Beardmore Terrace
Before the arrival of major industries, villages such as Dalmuir
and Dalmuir Shore were quiet backwaters and largely pastoral. Prior
to 1900 there was little development on Dumbarton Road to the west
of the point at which it is crossed by the Forth and Clyde
Canal.
The coming of William Beardmore's Dalmuir Naval Construction
Works in the early 1900s brought jobs and boosted development of
the area. However, there was a severe shortage of housing for
workers. Earlier speculative building, such as The Crescent
(financed by the City of Glasgow Bank before its collapse in 1878),
proved insufficient to meet the increased demand for accommodation
and Beardmore was obliged to fill this need themselves by providing
housing for their workers.
Initially, the company purchased villas and tenements near the
works. However, in 1905 Clydebank Burgh Council granted Beardmore
permission to erect thirty-seven tenements, the first phase of
which commenced in 1905. By 1914 the area between Scott Street and
Dunn Street, including Beardmore Terrace, had been laid out.
Beardmore Terrace had shops at ground level and three storeys of
accommodation above. There was a "pecking order" in the provision
of accommodation: workers might be housed in tenements such as
those in Beardmore Terrace, foremen in the Agamemnon Street
tenements, and senior management in the large detached villas in
Regent Street.
Page last update:
24 July 2012