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| See also: | List of years in Scotland Timeline of Scottish history 1850 in: The UK • Wales • Elsewhere  | ||||
Events from the year 1850 in Scotland.
Incumbents
Law officers
Judiciary
Events
- 1 April – Aberdeen Railway opens to a terminus at Ferryhill, Aberdeen.
 - 15 April – iron paddle steamer SS City of Glasgow, launched on 28 February by Tod & Macgregor of Partick, makes her maiden voyage as the first steamer on the Glasgow–New York route.
 - 18 June – paddle steamer Orion sinks off Portpatrick[1] through the negligence of her master with the loss of 50 lives.
 - 17 October – James Young patents a method of distilling paraffin from coal, laying the foundations for the Scottish paraffin industry.
 - December – destitute Gaelic speakers from the island of Barra begin to appear in Glasgow, displaced by the Highland Clearances.
 - Cox Brothers open the Camperdown Works in Dundee which will become the world's largest jute works.
 - Remodelling of Dunrobin Castle completed.
 - Skara Brae revealed by weather.
 
Births
- 4 February – Thomas Lomar Gray, seismologist (died 1908 in the United States)
 - 24 April – Murdo MacKenzie, businessman (died 1939 in the United States)
 - 30 April – George Gibb, transport administrator (died 1925 in London)
 - 12 May – Charles McLaren, 1st Baron Aberconway, jurist, landowner, industrialist and Unionist politician (died 1934 in London)[2]
 - 27 May – Thomas Neill Cream, the "Lambeth Poisoner", serial killer (hanged 1897 in London)
 - 14 June – Eliza Humphreys, née Gollan (pen name 'Rita'), novelist (died 1938 in England)
 - 13 August – Peter Drummond, steam locomotive engineer (died 1918)
 - 22 August – William Morrison, chemist, creator of an electric carriage (died 1927 in the United States)
 - 13 November – Robert Louis Stevenson, novelist, poet, essayist and travel writer (died 1894 in Samoa)
 - 11 December – Mary Victoria Douglas-Hamilton, married into European nobility (died 1922 in Budapest)
 
Deaths
- 26 January – Francis Jeffrey, Lord Jeffrey, judge and literary critic (born 1773)
 - 5 June – Thomas Brown, architect (born 1781)
 - 18 June – John Burns, surgeon (born 1775) (in PS Orion disaster)
 - 12 July – Robert Stevenson, civil engineer noted for lighthouses (born 1772)[3]
 - 3 December – John Gibb, civil engineer and contractor (born 1776)
 - 29 December – William Hamilton Maxwell, novelist (born 1792 in Ireland)
 - Approximate date – Walter Sutherland, last native speaker of the Norn language on Unst
 
See also
References
- ↑ Kennedy, John (2007). The History of Steam Navigation. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4304-8330-4.
 - ↑ "Lord Aberconway, Industrialist, Dies; Sat in British Commons 1880 to 1910". timesmachine.nytimes.com. Retrieved 23 September 2020.
 - ↑ "Robert Stevenson". Northern Lighthouse Board. 2009. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
 
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