Twechar

Twechar

infobox UK place

country = Scotland
official_name= Twechar
gaelic_name= |os_grid_reference= NS698754
latitude=55.95393
longitude=-4.08682
map_type= Scotland
population=
unitary_scotland= East Dunbartonshire
lieutenancy_scotland= Dunbartonshire
post_town= GLASGOW
postcode_district = G
postcode_area= G
dial_code= 01236
constituency_westminster= East Dunbartonshire
Cumbernauld, Kilsyth and Kirkintilloch East
constituency_scottish_parliament= Strathkelvin and Bearsden
West of Scotland

Twechar is a small former mining village in East Dunbartonshire, Scotland. It lies between the larger towns of Kirkintilloch and Kilsyth.

The Forth and Clyde Canal runs close to the village to the north, and closely follows the line of the Antonine Wall. There are visible remains of the wall on Barhill- (gbmapping|NS698754) and the Roman Fort is a local tourist attraction.

Mining

There is a long history of mining activity in the Twechar locality but it was not until the coming of William Baird & Co. to the area, about 1860, that a close-knit mining community was created.

Pits were sunk at Twechar and Gartshore and a row of workers' houses was built on the south bank of the Forth and Clyde canal, just east of Twechar Bridge.

The coal mining industry begun by the Bairds in the 1860s lasted for just over a century. Twechar No.1 Pit, on the north bank of the canal to the east of Twechar Bridge, closed in 1964, while Gartshore 9/11, the very last colliery in the area, was shut down in 1968. Thereafter some Twechar men travelled each day to collieries such as Bedlay and Cardowan in Lanarkshire, until they too were closed, during the early 1980s.

Baird & Co. provided rail connections to their local pits at an early date but for many years much of their coal was transported to market by canal boat. During the 1860s the canal company permitted Baird & Co. to place a railway swing bridge over the canal, a short distance to the west of Twechar road bridge, for the purpose of forming a connection between collieries on either side of the canal. As part of the deal the coal company agreed to transport a proportion of its coal by canal although this requirement lapsed early in the twentieth century. However, the swing bridge continued in use until the mid-1960s, its hand-winding apparatus having been made redundant on 1 January 1963, when the canal closed.

Housing

The original housing provided by William Baird & Co soon proved inadequate and around 1880 the Barrhill Rows were constructed at right angles to Main Street, on its western side.

At first there were four rows, supplemented by two more about 1900, by which date the total number of dwellings in the rows was 160. The row nearest the canal included a Gartsherrie Co-operative shop and accordingly was know as the 'Store Row'.

Initially the houses had no sanitation and were lit by paraffin lamps. Communal wash houses were provided at intervals along each row. Most of the houses were of the two-apartment (room & kitchen) variety.

A great improvement was made in 1925, when Baird & Co. (in response to considerable pressure from the miners themselves, over the years) provided good quality modern housing for their mine workers at Burnbrae, Annieston, Sunnyhill and adjacent streets. There were 200 dwellings in all, some two-apartment and some three-apartment, built in two-story blocks of four. They were provided with bathrooms and electric lighting. When these houses were built the old row on the south bank of the canal was demolished. The Barrhill Rows, however, lasted until 1957. The Baird houses of 1925 are still in use today. Later housing was provided by Dunbartonshire County Council at MacDonald Crescent (1939), Alexander Avenue (1948) and Kelvin View (about 1955).

chools

The village also had its own secondary education in Twechar School (now Twechar Primary School) until secondary schools in Cumbernauld and Kirkintilloch opened and secondary age pupils were sent by bus to these schools.

Pupils from Twechar Primary now go on to further education at Kirkintilloch High School.
Roman Catholic children are taught at St Agathas in Kirkintilloch for their primary and St Ninians, Kirkintilloch for their secondary education.

Redevelopment

The reopening of the Forth & Clyde Canal, in May 2001, brought with it great opportunities for the development of Twechar, which lies close to the canal's half-way point.

Currently the village is undergoing a regeneration, EDC and private enterprise have put forward proposals to build approximately 200+ new houses, older housing stock in the "National Coal Board" scheme will be demolished from late 2007 onwards if the plan goes ahead.

The local leisure centre has undergone an expensive renovation and has been re-titled " The Twechar healthy living and enterprise centre." There is also a pharmacy run by M & D Green Dispensing Chemists Ltd. Negotiations to obtain a GP have been ongoing for some time.

An area to the rear of the Masonic Hall ( Lodge Barrhill Twechar 1444 ) has already been developed for boating purposes on the canal , hopefully there will be a community canal boat in place in the near future.

Church

There is a Church of Scotland congregation, Twechar Parish Church, which shares a minister with Banton. The Roman Catholic population is served by St. John of the Cross Chapel in Twechar. There is also a Church of the Nazarene.

Urban Myth

Contrary to popular belief - Twechar "does not" have a beach.It is a local "urban myth".

External links

For other information please visit the following websites:" ThinkTwechar " [http://www.thinktwechar.org] website" Twechar Youth Group"(http://www.twecharyouthgroup.org) website" Twechar Healthy Living and Enterprise Centre" (http://www.twecharhlec.org.uk) website

References


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