Glasgow

The Merchant City: A Self Guided Audio Tour of Glasgow

Glasgow, United Kingdom
From
$8.99
Date
Click to select
Free Cancellation. Read More
Overview
Duration
1h 20min
Languages
English, English
Voucher type
E-Ticket
What To Expect

Experience the magic of GPS on this self-guided walking tour through Glasgow.

Three hundred years ago the wider Glasgow area was mostly countryside, with the Cathedral at its centre. The city began to change in the 1500s when Scotland became a Protestant country. Lucrative pilgrimages to Glasgow that had long been made by Roman Catholics ended, replaced by tobacco from America.

You’ll hear how Glasgow went from surviving to thriving, transitioning from the tobacco trade to cotton and, later, heavy engineering to eventually become the burgeoning ‘Second City’ of the Empire. How did these merchants become wealthy beyond our imaginings? Slavery.

We’ll explore Glasgow’s roles in slavery and its abolition while we walk the streets of the Merchant City district, discovering how the city developed from the 1600s until today. Everywhere you turn, from George Square to the Royal Exchange Square, you’ll encounter the wealth of Glasgow’s merchants written in stone.

What to remember

Important info

Service animals allowed. Public transportation options are available nearby. Suitable for all physical fitness levels

included
What's included
included-item
Get unlimited, lifetime use of this tour, before your booking date and after it. The virtual playback option, so you can listen to this tour like an audiobook from anywhere. Offline access to audio, maps, and geodata. Flexibility to explore at your own pace with a self-guided GPS tour. Directions to the starting point so that when you’re in the right place, the tour will start
Cancellation Policy
can-cancel You can cancel your tour until a day in advance
Provider
VoiceMap Audio Tours
Meeting Point

The statue of Walter Scott is in the centre of George Square; the tour starts at the statue. George Square is in the centre of the city, beside Queen Street Station. It is easily reached on foot, by bus, or by train.