ON THIS DAY
1606: Sir Everard Digby, Robert Wintour, John Grant and Thomas Bates were hung, drawn and quartered for their part in Guy Fawkes’ Gunpowder Plot.
1649: Charles I, convicted of treason, was beheaded on a scaffold outside the Banqueting House in Whitehall.
1858: The Halle Orchestra was founded by Charles Halle in Manchester.
1889: Beautiful 17-year-old Baroness Marie Vetsera and her lover, Austrian Crown Prince Rudolf, were found dead at the royal hunting lodge of Mayerling, near Vienna. It remains a mystery whether it was a double suicide or murder.
1933: Adolf Hitler became chancellor of Germany.
1948: Indian leader Mahatma Gandhi was assassinated by a Hindu fanatic in New Delhi.
1961: The contraceptive pill went on sale in Britain – but was not available on the NHS until December.
1965: Big Ben was silenced for the funeral procession of Sir Winston Churchill.
1982: Stanley Holloway, actor, comedian and singer, died aged 91.
1997: An underground anti-road protest came to an end after six days as the last demonstrator, known as Swampy, emerged from a tunnel underneath the proposed A30 extension route in Devon.
2008: Entertainer and TV presenter Jeremy Beadle died in hospital in north London at the age of 59 following a short battle with pneumonia.
2014: Irish authorities were sure that “filler product” found in contaminated burgers sold in supermarkets came from Poland and was a mixture of beef and horse offcuts, the Food Standards Agency said.
ON THIS DAY LAST YEAR: The
widow of James Brokenshire, who died after suffering from lung cancer aged 53, called for a national screening programme for the disease to improve poor survival rates. BIRTHDAYS: Gene Hackman, actor, 93; Vanessa Redgrave, actress, 86; Boris Spassky, chess master, 86; Dick Cheney, US politician, 82; Phil Collins, rock singer/drummer, 72; Brett Butler, actress, 65; Christian Bale, actor, 49; Wilmer Valderrama, actor, 43; Peter Crouch, footballer, 42.