Garnkirk is a settlement in
North Lanarkshire, located a mile (1.5 km) southwest of
Muirhead.[1] It is located 10 km northeast of
Glasgow's city centre and 23 km southwest of
Falkirk. Garnkirk is connected via the nearby motorways
M8,
M73 and
M80. This provides access to
Cumbernauld,
Glasgow and
Stirling. The nearest modern railway stations are in
Gartcosh and
Stepps.
History
The etymology of the name is ‘enclosure of the hen’.[3] Several old documents show Garnkirk with various spellings including maps by
Timothy Pont,[4] Charles Ross,[5] and
William Roy.[6]
John Dunlop bought Garnkirk House in 1634.[7] The house stayed in the family for many years. The Dunlops were well known. For example James Dunlop being a wealthy landowner opposed
Thomas Muir and the congregation at
Cadder over who appointed their minister.[8][9] The house is now the clubhouse of the Crow Wood Golf Club.[10]
"James Dunlop of Garnkirk" was one of the five wealthy supporters of Glasgow's first playhouse in the late 18th century ( a Puritanical spirit suppressing entertainment in the city).[11]
One gazetteer, Samuel Lewis, describes coal being hardly worth digging
Auchinloch with some limestone quarrying with a works established at Garnkirk.[12] There was some coal found at Garnkirk.[13] There was a substantial fire clay works at Garnkirk, north of Garnkirk Station, on the
Garnkirk and Glasgow Railway.[14] It opened around 1831;[15] their goods were sold around the world.[16] The works manufactured products including vases, flower-pots and crucibles.[17] It shut in 1901.[18] Between 1897 and 1921 Garnkirk was the location of the
Gartloch Distillery that produced grain whisky.[19] It was sold as widely as America[20] and New Zealand.[21]
Garnkirk Burn
The Garnkirk Burn rises to the west of Stepps.[22] It then runs through the Garnkirk Glen[23] and flows north-east to meet the Bothlin Burn. The Bothlin Burn escapes from Bishop Loch, south of
Gartcosh. It is joined by the Garnkirk Burn east of Davidston farm, just north of the
M80.[24] The Bothlin is without a doubt the
Luggie Water's major contributing stream.
References
^"OS 25 inch 1892-1949". National Library of Scotland. Ordnance Survey. Retrieved 26 October 2017.
^Society for the Benefit of the Sons and Daughters of the Clergy (1845).
The new statistical account of Scotland. Edinburgh and London: W. Blackwood and Sons. p. 402. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
^Kidd, Neil.
"Industries". The Story of Chryston. Retrieved 24 February 2018.