Oral Answers to Questions — Scotland – in the House of Commons at 12:00 am on 17 June 1964.
Lieut-Colonel Neil McLean
, Inverness
12:00,
17 June 1964
asked the Secretary of State for Scotland what was the estimated number of tourist visitors to Scotland in 1963.
Mr Michael Noble
, Argyll
The Scottish Tourist Board's latest report estimates the number of visitors in 1963 as 5·1 millions. These figures are based on returns from Scottish hotels and guest houses. They include visitors from England and Wales, from other parts of the United Kingdom and from overseas.
Lieut-Colonel Neil McLean
, Inverness
Do not these figures show that the tourist industry will and must play an increasingly important rôle in the Scottish economy? What estimate has my right hon. Friend of the number of visitors to Scotland over the next few years?
Mr Michael Noble
, Argyll
I see no reason why the numbers should not continue to go up. It is difficult to split up the available figures, but I see that the British Travel and Holidays Association has estimated that the number of overseas visitors to Scotland last year was 710,000. This was a considerable increase over any of the previous three years.
Mr Cyril Bence
, Dunbartonshire East
Does that figure include the hon. Member for Inverness (Mr. N. McLean)?
Commander Charles Donaldson
, Roxburghshire, Selkirkshire and Peeblesshire
Does my right hon. Friend appreciate that one factor this year causing concern to the tourist industry and to the Tourist Board is the number of cancellations, stretching as far ahead as to the end of August, made of hotel bookings as far south as the Border following the Aberdeen typhoid outbreak? Will my right hon. Friend soon make an authoritative statement about the outbreak and the clearance of the trouble, as this affects tourists from the south of Britain considering visiting Scotland during the season?
Mr Michael Noble
, Argyll
All I can say at the moment is that among the 5 million people I mentioned one would expect a certain small number of cancellations. That is only natural. The epidemic seems to be dying down now and I have every hope that the available tourist accommodation in Scotland will be full again very quickly.
Secretary of State was originally the title given to the two officials who conducted the Royal Correspondence under Elizabeth I. Now it is the title held by some of the more important Government Ministers, for example the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs.