- Source: 1846 in Scotland
Events from the year 1846 in Scotland.
Incumbents
= Law officers
=Lord Advocate – Duncan McNeill until July; then Andrew Rutherfurd
Solicitor General for Scotland – Adam Anderson; then Thomas Maitland
= Judiciary
=Lord President of the Court of Session and Lord Justice General – Lord Boyle
Lord Justice Clerk – Lord Hope
Events
January – African American abolitionist Frederick Douglass arrives in Scotland from Ireland to continue his speaking tour of the United Kingdom.
22 June – the North British Railway is opened to public traffic between Edinburgh and Berwick-upon-Tweed, the first line to cross the border between Scotland and England. Edinburgh Waverley railway station is opened.
15 August – inauguration of Scott Monument in Edinburgh.
21 December – Scottish-born surgeon Robert Liston carries out the first operation under anesthesia in Europe, at University College Hospital in London.
Start of Highland Potato Famine.
English tourism pioneer Thomas Cook brings 350 people from Leicester on a tour of Scotland.
Lighthouses at Covesea Skerries, Chanonry Point and Cromarty (all designed by Alan Stevenson) first illuminated.
New College, Edinburgh, opens its doors as a theological training college for the Free Church of Scotland.
Catherine Murray, Countess of Dunmore, commissions "the Paisley Sisters" of Strond on Harris to weave tweed in the Clan Murray tartan, origin of the commercial Harris Tweed industry.
Engineer Robert William Thomson is granted his first patent for a pneumatic tyre, in France.
14-year-old James Clerk Maxwell's first scientific paper is presented to the Royal Society of Edinburgh.
The John Dewar & Sons company is created by John Dewar, Sr. and his sons
Charles William George St John's Short Sketches of the Wild Sports and Natural History of the Highlands is published.
Births
1 January – Edward Pinnington, art historian, biographer and journalist (died 1921)
10 February – James Burns, shipowner (died 1923 in Australia)
28 February – John F. McIntosh, steam locomotive engineer (died 1918)
21 June – Marion Adams-Acton ("Jeanie Hering"), born Marion Jean Hamilton, novelist (died 1928 in London)
Deaths
12 February – Henry Duncan, minister, geologist and social reformer (born 1774)
23 May – Charles Ewart, soldier (born 1769)
Andrew Innes, last survivor of the Buchanites
The arts
William Motherwell's Poetical Works are published posthumously.
Carolina, Lady Nairne's Lays from Strathern are published posthumously, revealing her authorship. This includes the Jacobite song "The Hundred Pipers".
See also
Timeline of Scottish history
1846 in Ireland
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Skotlandia
- Keju Cheddar
- James Lawson (pendeta)
- John Douglas (Uskup Agung St Andrews)
- Robert Pont
- William Robertson Smith
- Fidra
- Elizabeth Eastlake
- John Craig (reformator)
- Ikan tombak
- 1846 in Scotland
- Highland Potato Famine
- Scotland
- Railway Regulation (Gauge) Act 1846
- John Rankine
- Robert Leckie
- 1846 in literature
- Great North of Scotland Railway
- 1846 in science
- Alexander Bruce