Events from the year 1965 in Scotland.
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See also: | List of years in Scotland Timeline of Scottish history 1965 in: The UK • Wales • Elsewhere Scottish football: 1964–65 • 1965–66 1965 in Scottish television |
Incumbents
editLaw officers
editJudiciary
editEvents
edit- March – Cables Wynd House ("Banana Flats") completed in Leith.[2]
- 24 March – Roxburgh, Selkirk and Peebles by-election: David Steel (Liberal) gains the seat from the Conservatives.
- 12 April – Harald Leslie becomes Chairman of the Scottish Land Court, with the judicial title Lord Birsay. He replaces Lord Gibson.[1]
- 15 June – Law Commissions Act 1965, establishing the Scottish Law Commission, receives the Royal assent.
- August – Union Canal officially closed to navigation.[3]
- 5 August – the Registration of Births, Deaths and Marriages (Scotland) Act 1965 receives royal assent.
- 11 August – first edition of The Celtic View, the official weekly magazine of Celtic F.C. in Glasgow, is published.
- 20 August – Cassius Clay fights an exhibition bout at the Ice Rink, Paisley.[4]
- 6 September – Edinburgh Princes Street railway station is officially closed.[5]
- 15 October – the Cruachan Dam pumped-storage hydroelectricity scheme at Ben Cruachan near Oban opens.
- 8 November – the Murder (Abolition of Death Penalty) Act suspends capital punishment for murder in England, Scotland and Wales, for five years in the first instance, replacing it with a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment.
- November – Harthill Bypass opened, first section of the M8 motorway and the first substantive section of motorway in Scotland.
- The Unionist Party in Scotland is renamed the Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party and constitutionally comes under the control of the London-based Conservative Party.
- Construction of the town of Dalgety Bay begins.
- Highlands and Islands Development Board formed.
- Corpach pulp and paper mills open.[6]
Births
edit- 18 January – Paul Flexney, footballer
- 20 January – Colin Calderwood, international footballer and coach
- 22 January – Brian McCardie, actor
- 27 January – Alan Cumming, actor
- 6 February – Simone Lahbib, actress
- 11 February – Keith Cochrane, businessman
- 14 February – Ian Spittal, footballer
- 16 February – Ally Maxwell, footballer and coach
- 22 February – John Leslie (born John Leslie Stott), television presenter
- 5 March – Carolyn Leckie, Scottish Socialist Party MSP (2003–2007)
- 8 March – Paul Martin, footballer and manager
- 20 March – William Dalrymple, historian
- 22 March – Rob Wainwright, international rugby union footballer
- 23 March – Marti Pellow (born Mark McLachlan), singer
- 26 March – Pat McFadden, Labour MP (Wolverhampton 2005– )
- 6 April – Andy Walker, footballer and TV pundit
- 11 April – Lynn Ferguson, writer, actress, comedian and presenter
- 25 April – Ally Dick, footballer
- 16 May – Stuart Millar, football player and manager
- 17 May – Keith Wright, international footballer
- 24 May – Brian Irvine, international footballer
- 28 May – Vic Kasule, footballer
- 5 June – Allan Guthrie, literary agent, author and editor of crime fiction
- 19 June – A. B. Jackson, poet
- 22 June – Jimmy Sandison, footballer
- 3 July – Tommy Flanagan, actor
- 9 July – David O'Hara, actor
- 12 July – Eric Cullen, actor (died 1996)
- 15 July – Alistair Carmichael, Liberal Democrat politician and Secretary of State for Scotland
- 19 July – Evelyn Glennie, virtuosa percussionist
- 24 July – Julie Graham, actress
- 26 July – Hamish Clark, actor
- 11 August – Robert Fleck, international footballer and manager
- 30 August – Peter Grant, international footballer and manager
- 5 September – Murdo Fraser, Conservative MSP (2001– )
- 11 September:
- Robert Docherty, footballer
- Graeme Obree, racing cyclist
- 14 September – Paul McFadden, footballer
- 27 September – Rhona Cameron, comedian
- 14 October – Sandy Stewart, footballer and manager
- 20 October – Norman Blake, singer, instrumentalist and songwriter
- 22 October – A. L. Kennedy, fiction writer
- 29 October – Paul Stewart, racing driver
- 12 November – Eddie Mair, radio and television presenter
- 19 November – Douglas Henshall, actor
- 24 November – Shirley Henderson, actress
- 25 November – Dougray Scott, actor
- 28 November – Caroline Paterson, actress
- 11 December – Alison Watt, painter
- 13 December – Hugh Burns, footballer
- 20 December – Robert Cavanah, actor, writer, director and producer
- 21 December – Stuart Mitchell, pianist and composer
- 31 December – Mike Conroy, footballer
- Unknown
- Anne Bevan, visual artist, sculptor and lecturer
- Christine Borland, sculptor
- Patricia Littlechild, sport shooter and neurosurgeon[7]
- Susan Philipsz, sound artist
Deaths
edit- 7 January – Anne Redpath, domestic painter (born 1895)
- 1 February – Robert Spence, Labour MP
- 14 February – David Ferguson Hunter, recipient of the Victoria Cross (born 1891)
- 30 April – James William Slessor Marr, marine biologist and polar explorer (born 1902)
- 17 March – Walter Potter Ritchie, recipient of the Victoria Cross (born 1892)
- 31 March – Gerard Crole, international rugby union and cricket player (born 1894)
- 9 April – Robert Gibson, Lord Gibson, lawyer and Labour MP
- 9 May – Hugh O'Donnell, footballer (born 1913)
- 16 July – William Reid, Scottish Labour Party Member of Parliament from 1950 to 1964 (born 1889)
- 2 August – John Carmont, High Court Judge (born 1890)
- 12 August – Willie Gallacher, trade unionist, activist and communist MP (born 1881)
- 5 September – Tom Johnston, Labour MP, government minister and chairman of North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board (born 1881)
- 8 October – James Nelson, international footballer (born 1901)
- 20 October – William Thomas Shaw, Unionist Party MP (born 1879)
The arts
edit- George Mackay Brown's poetry The Year of the Whale is published.
- The Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts opens the Kelly Gallery.
- 31 December – "Pirate" radio station Radio Scotland begins broadcasting from LV Comet anchored outside U.K. territorial waters off Dunbar.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b "No. 18339". The Edinburgh Gazette. 6 April 1965. p. 243.
- ^ "Cables Wynd House". Historic Environment Scotland. 30 January 2017. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
- ^ Jean, Jean (1968). The Canals of Scotland. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-4240-1.
- ^ "King Ali of Paisley", The Scotsman, retrieved 7 May 2014
- ^ Butt, R. V. J. (1995). The Directory of Railway Stations: details every public and private passenger station, halt, platform and stopping place, past and present. Sparkford: Patrick Stephens Ltd. ISBN 1-8526-0508-1.
- ^ "Kilmallie timeline". Kilmallie Community Council. Retrieved 8 August 2014.
- ^ "Scottish Smallbore Rifle Association". www.ssra.co.uk. Retrieved 30 April 2020.