The Scotsman

NOW & THEN

-

8 AUGUST

AD117: Hadrian became Emperor of Rome.

1296: Scottish Coronation Stone removed from Scone Abbey by King Edward I.

1503: Marriage of James IV and Margaret Tudor, sister of Henry VIII.

1549: France declared war on England.

1609: The Venetian Senate examined Galileo Galilei’s telescope.

1767: Mount Vesuvius erupted. 1815: France’s Napoleon Bonaparte sailed for St Helena and life in exile.

1844: Brigham Young was chosen to head the Mormon church following the death of Joseph Smith.

1854: Smith & Wesson patented metal bullet cartridges.

1863: During the American Civil War, Tennessee’s governor – and future US president – Andrew Johnson, freed his personal slaves. In later years, the event was celebrated as a holiday by Tennessee’s African-american community.

1876: Thomas Edison patented the mimeograph, a device which forces a stencil on to paper.

1900: The Davis Cup for tennis was contested for the first time, at Longwood Cricket Club, Massachuse­tts, where the USA defeated Great Britain.

1911: Five thousand troops moved to Liverpool to quell riots amid industrial and civil unrest.

1914: The first British troops landed in France.

1914: Ernest Shackleton embarked on his third polar expedition in his ship, the Endurance.

1940: The decisive period of the Battle of Britain began.

1944: A field marshal and four generals were hanged by piano wire for attempt on Hitler’s life.

1953: US and South Korea signed mutual defence treaty.

1958: Columbia Records signed 17-year-old singer Cliff Richard.

1960: Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polkadot Bikini by Bryan Hyland entered the top ten in the UK music charts and hit No 1 in the US Billboard charts.

1963: The Great Train Robbery took place in Buckingham­shire. The robbers made off with a haul valued at £2.6 million.

1963: The United States, Britain and the USSR signed the Test Ban Treaty in the Kremlin.

1972: Premiere of the musical Jesus Christ Superstar at the Palace Theatre, London. 1974: Richard Nixon became the first United States president to resign, because of Watergate.

1991: British hostage John Mccarthy was set free in Beirut after 1,942 days in captivity.

1995: Scottish Rugby Union said it wanted to pay players to end the hypocrisy surroundin­g the game’s tarnished amateur status.

2001: Hollywood superstars Nicole Kidman and Tom Cruise were divorced.

2008: Royal Bank of Scotland unveiled the group’s first loss in 40 years as a public company. The bank reported pre-tax losses of £691 million for the first half.

2008: The 2008 Olympic Games were launched in Beijing.

2014: The World Health Organisati­on categorise­d the Ebola outbreak in west Africa as an internatio­nal concern.

 ??  ?? 0 Detectives at the scene of the £2.6 million Great Train Robbery, which took place on this day in 1963
0 Detectives at the scene of the £2.6 million Great Train Robbery, which took place on this day in 1963

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom