People's Palace and Winter Gardens

kimmsw
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4 out of 5
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Editor Pick

The Palace for Gllasgow's People

  • August 4, 2009
  • Rated 4 of 5 by duskmaiden from London, United Kingdom
Glasgow, the dear green place is a city I know fairly well and love. One of the main reasons I love the city is the people. They really make the place, as they are down to earth, friendly and genuine. The Glaswegians make Glasgow. So it is appropriate they have a museum dedicated o the People, The People's Palace

The People’s Palace is a social history museum dedicated to Glasgow and its population since 1750 that coincides with Glasgow’s trade in tobacco just before the first blossomings of the industrial revolution, which made Glasgow the city that it is today. I have been to a number of social history museums of varying quality (they tend to all have a mangle, washboard and outside toilet) so I was wondering was how would this compare with others and how would it convey the Glaswegianess of the people? I half expected it to be very similar to the Pumphouse museum in Manchester.

The People’s Palace is located in Glasgow Green. This is a big park near the river Clyde in the east end of Glasgow. It is within walking distance from the City Centre. The park the oldest one in Glasgow dating back to 1450 has had a fine history of public speakers, concerts and was where the city’s washhouse was. It’s a lovely park and worth half a day if you get that rare Glasgow day without rain.

The museum itself is a wonderful red brick building with a huge conservatory, the Winter Gardens attached to its side. As it is a local authority museum it is free to get in. It has pretty standard opening times being open from 10 to 5pm everyday except Friday and Sunday when it opens an hour later. It is also fully accessible to disabled visitors as it has lifts and disabled toilets.

The first thing I saw on entering the museum was the Victorian Winter Gardens full of tropical plants and interesting metal sculptures. This was a lovely place to just sit and watch the world go by. My friend told me that it was available for private functions and weddings. It is supposed to be very popular as it is booked up years in advance for weddings. I also noticed a small exhibition of paintings done by patients of the local NHS Trust. It was nice to see the museum was truly the people’s museum and was living and growing.

Upstairs to the next floor and I was captivated by the exhibition on the Glaswegian language "the patter" in the middle of the floor. The sometimes difficult to understand Glaswegian accent is something that is unique to Glasgow and I thought they displayed this pretty well. The first things you encounter are television screens of Glasgow comics and you can sit in a comfy booth and listen to this. I was also transfixed with an audio soundtrack of children repeating playground rhymes and songs. I may be a Borders girl rather than a Glaswegian one but I remember a lot of them. I must have looked a right numpty (idiot) just singing along with songs such as Ye cannie shove yer Granny aff a bus. I think that is a mark of a good social history museum if you can identify with the exhibits. I also liked some simple lift up flaps with Glaswegian words and their Queen’s English equivalent.

The next section I skipped through. It was on the world wars. There looked like a good Anderson shelter for kids. I skipped through as I could get the Second World War anywhere and know a bit about Glasgow and Clydebank’s experience in the wars. The next exhibits the dairy and the steamie were more interesting. I think I associate the steamie with Glasgow. It did not matter that it was the old mangle and washboard, as it seemed to be presented differently. I saw a grandmother explaining to her grandkids all about them.

The other side of the first floor was specifically Glaswegian. There was a model of Duke Street Prison, which I believe is not far from Glasgow Green. There was also an exhibit on the Barrowlands Ballroom, once a favorite place for dancing and now a great place for seeing gigs. They had little cupboards to open that were exact replicas of those in the Barrowlands. Each one had something that represents an element of the Barrowlands including shoes, hats etc.
Finally on that floor there was an exhibition about the pros and cons of alcohol. I had studied the temperance movement in the West of Scotland and the association of poverty with drinking in my degree course. I found it interesting as it displayed both sides of the argument and had a lot of alcohol paraphernalia including 1990s alcopop bottles. Me and my friend had a good time remembering trying things such as Hooch, Two dogs and diamond Blush .
Upstairs did not quite capture my imagination as much as downstairs. The middle seemed to be slightly political which I skipped. I am not that interested in politics. There was also a lot of space devoted to Glasgow’s industrial heritage. I noticed in this part the interpretation was a bit tatty and faded. Some of the words on some of the panels were very difficult to read. I was disappointed at this as the museum had a refurbishment in 1998 to bring it up to date. Either this display was from before the refurbishment or the panel has not been sturdy enough to be already fading. At the end of the industrial section there was a bit about famous Glaswegians. I marveled at Lulu’s 1970s suit but again a lot of it seemed to be a bit tatty.

The other end of the second floor interested me more. It was on housing another subject I studied in depth in my degree. I found the pictures of a stinking outside toilet in the Gorbals in the 1950s quite poignant and shocking because this was within my parent’s lifetime. They had a display of 19th century housing tickets (these showed how many people a house should hold measured by the house’s size in cubic metres. These houses were often raided in the middle of the night) as they made my lectures come alive. I also really liked a model about a single end (one roomed house) in the old tenements. It was nicely done with a soundtrack of Glaswegian voices and the lighting lit up different parts of the model when they were mentioned. Finally there was a bit on washing and cleanliness with a bath that probably came form a public washhouse and also a hairdryer that looked very like one my mum had when I was wee.

After that we were back down to the ground floor to explore the cafe and shop. I was disappointed to find the cafe although nice was ran by Costa Coffee. That did nor feel Glaswegian at all. The shop was not bad. It sold a range of things from school kids souvenirs to Rennie Mackintosh jewellry. It had a good range of books, some tartan tat and the old fashioned advertisements that are a staple of all museum shops. I wanted to get a magnet for my magnet collection but they only had the old adverts ones which I could get anywhere. Instead I bought some coasters with Scottish words on them as my souvenir of my visit.
The museum seems keen on education. There was a talk on capitalism as part of Black History month but I was not that interested in that. There was also a guided tour around the museum that would have been interesting but it was on after our visit ended.

My visit was on a Sunday lunchtime and it seemed pretty busy with a number of families visiting. . It took about an hour and a half to walk round

I liked the People’s Place. It seemed like a place I could go to again and again if I was in Glasgow more often. I was disappointed with some faded and tatty interpretation and the cafe being run by Costa Coffee but over all I think it did convey the uniqueness of the city and people.

From journal Galavantitng Around Glasgow and the Surroudning Areas

Find Out About Glasgow's History

  • February 28, 2009
  • Rated 4 of 5 by tvordj from Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
Find Out About Glasgow's History

In the east end of Glasgow across Glasgow Green is the People's Palace and Winter Garden, a social history museum about the people of Glasgow, supposed to be from the 12th to 20th centuries but it seemed like it focused mainly on the 19th and 20th from the exhibits we saw. It had exhibits on life in the tenements, the temperance movement, civic politics, life during the world wars, marriage, family life, the language ("patter") etc. There are paintings, prints, maps and interactive exhibits. It was quite entertaining and not a large museum so wasn't overwhelming. We didn't spend much time in the green house as the weather wasn't great anyway.

Best thing about the museum, though is that it's free! There's a lift in case you have mobility problems as well as a cafe and gift shop.

From journal Touring Scotland

Editor Pick

People's Palace and Winter Gardens

  • June 5, 2007
  • Rated 5 of 5 by Drever from Ayr
People's Palace and Winter Gardens

The People’s Palace sits at the heart of the historic Glasgow Green by the River Clyde. This free museum covers the social history of Glasgow, with displays on how ordinary people have lived their lives since the industrial age. You can see paintings, prints, and photographs displayed alongside a wealth of historic artifacts, film, and interactive displays - good for kids.

The red brick building itself was purpose-built in 1898 as a cultural museum for the people of Glasgow’s East End. The large glass-topped atrium in the back contains an exotic garden, known as the Winter Gardens, and cafe. Wandering round the displays gives a real feel of living in Glasgow and what makes its people the way they are.

Over 20,000 Glasgwegians lost their lives in the World War I alone. Personal stories bring the visitor into the period. For instance there is Private James Riley. A German Drill book he had picked up saved his life. The bullet went through the book but only dented a shaving mirror behind it. An Anderson Shelter on display, a small hut made of steel sheets, showed the poor protection for many from bombs in World War II.

On the top floor is the Glasgow history painting series made by artist Ken Currie in 1987. The series commemorates the massacre of the Calton Weavers, which marked the birth of the trade union movement and visually presents the political history of working-class struggle in the city.

The displays also explain the Glasgow dialect, speech patterns, and expressions that even Scots from outside the city can have trouble deciphering. I loved the shows featured clips of comedian Billy Connelly and the TV show Rab C Nesbitt.

I also found the displays on dancing at the Barrowlands funny. The building opened in 1934 and could hold 2,000 dancers. Any woman not getting dances was likely to dread these words, ‘come on lads she paid her tanner and is entitled to a dance’. Beetroot red would probably describe her.

Boards showing how petty hanging offences could be. A stark bare little prisoner’s cell showed little indication of the rights they now claim. Marriage and attitudes towards it receive attention. Total ignorance towards sex was the rule for many. Wife’s comments gave the impression that some of the men were sex mad beasts – headaches were of no concern.

In overcrowded Glasgow, the tenement city, until the 1940s most Glasgwegians lived in a one-or two roomed house. An example room brings the grim conditions to life. These people worked in what was the workshop of the world. The industry then and its disappearance are explained.

What I like about this museum is that it shows what people get up to in their spare time, how they live and entertain themselves. The People's Palace is the first port of call for anyone who wants to know why Glasgwegians are the way they are.

From journal Exploring Glasgow

People's Palace

  • June 24, 2006
  • Rated 5 of 5 by raycarstairs from Glasgow, Scotland
People's Palace

Poised majestically on the fringes of Glasgow Green, the People's Palace tells the colourful tales of the ordinary folk of Glasgow past. A monument to the daily hardship of life in industrial and wartime Glasgow, the somewhat ageing displays chart the varied fortunes and heritage of a richly cultured working class city.

Whilst the visuals are in part looking a little tired, the informative style of presentation is sure to capture the interest of all ages.

Adjoining the Palace are the small but attractive Winter Gardens with an excellent cafe suitably located amidst the botanic wonders.

However, the real piece de resistance is the Doulton Fountain which stands proudly over the newly landscaped entrance. This working terracotta fountain is unique and the only surviving example of its type in the world.

From journal Glasgow - Past, Present, Future...

People's Palace

  • June 28, 2000
  • Rated 3 of 5 by kimmsw from Sparks, Nevada
People's Palace

Exhibitions show the history of the city and it's working class citizens. Much of the displays focus on the Victorian era and industrial revolution. Bits and pieces of the region's political history are presented. Since it is right on the Green, enjoy this park as well.

From journal Glasgow isn't as bad as it's former reputation

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