The Lady Well is a holy well in Glasgow in Scotland.
Also known as 'Our Lady's Well', Glasgow's Ladywell is an artesian spring noted on early city maps and can be reliably assumed to predate the city. It lay just outside the city wall and Drygate Port in medieval times and will have refreshed Romans traveling the old Carntyne Highway east-west between forts along the Antonine Wall. Today it is erroneously believed to have been sunk for use of commoners denied access to a nearby Priest's Well, and/or to have been capped in the early 19th century out of fears of pollution or plague.
Its wellhead was jointly rebuilt by the Merchants House and City Council in 1835-6 for enclosure in a new wall when the Fir Park behind it was turned into a gardened burial ground.
Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lady_Well
Address Ladywell Street, Glasgow G4 0, United Kingdom
Coordinates 55°51'39.013" N -4°13'56.895" E