On this day: First televised general election results in UK

EVENTS, birthdays and anniversaries on 23 February
The first televised general election results. The Labour Party held on with the closest contest for 100 years. Picture: GettyThe first televised general election results. The Labour Party held on with the closest contest for 100 years. Picture: Getty
The first televised general election results. The Labour Party held on with the closest contest for 100 years. Picture: Getty

1310: Declaration of the clergy and people in favour of King Robert Bruce from the Church of the Friars Minor in Dundee.

1573: Pacification of Perth ended fighting in Scotland between Regent and supporters of Mary Queen of Scots.

1863: Captain JH Speke discovered source of the Nile.

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1874: Lawn tennis was patented by an Englishman, Major Walter Wingfield.

1898: Emile Zola was imprisoned in France for writing J’accuse.

1901: Britain and Germany agreed on boundary between German East Africa and Nyasaland.

1905: The first Rotary Club was formed in Chicago.

1906: Canadian Tommy Burns won the world heavyweight boxing title in Los Angeles with a points win over Marvin Hart. He was the only one of his countrymen to win the title and the shortest at 5ft 7in.

1915: The French actress Sarah Bernhardt had her right leg amputated.

1919: Benito Mussolini founded the Fascist Party in Italy.

1920: The first regular broadcasting service in Britain started from Marconi’s studio in Chelmsford. The 30-minute programme was transmitted twice daily.

1933: Japan began occupation of China north of the Great Wall.

1934: Clark Gable exposed his bare chest in the film It Happened One Night, and millions of men stopped wearing vests.

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1950: The first televised general election results. The Labour Party held on with the closest contest for 100 years – and Clement Attlee remained prime minister.

1953: An amnesty offered by the government to Second World War deserters brought in applications from more than 3,000 servicemen and 14 servicewomen.

1973: Fighting continued in Laos in spite of peace agreement between Laotian government and Communist-led Pathet Lao.

1987: Soviet dissident Josif Begun was freed as USSR promised release of 140 political prisoners and review of other cases.

1989: Japan said farewell to Emperor Hirohito with series of centuries-old court and religious funeral services.

1990: Prince Sihanouk returned to Cambodia after 11 years in exile.

1990: Shell UK was fined £1million for polluting the Mersey estuary in August 1989.

1991: Military junta seized power in Thailand after a bloodless coup.

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1998: Osama bin Laden published a fatwa declaring jihad against all Jews and “Crusaders”; the latter term commonly interpreted to refer to the people of Europe and the United States.

2007: A train derailed on an evening express service near Grayrigg, Cumbria, England, killing one person and injuring 22. .

2008: The Suffolk Strangler, Steve Wright, 49, who murdered five Ipswich prostitutes in a six-week killing spree, was told by a judge that he would spend the rest of his life in prison.

2013: The United Kingdom lost its AAA credit rating, the first such downgrade since 1978.

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