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The Barras is a major street and indoor weekend market in the East End of Glasgow, Scotland. The term "Barra" is Glaswegian dialect for "barrow" relating to the market's early years where traders sold their wares from handcarts.
Barrowland is sometimes used to describe the Calton district of Glasgow, where the market is located.
History
editOne of Glasgow's most famous institutions, The Barras was founded by James and Maggie McIver in the interwar years. McIver hired over 300 barrows to local hawkers in her yard in Marshall Lane.[1] This was in response to the Local Corporation wishing to stop local street traders and the street traders being charged by the police. In 1926, Maggie McIver decided to cover the market mainly to protect clothing hawkers from having their stock ruined. The market was fully enclosed two years later.[2] Several of the smaller 1921-era market halls still bear the McIver name.[citation needed]
In 2016, with market stalls quieter than in previous decades, the city council looked at proposals to redevelop the area.[3]
Ballroom
editIt was common practice for McIver to host a Christmas party for the hawkers and their families in a local hall. One year, when McIver was unable to hire the hall, she decided to build her own, the famous Barrowland Ballrooms which opened Christmas Eve 1934. The front of the building is decorated with a distinctive animated neon sign.
Location
editBecause of its location on Gallowgate, the main thoroughfare from the city centre to Parkhead and Celtic Park, The Barrowland has a large concentration of public houses and shops devoted to fans of Celtic Football Club.[citation needed]
References
edit- ^ "The Barras from The Gazetteer for Scotland". Retrieved 29 October 2018.
- ^ Elspeth, King (1993). The Hidden History of Glasgow's Women: The Thenew Factor. Edinburgh: Mainstream Pub. ISBN 1851584048. OCLC 30477923.
- ^ Braiden, Gerry (4 March 2016). "Glasgow's notorious Barras earmarked as arts, events and music quarter in £30m plans". The Herald. Glasgow. Retrieved 10 July 2016.
External links
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