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On this day in 1934

The surgeon’s photograph of Nessie is published

Whether or not the Loch Ness Monster really exists has been a point of debate for years. However, the so-called surgeon’s photograph of 1934, which appeared to show a dinosaur-like creature surfacing, with a long neck and small head, would have helped bring many doubters into the believers’ camp. It’s since been debunked.

Reports had been getting more common from the 1800s onwards, with some even claiming that they’d seen the monster out of the loch, running around on dry land. There was a particular spate in the early 1930s, culminating in the surgeon’s photograph, so-called because the photographer, Robert Wilson, was a surgeon.

Monster with a swan-like head

The Western Morning News on 20 April explained how “Dr Wilson described the monster having a small head and a swan-like neck protruding three feet above the surface of the water. The creature was about two or three hundred yards from the shore, and, while no part of its body was visible, Dr Wilson stated there was considerable commotion of the water in the vicinity”.

The photograph was seized upon as evidence of the monster’s existence. However, in the 1990s, a series of analyses by authors and television documentary makers revealed evidence that it was, in fact, a hoax, and that the way the frame had been cropped had made the ‘monster’ look far larger than it really was.
An ambitious expedition to capture the monster, led by Swedish explorer Jan Sundberg, took place in 2001.

 

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...and on this day in 2014

John Muir Way opens on John Muir’s birthday

The John Muir Way long distance walking route covers 130 miles through southern Scotland. It runs from coast to coast between Argyll and Bute, and Muir’s birthplace in Dunbar, East Lothian. One of the most popular walking routes in Britain, the Way passes Loch Lomond, the Forth and Clyde Canal, Linlithgow and Bo’ness.

Born in Dunbar in 1838, John Muir was a conservationist who founded the US National Park Service, which looks after all the United States’ national parks and monuments, including Florida’s Everglades, the Statue of Liberty in New York, the Grand Canyon and both Yellowstone and Yosemite National Parks. The Muir family had emigrated to the United States in 1849, and John Muir himself died in Los Angeles in 1914.


 

Yesterday…

Queen Victoria’s would-be assassin stands trial

Robert Maclean was born in Scotland, but the act that made him famous – his attempted assassination of Queen Victoria – occurred in Windsor.

Tomorrow…

Leith-built steamship is first to cross the Atlantic

SS Sirius was designed for a route between Cork and London but one year after launch was the first steam ship to cross to America.