Coatbridge Memories

Monklands Memories - Airdrie & Coatbridge areas

Home

Computers

Genealogy

Features 

Bricks

UGotmail

Leisure

Cheap Phone

Links

Contact us

Your Home Town

Birds of Prey

Memories

Poetry

Humour

Insurance

Holidays

Trams

People & Places

   Reminiscence pages

Memories Pages

Home Page
JOHN WHITE father of local history
Monklands Heritage Society

Life &Times -Bob McMillan
Sunnyside - Part 1

Summerlee & Hydrocon 

Detachable Collars

Boys at Play

Utilities

Sunnyside - Part 2

Coatbridge Co-op
Coatbridge Co-op Chap 1

Coatbridge Co-op Chap 2

Thom Gilchrist Obituary

Alexander Hospital

Memories-Tom Frew

Lamberton 1

  1. Anecdotes - TF

  2. Old Lambertonians

  3. Group photo

  4. Gallery 2

  5. Engineers

  6. Lamberton 1939

  7. Memories - TF??

  8. L1020341b.jpg

 

Lambertons 7 (KRG)
Skyscraper Wean”
Coatbridge Cinemas
Airdrie Cinemas
The Colliers of Scotland

Beamish Museum
Murray & Paterson Intro
M & Paterson History

M & P History 2

Stewart & LLoyds
Clyde Tube Works


GARROWHILL
***Alistair Stevenson
**More Recent Alistair
**Holiday in Riddrie
Memories of Watsons
by Carrick Watson
  FASKINE stories

The Faskine - William Kerr

Stories when you are dead - set in The Faskine

Faskine Tale  Elizabeth Tennant

Memories of Gartcosh & Kingshill John Duncan
Reminiscence Pages
Other Factories

RB Tennent Coatbridge
RB Tennent Poem Ww
My RB Tennent Years - Grant Cullen
Coatbridge Poem-WW

 

Honeywell
William Bain & Co
Calder Hot Roll John Marrs

Thomas Hudson & Co


Bairds of Old Monkland

Bairds of Gartsherrie

William Baird & Co



“Auld” Old Monkland
(Bob Cameron  c1986)

Old Monkland Memories
from Canada - John Marrs

Memories of Langloan c1987
Margie (Logue) Weisak
Langloan Lum

Janet Hamilton -
The Candy Man - Art McGivern
Baxters Buses
Iron & Steelworks New
 

Iron & Steelworks in Coatbridge

 

Gartsherrie ironworks

Bus Full of Memories -
Tam Craven
ABC Minors
Dick Barton - Special Agent
Birds of Prey
The Railways
Gartloch Hosp
Bert Gilroy
MEMORIES
The Penny Project
Cowboys
More Cowboys
More Cowboys

Raymond Hatton
Looking for all the world like a beardless Rumpelstiltskin, actor Raymond Hatton utilized his offbeat facial features and gift for mimicry in vaudeville, where he appeared from the age of 12 onward. In films from 1914, Hatton was starred or co-starred in several of the early Cecil B. DeMille productions, notably The Whispering Chorus (1917), in which the actor delivered a bravura performance as a man arrested for murdering himself. Though he played a vast array of characters in the late teens and early 1920s, by 1926 Hatton had settled into rubeish character roles. He was teamed with Wallace Beery in several popular Paramount comedies of the late silent era, notably Behind the Front (1926) and Now We're in the Air (1927). Curiously, while Beery's career skyrocketed in the 1930s, Hatton's stardom diminished, though he was every bit as talented as his former partner. In the 1930s and 1940s, Hatton showed up as comic sidekick to such western stars as Johnny Mack Brown and Bob Livingston.

He was usually cast as a grizzled old desert rat, even when (as in the case of the "Rough Riders" series with Buck Jones and Tim McCoy) he happened to be younger than the nominal leading man. Raymond Hatton continued to act into the 1960s, showing up on such TV series as The Abbott and Costello Show and Superman and in several American-International quickies. Raymond Hatton's last screen appearance was as the old man collecting bottles along the highway in Richard Brooks' In Cold Blood (1967). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Born in Indiana, Charles "Buck" Jones was raised in Montana, where he trained himself to be an expert rider and roper. After serving in the U.S. Cavalry, he joined the Miller Brothers 101 Ranch Wild West Show as a trick rider, and later performed with the Ringling Bros. circus. Entering films as a stunt double in 1917, he was promoted to his own starring series at Fox Studios two years later. Appearing onscreen with his horse Silver, Jones quickly became one of the most popular Western stars of the 1920s. When Westerns went into a brief eclipse in the early talkie era, he was "demoted" to low-budget Columbia Pictures, where he continued appearing in high-grossing horse operas and occasional "straight" dramatic films until 1936. He then spent a few seasons at Universal as star, producer, and occasional director. At the peak of his popularity in the 1930s, when his Buck Jones Rangers club boasted five million youthful members, at one point he was receiving more fan mail than Clark Gable. When his career began slipping again in 1940, he signed with Monogram, where he co-starred with Tim McCoy and Raymond Hatton in the money-spinning Rough Riders series. On November 30, 1942, Jones was guest of honor at a party given by his producer/manager Scott R. Dunlap at the Cocoanut Grove night club in Boston when a fire broke out in the kitchen. According to some reports, Jones attempted to escape along with all the others when the fire spread to the main room; other sources claim that he valiantly insisted upon re-entering the blazing inferno to rescue the guests still trapped inside. Whatever the circumstances, the end result was the same: Jones perished in the Cocoanut Grove fire along with nearly 500 others. Married to the same woman for 27 years, Buck Jones was the father of a daughter named Maxine, who married actor Noah Beery Jr.

An authentic cowboy from the age of 15, Timothy McCoy moved to a large Wyoming ranch next to a Sioux Indian reservation after some college studies; he became an authority on Indian languages, customs, and folk history, and mastered Indian sign language. He served in World War I, and was then appointed Indian Agent for his territory. In 1922, he was employed as a technical advisor and co-ordinator of Indian extras for the film The Covered Wagon (1923); McCoy may also have done some trick riding for the film. He later he resigned his government post, having been offered a key supporting role in the western The Thundering Herd (1925). MGM signed him to a film contract in 1925; he was to star in westerns and action movies based on historical anecdotes of the American frontier. By the early '30s he was among the most popular western stars; he always appeared dresed in black, with an oversized white Stetson hat and a pearl-handled gun. McCoy interrupted his screen career in 1935 to travel with the Ringling Brothers circus. In 1938 he started his own Wild West show, but it was unsuccessful. He returned to the screen in 1940, and for two years he co-starred in the low-budget Rough Rider western series; the series ended when Buck Jones, another of its stars, died in a fire. He served in World War II (in which he was awarded the Bronze Star), then retired to his ranch; from 1949, however, he worked on TV and in occasional film cameo roles. He won an Emmy for his TV program The Tim McCoy Show. Until 1976 McCoy continued working 300 days a year as the headliner of Tommy Scott's Country Music Circus. In 1974 he was inducted into the Cowboy Hall of Fame. He authored an autobiography (assisted by his son Ronald), Tim McCoy Remembers the West (1977).

 

Another Code of the West!

  • You don't need decorated words to make your meanin' clear. Say it plain and save some breath for breathin'.
  • Don't never interfere with something that ain't botherin' you none.
  • If you find yourself in a hole, the first thing to do is to stop diggin'.
  • Never grumble. It makes you about as welcome as a sidewinder in a cow camp.
  • If you're ridin' ahead of the herd, take a look back every now and then to make sure its still there.
  • It don't matter so much how long a ride you have, as how well you ride it.
  • Always drink upstream from the herd.
  • Never kick a fresh turd on a hot day.
  • The first thing you do when you get up in the morning is put on your Stetson.
  • Don't worry about biting off more than you can chew. Your mouth is probably a whole lot bigger than you think.
  • When it comes to cussin don't swallow your tongue; use both barrels and air out your lungs.
  • Don't get mad at somebody who knows more than you do. It ain't their fault.
  • Talk low, talk slow, and don't say too much. Generally, you ain't learin' nothin' when your mouth is a-jawin'.
  • If you want to forget all your troubles, take a little walk in brand-new pair of high-heeled ridin' boots.
  • The wildest critters live in the city!
  • Trust everybody in the game, but always cut the cards.
  • The quickest way to double your money is to fold it over and put it back in your pocket.
  • Don't let so much reality into your life that there's no room left for dreamin'.
  • Makin' it in life is kinda like bustin' broncs: you're gonna get thrown a lot. The simple secret is to keep gettin' back on.
  • Go after life as if it's something that's got to be roped in a hurry before it gets away.
  • Don't squat with your spurs on!
  • Never miss a chance to rest your horse.

 

 
 Life &Times Insurance Reminiscence Genealogy Leisure Memories

Hydrocon  

Detachable Collars

Boys at Play

Utilities

Sunnyside - Part 1

Sunnyside - Part 2

Red Bridge 1

Red Bridge 2

Coatbridge Co-op 1

Coatbridge Co-op 2

Kipps

Thom Gilchrist Obit

Alexander Hospital

 

Travel Insurance

Home Insurance

Life Insurance

Motor Insurance

Payment Protect

Private Health

Critical Illness

Long Term Care

Glossary -Terms


You got Mail

Contact us

Links
Your Home Town

Memories

Start a project?

Street Games

Skipping Songs

ABC Minors

 Dick Barton

 Dr Who

 Cowboys

 More Cowboys

 Tea Dances

How did we survive?

Young at Heart

Genealogy Info

Scottish Genealogy

Before the Famine

Irish Emigration

Ulster Emigration

Lanarkshire Parish

Lanarkshire Links

Irish Links

Books

Can YOU help?

Irish Philosophy

Scot Roots

Scots Family

Summerlee Trams

North Calder Heritage

Strathclyde  Park 

Drumpellier Park

Glenboig Park

Northburn Park

Summerlee Heritage

Monklands Ramblers

Palacerigg Park

Britannia Panopticon

Birds of Prey

Nearby places

Humour pages

Poetry Corner

“Auld” Monkland

Bairds of Old Monkland

Langloan c1987

Coatbridge Cinemas

Airdrie Cinemas

Lambertons

Murray & Paterson

Stewart & LLoyds

RB Tennent 

Honeywell

William Bain & Co

Calder Hot Roll

Thomas Hudson

The Faskine

Use the new Forum    Recommended Professionals & Tradesmen            Send an email to Monklands Memories

Copyright Monklands Memories  2000-2012   Site designed by Sennet   Pensions Information  Tell  friends about Monklands Memories