North Briton
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
North Briton was a term used for a Scottish person who identified themselves as Scottish and Unionist by supporting the continuation of the United Kingdom. The term is sometimes derogatory or comedic in usage on the rare occasions when it is used today.
After the 1707 Act of Union, Scotland was sometimes referred to as North Britain. In 1707, the Royal Scots Greys were renamed the "Royal North British Dragoons". In Rob Roy (1817), Sir Walter Scott refers to a Scottish person in England as a North Briton, sometimes in the mouth of an English character but also in the authorial voice.
"Why, a Scotch sort of a gentleman, as I said before," returned mine host; "they are all gentle, ye mun know, though they ha' narra shirt to back; but this is a decentish hallion—a canny North Briton as e'er cross'd Berwick Bridge — I trow he's a dealer in cattle." —Rob Roy, Scott
The North Briton and New North Briton were newspapers in the 18th and 19th centuries, and in 1844 there was also a North British Advertiser. The North British Review was founded in 1844 by members of the Free Church of Scotland as a Scottish "national review" for those unsatisfied with the secular Edinburgh Review or the conservative Quarterly Review. It continued until 1871 [1][2].
The North British Railway ran a number of east coast routes and was the company involved in the 1879 Tay Bridge Disaster. In the grouping of railway companies in 1923 it was absorbed into the London and North Eastern Railway. The eponymous "North British Hotel" in Edinburgh was renamed as Balmoral Hotel in the 1980s, though the original name still appears on the stonework.
The Glasgow-based North British Locomotive Company, formed in 1908, was for a time the largest steam locomotive manufacturer in Europe.