Old Glasgow Photographs - Anderston Streets and Dates - Lost Glasgow

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  • Опубліковано 16 вер 2024
  • A collection of photographs from Anderston's history - some quite rare.
    from the year 1890 to the present day.
    You'll find many streets and places in this video that no longer exists, aswell as an abundance of buildings that have been forgotten from Glasgow's past - the Anderston Library being a great example in showing the beauty that was once present all over Anderston.
    I hope that you enjoy the video and be sure to Subscribe for future videos like this ✔️
    Never forget your History 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇬🇧🇮🇪🇺🇸

КОМЕНТАРІ • 35

  • @hughbarr8408
    @hughbarr8408 7 місяців тому +2

    I am an Anderston boy, Argyle St and latterly Kent Rd. Early in the morning I used to walk from my tenement to Anderston Primary school, everything had been demolished and the flats were being erected. This would be early 1970's, so amazing to see these old photos and former way of life and a lot of it predating my childhood. Lovely people and neighbours.

  • @TheStefmcd
    @TheStefmcd 10 місяців тому +1

    Superb collection. Thanks.

  • @ronnygibbon
    @ronnygibbon 10 місяців тому +1

    I love these historic pictures of Glasgow and no doubt a lot of these old buildings had to come down but when I think about the post-war replacements I struggle to come up with any improvements.

  • @JimWood28
    @JimWood28 7 місяців тому

    Thank you, memories of roads I'd cross on my way to school etc. At 7 minutes 11 seconds, bottom of Cleveland Street looking down St. Vincent Street, I'd cross there, cut through the flats and go to school!

    • @Urban-Expeditions
      @Urban-Expeditions  7 місяців тому +1

      Thanks for sharing your memories and appreciation, glad you enjoyed 👍

  • @blazinstars6660
    @blazinstars6660 8 місяців тому +1

    used stay in block behind old folks home ,20 houldsworth street now gone .moved there when it still a building site when i was 6[7 was so much fun before health n safety

  • @Eoin-fd5ns
    @Eoin-fd5ns 20 днів тому

    My great great Grandmothers family had a farm in Anderson before it was built up. she could remember crossing the Clyde on stepping stones to sell goods in Govan market as a young girl.

    • @Urban-Expeditions
      @Urban-Expeditions  20 днів тому +1

      Fascinating! Thanks for sharing your insights 👍

    • @Eoin-fd5ns
      @Eoin-fd5ns 18 днів тому

      @@Urban-Expeditions Thank you loved the video.

  • @splintercast8092
    @splintercast8092 26 днів тому

    The bit of Elliot Street in the photo at 4:41 is almost exactly the same today. Virtually every other photo is unrecognisable.

    • @Urban-Expeditions
      @Urban-Expeditions  26 днів тому

      Good Catch 👍 Lots of wee historic Buildings around that way still standing 🔎

  • @lykel5011
    @lykel5011 11 місяців тому +1

    Looks as if Anderston was well established at the turn of the century in 1900, I wonder how old the buildings really were and what’s gone on before as I don’t think we know the truth. I remember Anderston, both my parent’s were raised there, there was a particular smell to the buildings that I remember as a toddler

  • @TheGrowler55
    @TheGrowler55 8 місяців тому +1

    My X Wife came from Anderston, Grace Street, I came from the Gorbals, we used to get the Ferry from Anderston over the Clyde and walk to the Gorbals where I came from, changed Days, sadly.

    • @Urban-Expeditions
      @Urban-Expeditions  8 місяців тому

      That's similar to my mum and dad's background, mum is from Anderston and dad is from Gorbals. I'm a big fan of both areas, great history and people and stories to hear ✔️ thanks for your appreciation buddy 👍

    • @karenpower8193
      @karenpower8193 8 місяців тому

      My mum was born in 28 Grace St 1939 my gran was also born in 14 Grace St. My mum left anderson marry my dad, and they both moved to the gorbals .

  • @MartinFarrell1972
    @MartinFarrell1972 9 місяців тому

    I'm 51 and live in EK. The bus to Glasgow used to go into Anderston Station. I remember shops close to the station. Are they even still there? I haven't been in that area in years.

    • @Urban-Expeditions
      @Urban-Expeditions  9 місяців тому

      Yeah the old Anderston Centre with all the shops on Argyle Street, that's all completely changed now. No shops at all and the high flats are hidden by a new modern apartment style blocks, with the Anderston Centre still showing signs of the past with all its derelict Shop fronts. Very sad to see!

  • @1gerard47
    @1gerard47 7 місяців тому

    It's called ?I've no words so sad to see the past being demolished, the biggest poison is the cellphone.

  • @Johnny-sr7mq
    @Johnny-sr7mq 9 місяців тому

    Photo at 7:49 I stayed in that building topfloor door at the head of the stairs 22 Grace street.

    • @Urban-Expeditions
      @Urban-Expeditions  9 місяців тому

      I remember that wee bit very well, loved it down there before it became the new builds ✌️

  • @johncopeland3826
    @johncopeland3826 10 місяців тому +1

    Nothing has changed especially with the same manky ,pollution filled stone and brickwork on our buildings in the 21st century ...same old city council degradation and financial neglect . Unacceptable !

    • @Urban-Expeditions
      @Urban-Expeditions  10 місяців тому

      Well to the contrary lots have changed, the main things being fresh air, space, gardens, parks, and above all Greco-Roman buildings that cannot be replicated today. Though I agree with what you're saying, but lots have changed for the worst. It's called post modernism and we are all being played.
      In regards to manky, pollution, overcrowded Glasgow well that's fairly new. Evolving from the early industrial period, before that Glasgow was a purified oasis of hills filled with vegetation, fields of plants and trees, rivers of trout and salmon including the Clyde. Hydepark in Anderston was actually a park, right by the Clyde which could be walked over as you pass by people fishing on multiple islands within the river. Bird baths everywhere, gardens, public toilets, old world tech... I could go on but in essence we have been played by an unknown enterprise.

    • @johncopeland3826
      @johncopeland3826 10 місяців тому

      Are you proud of Glasgow in 2023 ? Sure ,there are beautiful sections but the neglect and underfunding of my city are far more prevalent than these . Can you actually say that Glasgow today ,visually , is a first world city in a first world country ? Comparing Glasgow with any post war modern European city breaks my heart . Where is the evolution of the infrastructure ,as an example ? Planting sapling trees in Sauchiehall St ,just does not do it for me . There has to be more ...much ,much more ! The kicker being it's going to cost tens of millions , which the city does not have .

    • @Urban-Expeditions
      @Urban-Expeditions  10 місяців тому +1

      @@johncopeland3826 modern Glasgow is a shambles yes, doesn't incite pride nor enthusiasm for how the city is today.
      It's the collapse of the industrial revolution, its crippled nearly every town in the UK that can't adapt to our modern world. The fact that it's shaking up the cities is not too bewildering. Look at all the empty shops/buildings, homelessness, crime rate rising, poverty, we can list these problems all day but it would be good to discuss potential solutions. My task for the meantime is to highlight the strengths of Glasgow and its history as one of the most proactive and culturally significant city's of our modern world. I have lots of surprises to showcase that will hopefully enlighting our people of what has already been accomplished and persevered 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @HighlanderOne
    @HighlanderOne 10 місяців тому

    Used to roam they streets yawn time ago ye know

    • @Urban-Expeditions
      @Urban-Expeditions  10 місяців тому

      😎

    • @thomasreed49
      @thomasreed49 10 місяців тому

      Not sure whether I’m classed as a Glaswegian born in rutherglen 1954 Dad was born 1932 grandad the late 1890s I think about them roaming the streets. My mother is English so we moved to Cambridgeshire when I was eight years ago. After all this time I’m still proud to call myself a scot and they are my people. Thank you for posting this video.

  • @Dss322
    @Dss322 10 місяців тому +1

    Crieff court .....good to see where my wee Ma was brought up.

  • @andrewtaylor5984
    @andrewtaylor5984 10 місяців тому

    I may not be a Glaswegian, but I have several books showing how the city used to be, before the M8 blitzed its way through the City Centre. I gather that Anderston Cross was completely obliterated c1967, and street maps show that Argyle Street was severed at about the same time. Equally concerning is the huge decline in Glasgow's population. The population was well over a million in 1961, 897,000 ten years later. I gather it is now only 600,000. On the other side of the city, Parliamentary Road has completely disappeared as well. I can only think of one or two other instances of main roads and similar landmarks being obliterated by planners.

    • @Urban-Expeditions
      @Urban-Expeditions  10 місяців тому +1

      Truly mind boggling, tragic and devastating to see how much cultural infrastructure has been totally obliterated. A pattern is found in the Greco-Roman, old world types specifically being demolished and swept under the carpet... one can only wonder why 🔍

    • @yesenochwasRIGHT
      @yesenochwasRIGHT 8 місяців тому

      ​@@Urban-Expeditionscorrupt councillors and envelopes.

    • @ZL54JK8
      @ZL54JK8 3 місяці тому

      I am a Glaswegian, but life's circumstances meant that I moved to London and became absorbed in that City's history and character. However, you never forget your roots, and I still remember in detail the Glasow of my youth. These photos instantly take me back over the years.
      I completely agree with what you say about the urban motorway tearing the heart out of the old Glasgow. It is heartbreaking to look now at the City in its aftermath. Planners were obsessed with a vision that should never have been allowed to come to fruition. As for the exodus of the population, there was great faith in the New Towns that were developing in the 1960s. Cumbernauld was the closest one to Glasgow and many Glaswegians moved there. The decline of shipbuilding and heavy industry in Glasgow hastened the exodus of the population.
      Glasgow has many fine sandstone tenement buildings, and it's a great pity there wasn't a thoroughgoing refurbishment to give them a new lease of life. You mention Argyle Street, and I remember as a child often travelling the length of that main thoroughfare on the tramcar. It was a key route, now sadly consigned to history and to old photos.
      Thank you for your interesting and thoughtful comment!