1751 in Scotland
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Events from the year 1751 in Scotland.
See also:List of years in Scotland
Timeline of Scottish history
1751 in: Great Britain ⢠Wales ⢠Elsewhere
Timeline of Scottish history
1751 in: Great Britain ⢠Wales ⢠Elsewhere
Incumbents
Law officers
- Lord Advocate â William Grant of Prestongrange
- Solicitor General for Scotland â Patrick Haldane of Gleneagles, jointly with Alexander Hume
Judiciary
Events
- 24 April â John Wesley arrives at Musselburgh, his destination on his first mission to Scotland.[1]
- 21 June â Alexander Geddes from Kinnermony, Banffshire, is executed at Aberdeen for bestiality, becoming the last felon in Scotland to be burnt following execution.[2]
- 1 July â The Cameronians, at this time serving in Ireland, are formally ranked as the 26th Regiment of Foot.
- David Hume settles in Edinburgh and publishes An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals.[3]
- In the University of Glasgow:
- Adam Smith is appointed professor of logic.
- The Medical School is founded.
- John Smith & Son bookshop in Glasgow established, claiming to be the oldest surviving bookseller in the English-speaking world.[4]
- Culter paper mill established.[5]
- First turnpike act for Scotland, for improvement of the road from Edinburgh to South Queensferry.[6]
- Approximate date â bridge built at Bridge of Orchy.[7]
Births
- 23 April â Gilbert Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound, colonial administrator (died 1814 in England)
- 3 or 29 June â William Roxburgh, surgeon and botanist, "father of Indian botany" (died 1815)
- 2 August â William Adam of Blair Adam, judge and politician (died 1839)
- 8 August â William Leslie, British Army officer (killed 1777 at Battle of Princeton)
- 10 December â James Donaldson, printer, newspaper publisher and philanthropist (died 1830)
- Donald Campbell, traveler in India and the Middle East (died 1804 in England)
- Approximate date â Helen Craik, novelist and poet (died 1825 in England)
Deaths
- 16 February â Charles Maitland, politician (born c. 1704)
- 18 February â Patrick Campbell, politician (born 1684)[8]
- 24 May â William Hamilton, comic poet (born c. 1665)
- 22 August (2 September NS) â Andrew Gordon, Benedictine and inventor (born 1712; died in Saxony)
- September â David Fordyce, philosopher (born 1711; lost at sea)
The arts
- Alasdair mac Mhaighstir Alasdair publishes his anti-Hanoverian volume of poems Ais-Eiridh na Sean Chánoin Albannaich ("The Resurrection of the Ancient Scottish Language") in Edinburgh, including his satire on the aisling form An Airce ("The Ark").
- Tobias Smollett's novel The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle is published.[3]
- Robert Louis Stevenson's book "Kidnapped" is based in 1751.
