Post
by Currie » Thu May 13, 2010 5:38 am
Hello Kenneth,
It look as though Glasgow took up the odds and evens numbering system in 1826 but this was long after London and Edinburgh. From what I saw, here and there, in the newspapers, there seems to have been a very slow take-up of the system by other Scottish cities and towns and some appear to have been still talking about it many decades later. As usual, not everyone was happy. Here’s some bits and pieces from the newspapers.
Caledonian Mercury (Edinburgh), Thursday, March 7, 1811
We are glad to find the subject of numbering the houses in the New Town, as well as the Southern Districts of Edinburgh, is about to be taken up by the Commissioners of Police; and that there is some prospect of that very necessary business being effected on a systematic plan. We beg leave to recommend a plan lately adopted in London, which is attended with the best effects.—All the even numbers are used on one side of the street, such as 2, 4, 6, 8, &c. and the odd ones on the other, 1, 3, 5, 7, &c. so that it can be ascertained at once on which side of the street the house wanted is situated.
Glasgow Herald (Glasgow), Friday, May 26, 1826
An advertisement inserted by the Clober Bleachfield Office informing the public of a change of address from 51 to 76 Bell Street “in consequence of the mode now adopted in numbering the Houses in the different Streets of this City”.
Glasgow Herald (Glasgow), Friday, May 26, 1826
To the Editor of the Glasgow Herald.
Sir—I shall feel much obliged if you, or any of your numerous readers, can tell me the method to be pursued in tracing out or following the successive numbers in our streets, upon the new plan now adopting. For my part, I have tried it repeatedly by myself, as well as with several others who pretended to know the system, but all to no purpose. In fact, to find out a given number seems almost impossible; and unless those who have taken the business in hand make it public by the newspapers, or hand-bills, to enable the population to understand it, not one in a hundred will know how to find out a place from the present mode. I was informed that all the odd numbers are on one side, and the even numbers on the other; but if so, there seems often a number omitted on both sides, for what reason I know not. This new plan, then, is the same as in London, Edinburgh, &c. I am sorry our authorities are at any time led away from their own superior system, merely for the vanity of having it said we are like our great neighbours in this respect; and sure I am this is the very reverse of an improvement, and objectionable for many private reasons, which it is now needless to offer when the plan is gone into. The object of the present is positively to get some instructions how to find out any place by the present numbering.—I am, Sir, A well-wisher to the City.
[We understand that the blanks in the numbers are not only where new buildings may be erected, but where shops or counting-houses are intended to be struck out in the present buildings.]
Hope that’s interesting,
Alan