#Nowandthen at Granton. A BR Standard Class 5 picks its way across the transfer tracks at Granton Middle Harbour. This was the main point of goods transfer in Edinburgh between the old North British/LNER and Caledonian/LMS systems.
Maybe this is a bit better scaled, h/t @DonnyEdinaloka
In 1980, the rails still led as far as a Texaco fuel depot where Saltire Street now is. The direct line from Roseburn was long gone, so the approach was along the shore at Wardie then across Lower Granton road, as we see a railtour doing here #nowandthen
There's a photo of the depot entrance here, flickr.com/photos/1179838… with the United Wire Works in the background (still there, although a much smaller operation now)
I know it's a combination of winter lighting, the quality of cheaper camera film, the filthy state of BR locos at this time and the industrial backdrop, but gosh the 80s can't half look grim when captured on camera.
h/t to @andyrossonline for reminder about East Pilton. Which made me think about Bruce Peebles works. If you're cycling along the path just before the bridge at Ainslie Park (heading west), you can see some older bits of wall and palisade fence on your right in the undergrowth
flickr.com/photos/1273405… that was where a workers entrance (via level crossing across the railway) and the rail entrance to the works was
That last photo was East Pilton Halt by the way, looking east towards the works. Here's the rail entrance (the level crossing was to the photographer's back) flickr.com/photos/cagiva1…
flickr.com/photos/cagiva1… Bruce Peebles. Actually named not for a man called Bruce Peebles, but a man called David Bruce Peebles, the founder of a gas engineering company in Edinburgh in 1866
Peebles (don't you love the word "Peebles?") soon began to specialise in the new-fangled business of electrical engineering and became a global success story flickr.com/photos/cagiva1…
Peebles became electrical engineers to the world, specialising in high voltage transformer equipment flickr.com/photos/cagiva1…
The Peebles site at East Pilton grew into a large, modern engineering works in the agricultural outskirts of the city, soon to become the suburbs as the Corporation threw up new estates in the land between Leith and Granton in the 1920s and 30s flickr.com/photos/cagiva1…
Most of the big power station schemes built in the 1960 and 70s had bits made by Peebles. Here's a transformer heading for Peterhead flickr.com/photos/cagiva1…
It was a tight fit, but using special tractors and trailers, huge bits of kit could be gotten to Granton for loading onto ships flickr.com/photos/cagiva1… this vessel is the Central Electricity Generating Board's "Kingsnorth Fisher"
And here's a transformer for the South of Scotland Electricity Board station at Clydesmill crawling along Maybury Road, with the old seed testing station in the background flickr.com/photos/cagiva1…
And another, this one for Longannet, with a banner proclaiming it was the largest load yet moved from Peebles, 270 tons (or 355 including the tractor and trailers). Headed again for Kingsnorth Fisher for a short hop to Rosyth flickr.com/photos/cagiva1…
Those with longer memories may recall that Silverknowes Roundabout used to have a gated-off road across it. That was for the abnormal loads from Peebles which couldn't go round so had to go through (or so I've been told)
flickr.com/photos/cagiva1… Peebles was bought by Reyrolle Parsons in 1969 (descendent of Charles Parsons' original steam turbine company), and became part of the Northern Electrical Industries (NEI) into the 1980s. Rolls Royce took over in 1989
Rolls Royce split the company for sale in 1998, the transformer business to Austrian VA Tech and the motors and generators side to the Australian Pope (no, an Australian company called Pope). A catastrophic fire destroyed most of the transformer works the next year.
There are more photos of the day of the fire here; edinphoto.org.uk/0_B/0_building…. The factory never re-opened and the site was cleared for housing. The transformer business moved to Leith Docks, the motors and generators to Rosyth Docks.
VA Tech were acquired by Siemens in 2005 and the Leith site was closed. Clyde Blowers bought the Rosyth business in 2013, where it is still going. Here's a nice photo inside the Transformer works of a small piece of test kit
The eagle-eyed amongst you may have noticed a small electrical tram locomotive on the advertising poster further up the thread
For a time Peebles built small electrical industrial locomotives, in fact they even built one for themselves (here it is shunting an old steam locomotive into retirement). This steam loco was built in Leith in 1861 and is now in the NMS on Chambers Street flickr.com/photos/1273405…
...and cycling pals, check out those covered bike racks in the background! No doubt custom built on site, not too sure about the bikes being stowed vertically though...
Anyway, thanks for coming to my lecture about Bruce Peebles. There's a heap more excellent photos on the Edinphoto site of bits of outsize electrical gear being squeezed through the city streets. I love this one at Foot of the Walk edinphoto.org.uk/0_edin_t/0_edi…
Here's the whole lot as one easy-to-consume web page (thanks @threadreaderapp) threadreaderapp.com/thread/1035496…

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More from @cocteautriplets

May 11
The derailment by strikers of the Flying Scotsman on May 10th 1926 has meant a much more serious and fatal rail accident in Edinburgh later that same day which claimed 3 lives and injured many has been somewhat overlooked 🧵👇🚂
The 1:06PM train from Berwick-upon-Tweed to Edinburgh hit a goods train being shunted across its path at St. Margaret's Depot just west of the tunnel under London Road. Due to the General Strike, most signal boxes were unmanned and only a rudimentary signalling system was running
The busy but confined St. Margaret's depot was on both sides of the LNER East Coast Mainline as it approached Edinburgh, with Piershill Junction for Leith and north Edinburgh to its east and the 60 yard tunnel under London Road constraining it to the west. OS 1944/5 Town Survey of Edinburgh showing the mainline running through St. Margaret's Depot. Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of Scotland
Read 26 tweets
Apr 30
It's been hard to find time recently for any in-depth threading, but I think tonight we can sneak in the story of the lesser-known Leith shipyard of Ramage & Ferguson, builders of luxury steam mega-yachts to the Victorian and Edwardian elites. ⛵️🧵👇 The modelmakers loft at Ramage & Ferguson, 1906. © Edinburgh City Libraries
In its working life from 1877 to 1934, the Ramage & Ferguson yard built 269 ships: 80, almost 1/3 of the total, were luxury steam yachts, built mainly to the designs of the 3 most prominent yacht designers in the world. It became the go-to shipyard for the rich and famous Image
When I say yachts, don't think about those little plastic things bobbing around in marinas these days. We're talking about multi-hundred (up to two thousand!) ton wooden and steel palaces, fitted out to the standards of ocean liners Launch of a yacht for an American customer at Ramage & Ferguson, late 1890s or early 20th century.
Read 56 tweets
Apr 7
As promised / threatened, there now follows a thread about the origins and abolition of the Tawse as the instrument of discipline in Scottish teaching. So lets start off with the Tawse - what is it and how did it evolve? 🧵👇
"Tawis" or "tawes" is a Scots word going back to c. 16th c., a plural of a leather belt or strap. In turn this came from the Middle English "tawe", leather tanned so as to keep it supple. Such devices were long the favoured instrument of corporal punishment in Scottish education "The Dominie Functions",  George Harvey (1806–1876). © The Stirling Smith Art Gallery & Museum via ArtUK
In 1848, George Mckarsie sued Archibald Dickson, schoolmaster of Auchtermuchty, for assaulting his son without provocation with a tawse "severely on the head, face and arms to the effusion of his blood". He was awarded a shilling but had to pay all expenses!
Read 67 tweets
Jan 24
This pub has been in the news for the wrong reasons recently, but despite appearances it's a very important pub; a surviving example of only a handful of such interwar hostelries built in #Edinburgh - the Roadhouse. And these 9 pubs have a story to tell. Shall we unravel it?🧵👇 The Anchor Inn, West Granton Road.
The short version of the Roadhouse story is thus: a blend of 1930s architecture and glamour used by the licensed trade to attract a new generation of sophisticated, Holywood-inspired, car-driving drinkers. That's partly true, but not the full story here 1934 Dunlop Tyres advert showing cars arriving at an Art Deco Roadhouse. © Illustrated London News
To understand how Edinburgh got its roadhouses we have to go back to 1913 when the Temperance movement was at the peak of its power and the Temperance (Scotland) Act was passed. This was also known as the Local Veto Act as it allowed localities to force referendums on going "dry" British Women's Temperance Association banner of the, Scottish Christian Union. 1900. © Edinburgh City Libraries
Read 64 tweets
Jan 18
In 1839, Dr. Thomas Smith of 21 Duke (now Dublin) Street in #Edinburgh tried on himself a purified extract of "Indian Hemp" - Cannabis sativa. He "gave an interesting account of its physiological action!". He was most probably the first person in Scotland to get high. Dr Thomas Smith of T. & H. Smith. 1807-1893
The medicinal and psychoactive properties of "Indian Hemp" had only just been introduced to Western medicine that year by Irish doctor William Brooke O'Shaughnessy, so it's unlikely anyone had done so before.
Cannabis seeds were advertised for sale in Edinburgh in the Caledonian Mercury as far back as 1761 (apply to the Gardener at Hermitage House in Leith), but these probably refer to Hemp: Cannabis sativa. 🌱
Read 30 tweets
Dec 29, 2023
Between 1950 and 1973, #Edinburgh built 77 municipal, multi-storey housing blocks (of 7 storeys or more), containing 6,084 flats across 968 storeys. So as promised, I've gone and made a spreadsheet inventory of them all. Let's have a look at them chronologically 🧵👇 Screenshot - spreadsheet of Edinburgh's multi-storey municipal housing blocks.
1950-51 saw the first such building - the 8 storey Westfield Court with 88 flats (and a nursery on the roof!) Built by local builders Hepburn Bros, it was heavily inspired by London's Kensal House by Maxwell Fry. It was a bit of a 1-off though and is rather unique in the city. Westfield Court
There then followed a series of experimental mid-rise blocks, variations on a theme, as a rather conservative local administration (headed by the Progressive Party) tried to work out what it wanted to do regards high-rise housing post-war.
Read 45 tweets

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