exhibtion: the way we were
by morton gillespie
2020 (online)
A photographic journey back in time. These photographs document the wholesale demolition of Glasgow’s slum tenements to be replaced by multistory boxes in the sky and peripheral housing schemes remote from the city centre. A time which saw the decline of the traditional industries of heavy engineering, shipbuilding and steelworks which had made Glasgow the second city of the empire. The days of Clyde steamers which transported Glaswegians “doon the water" to Dunoon, Largs and Rothesay. Gillespie’s images capture memories of the past and of a brave new world in the making.
All photographs copyright Morton Gillespie. Images available for purchase. Contact heritage@mbht.org.uk for more information.
Maryhill Burgh Halls Trust would like to extend a special thanks to Morton Gillespie for allowing us to show his beautiful photographs.
We hope you enjoyed looking through them and that you will be able to come see the live exhibition once we are reopened. In the mean time, we would love to hear your memories of 1960’s Glasgow and The Way We Were.