On this day in Scotland | | Scottish history with entries for every day On this day in Scotland – Scottish history with entries for every day

On this day in 1848

Tea magnate Thomas Lipton is born

Lipton’s tea is famous the world over. It takes its name from Thomas Lipton, who was born in Glasgow in 1848 (some sources say 1850) and went on to found Lipton tea.

As a young man, he spent time working on ships, then lived in America for a couple of years. When he returned to his hometown, he brought £100 with him and used it to open a provisions store, which he built up into a national chain of several hundred outlets.

Respected businessman

“He was always a good buyer, and in time proved himself to be one of the most extraordinary sellers the world has seen,” wrote the Northern Whig on 3 October 1931. “Always daring and always with large ideas, he was not content to confine his operations to Glasgow. He became one of the pioneers of a form of business now very much developed, that of the multiple shop, and in time there came to be scarcely a town in the United Kingdom in which you could not find one of Lipton’s shops.”

In the late 1800s he started to trade in tea, buying direct from the producers so he could undercut rivals in his grocery stores. This established the brand that carries his name to this day.

Lipton’s death

Lipton never married, and died in London in 1931, but left most of his estate to the city of Glasgow. He was 81 at the time of his death and had been ill for a week.

The Yorkshire Post announced his death on 3 October, the day after he took his last breath, and described him as an ingenious and diverting advertiser. “In 1889 when he realised that there were large profits to be made in tea, he purchased 20,000 chests, and to advertise the fact sent through the streets of Glasgow a procession of fifty drays accompanied by a brass band and a squad of pipers.” By the 1890s, said the same piece in the Yorkshire Post, he held more tea in bond than any other man in the world.

Lipton is buried in a family grave in Glasgow’s Southern Necropolis.

 

Scotland newsletters

Join the club!

From the birth of Robbie Burns to the invention of the waterbed – Scotland has a fascinating history to explore. Don't miss our free weekly update.



We'll never sell your data and you can unsubscribe in an instant.

 

...and on this day in 1941

Rudolf Hess flees to Scotland

Rudolf Hess was Adolf Hitler’s trusted deputy, but he fled to Scotland in 1941 on an unauthorised flight in an effort to negotiate peace during the early years of the Second World War.

Despite being Deputy Führer, Hess wasn’t Hitler’s direct successor. In the case of the leader’s incapacity or death, Hermann Goring would step in. If neither of them was able to act, it would be Hess who took over. Nonetheless, Hess would have been aware of everything that the Nazi Party was doing, and he authorised many of the laws that would enable the Holocaust.

Hess flies to Scotland

When it looked like Hitler was about to open a second front in the war – with Russia – Hess had a plane adapted for long-range use and placed on standby. Then, on the early evening of 10 May 1941, he took off from Augsburg in Bavaria and headed for Britain. His intention was to secure a meeting with the Duke of Hamilton, who Hess believed had the ear of the king. He also believed that both men – Hamilton and the king – were against the war and would negotiate peace with Germany.

He crossed the British coast at Northumberland and flew as low as 50ft from the ground in the hope it would help him evade detection, although by then he had already been spotted by radar. Once over Scotland, he increased his altitude to several thousand feet and parachuted out, which saved him having to find somewhere to land. His plane crashed, and he came down at Floors Farm in Waterfoot, where he was discovered by David McLean. McLean contacted the Home Guard, which took Hess to Busby, then to Giffnock.

Hess’s defection revealed

German radio announced Hess’s defection, so there was no reason for British authorities not to allow the same to be done in Britain. The Dundee Courier of 13 May included the official announcement from Downing Street that “on the night of Saturday, the 10th, an Me. 110 was reported by our patrols to have crossed the coast of Scotland and to be flying in the direction of Glasgow. Since an Me. 110 would not have the fuel to return to Germany, this report was at first disbelieved. Later on am ME.110 crashed near Glasgow with its guns unloaded. Shortly afterwards a German officer who had bailed out was found, with his parachute, in the neighbourhood, suffering from a broken ankle. He was taken to a hospital in Glasgow, where he at first gave his name as Horn, but later on he declared he was Rudolf Hess.”

The German version of events stated that Hess had been ill for some years and that a letter he’d left behind suggested he was suffering a mental disorder.

Hess got his meeting with the Duke of Hamilton and told him that Hitler wanted to make peace with Britain, but he didn’t get the peace conference he was after.

Germany in denial

The Northern Wig of 14 May included comments issued by the National Socialist (Nazi) party which insisted that “nothing has been changed by this act in the prosecution of the war against Britain, forced upon the German people. It will be continued, as the Führer announced in his last speech, until the British leaders have been overthrown or are ready for peace.”

He was taken into custody and held until the end of the war, during the remainder of which he became increasingly paranoid and, at one time, attempted suicide.

He stood trial at Nuremberg for crimes against humanity and was sentenced to live in prison. He served his sentence at Spandau Prison in Berlin, eventually succeeding in a suicide attempt at the age of 93, after which the prison was demolished, and the site used for the construction of a shopping centre.


 

Yesterday…

Author JM Barrie is born

James Matthew Barrie was born in Kirriemuir, Angus, and is best remembered as the author of the stage play Peter Pan.

Tomorrow…

The Wigtown Martyrs are drowned

Mary Wilson and Mary Lachlan were Covenanters, who believed that God and Jesus Christ sat at the head of the church.