That the Parliament notes the 100th anniversary of the first demonstration of a mechanical television system by the Scottish inventor, John Logie Baird, on 26 January 1926; acknowledges that Baird, who was born in Helensburgh on 13 August 1888 and studied at the Glasgow and West of Scotland Technical College, went on to develop the first publicly demonstrated colour television system and the first viable purely electronic colour television picture tube; understands that the demonstration in his London laboratory marked a significant milestone in the development of modern television technology and that images of "Stooky Bill", the head of a ventriloquist’s dummy created by Baird, were the first to be successfully transmitted by television; recognises that Baird’s work contributed to worldwide advances in audiovisual communication and remains a source of scientific and cultural importance to Scotland, and considers that the anniversary provides an opportunity to reflect on Scotland’s longstanding and global contribution to innovation and engineering.
Supported by:
Karen Adam, Alasdair Allan, Colin Beattie, Miles Briggs, Annabelle Ewing, Murdo Fraser, Dr Pam Gosal MBE, Jamie Hepburn, Gordon MacDonald, Rona Mackay, John Mason, Liam McArthur, Kevin Stewart, Paul Sweeney, Annie Wells, Elena Whitham