86-731: The Luggie Water is one of two streams which flow out of Cumbernauld . The Scottish New Town ’s name derives from the Gaelic for "the meeting of the waters", which possibly refers to the Luggie Water and the Red Burn , both of which run through Cumbernauld but which never meet. Water from the Luggie eventually ends up in the west in the Firth of Clyde via the River Kelvin which joins
172-759: A BMX track and spin classes for cycling. The town's rugby team, Cumbernauld RFC , were formed in 1970 and grew to have 3 senior men's teams and several junior teams. The club and council agreed in the late 1970s to develop the Auchenkilns area in Condorrat. The multi-sports facility opened in 1979 and is now shared with Kildrum United FC. They play in West Region League 3, the 7th tier of club rugby in Scotland. The Cumbernauld Gymnastics Club moved into its base at Broadwood Gymnastics Academy in
258-741: A 6m wall to hold back the water. This was primarily to prevent flooding downstream but also for recreation. The lake is maintained at a nearly constant level and drains northward to the Kelvin via the Board Burn rather than into the Luggie. Modern maps show another balancing pond also exists which does drain south into the Luggie. Mollins Burn - On the eastern edge of the village of Mollinsburn . Bothlin Burn - At Oxgang in Kirkintilloch. The Bothlin escapes from Bishop Loch, south of Gartcosh . It
344-535: A New Town on 9 December 1955. This led to rapid expansion and building for about 40 years until the town became established as the largest in North Lanarkshire. At the UK census in 2011, the population of Cumbernauld was approximately 52,000, housed in more than a dozen residential areas . Cumbernauld's economy is a mixture of some manufacturing, mainly on its industrial estates , as well as service industries in
430-454: A New Town, the target population was 50,000. In 1961, only five years after becoming a new town, the area to the north of the A80 was added to the town's area with new planned neighbourhoods at Westfield , Balloch , Westerwood and Carrickstone . As a result, a revised target population of 70,000 was set. However, the 2011 UK Census still only shows about 52,000 residents. When Raymond Gillies,
516-528: A dozen coaches a day to various towns. Old maps like the 1899 O.S. map show other employment like a gas works and a stocking factory in The Village and a corn mill at Lenziemill close to the old brick and pipe works. Three schools were run but the teachers were not always paid by the heritors. There were several church ministers and the Church of Scotland paid, out of collections, about 25 poor people
602-608: A dwindling population and states "Handloom weaving of checks and other striped fabrics is still carried on, but mining and quarrying are the staple industry." There tended to be plenty of work, but times were hard even for skilled labourers like the nearby Calton weavers . The mining and quarrying industries flourished after the completion of the Forth and Clyde Canal in 1790. Quarrying of limestone, coal and clay took place in Cumbernauld, for example at Glencryan, where adits to
688-476: A large number of parks, and there are also LNRs (Local Nature Reserves) and SINCs ( Sites of Importance for Nature Conservation ) owned and managed by North Lanarkshire Council. For example St. Maurice's Pond as a SINC and Ravenswood has a LNR. In 1993 Broadwood Loch, a balancing lake , was created by damming the Moss Water and using a plastic waterproof membrane, and a 6-metre (20 ft) wall to hold back
774-561: A local businessman, gave Cumbernauld the St Enoch's station clock, in 1977, the Queen was celebrating her Silver Jubilee . To mark the occasion, the Queen started the clock using the pendulum motion and unveiled a commemorative plaque at Cumbernauld Town Centre , at the staircase joining the upper mall area with the old Woolco store. The clock is featured in Gregory's Girl and is now in
860-529: A revised target population of 70,000. Cumbernauld is the clearest example of a modernist new town vision in the UK. Housing was originally built in a series of satellite neighbourhoods clustered around the hilltop town centre. Separation of people and cars was a major element of the first town masterplan, and this was carried through for much of the development of the town. Cumbernauld pioneered designs for underpasses and pedestrian footbridges as well as segregated footpaths. Early neighbourhoods were designed by
946-561: A topographical suffix perhaps referring to a hill or slope (Welsh yn allt , 'at a hill'). There is a record of the charter of the lands of Lenzie and Cumbernauld, granted to William Comyn by Alexander II in 1216. Cumbernauld Castle was first built as a Norman-style motte and bailey castle. Owned by the Comyns , it was situated at the east end of the park, where the motte (mound) is still visible. The Flemings took possession of Cumbernauld Castle and its estate ( c. 1306) after Robert
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#17327906075061032-448: A week who could not support themselves. Groome also records clerical work as there was a post office, two banks (held two days a week in a room in the inn ) and a library with a newsroom. In 1880, Jane Lindsay (also called Luggie Jean on account of a deformity which gave the impression of having an extra ear) was murdered in a pool of water on the edge of Fannyside Moor, coincidentally near the stream called Luggie Water . A local farmer
1118-422: A year but re-opened in the 1870s. Parish records give a snapshot of heads of family's occupations in 1835 and 1839 including several bakers, servants, shoemakers and wrights. The Ordnance Survey Name Books of 1860 provide land-use information from around the same period. Cumbernauld was long a staging-post for changing horses between Glasgow and Edinburgh and there were several inns and a smiddy as well as half
1204-518: Is a large town in the historic county of Dunbartonshire and council area of North Lanarkshire , Scotland . It is the tenth most-populous locality in Scotland and the most populated town in North Lanarkshire, positioned in the centre of Scotland's Central Belt . Geographically, Cumbernauld sits between east and west, being on the Scottish watershed between the Forth and the Clyde ; however, it
1290-693: Is also a footpath along the Glencryan Burn with miles of pathways up towards Pallacerigg and Fannyside Lochs. Fannyside Muir, to the south of the town, is part of the Slamannan plateau, an area of 183 hectares of lowland bog. This habitat is being restored by a variety of organisations including the national insect charity Buglife. The plateau is designated as a SSSI ( Site of Special Scientific Interest ) and an SPA ( Special Protection Area ), partly because of its nationally important population of Taiga Bean Geese ( Anser fabialis fabialis ). There are
1376-405: Is also from a Gaelic phrase - "Comh Dobhair Alt" - The joint river place. The Luggie Water flows round the southern perimeter of Condorrat where older maps and descriptions seem to show it was joined by the Moss Water. (Confusingly they also show the Moss Water flowing north). In 1993 Broadwood Loch, a balancing lake , was created by damming the Moss Water and using a plastic waterproof membrane, and
1462-730: Is culturally more weighted towards Glasgow and the New Town's planners aimed to fill 80% of its houses from Scotland's largest city to reduce housing pressure there. Traces of Roman occupation are still visible, for example at Westerwood and, less conspicuously, north of the M80 where the legionaries surfaced the Via Flavii, later called the "Auld Cley Road". This is acknowledged in Cumbernauld Community Park, also site of Scotland's only visible open-air Roman altar, in
1548-623: Is his most well-known work. The Luggie and Other Poems is his anthology and is online. Some of his many verses which mention the Luggie include a poem about a yellowhammer and this unnamed sonnet: LONG yearnings had my soul to gaze upon Fair Italy with atmosphere of fire; On tawny Spain; on th' immemorial land Where Time has dallied with the Parthenon In beautiful affection and desire. But when last even, effluently bland, I saw sweet Luggie wind her amber waters Thro' lawns of dew and glens of glimmering green, And saw
1634-645: Is joined by the Garnkirk Burn east of Davidston farm. The Bothlin is without a doubt the Luggie's major contributing stream. Its source the Bishop loch was a third larger in area than it is today and this is a result of the Forth & Clyde Canal Company buying the water rights and using it as a storage reservoir to supply the canal at Kirkintilloch via the Bothlin. This was done by a canal feeder drawing water from
1720-415: Is some dispute from Hugo Millar. The Earl of Wigton was ordered to garrison the castle in 1650. Cumbernauld Castle was besieged and largely destroyed by Cromwell 's General Monck in 1651. Irvine records that the old castle was burned to the ground by "a party of Highlanders during the rebellion of 1715 ." Cumbernauld House , which still survives, was designed by William Adam and built in 1731 near
1806-545: Is some evidence that coffins were laid on top of the stone on their way to the cemetery in Kirkintilloch and that the stone has been somewhat worn away. Cumbernauld's name probably comes from the Gaelic comar nan allt , meaning "meeting of the burns or streams". There are differing views as to the etymology of this. One theory is that from its high point in the Central Belt , its streams flow both west to
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#17327906075061892-575: The Antonine Centre . After the creation of the new town , diverse industries such as high-tech , electronics , and chemical and food processing became large employers, along with the Inland Revenue (now His Majesty's Revenue and Customs ). The main industrial estates were developed to the east and west along the A80 at Wardpark and Westfield . Areas at Blairlinn and Lenziemill to
1978-626: The Gorbals . As a direct result, the Clyde Valley Regional Plan 1946 allocated sites where satellite new towns were to be built to alleviate the problem through an overspill agreement. Glasgow would also undertake the development of its peripheral housing estates. Cumbernauld was designated as a New Town in 1955, the third to be designated in Scotland. The others were East Kilbride , Glenrothes , Livingston and Irvine (Cowling 1997). The development, promotion and management
2064-566: The River Avon ) includes areas of Fannyside Muir. The Red Burn enters Cumbernauld behind Cumbernauld Academy (formerly Cumbernauld High ), whereas the Luggie Water flows past Luggiebank close to the Greenfaulds railway station . Therefore, anywhere between these two landmarks may be the aquatic heart of Scotland. The Forth and Clyde Canal passes north of Cumbernauld but crosses both the Luggie Water on an aqueduct at Kirkintilloch , and
2150-635: The River Clyde and east to the Firth of Forth so Cumbernauld's name is about it being on a watershed . Another theory ascribes the name to the meeting point of the Red Burn and Bog Stank streams within Cumbernauld Glen. 'Cumbernauld' is generally considered to be a Gaelic name. However, early forms containing Cumyr- hint at a Cumbric predecessor derived from *cömber , 'confluence' (c.f Welsh cymer , 'confluence'), synonymous with Aber . This seems to be suffixed with Cumbric *-ïn-alt ,
2236-538: The Scottish watershed , the drainage divide which separates river systems that flow to the east from those that flow to the west. There are two main waterways which flow out of Cumbernauld: the Red Burn (from which the town's Gaelic name is derived) and the Luggie Water (immortalised by David Gray ). The Red Burn flows through Cumbrnauld Glen and there are walkways alongside this and the Bog Stank. There
2322-478: The latest of which began construction in May 2003 for completion around September 2004. Initially the basic groundwork for the new shops began in 1997 and were finally completed in summer 2007. Designed to be a commerce centre, an entertainment and business venue and a luxury accommodation site, it was widely accepted as Britain's first shopping centre and was the world's first multi-level covered town centre. However,
2408-655: The town centre and in sites close to the M80. Cumbernauld was featured in Our World , the first live multinational multi-satellite television production. Cumbernauld's history stretches at least to Roman times, as Westerwood was a Roman fort on the Antonine Wall , the furthest and most northerly boundary of the Roman Empire. Two Roman temporary camps have been discovered and digitally reconstructed east of
2494-428: The "bright, shining" nature of the stream compared to other local watercourses. Two of Pont's maps mention the Luggie although neither links it with Cumbernauld. Several other old maps show the Luggie with various spellings including maps by Charles Ross, William Forrest, and William Roy . Kirkintilloch poet David Gray (1838–61), wrote many poems which mention the river. "The Luggie" which has been partly narrated,
2580-422: The 'Naud , statue which overlooks the A80 in Cumbernauld. While it doesn't mention the Luggie by name, the poem, inspired by Cumbernauld's Gaelic name, builds on the theme of watershed to east and west. There have been reports of large mammals including otters, badgers, pine martens , foxes, mink and roe deer along the river. Ornithologists have reported seeing herons and kingfishers too. Eels which swim as far as
2666-520: The 10-year-old King James II . Malcolm shared their fate three days later. Malcolm was succeeded by his son Robert. The castle played host to the royalty of Scotland. James IV (1473–1513) wooed Margaret Drummond at Cumbernauld Castle, where Margaret's sister was married to Lord Fleming. The Drummond sisters lie buried in Dunblane Cathedral following their poisoning, possibly by a government determined to marry an unwilling King James to
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2752-450: The 10th hole on Palacerigg Golf Course. Within about a kilometer of this point are streams whose waters make it to Linlithgow , Larbert and Kirkintilloch on their way to their destinations. There is indeed a drainage ditch choked with rushes and containing little moving water to the west of this hill which initially runs in a southerly direction before taking a south west route and thereafter westerly bearing joined by other ditches along
2838-592: The Bruce murdered the Red Comyn . Robert Fleming was a staunch supporter of Bruce, and one of his companions that day. To provide proof that Comyn was dead, Fleming cut off his head in order to "let the deed shaw", a Fleming family motto ever since. On 1 October 1310 Robert the Bruce wrote to Edward II of England from Kildrum trying, unsuccessfully, to establish peace between Scotland and England. Abercromby describes Malcolm Fleming as returning home to Inverbervie with
2924-653: The CDC and were constructed at Ravenswood , Seafar and Kildrum , north of the Town Centre and Carbrain to the south. Other neighbourhoods were later developed at the Village , Greenfaulds , Condorrat , and Abronhill . Much of the housing in these areas won awards for their innovative designs. Cumbernauld town centre 's lead designer was Geoffrey Copcutt. Phase 1 was opened by Princess Margaret in 1967, of which some footage survives. When originally designated as
3010-520: The Caribbean and back have also been found. There would appear to be no single 'source' of the Luggie Water although Herd's Hill on Fannyside is a likely candidate. This very remote location is where the Covenanters used to listen to field preachers despite it being a capital offence. On maps this is at a height of 178 m about 1 km south of the larger Fannyside Loch. It's not far from
3096-614: The English. He also seems to have been arrested by James and imprisoned briefly in Dalkeith Castle. In 1440, this Malcolm Fleming attended the Black Dinner along with his 16-year-old friend Earl William Douglas and his 11-year-old brother David Douglas at Edinburgh Castle. Immediately after the dinner, at which a black bull's head was served, there was a trial on trumped-up charges and the brothers were beheaded in front of
3182-528: The Glen, are used today as a park, known as Cumbernauld Park. Workers laboured on about 40–50 farms and details from 1839 have been recorded for both arable and livestock farming. Some of them were said to make a "very considerable income" for their owners. Weaving was an important part of the town's industry particularly during the Industrial Revolution . Irvine records that in 1841 a fifth of
3268-417: The Luggie and its tributaries. For example at the site of the old mill at Lenziemill there is the ruins of a weir. It looks like a natural waterfall but it raised the water level in order to supply the mill lead to Lenzie corn and flax mills. Some of the isolated spots attract youths who enjoy local tonics or practise their art. Some parts of the river have problems with shopping trolleys and old mattresses and
3354-623: The Luggie at Kirkintilloch . Water from the Red Burn on the other hand flows northward and then eastward via the Bonny Water and the River Carron into the Firth of Forth . Cumbernauld can be considered the aquatic heart of Scotland, being the urban watershed between East and West in the centre of the Central Belt . Where exactly the Scottish watershed is located in the town is difficult to pinpoint. The catchment of both streams (and
3440-468: The Luggie at Tannoch bridge, (near Bedlam and the stables), south of Pallacerigg Road. The Cameron (historically known as the Kamrõ Burn ) would appear to be the larger stream of the two. After Luggiebank the river skirts the edge of Cumbernauld with Lenziemill to the north and Blairlinn to the south. Shank Burn - Another large burn almost as big as the Luggie empties itself into the Luggie from
3526-572: The Luggie's confluence with the Kelvin is a distance of approximately 18 kilometres (11 mi) which almost agrees with Groome of the Gazetteer of Scotland . The Gazetteer also states "Fannyside Loch, 2 + 3 ⁄ 4 miles (4.5 kilometres) southeast of the town, is the only one that has not been drained of several lakes; it is 6 + 3 ⁄ 4 furlongs (1,350 metres) long and from 1 to 2 furlongs (200 to 400 metres) broad. The new-born Kelvin traces 3 + 1 ⁄ 4 miles (5 kilometres) of
Luggie Water - Misplaced Pages Continue
3612-549: The Red Burn on another aqueduct close to the Castlecary Arches. The river levels at Condorrat (after the confluence with the Gain Burn) and Oxgang are monitored by SEPA . For much of its length eastwards from Mollinsburn , Luggie Water formed the historic county boundary between Lanarkshire to the south and Dunbartonshire to the north. The etymology of the Luggie's name is uncertain. It may originate from
3698-667: The Tryst Lions wrestling club and squash and badminton courts as well as gyms. Martial arts are practised in The Link, the Tryst and at Broodwood. Raw Taekwondo also have a centre at Westfield Industrial Estate. The Palacerigg Field Archers , that meets for practice at the Tryst Sports Centre and has an archery course at the nearby Palacerigg Country Park where competitions are held. Palacerigg also has one of
3784-714: The Westfield part of the town. The old Isola-Werke factory in the Wardpark area has been converted into film studios and production facilities for the TV series Outlander which frequently films within the town's greenspaces. In particular, the Scottish Wildlife Trust's Cumbernauld Glen reserve, has been used as a backdrop whose ancient oak forest remnant provides a convenient stand-in for 18th Century Highlands' scenes. In May 2016, North Lanarkshire Council agreed to
3870-626: The area of Coatbridge called the Luggie Burn, a tributary of the North Calder Water . Jane Lindsay from Cumbernauld , who was found murdered on nearby Fannyside Moor in 1880, had been known as "Luggie Jean" in life on account of a deformity which gave the impression of her having an extra ear; it was coincidence that she was killed near the stream of the same name. Cumbernauld Cumbernauld ( / ˌ k ʌ m b ər ˈ n ɔː l d / ; Scottish Gaelic : Comar nan Allt )
3956-714: The award of 'Best Town' at the Scottish Design Awards 2012. The Royal Town Planning Institute (RTPI) awarded the town a certificate in March 2014 for its success as a New Town. In 2015 the Town Centre was awarded the Green Apple Environmental Award. Cumbernauld won the 2013 Beautiful Scotland Award for the best "Small City". It has also received silver medals each year since 2009, the most recent being in 2017. In 2017 Cumbernauld
4042-412: The banks of the Luggie than he saw, for his tardy comments must exclude the stretch of the river through the beautiful glen at Luggiebank and the meanders along its shallow glen west of Mollins. There are many man-made structures along the watercourse. Some give aesthetic pleasure although others are largely functional. There are road, rail and footbridges as well as viaducts, and weirs along the length of
4128-469: The burn near Claddens by way of a weir and sluice. As it flows through Kirkintilloch it is crossed by an aqueduct [1] that carries the Forth & Clyde Canal. After this it is but a short distance until it meets the smaller River Kelvin. Despite Groome's recorded opinion in the Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland (available online) as a "dull, sluggish, ditch-like stream", there is more beauty to
4214-449: The castle and reportedly planted a sweet chestnut tree in the grounds in 1561; she's also said to have planted a yew tree at Castlecary Castle , only a mile or two away, which still grows there. The whole great hall collapsed while the queen was staying at Commernalde on 26 January 1562, and 7 or 8 men were killed. Most of the queen's party were out hunting. Mary was not hurt and visited the relatives of those who were injured or killed in
4300-467: The comeliness of Scotland's daughters, Their speaking eyes and modest mountain mien, I blest the Godhead over all presiding, Who placed me here, removed from human strife, Where Luggie, in her clear unwearied gliding, Is but the image of my inner life. Jim Carruth, poet laureate of Glasgow, has a poem called Watershed which is inscribed on the base of Andy Scott's Arria, The Angel of
4386-543: The deer in John Fleming's forest of Cumbernauld and the white cows and bulls, to the great destruction of the park of the estate and hindering of the common good. For those kind of cows and bulls have been kept these many years in the said forest; and their like was not maintained in any other parts of the British Isles as is well known.") John Livingstone stayed often at Cumbernauld between 1632–1634. He
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#17327906075064472-536: The dere in John Fleming's forest of Cummernald and the quhit ky and bullis, to the gryt destructione of polecie and hinder of the commonweil. For that kynd of ky and bullis hes bein keipit this money yeiris in the said forest; and the like was not mentenit in ony uther partis of the Ile of Albion as is well knowen." "(In English, And amongst others, great enormities perpetrated by the Earl's soldiers, they have slain and destroyed
4558-502: The early 1990s it, a purpose built building at the same site as Broadwood Stadium. They also have tennis and short tennis at Broodwood. Dance classes are held at a number of location including Cumbernauld Theatre which also has drama classes and programmes. The Cumbernauld Handball Team, Tryst 77, which in 2007 came second in the British Handball Championships. The Tryst houses the Cumbernauld swimming team,
4644-687: The expansion the Wardpark site if funding could be found. Another industrial estate Lenziemill is home to Dow Waste Management and furniture maker Aquapac amongst others. Cumbernauld consists of more than 50% green space, and was designed to incorporate green spaces as a resource for the community. The Scottish Wildlife Trust owns four wildlife reserves in the town – Cumbernauld Glen, Luggiebank Wood, Forest Wood, and Northside Wood. These habitats include ancient oak forest (with attendant bluebell displays in early summer) and large areas of Scots pine coverage. Cumbernauld (like Ben Lomond ) lies on
4730-610: The formerly exiled 21-year-old King David II . Around 1371, the family built a second castle where the Cumbernauld House now stands. One castle wall exists but most of the stonework was recycled for the House or other buildings. King Robert III knighted Malcolm and granted Sir Malcolm Fleming and his heirs the charter to Cumbernauld Castle on 2 April 1406, just two days before the king's death. Malcolm (and his heir in 1427 ) were used as hostages to ransom James I back from
4816-483: The fort, at Tollpark (now covered by Wardpark North) and at Garnhall, similar to the two at Dullatur . One of the most discussed Roman finds from Cumbernauld is a sandstone slab depicting Triton and a naked, kneeling captive. It was found on a farm at Arniebog (between the runway of Cumbernauld Airport and Westerwood Golf Course). The slab can now be viewed at the Hunterian Museum in Glasgow along with an uninscribed altar from Arniebog and other artefacts like
4902-431: The ground at the existing Comyns' chapel which dates from the end of the 12th century. James V is recorded as staying for a couple of days at the castle around 14 December 1529. In November 1542, Malcolm Fleming , Lord Chamberlain of Scotland to King James V , was taken prisoner by the English at the Battle of Solway Moss , but released at a ransom of 1,000 marks , paid on 1 July 1548. Mary, Queen of Scots visited
4988-477: The inscribed altar, and statuette found at Castlecary and an older copy of the Bridgeness Slab . In addition to these, an altarstone to Silvanus and the Sky dedicated by a centurion named Verecundus and his wife has been found. Cumbernauld also has the only Roman altar still in the open air in Scotland: the Carrick Stone. The stone has also been linked with Robert Bruce, being the place where he reportedly set up his standard on his way to Bannockburn . There
5074-401: The like just dumped in the river. Volunteers like some Luggiewatch members from Kirkintilloch sometimes give up their free time to help with this problem. Other structures are more poignant like the memorial at Kirkintilloch to a young man, Hazleton Robert Robson, who at the age of 17 drowned in the Luggie Water whilst attempting to save the life of a young child. There is another watercourse in
5160-410: The north east and north of the village of Greengairs. Worries about potential pollution from mining effluent near this source were published in The Herald. It is therefore difficult to claim a single source for this river and it can be safely assumed as per the Ordnance Survey that the river called the Luggie Water commences at the confluence of its contributaries at Rumblybugs bridge. From this point to
5246-419: The north-western, and Luggie Water 4 + 1 ⁄ 2 miles (7 kilometres) of the southern, border; whilst the former throughout is also closely followed by 4 + 1 ⁄ 2 miles (7 kilometres) of the Forth and Clyde Canal." The preacher Adam Forman suggests Torbrex Farm as the source. The significant downstream tributary burns after Rumblybugs are in order: Cameron Burn - Which flows north to join
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#17327906075065332-411: The oak forest. The town began to enlarge as the weaving industry of the village was supplemented by mining and quarrying as travel across Scotland became easier due to the Forth and Clyde Canal and the railways being constructed. Cumbernauld railway station , though some distance from the village, improved communications with Glasgow, Falkirk and Stirling . Cumbernauld was designated as the site for
5418-418: The old fireclay mines are still clearly visible. Groome's Gazetteer (1882–86) states: "A colliery is at Netherwood [just north of the airport] ironstone has been mined to a small extent by the Carron Company (at Westerwood farm); and limestone, brick-clay, sandstone, and trap are all of them largely worked, the sandstone for building, the trap for road-metal, paving, and rough masonry." The mine at Netherwood
5504-448: The older castle. In 1746, the retreating Jacobite army was billeted for a night in Cumbernauld village. Rather than stay in Cumbernauld House, the commander, Lord George Murray , slept in the village's Black Bull Inn, where he could enforce closer discipline on his soldiers. After the new house was built, the castle was converted to stables, but was accidentally burnt down by dragoons posted there in 1746. The House's grounds, located in
5590-405: The rest of that shire. The two parishes were briefly restored to Stirlingshire between 1503 and 1509, but from 1509 until 1975 they again formed an exclave of Dunbartonshire. Between 1975 and 1996 Cumbernauld was part of the Cumbernauld and Kilsyth District of Strathclyde region. Since 1996 it has been part of North Lanarkshire . The arms of Cumbernauld and Kilsyth District Council featured
5676-454: The shadow of the imposing Carrickstone Water Tower. For many years Cumbernauld was chiefly populated around what is now called The Village with the medieval castle a short walk away surrounded by its own park grounds. The Great House Prach Led by Lord Marek Prach was known for controlling these lands during the Medieval Era The castle frequently hosted visiting royalty and the grounds were famous for their white cattle which were hunted in
5762-501: The sister of Henry VIII of England , Margaret Tudor . The murders made James IV a frequent visitor to Cumbernauld, Margaret Tudor accompanying him on one occasion. It is recorded that during this James' reign in 1500, the Black Death led to a special plea from the surviving people of Cumbernauld to the church authorities in Glasgow to allow them to establish their own cemetery rather than taking all their dead to St. Ninian's in Kirkintilloch. They were granted permission to do so, and used
5848-420: The south near Garngibboch west of both the A73 road bridge and the rail bridge. Gain Burn - At Auchenkilns Holdings from the south a few hundred metres downstream of Garngibboch Bridge near Cumbernauld Rugby Club 's ground. Older maps also show another unnamed burn joining the Luggie just after the Gain Burn coming from Auchinkilns. Moss Water - From Cumbernauld the Luggie flows past Condorrat , whose name
5934-416: The south of the town have also been developed for industry. The Cumbernauld Development Corporation (C.D.C.) disbanded in 1996. The Modern era for the town can be dated from the disbanding of the C.D.C. in 1996. The intended core of Cumbernauld remains the Town Centre buildings, all of which is essentially contained within one structure, segmented into "phases", the first of which was completed in 1967,
6020-493: The town never developed to its planned size, and the town centre has never had the life envisaged by town planners . Further expansion has been primarily to provide further space for shops . A substantial portion of the original shopping centre was demolished due to structural damage and has been redeveloped as a new shopping and leisure complex. The Centre , built in the 1960s to serve the town's commercial needs in one brutalist megastructure , has often been described as one of
6106-482: The town's three golf courses; the other two are Dullatur Golf Club , and Westerwood, which was designed by Seve Ballesteros and Dave Thomas . Snooker is played at the Red Triangle. Bowls is played in the Village, Abronhill, Ravenswood and in Condorrat. A small attraction World of Wings near Blairlinn houses a collection of birds of prey , offering flying displays and conservation activities. Covenanter Too Many Requests If you report this error to
6192-423: The ugliest and least-loved examples of post-war design in Scotland. Despite its bad press, Cumbernauld is regarded as representing a significant moment in town design, and in 1993 it was listed as one of the sixty key monuments of post-war architecture by the international conservation organisation DoCoMoMo . In March 2022, the building was scheduled to be demolished. The residential structure of Cumbernauld
6278-512: The village below. Royalty often visited the town to hunt the rare Scottish ox, or white cattle, which roamed in the woods around Cumbernauld. These woods were a surviving fragment of the ancient Caledonian Forest , in which the oxen abounded at least till 1571 and probably until the building of the new house. Many of these were deliberately killed by Regent Lennox 's men and a plaintiff complains: "And amonges others greite enormyties perpetrated be th' erles men of werre they have slayne and destroyed
6364-563: The water. This was primarily to prevent flooding downstream but also for recreation. A landscape scale conservation partnership led by the Scottish Wildlife Trust, the Cumbernauld Living Landscape (CLL), operates in the town with the aim of enhancing, connecting and restoring the greenspaces and improving people's perceptions of and access to them. In 2014, the CLL obtained camera trap footage of pine martens living in
6450-511: The way before it joins with another burn coming from the south at a place called 'Rumblybugs' next to the road between Wester Glentore farm and Cumbernauld. This is very close to the upper reaches of the Avon Water . The burn from the south - which is the larger of the two contributing streams that make the first notification on maps as Luggie Water after the confluence of the two is in turn an entity also made of drainage ditches from fields to
6536-414: The white cattle and the motto of "Daur and Prosper" boldly asserting Dare and Prosper . However the open Bible and the miner's lamp were the only symbols which were carried on to the North Lanarkshire coat of arms. Cumbernauld was designated a New Town on 9 December 1955. This being in the post-war era there are abundant film, photographic and paper records of this which are now being digitised . There
6622-463: The whole population of 4501 people worked on about 600 hand looms. Cotton weaving was not a lucrative profession; cottage workers struggled to make ends meet especially when competing with ongoing industrialisation. In October 1878, this was compounded by the failure of the Bank of Glasgow in which much of the village's money was invested. Many lowland workers migrated and Groome's Gazetteer 1896 records
6708-638: The woods within Cumbernauld and the return of this species (formerly extinct across the central belt of Scotland) has become a central plank of the organisation's strategy to improve perceptions of nature in the town. In 1967 the Institute of American Architects voted Cumbernauld the world's best new town conferring the Reynold's Memorial Award. Cumbernauld is a two-time winner of the Carbuncle Awards in 2001 and 2005. The town has since received
6794-614: Was also awarded the Garden for Life Biodiversity Award. Cumbernauld hosted Clyde F.C , who play football in the Scottish League Two , who resided at Broadwood Stadium , which was their home since they relocated from their traditional base of Glasgow in February 1994, until 2022. Their prior interim use of other football grounds has led Clyde fans to be known as the "Gypsy Army". In 2012, Broadwood Stadium's grass pitch
6880-565: Was an inaugural ceremony on 28 June 1957 with Viscount Muirshiel , Secretary of State for Scotland of which some silent, colour footage survives. See the On film and TV section for link to this and other footage from this period. After the Second World War , Glasgow was suffering from a chronic shortage of housing, which was often of poor quality and had residents living in overcrowded and unsafe conditions, particularly in areas such as
6966-527: Was charged with her murder. Forensic experts, professors at Glasgow and Edinburgh, appeared as witnesses on opposing sides at the trial, and a not proven verdict was returned. When shires were first established in Scotland in the twelfth century, the parish of Cumbernauld was included in Stirlingshire . At some point in the fourteenth century it and the neighbouring parish of Kirkintilloch were transferred to Dunbartonshire , despite not adjoining
7052-727: Was hand-pumped, although other mines in Cumbernauld had machine pumps to clear them of water. There was a fire clay works at Cumbernauld owned by the Glenboig Union Fireclay Company Limited. Cumbernauld railway station was built by the Caledonian Railway and opened in August 1848 on their line from Gartsherrie (on the former Garnkirk and Glasgow Railway ) to Greenhill on the Scottish Central Railway . It closed within
7138-539: Was noteworthy in that there were no pedestrian crossings of any kind. Some well-known companies use Cumbernauld as a base including Mackintosh , and Farmfoods who operate in Blairlinn . Cumbernauld in the last few years has seen a surge of business activity with the OKI UK headquarters moving across town to Westfield close to Yaskawa Electronics . Irn-bru makers A.G. Barr also has its world headquarters in
7224-476: Was replaced by a new artificial FIFA standard 3G surface in a partnership between fellow tenants and Lowland League club Cumbernauld Colts , North Lanarkshire Leisure and the local council. Cumbernauld is home to Junior football side Cumbernauld United who play at Guy's Meadow . Five-a-side can be played at the Tryst Sports Centre or Broadwood who also have seven-a-side and full size pitches. Pitches are bookable at Ravenswood and Oak Road too. Broadwood also has
7310-609: Was staying there during the Shotts Revival on Monday 21 June 1630 when he preached and 500 people in one day had "a discernible change wrought upon them." In 1640, eighteen Scottish noblemen met at Cumbernauld to sign the Cumbernauld Bond to oppose the policies of the Earl of Argyll who controlled the dominant political faction in Scotland. Cumbernauld may have been created a Burgh of barony in 1649, although there
7396-600: Was undertaken, until 1996, by the Cumbernauld Development Corporation (CDC). This was a quango appointed by the Secretary of State for Scotland (Cowling 1997). The area allocated was 4,150 acres (1,680 ha) lying between and incorporating the existing villages of Condorrat and Cumbernauld . The first new housing became available in 1958. An additional 3,638 acres (1,472 ha) was added to the designated town area on 19 March 1973 to accommodate
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