wilsons zoo and lewis's menagerie
#1
Posted 18 August 2011 - 06:27 PM
does anyone remember the menagerie that was on the top floor in Lewis's department store in Argyle Street,and incredibly a zoo on the corner of Oswald Street and Argyle Street where if you followed the smell up one flight of stairs in a tenement building you came to a zoo housing a lion,monkeys,snakes and a whole mixture of other animals.It seems incredible now in retrospect that this would be allowed on health and safety grounds alone.
Willie.x.
#2
Posted 18 August 2011 - 08:35 PM
Hi,
does anyone remember the menagerie that was on the top floor in Lewis's department store in Argyle Street,and incredibly a zoo on the corner of Oswald Street and Argyle Street where if you followed the smell up one flight of stairs in a tenement building you came to a zoo housing a lion,monkeys,snakes and a whole mixture of other animals.It seems incredible now in retrospect that this would be allowed on health and safety grounds alone.
Willie.x.
Sounds pretty amazing, Willie. I was never there. When was that?
#3
Posted 19 August 2011 - 06:18 AM
Sounds pretty amazing, Willie. I was never there. When was that?
#4
Posted 19 August 2011 - 06:21 AM
it was certainly there into the early 50s.I remember being taken there just the once.It was pretty smelly,and you came away feeling terribly sorry for the animals.Lewis's menagerie was different as the animals and birds were better cared for I think, and more pets than wild animals,
Willie.x.
#5
Posted 19 August 2011 - 10:01 PM
I remember in the early 70's a pet shop just as you entered under Central Station Bridge on Argyle St.,coming from the west that had an advert in the window directing you to the Oswald St Zoo. It seemed so improbable to me even as a teen that there would be a Zoo in the city centre, that I never investigated.Hi Pat,
it was certainly there into the early 50s.I remember being taken there just the once.It was pretty smelly,and you came away feeling terribly sorry for the animals.Lewis's menagerie was different as the animals and birds were better cared for I think, and more pets than wild animals,
Willie.x.
#6
Posted 20 August 2011 - 05:39 AM
I remember in the early 70's a pet shop just as you entered under Central Station Bridge on Argyle St.,coming from the west that had an advert in the window directing you to the Oswald St Zoo. It seemed so improbable to me even as a teen that there would be a Zoo in the city centre, that I never investigated.
#7
Posted 20 August 2011 - 05:42 AM
I know what you mean.It just seems so improbable having a city centre zoo up a close in a tenement,
Willie.x.
#8
Posted 26 December 2011 - 08:52 PM
WILSON'S ZOO, 68-76 OSWALD STREET
The Wilson family operated a commercial zoo in Glasgow for many years. On Wednesday 23rd December, 1936, a 'miniature zoo' opened inside a disused church near Glasgow's Central Station, renovated and modernised for its new purpose. This replaced an earlier zoo under the railway arches in Argyle Street.
The Oswald Street establishment, owned by William Wilson and his son, housed a varied collection, including lions, a black panther, monkeys, a badger, parrots, macaws and a delightful mynah bird remembered for saying, "Where's the sawdust man?" in a broad Glaswegian accent. It was very popular and crowded, with two levels of cages and a pet shop in the basement. This zoo continued to operate until the 1950s. When it closed, the pet shop business moved just across the River Clyde to Carlton Place.
Wilson's Oswald Street Zoo opened only one week after the founding of the Zoological Society of Glasgow. It is possible these two events are linked in some way, although no documentary evidence has been found connecting them.
Can anyone pinpoint the location of the original zoo inside the disused church near Central Station?
The Oswald Street Wilson's Zoo was on the site now occupied by that hideous '60s office block with the RAC/BSM shop at its ground floor level. If I remember correctly the entrance was above ground floor level and was accessed via a staircase on either side. My father once told me it was popular with guys who used to stagger in after the pubs shut at 2.30pm. They would then proceed to take the piss out of the unfortunate exhibits until the pubs re-opened at five.
In 1936 the old St Peter's was converted to a zoo by the Wilson family, which had previously kept a zoo under the railway arches in Argyle Street. Wilson's Zoo became very popular, offering a pet shop in the basement as well as cages on two floors containing diverse animals such as tightrope-walking lions and lionesses which performed twice a day; a black panther; monkeys; a badger; parrots; macaws and a mynah bird which spoke in a Glaswegian accent. The zoo closed in the 1950s and the building was later demolished.
See here for more
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#9
Posted 07 January 2012 - 04:04 PM
#10
Posted 23 February 2012 - 04:56 PM
From 'Hidden Glasgow':
WILSON'S ZOO, 68-76 OSWALD STREET
See here for more
#11
Posted 23 February 2012 - 05:07 PM
There was also a menagerie on topfloor of Lewis¨s in Argyle Street,where you could visit and pet the animals..no lions or panthers of course,but guinea pigs etc.who looked thoroughly fed up with all the attention and just wanted a kip,particularly those nocturnal hamsters who would give you a nip for interrupting their zzzzzs.
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