Skip to content

Harvie's Dyke

Christopher A. Whatley

The People, their Liberty and the Clyde

Barcode 9780859767309
Paperback

Original price £15.75 - Original price £15.75
Original price
£15.75
£15.75 - £15.75
Current price £15.75

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
in stock
FREE shipping

Release Date: 03/07/2025

Genre: Non-Fiction
Sub-Genre: History
Label: John Donald
Language: English
Publisher: Birlinn General

The People, their Liberty and the Clyde

This is the first book to highlight this major episode in Glasgow’s history, which has been largely forgotten and yet lies at the heart of the rights of way movement in Scotland. Glasgow’s citizens to defended their right of passage along the north bank of the Clyde, which served the interests and enthusiasms of ordinary working people.


In the early 1820s, Thomas Harvie, a newly rich, arrogant Glasgow distiller, bought Westthorn estate on the eastern edge of the city close to the north bank of the River Clyde. To establish the bounds of his property and keep out intruders, he erected two walls, the larger of which (‘Harvie’s Dyke’) was massive, fortified and blocked a long-established pathway alongside the river. Colliers and other workers from nearby villages (many of whom regularly used the walkway) were outraged. A large crowd gathered on midsummer’s evening in 1823 and set about demolishing the wall. After a cavalry charge put an end to the disturbance, dozens of the rioters were arrested and some imprisoned.

But Harvie rebuilt his walls, and a six-year struggle with the people of Glasgow ensued, which resulted in a House of Lords ruling in 1828 in favour of those who had campaigned for ‘the liberties of the banks of the Clyde’. The episode gripped the city and was heralded in poems, song and newspapers for many decades. It also inspired later protests against landowners who attempted to obstruct public rights of way. This book is testimony to a triumphant victory for ordinary Glaswegians over an uncompromising estate proprietor.