Someone still living in the 19th Century Chalky, when the coffers are full and its not your money it will always be wasted especially by Government, Who the hell rakes leaves nowadays ?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-30055912
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Someone still living in the 19th Century Chalky, when the coffers are full and its not your money it will always be wasted especially by Government, Who the hell rakes leaves nowadays ?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-30055912
They have employed contractors to look after the trees and gardens,presumably its a contract for a couple of years or more it just seems like whoever is in charge is just being a complete pain in the arse,145 trees to pick the leaves off is going to take ages,just let them drop like they have for millions of years ffs
17 NOVEMBER
1292 John Balliol became King of Scotland. He was stripped of all his powers by Edward I, thus earning himself the Scottish nickname 'Toom Tabard'. Toom means empty, so it was likening Balliol to an empty suit.
1558 The Elizabethan era began when Mary I, England's first queen (also known as 'Bloody Mary'), died at St James's Palace London. She was succeeded by her half-sister Elizabeth I.
1603 The trial of Sir Walter Raleigh began. Falsely accused of treason, he had been offered a large sum of money by Lord Cobham, a critic of England’s King James I, to make peace with the Spanish and put Arabella Stuart, James’s cousin, on the throne. Raleigh claimed he turned down the offer, but Lord Cobham told his accusers that Raleigh was involved in the plot.
1800 Congress holds its 1st session in Washington D.C. in an incomplete Capitol Building
1810 Sweden declared war on its ally Britain during the Napoleonic Wars to begin the Anglo-Swedish War, although no fighting ever took place! The declaration of war was the result of an ultimatum by France to the Swedish government that France and its allies would declare war against Sweden if Sweden did not meet the French demands to declare war on Britain, confiscate all British ships and seize all British products. The war existed only on paper, and Britain was still officially allowed to station ships in the Swedish port of Hanö and trade with the Baltic nations.
1831 Ecuador and Venezuela separated from Greater Colombia
1855 David Livingstone became the first European to see the Victoria Falls in what is now present day Zambia-Zimbabwe. Livingstone was born at Blantyre on the outskirts of Glasgow, where there is also a statue to him -
1869 England’s James Moore won the first cycle road race, an 83 miles race from Paris to Rouen.
1869 In Egypt, the Suez Canal, linking the Mediterranean Sea with the Red Sea, is inaugurated
1871 The National Rifle Association is granted a charter by the state of New York
1880 The first three women to graduate in Britain received their Bachelor of Arts degrees at London University.
1882 The Royal Astronomer witnessed an unidentified flying object from the Greenwich Observatory. He described it as a circular object, glowing bright green.
1887 The birth of Field Marshal Viscount Montgomery of Alamein, English soldier who was a painstaking planner, which contributed to his most successful battle in North Africa when he broke through Rommel’s lines during the Second World War.
1919 King George V proclaimed Armistice Day, later to be known as Remembrance Day.
1922 Britain elected its first Communist Member of Parliament, J T Walton-Newbold standing for Motherwell, Scotland. He eventually joined the Labour Party.
1922 The last sultan of the Ottoman Empire Mehmed VI is expelled to Malta on British warship
1955 Anglesey became the first authority in Britain to introduce fluoride into the water supply.
1959 Two Scottish airports, Prestwick and Renfrew, became the first to offer duty free goods in Britain. Heathrow followed soon after.
1962 President John F. Kennedy dedicates Washington Dulles International Airport, serving the Washington, D.C., region
1964 Britain said that it was banning all arms exports to South Africa.
1969 Negotiators from the Soviet Union and the US meet in Helsinki, Finland to begin SALT I negotiations aimed at limiting the number of strategic weapons on both sides
1970 Stephanie Rahn became the Sun newspaper's first 'Page Three Girl'.
1970 Douglas Engelbart receives the patent for the first computer mouse
1973 Watergate scandal: In Orlando, Florida, U.S. President Richard Nixon tells 400 Associated Press managing editors "I am not a crook."
1982 Duk Koo Kim dies from injuries sustained during a 14-round match against Ray Mancini in Las Vegas, prompting reforms in the sport of boxing
2014 The family of murdered schoolgirl April Jones (aged 5) watched the demolition of the house owned by her killer Mark Bridger. The rented home was bought by the Welsh government in August and is where Bridger is believed to have killed and dismembered April after snatching her outside her parents’ home in Machynlleth, mid Wales, on 1st October 2012. Detectives believe that Bridger dismembered her body at the cottage and disposed of her remains at numerous locations around the countryside. At the time of her disappearance, ribbons were tied to the railings around the town's clock tower, on shop doors and pinned to trees.
2014 Alex Salmond, Scotland's First Minister, gave his final press conference and parliamentary speech before handing over to Nicola Sturgeon, Scotland’s first female First Minister.
2014 According to Dutch scientists, a single 10-second kiss can transfer as many as 80 million bacteria. The research was published in the journal Microbiome.
2014 The Anglican General Synod formally enacted legislation allowing women to be nominated and appointed as bishops. The first woman bishop - the Rt. Rev. Libby Lane, was consecrated Bishop of Stockport in a ceremony at York Minster 10 weeks later, on 26th January 2015.
Famous Birthday's
Louis XVIII
(1755 - 1824)
Bernard Montgomery
(1887 - 1976)
Peter Cook
(1937 - 1995)
Martin Scorsese
75th Birthday
Gordon Lightfoot
79th Birthday
Danny DeVito
73rd Birthday
Rod Clements
70th Birthday
Terry Fenwick
58th Birthday
Jonathan Ross
57th Birthday
Famous Deaths
Thomas Pelham-Holles
(1693 - 1768)
Catherine the Great
(1729 - 1796)
Auguste Rodin
(1840 - 1917)
Calico Jack, English pirate
(1682 - 1720)
Dick Lilley
(1866 - 1929)
Jimmy Ruffin
(1936 - 2014)
Famous Weddings
1749 Founding Father of the United States Roger Sherman (28) weds first wife Elizabeth Hartwell in Massachusetts
1934 Lyndon B. Johnson marries Claudia Alta Taylor
1950 Writer Jack Kerouac (28) weds Joan Haverty
1978 Gerald Lascelles, British aristocrat and son of Princess Mary weds 2nd wife Elizabeth Collingwood in Vienna
2003 Singer Blake Shelton (27) weds Kaynette Williams in Gatlinburg, Tennessee
Famous Divorces
1995 Retired MLB player Johnny Bench (47) divorces Laura Cwikowski after nearly 8 years of marriage
20 NOVEMBER
284 Roman soldier Diocletian proclaimed Emperor by the army
762 Bögü, Khan of the Uyghurs, conquers Lo-Yang, capital of the Chinese Empire
868 St. Edmund, Saxon king of East Anglia, was martyred by the Vikings, who tied him to a tree, shot at him with arrows, then beheaded him. He gave his name to the town Bury St. Edmunds in Suffolk.
1620 The birth of Peregrine White a child of William and Susanna White, Mayflower passengers. He was the first English child born in the Plymouth Colony at Cape Cod Harbour.
1695 Zumbi last leaders of Quilombo dos Palmares in early Brazil and ex-slave, is executed
1759 The British fleet, under Admiral Hawke, defeated the French at the Battle of Quiberon Bay, thwarting an invasion of England.
1787 Birth of Sir Samuel Cunard, a ship owner born in Nova Scotia who came to Britain in 1838 and, together with two partners, established what became the Cunard Line in 1839. Their first ship, the Britannia, set sail the following year taking 14 days and 8 hours to cross the Atlantic.
1805 Beethoven's only opera, Fidelio premieres in Vienna
1815 The Treaty of Paris was signed, following the defeat and second abdication of Napoleon Bonaparte. Bonaparte's defeat at Waterloo in June 1815 ended his rule as Emperor of the French and marked the end of his Hundred Days return from exile on the island of Elba.
1820 An 80-ton sperm whale attacks the Es*** 2,000 miles from the coast of South America. (Herman Melville's 1851 novel Moby-Dick is in part inspired by this story.)
1906 Charles Stewart Rolls and Frederick Henry Royce formed Rolls-Royce. In 1931, the company bought up Bentley Motors.
1908 Birth of Alistair Cooke, British-born US-based broadcaster and journalist who began his famous commentaries, Letters from America, in 1938.
1917 First successful tank use in battle (Britain breaks through German lines) at Battle of Cambrai WWI
1944 World War II: The end of the 'blackout' in London. After five years in the dark, the lights were switched back on in Piccadilly Circus, the Strand and in Fleet Street.
1945 Nuremberg trials: Trials against 24 Nazi war criminals start at the Palace of Justice at Nuremberg
1947 Princess Elizabeth (Queen Elizabeth II) married Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten (Duke of Edinburgh) at Westminster Abbey. The BBC made the first tele-recording of the event, which was broadcast in the US 32 hours later.
1951 Snowdonia in Wales was designated a National Park. It was the third area to be designated 'National Park', the first being the Peak District
1962 In response to the Soviet Union agreeing to remove its missiles from Cuba, U.S. President John F. Kennedy ends the quarantine of the Caribbean nation
1969 Occupation of Alcatraz: Native American activists seize control of Alcatraz Island until being ousted by the U.S. Government on June 11, 1971
1969 Brazilian soccer icon Pele scores his 1,000th goal
1969 Vietnam War: The Plain Dealer publishes explicit photographs of dead villagers from the My Lai Massacre in Vietnam
1970 The ten-shilling note (50p) was officially withdrawn by the Bank of England.
1974 The United States Department of Justice files its final anti-trust suit against AT&T Corporation. This suit later leads to the breakup of AT&T and its Bell System
1977 Egyptian President Sadat becomes the first Arab leader to officially visit Israel, when he meets Israeli Prime Minister Begin and speaks before the Knesset
1979 Anthony Blunt, the Surveyor of the Queen’s Pictures, was stripped of his knighthood after admitting to being a spy for Russia, thereby exposed as the Fourth Man in the Burgess, Maclean and Philby spy scandal.
1984 McDonald's makes its 50 billionth hamburger
1885 Microsoft Windows 1.0 is released
1986 World Health Organization announces first global effort to combat AIDS
1990 Margaret Thatcher failed by four votes, to gain outright victory over Michael Heseltine, for leadership of the Conservative Party.
1992 Fire severely damaged the 'Brunswick Tower', at Windsor Castle when a spotlight ignited a curtain. The castle is the largest inhabited castle in the world and one of the official residences of Queen Elizabeth II. The question of how the funds required should be found raised important issues about the financing of the monarchy, and led to Buckingham Palace being opened to the public for the first time to help to pay for the restoration.
2001 President George W. Bush dedicates the United States Department of Justice headquarters building as the Robert F. Kennedy Justice Building
2007 Two computer discs holding the personal details of all families in the UK with a child under 16 went missing. The Child Benefit data on them included the name, address, date of birth, National Insurance number and, where relevant, bank details of 25 million people. Chancellor Alistair Darling said there was no evidence the data had gone to criminals - but urged people to monitor bank accounts "for unusual activity".
2012 32 year old Kweku Adoboli, a City trader who lost £1.4bn of Swiss bank UBS's money was jailed for seven years after being found guilty of two counts of fraud.It was Britain's biggest banking fraud and a 'a gamble or two away from destroying Switzerland's largest bank'.
2013 Hull was chosen as the UK's city of culture for 2017, beating off challenges from Dundee, Leicester and Swansea..
2014 Radio 2 presenter Jeremy Vine was stopped on his way to work at the BBC by a police officer holding a speed radar gun. The device showed that he had been cycling at 16mph through Hyde Park, where the limit is 5mph.
2014 The UK's first bus powered entirely by human and food waste went into service between Bristol and Bath. The 40-seat 'Bio-Bus' runs on biomethane gas generated through the treatment of sewage and food waste.
Famous Birthday's
Edwin Hubble
(1889 - 1953)
Robert F. Kennedy
(1925 - 1968)
Duane Allman
(1946 - 1971)
Bo Derek
61st Birthday
Joe Biden
75th Birthday
Veronica Hamel
74th Birthday
Famous Deaths
Tom Horn (American gunfighter and outlaw, hanged to death at 42)
(1860 - 1903)
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Leo Tolstoy
(1828 - 1910)
Francisco Franco
(1892 - 1975)
Famous Weddings
1895 Businessman Harvey Firestone (26) weds composer Idabelle Smith (21)
1900 Archaeologist Hiram Bingham (25) weds Tiffany heiress Alfreda Mitchell in Honolulu, Hawaii
1932 Blues musician Muddy Waters (19) weds Mabel Berry
1937 Actor Jackie Coogan (23) weds actress Betty Grable (20) at St. Brendan Catholic Church in Los Angeles
1944 Model agency executive Eileen Ford (22) weds businessman Gerard W. Ford (20) in San Francisco, California
Famous Divorces
2007 Linda Bollea (46) divorces professional wrestler Hulk Hogan (53) after 23 years of marriage
2013 Business magnate Rupert Murdoch (82) divorces Wendi Deng (44) due to irreconcilable differences after 13 years of marriage
23 NOVEMBER
1248 Conquest of Seville by Christian troops under King Ferdinand III of Castile after the city capitulates
1499 The Pretender to the throne, Flemish impostor Perkin Warbeck, was hanged for reportedly attempting to escape from the Tower of London. He had invaded England in 1497, claiming to be Richard of Shrewsbury, Duke of York, the younger son of King Edward IV.
1644 Areopagitica, a pamphlet by John Milton, decrying censorship, is published
1852 Britain's first four pillar boxes came into service on the Channel Island of Jersey. The idea came from English novelist Anthony Trollope who worked for the General Post Office in London before becoming a writer.
1863 Patent granted for a process of making color photographs
1867 The Manchester Martyrs (William Philip Allen, Michael Larkin, and Michael O'Brien, all members of the Irish Republican Brotherhood) were hanged in Manchester for killing a police officer whilst freeing two Irish nationalists from custody.
1869 In Dumbarton, Scotland, the clipper Cutty Sark is launched - one of the last clippers ever built, and the only one still surviving
1887 Boris Karloff, English actor famous for his roles in horror films, was born.
1889 The first jukebox goes into operation at the Palais Royale Saloon in San Francisco
1896 The first Royal Command Performance for the British Sovereign. The event was in the Red Drawing Room at Windsor Castle, before H.M. Queen Victoria.
1905 British Liberal Party leader Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman advocated Home Rule for Ireland, by instalments, in a controversial speech in Scotland.
1910 American born Dr. Hawley Harvey Crippen was hanged at Pentonville Prison in London after being found guilty of poisoning his wife and dismembering her body.
1915 ‘Pack Up Your Troubles in Your Old Kit Bag’, the famous First World War song, was published, by Felix Powell and George Asaf, who were really two brothers from Wales.
1924 Edwin Hubble's scientific discovery that Andromeda is actually another galaxy, and that the Milky Way is only one of many such galaxies in the universe, is first published
1936 Life magazine is reborn as a photo magazine and enjoys instant success
1942 Chinese steward Poon Lim begins 133 days arift after British ship SS Benlomond torpedoed by german U-boat and he is the sole survivor
1954 The birth of Ross Brawn, English motorsport engineer and Formula One team principal. He worked as the technical director of the championship-winning Benetton and Ferrari Formula One teams.
1959 French President Charles de Gaulle declares in a speech in Strasbourg his vision for "Europe, from the Atlantic to the Urals".
1962 British surgeon John Charnley developed a technique at Wrightington Hospital Lancashire that revolutionised hip replacement operations. He was later knighted for his efforts and his work became the standard procedure across the world.
1963 The BBC broadcast the first ever episode of Doctor Who, starring William Hartnell as the Doctor, and Ann Ford as his first female companion. It is the world's longest running science fiction drama.The producer, Sydney Newman, thought the Daleks, designed by Ray Cusick, were ‘bug-eyed monsters’ and totally wrong for the series. Roath Lock studios in the Porth Teigr area of Cardiff Bay is the home of Doctor Who and its spin-off, 'Class'.
1976 British comedians Eric Morecambe and Ernie Wise received the Order of the British Empire (OBE) from Queen Elizabeth II. There is a statue of Eric Morecambe on the promenade at Morecambe, Lancashire.
1976 Apneist Jacques Mayol is the first man to reach a depth of 100 m undersea without breathing equipment
1978 A Birmingham nightclub was ordered to open its doors to black and Chinese people.
1979 In Dublin, Thomas McMahon was found guilty of the murder of Lord Mountbatten, and given a life sentence.
1981 Ronald Reagan signs the top secret National Security Decision Directive 17, giving the CIA the authority to recruit and support Contra rebels in Nicaragua
1984 Almost 1,000 passengers were trapped in smoke filled tunnels for three hours after a fire at Oxford Circus underground station.
1990 The death of the author Roald Dahl. He was born in Cardiff, (to Norwegian parents). Roald Dahl Plass is a public plaza in the heart of Cardiff Bay. His 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
1992 The first smartphone, the IBM Simon, is introduced at COMDEX in Las Vegas, Nevada
1993 English artist Rachel Whiteread won both the £20,000 Turner Prize award for best British modern artist and the £40,000 K Foundation art award for the worst artist of the year. She was the first woman to win Turner prize. and 2001 she became the third artist to provide a sculpture for the empty fourth plinth in Trafalgar Square, an inverted 11 ton resin cast of the plinth itself.
2001 The Convention on Cybercrime is signed in Budapest, Hungary
2005 Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, is elected president of Liberia, the first woman to lead an African country
2014 Veteran sailor Sir Robin Knox-Johnston (aged 75) spoke of the 'warm and friendly' reception he received after claiming third place in his class of the singlehanded transatlantic Route du Rhum race, from St Malo in France to Guadeloupe in the Caribbean. Sir Robin, a grandfather of five, was the first person ever to sail single-handed and non-stop, around the world, in 1969.
2016 Thomas Mair was found guilty of the murder of Labour MP Jo Cox (16th June 2016). He was sentenced to life imprisonment with a whole life order.
Famous Birthday's
Franklin Pierce
(1804 - 1869)
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Billy the Kid
(1859 - 1881)
Harpo Marx
(1888 - 1964)
Lew Hoad
(1934 - 1994)
Alan Mullery
76th Birthday
Merv Hughes
56th Birthday
Miley Cyrus
25th Birthday
Famous Deaths
Hawley Harvey Crippen [Dr Crippen] Hanged at 48 in Pentonville
(1862 - 1910)
André Malraux
(1901 - 1976)
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Roald Dahl
(1916 - 1990)
Mary Whitehouse
(1910 - 2001)
Larry Hagman
(1931 - 2012)
Andrew Sachs
(1930 - 2016)
Famous Weddings
1929 Academy Award-winning Shirley Booth marries comic actor Ed Gardner
1940 RAF pilot Guy Gibson (22) weds show dancer and actress Eve Moore in Penarth’s Anglican Church
1940 Film director David Lean (32) weds actress Kay Walsh (29)
1955 Physicist William Shockley (45) weds psychiatric nurse Emmy Lanning
1963 "12 Angry Men" director Sidney Lumet (39) weds Lena Horne's daughter Gail Jones
26 NOVEMBER
43 BC Second Triumvirate alliance of Roman leader Octavian (later Caesar Augustus), Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, and Mark Antony formed
1645 English Civil War - The third siege of Newark, which lasted from 26th November 1645 to 8th May 1646. Newark was important to both sides, as two important roads ran through the town - the Great North Way and Fosse Way. Newark castle was deliberately destroyed as a fortress in 1648.
1703 Henry Winstanley, the engineer who built the first Eddystone lighthouse, was among those who died when it was destroyed in the Great Storm that claimed 9000 lives and lasted from the 25th to the 27th November.
1778 British explorer Captain James Cook discovers Maui in the Sandwich Islands (now Hawaii)
1789 1st national Thanksgiving in America
1805 The offficial opening of Thomas Telford's Pontcysyllte Aqueduct that carries the Llangollen Canal over the valley of the River Dee in Wales. It is the longest and highest aqueduct in Britain, a Grade I Listed Building and a World Heritage Site.
1836 The death of John Loudon McAdam. He invented a new process, "macadamisation", for building roads with a smooth hard surface, using controlled materials. Modern road construction still reflects McAdam's influence. He had extensive responsibilities in the north of England including the road from Penrith to Greta Bridge (A66), the road from Penrith to Cockermouth (also the A66) and the road from Penrith to Carlisle (A6). Whilst in the area he lived here - 1, Cockell House, Penrith
1864 Oxford professor Charles Dodgson presented a little girl called Alice Liddell with a handwritten manuscript of a story she had inspired him to write. It was called Alice's Adventures Under Ground. Dodgson's tale was published in 1865 as 'Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll'. Alice's shop in Oxford at 83, St. Aldates was the inspiration for a whole chapter in the Alice in Wonderland stories. Lewis Carroll was born at Daresbury and this is the site of the former parsonage where he was born. There is also a Lewis Carroll window in the parish church of All Saints in Daresbury.
1865 "Alice in Wonderland" by Lewis Carroll is published in America
1867 Mrs. Lily Maxwell of Manchester became the first ever woman to vote in a British election, due to a mistake in the electoral register. She had to be escorted to the polling station by a bodyguard to protect her from those opposed to women’s suffrage.
1908 The birth of Lord Forte (Charles Forte), British business magnate and Chairman of Trusthouse Forte, one of the largest hotel and restaurant groups in the world.
1917 NHL forms with Montreal Canadiens, Montreal Maroons, Toronto Arenas, Ottawa Senators & Quebec Bulldogs; National Hockey Association disbands
1922 Howard Carter and the Earl of Carnarvon, Carter’s sponsor, became the first men to see inside the tomb of the Pharaoh Tutankhamun near Luxor since it was sealed 3,000 years previously. Having escaped detection by tomb robbers, it was complete with gold statues and a gold throne inlaid with gems.
1944 World War II: A German V-2 rocket hit a Woolworth's store on New Cross High Street in Lewisham and killed 168 shoppers.
1945 The release of the classic romantic film Brief Encounter, starring Celia Johnson, Trevor Howard, Stanley Holloway and Joyce Carey. The film was partially shot at Carnforth railway station and buffet room.
1952 1st modern 3-D movie "Bwana Devil" premieres in Hollywood
1953 Peers backed the Government's proposals for commercial television.
1954 Donald Campbell's new Bluebird K7 (a turbo jet engined hydroplane) was handed over to him On This Day. Campbell set seven world water speed records in Bluebird K7 and it was in her that he was killed on Coniston Water on 4th January 1967 whilst attempting another water speed record, his target being 300 mph. He is buried in Coniston graveyard.
1968 The new Race Relations Act made it illegal to refuse housing, employment or public services to people because of their ethnic background.
1970 In Basse-Terre, Guadeloupe, 1.5 inches (38.1mm) of rain fall in a minute, the heaviest rainfall ever on record
1983 The Brinks Mat security warehouse at London’s Heathrow Airport was robbed of £25 million worth of gold bars weighing three tons. The gang gained entry to the warehouse from an insider security guard called Anthony Black. The robbers expected to steal £3 million in cash, but when they arrived, they found the gold bullion, most of which was never recovered.
1987 Drawings of English bank notes by US artist James Boggs were declared works of art and not illegal replicas of UK currency by an Old Bailey jury.
1988 Mrs. Rita Lockett of Torquay, Devon, spent £10,000 to repeat her daughter’s wedding two months after the event, because she did not like the video. The couple went through the reception with all 200 wedding guests wearing the same outfits and having to listen to the same speeches, this time with a professional video crew on hand.
1992 It was announced that as from 1993 the Queen would make arrangements to pay income tax, the first British monarch to do so since the 1930s.
1998 Tony Blair becomes the first Prime Minister of the United Kingdom to address the Oireachtas, the parliament of the Republic of Ireland
2014 The Save the Children charity was criticised for giving former Prime Minister Tony Blair an award for his anti-poverty work in Africa. Critics said that his role in the Iraq war should disqualify him from receiving the honour.
Famous Birthday's
Albert B. Fall
(1861 - 1944)
Charles M. Schulz
(1922 - 2000)
Robert Goulet
(1933 - 2007)
Tina Turner
78th Birthday
Famous Deaths
Sojourner Truth
(1787 - 1883)
Philippe de Broca
(1933 - 2004)
Michael Bentine
(1922 - 1996)
Famous Weddings
1894 Russian emperor Nicholas II (26) weds Alexandra Feodorovna (22) at the Grand Church of the Winter Palace in St Petersburg, Russia
1924 Comic actor Charlie Chaplin (35) weds "The Kid" actress Lita Grey (16) in Mexico
1958 Model Bettie Page (35) weds Armond Walterson in Florida
1962 Singer Tina Turner (23) weds Ike Turner (31) in Tijuana, Mexico
1977 Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm (53) weds businessman Arthur Hardwick Jr at the Sheraton Inn in Cheektowaga, New York
28 NOVEMBER
1520 Three ships under the command of explorer Ferdinand Magellan reach the Pacific Ocean, becoming the first European ships to sail from the Atlantic to the Pacific
1582 In Stratford-upon-Avon, William Shakespeare and Anne Hathaway pay a £40 bond for their marriage licence
1628 John Bunyan, author of The Pilgrim's Progress, was born.
1660 At Gresham College in Central London, 12 men, including Christopher Wren, Robert Boyle, John Wilkins, and Sir Robert Moray founded what was later known as the Royal Society, an organization dedicated to promoting excellence in science.
1757 The birth of the poet William Blake. His work included a poem that began 'And did those feet in ancient time', which became the words for the anthem Jerusalem.
1814 The Times newspaper was, for the first time, printed by automatic, steam powered presses built by the German inventors Friedrich Koenig and Andreas Friedrich Bauer. It signalled the beginning of the availability of newspapers to a mass audience.
1893 Women vote in a national election for the first time, in the New Zealand general election
1895 The first American automobile race takes place over the 54 miles from Chicago's Jackson Park to Evanston, Illinois. Frank Duryea wins in approximately 10 hours
1905 The Irish political party Sinn Fein was founded by Arthur Griffith in Dublin.
1909 Sergei Rachmaninoff makes the debut performance of his Piano Concerto No. 3, considered one of the most technically challenging concertos in the standard classical repertoire
1914 World War I: Following a war-induced closure in July, the New York Stock Exchange re-opens for bond trading
1919 Nancy Astor became Britain's first woman MP, holding a safe Plymouth seat for the Conservative Party in a by-election caused by her husband's elevation to the peerage.
1935 The Miles quadruplets (Ann, Ernest, Michael and Paul) were born in Cambridgeshire and were the first British quads to survive infancy.
1943 U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin meet in Tehran, Iran, to discuss war strategy
1967 All horse racing in Britain was suspended 'indefinitely' to help prevent the spread of foot-and-mouth disease.
1967 1st radio pulsars detected by British postgraduate Jocelyn Burnell and her supervisor Antony Hewish at Cambridge University
1968 The death of the children's author Enid Blyton. She wrote more than 800 books over 40 years including Noddy, The Famous Five and The Secret Seven.
1971 An English farmer uncovered a major immigrant smuggling operation when he rammed a plane which had landed at a disused airfield on his farm in Kimbolton, 10 miles from Huntingdon. The pilot escaped but police officers arrived soon after the incident and detained the five occupants of the plane.
1990 Margaret Thatcher made her last speech outside 10 Downing Street following her resignation as Prime Minister.
1993 The Northern Ireland peace process and Prime Minister John Major's credibility were dealt a blow when secret government contacts with the IRA were publicly disclosed.
1997 MPs in the House of Commons approved a Private Member's Bill, introduced by Labour MP Michael Foster, to ban fox hunting.
1999 Eleven people were injured when a nude swordsman attacked churchgoers at St. Andrew's Roman Catholic Church in London.
2002 Suicide bombers blow up an Israeli-owned hotel in Mombasa, Kenya; their colleagues fail in their attempt to bring down Arkia Israel Airlines Flight 582 with missiles
2006 A modern spy drama unfolded following the death of former KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko in London when traces of polonium-210 radiation were found at central London addresses.
2011 British company Captive Media announced details of its urinal mounted, urine-controlled games console for men. It called it the first 'hands-free' video gaming console of its kind, with games on offer including a skiing challenge, and a multiple choice pub quiz. A noted side effect was that the toilets became markedly cleaner, as a new premium was set on accuracy.
2013 A Newport man (James Howells) searched a landfill site in South Wales hoping to find a computer hard drive he threw away, worth over £4m. The drive contained 7,500 *******s, a virtual form of currency for use online. The drive was not found.
2013 The grand unveiling of TV's Coronation Street (Weatherfield) at its new home on Salford Quays, across the water from the BBC. In January 2014 the soap left its long established Quay Street site in Manchester city centre, which was sold for £26.5m.
2014 Jordan Winn was jailed for 13 months after he was caught driving at nearly 100mph in a 30mph zone. Winn blamed his Staffordshire bull terrier, who he said was in the footwell of his Volvo S60, for sitting on the accelerator pedal.
Famous Birthday's
William Blake
(1757 - 1827)
Henry Bacon
(1866 - 1924)
Berry Gordy
88th Birthday
Hugh McKenna, (rocker, Alex Harvey Band)
68th Birthday
Ed Harris
67th Birthday
Jeff Fahey
64th Birthday
Alessandro Altobelli
62nd Birthday
Martin Clunes
56th Birthday
Famous Deaths
James Naismith
(1861 - 1939)
Enrico Fermi
(1901 - 1954)
Jeffrey Dahmer
(1960 - 1994)
Jerry Edmonton, (Canadian drummer, Steppenwolf)
(1946 - 1993)
Leslie Nielsen
(1926 - 2010)
Famous Weddings
1582 Playwright & poet William Shakespeare marries Anne Hathaway
1936 Paleoanthropologist Raymond Arthur Dart (43) weds librarian Marjorie Gordon Frew
1938 Chinese politician Mao Zedong (44) weds Jiang Qing (24) in a small private ceremony
1962 Artist and peace activist Yoko Ono (30) weds film producer Anthony Cox
1986 NBC's Ahmad Rashad marriage proposal is accepted by Phylicia Ayers-Allen during halftime of Det Lions-NY Jets football game
50 Years Ago Album and Single # 1s
SGT PEPPER'S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND - BEATLES.
LET THE HEARTACHES BEGIN - LONG JOHN BALDRY
03 DECEMBER
1586 Sir Thomas Herriot introduces potatoes to England from Colombia
1775 First official US flag raised (Grand Union Flag) aboard naval vessel USS Alfred
1795 Sir Rowland Hill, postal pioneer and founder of the 'Penny Post' was born.
1818 Illinois becomes the 21st U.S. state
1820 Thomas Beecham, English manufacturer and inventor of Beecham's pills, was born. The Beecham's Building on Westfield Street in St. Helen's is the former headquarters of the pharmaceutical company
1836 Three people were killed at Great Corby, near Carlisle in Cumbria, in the first fatal railway derailment.
1854 Eureka Stockade: In what is claimed by many to be the birth of Australian democracy, more than 20 goldminers at Ballarat, Victoria, are killed by state troopers in an uprising over mining licences
1868 Gladstone became Prime Minister for the first time. He won office for three more terms.
1894 Robert Louis Stevenson, Scottish novelist of Treasure Island, Kidnapped and Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde, died, aged 45 on the island of Samoa.
1909 King Edward VII dissolved Parliament and taxes on alcohol, tobacco and cars were suspended as no budget had been passed. Edward was the eldest son of Queen Victoria and had a reputation as a 'playboy prince'. This statue of King Edward VII, was unveiled by his father King George V in 1912 during a visit to Huddersfield with Queen Mary.
1910 Modern neon lighting is first demonstrated by Georges Claude at the Paris Motor Show
1926 In an episode as puzzling and intriguing as any in her many novels, Agatha Christie disappeared from her Surrey home and was discovered on the 14th December staying under an assumed name at the Old Swan Hotel, Harrogate. She said she had no recollection of how she came to be in Yorkshire.
1927 Putting Pants on Philip, the first Laurel and Hardy film, is released
1936 The Royal Family cancelled all engagements as news broke of Edward VIII's determination to marry divorcee Wallis Simpson.
1944 Britain 'stood down' the Home Guard - formed in 1939 to defend Britain from invasion by Germany. They were officially disbanded in December 1945.
1948 The birth of John Michael 'Ozzy' Osbourne, English heavy metal vocalist and songwriter, whose musical career has spanned over 40 years. He rose to prominence as lead singer of the band Black Sabbath and became known as the 'Prince of Darkness'.
1961 The whole of south East England was plunged into darkness for two hours, due to an error by an electrician.
1963 The launch of Britain's second nuclear submarine, HMS Valiant.
1967 At Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa, a transplant team carries out the first heart transplant on a human (53-year-old Louis Washkansky).
1976 An assassination attempt is made on Bob Marley. He is shot twice, but will play a concert only two days later
1977 Wings started a nine week run at No.1 with Mull of Kintyre. It was the first single to sell over 2 million in the UK.
1979 In Cincinnati, 11 fans are suffocated in a crush for seats on the concourse outside Riverfront Coliseum before a Who concert
1979 Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini becomes the first Supreme Leader of Iran
1984 British Telecom was privatised. The shares immediately made massive gains.
1984 Bhopal disaster: Union Carbide pesticide plant leak 45 tons of methyl isocyanate and other toxic compounds in Bhopal, India, kills 2,259 (official figure) - other estimates as high as 16,000 (including later deaths) and over half a million injured
1988 Junior Health minister Edwina Currie provoked outrage by saying that most of Britain's egg production was infected with the salmonella bacteria.
1989 Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev and US President George H. W. Bush, declare the Cold War over
1992 Two bombs exploded in the centre of Manchester injuring 65 people. Miraculously no-one was killed, but much of the city centre had to be rebuilt.
1992 A test engineer for Sema Group uses a personal computer to send the world's first text message via the Vodafone network to the phone of a colleague
1994 The Playstation was released in Japan
2007 Gillian Gibbons, a 54 year old teacher from Liverpool was released after eight days in custody and handed over to British officials in Sudan after being jailed for letting her class name a teddy bear Muhammad.
2009 The death of Richard Todd, British actor, immortalized in the film Dam Busters (1955) as Wing Commander Guy Gibson, VC.
2012 St James's Palace announced that the Duchess of Cambridge was expecting a baby. The baby, the couple's first, would be born third in line to the throne, after Prince Charles and Prince William.
2015 RAF Tornado jets carried out their first air strikes against 'so-called Islamic State' in Syria, hours after MPs had voted (397 votes to 223) in favour of UK action in Syria.
Famous Birthday's
George McClellan
(1826 - 1885)
Andy Williams
(1927 - 2012)
Mel Smith
(1952 - 2013)
Franz Klammer
64th Birthday
Ozzy Osbourne
69th Birthday
Eamonn Holmes
58th Birthday
Daryl Hannah
57th Birthday
Julianne Moore
57th Birthday
Frank Sinclair
46th Birthday
Daniel Bedingfield
38th Birthday
David Villa
36th Birthday
Famous Deaths
Diocletian
( - 311)
Robert Louis Stevenson
(1850 - 1894)
Pierre Auguste Renoir
(1841 - 1919)
Cow Cow Davenport
(1894 - 1955)
Oswald Mosley
(1896 - 1980)
Jimmy Jewel
(1909 - 1995)
Famous Weddings
1931 Silent film actress Clara Bow (26) weds actor and politician Rex Bell (28) in Las Vegas
1940 Nobel Prize winning author Albert Camus (27) weds pianist and mathematician Francine Faure (25) in Lyon, France
1984 Oldest groom - Harry Stevens, 103, weds Thelma Lucas, 83, in Wisconsin
1993 Baseball player Darryl Strawberry (31) weds Charisse Simon (26)
2005 NBC correspondent Hoda Kotb (41) weds New Orleans tennis coach Burzis Kanga in the Dominican Republic