On this day in 1827

Brewer William McEwan is born

William McEwan was born in Clackmannanshire, died in London in 1913 and was buried in Surrey. During his life he both founded the Fountain Brewery and was the Member of Parliament for Edinburgh Central between 1886 and 1900.

Successful brewer

Fountain Brewery found great success as a brewer of beer – particularly McEwan’s – which it sold both locally, as well as in England and overseas. Some exports went as far as Australia. The Globe, in its obituary of 13 May 1919, noted that McEwan “started in business on his own account at the age of 29 with a capital of £3000 and built up the great brewery firm which bears his name. He had been called the ‘Bass of Scotland’, and the turning point of his career was said to have been reached when, like the founder of the Burton firm, he introduced his beer into India”.

His success in brewing and politics enabled him to buy Polesden Lacey, an Edwardian house in Surrey that was bequeathed to the National Trust, and to fund various charitable donations, including paintings that he gave to the National Gallery of Scotland and the £115,000 McEwan Hall to the University of Edinburgh.

“One of the greatest businesses in the world”

Upon his death, the Daily Mirror of 13 May 1913 called his brewery “one of the greatest businesses in the world”. It continued, “he was a strong believer in the efficacy of daily exercise, and always walked along the Embankment to his business in the City, his companion for some years being a beautiful white collie, for which he had great affection. Two years ago he was run over by a carriage and pair in Berkley-street, and was seriously injured. He never fully recovered from the accident.”

 

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...and on this day in 1970

The Commonwealth Games opens in Edinburgh

Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, welcomed almost 1,400 athletes from 42 countries to Meadowbank Stadium for the ninth Commonwealth Games. Edinburgh had won the right to hold the games in 1966, after competing for the honour against Christchurch in New Zealand. Christchurch went on to host its own games four years later.

Notable firsts

The Edinburgh games were notable for introducing two important innovations. The first of these was the decision to use metric, rather than imperial measurements for all events, and the second was the use of photography to definitively rule on close finishes.

Athletes competed across nine disciplines and although England won the most medals, with its team taking home 84 in total, it only won 27 gold. Australia, which won 82 medals in total, won 36 gold, and therefore topped the leader board. Scotland won six gold medals and 25 medals in total.

Sailors protest

The day after the opening, the Aberdeen Press and Journal reported that “the Duke of Edinburgh faced a mini mutiny” when he became “the target of a protest about the disappearance of the Navy’s traditional rum ration, due to end on August 1.” The sailors had chanted “save our tot” as the Duke arrived, and after his speech.

However, this seems to have done little to spoil the event. The Birmingham Daily Post, of 17 July 1970, described how “to the inevitable swirl of the bagpipes, a nine-gun salute and fly-past of lightning jets, the ninth Commonwealth Games were officially declared open by the Duke of Edinburgh yesterday. It was a colourful, almost homely affair. Edinburgh’s £2,400,000 Meadowbank Stadium was a blaze of assorted tartans, lime green, shocking pinks, which brightened a dull, cheerless Scottish afternoon.”

Games’ legacy

The Games ended on 25 July, but their benefits continued to be felt. The Illustrated London News that day wrote that the city now had “a magnificent swimming pool; a passable stadium, whose only drawback is that athletes run most of their races slap into the vicious prevailing sea winds; a Games village which athletes say is better than any they have seen; a record take at the box office; a record number of countries competing; and a city which, ever so discreetly, is being seduced into carnival.”

Scotland would host the Commonwealth Games again in 2014; on that occasion in Glasgow.


 

Yesterday…

Architect William Henry Playfair is born

Architect William Henry Playfair is responsible for designing many notable buildings in Edinburgh. He died in 1790.

Tomorrow…

Janet Douglas, Lady Glamis, is burned at the stake

Janet Douglas was accused of a plot to poison king James V. She was tried and convicted of treason, and burned at the stake in Edinburgh.

Open University founder Walter Perry dies

Dundee-born Walter Perry was one of the Open University’s co-founders and its first vice chancellor. He died in 2003.

The Bank of Scotland is founded

The Bank of Scotland was formed under the authority of an Act of the Scottish Parliament on 17 July 1695, and opened the following February.