Gorgie ( ) is a densely populated area of Edinburgh, Scotland. It is located to the west of the city centre, and borders Murrayfield, Ardmillan and Dalry.
Gorgie developed at a slower pace than nearby Dalry, allowing the continued operation of the Gorgie pig farm until 1885. Robb's Loan is named after Robert Robb and his son James who farmed at Gorgie Mains for much of the nineteenth century. By 1800, only the area between Robertson Avenue and Saughton Park had any housing, served by a school and a church mission.
The distillery gained access to the Edinburgh Suburban and Southside Junction Railway, which began developing a railway station in Gorgie. This brought about the 1888 development of Stewart Terrace, Wardlaw Place, Wardlaw Street, . The tenement flats of Tynecastle Terrace that go halfway to mcleod street built 1898 ( date stone above the bathroom window at the top of the close next door) one of the last rows of tenements to be built in Gorgie it's joined onto the oldest row of tenements halfway along the block at Newton St on Gorgie Rd for which there is a date stone '1886' if one were to look up. There’s more date stones on three buildings at the junction of Wheatfield St, Gorgie Rd and Wardlaw Place. The south side of Gorgie Road 1887-1899 and north side 1896-1899 west of Newton Street.
although Gorgie, west of Robertson Avenue, did not lose its rural character until the early 1900s.
McVitie & Price Ltd was established in 1830 on Rose Street in Edinburgh. The firm moved to various sites in the city, before completing the St. Andrews Biscuit Works factory on Robertson Avenue in 1888. Though the factory burned down in 1894, it was rebuilt the same year. It is one of the claimed sites of where the digestive biscuit was invented. The site was closed in 1969, when production ceased and operations were transferred to Levenshulme in Manchester, and Harlesden in London. After closure, Ferranti occupied the buildings as an electronics factory until the 1980s.
In 1906, pharmaceutical research company T&H Smith Ltd moved from Canongate to the district. Now merged with two other Edinburgh-based medical research companies, they form medicinal-opiate producer MacFarlan Smith.
The chemical plant of Cox's glue and gelatin works, and the Caledonian Brewery also developed in the area.
St. Martin of Tours church is in the Anglican Communion
Gorgie Gospel Hall belongs to the Open Brethren Christian tradition.
In 1908 what is now Gorgie Mission Church was opened.
Since 2008, Destiny Church, Edinburgh has been meeting in the converted former Bingo Hall.
Gorgie City Farm was established by local people in 1982 on the site of a derelict railway goods yard. Set up as a community project with the aim of improving education in agriculture, horticulture and rural crafts for people living in the area.[1] The farm closed in 2023, with community-led plans to re-open at a future point.
In 2012, Gorgie was the centre of a Legionnaire's Disease outbreak believed to originate from factory cooling towers in the area.
At the Scottish Parliament, the area falls within Edinburgh Central, currently represented by Angus Robertson MSP of the Scottish National Party.
The area, as part of the Sighthill/Gorgie ward, elects four councillors to the City of Edinburgh Council. The current representation is: Denis Dixon and Catherine Fullerton (both SNP), Donald Wilson (Scottish Labour Party) and Ashley Graczyk (Conservatives).
No trace of the station remains but the route continues to be used for freight services to this day, so freight trains avoid Edinburgh's main stations of and , and occasionally diverted passenger trains also pass along this line.
Places of worship
Present
Representation
Demographics
84.9% 8.6% 2.1% 2.5% 1.9%
Transport
Future
Heart of Midlothian F.C.
Notable residents
See also
Sources
External links
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