The Scotsman

NOW & THEN

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6MAY

1626: Manhattan Island, a borough of New York City, was bought from Native Americans for goods and trinkets to the equivalent of $24.

1839: House of Commons passed a bill to suspend Jamaica’s Constituti­on after riots due to emancipati­on of slaves.

1840: The first adhesive British stamps, for general use – the penny black and twopenny blue – were issued by the Post Office.

1877: Britain sent Russia a note warning it against attempted blockade of Suez or occupation of Egypt.

1882: Lord Cavendish and Thomas Henry Burke were assassinat­ed by Fenian “Invincible­s” in Phoenix Park, Dublin.

1937: The 804-ft German dirigible, Hindenburg, burned at its moorings in Lakehurst, New Jersey, killing 36 of the 97 people aboard.

1941: Joseph Stalin became Soviet premier, succeeding VM Molotov.

1941: In the last German bombing attack on the Clyde area, Greenock was worst hit, with 280 dead.

1942: The song White Christmas, by Irving Berlin, was published. It became the greatest selling record of all time.

1954: Roger Bannister ran the first sub-four-minute mile, in Oxford, in three minutes 59.4 seconds.

1954: First radio series for Morecambe and Wise, You’re Only Young Once, was broadcast.

1959: The Cod War between Britain and Iceland over fishing rights intensifie­d when Icelandic gunboats fired live ammunition at British trawlers.

1960: Princess Margaret married Antony Armstrong-jones in Westminste­r Abbey.

1966: Ian Brady and Myra Hindley were found guilty of the Moors murders at Chester Crown Court.

1968: Spain closed the border between Gibraltar and Spain to all but Spaniards.

1972: The first all-women race under Jockey Club rules, the Goya Stakes, was run over nine furlongs at Kempton Park.

1993: Conservati­ves lost Newbury in a massive by-election swing to the Liberal Democrats, plus control of all but one county council in England and Wales.

1994: The Queen and President Mitterrand of France opened the Channel Tunnel.

1995: Will Carling was sacked as England captain for describing Rugby Football Union officials as “57 old farts”. He was reinstated 72 hours later.

1999: The new Scottish Parliament was elected, with 56 Labour MSPS, 35 SNPS, 18 Conservati­ves, 16 Liberal Democrats, one Green, one Scottish Socialist and one Independen­t.

2010: The general election took place, but resulted in Britain’s first hung parliament since 1974 with the Conservati­ves ending up the leading party on 306 seats.

2012: François Hollande was elected president of France.

2014: The Mini motor car, which was launched in 1959, was named in a survey as the best British car ever built.

2019: The Duke and Duchess of Sussex celebrated the birth of their first child, Archie Harrison Mountbatte­n-windsor.

 ??  ?? 0 François Mitterrand and the Queen at the inaugurati­on of the Channel Tunnel in Coqulles, France, today in 1994
0 François Mitterrand and the Queen at the inaugurati­on of the Channel Tunnel in Coqulles, France, today in 1994

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