• Scotland in the 19th Century

    Scotland in the 19th Century

    Scotland's History in the 19th century

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You can move up and down the timeline using the date bands: the bottom band moves you along centuries quickly and the middle bank moves along decades. Click on individual events to see more details and description.

Timeline of Scottish History

A timeline of events in Scottish History!. Scroll through a growing chronology of events and click on them for more details and links

Scotland in the Nineteenth Century

The nineteenth century is the era when Scotland moved towards the modern era in the central belt with the growth of the cities and their industrialisation. the scottish highlands became the seat for a new romantic image of scotland that remains resonant today.

Ninteenth Century Scottish History Timeline

  • 1800 Rich ironstone discovered in the Monklands area  
  • 1800 Robert Owen takes over at New Lanark  
  • 1802 Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border published  
  • 1803 Telford begins the Caledonian Canal  
  • 1806 Appointed Clerk to the Court of Session  
  • 1808 Marmion published  
  • 1810 Lady of the Lake published  
  • 1811 Scott buys Abbotsford  
  • 1811 Scots settle Red River in Manitoba  
  • 1811 John Rennie builds Waterloo Bridge in London  
  • 1812 Henry Bell launches the Comet on the Clyde  
  • 1814 Waverley written  
  • 1815 John Loudon McAdam develops his surfaced roads  
  • 1816 Old Mortality published  
  • 1819 The Radical War  
  • 1819 Queen Victoria born  
  • 1819 Ivanhoe published  
  • 1820 1820s - Start of fall in kelp prices sparks off widespread emigration  
  • 1823 Robert Napier builds his first marine steam engine  
  • 1823 Reduction of whisky duty makes commercial sales viable  
  • 1826 Charlotte dies. Scott suffers financial collapse  
  • 1827 John Brown born  
  • 1828 James Neilson invents hot blast method of iron smelting  
  • 1828 Burke and Hare tried  
  • 1830 Glasgow's population reaches 200,000  
  • 1830 1830s - Beginning of failure of potato crops  
  • 1831 New patent whisky still helps large scale production  
  • 1832 Reform Act introduced
  • 1832 Firsy books on tartan published  
  • 1834 First iron shipyard opened by Tod and MacGregor at Meadowside on the Clyde  
  • 1834 Veto Act introduced  
  • 1837 Victoria takes the throne  
  • 1842 Ministers meet at the Edinburgh Convocation  
  • 1842 She and Albert visit Scotland for the first time  
  • 1843 The Disruption  
  • 1844 Lewis bought by Sir James Matheson  
  • 1846 Robert Lister first uses ether as an anaesthetic  
  • 1846 Thomas Cook organises first Scottish tour  
  • 1847 James Young Simpson discovers chloroform  
  • 1847 Lease offered on Balmoral  
  • 1848 Victoria first meets John Brown  
  • 1848 The Queen first attends the Braemar Gathering  
  • 1850 1850s - Clearances end when virtually everyone is evicted  
  • 1850 Highland Estate Building. A period during which the scenery and romantic stories of and about the Highlands of Scotland led to a rapid expansion of travelling and sport. In order to facilitate this, many houses and estates were built. The tracks built for stalking are often still in use today and can be useful for hill approaches. This period of ?Balmoralism? (named after Queen Victoria?s Highland Castle) was made easier by the ?clearances?, when crofters were displaced to make way for more profitable sheep.  
  • 1851 Paraffin Young patents his shale oil extraction process  
  • 1852 Victoria and Albert buy Balmoral  
  • 1856 James Keir Hardie born  
  • 1856 Hugh Thomas Munro born in London. Munro born in London, at 27 Eaton Place. The eldest of a family of nine. His collecting habit starts early, with butterflies, birds? eggs, shells, fossils and so on. Goes to school in Crieff, Perthshire.  
  • 1860 Glasgow's population reaches nearly 400,000  
  • 1860 Joseph Lister begins his practical work on antiseptic surgery  
  • 1860 Invention of breech loading shotgun makes Highland hunting easier  
  • 1861 Prince Albert dies  
  • 1863 Railway from Perth to Inverness completed  
  • 1866 Gossip about an illicit relationship spreads  
  • 1866 He starts work in the mines  
  • 1873 Munro in Germany. Munro goes to Stuttgart to learn German. Starts climbing in the Alps.  
  • 1875 Munro returns to London. Back in London, Munro studies business methods and enjoys the social life. He has a good ear for music and becomes an expert dancer. Goes to Europe as Aide-de-Camp to General the Honourable W. Fielding. Several years later develops pleurisy.  
  • 1877 Large scale (six-inch) field survey of Scotland completed by O.S. The O.S. complete the six-inch maps, the basis for the one-inch series to follow.  
  • 1878 Matheson dies  
  • 1879 Hardie joins the Lanarkshire Miners' Union  
  • 1880 Moves to Ayrshire  
  • 1880 Railway reaches Tyndrum. The Oban Railway Line reaches Tyndrum, making it easier to reach many mountainous areas.  
  • 1880 Munro in S. Africa. To improve his health, Munro goes to S. Africa, as Private Secretary to Sir George Colley, Governor of Natal. When the Basuto War breaks out volunteers for active service and carries despatches as a member of an irregular cavalry corps, Landrey's Horse. At end of war returns home to London, bringing with him Basuto and Zulu curios, antelope heads, a black boy, and a monkey.  
  • 1882 Highland Land League formed  
  • 1883 O.S. one-inch maps cover most of Scotland. Growth of walking clubs. In the 3rd quarter of this century, at least a dozen walking and rambling clubs were formed in the Lowlands of Scotland.  
  • 1884 William Hesketh Lever makes his first trip to the Hebrides  
  • 1884 Early listing of Scottish Mountains. Third Edition of 'The Highland Sportsman and Tourist' (Robert Hall) - Lists 236 heights of 3000ft or more. But it is not known for certain whether Munro saw this, or other early lists.  
  • 1885 Munro tries politics. Munro, now living mainly at the family home in Forfarshire, at Lindertis, stands as Conservative candidate for Kirkcaldy Burghs. And gets heavily defeated. Continues to explore the Scottish hills.  
  • 1888 Fights and loses Mid Lanark by-election  
  • 1888 Scottish Labour Party formed  
  • 1889 Formation of Scottish Mountaineering Club. March 1889, Glasgow. The SMC is constituted after correspondence in the ?Glasgow Herald? discussing the possibility of forming a ?Scottish Alpine Club?. There was already in Scotland a small nucleus of active and experienced mountaineers, but contact between them was spare. The SMC begin a Journal in 1890, initially published three times a year, and including a serially published guide to the Scottish Mountains. The first Editor, J.G. Stott, commissions Munro to draw up a list of Scottish mountains. Munro has to date climbed 42 tops.  
  • 1891 An Comunn Gaidhealach - the Gaelic Society - founded to promote the Gaelic language  
  • 1891 Munro?s Tables Published The famous tables are published for the first time in September, 1891, in the sixth issue of Volume 1 of the SMC Journal. They include 538 tops which exceed 3,000 feet in height; 283 are deemed to be separate mountains. Munro completed the list in five months of very hard work, using many field notes collected before and during its compilation. In a note to the Tables, Munro admits that he did not foresee the amount of work which would be required. Munro is 35.  
  • 1892 Hardie elected as MP for West Ham South  
  • 1892 Munro becomes 3rd President of SMC. As President he entertains his fellow members on Club Meets by playing the flute. He does not drink tea.  
  • 1892 Marries general's daughter. Travels widely. He continues, while in Scotland, to work on the Tables, as he is not completely happy with the first edition. 1893 He dies at Abbotsford  
  • 1893 John Brown dies  
  • 1893 Independent Labour Party formed  
  • 1894 West Highland Railway reaches Fort William  
  • 1894 Scottish Labour Party wound up  
  • 1895 Hardie loses West Ham  
  • 1897 Victoria celebrates her Diamond Jubilee  

The Great Disruption of 1843

Ever since the days of John Knox and the Reformation, the vast majority of the Scottish people had thrown their weight and support behind the Kirk.

However, the unity of the Church of Scotland was finally blown apart by one of the most important and far-reaching events of the nineteenth century - the co-called Disruption of 1843.

This split in the Kirk caused bitter divisions, left ministers without homes and salaries, and meant that whole congregations found themselves without churches to worship in.

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Age of Invention in Scotland

The Age of Invention in Scotland

In just a few short decades, Scotland managed to transform itself from a remote backwater scrabbling to make a living off the land into one of the greatest industrial nations on Earth.

The genius of its inventors, engineers and businessmen, combined with the hard work of its people, quickly transformed the country during the 18th and 19th centuries into the so-called workshop of the world.

As the economy boomed, cities such as Glasgow became some of the wealthiest places in Britain and the Empire. But there was also a dark side to this new-found wealth - appalling squalor and poverty which condemned thousands to an early death through illness and disease.

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James Keir Hardie & Labour Conditions

Scotland may have been a wealthy country in the Victorian era - but much of its prosperity was created at the expense of its workers.

Hundreds of thousands of men, women and children toiled in factories and down mines to build business empires for their employers.

They often worked for long hours in appalling conditions. Inevitably, there had to be a backlash sooner or later. When it came, it was in the formation of the Scottish Labour Party.

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The Renewal of Lewis

The Attempted Renewal of Lewis & Harris

Massive changes took place in British society during Queen Victoria's long reign on the throne - but they made the gap between rich and poor wider than ever.

While many industrialists from south of the border made an absolute fortune in their mills and factories and treated Scotland as a holiday playground, Highlanders continued to suffer from centuries-old problems of poverty and deprivation.

However, at least some of the Highlanders' difficulties were of their own making. They were a proud but stubborn people who were sometimes resistant to change, and whose desire for land on occasions blinded them as to the best way of making progress.

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Victoria & Balmoral

Victoria and Balmoral

Queen Victoria was the first English-born monarch of Great Britain ever to fall in love with Scotland. She thought it was the finest country in the world, and came north of the border as often as she could.

Yet the Queen - who ruled over the British Empire for 64 long years - only discovered the delights of the Scottish landscape, scenery and people by accident.

She was meant to be going to Brussels for a summer holiday in 1842, but she fell ill and her advisers thought a trip to Scotland would provide a good but less strenuous alternative.

Victoria came north and was immediately captivated. The affection she had for the Scots from then on was to profoundly shape both her own life and that of the country she effectively adopted.

She put the Highlands on the map, made them popular, sparked off a craze for tartan in fashionable society - and struck up a relationship with a servant which almost certainly developed into an illicit love affair.

Victoria's first sight of Scotland after arriving by ship at Leith was Edinburgh. Incredibly, she was only the second reigning British monarch to come north of the border - the first was George IV in 1820 - but she took to the country and its people straight away.

The young Queen was immediately enchanted with the capital, but her true heart lay in the Highlands. She travelled on to Perthshire, with her husband, Prince Albert, enjoying the deerstalking.

The pair immediately fell in love with the vast, open views and the stern but respectful people. And they quickly developed an affection for Balmoral, with its pocket-sized castle hidden deep in the Deeside countryside

At that time, the castle and estate were owned by Sir Robert Gordon, the brother of the Earl of Aberdeen. Victoria was offered the remaining lease when he died in 1847, and she decided to take it, renting the place out for her by-now annual visits north of the border.

The castle was small, but it afforded her privacy and an escape from the rigid protocol and often dull routine of royal life in faraway London. Prince Albert loved it as much as she did, partly because the countryside reminded him of his childhood in Germany.

The royal couple were offered the chance to buy the property and estate in 1852. They snapped up the opportunity, and decided to build a far grander castle on the site.

The old property - which, in any case, was in pretty bad repair - was demolished and a replacement, fashioned in granite and designed in the new and fashionable Scottish baronial style, built in its place.

But Victoria didn't just like the building and the countryside - she loved the local people too, and forged an affection between the Royal Family and the inhabitants of nearby villages such as Braemar and Ballater which continues to this day.

The Royal couple delighted in adopting Scottish customs. They ate porridge for breakfast, for instance, and quickly fell in love with tartan - to the extent that they decked the castle out in it.

Victoria often wore a tartan plaid and clothed her children in the kilt, while Albert actually designed his own tartan for use by the Royals. Their interest in the subject created an enthusiasm for it which made it the most fashionable cloth of the age, and which secured its position in the fashion world right through to the present day.

The Queen also deliberately set out to make contacts with local residents, and even visited them in their homes and made friends with their children. However, there was one local who stood head and shoulders above the rest in terms of her affection - the ghillie John Brown.

Victoria first met Brown shortly after taking the lease on Balmoral. At the time, he was a 21-year-old stable hand on the estate; the Queen was eight years older.

Prince Albert also took to him quickly, since the two men shared a love of shooting, hillwalking and deer shooting. As a result, the ghillie was a natural choice to accompany the Queen when she ventured out in the area alone.

When her beloved husband died suddenly from complications arising from a chill in 1861, Victoria was devastated, and took to the mourning black she would wear for the rest of her life.

In a bid to try and revive the shattered Queen, who was virtually on the edge of a nervous breakdown, courtiers summoned Brown. He travelled down to the Isle of Wight where she was staying at the time and her condition immediately improved.

There is little doubt that from then on, their relationship deepened and probably turned into a love affair. Remarkably, she became submissive to him. If he told her to do something, she immediately obeyed - she would, for instance, change an outfit if he didn't like it or felt it wasn't right for her.

His influence became overpowering. No longer were they just together in Scotland - the dour ghillie from the Highlands was expected to be by the Queen's side in London, too.

On one famous occasion, she refused to attend a military review in Hyde Park unless Brown was with her. Her advisers gently tried to persuade the Queen that with gossip over their relationship at fever pitch, this could cause a riot, but she refused to budge.

The problem was only solved when the Mexican Emperor fortuitously died, allowing relieved officials to cancel the whole thing as a mark of respect for his passing.

Unsurprisingly, rumours about the relationship spread far and wide, and there were even wild allegations that the Queen had given birth to a secret love child by Brown during a holiday in Switzerland in 1868.

Brown's position was deeply resented by the Royal Court, and the Prince of Wales - later to become Edward VII - is said to have loathed him. Yet his power over Victoria simply seemed to increase as the years passed.

He began to be privy to state secrets and exert his own influence and opinions over the politicians of the time. He could hire and fire household staff, and is said to have saved her life on a number of occasions by grabbing attackers and taking control of her runaway horses.

Then, in 1893, tragedy struck again for the ageing Queen. She had bought Brown a house at Balmoral for his retirement, but he never lived to enjoy it. Like Albert before him, he caught a chill while outdoors. Complications turned it to fever, and he was dead within days.

Once again, Victoria went into acute shock. She lost the use of her legs, complaining bitterly: "My grief is unbounded, dreadful, and I know not how to bear it or how to believe it possible. Dear, dear John, my kindest and best friend, to whom I could say everything."

This time, she never really recovered. Four years later, she celebrated her Diamond Jubilee, and four years after that, she died.

An age was finally over. But it had been an age which had been good for Scotland. At the end of Victoria's reign much of he country was prosperous, and its people well educated, ambitious and content.

Thanks to the efforts of the Queen who loved Scotland and everything about it, the country was finally on the world map in a new and different way. Stories of impoverished Highlanders and slum cities had been replaced by the powerful imagery of the shortbread tin - lochs, heather, porridge and tartan.

It was false, kitsch, and touristy, but the world loved it - and continues to love it to this very day.


Meanwhile...

  • 1848

The first settlers arrive in Dunedin, New Zealand

  • 1848

Hale and Burnett found the New York News Agency - later the Associated Press

  • 1848

William Thomson, Lord Kelvin, determines the temperature fo absolute zero

  • 1861

Russian serfs are emancipated

  • 1861

Mrs Beeton?s, ?Book of Household Management? is published

  • 1901

The Mombasa to Lake Victoria railway is completed

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Victorian Highlands & Rise of Whisky

The Victorian Highlands

Queen Victoria's love affair with the Highlands inflicted a massive change on the country - by suddenly making it trendy and fashionable to travel north of the border.

In the space of just a few years, Highlanders stopped being seen as savages by the English and suddenly became the centre of fascination and attention.

The middle classes caught onto Victoria's example and started to fall in love with the customs and culture of Scotland's rugged, mountainous and remote north.

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