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On this day in 1996

Mass shooting at Dunblane Primary School

Gunman Thomas Hamilton shot dead 16 pupils, one teacher, and himself in the UK’s worst mass shooting. The incident occurred at Dunblane Primary School, close to Stirling.

Hamilton had arrived at the school at half past nine on the morning of the attack, carrying four handguns and more than 700 rounds of ammunition. He cut the local telephone cables, presumably to hamper any attempt to call for assistance. These cables didn’t serve the school, but ran instead to local houses.

He then entered the school gymnasium and, according to evidence given by teacher Eileen Harrild as part of the official inquiry,

he took a couple of steps, and I was very close to him, and it was only a few feet, because I was about to ask him what he wanted, and looked and saw the gun, and he starting shooting.

He killed class teacher Gwen Mayor and injured two others, along with several pupils. One of the injured teachers was Eileen Harrild herself. As she told the inquiry,

I couldn’t quite comprehend what was happening. I turned away from the man and made towards the open store area. I stumbled towards the open store area and I then had my back to the man, and during this time he turned his attention to the children and the people in that bottom third of the gymnasium. The shooting didn’t stop. It was continuous and rapid.

Eileen and fellow teacher Mary Blake helped move some of the children into the store area with them, where they took refuge as the shooting continued. As Mary told the inquiry,

The dark figure [Thomas Hamilton] was just inside the door. He was wearing dark clothing and he had some sort of headgear on. I was then hit, and I remember my head hurting. I realised that something terrible was happening. I fell to the ground, and I could hear constant shooting. I have a memory of him having both his hands up, but I don’t know if he had a gun in both hands. He was pointing the gun all around and shooting constantly. I could hear the children screaming. It was so loud that the screams seemed to be inside my head. My head was hurting terribly. I don’t remember being shot in the legs. I assume that is why I fell down, but I can’t remember when I was hit on the legs.

Several of the children still in the gymnasium were by then also lying injured and unable to move on the gymnasium floor. Hamilton shot these children for a second time, killing them, then left the gymnasium and shot into a nearby classroom.

Returning to the gymnasium, he placed a gun in his own mouth and pulled the trigger, killing himself instantly. He had been on the school grounds for less than give minutes, yet 17 people were dead and one further child died on the way to hospital. The 15 children who had been killed in the gymnasium had together sustained 58 gunshot wounds, of which the official inquiry ruled 26 would have proved individually fatal. Hamilton had fired 106 rounds of ammunition in total.

In the wake of the shooting, Britain introduced tougher gun control laws, as recommended by the Cullen Report into the massacre. Police also operated a temporary buy-back scheme that paid legal handgun owners to turn in their weapons in return for compensation.

A memorial to the victims of the shooting was erected at Dunblane Cathedral.

 

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...and on this day in 1192

The Church of Scotland becomes a daughter of Rome

A papal bull issued on 13 March 1192 ended the authority of the Archbishop of York over the Church of Scotland. Issued by Pope Celestine III, the decree confirmed the Church of Scotland as an independent entity.

York had long claimed authority over the Scottish church, pointing to a previous bull as the source of its authority. However, when Scotland refused to fall in line, successive bishops had taken a harder line, which had only resulted in more determined resistance.

York vacant

This was brought into focus when a new Scottish bishop needed to be ordained at a time when the seat of the Archbishop of York was also vacant. As the Archbishop of York was responsible for elevating Scottish bishops, the only solution was for the new Scottish bishop and the new Archbishop to each be consecrated by the Pope.

This created something of a precedent, certainly where the Scottish appointment was concerned, which Celestine III formalised through the issue of his bull, which broke the connection between the Scottish church and the seat of the Archbishop in York. Scotland thus became a direct daughter of the church in Rome, answerable directly to – and taking its authority directly from – the Pope.


 

Yesterday…

Salmon extinct in the River Kelvin

By March 1852, salmon had died out in the River Kelvin. They would not return until 1999 after a significant government investment.

Tomorrow…

Stirling is granted city status

Beating Ayr, Dumfries and Paisley, Stirling was granted city status in 2002 to celebrate Queen Elizabeth II’s Golden Jubilee

Clydebank suffers aerial attack

More than 500 people were killed and 1000 injured in a German bombing raid on Clydebank’s shipping and munitions industries in March 1941.

Mary McKinnon stands trial for murder

Mary McKinnon stabbed William Howat with a table knife on 8 February, and he died, 12 days later, at the Royal Infirmary in Edinburgh.