| |||||
| Centuries: | 
  | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Decades: | 
  | ||||
| See also: | List of years in Scotland Timeline of Scottish history 1882 in: The UK • Wales • Elsewhere Scottish football: 1881–82 • 1882–83  | ||||
Events from the year 1882 in Scotland.
Incumbents
Law officers
Judiciary
Events
- 2 March – Roderick Maclean fails in an attempt to assassinate Queen Victoria at Windsor, Berkshire.[1]
 - 1 June – Rothesay tramway opened on the Isle of Bute; a salt-water swimming bath is also opened in Rothesay this year.
 - June – St. Andrew's Ambulance Association is officially founded with a constitution being adopted at a general meeting in Glasgow.[2]
 - July – HM Prison Barlinnie opened in Glasgow.
 - 27 November – Inverythan rail accident: a cast iron girder underbridge in Aberdeenshire collapses as a Great North of Scotland Railway train passes over, causing at least 5 deaths.
 - 20 December – Hospital for Sick Children, Glasgow, opened at Garnethill.
 - Battle of the Braes on Skye: Protests by crofting tenants facing eviction. Police from Glasgow and the military are sent to restore order.[3][4]
 - Vat 69 blended whisky first produced by William Sanderson & Son of South Queensferry.
 - Founding of Albion Rovers F.C. through the amalgamation of two Coatbridge clubs, Albion and Rovers.
 - Lewis Campbell publishes The Life of James Clerk Maxwell, with a Selection from his Correspondence and Occasional Writings and a Sketch of his Contributions to Science, including some of Maxwell's verses.
 - Archaeologist Robert Munro publishes Ancient Scottish Lake Dwellings or Crannogs.
 
Births
- 6 January – Alexander Gray, economist, poet and translator (died 1968)
 - 2 February – Joseph Wedderburn, mathematician (died 1948)
 - 20 February – Alexander Carrick, sculptor (died 1966)
 - 24 April – Hugh Dowding, Air Chief Marshal (died 1970)
 - 28 May – Donald McLeod, footballer (killed 1917 in Battle of Passchendaele)
 - 16 June – Norah Neilson Gray, portrait painter (died 1931)
 - 18 June – Thomas S. Tait, architect (died 1954)
 - 8 July – John Anderson, 1st Viscount Waverley, civil servant and politician (died 1958)
 - 2 November – Frederick Farrell, watercolourist, war artist (died 1935)
 - John Alexander Stewart, orientalist (died 1948)
 
Deaths
- 17 January – Sir Daniel Macnee, portrait painter (born 1806)
 - 23 January – Robert Christison, toxicologist, physician and president of the British Medical Association (1875) (born 1797)
 - 7 March – John Muir, Indologist (born 1810)
 - 10 March – Sir Charles Wyville Thomson, marine zoologist (born 1830)
 - 11 May – John Brown, physician and writer (born 1810)
 
The arts
- American scholar Francis James Child begins publication of The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, the Child Ballads.
 - Gaelic poet William Livingston (Uilleam Macdhunleibhe)'s collected works are published posthumously as Duain agus Orain.[5]
 
See also
References
- ↑ Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0.
 - ↑ "Our History". St Andrew's First Aid. Archived from the original on 7 May 2013. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
 - ↑ "Clearances – Battle of the Braes". Highland Clearances. Archived from the original on 15 May 2008. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
 - ↑ "The Battle of the Braes – 1882". Scotland's History. BBC. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
 - ↑ Whyte, Christopher (1991). William Livingston/Uilleam Macdhunleibhe (1808-70): a survey of his poetry and prose. PhD thesis, University of Glasgow. Retrieved 2014-08-18.
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.
