Hawick Explained

Hawick should not be confused with Howick (disambiguation).

Official Name:Hawick
Type:Town and former burgh
Gaelic Name:Hamhaig[1]
Scots Name:Haaick[2]
Country:Scotland
Language:English
Language1:Southern Scots
Population:13,586
Population Ref:(2021 est.)[3]
Area Total Sq Mi:1.9
Os Grid Reference:NT505155
Edinburgh Distance:39.7miles NNW
London Distance:292miles SSE
Map Alt:Hawick is in the Scottish Borders in the south of Scotland
Coordinates:55.422°N -2.787°W
Post Town:HAWICK
Postcode Area:TD
Postcode District:TD9
Dial Code:01450
Constituency Westminster:Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk
Unitary Scotland:Scottish Borders
Lieutenancy Scotland:Roxburgh, Ettrick and Lauderdale
Constituency Scottish Parliament:Ettrick, Roxburgh and Berwickshire
Website:scotborders.gov.uk
Static Image Name:River Teviot, Hawick, Roxburghshire.jpg
Static Image Caption:The River Teviot running through Hawick, with the town hall visible
Static Image Alt:A town landscape

Hawick (; Scots: Haaick; Gaelic; Scottish Gaelic: Hamhaig) is a town in the Scottish Borders council area and historic county of Roxburghshire in the east Southern Uplands of Scotland. It is 10miles south-west of Jedburgh and 8.9miles south-south-east of Selkirk. It is one of the furthest towns from the sea in Scotland, in the heart of Teviotdale, and is the biggest town in Roxburghshire. The town is at the confluence of the Slitrig Water with the River Teviot.

The town was formally established in the 16th century, but was previously the site of historic settlement going back hundreds of years. By the late 17th century, the town began to grow significantly, especially during the Industrial Revolution and Victorian era as a centre for the production of textiles, with a focus on knitting and weaving, involving materials such as tweed and cashmere. By the late 20th century, textile production had declined but the town remains an important regional centre for shopping, tourism and services. Hawick's architecture is distinctive in that it has many sandstone buildings with slate roofs. The town has several museums, parks and heritage sites. The town hosts the annual Alchemy Film and Moving Image Festival.

History

The name Hawick is Old English in origin, first recorded in 1167 and translates as "enclosed farm" or "enclosed hamlet".[4] The origin of the name of Hawick was first researched in the 1860s by James Murray, a local teacher and later the primary editor of the Oxford English Dictionary. The town has a long history of habitation being settled at the confluence of Slitrig Water and the River Teviot.[5] The west end of the town contains "the Motte", the remains of a likely 12th century Scoto-Norman motte-and-bailey castle.

On 20 June 1342, as Alexander Ramsay of Dalhousie according to the duty of his office as Sheriff of Teviotsdale was holding court in the church of Hawick, William Douglas, Lord of Liddesdale came with an armed retinue and entered the church. He was courteously welcomed. Douglas and his men attacked Ramsay and dragged him bleeding and in chains to Hermitage Castle; It is generally assumed because Douglas believed he should be Sheriff of Teviotdale. There Ramsay was imprisoned in a dungeon where he died of starvation.[6]

The origin of Hawick being formally declared a town are said to originate with the Battle of Hornshole which was fought in 1514 between an English raiding party and young locals from Hawick.[5] [7] In 2014, on the 500th anniversary of the battle, some 1,800 children dressed in period costumes re-enacted the battle.[7] The oldest official document of the town is a deed dated 11 October 1537 in which the town was re-declared a free burgh since time immemorial.[8]

St Mary's and Old Parish Church is the oldest church in the town, being constructed in 1764 on the site of an earlier 13th century church. The church was extensively damaged by fire in the late 19th century but was reconstructed in a similar style. The cemetery contains 17th and 18th century gravestones, as well as an elaborate ironwork memorial gate given by the town council.

Hawick developed in the late 18th and 19th centuries as an important town in the manufacture of textiles and knitwear.[9] [10] [11] The first knitting machines were brought to Hawick in 1771 by John Hardie, building on an existing carpet manufacturing trade and with a view to expanding into the production of stockings.[10] As a result of a decline in the stocking trade by 1815, some weaving manufacturers had set up in the town using resources from the stocking trade.[10] These industries continued to grow in size, when in the early 1830s, the term "Tweed" originated from the town as a result of a miscommunication of twill for the River Tweed.[10] [12] The town subsequently focused on the manufacturer of different textiles, hosiery and knitwear, including cashmere, adapting to different patterns and materials as fashions changed.[10] [11] In the 1930s, over 1200 persons were employed in producing knitwear in the town.[10] However, by the late 20th century, changing production methods, costs and tastes resulted in the decline of the textile industries to all but a few small businesses.[10] [13]

July 2020 saw the start of work on a £92m flood-defence scheme.[14] But in October 2021, with engineering work still in progress, the town was severely affected by heavy rainfall and subsequent flooding.[15]

Governance

Local government services for Hawick are provided by Scottish Borders Council. There is also a community council covering the town.[16]

Hawick was designated a burgh of regality in 1669 and became a police burgh in 1868.[17] Hawick Town Hall on the High Street was built in 1886, designed by James Campbell Walker in the Scottish baronial style.

When elected county councils were created in 1890 under the Local Government (Scotland) Act 1889, the burgh of Hawick was deemed capable of running its own affairs and so was excluded from the jurisdiction of Roxburghshire County Council.[18] Further local government reform in 1930 brought the burgh of Hawick within the area controlled by the county council, with the town being reclassified as a small burgh, ceding most of its functions to the county council.[19]

In 1975 local government across Scotland was reformed under the Local Government (Scotland) Act 1973. The burghs and counties were abolished as administrative areas, replaced with a two-tier system of upper-tier regions and lower-tier districts. Hawick therefore became part of the Roxburgh district within the Borders region.[20] Roxburgh District Council used Hawick Town Hall as its headquarters. Further local government reform in 1996 abolished the regions and districts, since when Hawick has been administered by Scottish Borders Council.[21]

Monuments

Hawick High Street has an equestrian statue at the east end, known as "the Horse", erected in 1914. Drumlanrig's Tower, now a museum, dates largely from the mid-16th century.[22]

In 2009 another monument the Turning of the Bull (artist, Angela Hunter, Innerleithen) was unveiled in Hawick. This monument depicts William Rule turning the wild bull as it was charging King Robert the Bruce, thus saving the king's life and beginning the Scottish Clan of Turnbull. A poem written by John Leyden commemorates this historical event. "His arms robust the hardy hunter flung around his bending horns, and upward wrung, with writhing force his neck retorted round, and rolled the panting monster to the ground, crushed, with enormous strength, his bony skull; and courtiers hailed the man who turned the bull."

Economy

The companies William Lockie, Hawick Cashmere, Hawick Knitwear, Johnstons of Elgin, Lyle & Scott, Peter Scott, Pringle of Scotland, and Scott and Charters, have had and in many cases still have manufacturing plants in Hawick, producing luxury cashmere and merino wool knitwear. Engineering firm Turnbull and Scott had their headquarters in an Elizabethan-style listed building on Commercial Road before moving to Burnfoot.[23]

In recent times, unemployment has been an issue in Hawick. The rate of unemployment exceeded the average for the Scottish Borders between 2014 and 2017.[24] The closure of once-significant employers, including mills like Peter Scott's[25] and Pringle's[26] have reduced the number of jobs in the town. The population has declined partly because of this; at 13,730 in 2016, it was at its lowest since the 1800s. Despite efforts to improve the economic situation, unemployment and poverty remain relatively high, with the number of children living in poverty in the town one-tenth higher than the average for the Borders region in 2017.[27] Developments such as a new business centre, which opened in 2024,[28] an Aldi supermarket,[29] and distillery,[30] which opened in 2018–19, have benefitted Hawick. Despite this, continued business closures, for example that of Homebase[31] and the Original Factory Store in 2018, suggest continued economic decline for the town.

Transport

Hawick lies in the centre of the valley of the Teviot. The A7 EdinburghCarlisle road passes through the town, with main roads also leading to Berwick-upon-Tweed (the A698) and Newcastle upon Tyne (the A6088, which joins the A68 at the Carter Bar, 16miles south-east of Hawick).

The town lost its rail service in 1969, when, as part of the Beeching Axe, the Waverley Route from Carlisle to Edinburgh via Hawick railway station was closed. It was then said to be the farthest large town from a railway station in the United Kingdom,[32] but this changed as a result of the opening of the Borders Railway, which, in 2015, reopened part of the former Waverley Route to Tweedbank, near Galashiels. Regular buses serve the railway station at Carlisle, 42miles away. Reconnecting Hawick to the Borders Railway would require reinstatement of a further approximately 17miles of the former Waverley Route from Hawick to Tweedbank station via Hassendean, St Boswells and Melrose, with refurbishment of the four-arch Ale Water viaduct[33] near New Belses. Hawick station was on the north bank of the river Teviot, below Wilton Hill Terrace, with a now demolished viaduct (near the Mart Street bridge) carrying the route south towards Carlisle. Waverley Walk[34] in Hawick is a footpath along the former railway route, north-eastward from the former station site near Teviotdale Leisure Centre. A feasibility study is now underway to evaluate the possible reopening of the southern section of the former Waverley railway to link the Borders Railway terminus at Tweedbank through Hawick to Carlisle.

The nearest major airports are at Edinburgh, 57miles away, and Newcastle, 56miles away.

Culture and traditions

The town hosts the annual Common Riding, which combines the annual riding of the boundaries of the town's common land with the commemoration of a victory of local youths over an English raiding party in 1514. In March 2007, this was described by the Rough Guide publication World Party as one of the best parties in the world.[35]

People from Hawick call themselves "Teries", after a traditional song which includes the line "Teribus ye teri odin".

Hawick and surrounding border residents are known to possess a dialect and accent slightly different from broader Scots, being classed as Southern Scots or Borders Scots.[36] [37] [38] For example, the term a "Hawick Gill" is a large measure of spirits, equivalent to 0.28 litre (half a pint).[9]

Film

Hawick is home to Alchemy Film & Arts, and its internationally renowned flagship annual event Alchemy Film and Moving Image Festival. Investing in film "as a means of generating discussion, strengthening community, and stimulating creative thought",[39] Alchemy works with artists and communities within Hawick and the Scottish Borders on a year-round basis.

In summer 2019, Alchemy launched its award-winning Film Town project, which "aims to work to the benefit of Hawick and its unique communities by widening accessibility and inclusion for audiences, participants and partners, and by challenging social, physical and communication barriers... while contributing to Hawick's economic regeneration through an investment in its cultural identity".[40]

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Alchemy delivered the tenth and eleventh editions of its annual film festival as livestream events delivered from Hawick, and assisted in helping the town's communities to digitise their own services, including the production of virtual lectures for the town's 164-year-old Hawick Archaeological Society.

Sports

The town is the home of Hawick Rugby Football Club which was founded in 1873.[9] The town has a senior football team, Hawick Royal Albert, who currently play in the East of Scotland Football League.

The Hawick baw game was once played here by the "uppies" and the "doonies" on the first Monday after the new moon in the month of February.[41] The river of the town formed an important part of the pitch. Although no longer played at Hawick, it is still played at nearby Jedburgh.

Confectionery

Hawick balls or baws, also known as Hills Balls[42] or taffy rock bools,[43] are a peppermint-flavoured boiled sweet that originated in the town.[44] [45] They are particularly associated with rugby commentator Bill McLaren who was known to offer them from a bag that he always carried.[46] [47] [48] They are now produced in Greenock.

Community facilities

Hawick Library is a Carnegie funded library that opened in 1904.[38]

Teviotdale Leisure Centre is the local public fitness centre, with a gym, children's soft-play area and swimming pool.[49] The previous public baths, now disused were built in 1913 on Commercial Road and closed in the 1980s.[50]

The Borders Textile Towerhouse is a local museum focusing on the history of textiles in Hawick and the Borders area.[51] Examples of temporary exhibitions held include an exhibit on fashion designer Bernat Klein and a history of shops in the town.[52] [53] The museum occupies a restored heritage building, formerly a hotel and inn which incorporates Drumlanrig Tower, a 16th century fortified tower.

Wilton Lodge Park is a large public park in the south-west of the town.[54] The park is home to Hawick Museum, a public museum focusing on art and local history.[55] The museum includes local artwork, some of which was produced by members of Hawick Art Club.[56]

The Borders Abbeys Way passes through Hawick. A statue of the popular rugby commentator Bill McLaren (1923–2010) is in Wilton Lodge Park, to the west of the town centre.[57]

In October 2021, the local council began construction of a new £2m footbridge to link local communities, as part of a broader improvements in the town to create an improved travel network in Hawick, alongside a new flood protection scheme.[58]

Hospital

Hawick Community Hospital is the local hospital for the area, itself replacing Hawick Cottage Hospital in 2005.[59]

Education

Hawick High School is a non-denominational secondary school in the town.[60] In September 2021, it was announced that a new circa £49 million will be built to replace the current school on its existing site by 2027.[61]

Media

Local news and television programmes are provided by BBC Scotland and ITV Border. Television signals are received from the Selkirk TV transmitter and the local relay transmitter.[62]

Local radio stations are BBC Radio Scotland on 93.5 FM, Greatest Hits Radio Scottish Borders and North Northumberland on 96.8 FM and TD9 Radio, an online community based station which broadcast from the town.[63]

The town is served by its own local newspaper, The Hawick Paper.[64] Other newspapers that cover the town are The Border Telegraph and Southern Reporter. [65] [66]

Town twinning

Notable people

Arts

Journalism

Science

Sports

Politics and public life

Business

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www2.smo.uhi.ac.uk/gaidhlig/faclair/sbg/lorg.php?faclair=sbg&seorsa=Beurla&facal=hawick&eis_saor=on&tairg=Lorg&faic_tus=on An Stòr-dàta Briathrachais
  2. http://www.scotslanguage.com/books/view/1/823/Names%20in%20Scots%20-%20Places%20in%20Scotland Scots Language Centre: Scottish Place Names in Scots
  3. Web site: Research and data .
  4. Book: Mills, A.D. . 2011 . A Dictionary of British Place Names . Oxford . Oxford University Press . 9780199609086.
  5. Book: Moffat, Alastair . 2014 . Hawick: A History from Earliest Times . Birlinn . 9781780272290.
  6. Book: Brown . Michael . The Black Douglases . 1999 . Tuckwell Press Ltd . East Linton, Scotland . 1862320365 . 42.
  7. News: Battle of Hornshole re-enacted in Hawick . 15 May 2014 . . 14 November 2021.
  8. Book: Wilson, Robert . 1841 . The History of Hawick Including Some Account of the Inhabitants: with Occasional Observations: to which is Appended a Short Memoir of the Author . R.Armstrong.
  9. Book: Ayto, J . 2005 . Brewer's Britain and Ireland . Chambers . 292 . 978-0304353859.
  10. Macdonald . Gordon . 2015 . The Tweed Valley . Archaeological Journal (London) . 172 . Sup1 . 1–47 . 10.1080/00665983.2015.1052620 . 220274648 . 22 November 2021.
  11. West . Andre . 2016 . Technology Meets Tradition In Scotland . Textile World . 166 . 5 . 36 . 22 November 2021.
  12. Web site: How tweed became a symbol of Scottish culture . https://web.archive.org/web/20210411223149/https://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/article/tweed-weaves-tales-of-scottish-history-and-landscapes. dead. 11 April 2021. 14 January 2021 . . 22 November 2021.
  13. Cowell, Alan. "Cashmere Moves On, And Scotland Feels a Chill." New York Times, 27 Mar. 2004, p. C1
  14. News: The battle to protect Hawick and Dumfries from flooding. 5 November 2021. BBC News . 21 November 2021.
  15. News: Two bridges "washed away" by heavy downpours . 27 October 2021 . . 14 November 2021.
  16. Web site: Community councils - Hawick . Scottish Borders Council . 23 December 2022.
  17. Web site: Hawick Burgh . A Vision of Britain through Time . GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth . 23 December 2022.
  18. [Local Government (Scotland) Act 1889]
  19. act. Local Government (Scotland) Act 1929. 1929. 25. 23 December 2022.
  20. act. Local Government (Scotland) Act 1973. 1973. 65. 23 December 2022.
  21. act. Local Government etc. (Scotland) Act 1994. 1994. 39. 16 December 2022.
  22. Web site: Drumlanrig's Tower. The Douglas Archives. 10 September 2021.
  23. Web site: 16–20 Commercial Road . British Listed Buildings.
  24. Book: Hawick and Denholm – Overview of Population, Deprivation, Unemployment and Schools . Scottish Borders Council – Corporate Business Management Service . 2017 . 3.
  25. Web site: 25 July 2016 . Scottish knitwear producer Peter Scott to close .
  26. Web site: 30 June 2008 . Jobs blow as Pringle decides to shut Scottish knitwear plant .
  27. Web site: 2017-08-31 . Nearly one in three Hawick kids live in poverty .
  28. Web site: 5 April 2024 . Hawick Business Centre prepares to open with drop-in day .
  29. Web site: 19 April 2018 . Wait for Hawick's new superstore is over .
  30. News: 1 May 2018 . Borders Distillery opens to the public in Hawick . BBC News .
  31. Web site: 14 August 2018 . Jobs to go as Hawick's Homebase store set to close .
  32. News: Brocklehurst . Steven . 2013-03-27 . What was Beeching's worst railway cut? . BBC News . 30 January 2017.
  33. Web site: Geograph:: Disused railway line (C) Walter Baxter .
  34. Web site: Geograph:: Waverley Walk, Hawick (C) Oliver Dixon .
  35. News: 13 March 2007 . Guide book praises common riding . BBC . dead . 16 May 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070314194606/http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/south_of_scotland/6441611.stm . 14 March 2007.
  36. Web site: Borders Scots . Scots Language Centre . 21 November 2021.
  37. Web site: Conversation in Hawick about accent, dialect and attitudes to language. . BBC Voices (British Library) . 21 November 2021.
  38. Taylor . Alan . 2019 . H is for Hawick. . TLS. Times Literary Supplement . July . 6069 . 17 .
  39. Web site: Disbury. Rachael. About Alchemy Film & Arts. 2021-04-12. Alchemy Film & Arts. en-GB.
  40. Web site: Pattison. Michael. FILM TOWN. 2021-04-12. Alchemy Film & Arts. en-GB.
  41. News: February 2010 . 2 August 2018.
  42. Book: Herdman, John . The County of Roxburgh . 22 November 1992 . Scottish Academic Press . 9780707307206 . Google Books.
  43. Book: Davidson, Alan . The Oxford Companion to Food . 22 January 2014 . Oxford University Press . 9780199677337 . Google Books.
  44. Web site: 17 September 2010 . Hawick Balls . The List.
  45. Web site: Dictionary of the Scots Language:: SND :: sndns1968 .
  46. News: Reason . Mark . 23 September 2011 . Rugby World Cup 2011: Scotland captain Rory Lawson trying to live up to values of his grandfather Bill McLaren . The Daily Telegraph .
  47. News: 25 January 2010 . Final farewell for Bill McLaren . BBC News .
  48. News: 25 January 2010 . Bill McLaren funeral: hundreds celebrate "voice of rugby" . The Daily Telegraph .
  49. Web site: Teviotdale Leisure Centre . Live Borders . 21 November 2021.
  50. Campbell . Douglas M. . 1993 . Scottish baths 1868-1914 : and their conservation . Edinburgh Research Archive . 248 . 22 November 2021.
  51. Web site: Borders Textile Towerhouse . Live Borders . 21 November 2021.
  52. News: Hawick's "forgotten shops" celebrated in new exhibition . 24 November 2019 . BBC News . 21 November 2021.
  53. Web site: Klein trustees begin weaving legacy project . 2 February 2020 . Border Telegraph . 21 November 2021.
  54. Web site: Wilton Lodge Park . Scottish Borders Council . 21 November 2021.
  55. Web site: Hawick Museum . Live Borders . 21 November 2021.
  56. Web site: Scottish art showcased in Hawick Museum . 7 March 2020 . Border Telegraph . 21 November 2021.
  57. News: 2018-02-07 . New bridge honours "voice of rugby" . BBC News .
  58. Web site: Two communities in Hawick are to be inter-connected by a new £2m footbridge . 5 October 2021 . Southern Reporter . 21 November 2021.
  59. Web site: Hawick Cottage Hospital. 26 April 2015 . Historic Hospitals. 5 February 2020.
  60. Web site: Homepage . Hawick High School . 14 November 2021.
  61. Web site: A new £48.4m Hawick High School will be completed by 2027. 21 September 2021. The Southern Reporter . 14 November 2021.
  62. Web site: Freeview Light on the Hawick (The Scottish Borders, Scotland) transmitter. 1 May 2004. UK Free TV. 11 December 2023.
  63. Web site: About Us. TD9 Radio. 22 January 2022 . 11 December 2023.
  64. Web site: The Hawick Paper. 11 December 2023.
  65. Web site: Border Telegraph. 23 November 2013. British Papers. 11 December 2023.
  66. Web site: Southern Reporter. 21 January 2014. British Papers. 11 December 2023.
  67. Web site: Tornado hits Hawick twin town Bailleul . 28 April 2014 . Hawick News.
  68. Web site: Andrew Cranston . 6 November 2020 . Ingleby.
  69. News: From Hawick to Hawick: The story of the Economist founder James Wilson. Business Standard India. 20 January 2021. Sreekumar. G..