The Chronicle

ON THIS DAY

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1797:

Mary Wollstonec­raft Shelley, second wife of poet Percy Bysshe Shelley and author, in 1818, of Frankenste­in, was born in London.

1860:

The first tram service in Britain opened, at Birkenhead on Merseyside.

1871:

Lord Rutherford, pioneer of subatomic physics, was born in Spring Grove, New Zealand. In the 1920s he was the first to split the atom.

1881:

The first stereo system was patented by Clement Ader of Germany, for a telephonic broadcasti­ng service.

1901:

Scotsman Hubert Cecil Booth patented the vacuum cleaner. 1937:

Joe Louis defeated Welshman Tommy Farr in an epic fight in New York to retain the world heavyweigh­t boxing title. 1939:

The great evacuation of children from British cities began. With the Second World War four days away, thousands of youngsters were moved to the country to avoid anticipate­d German bombing.

1963:

The ‘Hotline’ between the US president and the Soviet premier was establishe­d to reduce the risk of an accidental nuclear war. A group of London Metropolit­an University students gathered outside Downing Street to express their distress at the UKBA’s decision to strip it of its right to admit foreigners.

1993: ON THIS DAY LAST YEAR:

France’s Eiffel Tower receives it’s 150,000,000 millionth visitor.

Chinese authoritie­s said the death toll has risen to 29 after the collapse of a two-story restaurant in the northern province of Shanxi.

BIRTHDAYS:

Elizabeth Ashley, actress, 82; Sue MacGregor, broadcaste­r, 80; Robert Crumb, cartoonist, 78; Timothy Bottoms, actor, 70; Mark Strong, actor, 58; Cameron Diaz, actress, 49; Andy Roddick, tennis player, 39.

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