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Alexandra Parade railway station

1881 establishments in ScotlandFormer North British Railway stationsGlasgow railway station stubsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Glasgow
Railway stations in Great Britain closed in 1917Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1881Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1919Railway stations served by ScotRailSPT railway stationsUse British English from March 2018
Alexandra Parade railway station, Glasgow (geograph 3373441)
Alexandra Parade railway station, Glasgow (geograph 3373441)

Alexandra Parade railway station is a railway station in Glasgow, Scotland. The station is 1+3⁄4 miles (2.8 km) east of Glasgow Queen Street on the Springburn branch of the North Clyde Line. The station is managed by ScotRail. It was built as part of the City of Glasgow Union Railway which provided a link across the Clyde (between the Glasgow and Paisley Joint Railway at Shields Junction and the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway at Sighthill Junction).

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Alexandra Parade railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Alexandra Parade railway station
Alexandra Park Street, Glasgow Blochairn

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 55.8637 ° E -4.2107 °
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Address

Alexandra Park Street

Alexandra Park Street
G31 3HU Glasgow, Blochairn
Scotland, United Kingdom
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Alexandra Parade railway station, Glasgow (geograph 3373441)
Alexandra Parade railway station, Glasgow (geograph 3373441)
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Nearby Places

Duke Street Prison

Duke Street Prison (also known as Bridewell or the Northern or North Prison) was one of eight prisons which served Glasgow and its surrounding area prior to the mid nineteenth century. An early example of the 'separate system', it was noted in 1841 that Duke Street Prison was Scotland's only 'well managed prison'.Duke Street Prison received its first inmates in 1798. The passing in 1839 of An Act to Improve Prisons and Prison Discipline started the creation of a centralised prison system which resulted in the closure of many of Scotland's smaller prisons. Between 1839 and 1862, seven of Glasgow's prisons were closed, leaving only the Duke Street Prison. Further legislation in 1860 and 1877 brought the management of Scottish prisons under the control of the state and led to the building of larger prison complexes. After 1882, male prisoners from Duke Street were moved to the newly built prison HM Prison Barlinnie in the Eastern suburbs of Glasgow. Duke Street Prison then operated as a women's prison until 1955. The building was demolished in 1958 to eventually make way for the Ladywell housing scheme which was built on the site from 1961–1964 and stands till this day. The only remaining structure of Duke Street Prison is some of the boundary wall.Living conditions within the prison became the subject of a Glasgow street song, sung to the tune of 'There Is a Happy Land'. There is a happy land, doon Duke Street Jail, Where a' the prisoners stand, tied tae a nail. Ham an' eggs they never see, dirty watter fur yer tea; there they live in misery God Save the Queen!