Basic Biographical Details Name: | James Corrie | Designation: | | Born: | c. 1823 | Died: | 16 August 1887 | Bio Notes: | James Corrie was born c.1823, the son of Richard Corrie, farmer and his wife Mary Caven. He married Helen Chalmers and commenced independent practice relatively late, in 1874 or 1875 in partnership with James Jackson Craig at 125 West Regent Street, Glasgow. In the difficult conditions after the failure of the City of Glasgow Bank in 1879 the partnership was dissolved, Craig reopening at 175 St Vincent Street and Corrie at 35 Oxford Street, moving to 131 in the following year.
Corrie died of heart disease at his home 98 Govanhill Street, Glasgow on 16 August 1887. | Private and Business AddressesThe following private or business addresses are associated with this : | | Address | Type | Date from | Date to | Notes | | 125, West Regent Street, Glasgow, Scotland | Business | 1874 or 1875 | 1879 | | | 35, Oxford Street, Glasgow, Scotland | Business | 1879 | 1880 | | | 131, Oxford Street, Glasgow, Scotland | Business | 1880 | | | | 98, Govanhill Street, Glasgow, Scotland | Private | 1887 * | | |
* earliest date known from documented sources.
Employment and TrainingEmployersThe following individuals or organisations employed or trained this (click on an item to view details): | | Name | Date from | Date to | Position | Notes | | Corrie & Craig | 1874 or 1875 | 1879 | Partner | |
Buildings and DesignsThis was involved with the following buildings or structures from the date specified (click on an item to view details): | | Date started | Building name | Town, district or village | Island | City or county | Country | Notes | | 1875 | North Woodside Free Church | | | Glasgow | Scotland | |
ReferencesBibliographic ReferencesThe following books contain references to this : | | Author(s) | Date | Title | Part | Publisher | Notes | | Post Office Directories | | | | | |
Archive ReferencesThe following archives hold material relating to this : | | Source | Archive Name | Source Catalogue No. | Notes | | Professor David M Walker personal archive | Professor David M Walker, notes and collection of archive material | | Research by Iain Paterson |
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