Back in the 18th century Morningside was a village in its own right, separate from Edinburgh, located on a piece of land sold off by the town council to pay for the cost of dealing with the plague in the late 1500s.
When it was first recorded on a city plan in 1759 it comprised just three houses, while by 1882 writers described it as “a row of thatched cottages, a line of trees and a blacksmith's forge”.
Benefiting from its location near to a number of major farms, as well as being the final stop on the main road into Edinburgh, the village grew quickly and was enveloped into the city as a residential suburb in the early 19th century.
Morningside became a favourite with many of Edinburgh’s wealthier residents who bought plots of land from the surrounding estates to build large villas and mansion houses, developing the pattern of streets that remains today.
Its reputation as an enviable place to live was bolstered in the 1870s when one of the first tram services in Edinburgh (initially horse-drawn, then later electric) linked Morningside with the east end of Princes Street.
Another transport coup arrived in 1885 with the Edinburgh Suburban and South Side Junction Railway carrying passengers from Morningside Road Station to Waverley.
Further expansion occured in the 1890s when the former Braid Estate was developed for housing, and with new residents came new services and facilities.
In the following decades local schools, churches, a library, a cinema, and even a ballroom were all established in the neighbourhood.
Today Morningside is local government ward with a population of around 33,000 people living in a mixture of villas, tenement flats and more modern housing, all centred around the main shopping street of Morningside Road.
Here are 28 pictures to take you back to the Morningside of the 1950s and 1960s.
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. Lollipop man John Thomson on Morningside Road in December 1964.
Lollipop man John Thomson on Morningside Road in December 1964. Photo: Unknown

. Today's lesson
Pupils at South Morningside School being taught how to add up money in September 1963. Photo: Unknown

. Development site
Part of Morningside Road pictured in January 1963. It had recently been bought by Grampian Properties for a supermarket development. Photo: Unknown

. Glorious Hearts
The new Heart of Midlothian Supporters club opens in Falcon Road, Morningside, in November 1965. Photo: Albert Jordan

. A great view of the blackboard
Pupils of South Morningside School sitting in their specially-designed galleried classroom in December 1952. Photo: Unknown

. Cleaning up
The interior of the Elliot Forbes Ltd Dry Cleaners shop, on Morningside Road, in January 1963. Photo: Unknown

25. Big day
Mr J.G. Davidson and Alison Brown are pictured at their wedding at North Morningside Church in July 1965. Photo: Unknown

26. Hanging on the telephone
Sir Ronald German phones the French Postmaster General M Jacques Marette to open the new telephone trunk call centre at Woodcroft, in Morningside, in July 1965. Photo: Unknown

27. Students on stage
Members of the Glasgow University Dramatic Society presenting 'Masque for 1966' in Morningside's Dunedin Lodge. Photo: Unknown

28. Safe to cross
Lollipop man John Thomson on Morningside Road in December 1964. Photo: Unknown