1968 in Scotland
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
See also:List of years in Scotland
Timeline of Scottish history
1968 in: The UK • Wales • Elsewhere
Scottish football: 1967–68 • 1968–69
1968 in Scottish television
Timeline of Scottish history
1968 in: The UK • Wales • Elsewhere
Scottish football: 1967–68 • 1968–69
1968 in Scottish television
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| See also: | List of years in Scotland Timeline of Scottish history 1968 in: The UK • Wales • Elsewhere Scottish football: 1967–68 • 1968–69 1968 in Scottish television | ||||
Events from the year 1968 in Scotland.
Law officers
- Lord Advocate – Henry Wilson
- Solicitor General for Scotland – Ewan Stewart
Judiciary
Events
- 15 January – 1968 Scotland storm ("Great Glasgow storm") leaves 20 dead across central Scotland including 9 in Glasgow.[1]
- February – Upper Clyde Shipbuilders formed with 48.4% government holding by amalgamation of Fairfields, Govan; Alexander Stephen & Sons, Linthouse; John Brown & Company, Clydebank; Charles Connell and Company, Scotstoun; and Yarrow Shipbuilders.
- 1 April – Reporting Scotland, BBC Scotland's national television news programme, is broadcast for the first time.
- 14 May – Murder of Maxwell Garvie: Mariticide in Kincardineshire.[2]
- 18 May – Declaration of Perth: Conservative Party leader, Edward Heath proposes a directly elected Scottish Assembly.[3]
- 22 May – The General Assembly of the Church of Scotland permits the ordination of women as ministers.[4]
- 4 June – General Post Office introduces the first postbus in Scotland, Dunbar–Innerwick–Spott, East Lothian.
- 18 November – James Watt Street fire: A warehouse fire in Glasgow kills 22.[5]
- Bluevale and Whitevale Towers, 298 ft (90.8 m) blocks of flats, completed in Glasgow.
Births
- 31 January – John Collins, international footballer
- 4 March – Christina McKelvie, Scottish Government minister (died 2025)
- 16 March – David MacMillan, Scottish-born organic chemist, recipient of Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- 26 April – Daniela Nardini, actress
- 5 August – Colin McRae, rally driver (killed in helicopter accident 2007)[6]
- 2 September – David Dinsmore, journalist[7]
- 6 September – Christopher Brookmyre, detective novelist
- 25 October – Jason Leitch, National Clinical Director of the Scottish Government
- 22 November – Sarah Smith, television and radio news reporter
- 23 November – Kirsty Young, television and radio presenter
- 28 December – Pauline Robertson, field hockey player
- Andrew O'Hagan, writer
- Frank Quitely (Vincent Deighan), comic book artist
