1884 in Scotland
Events from the year 1884 in Scotland.Incumbents
- Monarch – Victoria
Law officers
- Lord Advocate – John Blair Balfour
- Solicitor General for Scotland – Alexander Asher
Judiciary
- Lord President of the Court of Session and Lord Justice General – Lord Glencorse
- Lord Justice Clerk – Lord Moncreiff
Events
- 26 January – Scotland beat Ireland 5-0 in the first match of the first British Home Championship in Association football.
- 15 March – Scotland beat England 1-0 in their second match of the British Home Championship.
- 29 March – Scotland beat Wales 4-1 to become winners of the first British Home Championship.
- 1 July – First International Forestry Exhibition opens at Donaldson's Hospital, Edinburgh, during which an electric railway is demonstrated.
- 17 July – Barque Vicksburg of Leith goes aground on Muckle Skerry in the Pentland Skerries with the loss of nine lives; twelve are saved by the island's lighthouse keepers.
- 2 November – Fourteen people were killed when some of the audience at the Star theatre, Glasgow panicked following a false fire alarm.
- 11 November – Blackford Hill is acquired by the city of Edinburgh.
- 18 November – Crofters War: Royal Marines and police arrive in naval ships at Uig, Skye, following an unsuccessful attempt to evict tenants engaging in a rent strike against Major William Fraser, owner of the Kilmuir Estate and Uig Tower.
- 1 December – Edinburgh Suburban and Southside Junction Railway opens to passengers.
- Pier terminal opened at Rothesay, Bute.
- Teacher's Highland Cream blended whisky registered.
Births
- 11 February – Joseph Westwood, Labour MP and Secretary of State for Scotland
- 24 February – William Theodore Heard, Cardinal of the Roman Catholic church
- 22 May – Wilhelmina Hay Abbott, suffragist and feminist
- 28 August – Peter Fraser, Labour prime minister of New Zealand
Deaths
- 26 February – Alexander Wood, physician, inventor of the first true hypodermic syringe
- 30 November – Sir Alexander Grant, 10th Baronet, Principal of the University of Edinburgh
- 20 December – William Lindsay Alexander, church leader
- Anthony Inglis, shipbuilder
The arts
- Publication of Songs of the North by Harold Boulton and Anne MacLeod including the first known version of "The Skye Boat Song".