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1964 in Scotland
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Events from the year 1964 in Scotland.
Incumbents
- Secretary of State for Scotland and Keeper of the Great Seal – Michael Noble until 16 October; then Willie Ross
Law officers
- Lord Advocate – Ian Shearer, Lord Avonside; then Gordon Stott
- Solicitor General for Scotland – David Colville Anderson; then Henry Wilson
Judiciary
- Lord President of the Court of Session and Lord Justice General – Lord Clyde
- Lord Justice Clerk – Lord Grant
- Chairman of the Scottish Land Court – Lord Gibson
Events

- 11 January – Nationwide UK teenage girls' magazine Jackie is first published by DC Thomson of Dundee.
- 29 April – 1964 Aberdeen typhoid outbreak: All schools in Aberdeen are closed following 136 cases of typhoid being reported.
- 30 April – Breakthrough on 2.5 mi tunnel 500 m under the Firth of Forth to link the colliery at Valleyfield, Fife, to the modern coal processing facilities at Kinneil colliery near Bo'ness.
- 14 May – Rutherglen by-election: Labour gains seat from the Conservatives.
- 20 May – 1964 Aberdeen typhoid outbreak begins.
- 23 June – University of Strathclyde chartered.
- 4 September – The Forth Road Bridge opens across the Firth of Forth, connecting Fife and Edinburgh.
- 22 September – Hunterston A nuclear power station opens.
- 15 October – United Kingdom general election: Labour defeats Sir Alec Douglas-Home's Conservatives and the Unionist Party in Scotland loses eight seats.
- 20 November – The first part of the M8 motorway between Glasgow and Edinburgh is opened.
- HMNB Clyde established by the Royal Navy at Faslane on the Gare Loch.
- William Grant & Sons first market their Glenfiddich distillery Speyside single malt whisky in bottles internationally.
Births
- 2 January – Michael McCann, lawyer and politician
- 29 January – Roddy Frame, singer-songwriter and guitarist
- 2 February – Susan Deacon, Labour politician and MSP (1999–2007)
- 12 February – Stephen Carter, businessman and politician
- 19 February – Jim McInally, international footballer and manager
- 7 March – Tommy Sheridan, socialist politician and MSP (1999–2007)
- 13 April – John Swinney, Scottish National Party leader and government minister
- 18 April – Niall Ferguson, historian
- 24 May – Liz McColgan, athlete
- 31 May – Billy Davies, footballer and manager
- 27 June – Shona Marshall, sport shooter
- 1 August – Fiona Hyslop, Scottish National Party MSP (1999– ) and government minister
- 9 September – John Hughes, footballer and manager
- 4 October – Yvonne Murray, middle- and long-distance runner
- 8 October – James Grant, new wave singer-songwriter
- 13 November – Paul McBride, criminal lawyer (died 2012)
- 11 December – Justin Currie, singer-songwriter
- 25 December – Gary McAllister, international footballer, manager and coach
- Dorothy Bain, Lord Advocate
- Stephen Conroy, painter
- Aminatta Forna, novelist
- Jim Lambie, installation artist
- Gillian Reid, chemist
- Alan Warner, novelist
Deaths
- 31 May – Nikolai Orlov, classical pianist (born 1892 in Russia)
- 21 July – John White, international footballer (born 1937)
- 25 September – Robert Wilson, tenor (born 1907)
- 3 December – Dot Allan, writer (born 1886)
- 11 December – Charles Donaldson, Conservative politician (born 1903)
- 31 December – Ronald Fairbairn, psychoanalyst (born 1889)
The arts
- 15 December – Peter Watkins' docudrama Culloden is broadcast on BBC Television.
References
References
- McRobbie, Angela. (1991). "Feminism and Youth Culture: from "Jackie" to "Just Seventeen"". Macmillan.
- (2014-05-13). "Tunnel under Forth that linked Lothians to Fife". [[Edinburgh Evening News]].
- (2015-03-04). "Crossing the Forth without the Forth Bridge". [[BBC]].
- MacDonald, Fraser. (2014-04-30). "Scotland's secret tunnel under the Forth, 50 years old and forgotten". [[The Guardian]].
- (1964-06-24). "Scottish University Charter Approved". [[The Times]].
- "1964 General election results summary". UK Political Info.
- "Glasgow 2014 - Shona Marshall Profile".
- "Olympedia – Yvonne Murray".
- (2007). "Biographical Dictionary of ScottishWomen". Edinburgh University Press.
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