ON THIS DAY
1687: Jean-baptiste Lully, composer who made French opera popular, died from an abscess on his foot caused by striking it with the stick he used to conduct his Te Deum.
1859: In Melbourne, plasterer Ben Douglas became chairman of the Political Labour League of Victoria, the first Labour Party.
1888: The English Football League was formed by 12 clubs meeting at a Fleet Street hotel.
1895: The first celluloid film was presented to an invited audience by Auguste and Louis Lumiere in Paris. 1896: Thomas Hughes, lawyer, author and Liberal MP, died. He was involved in the formation of some early trade unions and wrote Tom Brown’s Schooldays.
1907: The first cabs with taxi meters began operating in London. 1945: The Arab League was founded by seven Middle East countries. 1958: Showman Michael Todd, husband of Elizabeth Taylor, died when his light aircraft iced up and crashed into mountains in New Mexico. The plane was called Lucky Liz.
1963: John Profumo denied having an affair with model Christine Keeler. The Secretary of State for War later resigned admitting he had lied to parliament.
1979: The British ambassador in Holland Sir Richard Sykes was shot dead by two IRA gunmen who opened fire outside his home in The Hague. 1996: The war crimes tribunal in The Hague made its first indictment of three Muslims and a Croat for the torture, rape and murder of Serb prisoners.
ON THIS DAY LAST YEAR: The number of people infected with Covid-19 worldwide reached the hundreds of thousands