Carluke
The town of Carluke (/kɑːrˈluːk/; Scottish Gaelic: Cathair MoLuaig) lies in the heart of the Lanarkshire countryside in South Lanarkshire, Scotland, 4.7 miles (7.6 kilometres) northwest of Lanark and 4.2 mi (6.8 km) southeast of Wishaw.
Carluke
| |
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Carluke Market Square, next to the Town Centre | |
Carluke Location within South Lanarkshire | |
Population | 13,300 [1] |
OS grid reference | NS848504 |
• Edinburgh | 29.5 mi (47.5 km) |
• London | 329.39 mi (530.10 km) |
Council area | |
Lieutenancy area | |
Country | Scotland |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | CARLUKE |
Postcode district | ML8 |
Dialling code | 01555 |
Police | Scotland |
Fire | Scottish |
Ambulance | Scottish |
UK Parliament | |
Scottish Parliament | |
Carluke is largely a commuting town, with a variety of small stores and supermarkets available at its centre. The surrounding villages of Braidwood, Forth, Kilncadzow, and Law are supported by the various shops and services available in Carluke.
Carluke today
Carluke is Clydesdale's largest town with a population of 13,300.[2] It sits on a high plateau overlooking the River Clyde, right in the heart of Lanarkshire's fruit growing area.
It has a locally important shopping centre and it has seen a recent boom in house building thanks to its direct train link with Glasgow. The town centre was redesigned to create an attractive shopping environment and work finished in 2006.
Thanks to its proximity to the Clydesdale's major fruit growers, one of Carluke's biggest employers is the jam company Renshaw Scott who recently added a chocolate refinery to their plant.
Memorials to two of Carluke's most famous sons were completed in 2006 as part of the town's Streetscape Project,[3] regenerating the centre of the town. On the paving at the bottom of the High Street, a design of a compass etched with arrows pointing to places relevant to Carluke such as Tinto Hill and Carluke, New Zealand, has been created in honour of the noted surveyor and cartographer Major General William Roy. Doctor Daniel Reid Rankin is remembered by a plaque in Rankin Square with etchings of fossils carved into the granite.
History
In a charter by Robert I, dated 1315, Carluke is written "Carneluk"; at different periods it appears as Carlowck, Carlowk, Carluk, Carlook, Carlouk and Carluke. Car or Caer tells us that it is a height or strong position[4] and Luke suggests that it may be dedicated to the saint of that name, or the early Christian saint Moluag (or Luag), however there is evidence that the earliest church was dedicated to St. Andrew, and 'Luke' is more likely to derive from the commonly revered pre-Christian deity Lugus.[5][6]
Some sources such as James Johnston Brown cite the -luke part as folk etymology.
The town was chartered as a Royal Burgh in 1662.[7] Carluke expanded during through the industrial age, with work involving corn milling, cotton weaving, coal mining and the manufacture of bricks, glass, confectionery and jam.
Notable figures
Carluke is the home of R&W Scott, who have been handmaking preserves from locally grown Clyde Valley fruit since the 1880s. Owned by Real Good Food Plc since September 2004, Scott's Carluke site was expanded in 2007 with the construction of a new foodhall for the manufacture of baking chocolate. The multi-award-winning bacon curers Ramsay of Carluke have also been based in the town since 1857. Family-owned for five generations, the company is one of Rick Stein's 'Food Heroes'.
The town has the distinction of being home to three gallant recipients of the Victoria Cross:
It is also the birthplace of:
- Major Thomas Weir, covenanting soldier and alleged warlock
- Major General William Roy, widely regarded as the founding father of the Ordnance Survey
- Dr Daniel Rankin, a noted 19th-century geologist and paleontologist.[8]
- Joe Dodds, a left-sided defender who played for Celtic, Cowdenbeath, Queen of the South and the Scotland national team
- Dougie Arnott, the former Motherwell striker, currently resides in the town.
- Tom Steele (stuntman).
- John Jackson, racing driver
Present day
Today Carluke's population stands at 13,300 and has 6 primary schools. Carluke Streetscape, a £2.35M town-centre redevelopment project funded by South Lanarkshire Council, was completed in April 2006. As a result, after many years of pedestrianisation, unidirectional vehicular traffic is now permitted along the town's High Street and Hamilton Street outwith business hours. Carluke high School was also redeveloped to make it bigger and more up to date in 2008. In 2010 a £1.1M indoor soft play and cafe "The Bubbles Factory" was built and opened in Hamilton Street, where the "old smiddy" was sited; in 2012 it was voted "The Best Soft Play in the UK". In 2011, a new Tesco store between Lanark Road and Shieldhill Road was constructed and opened.
Education
The town currently has five primary schools: Carluke Primary,[9] High Mill Primary,[10] Kirkton Primary,[11] Crawforddyke Primary,[12] and St Athanasius Primary;[13] all of which are in the process of being rebuilt or refurbished. Secondary education is provided by Carluke High School, which also serves Law village, Braidwood and Forth. Carluke High School has also been rebuilt on its current site and Kirkton Primary, the last of the schools to be rebuilt, was completed in 2014. Braidwood Primary is a school near Carluke
In addition Carluke is home to a state funded Special School, Victoria Park. The school serves the whole of South Lanarkshire Council and provides education for primary and secondary pupils aged 3 to 18 with special educational needs.
Sport
Carluke is home to Central District Junior side Carluke Rovers F.C. who play at the John Cumming Stadium, the field hockey club Clydeside and the Carluke Cobras, one of the top three flag football teams in the UK.
There are also several men's amateur football sides in the town Carluke FC, Carluke FC 35's, Carluke Hearts, Carluke Victoria and Carluke Thistle. At youth level there is also Milton Rovers and Carluke United.
It was the home of one of the most successful Scottish American football teams The Clydesdale Colts . (Nationale Finalists 3 times and Winners once), The Colts were formed by Lex Carson and Harvey Gordon. Their home games were played at Loch Park Stadium. Carluke's Rugby league team is Carluke Tigers.
John Cumming Stadium facilities includes a 400-metre all-weather athletics track and an 11-a-side 3G synthetic football pitch. Situated on the same site, Carluke Leisure Centre facilities include a gym, swimming pool, health suite, creche and coffee shop.[14] Carluke has two lawn bowls clubs, Castlehill Bowling club and Carluke Bowling Club. A concrete outdoor skatepark is located near Crawforddyke primary school, features include quarter pipes, manual pad and bowled section.[15]
Transport
Carluke is situated 6.5 miles (10.5 km) from Junction 8 of the M74, 8 miles (13 km) from Junction 6 of the M8 and 17 miles (27 km) from the M80 at Cumbernauld, and is the meeting place of the A73 and A721 roads. The town also benefits from frequent direct rail services to Lanark, Motherwell, Hamilton and Glasgow and a recently enhanced bi-hourly service to Edinburgh (Sundays excepted) from Carluke railway station, less than a 10-minute walk from the town centre. There is a circular town bus route that connects the town centre with several local housing schemes. There are also regular bus services to Lanark, Wishaw, Motherwell, Hamilton and Glasgow as well as an hourly express coach service to Glasgow that runs non-stop from the outskirts of Motherwell via the M74, M73 and M8 motorways.
See also
References
- "Carluke Locality". City Population. 30 May 2015. Retrieved 3 July 2017.
- "Carluke Locality". City Population. 30 May 2015. Retrieved 3 July 2017.
- "Streetscape to commemorate Carluke's most famous historic figures". Carluke Gazette. 1 March 2006.
- Hicks, Davyth A.: Language, History and Onomastics in Medieval Cumbria (an analysis of the generative usage of the cumbric habitative generics cair and tref) (PDF), pg. 96-97
- Hicks, Davyth A.: Language, History and Onomastics in Medieval Cumbria (an analysis of the generative usage of the cumbric habitative generics cair and tref) (PDF), pg. 169
- «Mauldslie Church», Canmore
- "Notices, Historical, Statistical and Biographical, Relating to the Parish of Carluke, from 1288 till 1874". Internet Archive. Retrieved 29 September 2016.
- "History of Carluke". Retrieved 28 March 2016.
- "Welcome". Carluke-pri.s-lanark.sch.uk. Retrieved 14 November 2012.
- "Welcome". Highmill-pri.s-lanark.sch.uk. Retrieved 14 November 2012.
- "Welcome". Kirkton-pri.s-lanark.sch.uk. Retrieved 14 November 2012.
- "Crawforddyke Primary School". Crawforddyke-pri.s-lanark.sch.uk. Retrieved 14 November 2012.
- "Welcome". St-athanasius-pri.s-lanark.sch.uk. Retrieved 14 November 2012.
- "Carluke Leisure Centre". South Lanarkshire Council.
- "Carluke Skatepark".
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carluke. |
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Carluke. |