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- John Logie Baird, inventor of television, transmitted the first long distance TV pictures from a room in the Central Hotel, Glasgow.
- The Cunard Shipping Line was founded in Glasgow and the liners Queen Mary, Queen Elizabeth, QE2 and the Royal Yacht Britannia were all built on the River Clyde at Clydebank.
- Greenock-born James Watt invented the separate condenser after a walk on Glasgow Green in 1765, an invention which made the steam engine economically viable.
- Paisley Museum houses the world's largest collection of Paisley Pattern shawls.
- Craignethan Castle, by Crossford, is where Mary Queen of Scots is reputed to have spent her last night of freedom.
- Charles Macintosh, inventor of the waterproof coat, lived and worked in Glasgow where, in 1824, he was responsible for the first commercial manufacture of the waterproof material.
- Granville Sharp Pattison, a Glasgow Surgeon, emigrated to the United States in 1816 and founded the Baltimore Infirmary, the country's first teaching hospital.
- Hamilton Mausoleum, which dates from the 1850s, has the longest echo of any building in Europe - 15 seconds!
- The Waverley, the world's last ocean-going paddle steamer was built in 1947 by A & J Inglis on the River Clyde.
- Charles Rennie Mackintosh, the world-famous architect and designer, was born in Glasgow in 1868. His work can be seen in many locations in and around the city.
- Sir William Burrell was estimated to have spent around £20,000 a year on works of art for more than 45 years of his life.
- In 1939, Glasgow had 114 picture houses, seating in excess of 175,000; more cinema seats per head than any other city in the world. The average Glaswegian would go an incredible 51 times per year!
- Billy Connolly, the comedian and actor, was born in Partick in Glasgow in 1942.
- Robert Carlyle was a Glasgow house painter prior to becoming a major television and cinema actor.
- Roy Rogers and Trigger are reputed to have descended the staircase of Glasgow's Central Hotel.
- Glasgow City Chambers features a miniature version of the Statue of Liberty.
- 'Braveheart' William Wallace is reputed to have been born in the Renfrewshire village of Elderslie. He also lived in Lanark for a few years around 1297 and is commemorated by a statue on the town's St Nicholas Church.
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