The politicians are buzzing round Glasgow at present. But most of the
time they ignore the real city. Here JACK McLEAN affectionately
anatomises an ignored part of the true, people's city: Toryglen.
Pictures by James Galloway.
TORYGLEN is at the margin beyond the margin. It always was. Its
origins in the 1950s new Glasgow -- a stirring vision of sub
East-European/Atleean Social Democracy with inside lavvies and a good
life for the wife and kiddies -- saw to it that Toryglen was like every
other scheme: a touch soulless at best.
Back in the fifties and early sixties, though, Toryglen was one of the
prime schemes to find yourself allotted to. Not quite Knightswood or
Mosspark or even its contemporary estate, Merrylee, but definitely
desirable. It was on the edge of the old Govanhill where there were yet
notions of gentility or at least the respectable working class syndrome
which was to lead to the upwardly mobile stuff of later years.
There was grass about and fresh air and neighbouring Castlemilk was
still half-built and had not yet developed its status of undesirability.
It was a good place to be and the local children got to go to, a mile
away admittedly, one of the best schools in Glasgow, Queen's Park
Secondary School. A legendary school, packed with old traditions.
Toryglen had all the earmarkings of the ''good'' scheme. But it was
also at the edge of Rutherglen and at the edge of social changes which
were to occur in many of the housing estates which were being built
throughout Scotland in those post-war years. These were to be crucial
factors in the development of Toryglen.
First of all Rutherglen. This was an ancient burgh, right on the
doorstep of the new scheme, a burgh resentful of Glasgow and its ways:
still semi-rural and conscious of its long history, with its fairs and
its burgh councils and its own royal charter. It took not at all to its
new neighbours: not then; not now. It allowed nothing of Toryglen past
its borders and to this day is still fighting any kind of incursion.
A recent proposal by Strathclyde Regional Council to amalgamate
Toryglen and Rutherglen children into the same school has met with
enormous resistance from both groups of residents, and this despite the
fact that the majority of Toryglen people shop in Rutherglen rather than
in Glasgow or even nearby Govanhill.
But Toryglen had nothing of nearby Govanhill, or of Glasgow come to
that, either. It was a new estate and it kept on getting newer. From the
early beginnings of a peripheral estate with lots of decent and
respectable tenants it went on, as many of the schemes were to do, to
extend itself. Thus the notorious, for Toryglen, Prospecthill Circus and
surrounding canton was erected.
Here I have to declare a personal interest. I worked in Toryglen for
over a decade: taught in the new Queen's Park School now risibly set in
Toryglen, and I knew the Circus. Toryglen called that area simply that,
as though it had clowns and wild animals and ringmasters and
demoralising sawdust about it, like any other circus, which indeed it
did. There were lots of good people about the Circus. But there were
lots of undesirables too. They're still are.
First the decent people. Round the Prospecthill Circus of Toryglen are
rows of neat enough houses and high rise flats. A quiet area it is,
despite the usual high unemployment. Sure, some of the quietness of a
morning is due to the unemployed in their beds or the dope smokers
mulling over their videos watched into the small hours: it would be
surprising in depressed areas like this if it were not so. But there are
clear indications of people trying their best.
A row of bilious pink curtains, neighbour after neighbour emulating
each other in outward finery, and with the almost Levantine aesthetic
which the working classes invariably display throughout the country. The
net curtain industry, too, would go broke if it were not for the
sensibilities of such ordinary people. Beside a graffiti-smeared gable
end is a small red sports car, a pride and joy, no doubt, to some
employed youth.
The houses look out on an industrial landscape worthy of Orwell. In
the high rise flats there are those who try hard to keep the decencies
up. Wee Mrs Conroy puts up pictures torn out of a calendar to cheer up
the landing while she complains of the neighbours above and below and of
the youths who assemble at nights to drink bottles of Buckfast and leave
the empties, with their ominous promise of social breakdown, tucked into
the steps. There are, says Mrs Conroy, ''all those alkies in the flats
across the way. And the wee lassies wi' weans -- single parents y'know
-- they attract some right bad hats.''
As there always is in schemes there is a shopping precinct -- shops
that do not grow organically out of local needs, but rather out of
planners' perceptions of them. Not a few of them are now irrevocably
boarded up: all of them have steel shutters to protect them from the
ever-present vandals: an off-licence would be impossible.
Michael's Chip Shop has grilles at its counter. You poke your hand
through a meagre space in the grille to take your fish supper and you
have to put your money through first: nobody thinks there is anything
odd about this. Like getting fed through a handsworth of openness: just
the way the dole money comes and the pension and everything else. The
local pub -- the Beacon -- is filled with old men, most of them under
pension age but made geriatric by unemployment, who sit lethargically on
seats upholstered in slashed plastic. The barmaid is cheerful enough:
the working classes are ever cheerful in adversity. You are not going to
get converzationi about Sartre and Joyce here, though.
This is what the sociologists call an ethnocentric area: nobody goes
out of it much and few want to either. Down the road in Polmadie, not
five minutes away from the Beacon, is the Spur Bar and Lounge. Quiet,
clean, respectable, good food and well-appointed surroundings, a
clientele considerably more confident and up-market in working class
terms, the Spur has a community easily visible where the Beacon has not.
Another five minutes away from the Beacon and the shopping precinct
and the Prospecthill Circus there is South Toryglen with well-kept
gardens and even a new yuppie estate of Georgian pretensions. The
children here are cleaner and better-dressed. The girls have the
pristine white socks and the boys the creased grey flannels denoting
parental motivation and parental finance. Most of those children go to
King's Park School rather than the nearer Queen's Park.
Their parents -- many of whom have bought their humble enough homes --
have taken to describing themselves as coming from King's Park anyway.
They will rather pathetically deny Toryglen. District councillor
(Labour) and local Church of Scotland minister, the Rev. Stuart
MacQuarrie, is strongly supportive of his flock but admits there is a
lack of confidence among the people of Toryglen.
''There is a lack of identity,'' he says, about the area he represents
in more ways than one, but claims this is changing. ''The people try so
hard and things are going to happen here.'' One cannot help but muse on
his optimism.
But 10 minutes walk away is the other margin of Toryglen: Govanhill.
This is the edge of the Central constituency. A big, blowsy, tenemental,
archetypal Glasgow district, full of people and ethnic divergence: it
has seen the Jewish community and the Highlanders and now contains a
vivid and vivacious amalgam of Irish and Asian and aboriginal
communities.
Paddy Neason's pub is packed on a Friday night: with Sikhs and
Donegalies and Glasgow folk, easy in each other's company and united in
their recreative pints of Guinness, just as they are united in their
shopping sprees of a Saturday. Many will patronise the Halal butchers
along with a one-time Pakistani neighbour.
Here you will find Mrs Di Paolo watering her vast array of potted
plants which she has displayed along the first floor parapet. The
nameplates at her close-mouth door read like the United Nations: Medina,
Ahmed, Di Paulo, Wong, Paxton, Malik, Sawadzki.
Govanhill is the old Glasgow with many a gap site there, true, but
with a new sense of the sort of optimism which Toryglen's Reverend
MacQuarrie is striving to invoke.
Things are getting better in Govanhill: indeed life is getting better
in Govanhill, but then life has never really gone away. The pubs, the
Chinese and Indian take-aways, banks, fruiterers, fishmongers, drapers,
schools, nearby health centres (which Toryglen lacks incidentally), the
railway stations, the buses and the bustle, the people in the streets:
this is the city which has been denied the people of Toryglen.
Govanhill is just on the margin of the politicians' concern this week,
as Toryglen is not. Toryglen is the margin beyond the margin this time.
The Water Margin. Like a water margin, too, you cannot see it: but it's
there and the politicians will not be able to ignore it either.
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