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| See also: | List of years in Scotland Timeline of Scottish history 1853 in: The UK • Wales • Elsewhere  | ||||
Events from the year 1853 in Scotland.
Incumbents
Law officers
Judiciary
Events
- 12 August – Licensing (Scotland) Act (known after its sponsor as the 'Forbes Mackenzie Act') regulates the supply of intoxicating beverages.[1]
 - 28 September – emigrant ship Annie Jane sinks in heavy seas off Vatersay, with the loss of 350 lives.[2]
 - Highland Clearances in Skye and Raasay.[3]
 - National Association for the Vindication of Scottish Rights formed.
 - Second cholera pandemic again revives in Scotland.
 - Time ball installed on Nelson Monument, Edinburgh.
 - Corn exchange built in Dalkeith.
 - John Hill Burton publishes his History of Scotland from the Revolution to the Extinction of the last Jacobite Insurrection.
 
Births
- 12 January – James MacLaren, architect in the "Arts and Crafts" style (died 1890)
 - 4 March – Hector MacDonald, soldier (suicide 1903 in Paris)
 - 31 March – Isaac Bayley Balfour, botanist (died 1922)
 - 10 June – Alexander Watson Hutton, "father of football in Argentina" (died 1936 in Buenos Aires)
 - 17 July – William Gunion Rutherford, classical scholar (died 1907 in England)
 
Deaths
- 2 January – William Collins, publisher (born 1789)
 - 30 July – John Struthers, poet (born 1776)
 - 28 September – Adam Anderson, Lord Anderson, judge (born c.1797)
 - 21 October – Robert Gordon, minister of religion and scientist (born 1786)
 
The arts
- Summer – John Everett Millais stays at Brig o' Turk in Glen Finglas with John Ruskin and his wife Effie to begin painting John Ruskin.
 - Alexander Smith's 'A Life Drama' is published as Poems.
 
See also
References
- ↑ Matthew, H. C. G. (2004). "Mackenzie, William Forbes (1807–1862)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/17605. Retrieved 27 June 2011. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
 - ↑ "Annie Jane". Wreck site. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
 - ↑ "The Skye and Raasay Clearances – 1853". Scotland's History. BBC. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
 
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