The Scotsman

NOW & THEN

9 DECEMBER

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1747: Great Britain and Netherland­s signed a military treaty.

1783: The first execution took place at Newgate Prison, London, having previously been held at Tyburn (now the site of Marble Arch).

1824: Spain’s army was defeated at Ayacucho, Peru, by Simon Bolivar’s forces and agreed to leave South America.

1854: The poem The Charge of the Light Brigade, written by Poet Laureate Alfred, Lord Tennyson, was published.

1868: William Ewart Gladstone became prime minister for the first of his four terms of office.

1884: Roller skates were patented by L Richardson of Chicago. He advertised them as a health aid – to stimulate soles and heels and so maintain strong legs.

1905: Separation of church and state in France was decreed.

1906: Theodore Roosevelt awarded Nobel Peace Prize. 1931: Spain became a republic. 1933: The London to Singapore airline service was inaugurate­d.

1940: British 8th Army opened its assault on Benghazi, Libya. It was the first major Allied offensive in North Africa during the Second World War.

1941: China declared war on Japan, Germany and Italy.

1941: Adolf Hitler ordered that US ships were to be torpedoed.

1949: The republic of Indonesia was establishe­d.

1960: The first episode of Coronation Street was televised, although it was not networked until the spring of 1961. A critic wrote: “The programme is doomed with its dreary signature tune and grim scenes of a row of terraced houses and smoking chimneys.”

1962: Tanganyika gained independen­ce fro Britain, took the name Tanzania and became a republic within the Commonweal­th, with Julius Nyerere as its first president.

1967: Nicolai Causescu became president of Romania.

1972: North Vietnam and Soviet Union concluded agreement for economic and military aid to Hanoi.

1976: United Nations General Assembly called for Middle East peace conference at Geneva, Switzerlan­d, with Palestine Liberation Organisati­on taking part.

1987: Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev met with United States president Ronald Reagan in Washington one day after the Us-soviet nuclear arms treaty was signed.

1988: West Germans demanded curbs on Nato military flights over their densely populated country.

1990: Lech Walesa won a landslide victory in Poland’s presidenti­al election.

1994: Sinn Fein had its first formal contact with government officials for 22 years.

2003: A blast in the centre of Moscow killed six people and wounded several more.

2005: Brokeback Mountain, starring Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal, was released.

2008: Four people, including a 15-month-old girl, were killed when a US military F-18 fighter jet crashed into a house in San Diego. The pilot ejected.

 ??  ?? On this day in 1990 Solidarity union leader Lech Walesa won a landslide victory in Poland’s presidenti­al election
On this day in 1990 Solidarity union leader Lech Walesa won a landslide victory in Poland’s presidenti­al election

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