The Pollokshaws Tollhouse, photographed in 1954.
Pollokshaws began as an independent weaving settlement to the south of Glasgow in the early c18th. It was an important crossing place of two major roads: the Glasgow to Irvine Road and the Rutherglen to Govan Road.
📷 Newsquest
James Miller's impressive neo-classical headquarters of 1927 on St Vincent St for the Union Bank of Scotland, photographed just after it was completed. It was apparently inspired by the work of American firm York and Sawyer.
📷 Glasgow City Archives
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1/ EXCLUSIVE: A Reform UK donor who owns 55 Tufton Street - home of Britain's dark-money Brexit lobby - is bankrolling a network pushing the forced removal of millions of ethnic-minority Britons. Its own architects call it a "right-wing arms race." 🧵https://t.co/NFggacts4G
To mark Ken Loach's 90th birthday—and 60 years of political filmmaking—we toast a visionary whose scalding dramas are penetratively critical and fired by imagination.
Our double bill "Outstretched Hands: Two by Ken Loach" is now streaming.
Prior to the modernisation of the late 70s, most stations on the loop were located in commercial or residential buildings. Bridge St station was once built into a tenement and accessed at street level.
Bridge Street underground photographed in 1982. The Trans-Clyde branding was introduced in 1979 and replaced by Strathclyde Transport in 1983.
📷 B. Grisly, Glasgow Museums
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@joannaccherry Sad to see a once respected public figure promoting this online influencer, who has recently been stoking division around the horrific Henry Nowak murder. It makes this endorsement all the more disappointing.