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| See also: | List of years in Scotland Timeline of Scottish history 1843 in: The UK • Wales • Elsewhere  | ||||
Events from the year 1843 in Scotland.
Incumbents

The Disruption Assembly, painted by David Octavius Hill
Law officers
Judiciary
Events
- 18 May – the Disruption of the Church of Scotland takes place.[1]
 - 3 June – first burial in Warriston Cemetery, Edinburgh.
 - 29 June – Robert Napier launches his first iron ship, the paddle steamer Vanguard, from his new yard at Govan on the River Clyde.[2]
 - 1 July – Union Bank of Scotland opens in Glasgow.
 - 13 August – Sir William Dunbar, priest of St. Paul's Chapel, Aberdeen, is excommunicated from the Scottish Episcopal Church for refusing to administer or receive the sacrament in accordance with the church's ritual.
 - Dingwall becomes the county town of Ross and Cromarty.
 - The last laird of Raasay, John Macleod, emigrates to Tasmania having sold the Scottish island to George Rainy to help clear his debts.[3]
 - The Ordnance Survey commences its first published mapping of Scotland with a survey of Wigtownshire.[4]
 - The Glenmorangie distillery is established in Tain by William Matheson.
 - Glenburn Hydro is opened in Rothesay, Bute, the first hydropathic establishment in Scotland.
 - First paddle steamer on Loch Katrine, Gypsy.
 - Little Ross lighthouse completed.
 - Angus MacKay becomes first Piper to the Sovereign.
 - Marion Kirkland Reid's feminist tract A Plea for Woman is published in Edinburgh.
 
Births
- 12 June – David Gill, astronomer known for measuring astronomical distances, for astrophotography, and for geodesy (died 1914)
 - 5 August – James Scott Skinner, dancing master, fiddler and composer (died 1927)
 - 21 August – Thomas Hill Jamieson, librarian (died 1876)
 
Deaths
- 25 July – Charles Macintosh, chemist and inventor of waterproof fabrics after whom the Mackintosh raincoat is named (born 1766)[5]
 - 5 December – David Hamilton, architect (born 1768)
 
The arts
- Hill & Adamson form Scotland's first photographic studio, on Calton Hill in Edinburgh.
 
See also
References
- ↑ "Victorian Britain". BBC. Retrieved 30 July 2013.
 - ↑  "PS Vanguard". Clydebuilt database. Archived from the original on 16 March 2016. Retrieved 15 March 2016.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ↑ Keay, John; Keay, Julia (1994), Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland, London: HarperCollins, p. 797, ISBN 978-0-00-255082-6
 - ↑ Fleet, Christopher; Withers, Charles W. J. "Ordnance Survey Maps - Six-inch 1st edition, Scotland, 1843-1882: A Scottish paper landscape". National Library of Scotland. Retrieved 5 September 2014.
 - ↑ Day, Lance; McNeil, Ian (11 September 2002). Biographical Dictionary of the History of Technology. Routledge. p. 786. ISBN 978-1-134-65019-4.
 
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