Black Country Bugle

ON THIS DAY

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OCTOBER 21 1772: Poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge (The Ancient Mariner, Kubla Khan) was born in Ottery St Mary, Devon. 1805: Lord Nelson, English naval hero, was killed at the Battle of Trafalgar - dying at the precise moment the Franco-spanish fleet surrendere­d. 1833: Alfred Nobel, industrial­ist, inventor of dynamite and founder of the Nobel Prizes, was born in Stockholm. 1858: The Can-can was first performed in Offenbach’s Orpheus in the Underworld in Paris. 1918: The “Spanish flu” epidemic started in Britain, eventually killing approximat­ely twice as many as died in the First World War. 1940: Geoffrey Boycott, Yorkshire and England cricketer, was born in Fitzwillia­m, West Yorkshire. 1950: Chinese forces occupied Tibet. 1952: The President of the Kenya African Union, Jomo Kenyatta, was arrested following the declaratio­n of a state of emergency in the British colony of Kenya. 1966: Disaster struck the small Welsh mining village of Aberfan when a colliery slag tip slid down the side of a hill and engulfed a row of houses, a farm and a school. Of the 144 people who died, 116 were children. 1982: Gerry Adams and Martin Mcguinness made history by becoming the first members of Sinn Fein to be elected to the Ulster Assembly. ON THIS DAY LAST YEAR: Zimbabwean authoritie­s revealed at least 55 elephants had starved to death during the past two months in the country’s biggest national park amid a serious drought.

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