1st March 1546: George Wishart, Protestant Martyr, burn at the stake at St Andrews on the orders of Cardinal David Beaton. The site is marked by a plaque and the letters “GW” in the roadway.
3rd March 1759: John Jamieson, lexicographer, whose Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language is credited with keeping the language alive, born in Glasgow.
4th March 1890: Forth Bridge opened by the Prince of Wales.
5th March 1324: David II, only son of Robert the Bruce and his second wife, Elizabeth de Burgh, born,
5th March 1790: Flora MacDonald, who saved “Bonnie Prince Charlie”, died at Kingsburgh, Skye.
6th March 1457: In a resolution of the 14th Parliament of James II, convened in Edinburgh, the games of football and golf were banned in favour of archery practice. It stated “..that the fut ball and golf be utterly cryit doun and nocht usit.”
6th March 1923: BBC began broadcasting in Scotland, from Glasgow, as 5SC.
7th March 1744: The Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers held their first meeting on Leith Links. The City of Edinburgh provided a silver club for competition which was won by John Rattray. He joined the Jacobite ’45 Rising after the Battle of Prestonpans, becoming “Bonnie Prince Charlie’s” personal surgeon. He avoided execution thanks to the intercession of Duncan Forbes, President of the Court of Session, a golfing friend.
8th March 1702: William III died at Kensington Palace after a fall from a horse. Anne succeeded to the throne.
12th March 1881: Andrew Watson, born in Guyana, son of a wealthy Scottish planter, Peter Miller, and a local girl, Rose Watson, made his first international appearance for Scotland’s football team.
12th March 1945: “HMS VENGEANCE” left Greenock, four months after Commissioning, for the Mediterranean, and thence to join the British Pacific Fleet.
13th/14th March 1941: The Clydebank Blitz, left 528 dead, 617 injured, and 48,000 homeless, many of whom never returned. Only 7 out of 12,000 houses intact.
14th March 1900: Dame Margaret Kidd QC born at Bo’ness. Scotland’s first and, for more than quarter of a century, only female advocate. Called to the bar in 1923 she was the first woman in the United Kingdom to take silk in 1948. She became Scotland’s first Sheriff Principal in 1960 when she took charge of the Sheriffdom of Dumfries and Galloway. She was Sheriff Principal of Perth and Angus from 1966 to 1974 and was made a Dame of the British Empire in 1975.
16th March 1995: Simon Fraser Lord Lovat, Chief of Clan Fraser, died. He was involved in the formation of the Commandos, the Dieppe Raid and D-Day.
17th March 1291: John Duns Scotus ordained a priest at St Andrews Church Northampton. Source: The Scottish Invention of America, Democracy and Human Rights, Klieforth and Munro, 2004, ISBN 0-7618-2791
18th March 1689: Raising of Lord Leven’s Regiment, later The King’s Own Scottish Borderers. The Regiment was raised for the defence of Edinburgh from the Jacobite Rebellion being lead by James Graham of Claverhouse, “Bonnie Dundee”, and first saw action at the Battle of Killiecrankie. They served for 317 years with distinction until 2006 when they were merged with The Royal Scots in into “1 Scots”, the 1st Battalion of The Royal Regiment of Scotland. On 30th November 2021 1 Scots became 1 Ranger and left the Royal Regiment of Scotland.
19th March 1286: Alexander III died, and was succeeded by Margaret, Maid of Norway. He died when his horse stumbled and he fell from a cliff at Kinghorn in Fife.
19th March 1813: David Livingstone born in Blantyre. Famous Missionary and African Explorer, doubts on his whereabouts brought about Henry Morton Stanley’s Expedition to find him and the well known question “Dr Livingstone, I presume?”
23rd March 1848: Captain William Cargill, a veteran of the Peninsular War, arrived at Otago Harbour, New Zealand and was soon joined by Thomas Burns, nephew of Robert Burns, the Poet, who was appointed Minister to the settlement.
24th March 1603: The Union of Crowns. James VI of Scotland accedes to the English Throne and becomes James I of England.
25th March 1306: Robert the Bruce, Earl of Annandale, crowned King of Scots at Scone in the presence the Bishops of St Andrews, Glasgow and Moray and the Abbot of Scone, and the Earls of Atholl, Lennox and Menteith by the Countess of Buchan as representative of the Clan MacDuff.
27th March 1625: James VI died in his 59th year, the Stuart Monarch who united the Kingdoms of England and Scotland, he returned only once to his native land after acceding to the English Throne. He became known as the “Wisest fool in Christendom. Among his many achievements was the “Authorised Version” of the Bible, the first freely available in English, and still used today.
27th March 1943: “HMS DASHER” exploded in the Clyde during a training exercise with the loss of 379 lives.