River Clyde, Scotland’s most famous and important river (and firth, or estuary), about 106 miles (170 km) in length, discharging to the Atlantic on the western coast. The upper Clyde is a clear fishing stream rising in the moorlands of the Southern Uplands and flowing northward through a valley bordered by river terraces for about 30 miles (48 km) to the neighbourhood of Biggar, where it abruptly changes course. From Biggar the Clyde winds northwestward, falling less than 100 feet (30 metres) in 15 miles (24 km) until at the Falls of Clyde it drops 250 feet (75 metres) in 4 miles (6.4 km). Waterpower from these falls was important in the siting of local cotton mills in the early 19th century, and there are now some small hydroelectric stations.
Near Crossford, the widening Vale of Clyde, famous for the breeding of Clydesdale horses, is intensively cultivated. From Hamilton northward, coal mining and heavy industry become dominant. Following the development of trade with the New World in the 18th century, the Clyde was dredged, deepened, and made navigable to the centre of Glasgow, which soon became a major industrial city and the world’s largest shipbuilding centre.
The famous Clydeside shipyards, which still border the river for 20 miles (32 km) below Glasgow, suffered severely from foreign competition after World War II. The river reaches its estuary, the Firth of Clyde, through hilly country near the coastal towns of Dumbarton and Greenock. From Dumbarton the firth extends about 65 miles (105 km) to the small island of Ailsa Craig. The attractive estuary region has long been popular with tourists. The chief Clydeside ports are Glasgow, Port Glasgow, and Greenock.