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Coatbridge and also
She was born Helen Lawrie Reilly, the daughter of a Catholic father and a Protestant mother, and she was educated at St. Patrick's Catholic High School on Muiryhall Street in Coatbridge, and attended at the same time as John Reid, whom she later replaced as Secretary of State for Scotland and also made way for as MP for Airdrie and Shotts.
The growth of the steel industry ( in nearby Motherwell ) had also led to a start of a decline in demand for the pig iron Coatbridge produced.
There are also several smaller burns which run through Coatbridge, most of which drain to the North Calder Water.
Coatbridge is also home to the annual Deep Fried Film Festival.
DRS also operates several intermodal trains on behalf of JG Russell, another logistics company, between Daventry and their marshalling yard at Coatbridge.
An area in the eastern part of Coatbridge is also part of the constituency.
They also drew with their Coatbridge namesakes in 1957 and again lost the replay.

Coatbridge and had
It became increasing expensive to produce iron in Coatbridge as raw materials had to be imported from as far afield as Spain.
It should be noted that London and Glasgow ( especially the Bellshill and Coatbridge areas of Greater Glasgow ) have long had large Catholic and Jewish Lithuanian populations.
2, 000 people had attended their recent marches in Coatbridge.

Coatbridge and for
With Skelton's support Dunglass secured the Unionist candidacy at Coatbridge for the 1929 general election.
Aged 22 he then served as a councillor on the Coatbridge Town Council from 1964 and he became a Justice of the Peace for the Lanark area in 1972.
Coatbridge was a major Scottish centre for iron works and coal mining during the 19th century and in this period was described as ' the industrial heartland of Scotland ' and the ' Iron Burgh '.
Coatbridge therefore became a popular destination for vast numbers of Irish ( especially from County Donegal in Ulster ) arriving in Scotland.
The iron bars and plates produced in Coatbridge iron works were the raw materials needed throughout the British Empire for railways, construction, bridge building and shipbuilding.
One example of uses Coatbridge ’ iron was put to included armour plating for British ships fighting in the Crimean War.
One contemporary observer at this time noted that Coatbridge is ' not famous for its sylvan beauties of its charming scenery ' and ' offers the visitor no inducements to loiter long '.
One son, James Baird, was responsible for erecting sixteen blast-furnaces in Coatbridge between 1830 and 1842.
They were responsible for the design of the lay out of present day Coatbridge town centre.
Coatbridge is especially noted for its historical links with Ireland.
The Edinburgh Monarchs rode there in 1968-69 ( as the Coatbridge Monarchs ) after losing their track at Meadowbank Stadium to the developers for the 1970 Commonwealth Games.
Glasgow Tigers moved from Hampden Park to Coatbridge in 1973, and stayed there until June 1977, when they were forced out for the introduction of greyhound racing .< ref >
Three weeks later, manager Webber Lees signed Stein for the Coatbridge club.
The Scottish influence in Kinross extends throughout the suburb with road names, parks and others mainly derived from Scottish place names, for example Glencoe Loop, Edinburgh Avenue, Roxburgh Circle, Selkirk Drive, Falkirk Court, Ben Nevis Turn, Coatbridge Circuit and many others.
When the Baxter's business was acquired, adverse public reaction to the repainting of buses into Scottish Omnibuses livery led to a decision to retain the Baxter's identity and blue livery for buses based at Victoria depot and used on town services around Airdrie and Coatbridge.
In addition to the construction of the Glasgow Bothwell Hamilton and Coatbridge Railway which runs through Burnbank he later gained fame for the Mallaig Extension Railway famous for the concrete structures built along the line, the most notable of which is Glenfinnan Viaduct.
It was created for the 2005 general election, covering the whole area of the Coatbridge and Chryston constituency and parts of the Hamilton North and Bellshill seat.
As part of the Sixth Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies which commenced in 2011, the Boundary Commission for Scotland has proposed dividing Coatbridge into two seats-one named ' Cumbernauld and Coatbridge North ', the other ' Airdrie and Coatbridge South '.

Coatbridge and worst
A legacy of ' devastating ' unemployment, appalling housing conditions and some of the worst overcrowding in Scotland left its stamp on the Coatbridge of the early 1930s.
In the 1930s and 1950s however massive programmes of state-sponsored house building saw thousands of new homes built in Coatbridge and some of the worst examples of slum housing were cleared away.

Coatbridge and industry
By the time of the 1920s however, coal seams were exhausted and the iron industry in Coatbridge was in rapid decline.

Coatbridge and .
It mainly consisted of allegations of sectarian spending discrepancies between Protestant Airdrie and Catholic Coatbridge, fuelled by the fact that all 17 of the ruling Labour group were Roman Catholics.
Scotland experienced a significant amount of Irish immigration, particularly in Glasgow, Edinburgh and Coatbridge.
* December 25 – Cliftonhill Stadium in Coatbridge, Scotland, opens as the home of Albion Rovers F. C ..
Other significant settlements include East Kilbride, Motherwell, Airdrie, Coatbridge, Blantyre, Cambuslang, Rutherglen and Wishaw.
The company was founded in London, England as Tulsemere Manufacturing Company in 1926, but has been based in Coatbridge, Scotland, since the 1970s.
Like his successor as Scottish Secretary, Helen Liddell he attended St Patrick's Secondary School, Coatbridge.
In addition to Airdrie, there are branches in Baillieston, Bellshill, Coatbridge, Motherwell, Muirhead and Shotts.
It connects the country's two largest cities, Glasgow and Edinburgh, and serves other large communities including Airdrie, Coatbridge, Greenock, Livingston and Paisley.
The Scottish Government plans to complete the one remaining unfinished section between Baillieston and Newhouse in the near future, providing three new motorway junctions to serve Coatbridge, Bargeddie and Holytown amongst others.
of Drumpellier near Coatbridge, North Lanarkshire, Scotland, and his father's second cousin, Anne Stirling.
The youngest of seven children, Graham grew up in poverty in Bargeddie, near Coatbridge.
Thomas " Tom " Clarke, CBE, JP ( born 10 January 1941 ) is a British Labour Party politician who has been a Member of Parliament ( MP ) since 1982 and has represented Coatbridge, Chryston and Bellshill since 2005.
Clarke was born in Coatbridge and was educated at All Saints Primary School in Airdrie and Columba High School in Coatbridge, followed by the Scottish College of Commerce in Glasgow.
The Coatbridge Town Council was replaced with the Monklands District Council in 1974 where Clarke continued to serve Coatbridge.
Clarke was selected to contest the 1982 Coatbridge and Airdrie by-election caused by the death of the sitting Labour MP James Dempsey.
Michael Connarty was born in Coatbridge.
Cunningham was born in Coatbridge and educated locally at the Columba High School ( in the same class as fellow Labour MP Tom Clarke ) before attending the Trade Union College in Tillicoultry.
He was educated at the Lesmahagow Higher Grade School School Road in Lesmahagow in Lanarkshire, Coatbridge College, Motherwell Technical College and University of Nottingham.
Between May and November 2001, Dumbarton shared Cliftonhill in Coatbridge with Albion Rovers.

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