List of Famous people born in Scotland, United Kingdom
Sidney Hayers
Sidney Hayers was a British film and television director, writer and producer.
Morag Hood
Morag Hood was a British actress who featured in numerous television programmes, stage productions, and audio presentations in the UK from the 1960s up to the late 1990s.
James Gray
James Whiteside Gray, is a British politician who has been the Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) for North Wiltshire since 1997.
John Mone
John Aloysius Mone was the third Roman Catholic Bishop of Paisley.
Robert Clark
Dr Robert Selbie Clark was a Scottish marine zoologist and explorer. He was the biologist on Sir Ernest Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition of 1914–1917, and served as the director of the Scottish Home Department Marine Laboratory, at Torry, Aberdeen.
Andy Gray
Andrew Mullen Gray is a Scottish football broadcaster and retired player.
Bob Malcolm
Robert Malcolm is a Scottish former football player and coach.
Anne Gibson
Anne Gibson is a Scottish badminton player who represented Great Britain in the 1996 Summer Olympic Games. She was Scottish Women's singles champion from 1989 to 1993, and from 1995 to 1997.
Jim Murphy
James Francis Murphy is a Scottish former politician who served as Leader of the Scottish Labour Party from 2014 to 2015 and Secretary of State for Scotland from 2008 to 2010. He was Member of Parliament (MP) for East Renfrewshire, formerly Eastwood, from 1997 to 2015. He identifies as a social democrat and has expressed support for a foreign policy of Western interventionism. He has been described as being on the political right of the Labour Party.
James Crichton-Browne
Sir James Crichton-Browne MD FRS FRSE was a leading Scottish psychiatrist, neurologist, eugenicist and medical psychologist. He is known for studies on the relationship of mental illness to brain injury and for the development of public health policies in relation to mental health. Crichton-Browne's father was the asylum reformer Dr William A.F. Browne, a prominent member of the Edinburgh Phrenological Society and, from 1838 until 1857, the superintendent of the Crichton Royal at Dumfries where Crichton-Browne spent much of his childhood.