William Bilsland

Sir William Bilsland LLD (17 March 1847 27 August 1921) was a Scottish baker who owned one of Scotland's largest bakeries, and was Lord Provost of Glasgow. He was an elder of the United Free Church of Scotland and a supporter of the temperance movement.

Sir William Bilsland

Life

He was born on 17 March 1847 at Ballat near Balfron, the son of Ann Blair and James Bilsland, a farmer.[1]

He was educated at Dalmanoch school in Bonhill living there with his uncle, Dr Alexander Leckie.

From 1860 to 1869 he worked as a grocer's assistant in Glasgow. In 1869 he opened a shop at 223 Garscube Road.[2] In 1872 he opened a bakery in Greenhill Street and also acquired an existing bakery in Elderslie Street.[3]

Bilsland Brothers

28 Park Circus, Glasgow

In 1877, with his brothers, he bought a large piece of ground on Hydepark Street and on which they built the large Hydepark Bakery, adopting the company name of Bilsland Brothers.[4]

By 1900 they employed 200 people and made 230,000 loaves of bread a week, over 10 million loaves per year. They supplied 1600 retailers. Workers were well-paid, worked a 40 hour maximum week, unusual for the time, and all received free bread.[5]

In 1912 they acquired the rival company of Gray and Dunn (but retained their name as Gray Dunn & Co).[6] The main company was rebranded as Glasgow Bakeries.

The company traded until 1985. The bakery was demolished in 2015.

Politics

In 1886 he became a town councillor representing the 13th ward in Glasgow.[3]

In 1905 he was elected Lord Provost, succeeding John Ure Primrose. He served until 1908 during which time he saw many artistic projects, in particular the Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum. During this period he lived at 28 Park Circus[7] a beautiful, three-storey Georgian circus form, just east of Kelvingrove Park.

In 1907 King Edward VII created him a baronet, as Sir William Bilsland, Baronet of Park Circus, for his services to Glasgow.[8]

He died on 27 August 1921.[9]

Family

In 1885 he married Agnes Anne Steven (d.1935). Together they had two childrenAgnes Anne (1896-1970) and Steven Bilsland, who inherited the business on his death.[10]

References

  1. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: William Bilsland
  2. Glasgow Post Office directory 1872
  3. "Bilsland Brothers". www.gracesguide.co.uk.
  4. "Sir William Bilsland". www.glasgowwestaddress.co.uk.
  5. "Sir William Bilsland, 1st Bt - Great British - bringing you closer to our history makers". great-british.co.uk.
  6. "Sir William Bilsland – Balfron, Stirlingshire". www.balfron.org.uk.
  7. Glasgow Post Office Directory 1905
  8. London Gazette 1 January 1907
  9. "Sir William (1st Baronet Bilsland, of Park Circus, Glasgow) Bilsland b. 17 Mar 1847 Ballat, Balfron, Stirllingshire, Scotland d. 27 Aug 1921: The Douglas Archives". www.douglashistory.co.uk.
  10. "The Hidden Glasgow Forums • View topic - Bilsland's Bakery". www.hiddenglasgow.com.
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
New creation Baronet
(of Park Circus)
1907–1921
Succeeded by
Steven Bilsland
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.