Interior of 'Madrasa Taleem Ul Islam' mosque, Pollokshields
Photograph of 'Kelmscott', Pollokshields, 2014
Tracery on window of Sherbrooke St Gilbert's Church
Illustration of 'Oaklands', Sherbrooke Avenue, from 1904
Kenmure Street immigration detentions protester warns Home Office View of Fotheringay Centre, 2014
This house was situated on the north side of Maxwell Drive on the present site of St Albert's School. First floor stalls of stables overlooking courtyard of former Copelawhill tram depot
Here you will find fascinating unblocked games without flash.
This photograph shows the very first trams to be operated by Glasgow Corporation while in procession to the newly opened depot at Coplawhill.
The steps had non-slip metal surfaces frequently divided by transverse ridges forming the criss-cross pattern.
Pollokshields Pollokshields has as much to offer as the more touristy Glasgow west end and city centre from an architectural, environmental and social history point of view but is less known.
St Ninian's was the south side's first Episcopal church, predating the much larger and grander St Margaret's in Newlands by half a century. 1920's view of Kenmure Street, Pollokshields
East Pollokshields, which was a burgh in its own right from 1880, was situated to the east of Shields Road. B. Hutchison was the first recipient of this grant.
The foundation stone was laid on 16th September 1872 by Dr. William S. Wilson, Bishop of Glasgow and Galloway.
From 1872, prior to the establishment of the municipal transport system, horse drawn trams had been operated in by the Glasgow Tramway and Omnibus Company.
Their exhibition drawing of the house, below, was displayed at the annual exhibition of the Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts in 1904.
Architect, H.E.
Herriman High School Wrestling, Articles P
Herriman High School Wrestling, Articles P
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