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LANARKSHIRE , a See also: south-western county of Scotland, bounded N. by the shires of See also: Dumbarton and See also: Stirling, E. by See also: Linlithgowshire, See also: Mid-See also: Lothian and See also: Peeblesshire, S. by Dumfries-See also: shire and W. by the counties of See also: Ayr, See also: Renfrew and Dumbarton
.
Its See also: area is 879 sq. m
.
(562,821 acres)
.
It may be described as embracing the valley of the See also: Clyde; and, in addition to the gradual descent from the high See also: land in the south, it is also characterized by a gentle slope towards both See also: banks of the See also: river
.
The shire is divided into three wards, the Upper, comprising all the See also: southern section, or more than See also: half the whole area (over 330,000 acres) ; the See also: Middle, with See also: Hamilton for its chief
See also: town, covering fully 190,000 acres; and the See also: Lower, occupying the See also: northern area of about 40,000 acres
.
The See also: surface falls gradually from the uplands in the south to the Firth of Clyde
.
The highest hills are nearly all on or close to the See also: borders of Peeblesshire and See also: Dumfriesshire, and include Culler See also: Fell (2454 ft.) and Lowther See also: Hill (2377)
.
The loftiest heights exclusively belonging to Lanarkshire are
See also: Green Lowther (2403), Tinto (2335), Ballencleuch See also: Law (2267), Rodger Law (2257), Dun Law (2216), See also: Shiel Dod (2190), Dungrain Law (2186) and Comb Law (2107)
.
The See also: principal See also: rivers are the Clyde and its See also: head See also: waters and affluents (on the right, the Medwjn, See also: Mouse, South See also: Calder, See also: North
Calder and Kelvin; on the See also: left, the See also: Douglas, Nethan, See also: Avon, Rotten Calder and Cart)
.
There are no lochs of considerable See also: size, the few sheets of See also: water in the north—Woodend See also: Reservoir, See also: Bishop Loch, Hogganfield Loch, Woodend Loch, Lochend Loch—mainly feeding the Monkland and the Forth and Clyde Canals
.
The most famous natural features are the Falls of Clyde at Bonnington, Corra, Dundaff and Stonebyres
.
Geology.—The southern upland portion is built up of See also: Silurian and Ordovician rocks; the northern lower-lying tracts are formed of Carboniferous and Old Red See also: Sandstone rocks
.
Ordovician strata See also: cross the county from S.W. to N.E. in a See also: belt 5-7 M. in breadth which is brought up by a fault against the Old Red and the Silurian on the northern See also: side
.
This fault runs by Lamington, Roberton and Crawfordjohn
.
The Ordovician rocks lie in a synclinal See also: fold with beds of Caradoc age in the centre flanked by graptolitic shales, grits and conglomerates, including among the last-named the See also: local " See also: Haggis-See also: rock "; the well-known See also: lead mines of See also: Leadhills are worked in these formations
.
Silurian shales and sandstones, &c., extend south of the Ordovician belt to the county boundary; and again, on the northern side of the Ordovician belt two small tracts appear through the Old Red Sandstone on the crests of anticlinal folds
.
The Old Red Sandstone covers an irregular See also: tract north of the Ordovician belt; a lower division consisting of sandstone, conglomerates and mud-stones is the most extensively See also: developed; above this is found a series of contemporaneous porphyrites and melaphyres, See also: con-formable upon the lower division in the west of the county but are not so in the See also: east
.
An upper series of sandstones and grits is seen for a See also: short distance west of Lamington
.
See also: Lanark stands on the Old Red Sandstone and the Falls of Clyde occur in the same rocks
.
Economic-ally the most important See also: geological feature is the See also: coal See also: basin of the See also: Glasgow See also: district
.
The See also: axis of this basin lies in a N.E.-S.W. direction; in the central See also: part, including Glasgow, See also: Airdrie, See also: Motherwell, See also: Wishaw, Carluke, lie the coal-See also: measures, consisting of sandstones, shales, marls and fireclays with seams of coal and ironstone
.
There are eleven beds of workable coal, the more important seams being the Ell, See also: Main, Splint, Pyotshaw and Virtuewell
.
Underlying the coal-measures is the Millstone Grit seen on the northern side between Glenboig and Hogganfield—here the fireclays of Garnkirk, Gartcosh and Glenboig are worked—and on the south and south-east of the coal-measures, but not on the western side, because it is there cut out by a fault
.
Beneath the last-named formation comes the Carboniferous See also: Limestone series with thin coals and ironstones, and again beneath this is the Calciferous Sandstone series which in the south-east consists of sandstones, shales, &c., but in the west the greater part of the series is composed of interbedded volcanic rocksporphyrites and melaphyres
.
It will be observed that in general the younger formations lie nearer the centre of the basin and the older ones crop out around them . Besides the volcanic rocks mentioned there are intrusive basalts in the Carboniferous rocks like that in the neighbourhood ofSee also: Shotts, and the smaller masses at Hogganfield near Glasgow and elsewhere
.
Volcanic necks are found in the Carluke and Kilcadzow districts, marking the vents of former volcanoes and several dikes of See also: Tertiary age See also: traverse the older rocks
.
An intrusion of See also: pink See also: felsite in early Old Red times has been the cause of Tinto Hill
.
Evidences of the Glacial See also: period are abundant in the See also: form of See also: kames and other deposits of See also: gravel, See also: sand and See also: boulder See also: clay
.
The ice in flowing northward and southward from the higher ground took an easterly direction when it reached the lower ground
.
In the lower reaches of the Clyde the remains of old beaches at 25, 50 and too ft. above the See also: present See also: sea-level are to be observed
.
See also: Climate and See also: Agriculture.—The rainfall averages 42 in. annually, being higher in the hill country and lower towards the north
.
The temperature for the See also: year averages 48° F., for See also: January 38° and for See also: July 59°
.
The area under grain has shown a downward tendency since 1880
.
Oats is the principal crop, but See also: barley and See also: wheat are also grown
.
Potatoes and turnips are raised on a large See also: scale
.
In the Lower See also: Ward market-gardening has increased considerably, and the quantity of vegetables, grapes and tomatoes reared under
See also: glass has reached See also: great proportions
.
An See also: ancient industry in the vale of the Clyde for many See also: miles below Lanark is the cultivation of fruit, several of the orchards being said to date from the See also: time of See also: Bede
.
The apples and See also: pears are of See also: good repute
.
There has been a remark-able extension in the culture of strawberries, hundreds of acres being laid down in beds
.
The See also: sheep walks in the upper and middle wards are heavily stocked and the herds of cattle are extensive, the favoured breeds being See also: Ayrshire and a cross between this and " improved Lanark." See also: Dairy-farming flourishes, the cheeses of Carnwath and Lesmahagow being in steady demand
.
Clydesdale draught-horses are of high class
.
They are supposed to have been bred from See also: Flanders horses imported early in the 18th century by the 5th duke of Hamilton
.
Most of the horses are kept for agricultural See also: work, but a considerable number of unbroken horses and mares are maintained for stock
.
Pigs are numerous, being extensively reared by the miners
.
The largest farms are situated in the Upper Ward, but the general holding runs from 50 to 100 acres
.
More than 21,000 acres are under See also: wood
.
Other See also: Industries.—The leading industries are those in connexionwith the See also: rich and extensive coal and iron See also: field to the east and south-east of Glasgow; the
See also: shipbuilding at See also: Govan and Partick and in Glasgow harbour; the textiles at Airdrie, Blantyre, Hamilton, Lanark, New Lanark, Rutherglen and Glasgow; See also: engineering at See also: Cambuslang, Carluke, See also: Coatbridge, Kinning See also: Park, Motherwell and Wishaw, and the varied and flourishing manufactures centred in and around Glasgow
.
Communications.—In the north of the county, where population is most dense and theSee also: mineral field exceptionally rich, railway facilities are highly developed, there being for to or 12 M. around Glasgow quite a network of lines
.
The Caledonian Railway See also: Company's main See also: line to the south runs through the whole length of the shire, sending off branches at several points, especially at Carstairs Junction
.
The North See also: British Railway Company serves various towns in the lower and middle wards and its lines to See also: Edinburgh cross the north-western corner and the north of the county
.
Only in the immediate neighbourhood of Glasgow does the Glasgow and South Western See also: system compete for Lanarkshire See also: traffic, though it combines with the Caledonian to work the Mid-Lanarkshire and Ayrshire railway
.
The Monkland Canal in the far north and the Forth and Clyde Canal in the north and north-west carry a considerable amount of goods, and before the days of See also: railways afforded one of the principal means of communication between east and west
.
Population and Administration.—The population amounted in 1891 to 1,105,899 and in 1901 to 1,339,327, or 1523 persons to the sq. m
.
Thus though only tenth in point of extent, it is much the most populous county in Scotland, containing within its See also: bounds nearly one-third of the population of the country
.
In 1901 there were 104 persons speaking Gaelic only, and 26,905 speaking Gaelic and See also: English
.
The chief towns, with populations in 1901, apart from Glasgow, are Airdrie (22,288), Cambuslang (12,252), Coatbridge (36,991), Govan (82,174), Hamilton (32,775), Kinning Park (13,852), See also: Larkhall (11,879), Motherwell (30,418), Partick (54,298), Rutherglen (17,220), Shettleston (12,154), Wishaw (20,873)
.
Among smaller towns are Bellshill, Carluke, Holytown, Lanark, Stonefield, See also: Toll-cross and Uddingston; and Lesmahagow and East See also: Kilbride are populous villages and See also: mining centres
.
The county is divided into six See also: parliamentary divisions:—North-east, North-west, Mid and South Lanark, Govan and Partick each returning one member
.
The royal burghs are Glasgow, Lanark and Rutherglen; the municipal and police burghs Airdrie, See also: Biggar, Coatbridge, Glasgow, Govan, Hamilton, Kinning Park, Lanark, Motherwell, Partick, Rutherglen and Wishaw
.
Glasgow returns seven members to Parliament; Airdrie, Hamilton and Lanark belong to theSee also: Falkirk See also: group and Rutherglen to the See also: Kilmarnock group of parliamentary burghs
.
Lanarkshire is a sheriffdom, whose See also: sheriff-principal is confined to his judicial duties in the county, and he has eight substitutes, five of whom sit constantly in Glasgow, and one each at Airdrie, Hamilton and Lanark
.
The shire is under school-See also: board jurisdiction, many See also: schools earning grants for higher See also: education
.
For advanced education, besides the university and many other institutions in Glasgow there are a high school in Hamilton, and technical schools at Coat-See also: bridge and Wishaw
.
The county council expends the " See also: residue " See also: grant in supporting lectures and classes in agriculture and agricultural chemistry, mining, dairying,
See also: cookery, See also: laundry work, nursery and poultry-keeping, in paying fees and railway fares and providing bursaries for technical students, and in subsidizing science and alt and technical classes in See also: day and evening schools
.
A director of technical education is maintained by the council
.
Lanark, Motherwell and Biggar entrust their shares of the grant to the county council, and Coatbridge and Airdrie themselves subsidize science and See also: art and evening classes and continuation schools
.
See also: History.—At an early period Lanarkshire was inhabited by a See also: Celtic tribe, the Damnonii, whose territory was divided by the See also: wall of See also: Antoninus between the Forth and Clyde (remains of which are found in the parish of Cadder), but who were never wholly subjugated by the See also: Romans
.
Traces of their fortifications, mounds and circles exist, while See also: stone axes,
See also: bronze celts, querns and urns belonging to their age are occasionally unearthed
.
Of the Romans there are traces in the See also: camp on Beattock See also: summit near Elvanfoot, in the See also: fine bridge over the Mouse near Lanark, in the road to the south of Strathaven, in the wall already mentioned and in the coins and other See also: relics that have been dug up
.
After their departure the country which included Lanark-shire formed part of the See also: kingdom of See also: Strathclyde, which, in the 7th century, was subdued by Northumbrian See also: Saxons, when great numbers of the Celts migrated into See also: Wales
.
The county once embraced a portion of See also: Renfrewshire, but this was disjoined in the time of Robert III
.
The shire was then divided into two wards, the Over (with Lanark as its chief town) and the Nether (with Rutherglen as its capital) . The present division into three wards was not effected till the 18th century . Independently of Glasgow, Lanarkshire has notSee also: borne any part continuously in the general history of Scotland, but has been the scene of
several exciting episodes
.
Many of See also: Wallace's daring deeds were performed in the county, See also: Queen Mary met her See also: fate at Langside (1568) and the See also: Covenanters received See also: constant support from the See also: people, defeating Claverhouse at Drumclog (1679), but suffering defeat themselves at Bothwell Brig (1679)
.
See W
.
Hamilton, Description of the Sheriffdoms of Lanark and Renfrew, See also: Maitland See also: Club (1831); C
.
V
.
Irving and,A
.
See also: Murray, The Upper Ward of Lanarkshire (Glasgow, 1864); The Clydesdale
See also: Stud See also: Book (Glasgow) ; W
.
A
.
Cowan, History of Lanark (Lanark, 1867) ; Extracts from the Records of the Burgh of Lanark (Glasgow, 1893)
.
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