1880 in Scotland

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1880
in
Scotland

Centuries:
  • 17th
  • 18th
  • 19th
  • 20th
  • 21st
Decades:
  • 1860s
  • 1870s
  • 1880s
  • 1890s
  • 1900s
See also:List of years in Scotland
Timeline of Scottish history
1880 in: The UKWalesIrelandElsewhere
Scottish football: 1879–801880–81

Events from the year 1880 in Scotland.

Incumbents[]

  • MonarchVictoria

Law officers[]

  • Lord AdvocateWilliam Watson until May; then John McLaren
  • Solicitor General for ScotlandJohn Macdonald; then John Blair Balfour

Judiciary[]

  • Lord President of the Court of Session and Lord Justice GeneralLord Glencorse
  • Lord Justice ClerkLord Moncreiff

Events[]

  • February – telephones introduced in Edinburgh.[1]
  • 27 April1880 United Kingdom general election: The Liberal Party defeat the Conservatives by a substantial majority following the 'Midlothian campaign' by William Ewart Gladstone who is returned as Member of Parliament for Midlothian and becomes Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.
  • 1 July – the Callander and Oban Railway is opened throughout to Oban.
  • October – the SS Ferret is fraudulently chartered at Greenock and taken to Australia.[2]
  • A. & R. Scott begin producing the predecessor of Scott's Porage Oats.[3]

Births[]

  • 29 MarchBobby Templeton, footballer (died 1919)
  • 4 AprilWilliam Russell Flint, watercolourist (died 1969)
  • 30 AprilCharles Exeter Devereux Crombie, cartoonist (died 1967)
  • 6 MayEdmund Ironside, British Army officer (died 1959)
  • 14 MayB. C. Forbes, financial journalist (died 1954 in the United States)
  • 1 JulyNoel Skelton, Unionist politician, journalist and intellectual (died 1935)
  • 13 AugustMary Macarthur, trade unionist (died 1921)
  • September – Peter Kyle, footballer (died 1961)
  • 23 SeptemberJohn Boyd Orr, physician and biologist, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (died 1971)
  • 15 OctoberMarie Stopes, author, palaeobotanist, campaigner for women's rights and pioneer in the field of birth control (died 1958)
  • 18 OctoberAlexander Livingstone, Liberal politician (died 1950)
  • Margaret McCoubrey, suffragette and pacifist in Belfast (died 1955 in Northern Ireland)
  • Dorothy Carleton Smyth, artist and designer (died 1933)
  • Preston Watson, aviator (killed in military aviation accident 1915)

Deaths[]

  • 3 AprilJohn Laing, bibliographer and Free Church minister (born 1809)
  • 31 DecemberJohn Stenhouse, chemist (born 1809)

Sport[]

Establishments[]

The arts[]

  • William McGonagall produces his doggerel poem "The Tay Bridge Disaster" to commemorate the previous December's Tay Bridge disaster.

See also[]

  • Timeline of Scottish history
  • 1880 in the United Kingdom

References[]

  1. ^ "History of Edinburgh". Visions of Scotland. Archived from the original on 14 February 2015. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  2. ^ "The Ferret Case". The Argus. Melbourne. 9 May 1881. p. 1S.
  3. ^ "Scott's Porage – Our Heritage". Scott's Porage Oats. Archived from the original on 23 September 2010. Retrieved 19 October 2010.
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