James Lang opened a shop and bakery in Gallowgate in 1817. His nephew, John Macfarlane, joined the business and took over when James died. A new bread factory was built at Wesleyan Street in Calton in 1880.
The firm decided to move into machine-made biscuit manufacturing and opened the Victoria Biscuit Works on an adjoining site in 1886. Expansion to London followed, with the opening of the Imperial Biscuit Works in Fulham in 1903.
In 1925 a new Victoria Biscuit Works with modern equipment was opened in Tollcross. The Osterley factory opened in 1931 and replaced the Imperial Biscuit Works in Fulham where production had doubled during WW1. Both had extensive staff recreation facilities. Osterley closed 1980.
Macfarlane, Lang and Co. Biscuit Factory, Clydeford Drive, Glasgow. 29th December 1929
Macfarlane Lang merged with another Scottish family-owned biscuit manufacturer, McVitie & Price to form United Biscuits in 1948. United Biscuits soon expanded to become one of Britain's leading food firms with brands including Jacob's of Aintree, Carr's of Carlisle and McVitie's.
From 2000 onwards family and plc owners were replaced by a succession of private equity and foreign owners, who loaded it with debt, failed to invest in product innovation or modernisation of factories. In 2014, Blackstone & PAI sold United Biscuits to Yildiz, now @pladis_Global.
A selection of biscuits manufactured by Macfarlane Lang & Co, advertised in the Commercial year book of the Glasgow Chamber of Commerce & Manufactures in 1915.
A proud Glaswegian industry callously discarded by faceless men in a boardroom far from our city.
The fight goes on.
Macfarlane Lang's rich tea biscuit and cream cracker production lines at their brand new Victoria Biscuit Works, Tollcross, Glasgow, 1928. @scotsonscreen@nlskelvinhall
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Ten years ago today, one of the worst acts of architectural vandalism in Glasgow's history was perpetrated, as Springburn Public Halls was suddenly demolished. 'The Public' was the heart of Springburn from opening in 1902 until it closed in 1985. My pleas to save it were in vain.
My letter pleading for the halls to be at least partially saved was published by the @heraldscotland. "Demolition of this fine listed building...would erase one of the last vestiges of a once thriving and industrious community and is utterly unacceptable." heraldscotland.com/opinion/130862…
At the last moment, I was able to get some of the sculpture by James Sheriff saved from the building and it was put in storage by Glasgow City Council. I was reacquainted with it last year and am working with @msmandymcintosh and @glasgowlife to ensure it it properly conserved.
205 years of biscuit-making in Glasgow came to an end this week as Scottish brand @McVities ended production. Our government shouldn't have to go cap in hand to its Turkish owner to beg them not to ruin our communities. Ownership rules should be tightened. sundaypost.com/fp/mcvities-fa…
James Lang opened a shop and bakery in Gallowgate in 1817. His nephew, John Macfarlane, joined the business and took over when James died. A new bread factory was built at Wesleyan Street in Calton in 1880.
The firm decided to move into machine-made biscuit manufacturing and opened the Victoria Biscuit Works on an adjoining site in 1886. Expansion to London followed, with the opening of the Imperial Biscuit Works in Fulham in 1903.
Sad @HistEnvScot have capitulated to a shoddy report published by the @O2ABC's owners, who have made no secret of their desire to demolish, with no replacement plan. Council should demand an independent heritage accredited structural engineer investigates. glasgowtimes.co.uk/news/18418501.…
Shoddy engineering reports have been used to 'lay on thick' justification for demolition of listed buildings before, then later debunked.
This is a serious flaw in the planning process. Developers are building predetermined cases for demolition based on unsound and partial investigations that they commission. HES and Councils should have greater capacity to commission independent investigations to protect heritage.
Excellent article by @MrMcEnaney in @FerretScot about the long-running blight of the Talisman pub in Springburn. The failure to force the demolition or renovation of this privately owned building over 22 years exposes a profound failure of planning policy. theferret.scot/derelict-build…
It started auspiciously. Opened by Scottish & Newcastle Breweries in 1966 as part of the Balgrayhill high rise scheme. It was regarded as an upmarket venue, popular for wedding receptions. Balgrayhill still had many Victorian villas lining it. First photo is from @garygilmore77.
Balgrayhill saw a £21 million regeneration programme completed in 1992 involving 260 houses, transforming the previous unbroken 600 metre long "snakeblocks" into separate buildings complete with central staircases and communal gardens. However the Talisman finally closed in 1998.
The biggest procurement scandal in the history of the Scottish Parliament. With the complicity of ministers, up to and including the First Minister, CMAL's hostility ran this shipyard into the ground. They then tried to cover up the truth. I hope they will now be held to account.
The contract to build two new LNG fuelled ferries was so novel that it was not subject to normal EU procurement rules, enabling Scottish Ministers to award the contract to Ferguson (FMEL), but the announcement by the First Minister bounced FMEL into taking a fixed price of £97m.
Due to their novel design, the International Maritime Organisation reviewed the first of class while under construction. They identified significant design changes which required rework and additional costs. FMEL argued that this should be at least shared with the customer, CMAL.