Priesthill

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Priesthill
Peat Road, Priesthill (geograph 3413631).jpg
Peat Road
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Priesthill
Location within Glasgow
OS grid reference NS531605
Council area
Lieutenancy area
  • Glasgow
Country Scotland
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Glasgow
Postcode district G53 6
Dialling code 0141
Police Scotland
Fire Scottish
Ambulance Scottish
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament
List of places
UK
Scotland
Glasgow
55°48′57″N4°20′36″W / 55.815764°N 4.343219°W / 55.815764; -4.343219 Coordinates: 55°48′57″N4°20′36″W / 55.815764°N 4.343219°W / 55.815764; -4.343219

Priesthill (Scottish Gaelic : Cnoc an t-Sagairt) is a neighbourhood in the south of the River Clyde in the Scottish city of Glasgow. It falls under the Greater Pollok ward of the city council area. The Darnley neighbourhood is located to the south, on the opposite side of the Glasgow South Western Line railway (both areas are served by Priesthill and Darnley railway station), while Nitshill lies to the west and Househillwood and the Silverburn Centre shopping complex to the north. The M77 motorway runs to the east of Priesthill with open farmland beyond. [1]

Contents

History

Priesthill was first mentioned in ancient text as a farm community owned by Walter Steward the progenitor of later Stuart kings and queens. Lord Darnley, husband of Mary, Queen of Scots, owned the land where Priesthill is located. During the Reformation, it is alleged a Catholic priest was hanged from a tree near Darnley Lane on the edge of the area, which is now called Priesthill to commemorate the occasion. More than likely the area was named after Priesthill Near Muirkirk, some twenty miles to the south over open country in Ayrshire. [2] Others allege that Priesthill was named after an ancient church that stood at the top of the hill on Stewart land. However, there is no historical or viva voce testimony to validate the claim. It is also said that Mary and Darnley did their courting near Darnley Lane. An ancient tree still stands at the end of the Darnley lane, which is now adjacent to a main highway (A726).

Once part the parish of Eastwood in Renfrewshire, the area was encompassed within Glasgow at the same time as Pollokshaws in the 1910s. Priesthill was one of the earliest attempts made by the Glasgow local government to relocate families from the outdated central tenements of Gorbals, Pollokshaws and other districts. Several homeless families were housed there in or around 1948–1950.

St Robert Bellarmine Secondary and other public schools were built to educate the influx of new residents in the early 1950s. [3] The hills beyond Priesthill were farmed until the 1960s and formed part of the Kennishead farm owned by Sir John Maxwell. This land was bought by Glasgow Corporation for housing purposes and the Darnley development was built there. Eastwoodmains, adjacent to Arden and Priesthill, was being farmed by the MacDonald family into the 1960s; this land was taken partially to make way for the new M77 motorway. The houses built by the local government in the 1950s [4] were mostly condemned and levelled in the 2000s and the land used for a mixture of private and public housing developments. [5] Others were refurbished in the 1980s, but required further substantial investment by the 2010s. [6]

Notable residents

Related Research Articles

Pollok Human settlement in Scotland

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Pollokshaws Human settlement in Scotland

Pollokshaws is an area on the South side of the city of Glasgow, Scotland. It is bordered by the residential neighbourhoods of Auldhouse to the east, Eastwood and Hillpark to the south and Shawlands to the north, with the Glasgow South Western Line railway and the open lands of Pollok Country Park to the west. The White Cart Water flows through the area.

Pollokshields Human settlement in Scotland

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Pollok Country Park Park in Glasgow, Scotland, UK

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Darnley Human settlement in Scotland

Darnley is an area in south-west Glasgow, Scotland, on the A727 just west of Arden. Other nearby neighbourhoods are Priesthill to the north, Southpark Village to the south, and South Nitshill and Parkhouse to the west; there is also a small industrial estate. The closest railway station is Priesthill and Darnley. The Brock Burn flows through the area.

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South Nitshill Human settlement in Scotland

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Deaconsbank Neighbourhood of Glasgow

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Auldhouse, Glasgow Human settlement in Scotland

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Greater Pollok (ward) Human settlement in Scotland

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Parkhouse, Glasgow G53 Human settlement in Scotland

Parkhouse is a residential neighbourhood of Glasgow, Scotland. Within the G53 postcode area and the Greater Pollok ward of the Glasgow City Council administration, the eastern cluster of private housing was constructed in the 1980s and the western part in the 2010s, prior to which it was open farmland annexed to Glasgow in 1938.

Easthall Human settlement in Scotland

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Househillwood Area of Glasgow

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References

  1. Priesthill at Gazetteer for Scotland
  2. "Alexander Peden: Prophecy, Ploughmen and Preaching in 1682". 17 April 2014.
  3. Housing Estates, Glasgow (Schools), Hansard, 18 April 1950
  4. Elliston Drive (Glasgow City Archives, Department of Architectural and Civic Design, 1952), The Glasgow Story
  5. Glenlora Drive (Glasgow City Archives, Department of Architectural and Civic Design, 1948), The Glasgow Story
  6. Council promises £5.12 million makeover for blighted Priesthill community, Glasgow Live, 25 January 2017
  7. English, Paul (25 August 2009). "Exclusive: Drink drove me to verge of suicide, reveals internet funnyman Brian Limond". Dailyrecord.co.uk. Retrieved 11 May 2019.