On this day in 1746
Jacobites fight in the Battle of Culloden
The Battle of Culloden was an unusually swift and bloody fight. In less than an hour, more than 2000 men had been killed or injured on Drummossie Moor, and the Jacobite campaign to win the British throne for Charles Edward Stuart – Bonnie Prince Charlie – son of James, was at an end.
The previous year, Stuart had arrived in Scotland and led an army of supporters that had captured Edinburgh and proclaimed his father king of Scotland. They then marched into England, as far south as Derbyshire. The government in London had no choice but to defend itself. It called back thousands of troops from Europe, and Stuart and his supporters returned to Scotland and were eventually clustered primarily outside Inverness.
Jacobite forces depleted
By the time of the battle on 16 April, the Jacobite forces had been severely depleted. Many had returned home, but still others were simply in the wrong place after a breakdown in communications had seen almost a third return to the city without the knowledge of the remaining two thirds.
The two sides formed up in the morning and the battle commenced at lunchtime, initially with a barrage of artillery fire from government forces. Stuart’s men suffered attacks from both sides and many were lost to musket fire. Stuart was removed from the battlefield for his own safety. Their formations broken up, the Jacobites were forced to retreat, in the process of which many more were killed by the advancing government forces. Casualty numbers on the Jacobean side vastly outnumbered those who had been fighting for the government cause – possibly by as much as six to one.
Flora MacDonald
Although plans were made for a Jacobite resurgence, they didn’t come to fruition. Charles Edward Stewart fled to the Hebrides and eventually Skye. Here, he met Flora MacDonald who helped him escape to France.
In the days following the battle, government forces confiscated livestock, which they sold for profit, and took Jacobite loyalists south across the border to stand trial for treason. Many of those who were convicted were executed or suffered transportation.
...and on this day in 1962
Livingston is designated a New Town
Livingston, then just a village, was greatly enlarged in the early 1960s, with the incorporation of several surrounding villages in an effort to reduce overcrowding in Glasgow. As such, it became Scotland’s fourth New Town. The plan, published in April that year, defined an 84-square-mile area of mixed housing and industry, including homes for 100,000 residents. Before the end of the decade, the initial 100,000 resident projection was more than doubled.
...and on this day in 1979
Seven killed in the Paisley Rail Crash
Five passengers and the drivers of two trains were killed when they collided head on at Paisley Gilmour Street on the evening of 16 April 1979. It occurred when the Ayr to Glasgow Central service left the platform even though its signal was red. This put it directly in the path of the oncoming service from Glasgow Central to Wemyss Bay with inevitable, unavoidable consequences.
Yesterday…
Founder and first governor of the Royal Bank of Scotland dies
Archibald Campbell founded two banks, supported the Acts of Union, and was Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of Scotland.
Inventor of the fridge is born in Hamilton
William Cullen discovered the process of artificial refrigeration and thus contributed enormously to the cause of public health.
Tomorrow…
The Kelpies are 30-metre-tall horse heads sited between Grangemouth and Falkirk, in Helix Park, which sits beside the Forth and Clyde Canal.