Ian Scott: Falkirk's Bank Street is packed full of history
and live on Freeview channel 276
This early local venture, which was popular with farmers and cattle dealers, opened in 1803 but failed to make much progress and closed 13 years later amid a mighty row as investors clamoured for their precious savings.
The Commercial Bank took over for a while and by the 1840s it was a “school for young ladies” run by a Miss Ingleton.
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Hide AdThe bank which stood at the north east end of the street is long gone but one survivor with a very chequered history is the three storey building at the west end which once housed Young’s Pram store and is now a Health and Beauty parlour.
It was built in 1802 for the Congregational Church and was the place of worship of Dr Robert Moffat, the African Missionary and father-in-law of David Livingstone.
The church was later used by the Baptists and other denominations before its conversion in 1846 to a coffee room and temperance hotel.
Around 1852 it was purchased by Sheriff Handyside and converted to a courthouse.
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Hide AdThere is a long-standing tradition that there is an underground passage from the basement to the town steeple so that criminals could avoid facing abusive crowds on their way to the jail.
Directly across the road in more recent times was Young’s main store which stretched down to its front entrance in Princes Street.
It was a wonderland of glass, porcelain and silverware as well as toys galore.
There were two other religious centres in the street.
The earliest was the old Evangelical Church which is now Wetherspoon’s Carron Works.
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Hide AdYou can still see the 1843 single storey stone building with its brick extension on top.
The newly formed congregation of St Modan’s met here in 1897 before moving to the Pleasance in 1915.
Later it was one of Falkirk’s cinemas, The Picture House, and then a bingo hall when the ‘flicks’ fell out of favour.
The other place of worship was the Salvation Army Hall which was demolished just a few years ago.
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Hide AdThe Army arrived in Falkirk in 1886 with premises at the east end of the High Street.
The early days were not too promising because their enthusiastic and very public approach to worship did not appeal to the existing churches.
On 23rd July 1910 their new Bank Street building was dedicated by Army Commissioner William Eadie, Provost Archibald Christie and many of the town’s most prominent citizens.
The Army moved in recent years to their new centre on High Station Road and sadly the Bank Street hall disappeared along with James Murphy’s Wire Works next door.
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Hide AdMost folk will remember the little house sitting in the middle of the works, once the home of Cooper, Henry Weir, the Precentor of the West Church.
He called it Violet Grove after his favourite hymn!
The site of both Hall and Wire Works stand empty but hopefully it will house a new development which some starry-eyed scribe will be writing about 100 years from now!
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