Gorgie is recorded in 12th century
charters of
Holyrood Abbey, when in 1236 it came into the possession of Sir William Livingston. In 1799, the Cox family who owned a mill bought most of the former estate from the residual Livingston family. They developed a glue factory on the site, which was redeveloped under a new
Post Office Telecommunications telephone exchange in 1969. From 1527, the landowners lived in Gorgie House, situated on Alexander Drive. Its remnants were demolished in 1937, to allow construction of the Pooles Roxy
cinema and some housing.
Industry With grain whisky consumption growing in the industrialised and railway connected
Victorian era, independent
whisky blenders needed access to a high quality and high volume producer of grain whisky spirit. In 1885, major shareholders
Andrew Usher,
William Sanderson and
John M. Crabbie, with numerous other whisky-blenders as shareholders, established the
North British Distillery Company, which bought the former pig farm, and began developing a distillery. The distillery gained access to the
Edinburgh Suburban and Southside Junction Railway, which began developing a railway station in Gorgie. This brought about the 1888 development of Stewart Terrace, Wardlaw Place, Wardlaw Street, . The
tenement flats of Tynecastle Terrace that go halfway to mcleod street built 1898 ( date stone above the bathroom window at the top of the close next door) one of the last rows of tenements to be built in Gorgie it's joined onto the oldest row of tenements halfway along the block at Newton St on Gorgie Rd for which there is a date stone '1886' if one were to look up. There’s more date stones on three buildings at the junction of Wheatfield St, Gorgie Rd and Wardlaw Place. The south side of Gorgie Road 1887-1899 and north side 1896-1899 west of Newton Street. although Gorgie, west of Robertson Avenue, did not lose its rural character until the early 1900s. Though the factory burned down in 1894, it was rebuilt the same year. It is one of the claimed sites of where the
digestive biscuit was invented. The site was closed in 1969, St. Martin of Tours church is in the
Anglican Communion Gorgie Gospel Hall belongs to the
Open Brethren Christian tradition. In 1908, what is now Gorgie Mission Church was opened. Since 2008,
Destiny Church, Edinburgh has been meeting in the converted former Bingo Hall. ==Present==