1
Dixon Halls
Crosshill and Govanhill Burgh Hall was gifted to the burghs by William Smith Dixon of Govan Iron Works.
The Scottish Baronial building was completed in 1879. The architect was Frank Stirrat, the winner of a competition for its commission. The boundary between the two burghs bisected the building allowing courtrooms and offices for each burgh to have separate access.
The building was renamed Dixon Halls when Crosshill and Govanhill were annexed by Glasgow in 1891.
Image: © Alan Murray Walsh
Taken: 16 Sep 2008
0.07 miles
2
Cathcart Road at Crosshill station
Image: © Peter Whatley
Taken: 21 Sep 2015
0.07 miles
3
Dixon Halls, Govanhill
Some history of this rather splendid building is given in
Image
Image: © Alec MacKinnon
Taken: 8 Mar 2015
0.07 miles
4
Holy Cross Church, Crosshill
This Church in Dixon Avenue is one of the earliest post- Reformation Catholic churches outwith central Glasgow, and was built in 1911. The parish of Holy Cross had been established in 1886 during the short period when Crosshill was an independent burgh.
The architects were Pugin and Pugin, whose Italianate design provides a local landmark.
Image: © Alan Murray Walsh
Taken: 16 Sep 2008
0.09 miles
5
Bennan Square Park
It is often useful to read online 'memory lane' articles/discussions - most commonly found on Facebook or local news sites - to get a feel of the history of a place not noteworthy enough to have been covered by more official sources. However, memories are notoriously unreliable, and my research into this little park provided a good example of why these memories should always be treated with a bit of caution.
A Mr McInally, born in 1941 according to a 2019 piece in the Glasgow Times, 'remembers' when Bennan Square 'was just a big, empty green space'. In actual fact OS maps show that the street, along with its largely unaltered park, was fully built by at least 1936, five years before he was born!
The park is a bit of a throwback. On StreetMap it has the appearance of a football pitch in the middle of a street. This is because it has two opposing entrances halfway along its long sides and a path running between the two, as well as a path running round its perimeter. It's rather like British TV's most famous little park surrounded by houses - Albert Square in EastEnders.
There is no playground here, which may lie behind it being an 'ever-popular' place to live, according to the estate agents. The planning at the time did include a playground, which was - and still is - on a neighbouring street to the North. So in the interwar years the lucky residents of Bennan Square could read their daily newspapers in peace, having sent their children to the less popular street nearby. Not a bad idea really, though these days the adults are no doubt reading their phones instead.
One interesting recollection of Mr McInally - which I see no reason to dispute - is that swings often got tied up on a Saturday night to preserve the sanctity of the Sabbath!
Image: © Ian Dodds
Taken: 3 Jun 2023
0.10 miles
6
Eskdale Street
A quiet residential street. Looking towards Dixon Road.
Image: © Richard Sutcliffe
Taken: 3 Jul 2022
0.11 miles
7
Govanhill Work Space
Offices and workspaces in the former Category B listed http://portal.historicenvironment.scot/designation/LB32467 New Bridgegate Church and hall on Dixon Road.
Image: © Richard Sutcliffe
Taken: 20 Oct 2022
0.11 miles
8
Crosshill Railway Station
Crosshill is the station between Queen's Park and Mount Florida on the Cathcart Circle Line out of Glasgow Central. It is also on the route leading towards the Newton and Neilston branch lines.
Image: © G Laird
Taken: 26 Dec 2008
0.11 miles
9
Crosshill railway station
On the Cathcart circle line, between Queen's Park and Mount Florida in the south side of Glasgow.
Image: © Thomas Nugent
Taken: 30 Dec 2009
0.12 miles
10
Sheds behind the tenements
Seen from a close window of a tenement on Eskdale Street. The sheds are in the 'back court' at the rear of the tenements. In the background is Holyrood Secondary School. The tenement on the left is on Dixon Road. This view was not visible a few months earlier. The large tree that grew beside the sheds was recently felled. Only the double stumps remain.
Image: © Richard Sutcliffe
Taken: 20 Oct 2022
0.12 miles