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| See also: | List of years in Scotland Timeline of Scottish history 1946 in: The UK • England • Wales • Elsewhere Scottish football: 1945–46 • 1946–47  | ||||
Events from the year 1946 in Scotland.
Incumbents
Law officers
Judiciary
Events
- 16 March – American Liberty ship Byron Darnton runs aground off Sanda Island; all 54 aboard are rescued.[1]
 - 13 April – a crowd of 139,468 at Hampden Park, Glasgow, watch the Scotland national football team defeat England 1-0 in a Victory International series Association football match.[2]
 - 3 May — The Hoover Company opens a factory at Cambuslang.[3]
 - 10 July – a crowd of 45,000 at Hampden Park watch Jackie Paterson defend his world flyweight boxing title.[2]
 - 25 July – a train collides with a bus which has crashed through level crossing gates at Balmuckety near Kirriemuir, killing 10.[4]
 - 27 August – MV Princess Victoria, the first roll-on/roll-off ferry built for service in British waters (the Stranraer–Larne crossing), is launched at William Denny and Brothers' shipyard in Dumbarton.
 - 22–27 November – the last election for a university constituency in the United Kingdom is held when the Combined Scottish Universities by-election is held. Walter Elliot (Unionist) wins decisively.
 - 5 December 
- A Kilmarnock by-election results in Willie Ross holding the seat for Labour.
 - Scottish edition of the Daily Mail begins publication in Edinburgh.
 
 - Drift mine opened in Machrihanish Coalfield.
 - Naturalist Gavin Maxwell purchases the island of Soay, Skye, and attempts to start a commercial shark fishing enterprise there.[5]
 
Births
- 6 January – John Duignan, economist and writer (died 2019)
 - 16 January – Graham Masterton, horror author
 - 30 January – Donald Mackay, Baron Mackay of Drumadoon, Lord Advocate
 - 28 February – Robin Cook, Labour MP and Foreign Secretary (died 2005)
 - 12 April – George Robertson, politician, Secretary General of NATO
 - May – Jock Brown, solicitor and football commentator
 - 10 May – Donovan, singer, songwriter and guitarist
 - 13 May – Bill Torrance, broadcaster
 - 1 June – Brian Cox, actor
 - 15 June – Michael Lynch), historian
 - 9 June – James Kelman, novelist
 - 9 July – Bon Scott, hard rock musician (AC/DC) in Australia (died 1980 in London)
 - 10 July – Stuart Christie, anarchist (died 2020)
 - 16 July – Charles McKean, Professor of Scottish Architectural History (died 2013)
 - 29 July – Bill Forsyth, film director
 - 19 August – Christopher Malcolm, television and film actor (died 2014 in London)
 - 25 August – Gavin Clydesdale Reid, economist
 - 27 August – Peter Tobin, serial killer and sex offender
 - 27 October – Margaret Bennett, ethnologist
 - 6 November – George Young, rock musician in Australia (died 2017)
 - 18 November
- Andrea Allan, actress
 - Chris Rainbow (born Christopher James Harley), pop rock singer and musician (died 2015)
 
 - 14 December – Peter Lorimer, international footballer (died 2021)
 - Louise Martin, sports administrator[6]
 - Gordeanna McCulloch, folk singer with The Clutha
 - Ronald Rae, sculptor
 
Deaths
- 17 February – Sir George Pirie, painter (born 1863)
 - 18 February – Catherine Carswell, biographer and journalist (born 1879)
 - 20 May – Jane Findlater, novelist (born 1866)
 - 5 June – James Craig Annan, photographer (born 1864)
 - 14 June – John Logie Baird, television pioneer (born 1888; died in England)
 - 15 July – Binnie Dunlop, editor and advocate of eugenics (born 1874)
 - 23 July – James Maxton, MP and leader of the Independent Labour Party (born 1885)
 - 6 August – Benny Lynch, flyweight boxer (born 1913)
 - 18 August – Marion Angus, Scots language poet (born 1865 in England)
 - 9 September – Violet Jacob, historical novelist (born 1863)
 
Arts and literature
- 22 May – English writer George Orwell leaves London to spend much of the next 18 months at Barnhill, Jura, working on his dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four.
 - Summer – Robert McLeish's The Gorbals Story is premiered by Glasgow Unity Theatre at the Queens Theatre.
 - Oriel Malet's fictionalised biography of Marjory Fleming is published.
 - Janet Adam Smith's Life Among the Scots is published.
 - The Central Office of Information short film The Glen is Ours is released.
 
See also
References
- ↑ "Bryon Darnton [sic.]". Canmore. Edinburgh: Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland. 19 April 2012. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
 - 1 2 "Notable Dates in History". The Flag in the Wind. The Scots Independent. Archived from the original on 23 May 2014. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
 - ↑ 'New industry tries vainly to "Buy Scottish"', Daily Record, 4 May 1946, p.5.
 - ↑ "Report on the Collision which occurred on 25th July, 1946, at Balmuckety Level Crossing on the London, Midland and Scottish Railway". Railways Archive. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
 - ↑ Maxwell, Gavin (1952). Harpoon at a Venture. London: Hart-Davis.
 - ↑ "Louise Martin pivotal in smoothing the way for the Glasgow Commonwealth Games". HeraldScotland. Retrieved 30 January 2023.
 
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