IMAGES TAKEN NEAR TO
Glasgow Road, DUMBARTON, G82 1ED

Introduction

This page details the photographs taken nearby to Glasgow Road, G82 1ED by members of the Geograph project.

The Geograph project started in 2005 with the aim of publishing, organising and preserving representative images for every square kilometre of Great Britain, Ireland and the Isle of Man.

There are currently over 7.5m images from over14,400 individuals and you can help contribute to the project by visiting https://www.geograph.org.uk

Image Map


Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
Notes
  • Clicking on the map will re-center to the selected point.
  • The higher the marker number, the further away the image location is from the centre of the postcode.

Image Listing (69 Images Found)

Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
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Image
Details
Distance
1
Benvenuti Coffee House
On the A814 on the outskirts of Dumbarton.
Image: © Barbara Carr Taken: 18 Apr 2013
0.01 miles
2
A814 heading west through Dumbarton
Image: © Peter Bond Taken: 3 Nov 2014
0.02 miles
3
Traffic Lights on Glasgow Road
The A814 diverges from the A82 close to the Dumbuck Quarry near Milton. It heads west through Dumbuck, and the eastern suburbs of Dumbarton as Glasgow Road.
Image: © David Dixon Taken: 26 Sep 2019
0.03 miles
4
Greenhead Road at Glasgow Road, Dumbarton
Image: © Stephen Sweeney Taken: 31 May 2008
0.04 miles
5
Dumbarton Fire Station
On Castlegreen St.
Image: © Stephen Sweeney Taken: 11 May 2007
0.07 miles
6
Glasgow Road
The A814, looking east at Dumbuck Gardens.
Image: © Thomas Nugent Taken: 27 Apr 2015
0.07 miles
7
Former North British Railway line
Now a busy foot and cycle path. Looking east from the Greenhead Road bridge.
Image: © Thomas Nugent Taken: 27 Apr 2015
0.08 miles
8
Underpass, Greenhead Road
Used by the Glasgow to Balloch cycle path, NCN7.
Image: © Richard Webb Taken: 1 Sep 2009
0.08 miles
9
Greenhead Road
Looking towards the bridge over the disused North British Railway line which is now a foot and cycle path.
Image: © Thomas Nugent Taken: 27 Apr 2015
0.10 miles
10
Dumbarton Building Society stone in Silverton Avenue
For context, see Image, where this inscribed tablet can be seen on the front of the nearest building on the left. The date 1923 applies only to the houses on that side (the west) of the avenue. Those on the other side were built earlier, in 1914. Dumbarton Building Society had its origins at a special meeting of the Dumbarton Equitable Co-operative Society on the 30th of January 1873. There, Mr John Barr indicated that a number of workers at Messrs Swan's yard wished to form a building society. An interim committee was formed. At their first general meeting, on 26th February, the official committee was appointed. The organisation was at that time called the Dumbarton Land and Buildings Investment Company. The change of name came in February 1878, when the Society came under the Building Societies' Act. On the occasion of their Jubilee Year, a commemorative stone of polished granite, the one shown in the present picture, was built into the corner house on the west side of Silverton Avenue, nearest Glasgow Road. While it is a date stone, after a fashion, it is essentially a commemorative stone for the Society's Jubilee Year. On Saturday 1st December 1923, a ceremony was held at the building, when the stone was unveiled by Mr William A Hutchison, the president. Luncheon was then served in the Co-operative Hall, 46 High Street, Dumbarton, to which members of the Society of thirty years' membership, past members of the Committee, and officials, were invited. The above details are from the "Jubilee Souvenir of Dumbarton Building Society Ltd 1873—1923: Fifty Years' History" (James Lyon, 1923). Another building in Dumbarton has a stone with an inscription mentioning the Society: the stone is shown in Image, and it is built into a tenement block that was originally called Grange Place: Image Below that inscription there used to be the additional text "Erected 1906", but it has fallen off or, more likely, been removed, at some point in the intervening century and more. In addition, the name Grange Place may have appeared above the surviving inscription.
Image: © Lairich Rig Taken: 19 Jan 2018
0.11 miles
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