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  1. #1
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    Nice one Altobelli, thought that you had forgotten

  2. #2
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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

  3. #3
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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.

  4. #4
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    26 OCTOBER

    0899 King Alfred the Great, Saxon King of Wes*** is believed to have died on this date. A soldier and scholar, he fought against the invading Danes and formed England's first navy. His son, Edward the Elder became King. Winchester was Alfred's capital, and he developed the town and to keep it safe from attack. This statue of him is in the town.

    1640 The Treaty of Ripon was signed, by Charles I, King of England, Scotland, and Ireland, and the Scottish Covenanters. It was a major setback for Charles, and its terms were humiliating. It stipulated that Northumberland and County Durham were to be ceded to the Scots as an interim measure, that Newcastle was to be left in the hands of the Scots, and that Charles was to pay them £850 a day to maintain their armies there.

    1775 King George III went before Parliament to declare the American colonies in rebellion, and authorized a military response to quell the American Revolution.

    1776 Benjamin Franklin departs from America for France on a mission to seek French support for the American Revolution.

    1825 The Erie Canal opens: Passage from Albany, New York to Lake Erie.

    1850 Robert McClure sights the fabled Northwest Passage for the first time (from Banks Island towards Melville Island)

    1859 The Royal Charter steam clipper was wrecked in Dulas Bay, off the coast of Anglesey, with almost 460 dead, the highest death toll of any shipwreck off the Welsh coast. The exact number of dead was not verified as the passenger list was lost in the wreck.

    1861 Pony Express (Missouri to California) ends after 19 months

    1863 The Football Association was formed at a meeting at Freeman's Tavern in London.

    1863 International conference begins in Geneva aimed at improving medical conditions on battlefields - beginning of the Red Cross

    1881 The Gunfight at the O.K. Corral takes place at Tombstone, Arizona.

    1901 First recorded use of "getaway car" occurs after holding up a shop in Paris

    1907 The Territorial Army was formed by the Secretary of State for War, Richard Haldane.

    1929 London's world famous buses were painted red.

    1936 The first electric generator at Hoover Dam goes into full operation.

    1950 The first sound and vision broadcast from the House of Commons was broadcast, showing George VI reopening the chamber after repair work carried out on damage sustained during the war.

    1965 The Beatles went to Buckingham Palace to be presented with their MBEs by Queen Elizabeth II. Four years later, John Lennon sent back his MBE, stating that he was returning the award in protest against British involvement in Biafra, Nigeria, and Vietnam.

    1970 Muhammad Ali faces off against Jerry Quarry in Atlanta, Georgia for the first time after Ali's three year hiatus from evading to be drafted in the Vietnam War.

    1977 The birth of Dame Sarah Storey, Britain's most decorated female Paralympian. Her list of major achievements (as of October 2015) include being a 21-time World champion (6 in swimming and 15 in cycling), a 21-time European champion (18 in swimming and 3 in cycling) and a holder of 72 world records. There is a sculpture to her and her husband 'Barney' Storey in their home town of Disley, Cheshire.

    1977 Last natural case of smallpox discovered in Merca district, Somalia. Considered the anniversary of the eradication of smallpox, the most spectacular success of vaccination

    1984 "Baby Fae" receives a heart transplant from a baboon.


    1986 Leading politician Jeffrey Archer was forced to resign from the deputy chairmanship of the Conservative party following allegations that he made a payment to a prostitute to avoid a scandal. He denied the allegations and later fought a successful libel case.

    1989 The re-built Globe Theatre in London reopened for the first time in 350 years.

    1989 The British Chancellor of the Exchequer Nigel Lawson resigned over policy differences with Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. John Major replaced him.

    1992 The London Ambulance Service was thrown into chaos after the failure of a new Computer Aided Dispatch system. Its poor design and implementation led to significant delays in the assigning of ambulances, with reports of 11 hour waits. Media reports at the time claimed that up to 30 people may have died as a result of the chaos. The then-chief executive, John Wilby, resigned shortly afterwards.

    2000 The long awaited report into the spread of BSE or 'mad cow disease' and its fatal human equivalent, vCJD, criticised officials, scientists and government ministers.

    2001 British troops were put on standby for action in Afghanistan as Tony Blair warned that Osama bin Laden must be stopped.

    2001 The United States passes the USA PATRIOT Act into law.

    2002 Approximately 150 hostages die when Russian Spetsnaz storm a theater in Moscow, which had been occupied by Chechen terrorists three days before.

    2012 Six care workers at Winterbourne View care home (Gloucestershire) were given prison sentences for 'particularly cruel … callous and degrading' abuse of disabled patients.' The defendents were were secretly filmed by BBC Panorama, slapping extremely vulnerable residents, soaking them in water, trapping them under chairs, taunting and swearing at them, pulling their hair and poking their eyes.

    2014 Camp Bastion, the last UK base in Afghanistan, was handed over to the control of Afghan security forces, ending British combat operations in the country.

    Famous Birthday's

    Edward W. Brooke
    (1919 - 2015)

    Hillary Clinton
    70th Birthday

    Seth MacFarlane
    44th Birthday

    Famous Deaths

    Elizabeth Cady Stanton
    (1815 - 1902)

    Hattie McDaniel
    (1895 - 1952)

    Igor Sikorsky
    (1889 - 1972)

    Famous Weddings

    1789 Lexicographer Noah Webster (31) weds Rebecca Greenleaf

    1953 Tennis champion Tony Trabert (23) weds beauty queen Shauna Wood at the Salt Lake Country Club in Salt Lake City, Utah

    1963 Actress Elizabeth Montgomery (30) weds director-producer William Asher (42) in El Paso, Texas

    1968 Lawyer and politician Rudy Giuliani (24) weds second cousin Regina Peruggi (22) in a large Roman Catholic ceremony in Bedford Park, The Bronx

    2002 American singer-songwriter and TV personality Jessica Simpson (22) weds singer-songwriter Nick Lachey (28) at Riverbend Church in Austin, Texas

  5. #5
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    27 OCTOBER

    312 Roman Emperor Constantine the Great is said to have received his famous Vision of the Cross

    939 Edmund I succeeded Athelstan as King of England.

    1275 Traditional founding of the city of Amsterdam.

    1644 The Second Battle of Newbury in the English Civil War took place in Speen, adjoining Newbury in Berkshire. The combined armies of Parliament inflicted a tactical defeat on the Royalists, but failed to gain any strategic advantage.

    1662 Charles II of England sold the coastal town of Dunkirk to King Louis XIV of France.

    1682 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania is founded.

    1728 The birthday of Captain James Cook, English naval officer and one of the greatest navigators in history. His voyages in the Endeavour led to the European discovery of Australia, New Zealand and the Hawaiian Islands. Thanks to Cook’s understanding of diet, no member of the crew ever died of scurvy, the great killer on other voyages. In his youth he was apprenticed to a ship owner in Whitby.

    1795 Pinckney's Treaty [Treaty of San Lorenzo] signed by Spain and US, establishing the southern boundary of the US and giving Americans right to navigate the Mississippi River

    1838 Missouri governor Lilburn Boggs issues the Extermination Order, which orders all Mormons to leave the state or be exterminated.

    1904 The first underground New York City Subway line opens; the system becomes the biggest in United States, and one of the biggest in world.

    1914 Birth of Welsh poet Dylan Thomas. He had a long affinity with Laugharne, spending the last four years of his life in the Boathouse -

    1914 World War I: The British super-dreadnought battleship HMS Audacious was sunk off Tory Island, north-west Ireland, by a minefield laid by the armed German merchant-cruiser Berlin. The Commander-in-Chief of the Grand Fleet, Sir John Jellicoe, proposed that the sinking be kept a secret, to which the Board of Admiralty and the British Cabinet agreed, and for the rest of the war, Audacious' name remained on all public lists of ship movements and activities.

    1936 American Wallis Simpson, the future Duchess of Windsor, was granted a divorce from her second husband Ernest, leaving her free to marry King Edward VIII.

    1939 The birth of John Cleese, actor, comedian, writer and film producer. He appeared in BBC TV's Monty Python's Flying Circus and Fawlty Towers, and has starred in many films including the four Monty Python films, Clockwise and A Fish called Wanda.

    1952 The BBC screened part one of the 26 part series 'Victory At Sea', Britain's first TV documentary.

    1958 The birth of Simon Le Bon, English musician, best known as the lead singer, lyricist and musician of the band Duran Duran.

    1962 Black Saturday - Russian nuclear missile crisis in Cuba

    1962 Major Rudolf Anderson of the USAF becomes the only direct human casualty of the Cuban Missile Crisis when his U-2 reconnaissance airplane is shot down in Cuba.

    1964 Ronald Reagan delivers a speech on behalf of Barry Goldwater. The speech launched his political career and came to be known as "A Time for Choosing".

    1965 An airliner crashed at Heathrow, killing 36 people.

    1967 Britain passed the Abortion Act, allowing abortions to be performed legally for medical reasons.

    1967 Catholic priest Philip Berrigan and others of the 'Baltimore Four' protest the Vietnam War by pouring blood on Selective Service records.

    1968 An estimated 6,000 marchers, demonstrating against the Vietnam War, faced up to police outside the US Embassy in London.

    1978 Four people were killed and four others seriously wounded after a gunman (Barry Williams) went on a shooting spree on the Bustleholm estate, Wednesbury and later at a service station in Nuneaton.

    1980 The start of a hunger strike by Republican prisoners interned in the Maze Prison in Northern Ireland.

    1982 China announces its population has reached 1 billion plus people

    1986 The government suddenly deregulated financial markets, leading to a total restructuring of the way in which they operated, in an event now referred to as the Big Bang.

    1987 Gilbert McNamee was sentenced to 25 years in prison for being an IRA bomb maker

    1988 Ronald Reagan decides to tear down the new U.S. Embassy in Moscow because of Soviet listening devices in the building structure.


    1992 United States Navy radioman Allen R. Schindler, Jr. is murdered by shipmate Terry M. Helvey for being gay, ultimately resulting in the "Don't ask, don't tell" military policy.

    1998 Welsh Secretary Ron Davies resigned after what he described as his 'inappropriate behaviour' late at night on Clapham Common, London which led to him being robbed at knife point.

    Famous Birthday's

    James Cook
    (1728 - 1779)

    Theodore Roosevelt
    (1858 - 1919)

    John Gotti
    (1940 - 2002)

    Famous Deaths

    Ivan the Great
    (1440 - 1505)

    Akbar
    (1542 - 1605)

    Ivan the Great
    (1462 - 1505)

    Lou Reed
    (1942 - 2013)

    Famous Weddings

    1880 Theodore Roosevelt, later 26th US President marries Alice Hathaway Lee, on his 22nd birthday

    1910 Baseball legend Connie Mack (47) weds Katherine Holahan

    1964 Singers Sonny & Cher wed, Cher wore bell-bottoms

    1971 Steve Garvey weds Cynthia Truhan

    1984 "Jessie's Girl" singer Rick Springfield (35) weds Barbara Porter in Australia

  6. #6
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    28 OCTOBER

    1216 Henry III was crowned. His son was England's warrior king, Edward I.

    1492 Christopher Columbus discovers Cuba and claims it for Spain

    1538 The first university in the New World, the Universidad Santo Tomás de Aquino, is established on Hispaniola

    1636 A vote of the Great and General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony establishes the first college in what would become the United States, today known as Harvard University.

    1664 The Corps of Her Majesty's Royal Marines, commonly referred to as the Royal Marines, was established. It was originally known as The Duke of York and Albany's Maritime Regiment of Foot.

    1746 Peruvian cities of Lima and Callao demolished by earthquake, 18,000 die

    1794 The birth of Robert Liston, Scottish physician who carried out Britain's first operation with the aid of an anaesthetic.

    1831 English physicist Michael Faraday demonstrated the dynamo, founding the science of electro-magnetism.

    1886 In New York Harbor, President Grover Cleveland dedicates the Statue of Liberty.

    1893 HMS Havelock, the Royal Navy's first destroyer, went on trials.

    1904 St Louis police try a new investigation method - fingerprints

    1912 The birth of Sir (William) Richard Doll, English physician and cancer researcher who first proved the link between cigarette smoking and cancer.

    1915 Richard Strauss conducts the first performance of his tone poem "Eine Alpensinfonie" in Berlin.

    1919 Volstead Act passed by US Congress, establishing prohibition, despite President Woodrow Wilson's veto

    1922 March on Rome: Italian fascists led by Benito Mussolini march on Rome and take over the Italian government.

    1924 Miner M.de Bruin discovers the infant fossil skull, "Taung child" in a lime quarry in Taung, South Africa. Paleoanthropologist Raymond Dart identifies the fossil as a new hominin species, Australopithecus africanus.

    1929 1929 1st child born in aircraft, Miami, Florida

    1930 The birth of Bernie Ecclestone English business magnate who is generally considered the primary authority in Formula One motor racing. His early involvement in the sport was as a competitor and then manager and, in 1972, he bought the Brabham team, which he ran for fifteen years. As a team owner he became a member of the Formula One Constructors' Association.

    1938 David Dimbleby, TV journalist and commentator was born.

    1949 The glove puppet Sooty, with Harry Corbett, made his first appearance on BBC TV.

    1958 The State Opening of Parliament was televised for the first time.

    1959 The first use of a car phone, with a call from Cheshire to London. A mere twenty five people had paid the astronomical sum of £200 each for one of the phones.

    1962 The opening of Britain's first urban motorway - the M62 (now M60) around Manchester.

    1962 End of Cuban Missile Crisis: Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev orders the removal of Soviet missiles from Cuba.

    1965 Construction on the St. Louis Arch is completed.

    1971 The House of Commons backed Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heath and, by a majority of 112, voted for Britain to apply to join the EEC - the European Economic Community.

    1974 Sports Minister Denis Howell's wife and young son survived a bomb attack on their car. The attack was thought to be the work of the Provisional IRA and the first on a serving minister during the current IRA campaign.

    1979 Chairman Hua Kuo-Feng, the first Chinese leader to visit Britain, was welcomed at Heathrow by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. (Additional note - Margaret Thatcher was born at this former grocer's shop in Grantham Lincolnshire.

    2000 Ulster Unionist Party leader David Trimble narrowly won party support to keep a Northern Ireland power sharing government alive.

    2005 Plame affair: Lewis Libby, Vice-president Dick Cheney's chief of staff, is indicted in the Valerie Plame case. Libby resigns later that day.

    2007 Cristina Fernández de Kirchner becomes the first woman elected President of Argentina.

    2011 Commonwealth leaders pledged to amend legislation dating back to the 17th century to allow daughters of the monarch to take precedence over younger sons in the line of succession.

    2011 Vincent Tabak, a 33 year old Dutch engineer with an obsession for violent *** and ****ography, was found guilty of strangling landscape architect Joanna Yeates for ***ual thrills. Her body was found, covered with leaves on Christmas morning 2010. The police initially suspected and arrested Christopher Jefferies, Yeates' landlord, who lived in a flat in the same building. The nature of press reporting on aspects of the case led to 'substantial, undisclosed libel damages' from eight newspapers being awarded to Mr. Jefferies.

    2014 105 year old Sir Nicholas Winton, who saved 669 children, most of them Jews, from the Nazis was awarded the Czech Republic's highest state honour, the Order of the White Lion. He was aged 29 when he arranged trains to take the children out of occupied Czechoslovakia and for foster families to meet them in London.

    2014 Tesco's Aberystwyth store made a blunder on a Welsh sign which was supposed to advertise 'free money' from the supermarket's cashpoint. The sign read "codiad am ddim", meaning free erections when it should read "arian am ddim" which means free money.

    Famous Birthday's

    Jonas Salk
    (1914 - 1995)

    Evelyn A Waugh
    (1903 - 1966)

    Bill Gates
    62nd Birthday

    Julia Roberts
    50th Birthday

    Hank Marvin
    76th Birthday

    Dennis Lillie
    68th Birthday

    Wayne Fontana
    72nd Birthday

    Cleo Laine
    90th Birthday

    Famous Deaths

    Maxentius
    ( - 312)

    John Locke
    (1632 - 1704)

    Abigail Adams
    (1744 - 1818)

    John Wallis
    (1617 - 1703)

    Ted Hughes
    (1930 - 1998)

    Famous Weddings

    1533 Prince Henry of France (later Henry II) (14) marries Florentine noblewoman Catherine de' Medici (14)

    1863 Painter Edouard Manet (31) weds Suzanne Leenhoff (34)

    1869 Sarawak's head of state Charles Brooke (40) weds Margaret Alice Lili de Windt (20) at Highworth, Wiltshire

    1981 Film director David Lean (73) weds fifth wife Sandra Hotz

    2004 Economist Joseph Stiglitz (61) weds professor Anya Schiffrin (41) at the Municipal Building in New York

  7. #7
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    29 OCTOBER

    539 BC King Cyrus "the Great" of Persia marches into Babylon, freeing Jewish captives and allowing them to return home

    1268 Conradin, the last legitimate male heir of the German Hohenstaufen dynasty of Kings and Holy Roman Emperors, is executed with Frederick I, Margrave of Baden by Charles I of Sicily

    1390 First trial for witchcraft in Paris leading to the death of three people.

    1618 Sir Walter Raleigh, English seafarer, courtier, writer and once a favourite of Queen Elizabeth I (he named Virginia after her) was beheaded at Whitehall. He had been falsely accused of treason and sentenced to death, commuted to imprisonment. He was released after 13 years to try and find the legendary gold of El Dorado. He failed, and returned to an undeserved fate.

    1656 Edmund Halley, British astronomer, was born.

    1665 Battle of Mbwila [Ambuila],: Portuguese forces defeat forces of the Kingdom of Kongo and decapitate King Antonio I of Kongo / Nvita a Nkanga

    1787 Mozart's opera Don Giovanni receives its first performance in Prague.

    1843 The world's first telegram was sent, from Paddington to Slough.

    1863 Eighteen countries, including Britain, met in Geneva and agreed to form the International Red Cross. The final resolutions adopted included The foundation of national relief societies for wounded soldiers - Neutrality and protection for wounded soldiers and a protection symbol for medical personnel in the field, namely a white armlet bearing a red cross.

    1886 Fred Archer rode the last of his 2746 winners at Newmarket, retiring as a jockey after 16 years.

    1901 Capital punishment: Leon Czolgosz, the assassin of U.S. President William McKinley, is executed by electrocution.

    1929 The New York Stock Exchange crashes in what will be called "Black Tuesday", ending the Great Bull Market of the 1920s and beginning the Great Depression.

    1945 The Harwell Atomic Energy Research Establishment was set up in England.

    1960 An airplane carrying the Cal Poly football team crashes on takeoff in Toledo, Ohio.

    1961 Syria exits from the United Arab Republic.

    1964 A collection of irreplaceable gems, including the 565 carat Star of India, is stolen by a group of thieves from the American Museum of Natural History in New York City.

    1969 The first-ever computer-to-computer link is established on ARPANET, the precursor to the Internet.

    1971 In Macon, Georgia, guitarist Duane Allman is killed in a motorcycle accident.

    1972 The three surviving perpetrators of the Munich massacre are released from prison in exchange for the hostages of hijacked Lufthansa Flight 615.

    1975 More than 20 people were injured in an IRA bomb attack on a restaurant in Mayfair, London.

    1975 The world’s largest mining complex was opened at Selby, Yorkshire. Selby is now an attractive market town with an ancient abbey that dates back to shortly after the Norman conquest.

    1983 Yachtsman Chay Blyth had to cancel his plans to create a new world clipper record when his trimaran capsized 500 miles east of New York.

    1986 The final section of the M25 was opened. The motorway around Greater London was designed to relieve traffic congestion within the capital.

    1988 Two of Britain’s greatest middle distance runners, Sebastian Coe and Steve Cram, re-ran the 367 metre ‘Chariots of Fire’ race around the Great Court at Trinity College, Cambridge. Sebastian Coe was the winner in 45.52 seconds. In the original race Lord Burghley crossed the line in 42.5 seconds.

    1989 Eight people died when winds of almost 100mph struck South Wales and the West of England, causing flooding, fallen trees and power cuts.

    1998 Apartheid: In South Africa, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission presents its report, which condemns both sides for committing atrocities.

    1998 Hurricane Mitch, the second deadliest Atlantic hurricane in history, makes landfall in Honduras.

    2003 The Conservative Party leader, Iain Duncan Smith, resigned after failing to win the backing of his fellow MPs.

    2004 Al Jazeera broadcasts an excerpt from a 2004 Osama bin Laden video in which he first admits direct responsibility for the September 11, 2001 attacks.

    2008 TV and radio presenters Jonathan Ross and Russell Brand were suspended. All their shows were taken off air whilst the BBC investigated their prank calls made to actor Andrew Sachs (Fawlty Towers) and comments made about the actor's granddaughter.

    2010 Take That fans complained after facing major problems buying tickets to see Robbie Williams tour with the group for the first time in 16 years. The websites of official agencies including Ticketmaster, See Tickets, Ticketline and The Ticket Factory all buckled under the strain as the tickets went on sale at 0900 BST.

    2012 The UK's first fourth generation (4G) mobile service was launched. 11 cities - London, Manchester, Bristol, Birmingham, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Leeds, Liverpool, Sheffield, Glasgow and Southampton had access to network EE's 4G from Tuesday morning, 30th October.

    2012 Hurricane Sandy hits the east coast of the United States, killing 148 directly and 138 indirectly, while leaving nearly $70 billion in damages and causing major power outages.

    2013 The Lonely Planet Guide named Yorkshire as one of the top places in the world to visit. It put the area third in the top 10 world regions, behind destinations in India and Australia.

    2013 Turkey opens a sea tunnel connecting Europe and Asia across the Bosphorus Strait in Istanbul.

    2014 The Serious Fraud Office initiated a criminal investigation into accounting irregularities at supermarket giant Tesco after the supermarket announced that its profits had been overstated by £263m.

    2015 China announces the end of their one-child policy after 35 years

    Famous Birthday's

    Joseph Goebbels
    (1897 - 1945)

    Robert Hardy
    (1925 - 20170

    Edwin van der Sar
    47th Birthday

    Matthew Hayden
    46th Birthday

    Robert Pirès
    44th Birthday

    Michael Vaughan
    43rd Birthday

    Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf
    79th Birthday

    Richard Dreyfuss
    70th Birthday

    Famous Deaths

    Walter Raleigh
    ( - 1618)

    Nathan Bedford Forrest
    (1821 - 1877)

    George McClellan
    (1826 - 1885)

    Jimmy Savile
    (1927 - 2011)

    Famous Weddings

    437 Valentinian III, Western Roman Emperor, marries Licinia Eudoxia, daughter of his cousin Theodosius II, Eastern Roman Emperor in Constantinople. This unifies the two branches of the House of Theodosius

    1994 Impressionist Rich Little (55) weds comedian Jeannette Markey (28) at the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas

    2004 "Jackass" member Chris Pontius (30) weds Claire Nolan in Malibu

    2011 Actress Eva Amurri (26) weds former Major League Soccer player Kyle Martino (31) in Charleston, South Carolina

    Famous Divorces

    1951 Singer/actor Frank Sinatra and 1st wife Nancy (Barbato) divorce due to infidelity after 12 years of marriage

    2010 Country singer Randy Travis (51) divorces manager Lib Hatcher due to state of incompatibility exists between the two parties after 19 long years of marriage. One of country music's longest-lasting couples

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