Pollok Country Park
History and features
The park, through which the White Cart Water flows towards Paisley, is the largest within the city of Glasgow. It was originally part of the Old Pollok Estate, which was home to the Maxwell family for over 700 years. In 1966 Mrs Anne Maxwell Macdonald gifted the estate, including Pollok House, to Glasgow Corporation with the condition that it remained a public park.
In 1878 the Poloc Cricket Club was established. Their Shawholm ground is one of several sporting facilities which ring the core of the park, including public playing fields at Nether Pollok near Shawlands (once containing the home ground of Pollok F.C. until 1926) and Norwood near Pollokshields, the private fields of Police Scotland and Hutchesons' Grammar School, (previously, Craigholme School), the rugby ground of Cartha Queens Park RFC, Dumbreck Riding School and two golf clubs: Haggs Castle (founded 1910) located next to the M77 motorway and Pollok (1892) to the north of Barrhead Road, a dual carriageway which is the only direct route between the east and west sides of the park approximately 1.4 miles (2.3 km) in length. On the other side of the road is a further golf club, Cowglen (1906).
In 1954 the park also became home to Pollokshaws Bowling Club, the land donated by Sir John Maxwell Stirling-Maxwell of Pollok House; the club moved across Pollokshaws Road to celebrate its centenary. It is located near to Pollokshaws West railway station on the Glasgow South Western Line which is the nearest to the centre of the park and one of its entrances; Shawlands on a different route (Cathcart Circle Lines) is also fairly close to one of the main entrances.
The park also contains the Burrell Collection, a purpose-built building designed to hold the large, eclectic antique and art collection of shipping magnate William Burrell, who donated the collection to the City of Glasgow on his death. Another feature of interest is the award-winning fold of Highland cattle, which is the most accessible of this species for the majority of Scots. In 2004, three mountain biking routes were opened by Olympic cyclist Chris Hoy. Strathclyde Police's mounted and dog-handling divisions are based in the park. There are two allotment gardens, one near Haggs Castle Golf Club and one at Pollokshaws.
Protests
In the early 1990s the park was the site of a road protest camp, the "Pollok Free State", which attempted to prevent the M77 motorway from cutting through the south-west side of the park and separating it from the nearby housing schemes. The road cost £53 million and destroyed 5,000 trees in a 7-mile (11 km) stretch of the park. Protesters, including local schoolchildren, attempted to prevent this using tactics such as building and occupying treehouses and tunnels. There was also a "Carhenge" of burnt-out and half-buried cars, from as far afield as Brighton, placed in the path of the road. Eviction of the camp by Wimpey bailiffs and police began on 23 March 1995, arresting 15 and injuring one. Though the camp failed to prevent the road being built, it was a formative experience for many Glasgow activists who had no previous experience of direct action. It also led to the resignation of M.P. Allan Stewart. As campaigners feared, the motorway has disconnected the park from communities to its north and west (Pollok, Corkerhill and Mosspark) with almost no direct access - there is one walkway on the north bank of the White Cart from near Corkerhill); by contrast, the eastern side of the park has three vehicular routes and two more access points for pedestrians and cyclists.
In early 2008 a campaign to "Save Pollok Park" was formed, protesting against outdoor adventure company Go Ape; the company was invited by Glasgow City Council to enhance outdoor recreational activities within the park. Over five thousand residents objected to the proposals to site a high wire forest adventure in the ancient North Wood.
References
- ^ "Living in Glasgow Pollok County Park". web page. Glasgow City Council. 31 July 2012. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
- ^ "Glasgow boasts top Park in Britain". The List. 24 October 2007. Archived from the original on 6 September 2012. Retrieved 4 September 2008.
- ^ "Pollok Country Park - Best in Britain and Europe". Archived from the original on 15 June 2008. Retrieved 20 June 2008.
- ^ Major transformation project for Pollok Country Park, Glasgow Live, 11 February 2019
- ^ Pollok House, Old Country Houses of the Old Glasgow Gentry (1878)
- ^ Pollok House (Mitchell Library, Glasgow Collection, Prints Collection), The Glasgow Story
- ^ Pollok House (Glasgow University Library, Special Collections, Dougan Collection, 1870), The Glasgow Story
- ^ Our ground, Poloc Cricket club
- ^ Netherpollok Football Pavilion, The List
- ^ The History of Pollok Football Club (1908–1977), Pollok FC
- ^ Location, Giffnock Soccer Centre
- ^ Lochinch History, Scottish Police recreation Association
- ^ Craigholme School: Glasgow girls' school to close over dwindling pupil numbers, Evening Times, 28 February 2018
- ^ Family forced to close city riding school after 50 years, Evening Times, 26 August 2013
- ^ Club History, Haggs Castle Golf Club
- ^ The Club, Pollok Golf Club
- ^ The Cowglen Golf Club, Cowglen Golf Club
- ^ Pollokshaws Bridges (Glasgow City Archives, Department of Architectural and Civic Design), The Glasgow Story
- ^ "Pollok Free State Lives On!". Do or Die No.5. 1995. Retrieved 4 September 2008.
- ^ Go Ape drops treetop park plans, BBC News, 13 June 2009
External links
- Media related to Pollok Country Park at Wikimedia Commons
- Pollok Country Park - Illustrated Guide
- White Cart Walkway, Pollok Country Park