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Kelso lies at the confluence of the Rivers
Tweed and Teviot, occupying a chalky hill and it is from this that
the town's name is derived, having been known originally as Calchou.
Today the burgh is well known for its large, continental-style main
square and the quantity of Georgian buildings still visible throughout
the town. Their survival is probably a result of Kelso not sharing
in the great mill boom of the nineteenth century that brought an
influx of workers to the other Borders burghs.
Throughout the Middle Ages, there were two
settlements named Kelso: Wester Kelso, a burgh which probably stood
somewhere to the west of the gates into the Floors estate, and Easter
Kelso, a village or 'toun' that stood somewhere to the north-west
of the abbey. Wester Kelso appears to have declined at the same
time as Roxburgh, during the long English occupation of the castle,
and was largely destroyed in a late seventeenth-century fire. Easter
Kelso expanded throughout the Middle Ages along what is now Roxburgh
Street, and became the modern burgh of Kelso.
Until the late sixteenth century, life in
Kelso was largely under the control of the abbey, which was both
a spiritual focus as well as landlord to the townspeople. The magnificent
western transept, surviving to almost its original height, gives
a sense of the abbey's imposing scale, and even as the abbey's wealth
declined in the early sixteenth century it remained an impressive
building according to contemporary accounts. After the Reformation,
the abbey's interests in and around Kelso became the property of
the Kers of Cessford, ancestors of the Dukes of Roxburghe and by
the seventeenth century, the Kers effectively owned Kelso.
Other than the abbey itself, little remains
of medieval Kelso. Serious fires in 1645 and 1685 appear to have
swept away many of medieval buildings in the town. In the following
century however, there was considerable rebuilding, with several
notable improvements being made. In 1670, Kelso Grammar School was
formally established (although it seems likely that the old monastic
school had probably continued informally), a subscription library
opened in 1750, and in the 1770s a public dispensary and hospital
was created. The building of the first bridge over the River Tweed
in the 1770s opened up Kelso to the Edinburgh to Newcastle coaches
and other passing trade. This bridge was destroyed by a flood in
1797, and replaced by the present bridge, designed by John Rennie,
in 1800-3. By the 1820s, Kelso had three coaching inns, including
the Cross Keys which dominates one side of The Square.
However, the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries were also a time of revolutions and uprisings, and Kelso
played its small part in the upheavals troubling the nation. In
the 1640s, a Covenanting force took possession of the town, while
the Jacobites easily captured Kelso in the uprisings of 1715, when
the Highlanders gathered with townspeople at the market cross of
Wester Kelso to hear the Hanoverians denounced and the Old Pretender
proclaimed as their rightful king. Thirty years later in 1745, Bonnie
Prince Charlie resided in the Chatto Lodging House, a building which
stood on the site of Ednam House. However, contemporary records
seem to suggest that the Kelsonians of the day were rather indifferent
to the Jacobite cause, as no one seems to have willingly joined
the Young Pretender's army.
The late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
was a time of considerable building in Kelso. Many of the existing
buildings in the town centre were constructed at this time, and
the town began to expand, largely by the building of middle-class
houses. Walking along Roxburgh Street, this outward growth is evident.
Near the centre of Kelso, lofty tenements rise on either side of
the narrow street. Further to the north, the tenements give way
to terraced houses and detached villas, many of these being sited
for their views over the River Tweed, while the street itself broadens.
Similarly, many of the houses on Edenside Road date from this period
of expansion, while the modern housing on Grovehill occupies the
site of a large villa and its grounds.
Despite this impressive growth and development,
Kelso remained a burgh of barony and the effective possession of
the Dukes of Roxburghe until 1853. In December of that year a petition
was circulated supporting a move to make Kelso a Police Burgh, where
a dozen elected Police Commissioners oversaw its affairs. In 1892,
under the Burgh Police Act, they became the Burgh Council under
the leadership of a Provost elected from their number.
Having played no part in the textile boom
of the nineteenth century, Kelso remained a market town with an
economy which was largely agricultural and service-based. In the
1960s, the government introduced a series of initiatives to develop
the Scottish economy. As a result, Kelso Town Council embarked on
an ambitious building programme, erecting modern council housing
while developing part of the old Pinnaclehill estate in Maxwellheugh
as an industrial estate, currently occupied by knitwear and electronics
businesses. Springwood Park, once home to the Douglas family, was
partly demolished in the 1960s, with the parkland sold off. Part
of the estate is now a caravan park. The most recent development
for Kelso is the construction of Hunter's Bridge, designed to reduce
the pressure of traffic on Rennie's bridge.
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SITES IN ROXBURGH STREET:
Introduction
to Roxburgh Street
Numbers 13-19
Number 61
Royal
British Legion Club
Number 16
Number 15-19
Numbers 18-24
Numbers 47-49
Number 51
48, Roxburgh House
Number 50
Numbers 85-87
Number 89
Number 106
Number 108
Number 126
Numbers 142-144
Free Church
Walton Hall
Numbers 2-4
Numbers 37-39
Numbers 41-43
Number 146
Number 132
Number 134
Number 60
Number 6
Numbers 10-12
Number 53
Numbers 1-5
Number 9
Number 21
Number 35
Number 140
Selkirk and Kelso Society Co-op
SITES IN THE SQUARE:
Introduction
to The Square
Kelso
Town Hall
6,
Royal Bank of Scotland
8-9,
Bank of Scotland
Numbers
10-20
21-22,
Kelso Savings Bank
Numbers
23-25
Numbers
30-32
Numbers
33-35
Numbers
38-40
Number
15
Numbers
42-44
Number
45
Number
46
Numbers
47-49
Cross
Keys Hotel
Numbers
18-19
Numbers
3-4
Number
1
Numbers
26-27
Numbers
28-29
Numbers
50, 51, 52
K6
Telephone Kiosk
21,
Peter Dominic
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