Baillieston

Baillieston
Scottish Gaelic: Baile Bhàillidh
Scots: Bailiestoun or Bylliestoun
Baillieston
 Baillieston shown within Glasgow
OS grid referenceNS677636
Council areaGlasgow City Council
Lieutenancy areaGlasgow
CountryScotland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Postcode district G69
Dialling code 0141
Police Scottish
Fire Scottish
Ambulance Scottish
EU Parliament Scotland
UK ParliamentGlasgow East
Scottish ParliamentGlasgow Shettleston
List of places
UK
Scotland
Glasgow

Coordinates: 55°50′51″N 4°06′53″W / 55.847404°N 4.114655°W

Baillieston (Scots: Bylliestoun or Bailiestoun,[1] Scottish Gaelic: Baile Bhàillidh)[2] is a suburb of Glasgow, Scotland. It is about 7 miles (11 km) east of the city centre.

It is also the name of Ward 20 of Glasgow City Council. It also appears in the Glasgow Baillieston Constituency (total population 45,895[3]) of the Scottish Parliament, and it forms part of the Glasgow East constituency of the UK Parliament.

Geographical position

Baillieston is situated west of a major interchange between the M8, M74 and M73 motorways and the A8 trunk road, between the town of Coatbridge, and the neighbouring Glasgow district of Shettleston. There is a railway station as well as the remnants of the Monkland Canal north of the district underneath the M8 motorway, at Easterhouse.

Schools

Local schools include the following:

Churches

There are a number of churches in Baillieston, including the original (1833) but disused Baillieston Old Parish Church in Church Street and the new (1974) Baillieston St Andrew's Church in Bredisholm Road (at the corner with Muirhead Road - http://www.standrewsbaillieston.org.uk). There are two Roman Catholic churches, St Francis of Assisi Church in Crown St and St Bridget's in Swinton Road, the latter built by the Pugin company from 1891 to 1893. There is a small Episcopal Church of St John also in Swinton Road, built in 1850. The Mure Memorial Parish Church in Garrowhill was built as part of the garden suburb opened in 1940. There are also two Plymouth Brethren churches. Hope Hall (aka Baillieston Evangelical Church) on Church Street and Gospel Church on Glasgow Road. These two churches merged and now meet in Gospel Church while Hope Hall is mainly used by Coconut Corner Childcare Centre - http://www.coconutcorner.co.uk.

Historic buildings

Other constructions

Football

Baillieston Juniors was founded in 1919 and played in their early years at a ground presently occupied by Martin Crescent but when Lanarkshire county council decided to build housing there in 1932 they had to move to a field nearby at Camp Road. This ground was named Springhill Park after the name of the farm owned by John Findlay of Springhill to whom it was rented from. The team played there until 1953 when they opened a new stadium at Station Road which they called Station Park due to its proximity to Baillieston Railway Station until the 1990s when the ground was sold off to a private housing developer due to a liquidity crisis. The team carried on, and, though they are not currently in business, they may still return to Junior football. Their greatest season was 1979–80, when they won the Scottish Junior Cup, the Glasgow Dryburgh Cup and the McLeod Cup. The star player, Davie Wilson was signed from the Juniors to Glasgow Rangers FC in 1956 and played for Scotland. In 1967 another Baillieston lad, Brian Heron would follow in Davie Whites footsteps to Ibrox. In 1987, Alan Dinnie left the Juniors to play for Partick Thistle F.C. but was never capped for Scotland. That same year Tommy Elliott was transferred from Baillieston Juniors to Partick Thistle.

A Baillieston Thistle team preceded the Juniors in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and won the Scottish Junior Football League twice: in 1893 and 1894. This side also featured a future Rangers and Scotland player, in the form of Willie Reid. Its name is kept alive by the Scottish Amateur Football Association team Baillieston Thistle AFC. The recently formed Baillieston United have just joined the central Scottish welfare fa as of July 2008. Another amateur team, Red Star Baillieston AFC plays at Stepford Edinburgh Road. Glasgow East AFC are another amateur side based in Baillieston who play in the Glasgow Sunday AFL (Amateur Football League). FC Baillieston, http://www.clubwebsite.co.uk/fcbaillieston/155752, were formed in 2010 and play in the Sunday Central AFL league. There is a Baillieston Girls Football Club and Baillieston Ladies Football Club, both of whom have supplied players to the national teams.

Famous People

References

  1. The Online Scots Dictionary
  2. List of railway station names in English, Scots and Gaelic - NewsNetScotland
  3. BBC News
  4. http://www.sing365.com/music/lyric.nsf/Michelle-McManus-Biography/472A979743FA4F4848256E1E00063F23
  5. http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/1508257