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SCOTS INVENTIONS , SCOTTISH FIRSTS, NEW IDEAS AND INNOVATIONS OF THE SCOTS


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...IT'S weel kent (well known) that the Scots lay claim to having invented Television, the Steam Engine and Penicillin, but there are a great many other "firsts" - Scots Inventions that seldom, if ever, get recognition.

Sometimes, the ideas have been "borrowed by others; sometimes, the idea or innovation has been so small, that it has not seemed worthy of note - though the change it made could have far-reaching effects!



SO, we are about to redress this; to right the wrong, for many of the unsung heroes, forgotten or never truly acknowledged. As on our Wee Bits page , we'll start with a few, and keep adding from the top, in no particular order, so that the latest entry is first to be seen. And, if you have heard of some of these, others may have not, for we dinnae a' read the same buiks!

AND, if any of our readers know of a Scots First we haven't mentioned - perhaps even by a family member or friend - TELL US! We'll be richt happy to include verified "Firsts", with an acknowledgement of the source on this very page. To go from "Scots Inventions" to our Suggestions Page - CLICK HERE...

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Scottish Firsts...

THE first commercially succesful spinning reel for fishing was patented in 1884 by Peter Malloch of Perth.

It was immensely popular at that time, as it made fishing much easier for beginners, and could be made for use in any type of fishing, from Salmon to Sharks.

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...Fingerprinting was discovered by Scotsman Henry Faulds from Ayrshire. He was working as a doctor in a hospital in Tokyo when he noticed the unique character of fingerprints. He suggested this as a way to catch criminals, in a letter to a scientific journal -Nature - published on October 28th 1880.

Doctor Faulds tried to interest the Police Commissioners in his discovery, but failed. In his native land, he is neither recognised nor honoured, but he was so well thought of in Japan that he was offered the post of Personal Physician to the Crown Prince (which he refused), and is commemorated there by a statue

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...The first US Store Santa Claus was James Edgar from Edinburgh. He owned the Boston Store in Brockton, Massachusetts and, from 1890, he promoted Christmas custom by strolling round his store dressed as Santa Claus, talking to the children.

This was a great success, and it wasn't long before every store in America had its Christmas Santa.

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Lighten up with our free newsletter...click here to apply ...Who invented the electric light?

It was James Bowman Lindsay (1799-1862). Born in Carmyllie, near Arbroath, Lindsay was a visionary and pioneer in the field of electricity. Although from a poor farming family, they sent him to St. Andrews University.

In 1835 he demonstrated constant electric light, whereby he could "read a book at a distance of one and a half foot", beating both Edison and Swann, who are credited with inventing the light-bulb, by decades. Regrettably, he seems to have done little to establish his claim or to develop the device,

He was also the first to demonstrate wireless telegraphy through water. He is buried in Dundee's Western Cemetery.

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...The Lee Enfield Rifle was invented by a Hawick lad, one James Paris Lee (1831-1904). The family emigrated to Canada, where James worked in his fathers' jewellery store - in a Canadian frontier town where guns made up a large part of the business.

In 1850, he opened his own business at Wallaceburg (named after Scottish Patriot, William Wallace) and by 1862 had patented his first rifle, a single-shot breech loader. It took him till 1878 to invent the famous rifle with a box magazine, capable of firing 30 rounds per minute - the rifle which became standard issue for the US and British armies

From 1888 the rifle was produced in the town of Enfield, near London, UK - whence derived the second part of its name..

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To go from Scots Inventions to the Suggestions Page - CLICK HERE



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