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Thread: On This Day

  1. #101
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    Apr 2009
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    34,432
    20 OCTOBER

    1097 1st Crusaders arrive in Antioch during the First Crusade

    1603 Chinese uprising in Philippines fails after 23,000 killed

    1632 The birth of English architect Christopher Wren. He was responsible for the rebuilding of St. Paul's Cathedral following the Great Fire of London.

    1714 The Coronation of King George I.

    1720 The English pirate of the Caribbean, John Rackham was captured by the Royal Navy. He is most remembered for two things: the design of his Jolly Roger flag, a skull with crossed swords, which contributed to the popularization of the design, and for having two female crew members, Mary Read and his lover Anne Bonny.

    1803 US Senate ratifies the Louisiana Purchase

    1818 The Convention of 1818 signed between the US and the UK which, among other things, settles the Canada–US border on the 49th parallel for most of its length.

    1822 The first edition of the Sunday Times newspaper.

    1822 The birth of Thomas Hughes, English author who wrote Tom Brown's Schooldays.

    1842 The death (from consumption) aged just 26, of Grace Darling, an English lighthouse keeper’s daughter from the Longstone Lighthouse. She rowed out on 7th September 1838, to rescue survivors of the Forfarshire off the Farne Islands and became a national heroine.The Grace Darling memorial is within St. Aidan's churchyard, Bamburgh, Northumberland.

    1864 US President Abraham Lincoln formally establishes Thanksgiving as a national holiday

    1890 The death of Sir Richard Francis Burton, English explorer, writer, soldier and diplomat. He was known for his travels and explorations within Asia and Africa and the discovery of Lake Tanganyika. Burton was one of the first non Muslims to enter the secret cities of Mecca and Medina.

    1904 The birth of Dame Anna Neagle, British actress and former chorus dancer.

    1915 Prime Minister David Lloyd George granted women their 'Right to Serve', thus opening up many new areas of employment for women. Trade Unionists were concerned that the move would depress wages.

    1935 Communist forces end their Long March at Yan'an, in Shaanxi, China, bringing Mao Zedong to prominence

    1946 'Muffin the Mule', a wooden puppet operated by Annette Mills (sister of actor Sir John Mills) first appeared in a children's television programme on BBC TV.

    1955 The publication of 'The Return of the King', the 3rd and final volume of 'The Lord of the Rings' by J.R.R. Tolkien

    1959 Women's colleges at Oxford University were given equal rights to those of the men's.

    1960 D.H Lawrence's controversial novel 'Lady Chatterley's Lover' put Penguin Books in the dock at the Old Bailey, London. They were accused of publishing obscene material but were eventually found not guilty.

    1968 The Convention of 1818 signed between the US and the UK which, among other things, settles the Canada–US border on the 49th parallel for most of its length.

    1973 Queen Elizabeth II opened the new Sydney Opera House in Australia, designed by Danish architect John Utzon.

    1973 President Richard Nixon fires Attorney General Richardson and Deputy Attorney General Ruckelshaus after they refuse to fire Watergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox.

    1988 The British Government announced plans to change the law so that remaining silent could incriminate rather than protect a suspect.

    1996 Oscar winners 'Wallace and Gromit' disappeared after being left in a taxi in New York. Both the life-size plastic models from Britain's award winning animation film were later found safe and well!

    1997 'Brown Monday' on the London Stock Exchange with £10 billion being wiped off the value of shares after British Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown failed to clarify his Government's stance on the European single currency.

    2010 Chancellor George Osborne unveiled the biggest UK spending cuts for decades, with welfare, councils and police budgets all hit.

    2012 Two people were taken to intensive care after hit-and-runs in Cardiff left a woman dead and 13 people injured.

    Famous Birthday's

    Dame Anna Neagle
    (1904 - 1986)

    Bela Lugosi
    (1882 - 1956)

    Jomo Kenyatta
    (1891 - 1978)

    Mickey Mantle
    (1931 - 1995)

    Famous Deaths

    Charles Babbage
    (1791 - 1871)

    Herbert Hoover
    (1874 - 1964)

    Muammar Gaddafi
    (1942 - 2011)


    Famous Weddings

    1853 23rd US President Benjamin Harrison (20) weds music teacher Caroline Scott (21)

    1943 British Children's writer Enid Blyton marries 2nd husband surgeon Kenneth Fraser Darrell Waters at City of Westminster registry office, London

    1949 Constitutional lawyer Phyllis Schlafly (25) weds attorney John Fred Schlafly, Jr.

    1968 Jacqueline Kennedy marries Greek shipping tycoon Aristotle Onassis on the island of Scorpios

    1973 Canadian actor William Shatner (Star Trek) marries Marcy Lafferty

  2. #102
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    21 OCTOBER

    1772 The birth, at Ottery St. Mary (Devon) of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge. The years 1797 and 1798, during which he lived at Coleridge Cottage, in Nether Stowey, Somerset, were among the most fruitful of Coleridge's life and where he wrote his notable poems The Rime of the Ancient Mariner and Kubla Khan.

    1774 First display of the word "Liberty" on a flag, raised by colonists in Taunton, Massachusetts in defiance of British rule in Colonial America.

    1805 At the Battle of Trafalgar, Nelson gave his famous signal, ‘England expects...’ which flew from the HMS Victory shortly after 11:00 a.m. The British won this important battle against Napoleon’s combined French and Spanish fleets off Cape Trafalgar, south-west of Spain and left Britain's navy unchallenged until the 20th century but Nelson was one of the day’s casualties. Nelson's flagship, Victory is now preserved at Portsmouth.

    1824 Portland cement, the modern building material, was first patented by Joseph Aspdin of Wakefield in Yorkshire. Its name is derived from its similarity to Portland stone, a type of building stone that was quarried on the Isle of Portland in Dorset.

    1854 Florence Nightingale with a staff of 38 nurses is sent to the Crimean War

    1868 Sir Ernest Dunlop Swinton, the English inventor of the military tank, was born.

    1879 Thomas Edison invents a workable electric light bulb at his laboratory in Menlo Park, N.J. which was tested the next day and lasted 13.5 hours

    1921 George Melford's silent film, The Sheik, starring Rudolph Valentino, premiers.

    1921 President Warren G. Harding delivers the first speech by a sitting U.S. President against lynching in the deep South.

    1940 Geoff Boycott, Yorkshire and England batsman was born.

    1940 The first edition of the Ernest Hemingway novel For Whom the Bell Tolls is published.


    1944 World War II: US troops capture Aachen, 1st large German city to fall

    1948 UN rejects Russian proposal to destroy atomic weapons

    1950 Korean War: Heavy fighting began between forces from the 27th British Commonwealth Brigade and the North Korean 239th Regiment at the Battle of Yongju, also known as the Battle of the Apple Orchard.

    1950 Chinese forces occupy Tibet

    1956 Kenyan rebel leader Dedan Kimathi was captured by the British Army, signalling the ultimate defeat of the Mau Mau Uprising, and essentially ending the British military campaign in Kenya.

    1958 The first women peers were introduced into the House of Lords.

    1960 Britain launched its first nuclear submarine, HMS Dreadnought, at Barrow. The building, is Europe's largest ship building hall at almost 200 ft high and 900 ft long.

    1966 144 people, 116 of them children, were killed in the small Welsh mining village of Aberfan when tons of slush, from a nearby coal slag tip weakened by rain, slid downhill and engulfed the village school, a farm and a row of terraced houses. The tragedy occurred at the beginning of the school day and on the day before the school closed for the half-term holiday. The children are buried in Aberfan's cemetery, on the hillside above the valley.

    1973 Fred Dryer of the then Los Angeles Rams becomes the first player in NFL history to score two safeties in the same game.

    1973 John Paul Getty III's ear is cut off by his kidnappers and sent to a newspaper in Rome; it doesn't arrive until November 8.


    1975 Britain's unemployment figure reached 1,000,000 for the first time since World War II.

    1982 Gerry Adams & Martin McGuinness made history by becoming the first members of Sinn Fein to be elected to the Ulster Assembly.

    1985 In one of Britain's worst motorway crashes, 13 people were killed on the M6 motorway in Lancashire.

    1988 A Greek cruise ship sank after a collision with a freighter. All 390 British schoolchildren and 81 teachers were rescued.

    1993 Military coup by Burundi President Ndadaye; 525,000 Hutus flee

    1994 North Korea and the United States sign an agreement that requires North Korea to stop its nuclear weapons program and agree to inspections.


    1996 Frances Lawrence, widow of headmaster Phillip Lawrence who was stabbed to death by a group of ****agers outside his school gates, launched a 'better citizenship campaign' to promote good behaviour in schools.

    1997 'Candle in the Wind' - the re-working of the hit single Elton John sang live at the funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales, was declared the biggest selling single in music history.

    2011 St Paul's Cathedral was closed to visitors for the first time since World War II because of anti-capitalist demonstrators (the 'Occupy London Stock Exchange' movement) 'camping on its doorstep'. The Right Reverend Graeme Knowles said that the decision had been taken with a heavy heart, for health and safety reasons.

    2012 The death (aged 99) of William Walker, the oldest surviving pilot from the Battle of Britain, who was shot down in his Spitfire and wounded in 1940.

    Famous Birthday's

    Alfred Nobel
    (1833 - 1896)

    Carrie Fisher
    (1956 - 2016)

    Kim Kardashian
    37th Birthday

    Geoff Boycott
    76th Birthday

    Famous Deaths

    Horatio Nelson
    (1758 - 1805)

    Jack Kerouac
    (1922 - 1969)

    Famous Weddings

    1917 Irish poet and playwright William Butler Yeats (52) weds Georgie Hyde-Lees (25)

    1929 Bank robber Willie Sutton (28) weds Louise Leudemann

    1948 Science fiction pioneering author "Stranger in a Strange Land" Robert A. Heinlein marries 3rd wife Virginia "Ginny" Gerstenfeld

    1977 Actor Peter Boyle (42) weds Loraine Alterman at the United Nations chapel in Manhattan

    1995 "Family Ties" actress Meredith Baxter (48) weds screenwriter Michael Blodgett (56) in Los Angeles

  3. #103
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    22 OCTOBER

    1633 Battle of Liaoluo Bay: Dutch East India Company defeated by Chinese Ming naval forces in southern Fujian sea

    1707 Four British Royal Navy ships ran aground near the Isles of Scilly. Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovell and more than 1,400 sailors drowned in one of the worst maritime disasters in the history of Britain. It was later determined that the main cause of the disaster was the navigators' inability to accurately calculate their positions.

    1721 Tsar Peter the Great becomes "All-Russian Imperator"

    1746 The College of New Jersey (later renamed Princeton University) receives its charter.

    1877 An explosion at the Blantyre mine in Scotland killed 207 miners the youngest aged 11. It remains Scotland’s worst mining accident.

    1878 The first floodlit rugby match took place, between Broughton and Swinton, at Broughton, Lancashire.

    1879 Thomas Edison perfects carbonized cotton filament light bulb

    1883 The Metropolitan Opera House in New York City opens with a performance of Gounod's Faust.

    1884 International Meridian Conference in Washington, D.C. adopts Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) worldwide, creating 24 international time zones with longitude zero at the Greenwich meridian

    1907 Panic of 1907: A run on Knickerbocker Trust Company stock leads to US wide run on banks

    1910 American born Doctor Hawley Crippen was convicted at the Old Bailey Central Criminal Court in London of poisoning his wife Cora. Crippen was hanged on November 23rd at Pentonville prison.

    1924 Toastmasters International is founded.

    1930 The BBC Symphony Orchestra played their first concert, conducted by Sir Adrian Boult at the Queen’s Hall, London.

    1934 In East Liverpool, Ohio, Federal Bureau of Investigation agents shoot and kill notorious bank robber Pretty Boy Floyd.

    1937 The Duke and Duchess of Windsor arrived in Berlin to meet German leader Adolf Hitler, to study housing conditions.

    1962 President Kennedy announces that American has discovered Soviet nuclear weapons in Cuba, and that he has ordered a naval "quarantine" of the Communist nation.

    1963 A BAC One-Eleven prototype airliner flown by test pilot Mike Lithgow, crashed during stall testing with the loss of all on board. Lithgow became the holder of the World Absolute Air Speed Record in 1953 flying a Supermarine Swift.

    1966 A Russian KGB master spy, George Blake, escaped from Wormwood Scrubs in London where he was serving a 40 year sentence for spying against the British Government.

    1966 The Supremes become the first all-female music group to attain a No. 1 selling album (The Supremes A' Go-Go).

    1972 Gordon Banks, England’s star goalkeeper, damaged his eyes in a car crash.

    1974 A bomb exploded in a London restaurant near to where opposition leader Edward Heath was dining. Three members of staff were injured.

    1975 The 'Guildford Four' were sentenced to life imprisonment after being found guilty of planting IRA bombs in pubs in Guildford and Woolwich. Fif**** years later they had their convictions quashed by the Court of Appeal, following an extensive inquiry into the original police investigation.

    1983 The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) held its biggest ever protest against nuclear missiles in London, with an estimated one million people taking part.

    1983 Two correctional officers are killed by inmates at the United States Penitentiary in Marion, Illinois. The incident inspires the Supermax model of prisons.

    1986 The world’s youngest heart transplant patient, a two-and-a-half-month-old baby from north west London, was given the heart of a five-day-old Belgian boy by Professor Magdi Yacoub at Harefield Hospital, Middle***.

    2001 Grand Theft Auto III was released, popularizing a genre of open-world, action-adventure video games as well as spurring controversy around violence in video games.


    2001 Towns and villages in Cambridgeshire and Es*** were on flood alert as forecasters predicted more torrential downpours following what experts said were the worst floods in 20 years.

    2001 The launch of the Beautiful Britain website! The first desktop wallpaper was a picture of Glenfinnan in the Scottish Highlands. If you have an all time favourite desktop wallpaper from the Beautiful Britain website then I'd be interested to know, via the Contact Form.

    2006 The first episode ('Everything Changes') of the cult British science fiction television programme Torchwood, a spin-off of Doctor Who. Alien hunter Ianto Jones was played by Welsh actor Gareth David-Lloyd. Remarkably, there is a shrine at Cardiff Bay in honour of Torchwood's fictional Ianto Jones who 'gave his life in defence of the children of this planet' in 2009.

    2013 Former BBC broadcaster Stuart Hall was stripped of his OBE by the Queen after he was jailed for a series of ***ual assaults on young girls. In June, Hall, aged 83, admitted 14 counts against girls aged from nine to 17 between 1967 and 1985. The Queen directed that the honour should be "cancelled and annulled" and his name be "erased" from the register.

    Famous Birthday's

    Franz Liszt
    (1811 - 1886)

    Joan Fontaine
    (1917 - 2013)

    Shaggy
    49th Birthday

    Famous Deaths

    Paul Cézanne
    (1839 - 1906)

    Pretty Boy Floyd
    (1904 - 1934)

    Arnold J. Toynbee
    (1889 - 1975)

    Famous Weddings

    1945 Argentine military officer and politician Juan Perón (50) weds actress Eva Perón (26) at a civil ceremony in Junin

    1948 Farm labor leader Cesar Chavez (21) weds labor activist Helen Fabela (20) in Reno, Nevada

    1967 Actor Morgan Freeman (30) weds Jeanette Adair Bradshaw

    1970 Singer James Brown (37) weds Deidre Jenkins in Barnwell, South Carolina

    1981 Best-selling author Michael Crichton (39) weds broadcast journalist Suzanne Childs

    Famous Divorces

    2007 Black Crowes frontman Chris Robinson (40) divorces actress Kate Hudson (28) due to irreconcilable differences after nearly six years of marriage

  4. #104
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    528
    Thank you Altobelli, as interesting as ever,I've enjoyed catching up on those

  5. #105
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    23 OCTOBER

    42 BC Roman Republican civil wars: Second Battle of Philippi - Brutus's army is decisively defeated by Mark Antony and Octavian. Brutus commits suicide.

    1641 The outbreak of the Irish Rebellion began as an attempted coup d'état by Irish Catholic gentry, who tried to seize control of the English administration in Ireland to force concessions for the Catholics living under English rule. However, the coup failed and the rebellion developed into an ethnic conflict between the native Irish Catholics and the English and Scottish Protestant settlers.

    1642 The first major battle of the English Civil War took place at Edgehill in South Warwickshire. Charles I and Prince Rupert led the Royalists and the Earl of Es*** led the Parliamentarians. It was an inconclusive result that prevented either faction gaining a quick victory in the war, which eventually lasted four years.

    1843 Nelson's Column in Trafalgar Square was finally completed. It commemorates Admiral Nelson's victory at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805. Nelson was born at Burnham Thorpe, Norfolk.

    1861 U.S. President Abraham Lincoln suspends the writ of habeas corpus in Washington, D.C., for all military-related cases.

    1906 In Britain, women suffragettes, campaigning for the right to vote, held a demonstration at the House of Commons. Ten were arrested and sent to prison.

    1915 Women's suffrage: In New York City, 25,000-33,000 women march on Fifth Avenue to advocate their right to vote.

    1917 Lenin calls for the October Revolution.

    1922 The shortest term of office this century for a British Prime Minister began on this day when Andrew Bonar Law took office. Due to ill health, he was replaced six months later by Stanley Baldwin.

    1931 The birth of Diana Dors, an actress remembered for her '*** symbol' roles.

    1939 The Japanese Mitsubishi G4M twin-engine "Betty" Bomber makes its maiden flight.

    1942 During WW II, Britain launches major offensive at El Alamein, Egypt

    1951 Conservative leader, Winston Churchill, wound up his election campaign by denying that he was a warmonger: "If I remain in public life at this juncture it is because I believe I may be able to make an important contribution to the prevention of a 3rd World War."

    1954 Britain, the US, France and the USSR agreed to end the occupation of Germany. On the same day, the Western nations agreed to allow West Germany to enter NATO.

    1958 The Smurfs, a fictional race of blue dwarves, later popularized in a Hanna-Barbera animated cartoon series, appear for the first time in the story La flute à six schtroumpfs.

    1966 John Surtees, British racing driver, won the Mexican Grand Prix.

    1967 British farmers began slaughtering cattle following a severe outbreak of 'foot and mouth' disease.

    1972 Access credit cards came into use in Britain.

    1973 The Watergate scandal: US President Richard M. Nixon agrees to turn over subpoenaed audio tapes of his Oval Office conversations.

    1973 A United Nations sanctioned cease-fire officially ends the Yom Kippur War between Israel and Syria.

    1977 Paleontologist Elso Barghoorn announces discovery of a 3.4-billion year old one-celled fossil, the earliest life form

    1981 US national debt hits $1 trillion

    1987 Former Champion Jockey Lester Piggott was jailed for three years for tax evasion.

    1991 The House of Lords ruled that husbands could legally be convicted of raping their wives.

    1995 Yolanda Saldívar is found guilty of first-degree murder in the shooting death of popular Latin singer Selena. Three days later, Saldívar was sentenced to life in prison.


    1998 Swatch Internet Time, a measure of 1000 "beats" per day was inaugurated by the Swatch Group.

    2001 The Northern Ireland peace process reached an historic breakthrough as the IRA announced that they were decommissioning their weapons.

    2009 BNP leader Nick Griffin complained to the BBC over his controversial appearance on Question Time, saying that he had faced a "lynch mob". He was robustly questioned about his views on race, immigration and the Holocaust from a largely hostile audience. He criticised Islam, defended a past head of the Ku Klux Klan but insisted that he was "not a Nazi". Critics said the show had given the BNP huge publicity and the BNP claimed 3,000 people registered to join the party during and after the broadcast.

    2012 The switchover to digital televison in the UK was complete when the analogue TV signal in Northern Ireland was turned off on Tuesday night at 23:30 BST. Simultaneously BBC Ceefax, the world's first teletext service, launched on 23rd September 1974 took its final bow with a series of graphics on Ceefax's front page.

    2013 Prince George, future king and future head of the Church of England was baptised at the Chapel Royal of St James's Palace.

    2014 The death, aged 72, of the 1970s singing star Alvin Stardust. He died of metastatic prostate cancer

    Famous Birthday's

    Louis Riel
    (1844 - 1885)

    Pele
    77th Birthday

    Weird Al Yankovic
    58th Birthday

    Famous Deaths

    Christian Dior
    (1905 - 1957)

    Maybelle Carter
    (1909 - 1978)

    Soong Mei-ling
    (1897 - 2003)

    Alvin Stardust
    (1942 - 2014)

    Famous Weddings

    1918 Actor Charlie Chaplin (29) weds Mildred Harris (17)

    1943 55th UK Prime Minister David Lloyd George (80) weds second wife Frances Stevenson

    1996 American caricaturist Al Hirshfeld (93) weds Louise Kerz

    2010 Singer-songwriter Katy Perry (25) weds actor-comedian Russell Brand (35) at luxury resort Aman-i-Khas in Northern India

  6. #106
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    24 OCTOBER

    1260 Qutuz, Mamluk Sultans of Egypt (1259-60), is assassinated by Baibars, a fellow Mamluk leader, who seizes power for himself

    1537 Henry VIII's 3rd wife, Jane Seymour, died following the birth of future king, Edward VI.

    1648 Treaty of Westphalia ends The Thirty Year's War in the Holy Roman Empire; Switzerland's independence recognized

    1842 The death (from consumption) aged just 26, of Grace Darling, an English lighthouse keeper’s daughter from the Longstone Lighthouse. She rowed out on 7th September 1838, to rescue survivors of the Forfarshire off the Farne Islands and became a national heroine.The Grace Darling memorial is within St. Aidan's churchyard, Bamburgh, Northumberland.

    1857 The founding of the world's first official football club, Sheffield Football Club, in Yorkshire, by a group of former students from Cambridge University. The club's finest hour came in 1904 when they won the FA Amateur Cup, a competition conceived after a suggestion by Sheffield. They are commemorated by the English Football Hall of Fame for their significant place in football history.

    1895 The birth of Jack Warner OBE, the English film and television actor who is closely associated with the role of PC George Dixon in the BBC television series Dixon of Dock Green, a part he played until the age of eighty.

    1901 Annie Edson Taylor becomes the first person to go over Niagara Falls, in a barrel.

    1908 Emmeline Pankhurst and her daughter Christabel were sent to prison for ‘inciting the public to rush the House of Commons’. Two Cabinet ministers were witnesses for the defence including Lloyd-George, then Chancellor of the Exchequer.

    1922 George Cadbury, the English chocolate manufacturer, died aged 83.

    1926 Harry Houdini's last performance takes place at the Garrick Theatre in Detroit.

    1929 "Black Thursday", start of stock market crash, Dow Jones down 12.8%

    1931 The George Washington Bridge opens to public traffic.

    1945 The United Nations was formed with the aim to 'save succeeding generations from the scourge of war.'

    1946 A camera on board the V-2 No. 13 rocket takes the first photograph of earth from outer space.

    1961 Malta was granted independence from Britain.

    1962 Cuban missile crisis: Soviet ships approach but stop short of the US blockade of Cuba

    1969 British actor Richard Burton bought his wife, American actress Elizabeth Taylor, a 69.42 carat diamond costing more than half a million pounds. Born at Pontrhydyfen, this Richard Burton sculpture is on the Richard Burton Trail in the Afan Forest Park in Neath - Port Talbot

    1976 British Formula One driver James Hunt won the Japanese Grand Prix and secured the world championship.

    1983 Civil servant Dennis Nilsen, from North London, went on trial accused of six murders and two attempted murders.

    1985 The birth of Wayne Rooney, English footballer. He made his senior international debut in 2003 becoming the youngest player at that time to represent England.

    1986 The UK government broke off diplomatic relations with Syria following revelations of complicity in a plot to blow up an El Al airliner.

    1987 Heavyweight boxing champion Frank Bruno knocked out Joe Bugner in Britain's most hyped boxing match, held at White Hart Lane, London. Bruno took home £750,000, Bugner got £250,000.

    1995 Britain's main church leaders attacked the setting up of Britain's first National Lottery, accusing it of undermining public culture and damaging society.

    2002 Police arrest spree killers John Allen Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo, ending the Beltway sniper attacks in the area around Washington, D.C.

    2003 The legendary supersonic aircraft, Concorde, made its last commercial passenger flight amid emotional scenes at Heathrow airport. Concorde was retired after 27 years due to a general downturn in the aviation industry after the 11th September terrorist attacks in 2001 and a decision by Airbus to discontinue maintenance support.

    2004 Arsenal Football Club loses to Manchester United, ending a row of unbeaten matches at 49 matches, which is the record in the Premier League.

    2008 'Bloody Friday' saw many of the world's stock exchanges experience the worst declines in their history, with drops of around 10% in most indices.

    2012 Sir Norman Bettison resigned as chief constable of West Yorkshire Police, saying that an inquiry into his role after the Hillsborough football tragedy of 1989 was 'a distraction' to the force. At the time he was a South Yorkshire Police inspector who attended the match as a spectator and later took part in an internal inquiry. He denied claims that he helped 'concoct' a false version of events.

    Famous Birthday's

    Domitian
    (51 - 96)

    Moss Hart
    (1904 - 1961)

    F. Murray Abraham
    78th Birthday

    Famous Deaths

    Tycho Brahe
    (1546 - 1601)

    Jackie Robinson
    (1919 - 1972)

    Rosa Parks
    (1913 - 2005)

    Famous Weddings

    1867 US Admiral George Dewey (29) weds daughter of New Hampshire's war governor Susan Goodwin

    1969 "Love Story" actress Ali MacGraw (30) weds film producer Robert Evans (39)

    1976 Pediatrician Benjamin Spock (73) weds Mary Morgan

    2013 Country music singer-songwriter Ashley Monroe (27) weds MLB pitcher John Danks (28) at Blackberry Farm in Walland, Tennessee

    2015 Comedian Tig Notaro (44) weds girlfriend Stephanie Allynne in Pass Christian, Mississippi

  7. #107
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    Nice one Altobelli, thought that you had forgotten

  8. #108
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    Quote Originally Posted by chalky_ncfc View Post
    Nice one Altobelli, thought that you had forgotten
    Just having one of those days Chalky

  9. #109
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    Quote Originally Posted by Altobelli View Post
    Just having one of those days Chalky
    At least you are over the hill now (that's the day done not you personally)

  10. #110
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    25 OCTOBER

    1400 The death of Geoffrey Chaucer, the English poet famous for the Canterbury Tales. Chaucer is known as the Father of English literature, is widely considered the greatest English poet of the Middle Ages and was the first poet to have been buried in Poet's Corner of Westminster Abbey.

    1415 In the Hundred Year's War, King Henry V's Longbowmen defeated a numerically superior French Army at the Battle of Agincourt. His victory crippled France and started a new period in the war, during which Henry married the French king's daughter and his son, Henry VI, was made heir to the throne of France.

    1760 King George II died. George III Hanover, his grandson, became king. In the later part of his life, George III suffered from recurrent, and eventually permanent, mental illness which may have been caused by a blood disease. After a final relapse in 1810, a regency was established, and George III's eldest son, George, Prince of Wales, ruled as Prince Regent.

    1800 The birth of Thomas Macaulay, British poet, historian, and politician. He was a member of the supreme council of India from 1834 - 1838 and pressed for parliamentary reform and the abolition of slavery.

    1828 The St Katharine Docks opened in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. They were part of the Port of London, in the area now known as the Docklands, and are now a popular housing and leisure complex.

    1839 Bradshaw's Railway Guide, the world's first railway timetable, was published, in Manchester.

    1854 Lord Cardigan led the Charge of the Light Brigade during the Battle of Balaclava in the Crimean War. An ambiguous order from the commander, Lord Raglan, led Cardigan’s brave cavalry to charge the Russians while fire came from three different sides.

    1861 The Toronto Stock Exchange is created.

    1920 The Sinn Féin Lord Mayor of Cork, Terence MacSwiney died in Brixton Prison after 74 days on hunger strike.

    1927 The Italian luxury liner SS Principessa Mafalda sinks off the coast of Brazil, killing 314.

    1938 The Archbishop of Dubuque denounces swing music as "a degenerated musical system… turned loose to gnaw away at the moral fiber of young people."

    1940 Benjamin O. Davis, Sr. is named the first African American general in the United States Army.


    1944 Heinrich Himmler orders a crackdown on the Edelweiss Pirates, a youth culture in that had assisted army deserters and others to hide from the Third Reich.

    1944 The USS Tang under Richard O'Kane (the top American submarine captain of World War II) is sunk by the ship's own malfunctioning torpedo.

    1946 1st trial against nazi war criminals in Nuremberg

    1951 Margaret Roberts (later Thatcher), aged 26, of the Conservative Party, became the youngest candidate to stand at a general election. The Conservatives won a narrow overall majority but the future British Prime Minister failed to win the seat.

    1962 Nelson Mandela is sentenced to five years in prison.

    1962 US Ambassador to the UN Adlai Stevenson demands USSR UN rep Zorin answer regarding Cuban missile bases saying "I am prepared to wait for my answer until hell freezes over"

    1964 The Beatles won five UK Ivor Novello Awards - 1963's Most Broadcast Song, and Top-Selling Single 'She Loves You', Second Best-Selling Single 'I Want to Hold your Hand', Second Most Outstanding Song 'All My Loving', and the Most Outstanding Contribution to Music.

    1971 United Nations votes to expel the Chinese Nationalist ruled Taiwan and admit the Communist People's Republic of China

    1976 The new National Theatre on the South Bank in London, was officially opened after years of delays.

    1978 Queen Elizabeth II opened the new Anglican Cathedral in Liverpool.

    1995 Fans gathered outside Buckingham Palace, to sing 'Congratulations' after singer Cliff Richard formally received his knighthood.

    2001 British Crime Survey revealed that the chances of being a victim of crime were the lowest for 20 years.

    2004 John Peel, veteran BBC broadcaster and Radio 1 DJ died, aged 65, from a heart attack whilst in Peru on holiday. He was the longest-serving of the original BBC Radio 1 DJs, broadcasting regularly from 1967 until his death.

    2004 Cuban President Fidel Castro announces that transactions using the American Dollar will be banned.

    2013 A dog walker found around sixty thousand pounds in banknotes (some charred after being burnt), floating in a Lincolnshire waterway (South Drove Drain in Spalding) . Six months later police were still following up a number of lines of enquiry.

    2013 The former Labour home and foreign secretary, Jack Straw (67) announced that he was to stand down as MP for Blackburn at the next general election.He was elected in Blackburn in 1979 and stood in eight general elections in the constituency.

    Famous Birthday's

    Pablo Picasso
    (1881 - 1973)

    Richard E. Byrd
    (1888 - 1957)

    Katy Perry
    33rd Birthday

    James McIlroy MBE
    86th Birthday

    Famous Deaths

    Albert Anastasia
    (1902 - 1957)

    Bobby Riggs
    (1918 - 1995)

    Bill Sharman
    (1926 - 2013)

    John Peel
    (1939 - 2004)

    Famous Weddings

    1764 Future 2nd American President John Adams (28) weds Abigail Smith (19) in Weymouth, Massachusetts (marriage lasts 54 years)

    1777 Governor of Virginia Patrick Henry (41) weds second wife Dorothea Dandridge

    1859 US President Chester A. Arthur (30) weds Ellen Herndon (22) at Calvary Episcopal Church in NYC, New York

    1915 Leader of China's 1911 revolution Sun Yat-sen (48) weds second wife Soong Ching-ling

    1945 Painter Jackson Pollock (33) weds painter Lee Krasner (27)
    Last edited by Altobelli; 26-10-2017 at 11:59 PM.

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