On this day: First tank tested and approved by British Army

EVENTS, birthdays, anniversaries
On this day in 1916, the first tanks were tested by the Britishg Army, who ordered 49 of the new machines. Picture: Getty ImagesOn this day in 1916, the first tanks were tested by the Britishg Army, who ordered 49 of the new machines. Picture: Getty Images
On this day in 1916, the first tanks were tested by the Britishg Army, who ordered 49 of the new machines. Picture: Getty Images

1792: First United States minister (ambassador) to Britain appointed.

1816: France decreed that the Bonaparte famly were excluded from the country forever.

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1836: HMS Beagle, with Charles Darwin on board, reached Sydney, Australia.

1866: The Royal Aeronautical Society was founded.

1872: Yohannes IV was crowned emperor of Ethiopia in Axum, the ancient capital – the first imperial coronation in the city for more than 200 years.

1875: Kwand-su became emperor of China.

1879: Lieutenant-General Shelmsford invaded Zululand as the British-Zulu War began in Africa.

1895: The National Trust was founded.

1896: The first X-ray photograph was made in the United States. Doctor Henry Louis Smith fired a bullet into a corpse and then took an exposure which, when developed, showed the exact location of the bullet.

1907: Britain granted responsible government to the former colony of Transvaal.

1916: The fighting tank was first tested and given official approval by British top brass. The army ordered 49.

1945: German forces withdrew in disorder in Battle of the Bulge.

1958: Soviet Union proposed zone free of nuclear weapons from Arctic Circle to Mediterranean.

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1964: Revolution in Zanzibar, which was declared a republic; Sultan was banished.

1967: China’s army pledged support to Mao Tse Tung during disorders triggered by Chinese cultural revolution.

1974: North African nations of Libya and Tunisia announced they had agreed to merge as new republic.

1995: It was announced that troops were being withdrawn from daylight patrols in Belfast for the first time for 25 years.

1996: The bodies of 8,000 Muslims were found buried in an open-cast mine in Ljubija, in northern Bosnia.

1998: Nineteen European nations agreed to forbid human cloning.

2002: The Buttery, one Glasgow’s best restaurants for more than a century, ceased trading.

2006: Turkey released Mehmet Ali Agca from jail after he served 25 years for shooting Pope John Paul II.

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2009: Kate Winslet won two Golden Globes in Los Angeles, best actress for Revolutionary Road and best supporting actress for The Reader.

2010: A massive 7.0-magnitude earthquake struck in Port-au-Prince, the capital of Haiti, leaving 200,000 dead and three million affected.

2014: At the 71st Golden Globe awards, Woody Allen received the Cecil B DeMille Award for lifetime achievement.

ANNIVERSARIES

Births: 1628 Charles Perrault, French writer and collector of fairy tales, including Little Red Riding Hood, Sleeping Beauty and Puss in Boots; 1729 Edmund Burke, statesman, philosopher and orator; 1822 Jean Joseph Etienne Lenoir, French inventor of the first practical internal combustion engine; 1876 Jack London, American novelist; 1893 Hermann Goering, Nazi leader and Luftwaffe creator; 1899 Paul Muller, Swiss chemist who formulated DDT insecticide; 1907 Tex Ritter, actor; 1944 Joe Frazier, American boxer; 1960 Michael Hutchence, rock singer (INXS).

Deaths: 1625 Jan Brueghel, the Elder, painter; 1897 Sir Isaac Pitman, printer, publisher and inventor of shorthand system; 1976 Dame Agatha Christie, author of detective stories; 1994 Sir Alastair Currie, emeritus professor of pathology, Edinburgh University; 2001 Michael Williams, actor; 2003 Maurice Gibb, rock guitarist (Bee Gees); 2014 Alexandra Bastedo, British actress.