Swanrad2
Well-Known Member
How dare you sir?
The Scots have far more Norse & Gael blood in them than the English, who have too much French blood in them for my liking. (speaking as an Anglo Scots cross breed)
Racist
How dare you sir?
The Scots have far more Norse & Gael blood in them than the English, who have too much French blood in them for my liking. (speaking as an Anglo Scots cross breed)
all the scaremongering is this thread is just that - my wife grew up in the Isle of man which is independent and I've never needed a passport to go their.
Tenuous statement....I was also a Manx resident/citizen - and i've seen the Isle of Man and Channel islands held up as examples of independant countries who have free reign in the UK by the YES campaign (Which, I support incidentally) - but that's not strictly correct, all of these islands, whilst maintaining a seperate Government, are CROWN DEPENDANCIES, of which the clue is kind of in the name, they are not completely independant of the UK.
all the scaremongering is this thread is just that - my wife grew up in the Isle of man which is independent and I've never needed a passport to go their.
As I understand it, you need a work permit to work there though. Strangely the inverse doesn't seem to apply.
I can only express a view on how I see the world and everyone will do the same
And you wonder why we want to get away from this type of English Nationalist clap trap, have a look at some of the guys below.
Road transport innovations[edit]
• Macadamised roads (the basis for, but not specifically, tarmac): John Loudon McAdam (1756–1836)[3]
• The pedal bicycle: Attributed to both Kirkpatrick Macmillan (1813–1878)[2] and Thomas McCall (1834–1904)
• The pneumatic tyre: Robert William Thomson and John Boyd Dunlop (1822–1873) [10]
• The overhead valve engine: David Dunbar Buick (1854–1929) [11]
Civil engineering innovations[edit]
• Tubular steel: Sir William Fairbairn (1789–1874)[12]
• The Falkirk wheel: Initial designs by Nicoll Russell Studios, Architects and engineers Binnie Black and Veatch (Opened 2002) [13]
• The patent slip for docking vessels: Thomas Morton (1781–1832) [14][15]
• The Drummond Light: Thomas Drummond (1797–1840) [16]
• Canal design: Thomas Telford (1757–1834) [17]
• Dock design improvements: John Rennie (1761–1821) [18]
• Crane design improvements: James Bremner (1784–1856) [19]
Aviation innovations[edit]
• Aircraft design: Frank Barnwell (1910) Establishing the fundamentals of aircraft design at the University of Glasgow.[20]
Power innovations[edit]
• Condensing steam engine improvements: James Watt (1736–1819)[1]
• Thermodynamic cycle: William John Macquorn Rankine (1820–1872)[21]
• Coal-gas lighting: William Murdoch (1754–1839) [22]
• The Stirling heat engine: Rev. Robert Stirling (1790–1878) [23]
• Carbon brushes for dynamos: George Forbes (1849–1936) [24]
• The Clerk cycle gas engine: Sir Dugald Clerk (1854–1932) [25]
• The wave-powered electricity generator: by South African Engineer Stephen Salter in 1977 [26]
• The Pelamis Wave Energy Converter ("red sea snake" wave energy device): Richard Yemm, 1998 [27]
Shipbuilding innovations[edit]
• Europe's first passenger steamboat: Henry Bell (1767–1830) [28]
• The first iron-hulled steamship: Sir William Fairbairn (1789–1874) [29]
• The first practical screw propeller: Robert Wilson (1803–1882)[citation needed]
• Marine engine innovations: James Howden (1832–1913)[30]
• John Elder & Charles Randolph (Marine Compound expansion engine)[30]
Military innovations[edit]
• Lieutenant-General Sir David Henderson two areas:
o Field intelligence. Argued for the establishment of the Intelligence Corps. Wrote Field Intelligence: Its Principles and Practice (1904) and Reconnaissance (1907) on the tactical intelligence of modern warfare during World War I.[31]
o Royal Air Force. Considered instrumental in the foundation of the British Royal Air Force.[32]
• United States Navy. Created largely by John Paul Jones, who was born in Kirkcudbrightshire.
• Special forces: Founded by Sir David Stirling and other Scottish Royal Marines, the SAS was created in World War Two in the North Africa campaign to go behind enemy lines to destroy and disrupt the enemy. Since then it as been regarded as the most famous and influential special forces that has inspired other countries to form their own special forces too.
Heavy industry innovations[edit]
• Coal mining extraction in the sea on an artificial island by Sir George Bruce of Carnock (1575). Regarded as one of the industrial wonders of the late medieval period.[33]
• Making cast steel from wrought iron: David Mushet (1772–1847) [34]
• Wrought iron sash bars for glass houses: John C. Loudon (1783–1865) [35]
• The hot blast oven: James Beaumont Neilson (1792–1865) [36]
• The steam hammer: James Nasmyth (1808–1890) [37]
• Wire rope: Robert Stirling Newall (1812–1889) [38]
• Steam engine improvements: William Mcnaught (1831–1881) [39]
• The Fairlie, a narrow gauge, double-bogie railway engine: Robert Francis Fairlie (1831–1885)[40]
• Cordite - Sir James Dewar, Sir Frederick Abel (1889) [41]
Agricultural innovations[edit]
• Threshing machine improvements: James Meikle (c.1690-c.1780) & Andrew Meikle (1719–1811) [42]
• Hollow pipe drainage: Sir Hew Dalrymple, Lord Drummore (1700–1753) [43]
• The Scotch plough: James Anderson of Hermiston (1739–1808) [44]
• Deanstonisation soil-drainage system: James Smith (1789–1850) [45]
• The mechanical reaping machine: Rev. Patrick Bell (1799–1869) [46]
• The Fresno scraper: James Porteous (1848–1922) [47]
• The Tuley tree shelter: Graham Tuley in 1979 [48]
Communication innovations[edit]
• Print stereotyping: William Ged (1690–1749) [49]
• The British Broadcasting Corporation BBC: John Reith, 1st Baron Reith (1922) its founder, first general manager and Director-general of the British Broadcasting Corporation[50]
• Roller printing: Thomas Bell (patented 1783) [51]
• The adhesive postage stamp and the postmark: James Chalmers (1782–1853) [52]
• Universal Standard Time: Sir Sandford Fleming (1827–1915) [53]
• Light signalling between ships: Admiral Philip H. Colomb (1831–1899) [54]
• The telephone: Alexander Graham Bell (1847–1922)[4]
• The teleprinter: Frederick G. Creed (1871–1957) [55]
• The first working television, and colour television; John Logie Baird (1888–1946)[5][6]
• Radar: Robert Watson-Watt (1892–1973)[8]
• The underlying principles of Radio - James Clerk Maxwell (1831–1879) [56]
• The automated teller machine and Personal Identification Number system - James Goodfellow (born 1937) [57]
• The Waverley pen nib innovations thereof: Duncan Cameron (1850) The popular "Waverley" was unique in design with a narrow waist and an upturned tip designed to made the ink flow more smoothly on the paper.[58]
Publishing firsts[edit]
• The first edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica (1768–81) [59]
• The first English textbook on surgery(1597) [60]
• The first modern pharmacopaedia, William Cullen (1776). The book became 'Europe’s principal text on the classification and treatment of disease'. His ideas survive in the terms nervous energy and neuroses (a word that Cullen coined).[61]
• The first postcards and picture postcards in the UK [62]
• The first eBook from a UK administration (March 2012). Scottish Government publishes 'Your Scotland, Your Referendum'.[63][citation needed]
• The educational foundation of Ophthalmology: Stewart Duke-Elder in his ground breaking work including ‘Textbook of Ophthalmology and fifteen volumes of System of Ophthalmology’[64]
Culture and the Arts[edit]
• Scottish National Portrait Gallery, designed by Sir Robert Rowand Anderson (1889): the world’s first purpose-built portrait gallery.[65]
Fictional Characters[edit]
• Sherlock Holmes, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
• Peter Pan, by J.M. Barrie, born in Kirriemuir, Angus
• Long John Silver and The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, by Robert Louis Stevenson
• John Bull: by John Arbuthnot although seen as a national personification of the United Kingdom in general, and England in particular,[66] the character of John Bull was invented by Arbuthnot in 1712[67]
Scientific innovations[edit]
• Logarithms: John Napier (1550–1617)[68]
• Modern Economics founded by Adam Smith (1776) 'The father of modern economics' [69] with the publication of The Wealth of Nations.[70][71]
• Modern Sociology: Adam Ferguson (1767) ‘The Father of Modern Sociology’ with his work An Essay on the History of Civil Society[72]
• Hypnotism: James Braid (1795–1860) the Father of Hypnotherapy[73]
• Tropical medicine: Sir Patrick Manson known as the father of Tropical Medicine[74]
• Modern Geology: James Hutton ‘The Founder of Modern Geology’ [75][76][77]
• The theory of Uniformitarianism: James Hutton (1788): a fundamental principle of Geology the features of the geologic time takes millions of years.[78]
• The theory of electromagnetism: James Clerk Maxwell (1831–1879) [79]
• The discovery of the Composition of Saturn’s Rings James Clerk Maxwell (1859): determined the rings of Saturn were composed of numerous small particles, all independently orbiting the planet. At the time it was generally thought the rings were solid. The Maxwell Ringlet and Maxwell Gap were named in his honor.[80]
• The Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution by James Clerk Maxwell (1860): the basis of the kinetic theory of gases, that speeds of molecules in a gas will change at different temperatures. The original theory first hypothesised by Maxwell and confirmed later in conjunction with Ludwig Boltzmann.[81]
• Popularising the decimal point: John Napier (1550–1617)[82]
• The first theory of the Higgs boson by Anglo-Scot[83] Peter Higgs particle-physics theorist at the University of Edinburgh (1964) [84]
• The Gregorian telescope: James Gregory (1638–1675) [85]
• The discovery of Proxima Centauri, the closest known star to the Sun, by Robert Innes (1861–1933) [86]
• One of the earliest measurements of distance to the Alpha Centauri star system, the closest such system outside of the Solar System, by Thomas Henderson (1798–1844) [87]
• The discovery of Centaurus A, a well–known starburst galaxy in the constellation of Centaurus, by James Dunlop (1793–1848) [88]
• The discovery of the Horsehead Nebula in the constellation of Orion, by Williamina Fleming (1857–1911) [89]
• The world's first oil refinery and a process of extracting paraffin from coal laying the foundations for the modern oil industry: James Young (1811–1883)[90]
• The identification of the minerals yttrialite, thorogummite, aguilarite and nivenite: by William Niven (1889) [91]
• The concept of latent heat: Joseph Black (1728–1799) [92]
• Discovering the properties of Carbon dioxide: Joseph Black (1728–1799)
• The concept of Heat capacity: Joseph Black (1728–1799)
• The pyroscope, atmometer and aethrioscope scientific instruments: Sir John Leslie (1766–1832) [93]
• Identifying the nucleus in living cells: Robert Brown (1773–1858) [94]
• Incandescent light bulb: James Bowman Lindsay (1799-1862)[95]
• Colloid chemistry: Thomas Graham (1805–1869) [96]
• The kelvin SI unit of temperature: William Thomson, Lord Kelvin (1824–1907) [97]
• Devising the diagramatic system of representing chemical bonds: Alexander Crum Brown (1838–1922) [98]
• Criminal fingerprinting: Henry Faulds (1843–1930) [99]
• The noble gases: Sir William Ramsay (1852–1916) [100]
• The cloud chamber recording of atoms: Charles Thomson Rees Wilson (1869–1959) [101][102]
• The discovery of the Wave of Translation, leading to the modern general theory of solitons by John Scott Russell (1808-1882) [103]
• Statistical graphics: William Playfair founder of the first statistical line charts, bar charts, and pie charts in (1786) and (1801) known as a scientific ‘milestone’ in statistical graphs and data visualization[104][105]
• The Arithmetic mean density of the Earth: Nevil Maskelyne conducted the Schiehallion experiment conducted at the Scottish mountain of Schiehallion, Perthshire 1774[106]
• The first isolation of methylated sugars, trimethyl and tetramethyl glucose: James Irvine[107][108]
• Discovery of the Japp–Klingemann reaction: to synthesize hydrazones from β-keto-acids (or β-keto-esters) and aryl diazonium salts 1887[109]
• Pioneering work on nutrition and poverty: John Boyd Orr (1880–1971) [110]
• Ferrocene synthetic substances: Peter Ludwig Pauson in 1955 [111]
• The first cloned mammal (Dolly the Sheep): Was conducted in The Roslin Institute research centre in 1996 [112]
• The seismometer innovations thereof: James David Forbes [113]
• Metaflex fabric innovations thereof: University of St. Andrews (2010) application of the first manufacturing fabrics that manipulate light in bending it around a subject. Before this such light manipulating atoms were fixed on flat hard surfaces. The team at St Andrews are the first to develop the concept to fabric.[114]
• Tractor beam innovations thereof: St. Andrews University (2013) the world's first to succeed in creating a functioning Tractor beam that pulls objects on a microscopic level[115][116]
• Macaulayite: Dr. Jeff Wilson of the Macaulay Institute, Aberdeen.[117]
• Dscovery of Catacol whitebeam by Scottish Natural Heritage and the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (1990s): a rare tree endemic and unique to the Isle of Arran in south west Scotland. The trees were confirmed as a distinct species by DNA testing.[118]
And of course Lord Kelvin and James Clark Maxwell.
Well said, and isn't it a pity that some won't.
Personally I find it very disturbing that some on here seem to have a hatred of anything from South of the boarder. What happens if it's a no vote?? Do we end up with the Scottish equivalent of the IRA.
As previously stated my heritage is from Scotland and nowhere in the past (with Scottish family and friends) have I ever been privy to the vitriol that seems to come through in some of these retorts/posts. William Wallace is dead and so are the tyrants of the past. The decision to stay or leave should be made on future financial economic and long term benefits for Scotland not on hype.
Personally, I've always thought that Scotland and the rest of the UK have benefited from being partners and I will find it a very sad day if the union we now have is torn apart for historical and or egotistical reasons.
Just how much better off do certain people think they will be if the separation happens. I do know one that will be, but the less said the better.
Rant over.
Tom.
William Wallace is dead
Tom.
Using the English language of course.
I'd take gold with you - there doesn't seem to be a plausible plan for a currency!
Well, I will be voting NO so that following the defeat of the SNP YES vote, the SNP will loose most of their seats in the next election and Scotland will return lots of Labour politicians which should put an end to this present bunch of "Old Etonians" in Westminster and hopefully annoy most of TORY England. Scotland will have the last laugh![]()
"
"Personally I find it very disturbing that some on here seem to have a hatred of anything from South of the boarder. What happens if it's a no vote?? Do we end up with the Scottish equivalent of the IRA."
This is the sort of myopic unbalanced observation that is really irritating.
scotland is ****.
scotland claims to be a tourist friendly country.
On the Inverness - Edinburgh train, one of the main tourist routes
there were two sandwiches, neither vegetarian. They ran out of hot water for coffee/tea.
scotland is a bad joke - country Ha ha ....