On this day: Kids suffer seizures watching Pokemon


1620: The Pilgrim Fathers arrived in Plymouth, Massachusetts.
1653: After the execution of Charles I, Oliver Cromwell failed to get the parliament he wanted and became Lord Protector of England, turning himself into an uncrowned king for the next four years.
1692: The National Debt introduced.
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Hide Ad1773: The Boston Tea Party – caused when angry rebels, dressed as Plains Indians, dumped 342 chests of tea, worth £18,000, from ships into Boston harbour as a protest against British taxation. The War of Independence had begun.
1809: Napoleon Bonaparte divorced Josephine after 13 years of marriage because she did not bear him a child.
1838: Boers defeated Zulus on Blood River, Natal.
1893: The Manchester Ship Canal was completed.
1914: West Hartlepool, Scarborough and Whitby were bombarded by German cruisers.
1925: Construction of the Mersey road tunnel began. It opened on 18 July, 1934.
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Hide Ad1929: The first all-talking feature film made in Britain. Called The Clue of the New Pin it featured a young John Gielgud as the villain.
1929: The British airship R100, designed by Barnes Wallis, first flew on trials.
1944: The Battle of the Bulge began in the Ardennes region of Belgium.
1954: Synthetic diamonds were produced at GEC’s laboratories in the United States.
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Hide Ad1966: United Nations Security Council voted 11-0 to invoke economic sanctions against white minority government in Rhodesia.
1967: UN panel agreed on pact for rescue of astronauts in event of space mishaps.
1971: Bangladesh formally came into existence after East Pakistan surrendered in the war with India.
1988: Edwina Currie resigned as junior health minister as taxpayers faced bill of £40 million to help ailing poultry industry after she said that most eggs were infected with salmonella.
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Hide Ad1991: Stella Rimington, 56, became the first woman to be made director-general of MI5.
1997: An episode of the animated programme Pokemon aired in Japan induced seizures in 685 Japanese children.
2009: Scotland’s biggest airline, Flyglobespan, collapsed and was placed in administration.
BIRTHDAYS
Christopher Biggins, actor and TV presenter, 66; Benny Andersson, pop singer (Abba), 68; Steven Bochco, television writer and producer, 71; Peter Dickinson OBE, author, 87; Joel Garner, cricketer, 62; Tony Hicks, guitarist (The Hollies), 69; Trevor Pinnock CBE, harpsichordist and conductor, 68; Sam Robards, actor, 53; Liv Ullmann, actress, 76; Dennis Wise, footballer and manager, 48; Mats Hummels, 2014 World Cup winning footballer, 26; Billy Gibbons, musician (ZZ Top), 65; Sir Quentin Blake SBE, cartoonis.
ANNIVERSARIES
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Hide AdBirths: 1485 Catherine of Aragon, first wife of Henry VIII; 1770 Ludwig van Beethoven, composer; 1775 Jane Austen, novelist; 1787 Mary Russell Mitford, author and dramatist; 1917 Sir Arthur C Clarke, science fiction writer.
Deaths: 882AD, Pope John VIII; 1859, Wilhelm Grimm, author (Brothers Grimm); 1916 Grigori Efimovich Rasputin, monk who wielded powerful influence over Russian Czarin (murdered); 1965 Somerset Maugham, author; 1980 Colonel Harland Sanders, founder of Kentucky Fried Chicken; 2001 Stuart Adamson, musician (Big Country); 2011 Nicol Williamson, Scottish actor.