Broxburn

Broxburn (Scottish Gaelic: Srath Bhroch) is a town in West Lothian, Scotland located 12 miles (19 km) west of Edinburgh on the A8 road, 5 miles (8.0 km) from Edinburgh Airport and 4.8 miles (7.7 km) to the north of Livingston.

Broxburn
  • Scottish Gaelic: Srath Bhroc

The Union Canal at Broxburn, looking west
Broxburn
Location within West Lothian
Population12,000 [1] (2001 census)

est. 14,140[2] (2006)

15,440 (2016)
OS grid referenceNT081722
Council area
Lieutenancy area
CountryScotland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townBroxburn
Postcode districtEH52
Dialling code01506
PoliceScotland
FireScottish
AmbulanceScottish
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament

Etymology

The name Broxburn is a corruption of "brock's burn", brock being an old name for a badger and burn being a Scots word for a stream. The village was earlier known as Easter Strathbrock (Uphall was Wester Strathbrock).[3]

History

Greendykes Road as of 2005

The village that later became Broxburn probably originated around 1350 when Margery le Cheyne inherited the eastern half of the Barony of Strathbrock (Easter Strathbrock) on the death of her father, Sir Reginald le Cheyne III. The hamlet that grew up around her residence was then called Eastertoun (eastern town) after the land on which it stood. The lands of Strathbrock were earlier owned by Freskin the Fleming, granted to him under a charter from King David I.

Easter Strathbrock was burned to the ground sometime in 1443-4 during a conflict between William, Earl of Douglas, Lieutenant-General of Scotland, and William, Lord Crichton, Chancellor of Scotland. It was destroyed again in 1455 during fighting between the Douglases and King James II. After the conflict, peace was regained and the town was gradually resettled.

The village was renamed Broxburn in 1600 by Sir Richard Cockburn of Clerkington, Keeper of the Privy Seal of Scotland, almost certainly after Broxburn, East Lothian.

Industry

Past

Former Broxburn shale oil works, taken from the top of the bing of spoil from the works. The surviving buildings of the works, now known as Albyn Industrial Estate, are in the middle of the picture. The villages of Broxburn and, to the right, Uphall are beyond and Livingston is visible on the skyline.

Broxburn remained an agricultural community until the development of the oil shale industry in the area during the second half of the nineteenth century. This brought in a rapid influx of workers, greatly expanding the local population. Broxburn is still known for its association with the industry, pioneered by the inventor and industrialist James Young. Many shale spoil tips, known as bings, are still in evidence around the town.

Up until its closure in 2013, Hall's of Broxburn employed around 1,700 employees at its meat processing plant to the east of the town[4]. At the time of closure, it was the largest, single employer in Broxburn.

Present

Broxburn now has two separate industrial areas, the Greendykes Industrial Estate and the East Mains Industrial Estate, which provide employment for local people. The largest employers are Campbells Prime Meat Limited, Glenmorangie and Broxburn Bottlers Limited (part of Ian Macleod Distillers Ltd).

Governance

Broxburn lies in the Livingston constituency of the British Parliament and the Almond Valley constituency of the Scottish Parliament.

Before Brexit, it was part of the Scotland European Parliament constituency.

For Local Government purposes, it is part of; the Broxburn, Uphall and Winchburgh Ward of West Lothian Council and is part of West Lothian Council 2nd ward, which also includes the nearby villages of Uphall and Winchburgh

Leisure

The Union Canal passes through Broxburn. It no longer operates as a transport link, but is now used for fishing and some leisure boating. It has a towpath previously used by the horses which drew canal barges and which is now used as a footpath.

The Shale Bings

The 3 Broxburn Bings (Greendikes Bing, Albion Oil Works Bing and Hopetoun Bing) reside on the north east of Broxburn starting from behind the East Mains Industrial estate. The nearby Niddry Bing resides near the village of Winchburgh. The largest of the three Bings is the Greendykes Bing which when scaled provides excellent views of the whole area. The Bings were created by large piles of spoil from the shale mines being dumped on top of each over to form the Bings. Local daredevils often ride their Dirt bikes around the tops of the Bings as well for fun.

Notable residents

Education

Broxburn has four schools, all state-funded, Broxburn Primary, Kirkhill Primary, St. Nicholas Roman Catholic Primary and Broxburn Academy.

Sports and health

Broxburn is home to the football club Broxburn Athletic, who play in the East of Scotland League. There are sports and health facilities publicly available, including a sports centre, library, swimming pool and bowling clubs. A motorcycle dirt track was built at The Sports Park in 1928 and a few demonstration events were staged to show off the new sport to football fans. Due to Broxburn's proximity to Edinburgh it was not licensed. Another demonstration event at motorcycle club event in 1929 ended after both riders crashed.

Transport

Broxburn has regular links to Edinburgh, Livingston, Linlithgow and Edinburgh Airport. Operators serving the town include, First, Lothian Country & E&M Horsburgh. The nearest railway station is at Uphall providing links to Edinburgh, Livingston, Bathgate, Airdrie and Glasgow.

Hospitals

The local hospital is St. John's Hospital at Howden in Livingston. Broxburn has its own health centre at the Strathbrock Partnership Centre.

Churches

Broxburn has six churches;

  • New Life Christian Fellowship Broxburn in Strathbrock Community Centre,
  • Broxburn Baptist Church,
  • Broxburn Catholic Church,
  • Broxburn Parish Church,
  • Grace Community Church,
  • St Nicholas United Free Church of Scotland.

There are also some other religious groups active in the town, including Jehovah's Witnesses and several evangelical Christian organisations.

Bibliography

Canule, Canule, Birnin Bricht— by David Kerr, 2005
Discovering West Lothian by William F. Hendrie, John Donald Publishers Ltd, Edinburgh, 1986
A History of Broxburn by Peter Caldwell
Strathbrock Area Guide prepared and published by Uphall Community Council with assistance from Broxburn Community Council and Ecclesmachan & Threemiletown Community Council

gollark: They should probably just not blindly trust things by IP. Although I have no idea what a SVI is.
gollark: I see.
gollark: They arbitrarily hide the C:\ drive then complain when people find it via any of various methods.
gollark: The security cameras were accessible on the internal network with the default password, no?
gollark: Given the school's wonderful security practices, indeed.

References

  1. "Comparative Population Profile: Broxburn Locality". Scotland's Census Results Online. 29 April 2001. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 1 September 2008.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 16 September 2009. Retrieved 23 August 2010.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. Taylor, Iain (2011). Place-names of Scotland. Edinburgh: Birlinn Ltd.
  4. "Production ends at Hall's plant". BBC News. 6 February 2013. Retrieved 21 May 2020.
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