1836 in Scotland
Events from the year 1836 in Scotland.Incumbents
- Monarch – William IV
Law officers
- Lord Advocate – John Murray
- Solicitor General for Scotland – John Cunninghame
Judiciary
- Lord President of the Court of Session – Lord Granton
- Lord Justice General – The Duke of Montrose until 30 December
- Lord Justice Clerk – Lord Boyle
Events
- 17 May – Arbroath and Forfar Railway authorised.
- 19 May – Dundee and Arbroath Railway authorised.
- June – 17 miniature coffins of unknown provenance are found in a cave on Arthur's Seat in Edinburgh.
- 1 July – North of Scotland Bank established in Aberdeen by Alexander Anderson and others.
- 16 July – the brig Mariner leaves Loch Eriboll on the north coast for Cape Breton Island and Quebec in British North America with 154 emigrants, mostly from the nearby Reay district.
- 30 July – Savings Bank of Glasgow established.
- 7 August – St Andrew's Cathedral, Dundee opened.
- 13 August – Edinburgh, Leith and Newhaven Railway authorised.
- Botanical Society of Scotland established as the Botanical Society of Edinburgh.
- Glasgow and Ship Bank established by merger of the Glasgow Banking Company and the Ship Bank.
- Robert Napier launches the paddle sloop Berenice for the East India Company, the first steam warship built in Scotland, the hull being subscontracted to John Wood of Port Glasgow.
- Construction of Granton harbour begun
- Construction of modern Inverness Castle.
- Former windmill at Maxwelltown opens as converted into an astronomical observatory and the world's oldest working camera obscura, basis of the modern-day Dumfries Museum.
- Wellington School, Ayr, established for "young ladies of quality" by Mrs Gross.
- John MacCulloch's geological map of Scotland is published posthumously.
Births
- 13 January – Alexander Whyte, minister of the Free Church of Scotland and theologian
- 12 February – John Gerard Anderson, educationalist in Queensland
- 21 February – Alexander Dickson, botanist
- 18 March – James Laidlaw Maxwell, Presbyterian missionary in Taiwan
- 31 March – William Dingwall Fordyce, Liberal politician
- 5 April – John Scott, botanist
- 24 May – William Mortimer Clark, Lieutenant Governor of Ontario
- 9 June – Thomas McCall Anderson, physician
- 26 June – Aeneas Chisholm, Roman Catholic priest
- 3 August – Colin Scott-Moncrieff, irrigation engineer in India and Egypt and Under-Secretary for Scotland
- 11 August – Hugh Gilzean-Reid, journalist and Liberal politician
- 7 September – Henry Campbell-Bannerman, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
- 23 September – Samuel Chisholm, Liberal politician and Lord Provost of Glasgow
- 28 October – James Edward Tierney Aitchison, surgeon and botanist
- 16 November – David Binning Monro, classical scholar
- 4 December – Duncan MacGregor Crerar, poet
- John Gregorson Campbell, minister of the church and folklorist
- William Baxter Collier Fyfe, genre and portrait painter
- Jessie Seymour Irvine, psalmist
- William Angus Knight, philosopher and literary scholar
- John Rhind, architect
- Andrew Strath, golfer
Deaths
- 15 February – John Gillies, Historiographer Royal for Scotland
- 24 February – Henry Liston, minister of the church and inventor
- 4 April – John Grieve, poet
- 23 June – James Mill, historian, economist, political theorist and philosopher
- August – Sir John Hope, British Army officer
- 21 October – Donald Gregory, antiquarian
- 26 November – John Loudon McAdam, civil engineer and road-builder
- 30 December – James Graham, 3rd Duke of Montrose, nobleman, politician and Lord Justice General
- John Heaviside Clark, artist
The arts
- Painter David Wilkie is granted a knighthood.
- 5 March – George Brodie appointed Historiographer Royal