These fans look a bit too well-dressed for a football match. They are Celtic supporters at the 1955 Scottish Cup final against Clyde. They were not happy about the result – Clyde won 1-0 after a replay

Glasgow Times:

GLASGOW has many fine buildings dating back hundreds of years, some of which have been magnificently restored.
One of them is Aikenhead House, which is in what we now know as King’s Park.
The park was previously part of a private estate consisting of Aikenhead House and its grounds, but a section of the estate around the mansion-house was gifted to Glasgow Corporation by the builder, J.A. Mactaggart, in May 1930. 
The central part of Aikenhead House was built in 1806 for tobacco merchant John Gordon, with the side wings added in 1823. 
During the Second World War the house was taken over by the military authorities and after the war it was used for a spell as storage space for the Burrell Collection, which had no permanent home at the time.
But by the 1970s, the boarded-up building was constantly vandalised and  suffering the effects of dry 
and wet rot, with repairs estimated at more than £1millon.
In June 1984, consultant engineer Douglas Loan bought the house for a nominal sum of £1000. His firm, Classical House Ltd, began work on the conversion to 14 flats in February 1985.
As you can see, it was completed the following year and the flats are still being used.