Difference between revisions of "Stonehouse, Lanarkshire"

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Stonehouse
Lanarkshire
St Ninians, Stonehouse.JPG
Remains of Saint Ninian's Kirk
Location
Grid reference: NS755467
Location: 55°41’49"N, 3°58’57"W
Data
Population: 7,500
Post town: Larkhall
Postcode: ML9
Dialling code: 01698
Local Government
Council: South Lanarkshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
East Kilbride, Strathaven
and Lesmahagow
Lanark and Hamilton East

Stonehouse is a rural village and parish in the Middle Ward of Lanarkshire. It is on Avon Water in an area of natural beauty and historical interest, near to the Clyde Valley. It is on the A71 trunk road between Edinburgh and Kilmarnock, near the towns of Hamilton, Larkhall and Strathaven. The population of Stonehouse is around 7,500.

History

The village's oldest structure are the ruins of St Ninian's Church, which date from the 17th century and stand in an ancient graveyard on the edge of the village. The old village centre has several rows of late 18th century and early 19th century weavers' cottages, some of which have double windows which were originally intended to maximize the amount of light coming in, for weavers working on their looms.

In 1971, Stonehouse was designated to become a new town, with the purpose of strengthening the output of public-sector housing available to rehouse Glasgow's people from its unfit tenements,[1] a modern urban design[2] to alleviate overcrowding in and around Glasgow and to generate industrial development, similar to the towns of East Kilbride, Cumbernauld and Livingston. Stonehouse was added to the responsibilities of the East Kilbride Development Corporation. Following the West Central Scotland Plan of 1974 and the inception of Strathclyde Regional Council in 1975, regional planning strategy was refocused upon regeneration within Glasgow leading to the establishment of the GEAR project in Glasgow's East End. With the encouragement of the Regional Council, the Secretary of State for Scotland, Bruce Millan, agreed that Stonehouse's development would be halted in 1976 after just 96 houses had been constructed.. When challenged by the Scottish Office to give evidence of the claimed interest of industries in moving to Stonehouse, the Development Corporation had been unable to demonstrate any significant interest.[3]

Cot Castle

Cot (Kat) Castle might better be classified as a "keep" or a "tower house," more like a fortified house than castle per se. Compared to English keeps, both Scottish and Irish keeps were generally smaller, but could provide both comfort and security, during the period of border war that marked the reign of King Edward I of England and those who followed him for three centuries. During the 14th and 15th centuries, keeps or tower houses were easier for the Scots to maintain against their wealthy foe to the south. Defence of Cot Castle would have been aided by the fact that it was built on the banks of the River Avon atop a cliff face. Little is known about the provenance of the castle, but it is thought to have changed hands frequently in a period when loss of a battle meant loss of one’s property. However, it is known that it belonged to the Hamiltons in the year 1500.[4]

In the 1937 Statistical Account of Stonehouse mention is made of Cot castle in the following extract:

"Among the documents discovered in 1887 in the Hamilton Chamberlain’s office, is a notarial instrument, narrating that in terms of a charter granted by himself, Alexander Hamilton of Catcastell, passed to the one-mark of Woodland and the half-merk land of Brownland, lying in the barony of Stanehouse and the sheriffdom of Lanark and there gave sasine of these lands with his own hands to James Wynzet, his heirs and assignees in usual form, 29th January 1511-12."[5]

Cot Castle farm, which was built much later, lapsed into ruins and was abandoned altogether in the late 1970s. A railway station was also located here at more recent times.[5]

Castle Dykes

According to Jennie Forsyth Jeffries, historian of the Forsyth family, Robert Forsyth orchestrated a victory against the English near "the dykes" and was given land upon which he built Dykes Castle around 1350. It is situated about two miles west of Stonehouse. Robert received the title first lord of Dykes and 1st Baron of Dykes.[6] The legend of Robert Forsyth against the English at the Dykes is recorded in this poem:

From the hills we see them coming

In their stout array;

Insolent the English

Think the land their prey;

They have broken down the Dykes

In this their strong foray.

Who will be the one so valiant

As their course to stay?

Out spake one who falters ne'er In council or in war—

On his crest afar.

Through the Dykes he'd chase the English

With his clansmen true,

And with sword, Forsyth advancing

Pierced the arrow through.

When the King of Scotland saw

He who bore a demi-griffin

The chieftain straight and tall,

Who had stood with all his clan

A wall where stood the wall,

Hailed Forsyth to be the lord,

The baron of the Dykes.[7]

According to Jeffries, the Clan Forsyth motto, Instaurator Ruinae (Restorer of the Ruins), was approved or granted to them for their services at the battle of Dykes.[8]

Holy Wells

Four holy wells stood in Stonehouse in pagan times, but may eventually have been adapted to Christian use as baptismal fonts.[9] Thomas Carlyle, 19th century philosopher and writer, said this of holy wells:

It is a curious thing that I remarked long ago and have often turned in my head that the old word for ‘holy’ in the German language—heilig—also means ‘healthy.’ And so Heilbronn means ‘holy well’ or ‘healthy well.’ We have in the Scotch ‘hale,’ and I suppose our English word ‘whole’—with a ‘w’—all of one piece without any hole in it—is the same word. I find that you could not get any better definition of what ‘holy’ really is than ‘healthy’—completely healthy.”[10]

Richard Naismith drew the connection between the pagan and Christian use of the well, saying, "It is easy to conceive how this well would be used to administer the rite of Christian baptism and, in those superstitious times, virtues would be attributed to the water of a healing character that would cause such wells to be regarded as holy, and pilgrims from the surrounding country would flock to try the healing properties of the famous wells." He locates the well "between the churchyard and the farm of Eastmains."[11]

Site of Ringsdale Castle

Ringsdale Castle, like Cot, was not a castle per se, but a motte. Its remains can be seen on the raised motte at the summit of the Avon Gorge, overlooking the river. The name Ringsdale is believed to be derived from the word Rhyn, meaning promontory or hill, in the language of the ancient Britons. Glenavon Cottage, reputed to have a romantic air,[12] though all that remains now is a small corner of its walls. In addition, a mill called Cloxy (Clocksy) Mill was marked on an 1838 map as appearing near Ringsdale. Its ruins on the banks of the Avon can still be seen, though there are no extant records of its origin.[13]

Other Castles

In the area of Stonehouse, there are a number of castles on the outskirts of the parish: Allanton, Brocket, Plotcock, Glassford, and Darngaber motte.[13]

The farm of Castlehill near Spittal seems also to have been named after a castle, which may have existed in early times, though no trace remains. It has been suggested that, given its location near the old military road that runs through the parish, it could have been established as a fort by the Romans.[14]

Covenanter Memorials

During the 17th century, the Scottish Presbyterians called Covenanters refused to accept English episcopacy in church government, which eventually erupted into armed hostilities. The area around Stonehouse was affected when the Battle of Drumclog in Lanarkshire was fought 1 June 1679, nine miles to the south-west of Stonehouse. James Thomson of Stonehouse Parish was among those who died as a result of wounds inflicted during that battle. He was buried in St Ninian’s churchyard, which, like other churchyards in the area, holds other Covenanter graves. On the 201st anniversary of the battle, in June 1880, approximately 2,000 people commemorated the Battle of Drumclog at St. Ninian’s.[15]

Another battle took place about ten miles north-east of Stonehouse at Sodom Hill. It is believed the conflict at Sodom Hill was "a skirmish between the Convenanters and "Clavers," that is, the troops under John Graham of Claverhouse, who had been appointed captain by King Charles II. Little is known of this conflict, but Robert K. Chalmers’ song "In Praise of the Avon" included these lines:

Sodom Hill and Drumclog Field

Where weavers fought and wadna yield;

Where Scotland’s richts were firmly seal’d

Beside the winding Avon.[15]

Three weeks later, the Covenanter cause came to an end in Lanarkshire at the Battle of Bothwell Bridge, about ten miles north of Stonehouse. On 20 June 1903, the 224th anniversary of the battle, approximately 25,000 people assembled at the site for a dedication of a monument to commemorate the battle.[16]

Schools

Stonehouse has two primary schools in modern buildings: Stonehouse Primary and Newfield Primary. Both of these schools are within the catchment area of Larkhall Academy, but some children in the village attend Strathaven Academy. The local Catholic primary school is St Patrick's Primary School in Strathaven.

Transport

Roads

Stonehouse is on the A71 trunk road, which stretches between Edinburgh and Kilmarnock. A by-pass was constructed around the old village area, rejoining the original route of the A71 near Stonehouse Hospital at the village’s Newfield area. Stonehouse is close to the M74 motorway, with a junction at Canderside Toll about a mile from the village, which provides a link to Glasgow and other Lanarkshire towns to the north and Dumfriesshire and beyond to the south.

Buses

Stonehouse has regular bus transport to the nearby towns of Larkhall, Hamilton, East Kilbride and Strathaven provided by the Whitelaws Coaches service 254. The bus runs half-hourly on Monday to Saturday daytimes to Hamilton, with each second bus extending to Hairmyres. An hourly service runs on evenings and Sundays to Hamilton.[17]

Railways

The railway was closed in 1965. There are two closed lines at Stonehouse, one to Dalserf and the other to Strathaven. There was a junction in Stonehouse where the Coalburn branch diverged from the line to Strathaven. Today, the nearest railway station for Stonehouse is at Larkhall. South Lanarkshire Council have recently undertaken a feasibility study in order to examine whether the railway from Larkhall could be extended towards Stonehouse; however the major obstacles are the viaduct which whilst the piers remain, the decking was removed in 1984. Also in the mid 1990s the A71 bypass was partially built over the trackbed of the former line.

Sport

Alexander Hamilton Memorial Park

The park with its bandstand and playground equipment

The Alexander Hamilton Memorial Park was opened in 1925, gifted by Alexander Hamilton (from Stonehouse) who made his fortune in carpet manufacture.[18] The distinctive bandstand[19] came from the 1911 Scottish National Exhibition in Glasgow.[20] The park and bandstand look over the Avon Valley.

A long park chute was built into the hillside and was opened in 1933 by Councillor Thomas Wilson but was dismantled in 1967.[21]

Today the park has a floodlit athletics track, football pitch, multi-surface games area as well as woodland walks and various play areas.

Tileworks Sports Ground

The Tileworks sports ground has a floodlit all weather playing surface designed for football or tennis. The facility also has indoor changing facilities and a full size grass pitch used previously by Stonehouse Violet F.C. and now used by Royal Albert F.C.

Stonehouse Bowling Club

The bowling club was first formed in 1857 at Loch Hall but later moved to its present location in Vicars Road

Buildings of interest in Stonehouse

Churches

The town has two main churches - St Ninian's Church and Paterson United Free Church of Scotland. St Ninian's Church was built in 1896, at a time when the Old Parish Church lacked space. In 1929, after the Union of the Churches, this was renamed to St Ninian's Parish Church of Scotland. The ruins of the church are situated within its own cemetery off Manse Road.

Paterson United Free Church of Scotland was renamed to honour H. A. Paterson, the church's minister who died in 1901, this church was originally called the United Presbyterian Church and was built in 1879. Prior to this was the church for the Associates Secession or Burgher denomination, which was built nearby in 1796 and existed until 1878.

Stonehouse senior citizens hall

This hall started life as the Gas Office. It is situated in the village square at Stonehouse Cross and shares the building with Stonehouse Library.

  • library and hall now situated at the lifestyles on strathaven road.

Stonehouse Public Institute

The Institute was formerly the Miners Welfare Hall. It was built in the early 1900s on New Street, close to the cross and is used for a variety of events and concerts. The smaller part of the building was also used as a radio studio, providing a local FM radio station for most of South Lanarkshire.

Stonehouse public hall

This hall was built in the late 19th century at Trongate, close to the cross.

South Lanarkshire Lifestyles - Stonehouse

The old public buildings were replaced by a new community centre at the edge of town, opened in 2011[22]

Cemeteries

Stonehouse cemetery, which contains the town's war memorial (details above), has the Commonwealth war graves of 8 British service personnel of the World Wars.[23]

Other cemeteries in the village include St Ninian's Church Cemetery and Glebe Cemetery.

War memorial

Stonehouse War Memorial is situated in the middle of Stonehouse Cemetery and lists those who died in both World Wars. The World War 1 soldiers names are on the side that faces the cemetery gates and the World War 2 names are on the opposite side.

The memorial is in the form of a cross on a long shaft which stands on a four tiered octagonal plinth. There is no decoration on either the plinth or cross.

Bridges

Linthaugh Bridge crosses the Avon water at the bottom of Linthaugh Brae. The bridge was built in 1772. Another notable bridge is Stonehouse Viaduct.

Countryside

Two rivers pass through the area - Avon Water and Cander Water. Nearby hills include Grossyet Knowe and Sodom Hill.

Cander Moss

This reserve is a remnant of a large area of raised bog and is maintained by the Scottish Wildlife Trust. The site is rich with all types of wildlife that can be found in this type of habitat. However, there are no footpaths and access across it is difficult.

Hospitals

Stonehouse Hospital opened in 1896 and provided care for sufferers of tuberculosis and other infectious diseases and was said to be "the best isolation hospital in Scotland".[24] The old Victorian hospital building was demolished and a new hospital opened in May 2004.

Community groups and organisations

Stonehouse Community First Response

Starting operations from late August 2009, the CFR group for Stonehouse is one of many groups operating in Scotland. The purpose of the group is to provide supplementary emergency medical cover within the area, specifically to allow rapid attendance at instances of things like Cardiac Arrest, Central Chest Pain, Sudden Adult Collapse or Breathing Difficulties. Due to the rural location of the Avondale area, it can sometimes take an ambulance upwards of 10 minutes to attend an incident. In the event of a Cardiac Arrest, ideally you would want a Defib. unit on scene within 5 minutes, preferably sooner. Members of the group are fully trained in the use of Defibrillators, supplemental Oxygen use, Airway management, and various other aspects of Basic Life Support. Community First Responder

The scheme is completely staffed by unpaid volunteers who are dispatched by the Scottish Ambulance Service to appropriate medical emergencies within the areas covered. At the current time, the Stonehouse scheme also covers:- Larkhall, Strathaven, Ashgill, Glassford, Sandford, & anywhere in between. In some circumstances, cover can also be extended to Blackwood/Kirkmuirhill/Boghead (Usually only if the fellow CFR scheme in Lesmahagow area is not on call). At the time of writing (1 September 2010), the first year stats. for the group are over 3500 hours of cover and attendance at over 220 emergency incidents. There are currently 10 members of the group, but new volunteers are always welcome.

Stonehouse Heritage Group

Stonehouse Heritage Group (SHG)[25] was formed in 1991. It was created by a small group of volunteers. Their first project was the inputting of census information on Stonehouse (Lanarkshire) into a computer database. The first census return to be input was the 1891 census. Search routines were developed so that the data could be easily accessed through a number of options that included Surname, full Name, Address etc. therefore providing an extremely quick search facility. Since then more information has gradually been added. Currently the group has a resource room at the local community hall (Stonehouse Lifestyles, 2 Udston Mill Road, Stonehouse ML9 3JL). Additional information can be found on their own website.

Stonehouse Scouts, Cubs and Beavers

Scouting in Stonehouse had closed in the early nineties but was restarted in 2014 by a team of local volunteers. Today there is a thriving group providing challenges and activities to boys and girls from age 6 to 14. The groups meet in the Scout and Guide Hall in Lawrie Street with the older group, The Scouts meeting on Monday evening, the Beavers on a Wednesday evening and the Cubs meeting separately on a Friday. There is full information on the groups activities on their own website,

References

  1. Modernising Government South Lanarkshire (2018-12-12). "Archives and records - South Lanarkshire Council". Southlanarkshire.gov.uk. http://www.southlanarkshire.gov.uk/info/427/libraries_and_archives/588/records_and_archives/5. Retrieved 2020-03-08. 
  2. "STONEHOUSE - CENTRE FOR SUCCESS NO. 1". http://movingimage.nls.uk/film/0949. Retrieved 2018-02-25. 
  3. "NEW TOWNS (SCOTLAND) BILL (Hansard, 29 March 1977)". Hansard.millbanksystems.com. http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/lords/1977/mar/29/new-towns-scotland-bill. Retrieved 2020-03-08. 
  4. "Cot (Kat) Castle". http://www.stonehouseonline.org.uk/castles.html. Retrieved 20 Aug 2016. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 Cot (Kat) Castle. 
  6. Jeffries, Jennie Forsyth (1920). A History of the Forsyth Family. Indianapolis. pp. 28–30. https://archive.org/stream/historyofforsyth00jeff#page/n9/mode/2up. Retrieved 21 Aug 2016. 
  7. Jeffries. A History of the Forsyth Family. pp. 27–28. 
  8. Jeffries. A History of the Forsyth Family. p. 28. 
  9. Naismith, Richard (1885). Stonehouse: Historical and Traditional. Glasgow: R. Forrester. p. 160. https://archive.org/details/stonehousehisto00naisgoog. Retrieved 20 Aug 2016. "holy wells stonehouse." 
  10. Carlyle, Thomas; Leask, W. Keith, ed. (1894). Readings from Carlyle. London: Blackie. p. 147. https://archive.org/details/readingsfromcar00carlgoog. Retrieved 20 Aug 2016. "Carlyle says It is a curious thing that I remarked long ago and have often turned in my head that the old word for holy in the German language heilig also means healthy." 
  11. Naismith. Stonehouse: Historical and Traditional. p. 160. 
  12. Naismith. Stonehouse: History and Tradition. p. 68. 
  13. 13.0 13.1 Ringsdale Castle. 
  14. Naismith. Stonehouse: Historical and Traditional. p. 68. 
  15. 15.0 15.1 "The Covenanters". http://www.stonehouseonline.org.uk/covenanters.html. 
  16. "Monument at Bothwell Bridge". http://www.scottishreformationsociety.org/monument-at-bothwell-bridge/. Retrieved 20 Aug 2016. 
  17. bustimes.org. "254 - Strathaven or Stonehouse - Hamilton or Hairmyres Hospital – Whitelaws Coaches –". Bustimes.org. https://bustimes.org/services/254-strathaven-or-stonehouse-hamilton-or-hairmyres. Retrieved 2020-03-08. 
  18. "Archived copy". http://www.victoriacarpets.com/Aboutus.aspx. Retrieved 2013-04-09. 
  19. "Millheugh Road Alexander Hamilton Memoria". British Listed Buildings. http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/sc-49588-millheugh-road-alexander-hamilton-memoria. Retrieved 8 March 2020. 
  20. "Scottish National Exhibition, 1911". TheGlasgowStory. http://theglasgowstory.com/image.php?inum=TGSA00395. Retrieved 2020-03-08. 
  21. "Photographs". http://www.stonehousebooks.co.uk/downloads/photographsinteractiveguide.pdf. 
  22. "Archived copy". http://www.southlanarkshire.gov.uk/press/article/388/stonehouse_community_centre_opens. Retrieved 2013-04-10. 
  23. Stonehouse Cemetery CWGC Cemetery Report.
  24. "Stonehouse Online". Stonehouse Online. http://www.stonehouseonline.org.uk/health.html. Retrieved 2020-03-08. 
  25. "Stonehouse Heritage" (in en-US). http://www.stonehouseheritage.co.uk/. Retrieved 2018-02-25. 

Outside links