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The Cranstonhill Bakery, 38-42 Cranston Street, Anderston, 1967.

Constructed as a mechanised bread bakery for BM & J Stevenson in 1877-78, this building was probably designed by Salmon & Son. The bakery proper was on the left, with the flour stores 
on the right. The building was demolished in 1967 as part of the Anderston Comprehensive Development Area. The second photograph (1966) also shows the Venetian
Gothic style, and was probably designed by Salmon and Sons, architects. The photograph shows how churches, factories and housing all huddled together in a city where most people walked.
Photo: John R Hume. Yashika 635 twin-lens reflex camera, digital print © HES

End of the Line Photographs of Glasgow's Industrial Past by John R Hume
  1. Introduction
  2. The Regent Flour Mills, Bunhouse Road, Kelvingrove, 1967.
  3. The United Cooperative Baking Society’s bakery, 12 McNeil Street, Moffat Street frontage, 1967.
  4. The Cranstonhill Bakery, 38-42 Cranston Street, Anderston, 1967.
  5. The South Sawmillfield Cotton Mill, 6-12 Burns Street, Port Dundas, 1965.
  6. The Saracen Foundry, 73 Hawthorn Street, Possilpark, 1965.
  7. The Gorbals Grain Mills, 87-97 Surrey Street, Gorbals, 1966.
  8. Townsends’ Chemical Works, 31-33 Townsend Street, Port Dundas, 1967.
  9. The Anderston Cotton Work, 93 Cheapside Street, Anderston, 1966.
  10. Monumental Sculptors’ Works, 60 Cathedral Street, Townhead, 1967.
  11. Pointhouse Shipbuilding Yard, 250 Ferry Road, 1964.
  12. Reed and Heddle Factory, 105-111 John Street, City Centre, 1973.
  13. The Clyde Foundry, 184 Helen Street, Govan, 1967.
  14. Parkhead Forge, G Shop, East Wellington Street, Parkhead, 1967.
  15. Concluding Remarks