- Tongland, (Gang Area)
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Tongland could also refer to a village inDumfries and Galloway "Tongland was a local
nickname for the area ofCalton, Glasgow controlled in the 1960s by a violent Scottishteenage gang called the Tongs.Tongland appears in
Gillies MacKinnon 's 1995 movie "Small Faces", set in the 1960s. [cite web |url=http://www.screenonline.org.uk/film/id/522864/index.html|title= British Film Institute page on 'Small Faces'] . The Tongs' and other gangs' power over the area and their decline in the 1970s is described inJaney Godley 's 2005autobiography "Handstands in the Dark". ["Handstands in the Dark", pub 2005, Chapter 10]The phrase and widespread local
graffiti "Tongs Ya Bass" arguably became Glasgow’s unofficial motto in the Sixties and Seventies.cite web |url=http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/opinion.cfm?id=1028392004|title= The Scotsman, 2nd September, 2004] The word "bass" was not an abbreviation of "bastard", but a corruption of the ancientScottish Gaelic expression for "battle and die".The Gang
The Tongs started in
Easterhouse . They took their name from thesecret societies active inChina ,Vietnam ,Singapore and theUnited States . The most famous Glasgow Tong was the "San Toy" named after a battle between the French and the Chinese in Vietnam. The Tongs financed themselves by levyingprotection money on local shops. They would mark out their territories withgraffiti such as "San Toy Ya Bass".The Calton Tongs adopted the title 'Tongs" after some of the local Calton youths attended a movie called 'Terror of the Tongs ' in a picture hall near Fielden Street in the East End of Glasgow During the 1960s' ..The first person to shout 'Tongs ya Bas' was 'Terror McCabe' who had been in attendance at the movie 'Terror of the Tongs , he also adopted the name 'Terror ' from the movie......... During the late 1970s ,early 1980s the prefix 'Real' was added to the 'Calton Tongs' title...as a sort of registered trademark...
References
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