Scottish shale Scottish shale

Cobbinshaw South village

Alternative names:
South Cobbinshaw, South Cobinshaw
Parish:
West Calder, Midlothian
Local authority:
West Lothian
Opened:
Constructed c.1870
Closed:
Many houses derelict by 1906, housing demolished by 1925
Current status of site:
Rough moorland grazing

In 1870 the South Cobbinshaw Oil Company began construction of an oil works, brick kilns and sixty houses in desolate moorland south of Cobbinshaw Loch. The enterprise was not successful and, by 1880, the site was virtually abandoned. Ownership of the Cobbinshaw shale-field, and of South Cobbinshaw village, changed hands on several occasions and shale mining eventually resumed to serve oil works in Tarbrax. Young's oil company purchased "workmens and other houses" from Hugh Rose in 1883 (see 215852, page 63)

A new school was built to serve the village in 1894 and a new church erected. With the collapse of the Caledonian Mineral Oil Company Ltd in 1903, the village was sold to a private owner and the population gradually declined. The last houses were demolished in about 1925, although the church remained in use until c.1930.

The 1897 OS plan shows two rows of houses, each with 12 dwellings and three rows of 6 dwellings. All appear sufficiently large to have contained two rooms. A further row appears to have contained 12 single room dwelling arranged back to back. In the 1906 OS map all but two rows appear derelict.

As recorded in the snippet (below) Cobbinshaw church was purchased by Woolfords Farm and components of the corrugated iron clad structure used to construct a hall building that still survives (2011) there (55.792060, -3.589919). Corrugated iron cottages also survive on the neighboring farms (55.776154, -3.583020 and 55.776378, -3.577034), said to have been built in the 1930's. It is perhaps possible that these also include material salvaged from Cobbinshaw church.

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  • Recent images - building at Woolfords farm constructed from components of Cobbinshaw school
  • Newspaper references
    • TEACHER (Certificated Female) Wanted by the West Calder School Board for Cobbinshaw Public School (on Roll 30), Salary £55 and 10 per cent of government grant. Duties to commence 6th September. – Applications with testimonials to be lodged with J.T.Mungle, Clerk to the Board, by 22d inst.

      Glasgow Herald, 19th July 1880

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      School Boards - A plan for the proposed new school at Cobbinshaw was submitted and approved of, and instructions given to have the plans forwarded to the Department for approval.

      Glasgow Herald, 9th August 1893

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      Midlothian County Council – It was agreed to communicate to the Caledonian Mineral Oil Company Limited, the analyst's report on the water recently introduced to Cobbinshaw Rows, and to call on the company to remedy the reported defects.

      Edinburgh Evening News, 9th January 1902

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      SAD RAILWAY FATALITY.

      Teacher Killed. A young man named John Anderson, a teacher at Cobbinshaw Public School, Was killed on the Caledonian Railway branch line Cobbinshaw last night. He was walking along the railway to his home at Tarbrax after leaving the school when he was overtaken and run down by a mineral train going into Tarbrax Works. Death was instantaneous. Deceased was a promising young man.

      Evening Telegraph, 17th January 1903

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      COBBINSHAW - 12 cottages for sale, ground can be arranged; all in good order; price £70 for lot – Brand, Dundee.

      Edinburgh Evening News, 3rd July 1903

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      FOR SALE, 30,000 undersize Easdale; 8,000 roofing tiles, 30 doors; cheap, immediate delivery.

      Edinburgh Evening News, 6th August 1903

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      COBBINSHAW

      30,000 undersize Ballachulish slates, bricks, joisting, sarking, flooring; cheap. – Brand, Overgate, Dundee.

      Edinburgh Evening News, 2nd July 1903

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      CHURCH TO CLOSE.

      Situated on Desolate Moor. It has been decided to close down the church which was erected at Cobbinshaw over 60 years ago, and which now stands in the midst of a desolate moor. The decision was intimated at a meeting of Edinburgh Presbytery on Tuesday by the joint clerk, the Rev. Dr. J.R. Aitken, who stated that the minister of the church, the Rev. Dr. Hugh Young, died recently, over ninety years of age. Every house on the moor had gone, and of 300 houses in Tarbrax, only 40 or 50 were now occupied. It was intimated that an offer being received from a farmer who was willing to take the church over, so that he could use it for some purpose on his farm, and that the church possessed a number of furnishings, which include an organ and Communion cups, and that these the congregation were willing to hand over to the Presbytery for use in any church which desired them.

      West Lothian, Courier 1930