1879 in Scotland
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Events from the year 1879 in Scotland.
See also:List of years in Scotland
Timeline of Scottish history
1879 in: The UK ⢠Wales ⢠Elsewhere
Scottish football: 1878â79 ⢠1879â80
Timeline of Scottish history
1879 in: The UK ⢠Wales ⢠Elsewhere
Scottish football: 1878â79 ⢠1879â80
Incumbents
Law officers
Judiciary
Events

- 4 January â Dundee-born Mormon missionary Hugh Findlay arrives in Shetland from the United States and on 31 March baptizes the islands' first two converts.[1]
- 25 January â first service held in St Mary's Cathedral, Edinburgh (Episcopal) on completion of the nave.
- 1 April â Dundee Stock Exchange established.
- 6 June â William Denny and Brothers launch the world's first ocean-going steamer to be built of mild steel, the SS Rotomahana, at Dumbarton.[2]
- 31 July â the Caledonian Railway opens the original Glasgow Central station.
- 30 September â foundation stone of the Forth Bridge is laid on Inchgarvie.
- 2 October â William Denny and Brothers launch the world's first transatlantic steamer to be built of mild steel, the SS Buenos Ayrean, at Dumbarton. On 1 December she makes her maiden voyage out of Glasgow for South America.[3]
- 28 December â the Tay Bridge disaster: the central part of the new Tay Bridge at Dundee collapses in a storm as a train passes over it, killing 78.[4]
- Construction of Garnethill Synagogue, Glasgow, the oldest to survive in Scotland, begins.
- Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh moves to Lauriston Place.
- First Angus cattle society formed.
Births
- 13 January â William Reid Dick, sculptor (died 1961 in England)
- 16 January â Jimmy Gillespie, rugby union player (died 1943)
- 27 March â Catherine Carswell, née Catherine Roxburgh Macfarlane, author (died 1946 in England)
- 29 March â Evelyn Vida Baxter, ornithologist (died 1959)[5]
- 24 August â John Maclean, Marxist (died 1923)
- 13 September â Tommy Tait, international footballer (died 1942)
- 21 October â Willie Anderson, golfer (died 1910 in the United States)
- 23 October â John MacDougall Hay, Church of Scotland minister and novelist (died 1919)
- John Maxwell, film producer (died 1940 in England)
- Henry J. Watt, experimental psychologist (died 1925)
Deaths
- 19 June â James Valentine, photographer (born 1815)
- 23 July â Charles Baillie, Lord Jerviswoode, advocate, judge and politician (born 1804)
- 29 October â John Blackwood, publisher (born 1818)
- 5 November â James Clerk Maxwell, theoretical physicist (born 1831; died of abdominal cancer in Cambridge)[6]
- 23 November â Mark Napier, lawyer, sheriff, biographer and historical author (born 1798)
The arts
- 6 September â first publication of a story by Arthur Conan Doyle, "The Mystery of Sasassa Valley" in Chambers's Journal.
- Construction of Royalty Theatre, Glasgow, completed.
