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  1. www.wikiwand.com › en › Donald_DewarDonald Dewar - Wikiwand

    Donald Campbell Dewar was a Scottish statesman and politician who served as the inaugural first minister of Scotland and leader of the Labour Party in Scotland from 1999 until his death in 2000. He previously served as Secretary of State for Scotland from 1997 to 1999. He was Member of Parliament (MP) for Glasgow Anniesland from 1978 to 2000. Dewar was also Member of the Scottish Parliament ...

  2. 8 de out. de 2020 · Donald Dewar Memorial Lecture (First Delivered: 8 October 2020). Sunday marks the 20th Anniversary of the death of our first First Minister, Donald Dewar. Prime Minister Tony Blair said that day Donald had been a “tremendous servant of our party and our country” and he reflected that “His passing will leave a vacuum in our national life and the lives of many people which will be ...

  3. Glasgow Club Donald Dewar. Situated in the west of the city, a stone’s throw from Drumchapel train station, Glasgow Club Donald Dewar has a bright and airy gym and fitness studio, along with fantastic full-size football pitches.

  4. Dewar became known as ‘the father of the nation’, but it wasn’t a term he was keen on himself. “If I wanted to annoy him, I would call him the father of the nation,” laughs David Whitton. “He got quite annoyed about it. But if he wasn’t the father of the nation, he was certainly the architect of the parliament in many ways.”.

  5. Donald Dewar's matriculation record page 2, 1957. Source: University of Glasgow. First Minister of Scotland. Born 21 August 1937. Died 11 October 2000. First Minister of Scotland 1999-2000. Connection to the University of Glasgow: Alumnus, Honorary Graduate. GU Degrees: MA, 1961; LLB, 1964; LLD, 1998;

  6. 0141 276 0774. Situated in the west of the city Glasgow Club Donald Dewar has a bright and airy gym and fitness studio, along with fantastic full-size football pitches.

  7. 11 de out. de 2000 · How others saw him: Donald Dewar was the tall, angular, fast-talking Scottish Secretary. An experienced politician, he long argued the case for devolution in opposition and saw his plans approach reality in the referendum and the ensuing Parliamentary bill.