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| See also: | List of years in Scotland Timeline of Scottish history 1813 in: The UK • Wales • Elsewhere  | ||||
Events from the year 1813 in Scotland.
Incumbents

The Telford bridge at Invermoriston
Law officers
Judiciary
Events
- 1 April – whaler Oscar wrecked off Aberdeen with the loss of 44 lives.[1]
 - 15 April – foundation stone of new harbour at Newhaven, Edinburgh, laid.[2]
 - October
- Completion of road bridge at Potarch by Thomas Telford; his bridge at Invermoriston is also completed this year.[3]
 - Probable completion of cast-iron footbridge over Esk on Buccleuch estate near Langholm.[4]
 
 - The first Kirkcaldy whaler, The Earl Percy, sails north to the Davis Strait.
 - Glasgow weavers fail in an attempt to secure higher wages.
 - Robert Owen obtains control of the cotton spinning mills at New Lanark and publishes A New View of Society, or Essays on the Principle of the Formation of the Human Character.
 
Births
- 30 January – George Gilfillan, writer and poet (died 1878)
 - 18 March –
- Thomas Graham Balfour, physician (died 1891 in London)
 - William Calder Marshall, sculptor (died 1894 in London)
 
 - 19 March – David Livingstone, missionary and explorer (died 1873 in Africa)
 - 13 April – Duncan Farquharson Gregory, mathematician (died 1844)
 - 14 May (bapt.) – John Hosack, lawyer and historian (died 1887 in London)
 - 17 May? – Eliza Rennie, author
 - 18 May – Colin Blackburn, Baron Blackburn, judge (died 1896)
 - 21 May – Robert Murray M'Cheyne, clergyman (died 1843)
 - 27 May – William McNaught, steam engineer (died 1881 in Manchester)
 - 21 June – William Edmondstoune Aytoun, lawyer and poet (died 1865)
 - 28 July – James Newlands, municipal engineer (died 1871 in Liverpool)
 - 10 August – Archibald Smith, mathematician and lawyer (died 1872 in London)
 - 6 September – Edward Balfour, surgeon and orientalist (died 1889 in London)
 - 10 September – Angus MacKay, piper (died 1859)
 - 13 September – Daniel MacMillan, publisher (died 1857)
 - 30 September – John Rae, Arctic explorer and physician (died 1893 in London)
 - November – John Stuart, genealogist (died 1877)
 - 13 December –
- James R. Ballantyne, orientalist (died 1864)
 - David Brandon, architect (died 1897)
 - George Bryson Sr., businessman and politician in Quebec (died 1900 in Canada)
 
 - 18 December – John Edgar Gregan, architect (died 1855 in Manchester)
 - John Bell-Irving, businessman in Hong Kong (died 1907)
 - James Colquhoun Campbell, Bishop of Bangor (died 1895 in Hastings)
 - Benjamin Connor, steam locomotive designer (died 1876)
 - Anthony Inglis, shipbuilder (died 1884)
 - John Kennedy, Congregational minister and theologian (died 1900)
 - William Logan, temperance campaigner (died 1879)
 - Letitia MacTavish Hargrave, born Letitia MacTavish, pioneer in Canada (died 1854)
 - Daniel M'Naghten, assassin (died 1865 in Broadmoor Criminal Lunatic Asylum)
 - George Tosh, metallurgist (died 1900 in Scunthorpe)
 
Deaths
- 5 January – Alexander Fraser Tytler, judge and historian (born 1747)
 - 15 February – Francis Home, physician (born 1719)
 - 15 March – Janet Richmond, born Janet Little, "The Scots Milkmaid", Scots language poet (born 1759)
 - 15 April – Alexander Murray, linguist (born 1775)
 - 22 June – Allan Burns, surgeon (born 1781)
 - 8 July – William Craig, Lord Craig, judge (born 1745)
 - 23 August – Alexander Wilson, ornithologist in America (born 1766)
 - 11 October – Robert Kerr, scientific writer and translator (born 1755)
 - 28 October – William Dudgeon, farmer and songwriter (born 1753?)
 
The arts
- James Hogg's poem The Queen's Wake is published.[5]
 
See also
References
- ↑ Brown, Fiona-Jane (16 May 2013). "Oscar shipwreck in 1813 cost the lives of 44 sailors". Daily Record. Glasgow. Retrieved 21 February 2014.
 - ↑ "History of Edinburgh". Visions of Scotland. Archived from the original on 14 February 2015. Retrieved 21 February 2014.
 - ↑ "Invermoriston Bridge". SABRE. Retrieved 21 February 2014.
 - ↑ MacKechnie, Aonghus (2014). "Duchess Bridge, Langholm: an early Scottish cast-iron estate footbridge - made in Scotland". Transactions of the Dumfriesshire and Galloway Natural History and Antiquarian Society. 3rd ser. 88: 109–16.
 - ↑ Cox, Michael, ed. (2004). The Concise Oxford Chronology of English Literature. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-860634-6.
 
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