It was a Wednesday morning in March, 1996, just after 9:30am, when eight-year-old Andy Murray – now one of the best tennis players to have ever lived – heard two gun shots outside his classroom at Dunblane Primary School.
The shots came from near the assembly hall in the small school, located in Stirlingshire, Scotland.
Murray never imagined the shots were being fired by someone he knew; 43-year-old former scout leader Thomas Hamilton.
In his autobiography Hitting Back, Murray says he attended a youth group run by Hamilton, who the family knew well enough to occasionally drive home.
But that day, Hamilton had on him 743 cartridges of ammunition – and would, over the next three to four minutes, become responsible for the deadliest mass shooting in British history.
Top Comments
The anti-gun argument is really an anti-capitalism argument. Capitalists win this one all the way. The gun/ammo mfrs. supply them to anyone with the money. They supply war efforts around the world, for both sides, plus private owners. Politicians are for sale.
Capitalism can and does exist quite happily with scant gun ownership.
Poor kids. I don’t think it will change anything knowing that he went through this though to the gun lobby. Good luck with that