1. Bob Bee
Head up Castle Street towards the multi storey carpark on the right. Look for the former Royal Glasgow Asylum for the Blind building which opened in 1828 and boasts the only facade clock tower in Europe. The clock don’t work. Can you see Bob? He likes a snack in the Little Royal Café. Now turn and head back down
2. Betty Bee
On your left is the entrance to the first ornamental cemetery in Glasgow, St Mungo’s New Burial Ground which opened in 1832. Here you might spot Betty. During the cholera outbreaks, there were many pit burials with much overcrowding and when the Royal was redeveloped, skeletons from cholera victims were discovered.
3. Barney Bee
Keep walking down Castle Street. Joseph Lister is famous for discovering that wound needed to be kept clean to maximise their chance of healing. Can you spy Barney and the plaque dedicated to Lister situated on the site of the former ward 24, where he made his discoveries in 1865?
4. Belinda Bee
As you head towards High Street, look for the former Royal Gatehouse Casualty Department. In 1954, Sir Edmund Hillary popped in to have his vaccination scar re dressed and the nurses are reported to have been “swooning”. Sir Edmund climbed to the summit of Mount Everest in 1953, and he was also a keen beekeeper.
5. Billy Bee
Look for the gate on your left just past the hospital entrance. Here is the FOGRI medicinal garden where there are lots of bee friendly flowers. Come in if we are open. You can see Billy through the gate. He loves to collect pollen here.
6. Barbara Bee
Keep walking. On the corner at Cathedral Precinct, you can see the Sentry Box. Once used to guard entry to and from Cathedral Precinct, it now forms part of our medicinal garden. Barbara is usually not far from her friend, Billy (45).
7. Belle Bee
Cross the road when it is safe to do so and have a look at Provand’s Lordship, the oldest house in Glasgow, built in 1471. Belle often spots the gardeners for a visit. You can find her in the ornate outside Provand’s Lordship.
8. Barry Bee
Keep walking down High Street. Can you spot the Barony Hall? Barry is not here though. Keep going and look at the magnificent Grecian’s community garden maintained by volunteers and situated on the site of the former hydraulic Pumping Station for Glasgow. The pump supplied high pressure water to buildings in Glasgow to work devices like lifts. Barry likes it here.
9. Birdie Bee
Look across the road. Can you see Birdie, near the wall? This is no ordinary wall. It is all that remains of the former Duke Street prison, one of 8 prisons in Glasgow which opened in 1798 as a mixed prison. Between 1882 and 1955, it was a women’s prison, men went to Barlinnie. Hoxone was superintendent of the prison until 1902 when he became Medical Superintendent at The Royal.
10. Bailey Bee
Now turn and head back towards the Royal. Cross over at the traffic lights and head into Cathedral Square, past the police box towards Cathedral House. It was built in 1896 as a hotel for women inmates released from Duke Street Prison. When the prison closed, Glasgow Cathedral used Cathedral House for choir practice. More recently Cathedral House has been a restaurant and a hotel.