On this day in 1854
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.
In the former of those positions, he represented William Burke’s wife, who had been accused of having knowledge of the murders committed by her husband and his partner William Hare. While Burke was hanged, she was acquitted. He was also a vigorous defender of Edinburgh’s architectural heritage.
Cockburn died in Bonaly where he kept one of his two Edinburgh houses, and is buried in Dean Cemetery.
Working until the end
On 4 May, the Inverness Courier broke the news to its readers, telling them that he had attended court in Ayr on 18 April but “being rather indisposed (suffering from diarrhoea), he was relieved by Lord Ivory of the arduous duty of presiding at the trial for murder, which occupied nearly two days; but after conviction, the sentence of death was pronounced by Lord Cockburn. It was the last judicial act which he performed, and none who heard him will ever forget it. Brief, gentle, simple, solemn, it was an exquisite specimen of the pathetic eloquence in which he was unrivalled.”
Cockburn advised the condemned man to make his peace with God. The day after Cockburn’s death, the Caledonian Mercury wrote that “one short week has passed [and] the Judge who pronounced the sentence and urged the use of time’s swift-winged hours, has anticipated the man whom he condemned, and has been summoned from the judgement seat on earth to appear at the tribunal of Heaven. An event so solemn, a lesson so striking, should not be lost on us.”
...and on this day in 2000
First episode of Rebus is shown on ITV
The first episode of ITV’s adaptation of the Edinburgh-set Rebus novels was broadcast in the same month as the birthdays of Rebus’ creator, Ian Rankin, and the actor who first played him on screen, John Hannah. The first episode was based on the eighth Rebus novel, Black & Blue. The first book in the series, Knots and Crosses, which had been published ten years earlier, didn’t make it to screen until the end of the fourth series, and was broadcast on 7 December 2007.
Hannah played John Rebus for two series, comprising six episodes in all, after which he handed the reins to actor Ken Stott.
Yesterday…
Inventor and astronomer James Ferguson is born
Astronomer and artist James Ferguson invented a device that would accurately show the position of the planets.
Tomorrow…
South Glasgow University Hospital takes its first patients
Glasgow’s Queen Elizabeth University Hospital cost £1bn to build and accepted its first patients at the end of April 2015.
Artist and embroiderer Jessie Newbery dies
Jessie Newbery was born in Paisley, pioneered needlework as an artistic work, and founded the Department of Embroidery at Glasgow.