1984 in Scotland
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See also: | List of years in Scotland Timeline of Scottish history 1984 in: The UK • Wales • Ireland • Elsewhere Scottish football: 1983–84 • 1984–85 1984 in Scottish television |
Events from the year 1984 in Scotland.
Incumbents
- Monarch – Elizabeth II
- Secretary of State for Scotland and Keeper of the Great Seal – George Younger
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 Elliott
Events
- 12 March – 1984/5 Miner's Strike: Polmaise Colliery is the first mine in Scotland to witness a walkout of its workers.[1]
- 16 April – Culmination of the Glasgow Ice Cream Wars with the murder by arson of six members of the Doyle family.
- 3 May – 1984/5 miner's strike: Nearly 300 miners are arrested outside Ravenscraig in clashes with police as they try to stop lorries laden with coal entering.[2]
- 14 June – Elections to the European Parliament result in Labour gaining three seats from the Conservatives to win 5 of the 8 seats in Scotland, with the Conservatives reduced to two and the SNP retaining the one they previously held.[3]
- 30 July – Polmont rail accident at Polmont, near Falkirk, when an express train from Edinburgh to Glasgow, travelling at high speed, strikes a cow on the track near Polmont station, derailing several carriages and resulting in thirteen deaths and 61 injuries.[4]
- 8 August – Official opening of Kylesku Bridge, replacing a ferry.
- August – Hutton oilfield production begins in the East Shetland Basin.
- Kellas cat identified as a hybrid.[5]
Births
- 17 January – Calvin Harris, born Adam Richard Wiles, pop singer, songwriter, record producer and DJ.
- 27 February – Catriona Forrest, field hockey player
- 8 May – Martin Compston, screen actor and footballer
- 5 September – Alison Bell, field hockey player[6]
- 8 September – Finlay Wild, fell runner
- 25 October – Adam MacKenzie, field hockey defender
- 30 November – Alan Hutton, footballer
Deaths
- 28 March – Jimmy McGowan, footballer (born 1924)
- 15 April – Alexander Trocchi, writer (born 1925)
- 6 September – Donny MacLeod, TV presenter (born 1932; heart attack)
- 11 October – Benno Schotz, sculptor (born 1891 in Germany)
- date unknown
- Jean Bain of Crathie, Aberdeenshire, last speaker of Deeside Gaelic (born Jean McDonald, 1890)[7]
- George Campbell Hay, poet (born 1915)
The arts
- 16 February – Iain Banks' first novel The Wasp Factory is published.
- Robert Alan Jamieson's novel Soor Hearts is published.
- James Kelman's first (published) novel The Busconductor Hines is published in Edinburgh.
- Scottish Poetry Library established.
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gollark: HTTP is kind of inefficient though honestly. I mean, look at all that inefficient textual content.
gollark: Now osmarks.tk only sends these cool™️ headers:```httpserver: nginx/1.18.0date: Mon, 03 Aug 2020 19:40:01 GMTcontent-type: text/htmlcontent-length: 6790last-modified: Fri, 03 Jul 2020 21:29:58 GMTetag: "5effa356-1a86"strict-transport-security: max-age=63072000; preload; includeSubDomainsreferrer-policy: strict-origin-when-cross-originaccept-ranges: bytes```
gollark: However, it got lost in a server configuration reconfiguration or possibly some time when I decided to reduce overhead.
gollark: Older versions of osmarks.tk used to.
See also
References
- Two miners from Polmaise Colliery reflect on strike of 1984 STV, accessed 1 January 2012.
- 1984 Miner's Strike saw 300 arrests in one day at Ravenscraig wishawpress.co.uk, accessed 1 January 2012.
- European Parliamentary Elections Archived 7 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine www.alba.org.uk, accessed 3 January 2012.
- Department of Transport; Major A.G.B. King (1985). Railway Accident: Report on the Derailment that occurred on 30th July 1984 near Polmont in the Scottish Region, British Railways. HMSO. ISBN 0-11-550685-3.
- Bowers, Aron. "Kellas Cats, Scotching the Myth". Scottish Big Cat Trust. Archived from the original on 4 October 2015. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
- "Glasgow 2014 - Alison Bell Profile". results.glasgow2014.com. Retrieved 1 April 2020.
- Watson, Adam; Clement, R. D. (1983). "Aberdeenshire Gaelic". Transactions of the Gaelic Society of Inverness. 52: 373–404.
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