On this day: Delegates met to organise the UN
Anzac Day.
1792: The Paris guillotine, newly improved by Doctor Joseph Guillotin, was used for the first time, to behead a highwayman, Nicolas-Jacques Pelletier. Soon his invention was to become the hallmark of “The Reign of Terror” of 1793 and 1794, when the “humane and egalitarian” decapitation machine put thousands to death, including Queen Marie Antoinette and her husband.
1843: Royal yacht Victoria and Albert was launched at Pembroke, South Wales.
1898: US declared war on Spain.
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Hide Ad1915: Gallipoli landing of Australian and New Zealand troops in the First World War.
1945: Delegates of 45 nations met in San Francisco, California, to organise United Nations.
1957: United States Sixth Fleet sailed for eastern Mediterranean as King Hussein proclaimed martial law in Jordan and sealed frontiers.
1975: In Portugal’s first free elections for 50 years, three main non-communist parties won a large majority.
1978: South Africa said it had accepted a western plan aimed at preparing South-west Africa for independence under black majority rule.
1983: In Germany, Stern magazine published the first extracts from the so-called Hitler Diaries, which were also published by the Sunday Times in Britain. Lord Dacre (formerly Hugh Trevor-Roper) said they were authentic, but they were later found to be forgeries by Konrad Kujau.
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Hide Ad1986: Rioting broke out across Soweto, South Africa’s largest black township, after police blocked youths protesting against arrest of 15 students.
1988: Afghanistan president Mohammad Najibullah offered to withdraw Afghan army from posts near Pakistan’s border.
1990: Nicaraguan president Violeta Barrio de Chamorro was inaugurated amid uproar over decision to let Sandinistas keep control of army and security police.
1990: The Commons voted 409 to 152 in favour of reducing the abortion limit to 24 weeks.
1991: Soviet Union’s Communist Party plenum decided to keep Gorbachev as leader in spite of hours of harsh criticism that led him to offer to resign.
1992: Earthquake measuring 7.0 on Richter scale rocked northern California.
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Hide Ad1993: Boris Yeltsin won a clear victory in a Russian referendum on his leadership and his reforms.
1994: Nine people died and 100 were injured in a car-bomb blast in Johannesburg as violence escalated in the run-up to South Africa’s first all-race elections.
2001: Motorola closed its Bathgate factory with the loss of 3,100 jobs.
2003: The Human Genome Project came to an end two and a half years earlier than anticipated.
2005: Bulgaria and Romania signed accession treaties to join the European Union.
2007: Boris Yeltsin’s funeral was the first to be sanctioned by the Russian Orthodox Church for a head of state since the funeral of Emperor Alexander III in 1894.
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Hide Ad2010: The first direct flight between Iraq and the UK for 20 years took off from Baghdad Airport, bound for London.
BIRTHDAYS
Fiona Bruce, journalist, TV presenter, 51; Andy Bell, pop musician (Erasure), 51; Eric Bristow, darts player, 58; Johan Cruyff, footballer and manager, 68; Fish (Derek William Dick), singer and actor, 57; Jason Lee, actor, 45; Sir Moir Lockhead OBE, former chief executive of FirstGroup, 70; Felipe Massa, Brazilian Formula 1 driver, 34; Sir Ian McCartney, Kilmarnock-born MP (1987-2010), 64; Buster Mottram, tennis player, 60; David Moyes, football manager, 52; Al Pacino, actor, 75; Monty Panesar, cricketer, 33; William Roache MBE, actor, 83; David Shepherd CBE, artist, 84; Talia Shire, actress, 69; Björn Ulvaeus, musician (Abba), 70; Renée Zellweger, actress, 46; Len Goodman, dance judge, 71.
ANNIVERSARIES
Births: 1284 King Edward II; 1599 Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector of England 1653-58; 1769 Sir Marc Isambard Brunel, engineer and inventor; 1873 Walter de la Mare, poet and novelist; 1874 Guglielmo Marconi, physicist and radio pioneer; 1895 Sir Stanley Rous, football administrator; 1908 Ed Murrow, broadcaster; 1917 Ella Fitzgerald, jazz singer; Paul Mazursky, film director; 1933 Jerry Leiber, American songwriter (notably Hound Dog).
Deaths: 1744 Anders Celsius, astronomer who devised centigrade temperature scale; 1878 Anna Sewell, author, notably Black Beauty; 1952 Gertie Miller, actress; 1955 Constance Collier, actress; 1972 George Sanders, actor; 1976 Sir Carol Reed, film director; 1982 Dame Celia Johnson, actress; 1995 Ginger Rogers, actress/dancer; 2001 Michele Alboreto, racing driver; 2009 Bea Arthur, actress; 2010 Alan Sillitoe, writer (Saturday Night and Sunday Morning); 2014 Stefanie Zweig, author.