Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland



 


Notes:
The Barony Parish had origins in 1595 and it emerged due to the pressure of population growth. There had been concern to serve the community's spiritual needs over the entire parochial district and so the Barony was created by the ecclesiastical authorities as a separate pastoral charge from Glasgow. Its territory covered the country or landward section of the old parish and extended from modern Woodside in the west, across the northern boundary of the town, then eastwards to Shettleston. For two centuries the congregation of the Barony Church met in the Crypt of Glasgow Cathedral until they moved to a new building in 1800.



Glasgow CathedralDuring the 17th century the Barony was not extensively populated. Even by the mid-18th century it was estimated to have only 4,000 inhabitants. Much of the Barony was farmland and Cowcaddens was originally the pasturage area for Glasgow's cattle. Several of the town's mills were also located in the Barony. Yet unlike the burghal entity of Glasgow, whose lands were owned by the town council on behalf of the community, the Barony contained numerous individual landed estates. Significantly, many of the Barony proprietors, like the Walkinshaws of Barrowfield, were keen to encourage industrial development in order to maximise income from their estates.



Glasgow from the westProximity to Glasgow also stimulated the Barony's industrial potential. Coal mining was associated first with Camlachie and then far more profitably with the Shettleston area. By the 1760s steam engines were operating in Shettleston's collieries, preventing them from becoming waterlogged. Textiles were another of the Barony's great growth areas. Calton, in the east, and Anderston, in the west, had become flourishing handloom weaving villages by the mid-18th century. Other increasingly populous textile villages were Bridgeton, Grahamston, Finnieston, North Woodside and Parkhead. By the 1790s the number of Barony inhabitants had risen to 18,500 and the parish had acquired a distinctly urban profile.

Latitude: 55.8619, Longitude: -4.237


Birth

Matches 1 to 19 of 19

   Last Name, Given Name(s)    Birth    Person ID 
1 Yuill, Robert  28 May 1808Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I11635
2 Yuill, Joseph  3 Oct 1812Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I11636
3 Yuill, John  10 Aug 1815Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I11637
4 Yuill, David Williamson  21 Sep 1817Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I11416
5 Wood, Ann  27 Nov 1808Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I20180
6 Wark, John B.  28 May 1721Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I15591
7 Wark, Andrew  29 Jul 1806Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I11109
8 Wallace, William  1787Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I38791
9 Turner, James  1824Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I11191
10 Stobo, Mary Kerr  20 Dec 1822Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I23947
11 Paul, Andrew  Abt 1795Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I15217
12 Neilson, William  7 Jan 1692/93Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I19454
13 Naismith, James  1808Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I20179
14 McVicar, Sarah  29 Mar 1794Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I14991
15 McGee, Agnes Mary  1803Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I10664
16 Kenney, Rowan  11 Nov 1798Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I12504
17 Kenney, Mary  22 Jan 1804Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I12500
18 Kenney, Henry  24 Jun 1800Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I12503
19 Carswell, Dr. Robert  4 Jul 1777Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I26214

Christening

Matches 1 to 11 of 11

   Last Name, Given Name(s)    Christening    Person ID 
1 Yuill, David Williamson  23 Oct 1817Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I11416
2 Wark, Andrew  10 Aug 1806Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I11109
3 Naismith, Jean  15 May 1831Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I20192
4 Naismith, Janet  8 Aug 1830Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I20181
5 Naismith, Alexander  16 Aug 1835Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I19354
6 Morrison, Janet  27 Jul 1838Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I18656
7 Morrison, George  Jul 1833Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I18655
8 Carswell, Dr. Robert  7 Jul 1782Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I26214
9 Carswell, Dr. Robert  7 JulBarony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I7640
10 Cannon, Gilbert  15 Oct 1829Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I12628
11 Anderson, Margaret  17 Sep 1790Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I12880

Death

Matches 1 to 1 of 1

   Last Name, Given Name(s)    Death    Person ID 
1 McKelvin, Margaret Agnes  1807Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland I15590

Marriage

Matches 1 to 9 of 9

   Family    Marriage    Family ID 
1 Yuill / Turner  15 Sep 1820Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland F3653
2 Wark / McEwen  21 May 1810Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland F3659
3 Paul / Munroe  27 Nov 1820Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland F5112
4 Paul / Matthew  1818Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland F2865
5 Naismith / Wood  10 Jan 1830Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland F6837
6 Morrison / Greier  26 Jun 1831Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland F6261
7 McCulloch / Bryce  13 Dec 1812Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland F9491
8 Leckie / McCracken  9 Jun 1805Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland F5118
9 Gunn / McPherson  12 Nov 1815Barony Parish, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland F8991


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