Gallus Glasgow Blog

We’ll be adding more content here throughout the programme, so check back to see what else we’ve uncovered in Sulman’s Victorian city!

The Sulman Map

“I feel like a bird soaring over the city when I gaze upon Sulman’s map, every nook and cranny with every detail so exact.

I can see where I came from and where I’m at.”

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Glasgow Green and Sport- Part Three

This blog explores the history of rowing on the Clyde. As the most popular spectator sport in the city up until the 1870s, races often saw crowds in excess of 30,000 lining the riverbanks. Ladies races were also held, but were seen as a novelty, an ‘amusing spectacle’.

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Tenements: A home for the middle classes too

Think tenements were just for the working classes? Then think again! In this guest blog Rachel Campbell from the Tenement House highlights how some tenements were built with the middle classes in mind, complete with ‘all mod cons’ including full indoor bathrooms with running hot water.

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Meet the Man Behind the Map

Thomas Sulman was an English architectural draftsman. He studied at The Working Men’s College between 1854 and 1858, where he was a student of, and later an engraver for, Dante Gabriel Rossetti. 

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A whirlwind history of the Glasgow Athenaeum since its establishment

What links Charles Dickens, women’s rights activists, dressmaking and the Glasgow Chess Club? No, this isn’t a bad Christmas cracker joke but an important piece of Glasgow history. The Glasgow Athenaeum, now The Royal Conservatoire of Scotland, has played an important role in helping to shape Glasgow’s cultural training and commercial output. Read more about its history in this blog by Dr. Karen Mailley-Watt.

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Glasgow Green and Sport- Part One

Glasgow’s oldest park has long been used as a space for leisure, entertainment and public events, but it also has a rich sporting heritage. This blog explores the sporting activities of the early days of the Green, including golf, shinty and cycling.

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Interactive Gallus Glasgow Guided Tours

Out and about in the city and looking for a bit of a steer? Why not check out our interactive Gallus Glasgow trails and find out more about the fate of the buildings that are depicted on Sulman’s map?

These tours explore the buildings shown on Thomas Sulman’s incredible Bird’s Eye View of Glasgow, 1864, that have survived or been lost, and what they can tell us about Victorian Glasgow.

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Glasgow’s Square Mile of Murder

Between 1857 and 1908, four of Scotland’s most notorious murders took place in Glasgow, in an area of one square mile. This blog explores the stories of these murders, including the human crocodile and the first use of forensic photography in Scottish policing.

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Historic black and white photograph of Glasgow Cathedral and the surrounding area, showing open ground in the foreground and 19th-century buildings in the distance. A row of arched structures lines one side, and the scene has a quiet, desolate atmosphere.

Glasgow Green and Sport- Part Two

This blog explores how Glasgow Green is arguably the home of football, with it and the surrounding areas being home to many football clubs who changed the Scottish Game into the World Game.

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