On this day in 1929
Madame Ecosse is born in Glasgow
Winnie Ewing had a long and varied political career. She was president of the Scottish National Party between 1987 and 2005, MSP for the Highlands and Islands, an MP at the House of Commons between 1967 and 1979, and a member of the European Parliament between 1979 and 1999. As SNP member for Ross, Skye and Lochaber, Ian Blackford, told the House of Commons on her 90th birthday, that made her the only parliamentarian to have sat in all three legislative bodies.
First to speak
When the new Scottish Parliament held its first debate, Winnie Ewing was the first to speak, opening the session by saying “I want to start with the words I have always wanted either to say or to hear someone else say – the Scottish Parliament, which adjourned on March 25, 1701, is hereby reconvened”.
Nicola Sturgeon chose Winnie Ewing as her political hero in a talk with the BBC and remembered Winnie’s speech upon the parliament’s opening. On 23 March 2018, she told the BBC, “I was there in the chamber, and it was an incredibly emotional moment … to see the woman who had served in the House of Commons as champion of a Scottish Parliament, served in the European Parliament, to come to a third parliament and declare it reconvened in the way she did”.
Champion of Scotland
In a 1987 debate in the Westminster parliament on the future government of Scotland, Winnie’s daughter-in-law, Margaret Ewing, MP for Moray, referred to Winnie’s successful campaign for the Hamilton seat 20 years before, which she had run under the slogan “Stop the world, Scotland wants to get on”.
“That philosophy still underpins the policies and the actions of the SNP,” Margaret Ewing said. “Members like to disparage us by talking about separatism and isolationism, yet the people of Scotland have been denied the right to have their voice heard in the world international community. That is where we seek to take our nation.”
Winnie was given her nickname, Madame Ecosse, by fellow European politicians when she was elected to the European Parliament and used her position both to secure funding for Scotland and represent it on the wider political stage.
...and on this day in 1633
Crown jewels lost when ferry sinks in the Firth of Forth
There’s a large horde of royal treasure at the bottom of the Firth of Forth. It sank in 1633 on the Blessing of Burntisland, a ferry that plied the five-mile crossing between Burntisland and Leith. The ferry had been caught in a storm, in which 33 of the 35 onboard drowned. As it went down, it took with it not only the passengers, but up to five tons of silver and gold belonging to Charles I, which would today be worth the equivalent of half a billion pounds.
With so much treasure waiting to be found, there has naturally been interest in locating the wreck and its cargo and, in October 2011, The Independent reported that marine archaeologists believed they had found it. “The archaeologists say that they are now poised to confirm publicly that the vessel is the Blessing of Burntisland, a royal ferry which sank during a storm in 1633 while carrying Charles I’s possessions across the Firth of Forth after he had been crowned King of Scotland.”
Yesterday…
Queen’s Park FC was founded in 1867 and is the oldest association football club in Scotland.
Hundreds killed as battleship sinks in Scapa Flow
A battleship was blown to pieces by an explosion in its munitions store, resulting in the deaths of 843 sailors.
Tomorrow…
Train crash demolishes Largs railway station
A train from Glasgow crashed through the buffers at Largs station in July 1995 and destroyed the ticket office.
King Robert I of Scotland was crowned after the murder of John Comyn and led the nation through much of the First War of Scottish Independence.