The etymology of the name is probably from the common Scottish surname Moody. Several old documents show Moodiesburn with various spellings including maps by Richardson, Forrest, and
William Roy. Moodiesburn (or Mudiesburn) was formerly part of the parish of
Cadder. The New Statistical Accounts recorded 30 families and 143 people in 1836. In 1846 there were reported to be 35 houses with 220 people living in them. Towards the end of the 19th century the population fell to as low as 150. The village was developed in the 20th century with employment in
coal mining and around
psychiatric institution Stoneyetts Hospital. In the 1930s, wooden houses were constructed on the estate of Gartferry House.
Auchengeich mining disaster In September 1959, 47 men lost their lives in a coal mine near the village of Moodiesburn when a faulty fan purifying the air in the colliery went on fire due to an electrical fault. The men were in bogies travelling to the coal face to start work, and due to the intense smoke they were abandoned just a few hundred metres from safety. The mine was eventually flooded to put out the fire; there was only one survivor from the crews. The
mining accident was one of the worst within the UK in the 20th century, widowing 41 women and leaving 76 children without fathers. The First Minister of Scotland
Alex Salmond unveiled a memorial on 18 September 2009 at Moodiesburn. Its centrepiece, a bronze statue of a miner, was stolen within weeks but replaced the following year after a fundraising drive.
Norman Buchan wrote a song, "Auchengeich", about the disaster, recorded by
Dick Gaughan and
The Easy Club. Aftermath and economic decline Local mining declined in the years following the disaster. Stoneyetts ceased operation in 1992, followed by
Scottish Power and Reekie Plant Hire sites closing in the latter half of the decade. A 1999 article in
The Observer lamented Moodiesburn's lack of local employment, as well as the increasing disaffection of its younger residents: Auchengeich sewage works and the Moodiesburn House Hotel – previously the Bedlay Dowager House – were closed in 2003 and 2008, respectively. Two career options remain in the area: landscaping product supplier Charcon Scotland (part of
Aggregate Industries), and
food processing company
Devro. ==Landmarks==