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James McCarthy

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17-700: James McCarthy may refer to: James McCarthy (bishop) (1853–1943), Bishop of Galloway James McCarthy (footballer) (born 1990), Ireland international footballer James McCarthy (Gaelic footballer) (born 1990), player for Dublin and Ballymun Kickhams James McCarthy (oceanographer) (1944–2019), Harvard professor of biological oceanography James McCarthy (rugby union) , (born 1999), Welsh rugby union player James McCarthy (sociologist) (born 1949), president of Suffolk University in Boston, Massachusetts James McCarthy (surveyor) (1853–1919), Irish surveyor who mapped

34-495: A future project. Pollokshaws Clock Tower, located on Pleasance Street, is the surviving part of the old Town House, built in 1803. There was a ground-floor school with a court-room and a police cell above it. From 1818, the Town House building also housed a library. The Pollokshaws Burgh Charter empowered the council to hold courts for the trial both of civil actions and criminal offences. A jail to incarcerate local wrongdoers

51-469: A tollbooth, it is the only surviving example of this type of building in the area, others having been lost to road development, and a rare example of an older building in Pollokshaws following 20th century slum clearance and redevelopment. It is now Category B listed. Following the abolition of road tolls in the 1880s it served as a carriage hire premises, a pub, and latterly as a private house up until

68-614: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages James McCarthy (bishop) James William McCarthy (30 January 1853 – 24 December 1943) was a Roman Catholic clergyman who served as Bishop of Galloway in Scotland from 1914 to 1943. Born in Newcastle upon Tyne , England , on 30 January 1853, he was educated at St Mary's College, Blairs 1869-1872; Royal Scots College, Valladolid (1872–76) and St Peter's Seminary (1876–79). He

85-460: The Episcopate on 9 June 1914. The principal consecrator was Donald Aloysius Mackintosh, Coadjutor Archbishop of Glasgow , and the principal co-consecrators were James August Smith , Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh and John Joseph Keily , Bishop of Plymouth. He died in office on 24 December 1943, aged 90. Pollokshaws Pollokshaws ( Scots : Powkshaws ) is an area on

102-563: The 17th century. A group of Flemish weavers were brought to the area in the 19th century by the landowners, the Maxwells of Pollok, on account of their exceptional weaving skills. Pollokshaws was granted a charter to become a Burgh of Barony in 1812. It became a police burgh in 1858 and remained a burgh of Renfrewshire until 1912 when it was annexed to the City of Glasgow. Though it had been an industrial area, this changed in 1957 when it

119-452: The 1950s. It was subsequently used for council storage but is now vacant and isolated on the roundabout. Pollokshaws Bowling Club was formed in 1854 and was originally across from Pollokshaws West railway station. On the club's centenary, the clubhouse and greens moved into Pollok Park rent free thanks to Sir John Stirling Maxwell. The Pollokshaws Races, an informal horse racing event staged annually from around 1750 until 1883, took place on

136-561: The Shawbridge Corridor; the last of these blocks was demolished in March 2016. Four other tower blocks remain, near Pollokshaws East railway station . According to the 2001 Census , Pollokshaws had a population of 4,295. Its residents are a mixture of working class and middle class social groups, and the area also had a large South Asian community. Pollokshaws was originally a village predominantly dedicated to weaving in

153-686: The Sherlock Holmes story The Boscombe Valley Mystery See also [ edit ] James MacCarthy (1945–2019), Irish artist Jim McCarthy (disambiguation) [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about people with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=James_McCarthy&oldid=1164332367 " Category : Human name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

170-712: The South side of the city of Glasgow , Scotland . It is bordered by the residential neighbourhoods of Auldhouse to the east, Eastwood and Hillpark to the south and Shawlands to the north, with the Glasgow South Western Line railway and the open lands of Pollok Country Park to the west. The White Cart Water flows through the area. The housing stock consists of some sandstone tenement housing , modern brick tenement-style buildings, low-rise social housing and high rise/multi-storey tower blocks. Previously eight tower blocks stood in an area known as

187-518: The boundaries of Siam in the 19th century James F. McCarthy (coach) , college football coach James Francis McCarthy (born 1942), American Roman Catholic bishop James P. McCarthy (born 1935), U.S. Air Force general James William McCarthy (1872–1939), U.S. federal judge James Joseph McCarthy (1817–1882), Irish architect Babe McCarthy (James H. McCarthy, 1923–1975), American basketball coach Sir James McCarthy (died 1824), governor of Cape Coast Castle James McCarthy, villain of

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204-462: The documentary series "The Detonators". Low-rise, mainly private housing has replaced the blocks. A group of four towers at Shawhill remain standing going into the 2020s, along with a single block at Cartcraigs on the southern periphery of the district. Pollokshaws Burgh Hall on Pollokshaws Road, built in 1895–98 by architect Robert Rowand Anderson in the Scots renaissance style , was originally

221-469: The municipal headquarters of the independent burgh before passing into the ownership of Glasgow Corporation following annexation. Now a Category A listed building , it was closed by the council in the 1990s but subsequently reopened for community use by a charitable trust. Sir John Stirling Maxwell Primary School, located on Bengal Street / Christian Street, was a standalone red sandstone building by architect John H Hamilton, completed in 1907. The site of

238-465: The school was previously donated by local philanthropic landowner Sir John Stirling Maxwell, after whom it was named. The school was closed in June 2011 and despite local pressure and campaigns the building was allowed to rot and stood derelict for some years. It was demolished in 2023 after being deemed structurally unsafe beyond repair, with the council promising to save and re-use some of its features in

255-605: Was ordained to the priesthood in Glasgow on 4 May 1879. He was curate at Our Lady and St Margaret's, Kinning Park (1879–84) and parish priest of St John's, Port Glasgow (1884–99). He was parish priest of St Mary Immaculate, Pollokshaws (1899–1900) and administrator of St Andrew's Cathedral, Glasgow (1900–14). He was appointed as Bishop of the Diocese of Galloway by the Holy See on 25 May 1914, and consecrated to

272-432: Was built in 1845. After the 1912 annexation of Pollokshaws Burgh to the City of Glasgow, most of the Town House was demolished and only a public campaign managed to save the remaining Clock Tower. The Round Toll is a circular building now located on the central island of the roundabout of the same name (junction of B762 Barrhead Road / Nether Auldhouse Road and B769 Pollokshaws Road / Thornliebank Road). Built around 1820 as

289-562: Was proposed as the second Comprehensive Development Area in Glasgow (the first was Hutchesontown ). The area was demolished and rebuilt anew. Several residential tower blocks were built as part of the CDA plan in the 1960s. Most of these were later demolished between 2008 and 2016 in the Shawbridge Corridor regeneration. The blowdowns of the first two towers in July 2008 was filmed in detail by an American company and can be seen as part of

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