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  1. #1
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    Apr 2009
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    34,432
    10 SEPTEMBER

    1224 The Franciscans, founded in 1209 by St. Francis of Assisi, first arrived in England. They were originally called Grey Friars because of their grey 'habits'.

    1515 Thomas Wolsey was invested as a Cardinal. When Wolsey failure to secure Henry VIII's annulment to Catherine of Aragon it caused his downfall and arrest and he was stripped of his government office and property, including Hampton Court.

    1547 The Duke of Somerset led the English to victory over the Scots at the Battle of Pinkie Cleugh, Musselburgh. It was the last full scale military 'pitched battle' confrontation between England and Scotland and is seen as the first modern battle in the British Isles.

    1776 George Washington asks for a spy volunteer, Nathan Hale volunteers

    1813 The first unqualified defeat of a British naval squadron in history took palace when US Captain Oliver Hazard Perry led a fleet of nine American ships to victory over a squadron of six British warships at the Battle of Lake Erie.

    1846 Elias Howe takes out a US patent for a lockstich sewing machine

    1891 Ta-Ra-Ra-Boom-De-E, the most popular song in Victorian England in the 1890s was written by former Canadian bandsman Henry J Sayers. Sayers later admitted to copying an Austrian song after hearing the tune being played in a brothel.

    1897 George Smith, a London cab driver, became the first person to be convicted for drunken driving. He was fined £1.

    1933 English tennis player Fred Perry became the first Briton to win the US Open Championship since 1903.

    1939 World War II: The submarine HMS Oxley was mistakenly sunk by the submarine HMS Triton near Norway and became the Royal Navy's first loss. There were only two survivors.

    1942 In a single raid, the RAF dropped 100,000 bombs on Dusseldorf.

    1960 A goal-less draw between Blackpool and Bolton Wanderers became the first English League game shown live on TV.

    1963 American Express opened a credit card service in Britain.

    1967 Almost 100 per cent of the voters of Gibraltar rejected Spanish rule in favour of retaining British sovereignty.

    1973 Scotland Yard began hunting for a teenage suspect after two bombs at mainline stations injured 13 people and brought chaos to central London.

    1977 Hamida Djandoubi, convicted of torture and murder, is the last person to be executed by Guillotine in France

    1987 Hypnotist Andrew Newton was permitted to perform on stage, as Westminster Council lifted a 35 year ban on acts of that type. Doctors raised objections to lifting the ban, but Newton was not allowed to demonstrate regression on stage (taking hypnotized people back to their childhood).

    2001 Charles Ingram won one million pounds on Who Wants to be a Millionaire. He was later accused of cheating by having his wife, Diana, and an accomplice, Tecwen Whittock, cough as Ingram announced the correct answer from the available choices. The Ingrams and Tecwen Whittock were convicted, on 7th April 2003, by a majority verdict of 'procuring the execution of a valuable security by deception'. All three were fined and given suspended prison sentences. In October 2004 Diana and Charles Ingram were declared bankrupt.

    2008 The Large Hadron Collider at CERN, described as the biggest scientific experiment in the history of mankind is powered up in Geneva, Switzerland

    Famous Birthday's

    Maria Theresa of Spain
    (1638 - 1683)

    Arnold Palmer
    88th Birthday

    Roger Maris
    (1934 - 1985)

    Famous Deaths

    Qin Shi Huang
    (259 BC - 210 BC)

    Jane Wyman
    (1917 - 2007)

    Cliff Robertson
    (1923 - 2011)

    Famous Weddings

    1957 Prime Minister of Canada Jean Chretien (23) weds Aline Chaine (21) in Canada

    1961 Nigerian novelist, critic and academic Chinua Achebe ("Things Fall Apart") marries Christie Okoli

    1961 Baseball player Ted Williams marries model Lee Howard (divorced 1967)

    1966 Actor John Lithgow (20) weds Jean Taynton

    1993 Actress Loretta Young, 80, weds costume designer Jean Louis, 85

  2. #2
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    Apr 2009
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    34,432
    11 SEPTEMBER

    1297 Scottish hero William Wallace defeated the English at Stirling Bridge. Wallace's statement before the battle was - 'We come here with no peaceful intent, but ready for battle, determined to avenge our wrongs and set our country free.'

    1609 Expulsion order announced against the Moriscos of Valencia; beginning of the expulsion of all Spain's Moriscos

    1697 Battle of Zenta: forces of Prince Eugen of Savoye defeat the Turks, ending Ottoman control of large parts of Central Europe

    1708 Great Northern war: Charles XII of Sweden stops his march to conquer Moscow outside Smolensk, marking the turning point in the war

    1777 American troops led by George Washington were defeated by the British at the Battle of Brandywine Creek, in the American War of Independence.

    1836 Register Office marriages were introduced in Britain.

    1841 The London to Brighton commuter express train began regular service, taking just 105 minutes.

    1879 268 miners died in an explosion at the Prince of Wales Colliery, at Abercarn, South Wales.

    1885 D.H. Lawrence, controversial English author of Sons and Lovers, Women in Love and Lady Chatterley's Lover, was born.

    1895 The prestigious FA Cup trophy was stolen from football outfitters William Shillock of Birmingham. 68 years later an 83 year old man confessed he'd melted it down to make counterfeit halfcrown coins.

    1915 The opening of Britain’s first Women’s Institute at Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysilio gogogoch, Anglesey, Wales.

    1950 Barry Sheene, British racing motor cyclist was born.

    1962 The Beatles completed the recording of their first single 'Love Me Do' at the Abbey Road Studios in north London.

    1968 The housing charity, Shelter, said up to three million people in Britain were living in damp, overcrowded slum conditions.

    1987 Four men were arrested on charges of plotting to steal a dolphin worth £25,000 from the Marineland Oceanarium in Morecambe, Lancashire.

    1997 In a national referendum on devolution, the people of Scotland voted 'Yes' to creating their own Parliament, for the first time in more than 300 years.

    2001 The '911' terrorist attacks in New York. In the aftermath, Prime Minister Tony Blair deployed British troops in the invasion of Iraq (March 2003), supporting the US President George Bush and his 'War on Terror'. On This Day hijackers crashed two airliners into the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York City, killing everyone on board and thousands of those working in the buildings. Both towers collapsed within two hours, destroying nearby buildings and damaging others. A third airliner was crashed into the Pentagon and a fourth plane was redirected towards Washington, D.C., targeting either the Capitol Building or the White House, but it crashed in a field near Shanksville in rural Pennsylvania after passengers attempted to retake control of the airliner. There were no survivors from any of the flights.

    2012 25 year old tennis player Andy Murray finally emulated Fred Perry's 1936 achievement and became the first British player to win the US Open in 76 years when he beat Novak Djokovic. Murray also won the Wimbledon championship in 2013 and 2016. He won gold at the London 2012 Olympics and gold again at the 2016 Rio Olympic Games thus becoming the first player, male or female, to win two gold medals in the tennis singles events.

    2014 The Society of Biology stated that warm temperatures had prompted flying ants to leave their nests early, Subsequently, seagulls had become more agressive, after getting 'drunk' by the formic acid in the ants’ bodies.

    Famous Birthday's

    D. H. Lawrence
    (1885 - 1930)

    Ferdinand Marcos
    (1917 - 1989)

    Tom Landry
    (1924 - 2000)

    Famous Deaths

    Billy Bishop
    (1894 - 1956)

    Nikita Khrushchev
    (1894 - 1971)

    Todd Beamer
    (1968 - 2001)

    Famous Weddings

    1930 Mystery writer Agatha Christie (39) weds archaeologist Max Mallowan (26)

    1941 Belgium King Leopold secretly marries Lilian Baels

    1983 Fashion designer Donna Karen marries Stephan Weiss

    1993 Country singer Merle Haggard (56) weds fifth wife Theresa Ann Lane at his ranch near Redding, California

    1999 Actress Jenny McCarthy (26) weds actor-director John Mallory Asher (28) in the Crystal Gardens at the Beverly Hills Hotel

    Famous Divorces

    1977 TV's Rhoda gets divorced

  3. #3
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    Apr 2009
    Posts
    34,432
    12 SEPTEMBER

    1440 Eton College was founded by Henry VI. Prefects were warned to look out for "ill-kempt heads and unwashed faces."

    1609 English explorer Henry Hudson sailed his ship 'Half Moon' into New York harbour and 150 miles further inland to Albany, along the waterway now called Hudson River.

    1846 Poet Elizabeth Barrett eloped to Italy with poet Robert Browning to escape Elizabeth's domineering father who disapproved of marriage for any of his children. Mr. Barrett then disinherited Elizabeth, as he did for each of his children who married:

    1852 The birth of Herbert Henry Asquith, British Liberal Prime Minister. It was Asquith who introduced old age pensions and Lloyd-George was his Chancellor of the Exchequer.

    1878 Cleopatra's Needle, the obelisk of Thothmes II, was erected on London's Embankment.

    1885 The Scottish football team of Arbroath beat Bon Accord (from Aberdeen) by 36 goals to nil in the first round of the Scottish Cup, making it a record breaking score for professional football. Thirteen goals were scored by centre-forward John Petrie.

    1890 Salisbury, Rhodesia, was founded as a military fort by by Cecil Rhodes. They originally named the city Fort Salisbury after the 3rd Marquess of Salisbury, then British prime minister.

    1906 The opening of the Newport Transporter Bridge in south east Wales. Only eight such bridges remain in use worldwide and this is the oldest and largest of the three historic transporter bridges which remain in Britain. Vehicles are tranported on the 'gondola' across the River Usk.

    1908 The marriage of Winston Churchill to Clementine Hozier.

    1909 World's first patent for synthetic rubber granted to German chemist Fritz Hofmann

    1933 Leó Szilárd, waiting for a red light on Southampton Row in Bloomsbury, conceives idea of a nuclear chain reaction

    1936 Britain’s Fred Perry won the US Tennis Championships against Donald Budge, the first non-US player ever to win. Britain had to wait a further 76 years for a male singles champion and on 11th September 2012 Andy Murray won the US Open, beating Novak Djokovic.

    1940 4 *****, following their dog down a hole near Lascaux France discover 17,000-year-old drawings now known as Lascaux Cave Paintings

    1958 US Supreme Court orders the all-white Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas to integrate

    1959 Luna 2 launched by USSR; 1st spacecraft to impact on the Moon

    1960 Ministry of Transport (MoT) tests on motor vehicles were introduced in the UK.

    1970 The supersonic Concorde passenger jet landed at Heathrow Airport for the first time to a barrage of complaints from nearby residents about noise.

    1972 Two British trawlers were sunk by Icelandic gunboats during the 'cod war'

    1987 The BBC filmed the first 'Top of the Pops' to be sold in America.

    1988 Roger Hargreaves, author and creator of the Mr. Men books died.

    2000 Britain was brought to a standstill as fuel tax protesters, backed by tanker drivers, caused petrol shortages.

    2005 England took the Ashes from Australia for the first time since 1987.

    2012 After three years reviewing 450,000 documents, including those relating to former prime minister Margaret Thatcher and Merseyside police, the Hillsborough Independent Panel published its report. The report exposed the police campaign to blame Liverpool fans for the 1989 Hillsborough football disaster which saw the death of 96 fans. It led to a new criminal inquiry into the disaster and an investigation by the Independent Police Complaints Commission.

    2014 The death, aged 88, of Dr. Ian Paisley, the former firebrand Democratic Unionist Party leader. For decades he was the face of opposition to compromise with the IRA in Northern Ireland. Friends and one-time foes described him as a 'colossus' and 'big man of Irish politics'.

    Famous Birthday's

    Henry Hudson
    1575

    Jesse Owens
    (1913 - 1980)

    Paul Walker
    (1973 - 2013)

    Famous Deaths

    Anthony Perkins
    (1932 - 1992)

    Johnny Cash
    (1932 - 2003)

    Ray Dolby
    (1933 - 2013)

    Famous Weddings

    1812 Revolutionary leader Jose de San Martin (33) weds MarÃ*a de los Remedios de Escalada at Buenos Aires Cathedral in Argentina

    1840 Composer Robert Schumann marries Clara Wieck

    1846 Poet and playwright Robert Browning (34) weds fellow poet Elizabeth Barrett (40) at Marylebone Church in London

    1892 61st UK Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin (25) weds writer and activist Lucy Ridsdale (23) in Rottingdean, England

    1908 Politician Winston Churchill marries Clementine Hozier

    Famous Divorces

    1967 Actress Rosemary Clooney divorces actor José Ferrer for the second time after she found out his affair with Stella Magee

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    34,432
    13 SEPTEMBER

    509 BC The temple of Jupiter on Rome's Capitoline Hill is dedicated on the ides of September

    335 Church of Holy Sepulchre consecrated in Jerusalem

    1224 Francis of Assisi is afflicted with stigmata after a vision praying on Mount Verna


    1759 British troops, under the command of General Wolfe, secured Canada for the British Empire after defeating the French at the Battle of Quebec. Wolfe and the French commander were killed during the battle.

    1806 The English statesman Charles James Fox was taken ill and died at his home in London, just as he was about to introduce a bill abolishing slavery.

    1847 American-Mexican war: US General Winfield Scott captures Mexico City

    1894 The birth, in Manningham, Bradford, of John Boynton Priestley, the English author generally referred to as J.B. Priestley. He published 26 novels, notably The Good Companions (1929), as well as numerous dramas such as An Inspector Calls (1945). There is a statue to him outside the National Media Museum in Bradford.

    1902 The first conviction in Britain using finger-prints as evidence was in the case against Harry Jackson by the Metropolitan Police at the Old Bailey. He had left his thumbprint in wet paint on a window sill and was tracked down through it. He was sentenced to seven years.

    1916 The birth, in Cardiff, (to Norwegian parents) of the author Roald Dahl. Roald Dahl Plass is a public plaza in the heart of Cardiff Bay. The area is home to the Senedd (Welsh Assembly Building) and the Wales Millennium Centre. Some of Roald Dahl's notable works include James and the Giant Peach, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Fantastic Mr Fox, George's Marvellous Medicine and The BFG (Big Friendly Giant).

    1938 John Smith, former leader of the Labour Party was born.

    1940 Buckingham Palace was hit by a bomb during 'The Blitz'.

    1944 The birth of Carol Barnes, British television newsreader and broadcaster who worked for ITN from 1975 to 2004. In 1994 she was voted Newscaster of the Year at the TV and Radio Industries Club Awards

    1956 IBM introduces the RAMAC 305, 1st commercial computer with a hard drive that uses magnetic disk storage, weighs over a ton

    1957 The Mousetrap became Britain's longest running play, reaching its 1,998th performance.

    1958 Cliff Richard made his British TV debut on Jack Good's Oh Boy, performing Move It.

    1970 In Colombia, en route to the World Cup finals in Mexico, the captain of the England football team, Bobby Moore was accused of stealing a diamond bracelet from a shop. After being kept under house arrest, he was released and all charges were dropped.

    1980 Hercules, the bear who went missing on Benbecula (in the Outer Hebrides) while being filmed for a Kleenex television commercial, was recaptured after 24 days 'on the run'.

    1988 Medina Perez, a Cuban diplomat opened fire in a crowded London street because of an American plot to make him defect, (his government said).

    1989 Britain's biggest ever banking computer error gave customers an extra £2 billion in a period of 30 minutes; 99.3 per cent of the money was reportedly returned.

    1993 Public unveiling of the Oslo Accords, an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement initiated by Norway


    2001 Iain Duncan Smith became the new leader of the Tory party.

    2001 British defence experts said that forces could be involved in retaliatory strikes against those responsible for the US terrorist attacks on New York's World Trade Centre two days previously.

    2012 Jo Shuter, head teacher since 2001 of Quintin Kynaston School in St John's Wood, north-west London was suspended after an investigation into its finances. (Shuter resigned on August 28th when it was announced that she had spent £30,000 of public money on luxury hotels, flowers and her 50th birthday party.) She had earlier had been credited with turning around a school's fortunes, was named head teacher of the year at the 2007 Teaching Awards and was awarded a CBE in June 2010.

    Famous Birthday's

    Daniel Defoe
    (1660 - 1731)

    Arnold Schoenberg
    (1874 - 1951)

    Claudette Colbert
    (1903 - 1996)

    Famous Deaths

    Titus
    (39 - 81)

    Philip II
    (1527 - 1598)

    Tupac Shakur
    (1971 - 1996)

    Famous Weddings

    1893 Microbiologist Robert Koch (49) weds actress Hedwig Freiberg (20)

    1975 Novelist Danielle Steel (28) weds Danny Zugelder in the prison canteen

    1981 Television producer Lorne Michaels (36) weds model Susan Forristal

    1998 "Spice Girls" pop singer Melanie Brown (23) weds Jimmy Gulzar in Little Marlow, Buckinghamshire

    2000 Wrestler "Stone Cold" Steve Austin (35) weds WWE Diva Debra Marshall (40) at the Little White Chapel in Las Vegas

    Famous Divorces

    1974 Singer-composer Quincy Jones Jr (28) divorces actress Ulla Andersson (41) after 5 years of marriage

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    34,432
    14 SEPTEMBER

    1607 The 'Flight of the Earls' from Lough Swilly, Donegal, in Ireland took place when Hugh Ó Neill (the earl of Tyrone) and about ninety followers left Ireland for mainland Europe following their earlier defeat in battle. They hoped to recruit an army for the invasion of Ireland with Spanish help, but King Philip III of Spain wanted to preserve the recent peace with England under its new Stuart dynasty so it was all to no avail. Nevertheless he persisted with the invasion plan until his death in exile in 1616.

    1682 Bishop Gore School, in Swansea was founded. It is one of the oldest schools in Wales and its most famous former pupil is almost certainly the poet, playwright and author Dylan Thomas who, it is said, was not a distinguished pupil. His father was Senior English Master at the school, which was then known as Swansea Grammar School.

    1741 George Frideric Handel finishes his "Messiah" oratorio after working on it non-stop for 23 days

    1752 The 3rd of September became the 14th as the Gregorian Calendar was introduced into Britain. Crowds of people rioted on the streets demanding, 'Give us back our 11 days.'

    1759 The earliest dated board game in England was sold on this day by its inventor John Jeffreys, from his house in Chapel Street, Westminster. The game was called 'A Journey Through Europe', or 'The play of Geography'.

    1812 Napoleon occupies Moscow and the fires start, extinguished by the 19th

    1852 The Duke of Wellington, victor at Waterloo, died aged 83. He was known as the Iron Duke and was Tory Prime Minister from 1828-30. 'Duke of Wellington' is a hereditary title, derived from the Somerset town of Wellington and was created for Arthur Wellesley, 1st Marquess of Wellington. The Wellington Monument is located on the highest point of the Blackdown Hills, 1.9 miles from the town of Wellington.

    1868 At the Open Championships at Prestwick, the legendary Scottish golfer Tom Morris scored the first recorded hole-in-one, on the 8th hole (166 yards).

    1891 The first penalty kick in an English League football game was taken by Heath of Wolverhampton Wanderers against Accrington.

    1909 Peter Scott, British artist and ornithologist was born.

    1910 The birth of the actor Jack Hawkins. He mostly appeared in character roles, often in epic films such as The Bridge on the River Kwai, Zulu, The Cruel Sea and Lawrence of Arabia. A 60 a day smoker, Hawkins began experiencing voice problems in the late 1950s. His entire larynx was removed and his performances were dubbed. Hawkins continued to smoke after losing his voice and died aged 62.

    1939 World’s 1st practical helicopter, the VS-300 designed by Igor Sikorsky takes (tethered) flight in Stratford, Connecticut

    1949 India's Constituent Assembly adopts Hindi as an official language. Celebrated today as Hindi Day.

    1951 Prime Minister Clement Attlee opened the largest oil refinery in Europe, at Fawley on Southampton Water.

    1956 1st prefrontal lobotomy performed in Washington, D.C.

    1960 Iraq, Iran, Kuwait, Saudi-Arabia & Venezuela form Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)

    1964 The British daily newspaper, the Daily Herald, ceased publication and was replaced by the Sun.

    1974 Two giant pandas, Chia-Chia and Ching-Ching, arrived at London Zoo.

    1981 A teenage boy who fired blank shots at the Queen in June 1980, pleaded guilty to a charge under the 1848 Treason Act.

    1988 A London taxi reached New Delhi with the meter showing a fare of £13,200. It was part of a six-man expedition on the way to Sydney.

    1997 Pete Townshend unveiled an English Heritage Blue Plaque at 23, Brook Street, Mayfair, London to mark where Jimi Hendrix had lived in 1968-69. He was the first pop star to be commemorated with the plaque.

    2001 Offices, shops and factories across the UK fell silent for three minutes as the nation mourned the victims of the US terrorist attacks.

    Famous Birthday's

    Alexander von Humboldt
    (1769 - 1859)

    Sam Neill
    70th Birthday

    Amy Winehouse
    (1983 - 2011)

    Famous Deaths

    Aaron Burr
    (1756 - 1836)

    William McKinley
    (1843 - 1901)

    Grace Kelly
    (1929 - 1982)

    Famous Weddings

    1830 Princess WFLC Marianne marries Albrecht of Prussia

    1835 American leading transcendentalist Ralph Waldo Emerson (33) marries 2nd wife Lydia (Lidian) Jackson in Plymouth, Massachusetts.

    1838 Newly escaped slave Frederick Douglass marries free woman Anne Murray in New York

    1886 Neurologist Sigmund Freud (30) weds Martha Bernays (25) in Hamburg, Germany

    1892 AP Giannini marries Clorinda Cuneo

    Famous Divorces

    1962 Actress Janet Leigh (35) divorces actor Tony Curtis (37) after after 10 years of marriage

    1984 Film director John Carpenter (36) and actress Adrienne Barbeau (39) divorce after 5 years of marriage

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