IN modern times, when every citizen is
aware of the serious dangers of a polluted water supply, it is
curious to find that until the beginning of the nineteenth century
Glasgow depended entirely for this chief necessary of life upon a
few wells and the waters of the Molendinar, the Camlachie Burn, and
the Clyde. Until the middle of the eighteenth century the wells were
merely open holes in the ground, surrounded with a low parapet wall,
[Burgh Records, 18th June, 1664.] and the water was drawn up by a
bucket and windlass. It was only by degrees that the wells were
covered, and a pump was substituted for the windlass and bucket. Of
the thirty or so public wells which existed at the end of the
century most were sunk in the streets of the town, and must have
been liable to serious pollution from the surface filth which was
only occasionally cleared away. As late as 1780 a well was sunk in
Jamaica Street to supply the occupants of the new houses then being
built in that thoroughfare. [Ibid. 30th Aug., 1780.]
The wells were one of the social
institutions of the town. Most famous of them were the well at the
Barras Yett, near the foot of Saltmarket, and the well in Trongate
at the West Port, near the head of the Stockwell. There the
gatherings of barefooted servant lasses, with their "girrs" and
"stoups," waiting their turn to draw the household water for the
day, exchanged all the latest gossip, to be carried home and duly
retailed to their mistresses with exclamations and embellishments.
The Town Council regularly appointed an official whose duty was to
see that buckets and chains and pumps were kept in good order.
Of these wells, those still in
existence, though now closed, are the famous Arns Well, [Named from
the "am" or alder trees which grew about it.—Strang, Glasgow and its
Clubs, pp. 160, 168.] near the Humane Society House on Glasgow
Green, the well in the flower garden of the Bishop's Castle, now
Cathedral Square, the Lady Well under the Necropolis, the well at
the Dew Hill or Dowhill in Gallowgate, which supplied the Saracen's
Head Inn, and the Deanside spring or Meadow Well opposite the
entrance to Shuttle Street, which at one time supplied the
Greyfriars Monastery, and which made it almost impossible to erect
some of the buildings round its site at 88 George Street. Of the old
private wells there is one under the paving of the Argyll Arcade,
not far from Buchanan Street, where once lay the garden of a
pleasant suburban house. The oldest of all, of course, is St.
Mungo's Well, in the lower part of the Cathedral, which was probably
used for church purposes till comparatively recent times.
Regarding the water supply of the
city McUre wrote in 1736, "There is plenty of water, there being
sweet water wells in several closses of the toun, besides sixteen
public wells, which serves the city night and day as need requires."
[History, p. 144.] Forty years later, however, when the population
was increasing at the rate of a thousand each year, the Town Council
began to foresee scarcity. In 1769, as we have seen, [Supra, chap.
xxx.] a committee was instructed to consider means of bringing good
water to the town, and a fee of £12 12s. was paid two Edinburgh
plumbers for their suggestions. Again in 1775 a clause was even
inserted in a parliamentary bill to authorize the enterprise, and
Robert McKell was employed to "enquire and search for fountains,
springs, and water of good quality"; and in the following year eight
guineas were paid to another man, Dr. Irvine, for similar services.
[Burgh Records, 8th Nov., 1769; 1st Oct., 1770; 16th Mar., 29th
Nov., 1775; 27th Nov., 1776.] Later still, in 1783, the Town Council
returned to the problem, when an offer was got from David Young for
bringing water from the Forth and Clyde Canal in a four-inch pipe,
filtering it, and distributing it in pipes through the city. Again
the surveyor received a fee, and again nothing was done. [Ibid. vol.
viii., p. 633. 12th Feb., 1783; 17th Dec., 1789. Marwick, Water
Supply, p. 55.]
Once more, in 1788, James Gordon, an
Edinburgh architect and master of works, submitted a scheme for
supplying the city with good water. There was evidently no urgency
in the project, for the Town Council only took up consideration of
this scheme four years afterwards, and then deferred it again
indefinitely. Gordon deprecated the Forth and Clyde Canal as a
source of supply because of the filth thrown into it by sloops and
passage boats. The source he recommended was the Garngad Burn, to be
supplemented in summer by the Monkland Canal. He proposed to
distribute the water through the city by means of elmwood pipes, and
pointed out that the undertaking might prove highly profitable, as
several water companies in England enjoyed revenues of from £1500 to
£50,000 sterling per annum. Even this bait did not stimulate the
city fathers to action, and again the project was laid aside and
forgotten. [Ibid. 23rd Oct., 1788; 19th Sept., 1792.]
In 1795, when the barracks were being
built in Gallowgate, the contractor arranged for a water supply to
be brought in a one-inch leaden pipe from George Macintosh's ground
at Dunchattan, and the Town Council hit upon the economical idea of
asking that the pipe should be increased in size to 1½ inch, and
that the extra water thus obtained should be distributed to the
inhabitants in Gallowgate, whose supply from the wells and streams
was running short. Two years later this arrangement was carried out
by a subscription of the owners in Gallowgate. [Ibid. 1st June,
1795; 17th Mar., 1797.]
Still later, in 1800, the Town
Council paid Bryce Macquiston, land surveyor and engineer, a fee of
£21 for five different schemes for supplying the city with water to
be pumped from the Clyde by steam engines. Public opinion, however,
was against any public outlay, and the project was again dropped.
[Ibid. 19th April, 1800.]
As in undertakings of more recent
date, like the installation of a tramway system and of electric
lighting, it was not till private enterprise had proved its
feasibility that the Town Council ventured upon the undertaking of
bringing an outside supply of water to the city. The projector of
this business was William Harley, a native of Glendevon, who had
learned weaving at Kinross, and made money as a gingham manufacturer
in South Frederick Street. A man of public spirit, he carried on a
great Sunday school and evening classes in the Briggate, and drew up
a scheme for ensuring that every child in Glasgow should receive an
education. He also joined Robert Haldane of Airthrey in touring the
country to establish Congregational churches : the little church at
Sannox in Arran was one of their planting.
In 1802 Harley developed in a new
direction. He bought a house named Willowbank, in the Sauchy Haugh,
now Sauchiehall Street, near the site of the present Blythswood
Street, and two years later he set about his famous enterprise of
supplying Glasgow with water. There was a strong flowing spring at
Willowbank. He led its water in a pipe to a tank on the spot where
the Tramway Offices now stand in Bath Street, and from that tank he
distributed supplies by means of pony carts throughout the town. The
water was sold at a halfpenny a stoup, and is said to have brought
him a revenue of several thousand pounds a year.
This enterprise did not continue long
without competition. Its evident success stimulated certain other
citizens to form a Glasgow Water Works Company. In support of this
scheme the Town Council subscribed £1000. The company secured powers
from Parliament to pump water from the Clyde and distribute it in
pipes throughout the city. It began operations in 1806, and had its
pumping station and chief reservoir at Dalmarnock, with other
reservoirs at Sydney Street and Rotten-row. [Burgh Records, 25th
Feb., 14th March, 1805; 28th Feb., 1806.] In the following year,
1807, another body entered the arena. "The Company of Proprietors of
the Cranstonhill Water-works" obtained authority to pump water from
the Clyde at Anderston Quay, and distribute it from reservoirs at
Cranstonhill. This company was to supply the suburbs only, and not
to encroach upon the royalty without permission of the Town Council.
[Ibid. 9th June, 1807; 26th Jan., 24th Mar., 1808.] By reason of
increasing steamboat and other traffic on the river, the Clyde water
at Anderston became unfit for use, and in 1819 the company secured
powers to pump its supplies at Dalmarnock. In 1838 the two companies
were amalgamated, and ten years later a further supply was
introduced by the Gorbals Gravitation Company, which brought water
to Gorbals and the southern suburbs from the Brock Burn and other
streams and lochs in Renfrewshire, six miles away. These companies
kept the city supplied till the Town Council in 1855 took over the
water companies, and proceeded to bring a more ample and permanent
flow from Loch Katrine, through the waterworks which were opened by
Queen Victoria on 14th October, 1859. [For details see Sir James
Marwick's Water Supply, etc.]
Meanwhile William Harley did not
confine himself to the supply of water for domestic purposes.
Adjoining his reservoir he established baths, and on the top of
Blythswood Hill, now covered by Blythswood Square, he laid out
pleasure gardens after the style of Vauxhall and Ranelagh at London.
He feued all the rising ground westward from St. George's Church,
and, as an approach to his pleasure gardens, built a bridge over the
St. Enoch Burn, and laid out the street which took its name from his
bath establishment. He reclaimed and cultivated Garnet Hill, and
grew there strawberries of a particularly fine flavour for the
enjoyment of the visitors to his Blythswood gardens, while the cream
to be consumed with these dainties came from a farm which he
purchased at Sighthill.
After their first novelty the public
tired of the pleasure gardens, with their bowling-green and
strawberry arbours, and dubbed the view tower and summer house which
he had built in the centre as "Harley's Folly." The tower, however,
was afterwards used as an observatory by the University authorities
until the erection of a special building for the purpose, and Harley
proceeded to plan the building of Blythswood Square as well as St.
Vincent Street, West George Street, Sauchiehall Street, and other
residential quarters.
As with the pleasure gardens the
public tired of Harley's baths after their first novelty had worn
off. But meanwhile, beside the baths, to supply the demand for some
refreshment after a plunge, one cow and then another had been
installed, the enterprise of supplying Glasgow with sweet clean milk
had been set afoot, and by and by the great establishment by which
William Harley is best remembered came into existence. "Harley's
Byres" housed 260 cows, with numerous calves and pigs, all
scrupulously groomed, tended, and fed. The public paid a fee to see
the establishment, and its fame spread through Europe. From these
byres the milk was distributed throughout the city in well-appointed
carts, with harness and brass shining, and every detail in perfect
order. Harley was the pioneer, a long way ahead of their time, of
the great public baths and spotless hygienic dairies which are
notable features of the life of every great city to-day. In 1814 the
Highland Society presented him with a piece of plate bearing a
complimentary inscription ; the visitors to the byres included the
future Emperor Nicholas of Russia, and many other foreign princes,
and the charge for public admission is said to have realized as much
as £200 a year.
Harley's next enterprise, begun at
the request of a number of the principal citizens, was to supply the
inhabitants of Glasgow with pure and wholesome bread. In this again
he shewed the way for the development of an industry in which
Glasgow till the present day remains second to none.
This new venture, however, started in
1815, was only beginning to establish itself when, with the British
victory at Waterloo, the long Napoleonic wars came to an end. As has
happened after a more recent war, the entire trade and industry of
the country suffered dislocation. While industry was adapting itself
to new requirements and commerce was finding its way into fresh
channels, there was widespread suffering among the working classes,
and in the maelstrom many long established and previously prosperous
businesses went down. Among these were Harley's many enterprises. He
was forced into bankruptcy; his assets were sold at throw-away
prices, the great establishment in Bath Street, which had cost over
£10,000, realizing no more than £2550; and his fortune of £54,000
disappeared. He died in London in 1829 on his way to St. Petersburg,
to organize a dairy enterprise at the invitation of the Russian Czar.
[William Harley, a Citizen of Glasgow, by J. Galloway, Glasgow,
1900. Before ruin came upon him Harley had acquired the old mansion
of Enoch Bank, near his baths and byres, and was residing there in
1810 and 1818.—Burgh Records, 19th July, 1810; 14th Jan., 1818.] |