1959 in Scotland
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
See also:List of years in Scotland
Timeline of Scottish history
1959 in: The UK • Wales • Elsewhere
Scottish football: 1958–59 • 1959–60
1959 in Scottish television
Timeline of Scottish history
1959 in: The UK • Wales • Elsewhere
Scottish football: 1958–59 • 1959–60
1959 in Scottish television
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| See also: | List of years in Scotland Timeline of Scottish history 1959 in: The UK • Wales • Elsewhere Scottish football: 1958–59 • 1959–60 1959 in Scottish television | ||||
Events from the year 1959 in Scotland.
Law officers
Judiciary
Events
- 1 January – 5 members of the Universal Hiking Club of Glasgow die in a storm in the Grampians.[1]
- 9 January – Clyde-built fisheries protection vessel Freya founders off Caithness with the loss of 3 of her crew of 20.[2]
- 28 January – a Glasgow Corporation Tramways tramcar collides with a lorry and catches fire in Shettleston Road with 3 killed.[3]
- 2 May – the Chapelcross nuclear power station opens.[4]
- 4 July – British Railways close their Kilmarnock Works.
- 18 September – Auchengeich mining disaster: 47 miners die as the result of an underground fire at Auchengeich Colliery, Lanarkshire.[5]
- 8 October – United Kingdom general election results in a record third successive Conservative victory.[6] Harold Macmillan increases the Conservative majority to 100 seats across the UK[7] but the Unionist Party in Scotland loses 4 seats.
- 14 November – the nuclear Dounreay fast reactor achieves criticality.[8]
- 17 November – Prestwick and Renfrew Airports become the first in the U.K. with duty-free shops.[9]
- 6 December – Aberdeen trawler George Robb runs aground at Duncansby Head in a severe gale with the loss of all 12 crew.[10]
- 7 December – Leith coaster Servus runs aground below Dunbeath Castle; her crew are rescued by life-boat.[11]
- 8 December – Broughty Ferry life-boat Mona capsizes on service to North Carr Lightship with the loss of all 8 of the life-boat crew.
- William Theodore Heard is elevated to cardinal, the first Scot to hold such an office since the Reformation.
- St. Cuthbert's Co-operative Society opens Scotland's first supermarket in Edinburgh.[12]
- North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board's Sloy-Awe Hydro-Electric Power Scheme becomes fully operational; and peat-fired generating station at Altnabreac opened.
- North Highland College established.
- The fossil ichthyosaur Dearcmhara is first discovered by Brian Shawcross on the Trotternish peninsula of Skye.
Births
- 31 January – Heather Anderson, SNP politician
- 12 April – Jackson Carlaw, politician, leader of the Scottish Conservatives
- 16 April – Alison Ramsay, field hockey player
- 27 April – Sheena Easton, singer
- 27 May – Gerard Kelly, television and pantomime actor (died 2010 in London)
- 9 July – Jim Kerr, rock singer-songwriter
- 16 July – James MacMillan, composer
- 27 July – Siobhan Redmond, actress
- 28 July – Lorraine Fullbrook, Conservative politician
- 31 July – Andrew Marr, print and television journalist
- 29 August – Eddi Reader, folk singer-songwriter
- 7 September – Rona Munro, dramatist and screenwriter
- 8 September – Judy Murray, tennis player and coach[13]
- 10 October – Mark Johnston, racehorse trainer
- 25 November – Charles Kennedy, politician, leader of the Liberal Democrats (UK) (died 2015)[14]
- 30 November – Lorraine Kelly, television presenter
- date unknown
- Meg Bateman, Gaelic writer and poet[15]
- Robert Crawford, poet and literary scholar
- Andy Gray, actor (died 2021)
- Pam Hogg, fashion designer (died 2025)
- Alexander Stoddart, sculptor
Deaths
- 2 July – William Weir, 1st Viscount Weir, industrialist and politician (born 1877)
- 1 October – Evelyn Vida Baxter, ornithologist (born 1879)[16]
- 15 November – Charles Thomson Rees Wilson, physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (born 1869)
- 25 November – Robert Smyth McColl, footballer and retail store founder (born 1876)
