The Chronicle

ON THIS DAY

-

1346:

Edward III of England, aided by his son Edward the Black Prince, defeated the French at The Battle of Crecy.

17 40:

Joseph-Michel Montgolfie­r, pioneer balloonist, was born in Annonay, France. He and his brother created the idea for the hot air balloon by filling paper bags with smoke from the fire and letting them rise to the ceiling.

1819:

Prince Albert, Consort to Queen Victoria, was born in Bavaria.

1875 :

John Buchan, Scottish novelist and statesman, was born in Perth. At the age of 39 he was confined to bed and wrote The 39 Steps. He became Governor General of Canada in 1935 and was created Baron Tweedsmuir.

1930:

The Man Of A Thousand Faces, actor Lon Chaney, died.

1936:

The BBC transmitte­d the first high-definition television pictures introduced by its announcer Leslie Mitchell. More than 7,000 people queued to see the pictures from Alexandra Palace on sets at the Olympia Radio Show.

1940:

The RAF bombed Berlin for the first time in retaliatio­n for attacks on

London.

195 2:

The Soviet Union announced that the first successful interconti­nental ballistic missile tests had taken place.

197 8:

Charles Boyer, actor who was everyone’s idea of the great French lover, died, aged 78. He took an overdose two days after his wife died.

197 8:

Cardinal Albino Luciani was elected Pope John Paul I. Within 33 days he was dead.

2012:

Tributes poured in from around the world to Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the Moon, who died at the age of 82.

 ??  ?? Lon Chaney, left
Lon Chaney, left
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom