Prehistory The earliest-known evidence of occupation in the area dates as far back as the late
Neolithic and Early
Bronze Age, as archaeological investigation has demonstrated that burial cairns in the district began as ceremonial or ritual sites of burial during the Neolithic, with the use of cup-marked, and other inscribed stones at key elevated sites, only to be later built upon with earth and re-used for burial into the Bronze Age. These findings have found further support through ongoing research indicating that many East Kilbride Cairns first noticed by the Reverend
David Ure in his
History of Rutherglen and East Kilbride (1793), are embedded, alongside other monuments, into a ritual landscape related to ancestor cults and relationships with key topographical features and annual solar events. A flint arrow head was discovered by Allan Forrest, a then child resident whilst groundworks were taking place in his family's garden at Glen Bervie, St Leonards in 1970 which later was identified as dating to 1500 BC (Bronze Age). Prehistoric – possibly Roman – graves have also been found near the Kype Water close to town of
Strathaven, some distance from East Kilbride but suggesting a Roman context for the wider area. Roman coins, footwear, and a Romano-British oil lamp have also been found in the area.
History East Kilbride traditionally takes its name from an
Irish saint named
St Bride (or Brigit), who may have founded a monastery for nuns and monks in
Kildare in
Leinster,
Ireland, in the 6th century.
Dál Riatan monks afterwards introduced her order to parts of Scotland, although the origins of the East Kilbride example - situated in the West of Scotland, is less certain due to a lack of early historical or linguistic involvement with Dalriada. The Scots anglicisation
kil takes its root from the Gaelic
cille, borrowed from the Latin for cell or chapel, of
St Brigit. the use of
cille to mark a probable dedication to an Irish saint in this part of Scotland is problematic due to linguistic dating issues, but some analysis suggests that churches with
cille place-names in the south west represent an early and short-lived influx of Irish church influence in or before the eighth century, which may or may not have involved the
Céilí Dé who were monastics. However, it has been suggested by Prof. T. O. Clancy and others that
cille place-names in the region, including the East Kilbride example, may instead relate to the main period of Gaelic cultural influx in the period post 900 AD. The original
parish church was located on what may have been a site of a pre-Christian significance, and tentatively the origin of the association with
St Brigit, since the site may be dedicated to the Celtic goddess
Brigid, whose traditions have been continued through the reverence of St Brigit brought on by the Celtic Church. However, this view is unpopular amongst academic audiences due to a complete lack of evidence supporting such earlier origins, thus making it an unfalsifiable concept. Additionally, the number of place-name dedications to St. Brigit in Scotland is further evidence of the possibility of Culdee activity in the southwest, if extrapolations are allowed from known areas of culdee activity. How this possibility relates to the relatively late dating-periods in the British kingdom of Strathclyde has not been explored owing to a lack of surviving written sources to provide insights for this geographical area.
Contemporary history In the early 18th century, the word 'East' was added to the name of East Kilbride, and 'West' to
West Kilbride to distinguish the towns from each other. East Kilbride grew from a small village of around 900 inhabitants in 1930 to become a
large burgh in 1967. The rapid industrialisation of the 20th century underpins this growth and left much of the working population throughout Scotland's
Central Belt, from Glasgow to Edinburgh, living in the housing stock built at the end of the previous century. The
Great War postponed any housing improvements, as did the
Treaty of Versailles and the period of post-war settlement it created. In turn, this was followed by the
Great Depression. After the
Second World War, Glasgow, already suffering from chronic housing shortages, incurred bomb damage from the war. In 1946, the Clyde Valley Regional Plan allocated sites where overspill satellite "new towns" could be constructed to help alleviate the housing shortage. Glasgow would also undertake the development of its peripheral housing estates. East Kilbride was the first of six
new towns in Scotland to be designated, in 1947, followed by
Glenrothes (1948),
Cumbernauld (1956),
Livingston (1962),
Irvine (1964) and
Stonehouse (1972), although Stonehouse new town was never built. The planned town has been subdivided into residential precincts, each with its own local shops, primary schools and community facilities. The housing precincts surround the shopping centre, which is bound by a
ring road. Industrial estates were concentrated on the outskirts of the town in northern, western and south-eastern directions (
Nerston,
College Milton and
Kelvin respectively). The Calderglen gorge bordering the eastern fringe of East Kilbride, was celebrated in a high number of printed works as a picturesque forest and 'magnificent in its grouping of craggy heights, sprinkled with trees and [...] the richly wooded and festooned valley', and with 'delightful cascades', and described as indescribable, or as 'the GRAND, the ROMANTIC, and BEAUTIFUL' –- the latter being the only part of David Ure's book where he emphasised the descriptive characteristics of a place in bold characters. The northern part of the gorge and adjoining Calderwood, the gorge's namesake, was the home of an ancient family known as the 'Maxwells of Calderwood' who resided in
Calderwood Castle, and were the oldest branch of the Maxwells of Pollok. The remnants of Calderwood Castle were demolished in 1951 and only a few parts of the structure remain.
Calderglen Heritage formally constituted in early 2017 as a body to protect, record, and restore local and national interest in the areas of the former Calderwood and Torrance estates of Calderglen. The story of how workers at the
Rolls-Royce factory in East Kilbride prevented engines for military jets being serviced and supplied between 1974 until 1978 to the
Chilean military dictatorship is told in the 2018-released documentary,
Nae Pasaran. The factory was scheduled for closure in 2017 and was subsequently demolished and the land (at
Nerston Industrial Estate) used for housing; a monument consisting of one of the unrepaired engines was installed at the town's
South Lanarkshire College in 2019. ==Geography==