On this day in 1948
Artist and embroiderer Jessie Newbery dies
Born Jessie Rowat in Paisley on 28 May 1864, Newbery pioneered needlework as an artistic work in its own right and established the Department of Embroidery at the Glasgow School of Art. She was one of the founders of a group of women designers and artists – later known as the Glasgow Girls – who did much to promote the arts within the city and produced some of the most notable works of their time. As part of this group, she worked alongside her one-time student Ann Macbeth to support women’s suffrage and women who had been imprisoned for fighting for their right to vote.
...and on this day in 2015
South Glasgow University Hospital takes its first patients
“It has been nicknamed the ‘Death Star’ by locals because of its imposing 14-storey star-shaped design, topped by a landing pad for aircraft,” said the BBC on 27 April 2015 when South Glasgow University Hospital, one of Europe’s largest critical care complexes, opened its doors for the first time.
Officially called the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital, it cost £1bn to build and equip and was constructed on such a scale to accommodate the patients and 10,000 employees from several other nearby hospitals. These were the Western, Victoria and Royal Infirmaries, and Royal Hospital for Sick Children, as well as some departments from Gartnavel General Hospital.
Brownfield site
It was built on the site of the former Southern General Hospital and largely did away with communal wards, with most in-patients instead accommodated in individual en-suite rooms. As well as its own bathroom, each room also has free television, radio and wireless Internet.
There’s a separate 250-bed Royal Hospital for Children on-site, with a roof garden, and individual emergency departments for each.
A fleet of 26 low-level robots, each of which cost £50,000, were installed to act as porters, automatically moving equipment, food and waste – but not patients – around the vast site. The robots have their own dedicated lifts in the complex and automatically return to their charging stations so they will always be ready for use.
Yesterday…
First episode of Rebus is shown on ITV
The first episode of ITV’s adaptation of the Edinburgh-set Rebus novels aired in the same month as the birthday of Rebus’ creator Ian Rankin.
Lord Cockburn dies in Edinburgh
Henry Cockburn was Solicitor General for Scotland for four years from 1830, and, during his life, served as both an advocate and judge.
Tomorrow…
Rebus author Ian Rankin is born
Author Ian Rankin was born in Fife in 1960. He is best known as the author of a series of novels focused on Detective Inspector John Rebus.
Scotland’s last Protestant martyr is burned
Walter Mylne was burned at the stake in 1558, becoming the last man martyred in Scotland for his Protestant faith.