GLENGARRY – Glasgow’s Sacred Heart

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Bartholomew Street in Glasgow’s Bridgeton district still stands today but it is an empty street:  a brick wall runs along one side with nothing behind it, there are no houses, shops or businesses anywhere to be seen.  It is a ghost street.  As cars and buses drive past Bartholomew Street and nearby Dalmarnock rail station heading up the new road towards Celtic Park, few people are aware of the history of these deserted streets that lie close to the River Clyde, the people who lived on them and the pivotal role the area played in the story of Celtic Football Club. 

 

Before Bartholomew Street was named it was home to a small community of Highlanders as outlined by William Guthrie in his 1911 book ‘Recollections of Bridgeton’:

The next road had no name but is now called Bartholomew Street.  It led down along the side of a burn, which was the march between Dalmarnock and Barrowfield estates, and ended at the gate to Bartholomew’s Works.  There was a large block of brick houses here, which was called Glengarry, occupied by the workers at these works. 

John Bartholomew had established a cotton factory and dye works next to the River Clyde at Dalmarnock in 1768.  Slowly, the former idyllic riverside area just outside of Glasgow town changed in character as more industries and businesses set up works – principally bleach, dye and printworks – to take advantage of the river as a source of power.  This part of Bridgeton would never be the same again.

The Glen that is home to Loch Garry in the Scottish Highlands remains an idyllic setting.  Sixteen miles north of Fort William is the point where the River Garry joins Loch Garry, part of the Great Glen.  In the 1790s this area known as ‘Glengarry’ was still home to the Clan MacDonnell which had fought under Bonnie Prince Charlie at Culloden.  Like other surviving clans, the people of Glengarry were targeted in the notorious Highland Clearances.  1792 was to become known to these Gaelic speakers as ‘Bliadhna nan Caorach’ (The Year of the Sheep) as families were in turn evicted from their homes and their farmlands converted into sheep walks at the behest of profiteering landlords and a conniving Government.  Protests by local clansmen resulted in the Black Watch being mobilised against them.  For the community of Glengarry,  emigration was their only option.

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Glengarry:  Loch Garry/ Loch Garraidh in the Scottish Highlands

In 1791 a ship left from Skye heading for North Carolina in the United States with a large number of Glengarry families on board.  After getting into difficulties the ship required to dock at Greenock.  The Highlanders were forced on-shore for days while repairs were ongoing.  Many were destitute and, as non-English speakers, struggled to communicate with locals.  In these dire circumstances their priest was sent for.

Father Alexander MacDonell had been educated at Paris and Valladolid before returning to Glengarry after his ordination.  In the aftermath of the notorious Gordon Riots of 1780, an ‘anti-Papist’ protest which descended into the worst rioting and looting ever witnessed in the city of London which was only suppressed by the intervention of the army, Catholic priests and Catholic worship were effectively outlawed and liable to attack.  Anti-Catholic sentiment was especially strong in Scotland at this time and few Catholics made their faith publicly known.  In Glasgow in the 1790s, one historian has claimed that there were only 39 practising Catholics in the city – and 43 anti-Catholic societies.

Yet when he arrived at Greenock, Father MacDonell immediately started negotiations with a view to finding work and homes for his Glengarry flock in Glasgow.  The industrialist David Dale, who owned New Lanark as well as the Barrowfield Dyeworks in Bridgeton, had also gone to Greenock in the hope of persuading the Highlanders in to his factories.  Dale and George MacIntosh has found commercial success in producing colour dyed materials.  They had hired Frenchman Pierre Jacob Papillon, a master dyer from Rouen, to come to Glasgow in 1785 to implement the secret ‘Turkey red’ process of dyeing.  This proved a great success and business boomed.  The street where the works were established was originally called Papillon Street and later changed to French Street – the spine of this small network of streets that this riverside community would develop into.

In addition to shelter and work, Father MacDonell’s negotiations with David Dale and his business associates focused on establishing a safe place of worship in Glasgow for the Highlanders.  This was how a large hall in Mitchell Street (in the heart of what is now the Merchant City) came to be rented for ‘the publicly avowed purpose of being a Catholic chapel.’ Opening in October 1792 under the stewardship of Father MacDonell, a congregation of 200 began celebrating mass publicly in Glasgow for the first time since the Reformation of 1560.  This congregation was largely made up of the Highlanders who now occupied the houses around Bartholomew and Papillon Streets of Bridgeton.  This small area quickly became known by the name of the inhabitants’ original homeland:  Glengarry.

GLENGARRY BY THE CLYDE

This was a significant development as Glengarry was the first recognised Catholic community in the city in over two centuries.  Previously, private homes had been used to celebrate Mass clandestinely.  However, when anti-Catholic sentiments were running high, these unofficial places of worship would come under attack.  This was the case for Robert Bagnall, an English potter who had set up home in the East End of Glasgow in 1768 and allowed Mass to be said there in secret.  The home and pottery were burnt to the ground in a sectarian attack in 1779 and Robert and his family moved to East Lothian where he re-established his business.  Although Father MacDonell posted a guard when Mass was held at Mitchell Street, there is no record of any attacks or confrontations.  A congregation of a few hundred proved a less appealing target than one of a few dozen.

The Highlanders threw themselves into their new jobs although factory work was alien to them and would later receive ‘ample and favourable testimonials of the good conduct’ they displayed from their Glasgow employers.  It was not just men and women who worked in the cotton factories as David Dale, often remembered as a social pioneer, was renowned for the use of child labour.  It was not uncommon for children to work 15 hour days at this time. The reliance of families on the income their children brought in from such labour would prove pivotal to the story of this community in decades to come.

Colour cotton dyeing gave the owners a commercial edge and while factories grew larger in size and mills also became established, the bleaching of the cotton required to be carried out by sunlight.  This meant that large areas had to be retained as open land for sheets to be laid out in the days before bleaching agents were available.  It is believed that this is how one field, which became known as Glengarry Park, survived for so long in the increasingly industrialised setting along the River Clyde.  This drawing (below) of the Barrowfield Dye Works from the early 19th century, showing female workers laying out materials for bleaching, gives an indication of the layout of the land in this part of Bridgeton at that time.

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Barrowfield Dye Works in Glengarry, late 17th Century

The Highlanders had only been set up in their new home of Glengarry for two years before they faced a new crisis.  War in Europe had ravaged Glasgow’s trade in cotton exports, in turn leading to large-scale redundancies.  The impact on the Glengarry community was immediate and heart-rending.  In a letter to Bishop Hay sent on 12th February 1794, Father MacDonell wrote of the difficulties:

Since I came to Glasgow I have seen upwards of six hundred Catholics, men, women and children from various parts of the Highlands, spread over the whole face of this country in quest of a scanty subsistence . . . A recital of the sufferings of this miserable people since the fatal stagnation took place in trade would sear your very soul.  I have at this instant a list of scores of them unable to get labour and destitute of every necessity of life.

The Highlanders were facing a true dilemma:  there was little hope of work for them staying in Glasgow and they did not have the funds to allow them to emigrate.  Returning to the ancestral homelands of Lochaber was not, however, an option.

The bargaining skills of Father MacDonell again came to the fore.  Despite the fact that Catholics were barred from entering the ranks of the British Army at this time, he persuaded a large number of the Glengarry men to volunteer for military service – and negotiated with the British Government to create the first Catholic regiment post-Reformation.  With the British at war with France, MacDonnel engaged in several months of lobbying with the result that the First Glengarry Fencibles were duly formed in August 1794.  Incredibly, MacDonell was installed as regimental chaplain at a time when being a priest was technically a criminal offence in both Scotland and England.  The regiment saw service initially in Guernsey and then in 1798 was sent to Ireland to help suppress the rebellion led by Wolfe Tone’s Society of United Irishmen.  With Father MacDonell alongside them, the Glengarry Fencibles did not engage in the brutality towards the Irish which other British regiments were renowned for and, when the rebellion was over, they were instrumental in the re-opening of Catholic churches in counties such as Wicklow and Wexford where priests had been forced into hiding.  As Father MacDonell later wrote of his regiment: “They everywhere won gold opinions by their humane behaviour to the vanquished, which was in striking contrast with the floggings, burnings and hangings which formed the daily occupation of the rest of the military.”

fr-alexander-macdonnellFather, later Bishop, Alexander MacDonell

The Glengarry Fencibles were disbanded in 1802 as they were now surplus to military requirements.  In recognition of their service the British Government offered the Highlanders land to re-settle in Trinidad, which they surprisingly declined.  Instead Father MacDonell secured an offer of 160,000 acres in eastern Canada where other members of the MacDonell clan had moved in 1786 (with another Father MacDonell from Knoydart, Glengarry) – naming their new home Glengarry County, which now lies in modern Ontario.  Scottish Gaelic is still spoken in parts of the county today and it is home to one of the largest annual Highland Games outside Scotland.  Alexander MacDonell went on to become the first ever Catholic Bishop of (what was then) Upper Canada.  The number of Catholic parishes in the region increased from three on his arrival to forty-eight at the time of his death.  Most importantly, he had led his Highland parishioners from banishment, destitution and war to a secure and peaceful future abroad – with their faith, language and culture intact.

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Memorial plaque to The Glengarry Fencibles and Fr. MacDonell – in the city of Kingston, Canada

Meanwhile, over two thousand miles away in Glasgow, a sizeable number of the original Highlanders, particularly those with young families, had remained in Bridgeton.  An upturn in the fortunes of the cotton industry and increased mechanisation meant more jobs in large mills and other works which had developed alongside the River Clyde.  Glengarry, and Glasgow, was to change beyond all recognition.

A GLENGARRY FAMILY

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The River Clyde at Dalmarnock – 1827

One man’s story demonstrates how some of those original Glengarry settlers and their offspring fared in Bridgeton after Father MacDonell and their clansmen left for foreign fields.  In April 1817 Hugh MacDonald was born in Rumford Street, Bridgeton, just a short distance from Bartholomew Street, where his parents lived initially on arrival from Lochaber.  The eldest of eleven children, Hugh was working as early as 7 years old as a tearer” alongside his father in a local printworks.  He was later apprenticed as a block printer at David Dale’s former Turkey Red Works on French Street, by that time owned by Henry Monteith who would later become Lord Provost of Glasgow.  The young MacDonald went on to become a shopkeeper in Bridgeton before moving into journalism in 1849, despite having had scant formal education (it is believed he only ever attended night school and was the youngest person on the roll of Bridgeton Public Library as a youth).  He worked for various Glasgow newspapers and became widely known as a poet and naturalist.  In 1854 a book of his writings entitled ‘Rambles Around Glasgow’ was published which sold well, with his descriptions of the burgeoning city and especially Glasgow Green – his most cherished place and just a short walk from Glengarry – earning him fame.

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Hugh MacDonald – a Glengarry boy, poet and writer

MacDonald died at the early age of 43 in March 1860, leaving a widow and five children behind.  A fountain in his memory stands in Glasgow Green close to the location of the ‘bonnie wee well’ he celebrated in song, just behind the People’s Palace.  The entry to the Green which today faces Bridgeton has been renamed Hugh MacDonald’s Gate.

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One of Hugh MacDonald’s poems, The Guid Auld Field, was about his earliest days playing and working around the streets of Glengarry which he recalled with evident fondness:

Does a thocht e’er cross your min’
0′ the guid auld field,
And our happy years langsyne,
In the guid auld field?
Do you min’ our lichtsome wiles.
Our kindly cracks and smiles,
Mingling pleasure wi’ our toils,
In the guid auld field?

The residual Highland influence on the area is clear from the sports played in the winter months when the bat, bowl and ball were put away:

Ilk boyish game we tried,
In the guid auld field;
We had doukins in the Clyde,
At the guid auld field;
The bat, the bowl, the ba’.
Wore the simmer months awa’,
Syne we’d shinties ‘mang the snaw,
At the guid auld field

Glengarry was already changed from the time of MacDonald’s youth, especially with family and friends scattered far from the riverside where he grew up:

But a sairly altered place
Is the guid auld field;
Scarce now I ken a face,                                                                            
In the guid auld field.

Auld friens are in the clay,
Or scattered far away;
and a stranger bears the sway
In the guid auld field.

It is to the credit of that community that one of the East End of Glasgow’s most acclaimed writers and poets came from their ranks.  Hugh MacDonald’s children helped form the third generation of Catholic Highlanders in Bridgeton, although the ties with Lochaber were purely historical now.  At the time of their father’s death the area and community had changed almost beyond recognition.  It is believed that, following An Gorta Mor – the Great Hunger – of 1845–1852, over a quarter of a million Irish men, women and children fled to Glasgow, the overwhelming majority to the city’s East End.  Between 1850 and 1884 the number of Catholic churches in Glasgow increased from five to fifty-four. Glengarry and Bridgeton would become home to a new generation of immigrants of the Catholic faith.

SACRED HEART OF BRIDGETON

In late 1873, in the area behind Hugh MacDonald’s birthplace on Rumford Street, the Sacred Heart Mission was opened.  Bridgeton now had a Catholic church of its own.  On 26th January 1874 the Sacred Heart School was opened, adjoining the mission and its presbytery on Old Dalmarnock Road.  The school’s first headteacher was an Irishman from County Sligo who was born Andrew Kerins but is better known today by the name given to him on becoming a member of the Marist teaching order: Brother Walfrid.

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Sacred Heart Mission, Bridgeton – opened 1873

Father Edward Noonan, the first parish priest of Sacred Heart, was a Limerick man and he and Brother Walfrid had their work cut out.  In the 1870s Bridgeton was heavily industrialised and the area experienced all the well-established social ills that cities of the time were renowned for: poverty, squalor, illiteracy and alcoholism.  Building a parish to meet the needs of a burgeoning flock was no easy feat in an era without any system of social security or a National Health Service.  As Headteacher of the boys school (the separate girls school was managed by nuns from the Franciscan Order), Brother Walfrid developed a number of initiatives to encourage the children of the new parish to attend the school and remain engaged with education (and the church) when their schooldays were over.  He created youth clubs and started a library system accessible to young people throughout the parish.  A network of employer contacts was cultivated throughout the city to help identify work placements for when the pupils came of age.

Walfrid realised the importance of sport to children and encouraged interest their in the relatively new game of football (as he’d done in his previous posting at St. Mary’s school in the Calton).  He set up a juvenile football team for players of school age called Columba which played on the former bleaching grounds off French Street celebrated in Hugh MacDonald’s poetry:  Glengarry Park.  One former parishioner recalled the founding of the Columba club in this sketch of a conversation between two residents of Bridgeton’s Dublinland in the Glasgow Observer in 1900:  “’An while taking car av the boys’ literary education in that way, Brother Walfrid didn’t forget to have some fun an’ amusement for them too; for he made a football club for them that was called the Columba; and’ even there he had a fine fatherly care av his boys, for he rinted a park for them down at Glengarry, where they cud play ‘ithout havin’ to mix up wid the corner boys.” 

This park was also home to a parish football club from Sacred Heart called Eastern Rovers which the Glasgow Observer of 1885 year confirmed had originally “been raised through the exertions of Brother Walfrid.”   The Marist brother’s involvement and interest in football was only just beginning . . .

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Glengarry Park in a map of Bridgeton from 1892-4; next door to Clyde’s ground, Barrowfield Park

The biggest problem faced by Brother Walfrid was persuading families in the new parish of the value of education.  Child labour at the time was the norm and the income that children generated was relied upon by many families to ensure there was enough food on the table for them all.  If a child was attending school then they weren’t earning with less money coming in to the house – with the same number of mouths to feed.  When the school opened in 1874 there were only 300 children who attended regularly even though Sacred Heart had 2,000 parishioners.  While the number of Bridgeton Catholics continued to increase, this didn’t lead to a corresponding rise in the school roll.  In order to overcome this problem that the Sligoman conceived the idea of the Poor Children’s Dinner Tables in 1884.  If children were provided with nourishing food while at school this would reduce the financial burden on the families and allow the children to help receive, at least, a basic education.

With the help of lay members of the St Vincent de Paul Conference in the Sacred Heart parish, Brother Walfrid took over premises in Savoy Street, at the rear of the school and church, to establish a kitchen to prepare the food for the Dinner Tables.

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Savoy Street, Bridgeton – 1960s.  The pend leads on to Main Street.  

A ‘penny dinner’ scheme was established, which Brother Walfrid described in 1895 in these terms:  The children were provided with a good warm meal for a penny.  Should parents prefer they could send the bread and the children get a large bowl of broth or soup for a halfpenny and those who were not able to pay got a substantial meal free.  This has been a very great blessing to the poor children.  The expenses for some time were met by subscriptions and collections, sermons etc. 

In the winter of 1885 a breakfast meal of a large bowl of porridge was also introduced to the penny dinner scheme.  The scheme presented the families of the parish with new options regarding their children’s welfare and education and it also provided the Catholic Church locally with a formidable challenge to the growing threat from soup kitchens, Gospel Tents and Evangelical Halls in Glasgow who used food as the means of tempting under-nourished Catholics – and especially children – into abandoning their faith.  Irishmen such as Father Noonan and Brother Walfrid were well aware of the risks posed by evangelical Protestant missionary societies to their parishioners.  During An Gorta Mor such aggressive missionary activities were common throughout Ireland, offering sustenance for the body as well as the mind of those prepared to ‘turn’ from their religious convictions.  Those who succumbed to the temptations of the Protestant soup kitchens were commonly referred to by the derogatory phrase of ‘taking the soup’ or soup-takers, a label that has survived down the years.

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Brother Walfrid – first Headmaster of Sacred Heart School, Bridgeton

 

The penny dinner scheme at the Sacred Heart school was to prove a great success.  In its first year the SvDP Conference in Bridgeton provided over 48,500 dinners and 1,150 breakfasts.  By 1886 the school roll at Sacred Heart had quadrupled from its foundation twelve years earlier to over 1,200 pupils.  Dinner Tables had also been established by Brother Dorotheus, the Marist colleague of Walfrid who ran St Mary’s School in the nearby Calton.  In the first six months of 1886, 26,421 dinners were provided to St Mary’s pupils – 17,707 of which were free dinners.  Celtic historian Brendan Sweeney has outlined the dilemma that success of the scheme presented to the Marist headteachers at the time: “The problem was clear: demand far exceeded the income available as almost 70% could not afford to pay anything and less than 4% were able to pay the full penny.  More had to be done and quickly.”

With a weekly commitment to provide almost 2,000 dinners at the two schools, and the local community being so impoverished that very few families could pay either a penny or half-penny contribution, the Penny Dinner Scheme required urgent funding.  The cost of providing the dinners in the first year at Sacred Heart (£105) was a significant amount for a school in a poor community to raise in the 1880s.  Brother Walfrid’s thoughts turned to a new form of fundraising:  football.

The new sport was attracting followers in ever-increasing numbers in the 1880s.  In Edinburgh and Dundee teams had developed out of those cities’ Irish communities who enjoyed great support and success.  Brother Walfrid realised there was potential for raising considerable sums to maintain the Dinner Tables by organising charity football matches in a Glasgow which was without a high-profile Irish football club.  As early as 1885 he was responsible for an invitation being issued to the Edinburgh Hibernians to send a team through to Glasgow’s East End for a game. Hibs’ reserve team took on the junior club Glasgow Hibernian on 26th September 1885, winning easily by 6-0, and afterwards the Edinburgh team attended a dinner hosted by the SVDP in St. Mary’s Hall on East Rose Street.  This was the first in a series of matches which Brother Walfrid organised in the East End, all the while developing new connections with established football clubs throughout Scotland.

While only a modest amount was raised from that first game, a bigger crowd was in attendance on 8th May 1886 when Clyde FC offered to take on Dundee Harp at their ground at Barrowfield Park – their home before a move across the river to Shawfield in 1898 – which lay just across Carstairs Street from Glengarry Park.  Publicity posters for the game stated that monies raised would be used “for the purpose of supplying the children of the unemployed Catholic householders of Sacred Heart Parish with free dinners and breakfasts.”  Harp ran out 2-1 victors in that tie and this time it was Sacred Heart school where the visiting Dundonians and the Clyde players enjoyed a post-match meal with Brother Walfrid presiding.
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On 18th September 1886 a crowd of 1,000 attended at Glengarry Park, the home of the teams most closely associated with Brother Walfrid – Eastern Rovers and Columba – to see Edinburgh Hibernians reserve team take on a parish team from St. Peter’s RC Church in Partick.  It was the St. Mary’s Dinner Tables who were the beneficiaries of this tie.

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As successful as these charity games had been in boosting the coffers of the Dinner Tables, the sums raised paled in comparison to that of the ‘East End Charity Cup’ ties fought between Renton and Hibernian – recent winners of the Scottish Cup for the first time – at Barrowfield Park on 26th May and 6th August 1887.  Over 12,000 turned up at the first game, a massive gate which surpassed the crowds of most Scottish Cup finals in the preceding years, and the sum of £120 was taken in gate receipts.  That game finished 1-1 and a replay was arranged for the start of the new season and an attendance of 4,000 was recorded this time, both crowds providing a boost to the funds of not only the local Dinner Tables but also charities in both Edinburgh and Renton.  This time Renton ran out easy 6-0 winners with 5 goals coming from future Celt Neilly McCallum.

After the replay in August 1887, the Renton and Hibernian parties retired to the Sacred Heart Boys Club for the post-match reception.  The Sacred Heart parish had played host to this remarkable series of football matches which, over the course of two years, would ultimately lead to the creation of one of the greatest names the sport has known.  Brother Walfrid’s instincts about the popularity of football among the Glasgow Irish and the people of the East End generally were proven correct.  A new idea had began to take hold – the creation of an Irish club in Glasgow to match and surpass the success of Hibernian in Edinburgh and Harp in Dundee.  In September 1887, just a few weeks after Renton won the East End Charity Cup in Bridgeton, Brother Walfrid travelled to Cathcart in the company of John Glass and Pat ‘Tailor’ Welsh.   The purpose was to persuade Tom Maley to join a new Glasgow football club, plans for which were already at an advanced stage.  With great fortune, the trio also invited Maley’s younger brother Willie to join as well.  Many years later Willie Maley would recall that it was in September 1887 that he ‘took the shilling’ and signed up with a club he would serve faithfully as player, secretary and manager until 1940.

Celtic Football Club was formally constituted on 6th November 1887 in St. Mary’s Hall in nearby Calton.  In a circular issued in January 1888 it was stated that “the main objective of the club is to supply the East end conferences of the Saint Vincent de Paul Society with funds for the maintenance of the “Dinner Tables” of our need children in the Missions of St. Mary’s, Sacred Heart and St. Michael’s.  Many cases of sheer poverty are left unaided through lack of means.  It is therefore with this principal object that we have set afloat the “Celtic”.

Land had already been secured for a ground for the new club.  The first Celtic Park – just off Janefield Street to the rear of the modern day Lisbon Lions Stand – was located less than a mile from Glengarry Park.

The concept of a sports club being set up for charitable purposes was ground-breaking and Brother Walfrid oversaw the development of Celtic and continued to manage the Penny Dinner scheme at Sacred Heart school through to his departure to London in 1892.  He therefore missed the remarkable scenes outside Sacred Heart Church in 1905 when thousands turned out to mourn the passing of an early hero of the club he founded.  Barney Battles was a hugely popular Celtic player in two spells between 1895 and 1905, winning two Scottish Cups and one League title, and a Scottish internationalist.  He died suddenly from pneumonia at the family home on London Road within a year of leaving Celtic.  Following requiem mass at Sacred Heart a cortege of over 2,000 followed Barney to his resting place at St Peter’s Cemetery, Dalbeth via Celtic Park.  It was estimated that a crowd of over 40,000 lined the route.  It was one of the biggest funerals the parish has ever witnessed.

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Barney Battles – an early Celtic favourite

 

Bridgeton was familiar territory to many of those involved in the development of Celtic FC.  The club’s first captain, James Kelly, originally lived with his family in James Street before they moved to Blantyre as his playing career ended and before he joined the Board of directors, later becoming Chairman.  Early Celtic meetings and AGMs were held in the Mechanic’s Hall at Canning Street (now London Road), just a short distance from Bridgeton Cross.

In the new century the community of Sacred Heart augmented its position in Bridgeton.  The Highlanders – and their language – were no longer an obvious presence but the parish founded in Glengarry was now home to thousands of descendants of immigrant Irish. During 1909 – 1910 a new church was built on the site of the original mission building in the grand style of a Roman basilica in red sandstone over three storeys.  Designed by the Belgian architect CJ Menart, the front of the church is adorned with three statues:  below the central figure of Christ stands Saint Patrick to the left and Saint Andrew to the right, reflecting the Irish and Scottish identities of the people who both shaped and formed the parish of the Sacred Heart.

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The imposing facade of Sacred Heart Church (2015)

The new church dominated its surroundings on Old Dalmarnock Road.  Next door to the presbytery, as shown in this photo below, was the three-storey Sacred Heart Boys School.  The girls’ school and nursery were located to the rear of the church on Reid Street, home to Sacred Heart Primary School today.  Around the corner, on Muslin Street, was the League of the Cross Hall – effectively the parish hall – which completed the church’s estate in Bridgeton.

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Sacred Heart Church, Presbytery and Boys’ School, Old Dalmarnock Road

 

While the Irish had for decades been a significant presence throughout Glasgow’s East End, there was an obvious fault-line that existed between those of Irish extraction.  This was reflected in the development of Bridgeton’s Main Street in the mid-19th century as William Guthrie noted in his 1911 ‘Recollections’: “At the corner of Ann Street and Main Street was a range of two-storey buildings which was called Wee Belfast, occupied by weavers from the north of Ireland.”  Further along Main Street lay a different Irish settlement: “We now come to Dublin Land.  There were always a good many Irish here and I suppose that was how it got its name.” 

The earliest industry in Bridgeton and Calton was handloom weaving and by 1819 it is estimated that almost one third of the workforce were Protestant Irish.  Largely overlooked, it is now estimated that over one quarter of the Irish who moved to Scotland in the 19th Century were non-Catholics from the northern counties.  Scottish employers had directly targeted these workers due to large numbers of skilled Scottish workers emigrating to North America and beyond.  Historian Tom Devine has recorded how Belfast newspapers of the era had adverts placed by Lanarkshire and Ayrshire firms offering jobs in mines as well as new and developing iron and steel works.  As a result of immigration, certain Scottish towns and villages became home to large communities of Protestant Irish, including Larkhall, Airdrie and Bridgeton.  Many of those who crossed the Irish Sea at that time were adherents of a uniquely Irish institution with which these areas of Scotland were to become synonymous:  the Orange Order.

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Bridgeton and Glengarry – 1912

WALKING THE WALK IN BRIDGETON

The first Orange Lodge in Glasgow was established in the Trongate in 1813.  Eight  years later saw the first organised demonstration or ‘walk’ in the city to commemorate the Battle of the Boyne.  Organised by Glasgow’s then three lodges, the parade was not advertised nor had it been granted permission to proceed.  The appearance of Orange marching band and supporters in the Merchant City area, close to the homes of many immigrant Irish Catholics, was unsurprisingly met with resistance as it approached the Trongate: ‘the crowd burst upon it’ reported the Glasgow Chronicle.  Sashes and banners were seized and destroyed and the marchers had to flee, taking refuge in public houses in King Street.

The following July, in 1822, saw a bigger march involving seven lodges this time (including Paisley and Pollokshaws).  Despite a ban having been imposed by city magistrates, the Orangemen marched from the Gallowgate to Fraser’s Hall in King Street.  The march itself passed peacefully but at its conclusion the hall was surrounded by a crowd of “zealous Irish Catholics, most ready to give battle” as one newspaper reported.  Although it was only 10am on a Sunday morning, a magistrate – fearing a riot – decided immediate action was required.  Professor Elaine McFarland, author of Protestants First – Orangeism in Nineteenth Century Scotland described the outcome of Glasgow’s second Orange Walk in these terms: Police and military intervention was required and 127 Orangemen were taken into safe-keeping, returning ignominiously ‘with their sashes in their pockets.’ 

As a result of the disturbances of 1822, fifty years would pass before the city fathers would give permission for an Orange Order parade within Glasgow’s boundaries.

The social impact on the city of Glasgow of the large numbers of Catholic and Protestant Irish settling in the city would prove considerable.  Orange Order membership swelled as a result of resentment at the increased numbers of Catholics– with Ulster-born Protestants prominent in the upper echelons of Scotland’s Grand Lodge and instrumental in the Order’s subsequent development in Glasgow and beyond.

Between 1865 and 1900 the number of Orange Lodges in Scotland increased significantly and it was estimated that at the end of the century the number of members had risen to approximately 30,000.  In the 1850s there were already two Orange Lodges in Bridgeton and the creation of a third saw ‘district’ status conferred on the area.  In the 1870s a new district – no. 44 – was created as new lodges extended across Bridgeton’s eastern boundary into Dalmarnock – covering both the Sacred Heart parish and Glengarry.  Social conflict was never far away.

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A modern banner of a Bridgeton Orange Order lodge

As early as 1879 there is a newspaper record of the windows of the Sacred Heart church being smashed in the aftermath of an Orange parade.  A Bridgeton flute band had earlier marched through High Street towards the Garngad trailed by ‘a large and disorderly mob’ and it was these followers who attacked the church on the return to Bridgeton.  Such attacks would prove commonplace for decades to come – and were often met with violent responses.

Sectarian violence in Bridgeton was at its worse in the 1920s and ‘30s.  Developments such as the decision to bring Catholic schools into the state sector in 1918 and the creation of the Irish Free State four years later fuelled anti-Catholic resentment which was exploited by political organisations such as the Scottish Protestant League (SPL).  Led by the notorious Alexander Ratcliffe – who later publicly declared himself a fascist following a visit to Nazi Germany in 1939 – the SPL campaigned for the repatriation of Irish immigrants and repeal of Section 18 of the 1918 Education (Scotland) Act, arguing it was tantamount to ‘Rome on the Rates’.  In 1931 Ratcliffe was elected to the Glasgow Corporation to represent Dennistoun and another SPL candidate won the Dalmarnock seat.  In Glasgow’s municipal elections in 1933 the PLT secured 68,000 votes – 22% of the total amount cast – and won seven seats, despite (or because of) the virulent anti-Catholic policies they pursued.  The sectarian divisions regularly manifested in street violence at this time due to another social dynamic that had a uniquely Glasgow dimension:  razor gangs.

LEAVING THEIR MARK:  GANGS OF BRIDGETON

Glasgow street gangs were not a new phenomenon but their size and influence scaled new heights in the era between the wars.  The largest and most notorious gang was the Protestant-only Billy Boys who were based at Bridgeton Cross.  The Billy Boys were also an Orange flute band and had a separate juvenile division, known as the Derry Boys.   Their acknowledged leader was Billy Fullerton, born in the Calton in 1906, and one story claims that he started the gang after a football match against a team called Kent Star on Glasgow Green in 1924 led to him being subject to a fierce hammer attack.  Kent Star were in fact a Catholic gang from the Calton, who with their co-religionists in the Calton Entry, would be regular conflict with the Billy Boys (who at one point had a membership in excess of 800).   The Billy Boys had enemies even closer to home than the Calton.  The Evening Citizen reported in March 1926 that the Billy Boys had been in clashes at Bridgeton Cross with a rival ‘Fenian’ gang – the Norman Conks.

Taking their name from their base in Norman Street in the centre of the area known as Glengarry, the Norman Conks (short for Conquerors) were renowned for their willingness to confront the larger Protestant gang throughout Bridgeton and in defence of their Catholic enclave.  There were other Catholic gangs in Bridgeton at this time also.  The Savoy Arcadians gathered in the area of Main Street directly behind Sacred Heart Church (on the street where the kitchen for the Poor Children’s Dinner Table was set up) while the Shanley Boys claimed Dale Street (named after the industrialist of the previous century) as their territory.

The start of the Norman Conks territory in Glengarry was marked by large green shamrocks which survived years after the tenements came down.  The rivalry between the Conks and the Billy Boys was intense and the violence fierce.  Some reports claim that the Conks turned up at Billy Fullerton’s wedding reception in 1926 and carried out a bottle attack on those in attendance.  Earlier the same year thirty members of the Conks attacked a group of Billy Boys at their usual meeting point at Bridgeton Toll (next to the railway station), with one victim suffering a broken skull due to a hammer blow.  One of the Conks was caught carrying a bayonet which he later claimed in court was a necessary means of defence as, as one newspaper reported, ‘the Billy Boys had already come after him several times.’ 

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Norman Conks territory:  a shamrock painted on the corner of French Street and Dora Street

Extortion of local businesses and theft were common means for the East End gangs to raise funds.  Street violence however was their real currency and some gang members were happy to display their allegiance by showing green or blue handkerchiefs in their suit jackets.  The Billy Boys did not restrict their attentions to local Catholic gangs.  The proximity of Celtic Park afforded them the opportunity to widen the scope of their attacks.  Bridgeton train station was the scene of an ambush in March 1934 as Celtic fans were passing through on an away visit to Love Street in Paisley.  Using a waiting group of Rangers fans as cover, a couple of Billy Boys jumped on the train and attacked two Celtic fans, one of whom was slashed with either a knife or a razor.  The principal attacker – a leading Billy Boy called John Traquair who had a previous conviction for attacking a Shanley Boy with a hatchet – was jailed for four years for the premeditated attack.

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The Billy Boys flute band – Billy Fullerton behind the drum

In 2008, the Glasgow comedian Janey Godley was surprised to come across a surviving Norman Conk – her friend’s elderly Aunt Katie.   Female members had been a common feature of the Glasgow gangs yet it was a shock when the sprightly old lady, who grew up in Norman Street, confessed to throwing petrol bombs at the Billy Boys in her youth.  In one candid remark, the former gang member said: “I once threw a hammer at one big bastard who battered a priest when I was 15.”  Her justification for involvement in street violence was straightforward: “They (the Protestants) thought they owned the place, but we showed them.” 

Gang violence in the East End was not always focused on sectarian lines.  The Catholic gangs of Bridgeton did not always act in unison.  A fall out between the Norman Conks and Shanley Boys in 1936 led to a two year-long feud which was peppered by violent clashes between Dale Street and Glengarry.  Sometimes gang violence was turned against their own.  Jurgis Stankawicus – known as Stankie – was a former pupil of Sacred Heart school born of Lithuanian parents who was a member of the Savoy Arcadians.  A dispute arose in October 1936 about his apparent association with two members of the Billy Boys, leading in turn to a fight – during which he was beaten to death with a poker and a knife by fellow members of the Aracadians.

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Norman Conks relax on Poplin Street in the 1960s in front of IRA grafitti 

The extremely violent nature of the street confrontations between the Bridgeton gangs was illustrated by Glasgow’s Chief Constable in the 1930s, Percy Sillitoe, who would later become the Head of MI5.  In his biography, Cloak Without Dagger, he described the scenes in Glengarry when the Billy Boys with accompanying flute band would attempt to march down Norman Street on Catholic holy days of obligation:

As soon as the distant strains of his offensive music were heard by the Conks, they manned all upper windows, and even the roofs in their street, and when the Billy Boys’ band tried to march past, it was met with a downpour of bricks, missiles, buckets of filth, and broken glass.  If the Norman Conks could have made boiling lead, I am sure they would not have hesitated to use that too. It was certainly all that would have been needed to complete the picture of a medieval siege.

Parish life at Sacred Heart was far from normal during this period.  Street processions were a common feature of Catholic communities then, especially in May when children would be making their first communion.  The academic Andrew Davies, author of City of Gangs – Glasgow and the Rise of the British Gangster, noted that for Sacred Heart parishioners in the 1920s and ‘30s “the processions, headed by a pipe band, invariably aroused the ire of the Billy Boys.”  In May 1929 a Sacred Heart Boys Guild procession from St. Andrew’s Halls in the city centre found their passage along London Road blocked by a contingent of Billy Boys.  Norman Conks had accompanied the procession and, according to a 15 year old boy whose leg was stabbed in the subsequent melee:  “The whole crossing was in an uproar.  Gangsters were struggling on the ground and kicking and slashing at each other.” 

 

Catholic church processions in Bridgeton down the years

There were similar scenes four years later when a 600-strong grouping of Billy Boys charged from Bridgeton Cross to attack another Catholic procession as it neared Sacred Heart Church, with a police officer giving this description of events: “Orange handkerchiefs were raised, bayonets flourished and stones and bottles thrown.”  Later the same evening, the parish priest at Sacred Heart pleaded with a group of over 200 Catholic youths to abandon plans for a revenge attack.  The priest had earlier denied allegations that the League of the Cross Hall on Muslin Street acted as an informal headquarters for one Bridgeton’s Catholic gangs.  The hall was had previously been subject to attack by the Billy Boys in 1931 when they “hurled volleys of bottles and pieces of metal at the windows.”

The same hall was to again feature in the local newspapers in 1936 when a number of Derry Boys were jailed following another attack on the premises.  The Derry Boys had by that time assumed the mantle of the pre-eminent Protestant gang in the city from the Billy Boys and were regularly in conflict with both rival gangs and police.  Three of the gang had been jailed in 1934 for smashing the windows of Sacred Heart school.  The summer of 1936 was to surpass the violence of previous years however.  As was common, disturbances followed the annual Twelfth of July memorial parade but these intensified after one of the Catholic gangs disrupted a local funeral.  The Derry Boys attacked the Ancient Order of Hibernians (AOH) Hall in the Calton and followed this up with midweek parades in the evenings, stretching police resources as these parades came under attack from the Conks and other gangs.

 

St Mary's AOH pipe band, 1923

The pipe band of the St. Mary’s Ancient Order of Hibernians (AOH) Division 541 based in the Calton, circa 1923

(Photo kindly provided by Vinny O’Brien)

 

The judiciary and police decided that concerted action was required to bring the gang warfare to an end.  Their principal target was the Derry Boys and a trap was set in early August 1936 when the Derry Boys complete with flute band and supporters, altogether numbering excess of 500, left Bridgeton Cross one Friday evening, heading along London Road in the direction of Celtic Park.  A short distance along the road they were met with a small contingent of police who commanded the march to stop.  Realising that they heavily outnumbered the police, the Derry Boys attacked – mostly with bottles and stones although one police officer was assaulted with a spear.  The gang hadn’t realised they had walked into an ambush.  Dozens of officers were hiding in furniture vans parked in Davaar Street and they set upon the marchers with the help of additional officers on horseback (referred to in the press at the time as ‘Sillitoe’s Cossacks’).  Despite allegations of police brutality, 20 of the 24 Derry Boys arrested that night were given heavy prison sentences.  The gang’s leaders were arrested in the days that followed the London Road ambush and soon followed their cohorts to jail.  The clampdown was truly underway.

THUNDER IN MY HEART 

The power and influence of the infamous razor gangs waned as a result of focused police actions and increased jail sentences as well as the intervention of World War 2.  Post-war Bridgeton was a changing place.  The school which Brother Walfrid founded continued to prosper and in the 1960s the Sacred Heart football team which he initiated had two would-be stars in its midst.  Future Celt Vic Davidson, who grew up in Ruby Street, became part of the famed Quality Street Gang (of the non-violent kind), Celtic’s reserve team of the late 1960s, and would go on to score 22 goals in 66 appearances during two spells at Celtic Park.  Frankie Miller, who was also an altar boy at Sacred Heart Church, would go on to find much greater fame away from the football field as a blues singer (and songwriter) of international renown.

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The Sacred Heart  team –  in the back row Vic Davidson (far left) and Frankie Miller (far right)

Born in 1949, Francis John Miller grew up in Glengarry’s Colvend Street and has been a Celtic fan throughout his life (he once wore a Celtic top gifted to him by Jimmy Johnstone on stage every night of a US tour).  Writing songs from the age of nine, Frankie started singing in bars in the East End and first came to the public’s attention with the band The Stoicks.  His raspy, full-throated soulful voice came to prominence after he moved to London in 1971 and he recorded a number of hit songs before moving to the States in the 1980s and wrote a number of songs for Holywood film soundtractks.  When pals would ask him why he was back in Glasgow he would usually reply: “To see Celtic and ma mammy.”  This was despite the fact his maternal grandfather was Archie Kyle, one of the few Roman Catholics to play for Rangers and Linfield in the early 1900s.

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Frankie Miller -on stage in his prime

Best known for his cover version of ‘Caledonia’ which was a big success in 1992, Frankie has also written two fine songs dedicated to his beloved Celtic: ‘The JJ Man’ about his friend and hero Jinky (as is, allegedly, the song ‘Drunken Nights In The City’!) as well as ‘The Loudest Roar’, celebrating Celtic’s 1967 European Cup triumph:

There’s a thunder in my heart that I learned long ago

And it captures every part of my soul

And when I saw those lights a-calling me from way across the shore

That’s when I heard the Loudest Roar

 

Through the 1950s and ‘60s the streets of Glengarry remained a resolutely Celtic area.  The Bridgeton Emmet Celtic Supporters Club was based in Mitchell’s Bar on Norman Street. In the 1990s Celtic fan Robert McAulay recalled his father, another Glengarry son, telling him of the party in Mitchell’s Bar on the night Celtic beat Rangers by the record-breaking scoreline of 7-1 in the 1957 League Cup Final:

The celebrations lasted as long as the licensing laws would allow and then it was off to ‘The Hut’, a dancehall just along the street.  And before my dad realised it, his ten bob from selling the match programmes was gone!  As my dad explained, a victory such as this was once-in-a-lifetime and ensured that the vast majority of Celtic fans had, for a short time, an escape from the miserable social conditions that were their existence.  In 1957 he still lived with his mother and five brothers in relative poverty in a room and kitchen with an outside toilet.

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Bridgeton Celtic supporters’ patch

Celtic fans had to ensure seven long years without any silverware between 1958 and 1965.  Victory over Dunfermline in the 1965 Scottish Cup Final under new manager Jock Stein  sparked scenes of joy at Hampden and beyond.  The Celtic team bus was mobbed that day as it made its way through the Gorbals on the way back from Hampden and these scenes were repeated in Bridgeton.  After crossing the Clyde the celebrating Celts made their way past Glengarry and up Dunn Street to the junction at London Road before turning right towards Celtic Park.  A photo taken outside the Waverley Bar, at the junction between Dunn Street and Bernard Street, shows the bus struggling to make its way through a throng of hundreds of cheering supporters.  It was another memorable moment of celebration for the Bridgeton Emmet CSC in their own neighbourhood.

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The district of Bridgeton itself has maintained a strong Orange identity through to the present day.  Loyalist bars predominate at Bridgeton Cross and the 1995 murder of 16 year-old Celtic fan Mark Scott outside one of those pubs demonstrated that sectarian violence is not an historical phenomenon.  The parish of Sacred Heart has continued on and, despite occasional attacks on church property, as has been the case throughout its history,  the church is one of the few surviving places of worship in Bridgeton in the new millenium.

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Sacred Heart Church today

The school which Brother Walfrid founded almost a century and a half ago remains a success story.  The modern Sacred Heart Primary School is a thriving community itself  with a large roll of pupils from a multitude of backgrounds and ethnicities and it is now the largest school in the district.   There is no reference in the building to the school’s notable first head-teacher or the incredible venture that was the Poor Children’s Dinner Tables,  established to encourage more children to attend school and help lift this originally Highland and latterly Irish community off its knees.  The focus is firmly on the educational and spiritual needs of the youth of the parish and few who attend are aware of the connection between the school and one of the world’s biggest football clubs.

Sacred Heart Primary School and adjoining Church in 2016

GLENGARRY NO MORE

Today, the streets around Glengarry are largely silent.  The tenements which housed thousands upon thousands of Glaswegians in Bridgeton, Dalmarnock and Calton have been swept away.  The East End experienced massive de-population in the 1970s and ‘80s alongside the decline of many local industries and businesses.  The streets around Glengarry gradually became deserted and after years of dilapidation the bulldozers finally moved in.

States of disrepair – Webster Street and Swanston Street

The Glengarry Bar, at the corner of French Street and Carstairs Street, is long gone.  A few industrial buildings have survived including the massive cotton spinning mill on Carstairs Street, built between 1884-1889, which still dominates the area.  There are no indications of the presence of those Highlanders who set up home in these streets over two centuries ago – other than the re-emergence of Glengarry Park, once again visible following land clearances between Swanston Street, Adelphi Street and French Street.

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Glengarry Park, home to Brother Walfrid’s original teams – 2016

From the edge of Glengarry Park it is possible to see the modern Celtic Park looming on the horizon, one of the prominent landmarks in the East End skyline nowadays.  Norman Street still stands – but the Conks have long gone.  (Perhaps just as well as a large Police Scotland building now stands at the edge of their old territory on the riverside).

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The streets of Glengarry are slowly changing character once again as a result of a large-scale regeneration project undertaken in the East End before and after the Commonwealth Games, under the banner ‘Building the Legacy.’  The new Clyde Gateway now splits Bartholomew Street from the heart of Glengarry while linking Celtic Park and the Emirates Arena to Shawfield and the nearby M77 motorway.  The area looks better than it has for years but there is a distinct absence of homes and people.

As you drive past what remains of Glengarry on your supporters’ bus or car after a game at Celtic Park, spare a thought for the community that once lived here and the struggles they endured.  Our world-famous football club stems from this parish and the people who lived and worked on these streets – from Father MacDonell to Frankie Miller, from the street-savvy gangsters to the Gaelic-speaking Highlanders, Hugh MacDonald to Brother Walfrid – built a legacy that demonstrates the true meaning of the popular Celtic phrase ‘faithful through and through.’

———-

 (c) The Shamrock 2016 

Glengarry – 2016

 

Bartholomew Street

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Savoy Street – where the Poor Children’s Dinner Tables were founded

 

 

 Celtic Park – as viewed from Glengarry Park

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 – – – – –

Thanks to GilleRuadh on the CelticMinded forum for this link about the one of the last original Gaelic speakers among the Glengarry community in Ontario:

http://www.electricscotland.com/history/canada/mcdonald_alec.htm

 – – – – –

Read more Celtic retro pieces in our magazine:  The Shamrock

Issue 3 out now!  

£3 digital; £4 by post 

On sale at Celtic Park at the Kilmarnock and Man City games

sham-3-cover

Issues 1 and 2

Available here, in print or digital format:  https://theshamrockglasgow.wordpress.com/magazine/

Covers of Issue 1and 2 together small


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51 Thoughts

  1. Excellent read, thank you. Family are from this area and born and bred there, Savoy St and Reid St. This is the first time I had heard of Glengarry! Thanks for a most enjoyable read!

    1. Thank you Claire, glad that so many have enjoyed the Glengarry piece. A lot of people with Bridgeton family connections have been in touch and commented.

  2. This is a bit heavy after the shambles in Inverness tonight (I am in Thailand and it 2.15 AM) but I will read it all this week.All the bestMartin

    Sent from my Samsung device

  3. What a terrific historical piece about a part of Glasgow many are unfamiliar with or are unaware of. The legacy of the people, their community and the social changes which occured over time are remarkable. A great insight into the birth of our grand club from such humble beginnings. Many thanks for arranging and correlating the facts and stories, superb piece

  4. What a fantastic piece of history and brilliantly written. For some people you cannot get enough history. For others just ignore it and remain ignorant.

  5. My mum born 1923 lived in Old Dalmarnock Road, facing Sacred Heart Church, which she attended everyday. I wish she was still here to see how much of this history she remembered. Fantastic piece.

  6. Thank you for a very well researched and moving article. I thought that I had a good understanding of the history of my team but quickly realised that I knew little of what happened pre Brother Wilfrid. We all need to learn lessons from history and know our roots.

  7. Great read as my wife comes from Lochaber and also as celtic supporters,Many many thanks.
    Ian and Maureen

  8. I was born in Norman St in 1946 the Bridgeton Emmett was my 1st Celtic Celtic Supporters Bus.Also drank in the Glengarry pub and Mitchell’s bar, and lucky enough to be at the 7-1 game.

    1. Hello Jim.Today you told me about this and ive not stopped reading it.Theres a few things that i didnt know about (in fact a lot of things) but to see my wee Uncle and our family name in the history of Norman st and the conks was brilliant.Cheers jim—Wee John Mc

  9. Thanks for this.

    I love to read these stories of old Glasgow and Celtic.

    Brother Dorotheus was my grandfather’s brother.

  10. tam mcg, i was born in 83 dale street 1939, same address as my old granddad and granny, they must have had a tough life with there 4 sons and 4 daughters.

  11. Absolutely fantastic research and article, loved reading it and happy being able to help you with the picture of the patch. Once again thanks for the history lesson .Hail hail from Stockholm.

  12. To be honest, I would have paid to read that. Great reading, and as much as my family hails from Donegal, there’s always an affinity with the East End.Thanks for the education. Hail Hail

  13. I have no family in Glasgow other than through Celtic so for me this outstanding article brings to life both the social history underpinning the club (which I knew about) and the community from whence it came (which I didn’t). I’ve learned a lot today in reading this. Thank you.

  14. What a truly moving story that is, to try and visualize what these early settlers went through is beyond comprehension. Equally the heroic efforts that were put together to alleviate the deprivation that existed would be worthy of the highest commendation in existence today.

  15. I was born in the house on 9 Norman st on 18/5/63 (the day the Beatles got their 1st No1) and it was brilliant(and sad) to read this.What a place it was in Decades gone by.Im glad to say that i am the son of a Norman Conk!.

  16. Absolutely great piece, got sent this from a friend of mine from New Zealand, originally from Reid Street in Bridgeton, who along with myself went to Sacred Heart Primary. I pride myself in telling people I was born and bred in Bridgeton, having being actually born in my house in number 5 Reid Street! Great read, brought back a lot of memories, thanks!

  17. As Robert McAulay says here that his dad and 5 brothers celebrated the 7-1 win against Rangers in the 1957 league cup final in Mitchells bar that night its good to say that my dad was one of them. Robert is my cousin and his dad ‘Joke’ (Real name Christopher) was my uncle.He also states that his dad and 5 bro’s were in a one apartment with their maw he forgot to say their sister (Luzzie) too.My dad and i spoke about this on the bus today…

  18. I was born in 9 Norman st and moved to Castlemilk when i was 3 weeks old.Robert McAulay who states that his dad and 5 brothers partied in Mitchells that night in 1957 is my cousin and his late dad was my uncle.This was brilliant reading.Thanks for this…

  19. Brilliant!! Robert McAulay is my cousin and i was born in Norman st on 18/5 63!!.Roberts dad ‘Joke’ (real name Christopher) was my uncle and my dad was one of his brothers who partied the night away back in 1957

    1. It’s like a McAulay family reunion – brilliant! Delighted to read comments from family members of Robert. The information he gave to the authors of the 7-1 book was really helpful in tying together different strands of the Glengarry story. Many thanks for your comments. HH.

  20. The Savoy Arcadians!!!
    What a name.
    Shakespeare couldn’t have made up a name like that.
    Savoy St.
    It’s other claim to fame?
    MB bars where made there.

  21. I came from French st. Remember the Glengarry pub well. Went to Sacred Heart primary. Still go to Sacred Heart chapel. Remember too the big shamrock on the wall at Poplin St/Norman St. Would like to add a little to this story : Brother Walfrid approached Clyde FC to play other charity matches in addition to the match that they they played against Dundee Harp. Clyde did not let him down. They played their part. This should not be forgotten. Also while I am at it I should mention that Sacred Heart chapel is now struggling a little, does anyone care?

  22. Great article to read. Since there are so many folk with a historic connection to the area, it might be possible to get a campaign set up to keep Glengarry Park as a formal open area, preferably with boards or plaques etc signifying its history and importance to local culture. Perhaps even the club itself could get involved, I take it there will be people of influence with links to Celtic and/or Glasgow Council and/or Glengarry/Bridgeton/Dalmarnock who would be interested in this cause?

    1. Agree absolutely, but given that the club itself choose to neglect the shrine that is already in the Glengarry i.e. Sacred Heart itself, what is the point? If Brother Walfrid were around today he would be broken hearted to see his church living a hand to mouth existence while the
      club are literally rolling in it. There is something seriously wrong!!!

  23. Humbling to read how a few men like Brother Walfrid can change tthe lives of so many by offering up their own lives- so that others could live better. That is the message of hope, love and of Jesus Christ!

  24. absolute class wish ma wee granda peter was still here to show him this sacred heart bhoy through and through captained thur football team and captain of brigeton bhoys club as well

  25. I’ve been told that my Granda Brogan used tae re-paint the Shamrock in Poplin st everytime it got painted over by the corporation…. Not too sure if true though… But my Grandad was well known as an unbeaten bare knuckle fighter… Apparently, he could have had a career, but he had my Granny and five daughters and his own wee business and couldnae take the risk…..I’ve no-one I can ask about this…..I wonder if my family story will strike a chord in somebody’s memory…..I so want to give my children knowledge of their ancestors…. I know virtually nothing…😩😥

    1. Thanks for your message Marie. Hopefully this will strike a memory with someone else from the area. The shamrock was there for many years so looks like there is an element of truth in what you’ve been told – well played Granda Brogan!

  26. What a fantastic article I really did enjoy reading it. My father John Fay with his brothers Jim, Henry (Fago) and sister Agnes all came from Norman Street. All three brothers went to Sacred Heart school with Henry being in the same class as, and friend of Frankie Miller. Dad as well as the whole Fay family (of which there were many) are still massive Celtic fans and I used to love hearing the old stories of Celtic, Bridgeton and more so the streets like Norman street. I’ve only been to Sacred Heart Chaple once and that was this time last year for dads funeral, so sorry to hear it’s struggling it’s a beautiful place and steeped in history.

  27. Excellent piece of history which explains the changes over many years.
    A friend of mine left a Celtic match in the mid 1990s wearing his scarf and, as he was from Ireland, he didn’t know which way to walk back. He was purposely misdirected towards Bridgeton Cross, and was suddenly attacked. He thought he’d been punched in the neck, but realised it was more serious when he felt the blood. He was rushed to hospital and nearly died of blood loss. He lost 70% of his blood. He’d been slashed by a razor, and the attacker had run down an alley to a waiting car.
    He was arrested weeks later (with the aid of a Celtic fan pretending to be a loyalist and going round the pubs saying he wanted to buy the attacker a drink) and sentenced.
    My friend attended the court preceedings, and, as he was leaving one day, a policeman said it must be traumatic for him, and gave him a number for counselling. When my friend called it, it was a loyalist number with recorded sectarian songs.

  28. Great read fantastic insight to area in and around paradise as a lad going to celtic park in 50s/60s with dad on Govan all Saints supporters bus every week brilliant,superb

  29. Thank you for enlightening me. I’m trying to find out more about The Sacred Heart School and the football team that played there. My uncle lived in the Garngad and played for the Sacred Heart before enlisting during the 2ndWW. Any suggestions would be appreciated….

  30. A great article and read. I was from 368 Main Street and played Sunday football Games against Norman Street – I played for Pentland Place. I played for the Sacred Heart Team as the Goalkeeper with Vic and Frankie – I was also an alter boy with Frankie – We won the Marist Trouphy for the first time beating St Mung’s in the semis and St Mary’s in the Final – my first of many medals !!. Many great memories of my Brigton Days. I left in 1973 – immigrated on my own to Canada and my Brigton upbringing done me very well in Canada.

  31. Mum was born in May 1932 and attended Sacred Heart School, we went back to Scotland for a Memory Lane trip and I have photo of her taken April 2019 standing outside Sacred Heart Church, she last stood there when she was nine.
    Maybe some of you know her family her name is Mary Farrell (May) and her brothers names are Thomas (Tommy) Farrell and John Farrell – what a lovely article have printed it off for mum to read

  32. I lived in Paisley, but worked as an apprentice turner in James Young Engineering, Bartholomew Street (with a bakery next door,) during the late 1970’s. I knew nothing of the history (nor was I interested age 16,) of the area then, so it’s nice to read about it now. I well remember how quickly the area changed due to the GEAR scheme at the time as I watched (literally,) the demolition of all the old buildings almost overnight. It’s sad to see Bartholomew St. cleared away now, but I guess that’s progress!

  33. My mother and her sister and brothers went there Nan, moira. Frank and James Gibbons, my granda Peter was a local coalman.m my uncle Frank trained Vic as a kid, built like a stick hard as nails! HAIL HAIL

  34. Fantastic area with so much history, my mum was raised in Soho Street, a few closes along from a certain Thomas Burns, and Lulu in the next close, my gran also stayed in Nuneaton Street, they knocked Soho Street down and moved them to Drumchapel, it would have been from just near Belgrove Station along to where the Crownpoint Sports Centre is now, after she met my dad at the dancing in Clydebank Town Hall, she married him and settled in Clydebank, where the raised a family, but we were always told stories about the old days in the Eastend, and it was made more poignant when i starting going to watch Celtic as a kid, and recognised a lot of the street names they had mentioned, I’m a Clydebank Bhoy through and through, but a part of my heart will always be with their memories in the Eastend.

  35. Lived in 255 Main St, moved to 64 Heron St Bridgeton attended Sacred Heart primary then went to Pirn st. I left Glasgow 1970 so reading this brought back so many memories for me of my childhood growing up in amongst all this history. Thank you for this fantastic article.

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