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Location of Scotstoun House

PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 10:24 pm
by Timchilli
Can someone pinpoint the exact location of this once great mansion house?

Was it on Dumbarton Road, or was it where the god-awful Kingsway flat current stand?

If someone could pinpoint it using Google Earth, that'd be top drawer.

Image

Image



Tim

PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 11:40 pm
by Ronnie
What dates are we talking about? This helps to find the right maps.

Also, these sphinxes look as if they have been part of another building (they look a bit "plonked down" here)? Any idea where they might have been before? Or who carved them?

Best, R

PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 11:57 pm
by DVF
Don't quote me, but it may have been here:

Image

PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 12:00 am
by Ronnie
The caption to the picture you posted (from The Glasgow Story) states:

"Scotstoun House, photographed by Thomas Annan in 1870. It stood to the south of Dumbarton Road near the ground on which Ardsloy Place was subsequently formed."

The book "Old Scotstoun – a village in the city", Miranda Marshall (1975) might be of use.

PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 12:18 am
by Timchilli
I've been looking for the Marshall book for some time -- still can't find it.

I believe that this is an Adair map from the 18th Century, showing Scotstoun House to the South.

Image

PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 12:28 am
by Dexter St. Clair
The Glasgow Story gives a street name Ardsloy Place

http://www.theglasgowstory.com/image.php?inum=TGSB00315&add=99&t=

PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 12:45 am
by DVF
So I was talking crap. ::): ::):

PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 2:35 am
by crusty_bint
Seems some of Scotstoun House survived well into the 20th Century although almost all trace of its once lush orchards is gone by 1939:

Maps:

1864 , 1899 , 1915 , 1939

PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 9:34 am
by Timchilli
Thanks for the scans, Crusty.

It seems, then, that Scotstoun House did stand on the site of the Kingsway flats, just off Dumbarton Road.

Image

As ever, a hideous replacement.

PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 11:37 am
by Dexter St. Clair
No it was south of Dumbarton road and was demolished when they built the railway embankment.

There was a children's home on the site of the Kingsway flats.

PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 3:01 pm
by Timchilli
Dexter St. Clair wrote:No it was south of Dumbarton road and was demolished when they built the railway embankment.

There was a children's home on the site of the Kingsway flats.

Is the 1939 OS map scanned by Crusty (above) inaccurate, then?
I think working from my own maps was the thing that began to confuse me as to the House’s exact location.

Also, where can I find more info on the children's home you speak of?

Many thanks

Tim

Time for the Mitchell.

PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 3:39 pm
by Dexter St. Clair
crusty_bint wrote:Seems some of Scotstoun House survived well into the 20th Century although almost all trace of its once lush orchards is gone by 1939:

Maps:

1864 , 1899 , 1915 , 1939


The First Two maps show Scotstoun House south of Dumbarton Road but the 1899 map shows a House north of Dumbarton Road which I believe became the Children's Home. The later maps show this home as "Scotstoun House" I used to have a map which showed a Children's Home where the Kingsaway flats are now. I have tried googling but there was an orphanage next to the park and I think that's hampering the search.

PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 6:58 pm
by yoker brian
I'm having my tea just now, but i think there is some mention of Scotstoun Estate and Scotstoun House in the book relating to Yoker "Both Sides of the Burn" let me finish and i'll have a check

PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 7:52 pm
by yoker brian
Just checked "Both Sides of the Burn" and it does mention Scotstoun Estate within Chapter 4 The Landed Gentry for anyone fortunate enough to have a copy

Text from the book is hown in black text below my comments are in red text

Page 39 para 3

In 1691 the estate was acquired by William Walkinshaw who greatly improved the place, He demolished the original Scotstoun House which stood on a site now the property of the Albion Motor Car Company (presumably somewhere between the river bank and south of Dumbarton road) and built a handsome new one on higher ground now occupied by the Kingsway high flats.

Until well into this century (1900s) the lodge of the original house stood at a point on Dumbarton Road near the present Duchall Place. The lodge of the new house stood some 100 yards west of this but on the north side of Dumbarton Road at the foot of Larchfield Place.

Page 39 Para 8

The house and lands were purchased in 1825 by yet another relative Lady Oswald whose family fortune had come from the Tobacco Trade. She did not like the austere frontage of the house and had it all torn down that same year and a new front more to liking substituted. This was the Scotstoun House known to the older residents of Scotstoun and Yoker.

The house finished it's days as a day nursery for toddlers and was demolished to make way for the present block of flats (early 60s??)

The Factors of Scotstoun Estate were well aware of it's value for housing development towards the end of the 1890s, and a company was formed "Scotstoun Estate Building Company" to plan and build the terrace houses which occupy a vast expanse of land between Lime Street and Queen Victoria Drive. In 1912 a claim was put on record in the Transactions of the Old Glasgow Society that "Scotstoun is the finest garden city in Glasgow."

PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 8:31 pm
by Dexter St. Clair
Thanks Brian.

I asked my wife what the name of the home was? She told me they just called it "the homies"

She's asking her mother.