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NORTHWOODSIDE HOUSE, GLASGOW
http://archive.org/stream/publications1st402rega#page/n5/mode/2up “The Regality Club”, Series
2, 1889. Article by A. Macgeorge on Northwoodside House. Andrew Macgeorge (1810-91) married
Margaret Pollock (b. 1821), dau of Margaret Barton Black (1797-1848), who was descended from
the Barton family. Andrew also wrote an article on John Black of Claremont, father of Margaret
Barton Black, which appeared in “The Regality Club”, Series 1, 1886.
NORTHWOODSIDE.
The annexed sketch represents a reach of the river Kelvin— or, as it is called in
the old writs, " the Water of Kelvin " — at a point where none of the objects
shown on it now remain. It was taken from the bridge near the fine church of which
the late Dr. Eadie was then incumbent. The sketch was taken on the 23rd of August,
1869, and represents what I then saw with the exception of the house to the left,
which had been pulled down a few months previously. I had been familiar with the
appearance of that house for many years, and more than once had been in it, and I
restored it to its place in the drawing partly from my own recent recollection of
it, which was very distinct, and partly from the interesting painting of it by thelate Mr. A. D. Robertson, now in the Corporation Galleries — one of the pictures
bequeathed to the city by the late Mr. William Euing. The whole scene as
represented in the sketch is what it was in the year 1868.
The house just referred to was an Italian-looking villa, and, besides the picture
in the Corporation Galleries, a view of it, taken from the land side, will be
found in The Old Country Houses of the Old Glasgow Gentry. The piece of ground on
which it was erected was of very small extent — a narrow strip forming a wooded
terrace overlooking the river, with the road "leading from Glasgow to
Northwoodside Mills" close behind it. This ground was acquired in 1771 by William
Fleming, coppersmith in Glasgow, from Lord Blantyre and Mr. Stirling of Keir.
Fleming conveyed it, with other land, in 1792, to Robert Miller, also a
coppersmith in Glasgow, and in the same year Miller conveyed it, with other land,to William Gillespie, calico printer in Anderston. In 1802 Mr. Gillespie conveyed
the property to his son Colin, designed merchant in New York. I have not been able
to ascertain by whom the house was erected, but it was probably by William
NORTHWOODSIDE. 9
Gillespie, as in the Conveyance of 1802 Colin Gillespie is described as "then
residing at Northwoodside," and in the previous titles there is no mention of
any house on the ground. It was probably erected previous to 1795, as in
Richardson's map of that date a house is shown just about the point where
this house stood. Part of the land acquired by William Gillespie was on
the north side of the road immediately behind the house, and on this ColinGillespie made a garden, and connected it with the house lot by an ornamental
iron bridge over the road. He also added to and improved the house. After
possessing the property for about eighteen years, Colin Gillespie, having become
insolvent, conveyed it in 1820 to Samuel Hoare and others, bankers in London, and
by them it was conveyed in 1822 to Mr. John Thomson, cashier, in Edinburgh, of the
Royal Bank of Scotland. Mr. Thomson occupied the house for a few years, and in
1828 sold it to Mr. Henry Paul, accountant in Glasgow, afterwards the first
manager of the City of Glasgow Bank. Mr. Paul lived in it till 1845, when he sold
it, along with the adjoining lands, to Mr. Bain of Moriston, by whom they were
conveyed to the City of Glasgow Bank, who laid out the ground for feuing.
The conveyance by Mr. Paul to Mr. Bain is the first in the progress in
which I find any mention of the house. It is there called " the mansion house orvilla of Northwoodside." In the Country Houses it is called "Northwoodside House,"
but it was certainly not the mansion house of the estate of Northwoodside. That
stood on the ground to the right. Both properties, and much more land in the
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neighbourhood, formed part of the " thirty-two shilling and four penny land of old
extent of Northwoodside" ; and the high three story house in the sketch, if not
the mansion house in its original form, certainly occupied its site.
That house, with land adjoining, belonged to James Lapsley, designed as
"of Northwoodside," from whom it was acquired in 1790 by Benjamin Barton,
commissary clerk of Glasgow. In the conveyance to him it is described as "that
part of the lands of Northwoodside called the Glebe, with the mansion house of
Northwoodside and other houses standing thereon, consisting of 4 acres 1 rood and25 falls." Mr. Barton possessed this house till his death in the end of the year
1816. I have not ascertained when it was built, but from the terms of the
conveyance to Barton, viz., the land, with "the mansion house standing thereon."
the original mansion house was no doubt there when Barton acquired the property.
There is little doubt, indeed, that the house shown in the sketch is the old
mansion house — improved very likely, and possibly with the third story, with its
battlemented top, added by Mr. Barton. There appears to have been a small
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bit of ground — about half an acre — lying between the house and the road, not
included in Lapsley's conveyance. Of this ground — so essential to his amenity -Mr. Barton got a lease from the Parliamentary Trustees of Blythswood, and in 1806
he obtained from them a feudal conveyance to it.
After Mr. Barton's death the property was in 1818 sold by his testamentary
trustees to Mr. John Hamilton of Northpark. In 1831 his son, Archibald
Hamilton, wine merchant in Glasgow, succeeded to it, as heir of his father. In
1839 it was sold by the trustees for Mr. Hamilton to Michael Rowand, banker in
Glasgow, and in 1851 Mr. Rowand conveyed it to the Union Bank of Scotland.
Benjamin Barton was a gentleman well known in Glasgow. He was Com-
missary clerk at the end of the last century and the beginning of the present. He
appears in the Glasgow Directory of 1789 as " Benjamin Barton, commissary clerk,
second flat above 218 Trongate." The house on the Kelvin was not his only
residence. He used it only as a country seat, and it was then a secluded place,
far away from the city. His town house, latterly, was the top flat of the tenement
at the head of Dunlop Street, on the west side — the Buck's Head Hotel occupying
the other side of the street.
Mr. Barton was descended from an ancient family, the head of which served
under William the Conqueror, and obtained from that monarch large possessions
in Lancashire. One of his descendants was Booth de Barton, who married a
daughter of the noble family of De Peltier of Normandy, and from that marriage the
commissary clerk was descended. Mr. Barton's sister, Margaret, married Mr. M'Nair
of Greenfield, and their daughter, Margaret M'Nair, became Mrs. Black of
Clairmont. By his first wife, Miss Paterson of Ballaird, Benjamin Barton had two
children — a son and a daughter. The latter married Mr. Farquhar Gray of Glen
Tigg, in Ayrshire— a gentleman well known in Glasgow. The son, Alexander, enteredthe army and became a distinguished officer. On the recommendation of the Duke of
Wellington, he was promoted for his services in the field. He commanded a squadron
of the 12th Light Dragoons (afterwards the 12th Royal Lancers) in three general
engagements — Salamanca, Vittoria, and Waterloo. He died unmarried. By a second
marriage his father, the commissary clerk, had three children — two sons, and a
daughter who married a well known Glasgow man, Mr. Stewart Bell, brother of an
equally well known citizen, David Bell. Benjamin Barton of Northwoodside died in
1816.
Some time after the sketch was taken the flat ground in front was, by filling
up, raised to a height very much above the original level, and on part of it the
New Glasgow Academy was built. This ground was acquired by the trustees of
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the Academy from the City of Glasgow Bank in 1878. It consisted of upwards
of 24,000 square yards, and the price paid was 20,000 pounds. The ground is
described in the conveyance as forming " part and portion of that lot of the lands
of Hillhead called the Holm, running along the water of Kelvin on the south sideof the said water immediately opposite the lands belonging to Archibald Hamilton,
merchant in Glasgow, and Henry Paul, accountant there, situated on the north side
of said water." The ground belonged previously to the Faculty of Physicians and
Surgeons, who feued it in 1828 to Andrew Reed, merchant in Glasgow. Reed, with the
consent of Mr. Gibson of Hillhead, sold it in 1830 to James Grant and William
Meiklem, writers in Glasgow ; and it was acquired by the City of Glasgow Bank in
1861.
The cottages to the right in the sketch were on the ground now occupied
by Rosebery Terrace. I have frequently in passing seen hay or corn stacks
behind them, so that they were probably occupied either in connection with land
under culture, or for dairy purposes. The whole ground of which this formed a part
consisted of 9 acres 3 roods and 6 falls, which was feued from Blythswood in 1806by James Towers, surgeon in Glasgow. It consisted of two portions — one a narrow
strip of planting lying between the river and what is called in the title "the
road leading from Woodside to Glasgow." The other and larger portion lay above and
to the east of that road. The south
south-west boundary of it was what is now the centre of the Great Western Road.
The feuars in Rosebery Terrace have each right to a pro indiviso share of the
narrow strip next the river, which is called in their titles " the waterside
ground." The feu-
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duty for the whoie ground — nearly ten acres — was 9o pounds 8 shillings and 10
pence, with augmentations.
On the extreme left — outside the range of the sketch — on the rising ground
which sloped down to the flat haugh land which forms the foreground of the
sketch, there stood in 1869 several rural cottages, with gardens in front of them.
These, like the cottages on the other side of the river, shown to the right in the
sketch, have all been removed, and probably part of the buildings of the Academy
is erected on their site. There were near them a good many trees and shrubs, and
they must have formed quiet and secluded residences. The rough pen and ink sketch
subjoined, from a drawing which I made on 17th August, 1869, gives a sufficiently
accurate view of these cottages. Near one of them in the background was a little
thatched summer house.
A. Macgeorge.
Illustration:https://picasaweb.google.com/114924510242579294555/Family#5935765298381340274