Bathgate
Bathgate is a town in West Lothian, Scotland, situated on the M8 motorway approximately 5 miles (8 km) west of Livingston and 18 miles (29 km) southwest of Edinburgh.[1] With a population of 23,600 as of mid-2020, it ranks as the second-largest settlement in the council area after Livingston.[2] Historically, Bathgate emerged as an industrial hub in the 19th century, driven by coal mining and the pioneering shale oil extraction processes that fueled Scotland's early oil boom, including the establishment of Young's Paraffin Light and Mineral Oil Company, which produced paraffin oil, wax, and byproducts essential to emerging industries.[3][1] Following the decline of heavy industry in the 20th century, the town has evolved into a commuter settlement, benefiting from its strategic position in the Central Belt and proximity to major employment centers in Edinburgh and Glasgow, while hosting modern business parks and transport links such as the reopened Bathgate railway station.[1][4]
Geography
Location and Administrative Setting
Bathgate is a town in West Lothian, Scotland, United Kingdom, situated at approximately 55°54′N 3°39′W.[5] It lies in the Central Lowland belt, along the strategic M8 motorway corridor that links Edinburgh and Glasgow. The town is positioned about 19 km (12 miles) west of Edinburgh and 45 km (28 miles) east of Glasgow, facilitating strong transport connections to both major cities.[6][7] Administratively, Bathgate falls within the West Lothian council area, one of Scotland's 32 unitary authorities responsible for local governance, including services such as planning, education, and community development.[8] The town constitutes the core of the Bathgate ward, West Lothian's third-largest electoral division by population, encompassing settlements like Boghall and serving as a hub for council facilities, including the Jim Walker Partnership Centre.[9][10] Bathgate's location within this framework positions it as a key commuter and industrial node in the region, benefiting from proximity to the national motorway network while under the jurisdiction of West Lothian Council headquartered in Livingston.[8]
Physical Features and Environment
Bathgate occupies a position within the lowland hills of West Lothian, Scotland, at an average elevation of 167 meters above sea level, with town center elevations around 141 meters.[11][12] The surrounding terrain features gently rolling landscapes characteristic of the region's Lowland Hills and Ridges character area.[13] The Bathgate Hills form a prominent range of low, rolling hills to the north and east of the town, extending toward Linlithgow and reaching a maximum height of 315 meters at Cairnpapple Hill, creating a distinctive rugged skyline visible from the surrounding lowlands.[14][15] Geologically, these hills consist of rocks dating back over 330 million years, originating from volcanic activity and sedimentary deposits when the area lay near the equator as part of a vast continent's edge, with evidence of ancient lava flows, fossils, and mineral resources like limestone that shaped local quarrying history.[16][17] Hydrologically, the town is traversed by the Bog Burn, a small river that flows through former industrial areas now targeted for ecological restoration, supporting local biodiversity and flood management within initiatives like the Bathgate Meadows Nature Park.[18] The broader environment reflects a transition from industrial exploitation—marked by mining and shale extraction—to regeneration efforts enhancing wildlife habitats, woodlands, and green spaces amid the hilly backdrop.[19][20]History
Pre-Medieval and Medieval Origins (Pre-1100–1500)
The name Bathgate derives from Brittonic *baedd coed, meaning "boar wood," with the settlement first recorded around 1160 as Batchet or Bathket.[3] Prior to the 12th century, evidence of organized settlement in the area is scant, though the region formed part of the early medieval Kingdom of Alba, with potential prehistoric activity inferred from broader West Lothian archaeology but lacking site-specific findings for Bathgate itself. Bathgate enters written records in a charter issued by King Malcolm IV (r. 1153–1165), confirming the grant of the church of Bathket and associated lands to Holyrood Abbey, indicating an established ecclesiastical presence by the mid-12th century.[21][22] The church, located at Kirkton north of the modern town center, served as the settlement's focal point, supporting a modest community likely engaged in agriculture and early resource extraction, including coal mining documented in royal charters from the period.[23] A royal castle emerged south of the town center by the early 14th century, serving as the caput of the barony of Bathgate, which held strategic importance during the Wars of Independence.[3][24] In 1319, English forces presented a cleric to the church amid occupation, and by 1323, Edward II resumed baronial lands before their restoration to Scottish control.[24] The barony passed to Walter Stewart, High Steward of Scotland, as part of the dowry of Marjorie Bruce circa 1315, with remnants of a 14th-century structure attributable to his tenure surviving into modern times.[23][25] In 1327, Holyrood Abbey transferred the church to Newbattle Abbey, reflecting monastic consolidations under David II (r. 1329–1371).[22] By the late medieval period, Bathgate functioned as a barony with fairs and feudal obligations, though it remained a small rural center without burgh status until later centuries; royal visits, such as those during the 1335 English negotiations, underscore its administrative role.[24] The castle saw use into the 15th century before declining, with the barony granted to figures like Sir Alexander Seton in 1336, amid ongoing Anglo-Scottish conflicts shaping local land tenure.[24] Archaeological traces, including the church ruins, provide physical evidence of this era's continuity.[23]Early Modern Period (17th–18th Centuries)
In 1606, silver ore was discovered at Hilderston, near Bathgate, by a local collier named Sandy Maund while prospecting for coal on lands owned by Sir Thomas Hamilton of Binniehill.[26] This led to the establishment of mines, known as King Jamie's Silver Mines, which operated intermittently from 1606 to 1614 under the patronage of King James VI; German specialists were imported in 1608 to extract and refine the high-quality ore, yielding significant but short-lived output before exhaustion and economic challenges halted operations.[27][28] Bathgate was formally constituted as a burgh of barony in 1661 by charter from Charles II, conferring privileges for local governance, trade, and markets; the town subsequently held seven annual fairs, primarily for cattle and goods, fostering modest commercial activity in an otherwise agrarian setting.[1][29] Religious strife characterized the mid-17th century, amid the broader Covenanting movement resisting episcopal impositions. In April 1673, James Davie, a local adherent to Presbyterian conventicles, was fatally shot by government dragoons led by Captain John Heron during a field preaching assembly at Blackdub farm in Bathgate parish; this incident reflected enforcement of the Pentland Rising aftermath and suppression of nonconformist gatherings.[30][31] Davie's tablestone grave in the old Bathgate cemetery east of the town center commemorates his death for upholding Scotland's covenanted Reformation principles.[32] Huguenot Protestant refugees from France settled in Bathgate during the 17th century, fleeing post-Revocation of the Edict of Nantes persecutions; they introduced specialized weaving skills, with figures like the Jarvey family (commemorated in Jarvey Street) contributing to early textile production.[1] By the 18th century, handloom weaving expanded as a primary economic pursuit, employing households in cottage industries and yielding relative prosperity through linen and woolen goods, though still within a small-scale rural framework supplemented by nascent coal extraction.[33][34] The settlement's population and infrastructure grew modestly eastward, with mining peripheries increasingly integrated into expanding streets, but Bathgate retained its character as a peripheral lowland burgh until fuller industrialization.[35]Industrial Expansion (19th Century)
The arrival of the railway to Bathgate in 1849 enhanced connectivity to broader markets, enabling efficient transport of raw materials and finished goods, which catalyzed industrial growth in the town.[36] Bathgate's industrial expansion in the mid-19th century was spearheaded by the shale oil sector, with James Young establishing the world's first commercial oil refinery there around 1850 after patenting a distillation process for extracting oil from torbanite and coal in 1850.[37][38] Young partnered with Edward Binney and Edward Meldrum to build the Bathgate Oil Works (also known as the Paraffin Works or Chemical Works), where bituminous shale was heated in retorts to yield crude oil, which was then refined into products such as paraffin wax, illuminating oil, lubricating oil, and naphtha.[38] By 1873, the facility processed 236,379 tons of bituminous shale annually, producing 1,500,000 gallons of illuminating oil, 250,000 gallons of lubricating oil, 1,000 tons of crude paraffin, and 150,000 gallons of naphtha, alongside 2,000 tons of sulphuric acid used in refining.[38] These operations positioned Scotland as the world's leading oil producer in the 1850s, with Bathgate at the epicenter, employing 500 to 700 workers locally and driving economic prosperity through exports of paraffin lamps and oils to markets including America.[37][38] Complementing shale oil, coal mining expanded using local seams like Boghead coal, which was hydrocarbon-rich and suitable for both fuel and oil extraction precursors, with collieries such as those at Mid Street and surrounding estates active throughout the century.[39][40] The industry's growth led to Bathgate's population tripling and the town shifting from stagnation to bustle, supported by ancillary activities like brickworks tied to mining.[41] In the latter 19th century, iron and steel manufacturing gained traction, leveraging abundant local coal and occasional iron ore deposits, with foundries and steelworks emerging as key employers alongside refining and collieries.[33][41] The Bathgate Oil Works partnership dissolved in 1864, with Young acquiring full control, though a fire in 1862 had caused £1,000 in damage; production continued until closure in 1887, by which time the shale sector had mined tens of millions of tons regionally, leaving lasting waste heaps known as bings.[38][37] This era cemented Bathgate's role in Scotland's resource-based industrialization, though dependent on finite local deposits.[41]20th Century Growth, War Efforts, and Decline
In the early 20th century, Bathgate transitioned from declining coal mining and heavy extractive industries toward manufacturing sectors, particularly chemicals and engineering, as collieries and quarries diminished in viability. This shift supported modest population stability amid broader regional industrial restructuring, with the town's engineering firms leveraging prior iron foundry expertise for component production.[3] During World War I, Bathgate's residual steelworks and brickworks contributed to Allied material demands, aligning with Scotland's steel output expansion from 1,199 tons in 1873 to peaks supporting wartime needs by 1914–1918, though local production remained secondary to larger Clyde Valley operations.[42] In World War II, the area's engineering base adapted for ancillary production, including fireclay and brick for construction, while government policies preserved capacity amid national mobilization; however, no major munitions or vehicle plants operated locally until postwar developments.[43] Postwar growth accelerated with the 1961 opening of the British Motor Corporation (BMC) commercial vehicle assembly plant, established under UK regional policy to offset heavy industry losses and create jobs in a high-unemployment zone.[44] Renamed under British Leyland, the facility peaked at over 6,000 employees by the 1970s, assembling trucks and tractors with Europe's largest machine tool concentration, driving economic expansion and population influx.[45] Decline set in during the late 1970s amid British Leyland's rationalization, with workforce cuts from 29,000 company-wide and Bathgate-specific redundancies exceeding 1,800 direct jobs by 1984–1986, as truck assembly ended in mid-1985 and engine production in 1986.[46] Concurrently, the 1982 Plessey capacitor plant closure prompted a worker occupation by 220 women, protesting 700 job losses in electronics manufacturing, though it failed to reverse shutdown.[47] These events, coupled with mining rundown, triggered socioeconomic contraction, population stagnation, and out-migration, marking Bathgate's deindustrialization phase.[48][49]Post-2000 Regeneration and Modern Challenges
The reopening of the Airdrie–Bathgate rail link on December 12, 2010, marked a significant infrastructure regeneration effort, with the £300 million project restoring passenger services dormant for over 50 years and integrating electrified lines connecting Bathgate to Glasgow and Edinburgh.[50] This enhancement facilitated improved commuting and freight options, contributing to local economic revitalization by encouraging investment and increasing passenger usage, particularly at Bathgate station, where services boosted accessibility.[51] Outcome evaluations confirmed the link's role in supporting regional connectivity and indirect wage benefits for residents in West Lothian.[52] Commercial regeneration included the redevelopment of the former Motorola facility in 2003, transforming the site into viable industrial space amid broader efforts to repurpose post-industrial land.[53] The Pyramids Business Park, encompassing 93 acres with over 207,000 square feet of office space and 137,000 square feet of distribution facilities, has evolved to host advanced sectors, including a 2021 sale enabling expansion into film and television production with planning approval for 11,148 square meters of studio space.[54][55] These initiatives aim to diversify the economy beyond traditional manufacturing, attracting creative industries to generate employment.[56] Environmental projects have complemented urban renewal, such as the Bathgate Burn restoration led by West Lothian Council, which seeks to rehabilitate the waterway into a nature park enhancing biodiversity, public access, and community engagement.[57] Similarly, the Bathgate Meadows Nature Park initiative, a five-year effort, focuses on restoring the Bog Burn and fostering sustainable community connections to green spaces.[19] Despite these advancements, Bathgate contends with persistent socioeconomic challenges, including pockets of multiple deprivation as outlined in the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD) 2020, where certain data zones rank among Scotland's 15% most deprived in domains like employment and income.[2] The town's designation as a regeneration priority stems from its relatively low socioeconomic status, reflecting enduring legacies of deindustrialization that limit broad-based prosperity even as targeted projects proceed.[19] West Lothian's overall profile shows 22 data zones in the national 15% most deprived, underscoring uneven progress in addressing inequality.[58]Demography
Population Dynamics and Growth
Bathgate's population remained modest in the early 19th century, reflecting its status as a small parish town prior to widespread industrialization. The 1801 census recorded 2,513 residents, increasing gradually to 3,593 by 1831 amid limited agricultural and local trade activities.[59] This slow expansion accelerated dramatically during the mid-19th century industrial boom, particularly with the discovery and exploitation of oil shale deposits, drawing workers to local chemical and manufacturing enterprises. By 1861, the population had surged to 10,134, more than tripling in three decades, before stabilizing slightly with 10,129 in 1871 and a minor decline to 9,450 by 1881 due to fluctuating industry demands and migration patterns.[59][60] The late 19th and early 20th centuries saw modest net growth, reaching 11,359 by 1891, supported by continued resource extraction but tempered by periodic economic downturns in coal and shale sectors.[59] Post-World War II deindustrialization, including closures of major employers like the Imperial Oil Shale Works in the 1950s and 1960s, contributed to stagnation, with the town designated a Special Development Area to attract new investment amid broader regional depopulation trends in heavy industry locales.[61] However, proximity to Edinburgh and improving transport links began fostering commuter-driven recovery by the late 20th century.| Census Year | Population |
|---|---|
| 1801 | 2,513 |
| 1831 | 3,593 |
| 1861 | 10,134 |
| 1871 | 10,129 |
| 1881 | 9,450 |
| 1891 | 11,359 |
| 1991 | 15,450 |
| 2001 | 20,514 |
| 2011 | 21,640 |
| 2022 | 22,222 |
Socioeconomic Composition
Bathgate exhibits a mixed socioeconomic profile, characterized by working-class roots tied to its industrial past, with notable pockets of deprivation amid broader West Lothian averages that rank moderately on national scales. According to the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD) 2020, the town includes four data zones in the 20% most deprived in Scotland—three in Bathgate proper and one in adjacent Boghall—with one Bathgate zone falling in the bottom 10% overall.[65] This contrasts with West Lothian's overall position, where 35 data zones are in the most deprived quintile, but highlights localized challenges in areas like Bathgate East and Boghall. Earlier data from 2015 indicated an income deprivation rate of 14% in the Bathgate ward, slightly below the 16% for both West Lothian and Scotland.[63] Income disparities are evident in child poverty metrics, with 46.5% of children in Bathgate and Boghall living in low-income families in 2021/22, more than double the West Lothian average of 19.9%; Bathgate East specifically reaches 50.5%.[65] Employment deprivation aligns closely with national norms in older assessments (13% rate, matching West Lothian and Scotland), but recent claimant counts reveal strains: 14.7% in Bathgate East and 25.0% in Boghall as of February 2024, exceeding the council's 16.8%.[65][63] Foodbank voucher distribution underscores this, with Bathgate and Boghall accounting for 15% of West Lothian's total (1,637 vouchers in 2022/23), including higher proportions for children (9.4% of local beneficiaries).[65] Education outcomes for school leavers in 2022/23 show Bathgate at 21% entering employment (versus 22% West Lothian) and 26% higher education (versus 25%), but with elevated negative destinations at 14% (versus 10% council-wide); Boghall fares worse at 29% employment and 19% higher education.[65] Housing and health indicators further reflect socioeconomic pressures, including denser housing stock and elevated rates of alcohol-related hospital admissions (1,106 per 100,000 in Bathgate and Boghall versus 495 West Lothian-wide), alongside life expectancy gaps of up to 10.48 years below national averages in deprived sub-areas.[65][63] These patterns suggest a composition dominated by routine and semi-routine occupations, with resilience in some metrics offset by persistent deprivation in eastern and peripheral zones.Economy
Foundations in Resource Extraction and Innovation
Bathgate's economic foundations were rooted in coal extraction, with documented pits operational from the early 19th century onward, including at least three within the town itself—two on sites now occupied by buildings in Mid Street.[66] These operations supplied local industries and fueled early industrial activities amid Scotland's broader coal boom during the [Industrial Revolution](/page/Industrial Revolution), though output remained modest compared to larger West Lothian collieries.[67] A pivotal innovation emerged in the mid-19th century through chemist James Young, who established Britain's—and the world's—first commercial mineral oil refinery in Bathgate in 1851.[68] Young's patented retorting process, granted in the UK and US that year, distilled paraffin oil from bituminous coal and later from torbanite (a local oil shale variant), transforming waste byproducts into valuable lubricants and illuminants essential for machinery and lighting.[68] [37] This site, developed with partners Edward Binney and Edward Meldrum, marked the inception of commercial-scale shale oil production, predating widespread crude oil drilling and positioning Bathgate as a hub for chemical innovation.[38] The refinery's success catalyzed regional resource extraction, spurring shale mining across West Lothian by adapting Young's coal-derived techniques to abundant local deposits, which yielded higher oil volumes.[69] By the 1860s, expansions like the Bathgate Oil Works processed thousands of tons annually, employing hundreds and establishing distillation as a foundational technology still influential in modern oil shale methods.[70] [69] This blend of extraction and process refinement not only diversified Bathgate's economy beyond coal but also exemplified early industrial ingenuity in converting low-value resources into high-demand commodities.[38]Mid-20th Century Peaks and Subsequent Deindustrialization
In the mid-20th century, Bathgate experienced industrial peaks driven primarily by the establishment of the British Motor Corporation's (BMC) commercial vehicle assembly plant in 1961, which later became part of British Leyland. Opened as part of UK government regional policy to combat unemployment in West Lothian—then at 4.8% in 1960—the facility focused on truck and tractor production, achieving daily outputs of up to 74 trucks in its main assembly block and exporting 45% of trucks and 80% of tractors by 1966.[44] Employment at the plant surged from 2,300 workers in 1962 to a peak of over 6,000 by the late 1960s and early 1970s, with detailed figures showing 4,579 employees in 1964 and 5,009 in 1966, including a mix of skilled machinists, semi-skilled assemblers, and apprentices.[44][45] This expansion diversified Bathgate's economy beyond declining coal and shale mining, attracting workers from regions like Glasgow and fostering local infrastructure such as modern housing.[44] The plant's growth reflected broader post-war optimism in Scotland's manufacturing sector, supported by incentives that positioned Bathgate as a hub for advanced assembly with one of Europe's largest concentrations of machine tools by the 1970s.[45] Production boomed amid demand for commercial vehicles, but vulnerabilities emerged from dependency on English Midlands supply chains, resulting in significant losses such as 8,921 vehicles unassembled in 1974 due to parts shortages.[44] Strikes, including one involving 1,800 machinists in 1978, highlighted labor tensions amid national industry rationalizations following BMC's mergers into British Leyland.[44] Deindustrialization accelerated in the late 1970s and 1980s, with the Bathgate plant facing phased closures: tractor assembly ended in 1982 with 850 redundancies, followed by a May 1984 announcement of 1,800 job losses and final shutdown in June 1986.[44][71] Contributing factors included British Leyland's inefficiencies, global competition in vehicle manufacturing, and shifts away from branch-plant models under changing regional policies.[44] Concurrent closures, such as the Plessey capacitor factory in 1982—which had peaked at 2,400 jobs in 1973—exacerbated the downturn, prompting worker occupations by women employees to protest the loss of 330 remaining positions.[72] Overall, these events drove Bathgate's unemployment to 19.3% by 1984, with male rates approaching 50% in manufacturing-dependent areas, leading to retail decline, population outflow, and a "ghost town" effect as economic activity shifted to nearby Livingston New Town.[44][47]Current Sectors, Regeneration Initiatives, and Critiques
Bathgate's economy has shifted towards logistics, distribution, and advanced manufacturing following deindustrialization, with the Pyramids Business Park serving as a key hub providing over 207,000 square feet of office space and 137,000 square feet of distribution facilities.[73][54] Major employers in the area include distribution centers for retailers such as Morrisons, ALDI, and Amazon near Bathgate, contributing to West Lothian's strengths in logistics and food processing.[73][74] The park has also attracted media production, with a £2 million film and TV studio development announced in 2021, including facilities for stages and support spaces.[56][55] Broader West Lothian sectors influencing Bathgate include life sciences, engineering, construction, and retail, with health and construction as leading employment areas.[75][76] West Lothian's unemployment claimant count stood at 2.7% in April 2024, below Scotland's 3.1% and the UK's 3.8%, indicating relative labor market stability.[77] Regeneration efforts in Bathgate have focused on environmental restoration and urban improvements. The Bathgate Water Regeneration Project, launched in 2024, aims to revitalize the waterway and surrounding greenspaces through multi-partner environmental initiatives linking housing developments to the town center.[78][79] Bathgate Meadows Nature Park represents a five-year, multi-million-pound scheme to enhance biodiversity, heritage, and community access, proceeding despite a £17 million National Lottery funding rejection in 2025.[19][80] Earlier projects include the 2017 George Street pedestrian precinct upgrade to boost town center footfall.[81] The Scottish Co-operative Discovery Centre advanced in 2025 with conservation planning for historical sites.[82] Critiques of these initiatives highlight implementation gaps and funding vulnerabilities. Local councillors reported in 2020 a lack of access to detailed regeneration proposals and irregular updates, raising concerns over transparency in town center plans.[83] The Bathgate Meadows project faced scrutiny after losing major funding, prompting questions on financial sustainability despite council commitment to proceed.[80] Town center management has grappled with post-pandemic recovery, cost-of-living pressures, and perceptions of declining safety, as challenged by local representatives against official surveys in 2023.[84][85] Despite low unemployment, persistent socioeconomic challenges in West Lothian, including demographic shifts and in-work poverty, underscore limitations in translating regeneration into broad-based prosperity.[86][87]Governance and Politics
Local Government Structure
Bathgate is administered within the West Lothian unitary council area by West Lothian Council, a single-tier local authority established in 1996 under the Local Government etc. (Scotland) Act 1994, which replaced Scotland's previous two-tier system of regional and district councils with 32 unitary authorities responsible for all local services such as education, housing, planning, roads, and social care.[8] The town is represented politically through Ward 8 (Bathgate), one of the council's nine multi-member wards, which elects four councillors to the full body of 33 members serving five-year terms.[9][88] Elections employ the single transferable vote (STV) system, implemented across Scottish local government in 2007 to achieve greater proportionality by allowing voters to rank candidates in order of preference, with votes transferred from eliminated candidates until ward quotas are met.[89][90] Council leadership consists of a leader selected by councillors, who oversees strategic direction alongside executive members managing portfolios like corporate policy, resources, education, and community services, with decisions processed through bodies such as the Council Executive.[91] Operational delivery falls to the Chief Executive, supported by three Depute Chief Executives responsible for distinct service clusters: education and planning (including economic development); corporate, operational, and housing services (encompassing roads, waste, and customer support); and health and social care (in partnership with NHS Lothian).[92][93] Localized coordination in Bathgate occurs via the Bathgate and Boghall Locality Plan, developed since 2018 by partnerships of council officers, elected members, and community representatives to address ward-specific priorities like service integration and community engagement.[65]Electoral History and Policy Impacts
Bathgate constitutes Ward 8 in West Lothian Council, which elects four councillors via the single transferable vote system introduced in Scottish local elections in 2007.[94] The ward has consistently returned a mix of Labour and Scottish National Party (SNP) representatives, reflecting broader competition between these parties in post-industrial West Lothian communities, with occasional Conservative success. In the 2017 local election on 4 May, held amid national debates on independence and economic recovery, Labour secured two seats (Harry Cartmill elected at stage 1 with 1,646 first-preference votes; John McGinty at stage 7), SNP one (William Hannah Boyle at stage 1 with 1,554 votes), and Conservatives one (Charles Kennedy at stage 7).[95] Turnout was 45.1%, with a quota of 1,539 votes required for election.[95]| Candidate | Party | First-Preference Votes | Elected Stage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Harry Cartmill | Scottish Labour | 1,646 | 1 |
| William Hannah Boyle | SNP | 1,554 | 1 |
| Charles Kennedy | Scottish Conservative and Unionist | 1,379 | 7 |
| John McGinty | Scottish Labour | 1,152 | 7 |
| Candidate | Party | First-Preference Votes | Elected Stage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Harry Cartmill | Scottish Labour | 2,496 | 1 |
| William Hannah Boyle | SNP | 1,806 | 1 |
| Pauline Stafford | SNP | 1,190 | 3 |
| Tony Pearson | Scottish Labour | 375 | 8 |