1926 in Scotland
Events from the year 1926 in Scotland.Incumbents
- Monarch – George V
- Secretary for Scotland and Keeper of the Great Seal – Sir John Gilmour, Bt until post abolished 26 July
- Secretary of State for Scotland and Keeper of the Great Seal, from 15 July – Sir John Gilmour, Bt
Law officers
- Lord Advocate – William Watson
- Solicitor General for Scotland – Alexander Munro MacRobert
Judiciary
- Lord President of the Court of Session and Lord Justice General – Lord Clyde
- Lord Justice Clerk – Lord Alness
- Chairman of the Scottish Land Court – Lord St Vigeans
Events
- 29 January – Dunbartonshire and East Renfrewshire by-elections: Conservatives retain the seats.
- 26 March – Bothwell by-election: Labour retains the seat.
- 3 – 12 May: 1926 United Kingdom general strike. Some violence in Glasgow.
- 26 November – launch, under the auspices of the Scots National League, of a new monthly Nationalist newspaper entitled The Scots Independent.
- Findhorn Bridge near Tomatin completed.
- First stage of Lanark Hydro Electric Scheme constructed.
- Scotland's only sugar beet processing plant is opened at Cupar.
- Sacramento River sternwheel paddle steamers Delta King and Delta Queen are shipped from William Denny and Brothers' yard at Dumbarton to California.
- The post of Secretary for Scotland upgraded to a full Secretary of State appointment
Births
- 13 January – Craigie Aitchison, painter
- 17 January – Moira Shearer, ballet dancer
- 11 February – Alexander Gibson, conductor and opera intendant
- 19 February – Charlie Cox, footballer
- 8 March - Edith MacArthur, actress
- 12 March – Gudrun Ure, actress
- 22 March – Alastair Reid, poet and scholar of South American literature
- 3 April - Andrew Keir, actor
- 22 April – James Stirling, architect
- May – Duncan Campbell, trumpet player
- 24 May – Stanley Baxter, comic actor
- 2 July - Morag Beaton, dramatic soprano
- 3 August - Rona Anderson, actress
- 15 August - D. E. R. Watt, historian
- 4 September – George William Gray, chemist, pioneer of liquid crystal technology
- 12 September – Dave Valentine, international rugby player
- 17 October - Archie Duncan, historian
- 9 November - Johnny Beattie, comedian
Deaths
- 2 January – John Gray McKendrick, physiologist, Regius Professor of Physiology at the University of Glasgow
- 3 February – Archibald White Maconochie, businessman and MP
- 4 April – John McTavish footballer
- 31 July – John McPherson, international footballer
- 4 September – Alexander Morison McAldowie, physician, folklorist and ornithologist
The arts
- 22 November – Hugh MacDiarmid's Scots language poem A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle is published.