ON THIS DAY
1626: Manhattan island was bought from local Indians by Dutch settler Peter Minuit for trinkets worth about 25 dollars. 1840: The first postage stamp
- the Penny Black - was issued by the Post Office for use.
1851: American inventor Linus Yale patented the lock which bears his name.
1856: Sigmund Freud, father of psychoanalysis, was born in Freiberg, Moravia (now Czech Republic).
1895: Rudolph Valentino, Italian heartthrob of the silent screen, was born in Castellaneta, Italy. 1937: The German airship Hindenburg exploded at its moorings in Lakehurst, New Jersey, killing 36 of the 97 people aboard. 1954: Roger Bannister ran the first sub-four-minute mile on the Iffley Road track in Oxford, in three minutes 59.4 seconds. 1960: Princess Margaret married Anthony Armstrong-jones (Lord Snowdon) in Westminster Abbey. 1966: Ian Brady and Myra Hindley, the Moors murderers, were found guilty at Chester Assizes and sentenced to life imprisonment. 1976: An earthquake struck Friuli in Northern Italy, causing 989 deaths and the destruction of entire villages.
1994: The Queen opened the Channel Tunnel.
1994: Nelson Mandela and the ANC were confirmed the winners in South Africa’s first post apartheid election.
1997: The Bank of England was given independence from political control, the most significant change in the bank’s 300-year history.
2004: The series finale of the television sitcom Friends was shown on US channel NBC, attracting 52.46 million viewers. 2013: Three women missing for more than a decade are found alive in the U.S. city of Cleveland, Ohio. Ariel Castro, is taken into custody. ON THIS DAY LAST YEAR: Alcohol-related deaths had reached their highest level for 20 years, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS), after jumping by a fifth over the previous year.