SAW016952 SCOTLAND (1948). Glasgow, general view, showing R A Peacock and Son Ltd. Whitefield Bakery, Fairley Street and Ibrox Terrace. An oblique aerial photograph taken facing south. This image has been produced from a crop marked negative.

© Hawlfraint cyfranwyr OpenStreetMap a thrwyddedwyd gan yr OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2024. Trwyddedir y gartograffeg fel CC BY-SA.

Delweddau cyfagos (5)

SAW016952
  0° 0m
SAW016950
  199° 48m
SAW016951
  160° 73m
SAR014782
  330° 210m
SAW009727
  330° 210m

Manylion

Pennawd [SAW016952] Glasgow, general view, showing R A Peacock and Son Ltd. Whitefield Bakery, Fairley Street and Ibrox Terrace. An oblique aerial photograph taken facing south. This image has been produced from a crop marked negative.
Cyfeirnod SAW016952
Dyddiad 1948
Dolen Canmore Collection item 1269061
Enw lle
Plwyf GLASGOW (CITY OF GLASGOW)
Ardal CITY OF GLASGOW
Gwlad SCOTLAND
Dwyreiniad / Gogleddiad 255810, 664650
Hydred / Lledred -4.3036760153528, 55.853482229104
Cyfeirnod Grid Cenedlaethol NS558647

Pinnau

A group of five 2ndWW Surface Blast Shelters.

redmist
Wednesday 6th of January 2021 08:20:09 PM
The old railway line which ran under Copland Road towards Ibrox Station used by thousands of football fans attending a match at Ibrox Stadium until its closure in 1967, apparently there are plans to re-open it. In the attached photo I have added image SAW009727 to indicate the route of the trains as they approached Ibrox Station (out of frame).

Billy Turner
Wednesday 11th of December 2019 04:17:13 PM
Hammer Shaft Factory, No 17 Fairley Street, Glasgow This works was founded in 1892 by Robert Burley & Sons, makers of hammer shafts and tool handles. It was extended in 1901 for the same firm, who were timber importers and merchants, as well as manufacturers. This shows the street frontage of the works from the north-east. The design suggests that the 1892 factory was the symmetrical block at the far end (of attached photos), and that the extension of 1901 is the near-symmetrical range at this end (photos). The building was still in use for its original purpose in 1968. Hand tools, including hammers of a wide range of sizes, and picks shovels and spades were used in enormous numbers before power tools and earth-moving machinery were readily available. The best hammer shafts were made, as here, from hickory wood, imported from America.

Billy Turner
Wednesday 11th of December 2019 03:12:01 PM
24 Fairley Street, Engine and Boiler Works. Engine and Boiler Works, No 24 Fairley Street, Glasgow This works was built in 1901 for James Anderson, to designs by D W Sturrock, architect. It seems likely that this was a move for Anderson's firm from their Bishop Street Engine Works. The works had a short life as such, for in 1908 it was converted into a bakery for Montgomerie & Co, to designs by Thomas Young, engineer. This shows the Fairley Street frontage of the building from the south-west. The building appears little changed from when it was an engineering and boiler works. In 1968 the bakery was still in operation, in the ownership of Montgomerie's Bread Co Ltd, and was billed as 'The Home of the Wonderloaf'. Its present use is not known.

Billy Turner
Wednesday 2nd of September 2015 09:02:26 PM
9 Fairley Street, Stables And Stores

Billy Turner
Wednesday 2nd of September 2015 08:51:00 PM
15 Fairley Street, Ibrox Ironworks. Ibrox Iron Works, No 15 Fairley Street, Glasgow This little works was built in 1891, and extended in 1904 for J M Adam & Co, pneumatic engineer, at a time when compressed air was being used increasingly as a means of transmitting power. Air-operated drills and riveting machines were already in use by 1900. This shows the street frontage of the works from the north-east. It seems possible that the 1904 extensions consisted of adding a storey to the central bay. By 1968 the building was being occupied by W B Russell, haulage contractors. Pneumatic tools were developed most actively in the United States of America, where the severe winters made the use of water-hydraulic power transmission inadvisable. The use of mass production techniques made sophisticated tools relatively cheap.

Billy Turner
Wednesday 2nd of September 2015 08:44:17 PM
Ibrox Parish Church

Class31
Thursday 22nd of November 2012 07:41:22 PM
Kirkwood Street

Class31
Thursday 22nd of November 2012 07:37:19 PM
Whitefield Road

Class31
Thursday 22nd of November 2012 07:36:12 PM
Paisley Road West

Class31
Thursday 22nd of November 2012 07:31:10 PM
Edmiston Drive

Class31
Thursday 22nd of November 2012 07:30:24 PM
Ibrox Terrace

Class31
Thursday 22nd of November 2012 07:29:09 PM
Fairley Street

Class31
Thursday 22nd of November 2012 07:28:04 PM
Mafeking Street

Class31
Thursday 22nd of November 2012 07:26:55 PM
Copland Road

Class31
Thursday 22nd of November 2012 07:15:37 PM