On this day: QEII joins the Falklands Task Force

Events, birthdays and anniversaries for 12 May
Troops line the rails of the QEII sailing up Southampton Water in 1982 as it heads off to join the Falklands Task Force. Picture: PATroops line the rails of the QEII sailing up Southampton Water in 1982 as it heads off to join the Falklands Task Force. Picture: PA
Troops line the rails of the QEII sailing up Southampton Water in 1982 as it heads off to join the Falklands Task Force. Picture: PA

1536: Sir Francis Weston, Mark Smeaton and other alleged paramours of Queen Anne Boleyn went on trial for treason.

1608: Protestant Union of German princes opposing Catholic bloc was formed at Anhausen.

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1679: Reverend James Kirkwood, the father of public libraries in Scotland, became minister of Minto.

1725: The Black Watch was commissioned under General Wade as the Independent Companies to police the Highlands.

1780: Charlestown fell to the British during the American Revolutionary War.

1888: Britain established protectorate over North Borneo and Brunei.

1906: The weekly magazine John Bull was started by Horatio Bottomley, MP.

1926: The General Strike in Britain ended after nine days.

1932: The kidnapped baby son of aviator Charles Lindbergh was found dead.

1935: Alcoholics Anonymous was founded by William Wilson in Ohio.

1937: The Coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth took place in Westminster Abbey.

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1940: First Victoria Crosses awarded to airmen in Second World War went posthumously to Flying Officer Donald Garland (pilot) and Sergeant Thomas Gray (observer) for a successful bombing attack, by 12 Squadron Fairey Battles, on the bridge at Maastricht.

1949: USSR lifted its blockade of Berlin after 11 months. It had cost the Allies £200 million to fly in food and essential supplies.

1951: The first H-bomb test on Eniwetok Atoll in the mid-Pacific proved it was possible to destroy a city more than 100 times the size of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

1962: South African General Law Amendment Bill imposed death penalty for sabotage.

1965: West Germany established diplomatic relations with Israel, and Arab states broke off relations with Bonn government.

1969: The voting age in Britain was lowered to 18.

1982: The QE2 sailed to join the Falklands Task Force.

1988: World Health Organisation said more than 34,000 Aids cases had been reported worldwide.

1990: At a Baltic summit, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania revived a 1934 political alliance, hoping a united front would crack Moscow’s resistance to the republics’ attempts to break away from the Soviet Union.

1990: A 1,000-tonne oil slick leaked from the Liberian tanker Rose Bay, which was in collision with a trawler in the Channel.

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1991: In Monte Carlo, Ayrton Senna won fourth successive Grand Prix.

1992: The Queen made a historic first speech to the European parliament in Strasbourg.

2003: Clare Short, the international development secretary, quit the Cabinet and accused the prime minister, Tony Blair, of endangering Labour’s achievements through his “obsessive” pursuit of a place in history.

2009: The number of people out of work in the UK rose 244,000 to 2.22 million in the first three months of the year – the biggest quarterly rise since 1981.

2009: A rare blue diamond sold for a record 10.5 million Swiss francs (£6.2m) at auction in Geneva. It weighed 7.03 carats, was smaller than a penny piece, and was one of only a handful of blue diamonds in existence.

BIRTHDAYS

Burt Bacharach, pianist and composer, 86; Gabriel Byrne, actor, 64; Andrew Coltart, Dumfries-born golfer, 44; Emilio Estevez, actor, 52; Susan Hampshire OBE, actress, 77; Baroness Kennedy of the Shaws, QC and broadcaster, 64; Jonah Lomu, New Zealand rugby player, 39; Dame Jenni Murray, broadcaster, 64; Chris Patten (Baron Patten of Barnes), MP 1979-1992, chancellor of Oxford University, 70; Dame Rosalind Savill, art and museum curator, 63; DrMiriam Stoppard OBE, author and broadcaster, 77; Professor Dame Joan Stringer, principal and vice-chancellor, Napier University, 66; Catherine Tate, actress, 46; Deborah Warner CBE, theatre director, 55; Steve Winwood, rock singer (Traffic) and composer, 66; Mark Foster, Olympic swimmer, 44.

ANNIVERSARIES

Births: 1763 John Bell, Edinburgh-born anatomist and surgeon; 1820 Florence Nightingale, the “Lady with the Lamp” in the Crimea, hospital and nursing reformer; 1903 Wilfrid Hyde White, actor; 1907 Leslie Charteris, crime fiction writer and creator of the Saint; 1912 Katharine Hepburn, actress; 1915 Dr Herrick Bunney, organist and Master of the Music, St Giles’ Cathedral, Edinburgh 1946-1996; 1924 Tony Hancock, comedian.

Deaths: 1641 Earl of Strafford (beheaded for treason); 1860 Sir Charles Barry, architect who designed new Palace of Westminster; 1884 Bedrich Smetana, composer; 1925 Amy Lowell, poet; 1967 John Masefield, poet laureate 1930-1967; 1986 Elisabeth Bergner, actress; 1994 John Smith, Labour Party leader 1992-4; 2001 Perry Como, singer.

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