blaze at former council building in Rutherglen BBC News 14 October 2022 Rutherglen Evangelistic Institute The Scottish Military Research Group Commemorations Project 22 December 2010 Right Hon Baron Overtoun 100 Glasgow Men 1909 History Smith and Rodger Ltd Rutherglen Evangelistic Institute Scotland s War WWI letter sent to Rutherglen troops in 1916 is unearthed ahead of Armistice Day Daily Record 2 November 2018 Rutherglen Scotland December 29 2017 The back view of the Old Burgh Primary School and the Rutherglen Evangelistic Institute Alamy King Street Burgh Primary School with Boundary Walls Railings and Gatepiers British Listed Buildings Site of former Burgh Primary School will soon be open for business Premier Construction News 23 December 2011 Burgh Business Centre Urban Realm 2012 Rutherglen nursery overwhelmed by response of community Daily Record 6 March 2014 Burgh Primary holds official opening Daily Record 7 April 2010 Memories of the Academy Rutherglen Reformer 21 March 2018 via PressReader Glasgow 255 King Street Rutherglen United Presbyterian Church Canmore a b Rutherglen UP Church Glasgow University Library Theology 1875 The Glasgow Story Cool welcome in Rutherglen arcade Daily Record 14 March 2018 Our Stores Rutherglen Exchange Shopping Centre New Rutherglen business centre is officially opened Daily Record 17 July 2011 Refurbishment completes on Rutherglen s Greenhill Court Urban Realm 16 June 2013 Case Study Greenhill Court Rutherglen Lovell Partnerships Rutherglen flats not a troubled block despite reported violence drug abuse and bullets Daily Record 21 June 2017 a b Adding heritage ingredient to the taste of success Glasgow Herald 3 February 1990 Our World Paterson Arran a b History of Oatcake Making in Rutherglen Rutherglen Heritage Society The beautiful game is always in vogue here Daily Record 5 September 2012 Linn O Dee Old Glasgow Pubs Licensing board member pledges vigilance at prospective Rutherglen Wetherspoons Daily Record 29 January 2012 Main Street Rutherglen Old Glasgow Pubs Pubs in Rutherglen Pubs Galore Up and down the main street I might have a glass of beer 16 December 2012 Long serving Rutherglen and Cambuslang Housing Association chairwoman stands down after 30 years Long serving Rutherglen and Cambuslang Housing Association chairwoman stands down after 30 years 15 December 2015 How the Great Storm of 1968 impacted on Rutherglen and Cambuslang Daily Record 12 January 2018 About Us Rutherglen and Cambuslang Housing Association Rutherglen woman who helped start housing association honoured by Queen Daily Record 2 January 2018 Rutherglen and Cambuslang high rise residents told cladding is not the same as Grenfell Daily Record 7 July 2017 Rutherglen and Cambuslang facing huge housing crisis Daily Record 21 February 2017 Artistic mural on Rutherglen s rich history is unveiled at train station Daily Record 21 November 2018 Home The Busy Bees Rutherglen mosque promises to sort out parking problems outside their building Daily Record 6 November 2015 Throwback Thursday New St Columbkille s Primary opened its doors Daily Record 26 March 2016 Children were abused for decades in Catholic homes Scottish inquiry finds The Guardian 11 October 2018 Gran breaks 65 year silence on horrifying abuse by nuns in Rutherglen kids home Daily Record 31 October 2018 For Glasgow s Greater Good NHS Scotland December 2003 a b c d GPs plan takeover of hospital which is facing early closure The Herald 21 October 1997 a b Hospital may be sacrificed Rutherglen Maternity could close early to save debt ridden Victoria Infirmary The Herald 18 June 1997 a b Rutherglen Maternity remembered through Facebook page Daily Record 11 May 2011 a b Olde Glasgow Hospitals Glasgow Punter 15 December 2017 Record and images for Dalmarnock Bridge Canmore Record and images for Dalmarnock Railway Bridge 1897 Canmore Farme Castle Glasgow University Library Special Collections Dougan Collection 1870 The Glasgow Story a b The Mysteries of the Farme Colliery Engine Justin Parkes North Lanarkshire Council a b Museum appeals for info on Rutherglen Farme Colliery Daily Record 14 July 2010 a b Newcomen engine Museum of Transport c 1905 The Glasgow Story a b 1910 Housing Conditions of Miners Farme Coal Co Ltd Rutherglen Scottish Mining Website a b Welcome Rutherglen Links Business Park a b c d e f g Farme Cross Rutherglen Heritage Society 2018 Rutherglen s Royalty Boundary Stones Rutherglen Heritage Society 2018 Public Sculpture JosephIngleby com Rutherglen Farme Cross May 2012 Album at Flickr May 2012 Glasgow Dalmarnock Road Dalmarnock Power Station Canmore Dalmarnock Road Power Station Glesga Pals Dalmarnock Power Station 1955 The Glasgow Story Homes planned for Dalmarnock Power Station site BBC News 28 April 2015 Industrial East End Parkhead History Shopping centre s industrial past remembered Evening Times 28 October 2013 Farme Colliery Engine Grace s Guide Caledonian Pottery Co Ltd Rutherglen Scotland s Brick Manufacturing Industry Hartley s history in Rutherglen Daily Record 27 July 2011 Caledonian Pottery Ltd Rutherglen Heritage Society 2020 Rutherglen pottery on show at museum Daily Record 28 November 2012 M74 Completion Project Glasgow Headland Archaeology Retrieved 9 September 2021 Marking 100 years of success Evening Times 13 February 2016 88 James Stirling Memoirs and portraits of one hundred Glasgow men 1886 Hugh Alexander Index of Glasgow Men 1909 Unicone Co Grace s Guide James Menzies and Co Grace s Guide Glasgow Dalmarnock Road Phoenix Tube Works Canmore Glasgow Rutherglen 119 Cambuslang Road Eastfield Ropery Canmore Glasgow 1 Lloyd Street Clyde Patent Wire Rope Works Canmore a b Museums Browse the Collection image of Farme Cross looking along Dalmarnock Road with the Clyde Patent Rope Wire Works Allan Whyte amp Co Ltd on the left 24 March 1925 South Lanarkshire Leisure and Culture Clyde Paper Co Grace s Guide Glasgow Clyde Paper Mill Canmore Scotland s Lost Industries Michael Meighan Amberley Publishing Limited 2012 ISBN 9781445624013 Rutherglen Brickworks Farme Cross Rutherglen South Lanarkshire Scotland s Brick Manufacturing Industry a b c Monogram site proposal could bring over 200 jobs to Rutherglen Daily Record 8 August 2012 Ekco CR32 Car Radio Allan s Virtual Radio Museum Unemployment Rutherglen Hansard 19 December 1967 Disastrous Inundation at Rutherglen Ashburton Guardian 15 April 1903 via Papers Past National Library of New Zealand a b Rutherglen Potentially Vulnerable Area 11 14 Clyde and Loch Lomond Local Plan District Scottish Environmental Protection Agency 2014 Glasgow 5 9 Dalmarnock Road Sanmex Chemical Works Canmore Rutherglen dealt major jobs blow as Sanmex announce plans to leave the Burgh Daily Record 13 July 2016 Speyside wins funds for Asian expansion The Speyside distillery Huge housing development planned for former distillery site in Rutherglen Daily Record 29 May 2018 Land for sale in 5 21 Dalmarnock Road Rutherglen Glasgow Scotland G73 PrimeLocation McDonald s plan Rutherglen opening in latter part of 2015 Daily Record 14 January 2015 Commercial property for sale in Clyde Gateway Trade Park Rutherglen Glasgow G73 PrimeLocation Rutherglen Links Clyde Gateway Regeneration plans for business sites near Rutherglen BBC News 4 December 2012 15m business district gets the green light Evening Times 6 December 2012 Ford Retail brings Scottish hub to Rutherglen business park The Scotsman 28 February 2019 Rutherglen Links Business Park enters final stages Scottish Construction Now 26 June 2019 Clyde Gateway showcase One Rutherglen Links Urban Realm 16 February 2015 One Rutherglen Links is open for business as Clyde Gateway look to attract new companies to the area Daily Record 16 February 2015 Rutherglen Links business park expands with twin pavilions Urban Realm 30 May 2019 Two 74 Ashfield Land Retrieved 11 July 2018 Green light for 15m mixed use development in South Lanarkshire Scottish Construction Now 17 February 2016 Retrieved 11 July 2018 Rutherglen s Two74 project faces delay Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer 15 September 2016 Retrieved 11 July 2018 Construction work underway on new golf complex for Rutherglen and Cambuslang Daily Record 3 March 2020 Topgolf Glasgow Opening date for Rutherglen golf venue confirmed Rebecca Newlands Glasgow Times 5 December 2022 Glasgow Rutherglen Farme Cross Millar Terrace Canmore Glasgow Rutherglen Farme Cross Carlyle Terrace Canmore How the colonies became an Edinburgh institution Edinburgh Evening News 25 July 2017 Rutherglen Miller Terrace General view from NE Canmore Rutherglen Parkhead History Tennent s Old Glasgow Pubs New community pub on Rutherglen block to take centre stage on local entertainment 23 March 2019 Rutherglen s new Kingdom Hall taking shape Daily Record 12 October 2011 Local Bowling Clubs Cambuslang Bowing Club Cuningar Loop Forestry and Land Scotland forestryandland gov scot Shawfield Old Country Houses of the Old Glasgow Gentry 1878 Toxic fears over M74 extension The Herald 2003 29 November 2003 24m identified for second phase of chromium cleanup at Shawfield Clyde Gateway news 2016 2million plan to clean up Shawfield Daily Record 8 February 2019 Harmful chemicals in green Glasgow burn to be flushed BBC News 19 February 2019 Retrieved 4 March 2020 Polmadie Burn Erin Brockovich River Clyde toxic disaster poses no risk to public Evening Times 8 March 2019 Retrieved 4 March 2020 Clyde Gateway National Business District Shawfield Shawfield masterplan wins 6m European funding Urban Realm 3 December 2012 New 9 million Rutherglen office building brings 170 jobs to local area Glasgow Live 8 July 2019 Grace s Guide Thomas B Seath Seath s Shipyard Rutherglen Heritage Society 2018 Clyde Smartbridge readied for weeknd opening Urban Realm 17 July 2014 Holistic landscape design will be essential to successful regeneration LUC Consultancy Is this Scotland s steepest street BBC News 28 August 2019 a b c Rutherglen church set to celebrate 175th anniversary Daily Record 19 January 2011 a b c New minister of Rutherglen West and Wardlawhill Church calls for focus on love and acceptance and to bring the church into modern times Daily Record 25 June 2017 Rutherglen church to be transformed into Hindu Temple Daily Record 7 April 2010 Rutherglen Wardlawhill Parish Church The Scottish Military Research Group Commemorations Project I hated school so much I pulled it down Sunday Mail 1 April 2001 Retrieved 5 March 2020 via The Free Library Dickie Douglas 25 October 2017 Former pupil who redeveloped old Rutherglen Academy building arranges school reunion Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer Retrieved 5 March 2020 a b c d Dickie Douglas 11 April 2012 Stonelaw head looks back on 32 terrific years in Rutherglen Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer Retrieved 4 March 2020 a b c Stonelaw High School About Us Stonelaw High School Retrieved 4 March 2020 History St John Operative 347 History Lodge Toryglen No 1561 Museums Browse the Collection Hamilton Road South Lanarkshire Leisure and Culture Gallowflat Mound Gazetteer for Scotland Rutherglen Gallowflat Canmore Gallowflat House Glasgow University Library Special Collections Dougan Collection 1870 The Glasgow Story Gallowflat Old Country Houses of the Old Glasgow Gentry 1878 Making your fellow pupils cross The Herald 13 January 2016 Retrieved 4 March 2020 Rebuilding Gallowflat School Rutherglen Heritage Society Hamilton rd 11th March 2009 Gallowflat School via Urban Glasgow Hamilton rd 10th July 2009 David Walker Gardens via Urban Glasgow David Walker Gardens RIAS Retrieved 4 March 2020 David Walker Gardens open its doors Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer 30 March 2011 Retrieved 4 March 2020 Williams Stratton 5 October 2015 Plans to turn the old Stonelaw High into flats given green light Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer Retrieved 4 March 2020 Kenealy Edel 20 July 2017 Plans for Rutherglen s Gallowflat school still on the table Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer Retrieved 4 March 2020 Rutherglen bowls champion determined to equal club legend s record of nine championship wins Daily Record 4 October 2017 About Us Rutherglen Bowling Club Church s project opens up the past The Herald 14 January 2014 Stonelaw Church opens time capsule from 1912 at special service Daily Record 16 January 2014 Revamp proposed for Stonelaw Church Rutherglen Reformer 14 March 2018 via PressReader Bowls Overtoun Park celebrating 100 years Daily Record 25 April 2012 Vandals leave Rutherglen bowling green like bomb site Daily Record 7 April 2016 a b Templeton Bowling Club hold summer fett sic Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer 16 June 2010 Retrieved 7 February 2018 Burnside grandfather is honoured as care home named after him Daily Record 10 October 2018 Templeton House Abbeyfield Concern over old Langside College campus plans in Rutherglen Daily Record 6 February 2014 Memories pupils learn to use green fingers in Rutherglen in 1954 Evening Times 26 March 2015 Stonelaw Community Sports Hub Retrieved 9 February 2018 Stonelaw Community Sports Centre South Lanarkshire Leisure amp Culture Retrieved 9 February 2018 Pupil rolls across Rutherglen and Cambuslang continue to rise Daily Record 24 March 2017 Glasgow Burnside Buchanan Drive Calderwood Primary School Canmore Schools and Nurseries catchment area Calderwood Primary School South Lanarkshire Council Cambuslang Industrial History 2013 via DocPlayer Eastfield House Old Country Houses of the Old Glasgow Gentry 1878 Smith Kenny 7 August 2010 New Trinity High is officially opened Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer Retrieved 5 March 2020 SLC Eastfield Lifestyle South Lanarkshire Leisure amp Culture Retrieved 7 March 2020 Proposed changes to popular Rutherglen pub will rip the heart out of the community Daily Record 12 September 2018 A 15m Hotel Plan for its Clydebridge Site Revealed by Steel Giant Liberty The Leaders Globe 13 January 2020 Malls Mire Community Woodland Urban Roots Retrieved 9 March 2020 Malls Mire Community Reserve Woodland Trust Retrieved 9 March 2020 Will Henshaw 1 June 2015 Toryglen s Urban Roots celebrate as Malls Mire gains local nature reserve status Daily Record Retrieved 9 March 2020 Old Photograph Burnhill Rutherglen Scotland Tour Scotland 3 Western Avenue Rutherglen West Parish Church Munro Church Church of Scotland British Listed Buildings Glasgow Rutherglen Western Avenue Munro Free Church Canmore A Brief Biography of George Henry Paulin Air Comm Marcus Wetherspoon Rutherglen The Scottish Military Research Group Commemorations Project Rutherglen community welcome off sales KO Daily Record 12 June 2014 More sickening sectarian graffiti painted in Rutherglen underpass Daily Record 12 October 2017 Police to meet with politicians and council to target anti social behaviour following underpass assaults Daily Record 3 September 2021 Lanarkshire town s main street not safe to walk at night due to teenage tearaways Jonathan Geddes Daily Record 11 January 2022 Cops vow to crack down on underage drinkers in Burnhill Jonathan Geddes Daily Record 19 October 2017 Burnhill Action Group Locator Voluntary Action South Lanarkshire Lottery cash is a godsend Rutherglen Reformer 27 February 2019 via PressReader Thugs making life miserable for Rutherglen s Burnhill community Daily Record 26 April 2017 Still Game at Rutherglen pub Daily Record 22 February 2018 Fairways Old Glasgow Pubs A history of Toryglen Golf Club Rutherglen Rutherglen Heritage Society October 2018 Toryglen Forgotten Golfing Greens of Scotland Retrieved 22 October 2018 Ye Old Inn Old Glasgow Pubs a b c Rutherglen Glencairn Football Club Glasgow Architecture 16 October 2008 Burnhill Sports Centre in Rutherglen facing the axe as South Lanarkshire Council look to balance budget Daily Record 3 December 2015 Burnhill Sports Centre demolished as council says no current plans for chromium probe Daily Record 9 August 2017 Cathkin Laundry site is cleared Daily Record 27 February 2013 2640 Westfield Rutherglen Curling Places Vol 2 History Carmunnock amp Rutherglen Curling Club Former Rutherglen nursery to become social housing Daily Record 4 April 2017 Housing association given keys to its new 4 5 million development Rutherglen Reformer 19 June 2019 via PressReader Step back in time at Rutherglen Library Daily Record 7 March 2015 Muirbank House Bankhead Rutherglen Home of Thomas Nelson amp Margaret Blair Ross Our Roots The Old Quarry Bar Rutherglen Glasgow Pubs Galore Bigots target Rutherglen club on eve of march Daily Record 6 July 2011 UK Voting In Four By Elections In Britain Seen As General Election Pointer Opposition Share Of Poll Increases 1964 British Pathe video footage polling station at Farie Street School a b c d Kings Park Glasgow origins amp history Glasgow s South Side Retrieved 13 February 2018 a b Newly built 8 8million Bankhead Primary School is a real class act Daily Record 9 June 2015 State Cinema The Glasgow Story Retrieved 13 February 2018 State County Glasgow The Scottish Cinema Project Retrieved 9 September 2018 Flats plan for former library Daily Record 4 January 2012 Car park will ease problems in Quigley s Daily Record 24 April 2013 Average speed cameras to go live in Rutherglen accident hotspot here is what you need to know Evening Times 15 September 2018 a b The Cityford Burn Rutherglen Heritage Society Exhibition looking back at Bankhead Pond set for Rutherglen Library Daily Record 14 March 2012 Bankhead Pond Memories Rutherglen Heritage Society 2020 The Late Right Hon Baron Overtoun Who s Who in Glasgow in 1909 Landemer Day Rutherglen Heritage Society 2019 Overtoun Park Jubilee Fountain Memorial Drinking Fountains 28 December 2014 Mill Street Overtoun Park Bandstand British Listed Buildings a b Overtoun Park Bandstand Carol Foreman Rutherglen Heritage Society 2020 Rutherglen residents want Overtoun Park bandstand returned to its former glory amid claims of neglect Daily Record 15 July 2015 New play equipment set for Overtoun Park in Rutherglen Daily Record 10 October 2013 a b Ruglen Ropewalk in Overtoun Park Greenspace Scotland 7 November 2018 Overtoun Park South Lanarkshire Council Overtoun Park Discover Glasgow Overtoun Covered Courts Rutherglen Lawn Tennis Club 30 January 2020 Rutherglen Tennis Club achieve milestone decision but face many hurdles Andy McGilvray Daily Record 30 September 2021 Retrieved 23 November 2021 Lawn Tennis Club Overtoun Courts Proposal Friends of Overtoun Park Retrieved 23 November 2021 About Grow73 About Us Friends of Overtoun Park Rutherglen named as one of the top 25 suburbs in the UK for first time buyers by national newspaper Daily Record 27 March 2015 a b c d e Time for action on older council houses Robert Brown Scottish Liberal Democrats 7 March 2017 Neighbourhood profiles Ward 11 Rutherglen South South Lanarkshire Community Planning Partnership Glasgow Church Avenue Burnside Parish Church Halls And Session House Canmore Rhul Glasgow The Scottish Cinema Project Retrieved 9 September 2018 Facilities Rutherglen Lawn Tennis Club Burnside tennis courts could be saved after Rutherglen Club launch community campaign Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer 28 October 2015 Retrieved 7 March 2020 Sewage work project in Rutherglen could see 11 months of disruption for residents Daily Record 2 May 2017 Stonelaw Woods 5 Rutherglen Heritage Project Stonelaw Tower Rutherglen Heritage Society Rutherglen news Burnside filling station site subject to planning application Daily Record 9 September 2016 Stonelaw Tower Scottish Castles Association 8 December 2014 Tower House or Engine House Inside Rais and Stonelaw Towers Scottish Castles Association 10 April 2018 General view Burnside Rutherglen Lanarkshire Scotland 1937 Oblique aerial photograph taken facing south Canmore Home The Croft Glasgow pub boss on Level 2 boundary edge furious at being unable to trade Glasgow Live 31 May 2021 Glasgow Castlemilk House Greater Glasgow An Illustrated Architectural Guide Sam Small 2008 quoted at Canmore Plans for housing development on former Rutherglen Croftfoot football parks move a step closer Daily Record 2 August 2016 Houses are selling fast at Croftfield Park Daily Record 13 September 2017 via PressReader Plans for new Spittal Primary are given the go ahead Daily Record 25 January 2012 Old Spittal to go Rutherglen Reformer 23 November 2016 via PressReader Welcome to our school Kirkriggs School Residents say they are not at all shocked by vicious Rutherglen attack Daily Record 12 April 2017 a b St Mark s Catholic church Rutherglen St Anthony and St Mark parish Castlemilk Glasgow Origins and History Scotcities Croftfoot Road Mill Street Gatepiers Formerly to Castlemilk House British Listed Buildings Castlemilk Woodlands Central Scotland Green Network 1 April 2010 Cassiltoun Housing Association wins prize for their work at Castlemilk Woods Scottish Federation of Housing Associations 18 August 2016 Castlemilk Park Project Cassiltoun Housing Association a b Election special Rutherglen South demands continued regeneration Daily Record 12 April 2017 Clashes between rival gangs in Rutherglen and Castlemilk are declining Daily Record 23 February 2016 Football is winning fight against gangs in Rutherglen Daily Record 29 September 2016 Rutherglen Fernhill and Cathkin s new minister speaks on starting work at the parish her unexpected road to the ministry and surprising media attention Jonathan Geddes Daily Record 20 January 2017 Cathkin Relief Road fully opened to the public Evening Times 28 February 2017 Retrieved 23 August 2017 Cathkin Relief Road idverde UK Cathkin Relief Road compensation claims could cost South Lanarkshire Council 1million Daily Record 22 October 2019 Fernbrae Meadows Green Infrastructure Scotland Retrieved 16 February 2020 a b Rutherglen community fear their scheme has become the forgotten land Daily Record 26 October 2016 Councillor s bid to upgrade Rutherglen s Springhall Daily Record 14 November 2016 Springhall facility on schedule Rutherglen Reformer 18 September 2019 via PressReader Revamped Community Hall taking shape South Lanarkshire View 16 September 2019 Rutherglen community centre reopens following 1m revamp Daily Record 12 July 2021 St Anthony s Catholic church Rutherglen St Anthony and St Mark parish About Us Loch Primary School Faith barriers broken down as pupils share school playground The Herald 22 September 2013 Rutherglen schools handed anti sectarian honour Daily Record 11 September 2013 1689 Burnside Curling Places Vol 1 John McDonald Mackintosh Architecture The Hunterian University of Glasgow Sir John McDonald Dictionary of Scottish Architects Elpalet Dictionary of Scottish Architects Elpalet including gatepiers 250 East Kilbride Road Rutherglen British Listed Buildings The Story of Rosebank Tower Tower Blocks UK 16 September 2019 Tower Block UK Springhall University of Edinburgh Retrieved 7 March 2020 Buildings in Glasgow Springhall Court Emporis Archived from the original on 2 June 2022 Retrieved 7 March 2020 Rise Up Women The Remarkable Lives of the Suffragettes Diane Atkinson 2018 ISBN 9781408844069 Refugee crisis At look back in time to when Rutherglen opened its arms to Belgians fleeing World War One Daily Record 6 October 2015 The new nursery connecting two communities South Lanarkshire View 12 May 2021 Retrieved 5 September 2021 Residents living in fear in revamped Cathkin estate Daily Record 9 May 2012 East Whitlawburn set for major regeneration Daily Record 11 September 2013 Map of the Parish of Carmunnock in the Historical County of Lanark Gazetteer for Scotland Cathkin Community Wing South Lanarkshire Leisure and Culture Cathkin Old Country Houses of the Old Glasgow Gentry 1878 The History of Cathkin House Family History at The Mitchell Glasgow Libraries Children s charity is still changing lives 60 years after it opened Third Force News 24 November 2015 New high school opened Glasgow Herald 17 November 1970 p 8 Retrieved 5 March 2020 Smith Kenny 15 October 2008 Cathkin High closes its doors for the last time Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer Retrieved 5 March 2020 a b Our primary schools South Lanarkshire Council Retrieved 6 December 2022 Our secondary schools South Lanarkshire Council Council s 1 2 billion school modernisation programme ends in Hamilton Daily Record 5 January 2020 Team Photograph Freewebs com Retrieved 16 November 2012 Leydon Liz 19 February 2018 A century of strong women Daily Record Retrieved 3 December 2021 Rutherglen Maternity Hospital House of Commons Debate Hansard 1 March 1995 A good night in Dave Anderson actor musician The Herald 12 November 2003 Retrieved 2 November 2022 Steven Campbell Gazetteer for Scotland Retrieved 2 November 2022 Andy Cameron on Johnny Hubbard s historic hat trick against Celtic The National 30 August 2019 Dougie Donnelly slams Scottish Government over sacking The Scotsman 17 January 2008 accessed 5 September 2021 Rutherglen is visited by Batman Iron Man and Spider Man as Comic Con comes to town Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer 9 February 2017 Retrieved 29 March 2018 Fernhill Wrestler back on the telly in Insane Fight Club II Daily Record 21 January 2015 Retrieved 5 August 2017 Geddes Jonathan 7 August 2013 Rutherglen actress Jayd Johnson on her starring role in Field of Blood Rutherglen Reformer Hamilton Retrieved 27 March 2020 Crime author Denise Mina discusses Rutherglen roots Jonathan Geddes Daily Record 23 May 2012 Denise Mina Field of Blood Maxima Library Rutherglen actor Scott Kyle all set for new role in Scottish theatre Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer 19 June 2017 Retrieved 27 March 2020 About George Logan Hinge and Brackett Official Website Retrieved 2 November 2022 Novelist Alistair MacLean Dies at 64 AP News Retrieved 22 August 2018 Matt McGinn event in Rutherglen pays tribute to legendary Scottish folk singer Daily Record 26 February 2020 Retrieved 2 November 2022 MSP s Parliamentary tribute to Edwin Morgan Daily Record 1 September 2010 Retrieved 2 November 2022 Geddes Jonathan 2 May 2016 From Rutherglen to Gotham City How a Cathkin comic book artist draws the world s biggest superheroes Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer Archived from the original on 5 July 2018 Retrieved 29 March 2018 Stonelaw s class of 1994 2000 all set to return to Rutherglen for a big school reunion Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer 22 January 2016 Retrieved 27 March 2020 Lanarkshire musician delighted as she takes over as Franz Ferdinand s drummer Daily Record 25 October 2021 Thomson exits Cappielow to be with his ill Supertramp father The Scotsman 4 December 2018 Retrieved 2 November 2022 Ure tells viewers of his love for Cambuslang Daily Record 11 January 2017 Prof Marie Cassidy to retire as State Pathologist The Irish Times 7 September 2018 Retrieved 4 November 2022 Fleming David Pinkerton Lord Fleming 1877 1944 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 33166 Retrieved 4 November 2022 Subscription or UK public library membership required Dickie Douglas 15 September 2015 Rutherglen SNP branch select Clare Haughey to fight seat as she accuses Labour of taking area for granted www dailyrecord co uk Retrieved 6 May 2016 Dickie Douglas 20 February 2013 Killen wins Rutherglen South for Labour Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer Trinity Mirror Retrieved 9 June 2017 A Glasgow MSP has called for a local paper like the Reformer for his east end constituency Daily Record 11 February 2021 Retrieved 4 November 2022 Plaque on King Street actually Queen Street Geograph 12 April 2013 Retrieved 17 June 2017 Scottish football legend Steve Archibald reveals he used to watch Rutherglen Glencairn in his younger days Daily Record 15 July 2016 Retrieved 4 November 2022 Archie Baird The Scotsman 5 November 2009 Retrieved 4 November 2022 a b c d Mitchell Andy 2021 The men who made Scotland The definitive Who s Who of Scottish Football Internationalists 1872 1939 Amazon ISBN 9798513846642 From Glasgow Rangers to Cambuslang Rangers for hitman Bob Davidson Daily Record 27 June 2015 Retrieved 4 November 2022 Di Giacomo aims to success with Ross County Daily Record 30 September 2009 Retrieved 4 November 2022 Stonelaw High waves farewell to favourite teacher Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer 5 October 2011 Retrieved 13 March 2018 Big hearted refs present 3000 cheque to charity Daily Record 18 February 2009 Retrieved 4 November 2022 McBeth Jim 11 February 2005 Jimmy Dunn Former professional footballer The Scotsman Edinburgh p 45 Retrieved 9 June 2022 via Gale OneFile News Scott Forrest named head coach of GB Women s sevens for Olympic Games The Offside Line 2 October 2019 Retrieved 4 November 2022 a b Book details greatest footballers to come from Rutherglen Daily Record 29 August 2012 Retrieved 4 November 2022 Miss Mary Dinorah Gilchrist Chess Scotland Retrieved 4 November 2022 Joyce Michael 2004 Football League Players Records 1888 to 1939 Nottingham SoccerData Tony Brown p 109 ISBN 978 1 899468 67 6 Spooner Murray 18 February 2016 Two Fernhill sisters have been selected for the Scotland Women s training camps The Daily Record Retrieved 16 June 2017 Joy for Doherty as he goes on to semi final The Irish Examiner 12 December 2002 Retrieved 4 November 2022 Harry Haddock Scotland Epistles 18 August 2016 Retrieved 4 November 2022 A Z of Rutherglen Then and Now Rutherglen Heritage Retrieved 17 December 2021 Archie Jackson Rutherglen Heritage Society Retrieved 4 November 2022 Douglas Dickie 8 June 2015 Colin Jackson Rangers star who based himself in Rutherglen looks back on life in the Royal Burgh Rutherglen Reformer Retrieved 1 November 2018 Thomas Leather ESPN Cricket Info Retrieved 4 November 2022 Dickie Douglas 8 October 2015 Motorsport Rutherglen racing champ Stevan McAleer clinches title after dramatic final race in USA Daily Record Retrieved 25 December 2022 Collette McCallum plays final game as Australia draw with Scotland Daily Record 16 April 2015 Retrieved 19 October 2016 Scotland call up for Amy McDonald Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer 4 March 2009 Retrieved 16 June 2017 Stephen has the jagged edge Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer 23 July 2008 Retrieved 6 June 2017 McPhee signs for Sons Dumbarton Reporter 15 June 2007 Retrieved 4 November 2022 Celtic legend Bobby Murdoch honoured at Rutherglen Town Hall Daily Record 17 October 2016 Retrieved 16 December 2016 Billy Murdoch Rutherglen s Greatest Retrieved 4 November 2022 Porter David L 2005 Basketball A Biographical Dictionary Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing Group p 332 ISBN 0 313 30952 3 Jack Mowat EU Football Info Retrieved 4 November 2022 Litster John Record of Pre War Scottish League Players Norwich PM Publications Steven Saunders leaves Rutherglen in search of Champions League football and Welsh silverware Daily Record 20 July 2016 Retrieved 4 November 2022 Rutherglen s Sandy Stewart is loving life at Houston Dynamo as he looks towards clinching a play off spot Daily Record Rutherglen Reformer 18 June 2015 Retrieved 15 August 2017 Joyce Michael 2004 Football League Players Records 1888 to 1939 Nottingham SoccerData p 251 ISBN 978 1 899468 67 6 Trouten is voted top young player BBC Sport 11 March 2005 Retrieved 12 November 2013 Duncan is delighted with call to Scots squad Rutherglen Reformer 29 January 2020 Retrieved 4 November 2022 Baillie Robert 1842 The letters and journals of Robert Baillie Vol 3 Edinburgh R Ogle p 467 Retrieved 13 February 2019 Style Glasgow Gurus Evening Times 15 February 2008Bibliography EditRutherglen Lore Story of an Eight Hundred Year old Royal Burgh 1126 1926 by William Ross Shearer printed in 1922External links Edit Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Rutherglen Media related to Rutherglen at Wikimedia Commons Rutherglen at Undiscovered Scotland Rutherglen at Gazetteer for Scotland Rutherglen A historical perspective 1885 from the Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland edited by Francis H Groome Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rutherglen amp oldid 1159201600, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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