1973 in Scotland
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List of years in Scotland Timeline of Scottish history 1973 in: The UK • Wales • Ireland • Elsewhere Scottish football: 1972–73 • 1973–74 1973 in Scottish television  | ||||
Events from the year 1973 in Scotland...
Incumbents
- Monarch — Elizabeth II (since 6 February 1952)
 - Secretary of State for Scotland and Keeper of the Great Seal — Gordon Campbell
 
Law officers
Judiciary
- Lord President of the Court of Session and Lord Justice General — Lord Emslie
 - Lord Justice Clerk — Lord Wheatley
 - Chairman of the Scottish Land Court — Lord Birsay
 
Events
- 1 January — Most of the west coast shipping services of David MacBrayne are merged with those of the Caledonian Steam Packet Company as Caledonian MacBrayne.
 - 1 March — Dundee East by-election: Labour retains the seat by only 1,141 votes in the face of a strong SNP challenge.
 - 17 July — Stonehouse, South Lanarkshire, is formally designated as a New Town.[1] but never developed.
 - 25 October — Local Government (Scotland) Act initiates a major reorganisation of local government in Scotland with effect from May 1975).
 - 26 October — Firefighters in Glasgow stage a one-day strike following a pay dispute. Troops are drafted in to run the fire stations.
 - 31 October — The Kilbrandon Report is published and recommends the establishment of a directly elected Scottish Assembly.
 - 8 November — Glasgow Govan by-election results in Margo MacDonald of the SNP gaining the seat from Labour on a 26.7% swing. In a second Scottish by election that day, the Conservatives retain Edinburgh North.
 - 14 December — Third (replacement) Bonar Bridge opened.
 - 31 December — Radio Clyde begins broadcasting, from Clydebank.
 
Births
- 20 January — Stephen Crabb, Welsh Conservative politician
 - 18 March — Patrick Harvie, Green politician
 - 10 May — Dario Franchitti, racing driver
 - 14 May — Fraser Nelson, political journalist
 - Iain Finlay Macleod, playwright and novelist
 
Deaths
- 15 January — Neil M. Gunn, novelist, critic, and dramatist (born 1891)
 - 23 September — A. S. Neill, progressive educator and author (born 1883)
 - 8 October — John Rankin, Labour politician (born 1890)
 - 5 December — Robert Watson-Watt, pioneer of radar (born 1892)
 -  30 December
- D. E. Stevenson (Dorothy Peploe), romantic novelist (born 1892)
 - Vagaland (Thomas Alexander Robertson), Shetland Scots poet (born 1909)
 
 - Sir William Gillies, painter (born 1898)
 - F. Marian McNeill, folklorist (born 1885)
 
The Arts
- 31 March — John McGrath's play The Cheviot, the Stag, and the Black Black Oil is premiered by 7:84 in Aberdeen.
 - 11 May–8 June - The political thriller Scotch on the Rocks, concerning a terrorist group fighting for Scottish independence in the near future, is broadcast by BBC Scotland.
 - Canongate Books is established as a publisher in Edinburgh.
 - George Mackay Brown's novel Magnus is published.
 - Celtic rock group Runrig formed on Skye.
 
See also
References
- ↑ The Edinburgh Gazette: no. 19294. p. 951. 14 August 1973. Retrieved 2007-10-30.
 
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