History Daily - The Dunblane Massacre
Episode Date: March 13, 2026March 13, 1996. The worst mass shooting in British history leads to the private ownership of most handguns being banned. This episode originally aired in 2024. Support the show! Join Into History for ...ad-free listening and more. History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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Aika
Aighttah
Aitkvakop a
Aukkillah,
Sill the manpavre
on aumisen
Lempilhae
Tilaeatian
Paiiomis
216th
Aifolor
Pistf
A listener note
This episode contains
references
to a mass
school shooting
It may not be
suitable for all
audiences
It's July 7th
2013 at the
Wimbledon
Tennis Championships
in London, England.
On center court
26-year-old
tennis players
Andy Murray wipes his face with the towel, bouncing the ball off the grass and preparing to serve.
It's something Andy has done millions of times in his career, but never with as much at stake.
Andy is in the final of the Wimbledon men's singles competition.
Player on the other side of the net is the top seed and world number one Novak Djokovic.
But Andy has beaten the odds and taken a lead. He's two sets up, and if this serve goes his way,
Andy will write his name into the record books as the first British player,
to win the title for 77 years.
Andy hits a powerful serve.
Novak just manages to return the ball,
but it's a slow, uncontrolled, looping shot back over the net.
Responding quickly, Andy hits a powerful forehand to Novak's weaker backhand,
and Novak hits the ball into the net.
Andy drops his racket and covers his face in disbelief.
He's won.
The spectators roar as Andy's emotions get the better of him,
and he waves to his ecstatic family in the country.
crowd. This is the moment Andy has been working toward all his career, all his life, ever since
he first picked up a tennis racket as a child, growing up in the small Scottish town of Dunblane.
Andy Murray's Wimbledon title sparks joy across Britain. He'll win a host of awards, television
specials will mark his victory, and he'll even be knighted by the queen. But the celebrations
will be especially enthusiastic in Andy's hometown. For the people of Dunblane, Andy is more than
just a local success. He's part of a wider story of trauma and survival that has shaped the
town and its inhabitants for almost two decades. Ever since Dunblane became infamous as the
site of Britain's deadliest mass shooting, which Andy Murray survived as a schoolchild on March 13,
1996.
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Vassan Club,
Ostaean
Putson,
I'm Lincie
Graham
and this
is History
Daily.
History
is made
every day
on this
podcast
every day. We tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world.
Today is March 13, 1996, the Dunblane Massacre.
It's 9.30 a.m. on March 13, 1996, in Dunblane, Scotland, 17 years before Andy Murray
wins the Wimbledon men's singles title. Andy is nine years old and jokes with his classmates as
they walk down the hall at Dunblane Primary School. Andy's in a good mood because his first lesson of
the day is over, and now it's time for his.
his favorite gym class. Andy spots his older brother Jamie walking the other way, and the two
siblings playfully punch each other's shoulders as they pass. But Andy stops his boisterous behavior
when loud popping noises ring through the hall. In the 1990s, there are still tens of thousands
of legally owned guns in homes across Britain, but still gun crime in the country is rare. Most
children have only ever heard gunshots on television or in movies. The idea that someone might carry
such a weapon into a school and use it is unimaginable. So when Andy hears the loud noises,
his first response is to wonder whether someone has set off fireworks as a prank. A few seconds
later, the popping noises begin to slow, but the silences in between are punctuated by screams
and cries of young children. After a moment, a teacher runs along the hall toward Andy and usheres
his class through the nearest door to the head teacher's office. The head teacher looks up and
confusion at the sudden influx of students into his office, but his expression changes to one of
horror when the teacher says there's a man with a gun on the premises. As the head teacher bolts out
the door, the other teacher tells the children to sit on the floor and keep away from the windows.
But the head teacher returns seconds later his face pale. He orders the children into another
nearby classroom, and as they leave, Andy sees the head teacher pick up the telephone and dial 999 to
summon emergency services. Andy and his classmates stay in this classroom for the next two hours.
Grim-faced police officers occasionally enter and assure the children that the gunman has gone and
they're all safe, but they must remain in the classroom for the time being. Teachers try to
distract the children with songs and coloring, but even the adults are struggling to hold back tears.
Eventually, Andy's classes escorted back along the hall and into the school playground, where he's
enveloped in a hug by his mother.
Only when Andy gets home does his mother break the news
that 16 of his fellow students and one teacher
were killed by the gunman that morning.
The children who died were all four or five years old
and were shot in the gymnasium,
the very place Andy was headed to when the gunfire started.
Andy feels a sudden panic
that the shooter might still be on the loose,
but his mother reassures him that the gunman won't be coming back.
He killed himself before police arrived.
at the school. Then his mother tells him that the perpetrator was 43-year-old Thomas Hamilton,
a well-known figure in their small town. Andy and his brother have attended youth groups run by Hamilton,
and his mother has even given the man lifts home in their car. The Dunblane massacre, as the school
shooting is quickly named, dominates British news coverage for days. Newspapers dedicate several
pages to the attack. The Queen and Prime Minister issue statements of condolence, the Secretary of State for Scotland,
rushes to Dunblane to coordinate support efforts as the community tries to come to terms with the tragedy.
Dunblame Primary School quickly reopens to provide a semblance of normality for survivors like Andy,
but no one can miss the taped-off gymnasium where the news reporters still camped out at the school gates.
The detectives leading the investigation soon announced that the gunmen had been recently questioned by police
about allegations of inappropriate behavior towards children. They suspect that Hamilton attacked Dunnard.
Blaine's schoolchildren in response to what Hamilton saw as harassment by the police.
Soon, though, the grieving families would begin to demand more answers.
They don't want to just know why Hamilton did what he did.
They want to know how he was able to do it.
After detectives confirmed that Hamilton used four legally owned handguns in the shooting,
a campaign will begin to tighten Britain's gun laws and ensure nothing like the massacre
at Dunblane Primary School can ever happen again.
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in the city of Sterling, Scotland, one month after the Dunblane massacre.
Anne Pearson, a mother of three school-aged children, sets up a table in a shopping mall.
She lays out pieces of paper on the table, then begins asking passers-by whether they're prepared
to help her change the law to prevent another mass shooting.
Four days after the Dunblane massacre, Anne took a phone call from a friend.
Like many people in the days that followed the tragedy, their only topic of conversation was
the killings in nearby Dunblane. The massacre has extra poignancy for Anne because she previously
lived in Dunblane. She knows that if she had still been there, her children could have also been
among the victims. And as the two friends talked current events on the phone, they decided that they
had to do something to prevent another school shooting. Within days, they prepared a petition to the
UK government demanding that handguns be banned. Today, Anne is standing by her table at one of
Sterling's busiest shopping locations to collect more signatures for her campaign.
Anne isn't the only person to have been moved to action by the tragedy.
Many of the shoppers she talks to know the town of Dunblane well, so they signed a petition
without hesitation, and several offered to help collect more signatures.
Thanks to the people of Sterling, Anne's petition soon gathers momentum.
As the number of signatures grows, the petition gains attention from the media, which
only further increases the number of people who want a sign. Anne and her fellow petitioners
then form an organization that they named the Snowdrop Campaign after the only flower
that was in bloom when the massacre took place. They receive another boost when several parents
of children killed at Dunblane reach out to commend them for their efforts. The support is especially
vocal from Mick North, a widower whose only child, five-year-old Sophie, was among those killed.
Anne arranges for the Snowdrop Campaign petition to be handed over to the Bridge.
British government at the end of May 1996, two months after the shooting, a day chosen because it
coincides with the beginning of an official inquiry into the tragedy. By then, the petition has
garnered more than 700,000 signatures. But the inquiry soon reveals the first rumblings of
opposition to the Snowdrop campaign, because not everyone in Britain agrees that gun laws
should be tightened. The official inquiry hears evidence from shooting club members who don't want to
lose access to their firearms, from gun retailers who don't
want to lose their livelihoods and from sports professionals who worry about the impact gun controls
will have on Britain's ability to host international events. As a result of these submissions,
the official inquiry into the massacre does not recommend a total ban on handguns. But the government
is aware that the majority of British people are on the side of the Snowdrop campaign and that
handgun control has become a major issue for voters. So Prime Minister John Major offers a compromise solution.
As the first anniversary of the massacre nears in 1997, the government bans the private ownership of most handguns,
apart from long-barreled pistols used by shooting clubs.
But the new law doesn't go far enough for Anne and the Snowdrop Campaign,
and they soon launch a second effort to convince the government to tighten the laws further.
This time, rather than collecting signatures on a petition, the Snowdrop Campaign aims to win over all doubters.
It launches a billboard campaign with a simple slogan,
ban all handguns, written on a chalkboard in a child's handwriting.
It also films a commercial that's screened in cinemas,
showing a human-shaped target being blasted apart by bullets,
with voiceover by actor Sean Connery.
Scottish musician Ted Christopher then adapts the words of Bob Dylan's knocking on Heaven's door
into an anti-gun anthem.
He records the song with Dun Blaine Primary School children as backing singers
and the track reaches number one in the UK pop charts.
Thanks to all these efforts,
within a year of the compromise ban coming into effect,
the British government will extend the legislation
to cover all models of handgun.
The new regulations will have an immediate impact.
More than 150,000 handguns will be taken out of circulation.
Gun homicides will become even rarer,
and there won't be another comparable mass shooting in Britain for over 14 years.
But the new gun controls will be.
come too late for Dunblane. Still this grieving Scottish community will come together to survive
its trauma and find its own way to heal the scars of the past.
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It's September
24th
2004 in
Dunblaine
Scotland
8 and a half
years after the
school shooting
Dozens of
local children
watch as
Mick North
holds up a
wicker basket
and releases
four white
doves into the
air.
They fly away
with a flap of
their wings
and mix
smiles at the wrapped faces of the youngsters all around him, wishing, as he had done every day
for the past eight years, that his daughter Sophie was among them. In the months after the Dunblane
massacre, donations flooded into the community from across the world. The townspeople had to decide
the best way to spend the money, and some wanted to donate it to local good causes. Some wanted
to fund more anti-gun campaigns. Others thought it should go to facilities to help the scarred town recover.
Eventually, civic leaders decided to spend 1.6 million pounds to build a new community space for hosting youth groups and sports clubs.
Now, almost a decade after the tragedy, the Dunblane Center is finally ready to open, and as the father of one of the school shooting victims, Mick North is a guest of honor for its unveiling.
After several speeches from visiting dignitaries, a ribbon is cut to ceremonially open the center.
Mick joins the throng as they wander through the door.
He chooses not to follow the crowd to the refreshments in the main hall, though.
Instead, he turns and heads down a ramp, passing a mirror onto which the words forever remembered are carved.
Beyond it, decorating the glass walls of the new center, are 17 etchings,
each a picture chosen by the families of the victims to remember their loved one.
Mick finds his way to the image he's chosen for his daughter, a cat sitting on a book.
Sophie loves stories and she loved animals.
and Mick stands silently before this image as the sun gleams through the glass,
casting shadows of the etching warmly over his face.
The Dunblane Center will quickly become a focal point for the small Scottish town,
and it's there that many of its residents will gather in the summer of 2013
to cheer on local boy Andy Murray in the men's final of Wimbledon.
As a survivor of the Dunblane Massacre, Andy's sporting triumph will help put to rest
some of the painful memories of Britain's deadliest mass shooting, which took place almost two decades
earlier on March 13, 1996.
Next on History Daily, March 16, 1872. After years of hammering out the rules to a new game,
two amateur teams meet in London for the first FAA Cup final and lay the foundations of modern football.
From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham.
Audio editing by Mohamed Shazid.
Sound design by Gabriel Gould.
Music by Thrum.
This episode is written and researched by Scott Reeves.
Edited by Dorian Marina.
Managing producer Emily Burke.
Executive producers are William Simpson for airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
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