1876 in Scotland
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See also: | List of years in Scotland Timeline of Scottish history 1876 in: The UK • Wales • Ireland • Elsewhere Scottish football: 1875–76 • 1876–77 |
Events from the year 1876 in Scotland.
Incumbents
Law officers
- Lord Advocate – Edward Strathearn Gordon until July; then William Watson
- Solicitor General for Scotland – William Watson; then John Macdonald
Events
- 14 February – Alexander Graham Bell files a patent for the telephone in the United States.[1]
- 19 February – Partick Thistle F.C. play their first match.[2]
- 5 April – River Dee Ferry Boat Disaster: 32 drown.
- 18 June – promenade on the roof of Waverley Market opens in Edinburgh;[3] this year also West Princes Street Gardens pass to the city's council as a public park.
- 17 October – St Enoch railway station officially opens in Glasgow.[4]
- 3 November – McLean Museum opens in Greenock.[5]
- William Forbes Skene's Celtic Scotland: a History of Ancient Alban begins publication in Edinburgh.
- Camp Coffee is first produced by Paterson & Sons Ltd in Glasgow.
Births
- 23 March – Muirhead Bone, etcher (died 1953)
- 19 June – Nigel Gresley, steam locomotive designer (died 1941)
- 6 September – John James Rickard Macleod, physician and physiologist, Nobel Prize laureate (died 1935)
- 3 October – Thomas Haining Gillespie, founder of the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland and Edinburgh Zoo (died 1967)
- 22 October – Cecilia Loftus, born Marie Cecilia Loftus Brown, actress in music hall and legitimate theatre (died 1943 in the United States)
- 4 November – Donald Cameron, 25th Lochiel, soldier and Chief of the Name (died 1951)
- 7 November – Alex Smith, international footballer (died 1954)
- 17 December – Archibald Main, ecclesiastical historian (died 1947)
- 18 December – Henry Wade, surgeon (died 1955)
- Joseph Lee, poet and journalist (died 1949)
Deaths
- 9 January – Thomas Hill Jamieson, librarian (born 1843)
- 22 January – Sir George Harvey, genre painter (born 1806)
- 3 February – Benjamin Connor, steam locomotive designer (born 1813)
- 24 April – Henry Dübs, steam locomotive manufacturer (born 1816 in Germany)
- 7 May – David Bryce, architect (born 1803)
- 23 June – Robert Napier, engineer, "Father of Clyde Shipbuilding" (born 1791)
- 23 December – Charles Neaves, Lord Neaves, judge and poet (born 1800)
References
- Miller, Anne; Mitchinson, John (13 May 2013). "QI: some quite interesting facts about telephones". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 18 March 2014.
- "1875-76 New Beginnings". Partick Thistle - The Early Years. Retrieved 18 March 2014.
- "History of Edinburgh". Visions of Scotland. Archived from the original on 14 February 2015. Retrieved 18 March 2014.
- Thomas, John (1971). A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain. Volume VI Scotland: The Lowlands and the Borders (1st ed.). Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-5408-6.
- "Museum History". Inverclyde Council. Archived from the original on 3 August 2012. Retrieved 18 March 2014.
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