The Scotsman

NOW & THEN

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12 APRIL

1606: The Union Flag was adopted as the flag of England, Wales and Scotland.

1621: French forces under King Louis XIII set out to crush Huguenot rebellion.

1709: The Tatler magazine was first published.

1861: The American Civil War began with the bombardmen­t of Union-held Fort Sumter in South Carolina by the southern Confederat­e army under General Pierre Beauregard.

1903: The world’s first motor omnibus service was inaugurate­d between Eastbourne Station and Meads, Sussex.

1914: George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion opened in London with Mrs Patrick Campbell as Eliza Doolittle and Sir Herbert Tree as Professor Higgins.

1945: Harry S Truman was sworn in as United States president after death from cerebral haemorrhag­e of Franklin D Roosevelt at age 63.

1954: Bill Haley recorded Rock Around The Clock, the first record to sell a million in Britain alone.

1961: Soviet Union put first man in space – Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin made safe landing after one orbit of Earth.

1981: The United States launched its pioneering space shuttle Columbia from Cape Canaveral, with Robert Crippen and John Young.

1989: Lord Lloyd-webber’s Cats was performed for the 3,358th time at the New London Theatre, Drury Lane, making it Britain’s longest-running musical.

1990: The Soviet Union admitted the massacre of up to 15,000 Polish officers at Katyn in the Soviet Union in 1940.

1990: East German parliament named Lothar de Maizière as prime minister, supported swift reunificat­ion, apologised for Holocaust, and recognised Polish border.

1991: Tanker loaded with tens of millions of gallons of oil burned for a second day off the Italian Riviera after colliding with a ferry.

1991: German chancellor Helmut Kohl formed a pact with the opposition to rescue eastern Germany from collapse.

1993: Serbian shelling killed 56 people, including 15 children, in the besieged Bosnian town of Srebrenica.

1995: Home secretary Michael Howard announced tougher laws to protect children from “video nasties”.

1996: The government’s majority in the House of Commons was reduced to one after Labour won Staffordsh­ire South-east from the Conservati­ves in a byelection.

1996: West Indies captain Brian Lara scored a Test record 400 not out in the fourth against England, in Antigua.

1998: An earthquake in Slovenia, 5.6 on the Richter scale occurred near town of Bovec.

1999: US president Bill Clinton was cited for contempt of court for giving “intentiona­lly false statements” in a sexual harassment civil lawsuit.

2002: A female suicide bomber detonated at the entrance to Jerusalem’s Mahane Yehuda open-air market, killing seven and wounding 104.

2010: A train derailed near Merano, Italy, after running into a landslide, causing nine deaths.

ANNIVERSAR­IES

Births: 1925 Oliver Postgate, creator of Bagpuss; 1929 Elspet Gray (Lady Rix), Inverness-born actress; 1941 Bobby Moore, footballer; 1944 Professor Lisa Jardine CBE, British historian; 1947 Tom Clancy, US novelist; 1950 David Cassidy, US singer Deaths:1981 Joe Louis, US and world heavyweigh­t boxing champion; 1989 Sugar Ray Robinson, welterweig­ht and middleweig­ht boxing champion; 1999 Boxcar Willie, country singer; 2016 Sir Arnold Wesker, British playwright; 2016 Anne Jackson, actress

 ??  ?? 0 Herbert Beerbohm Tree as Henry and Mrs Patrick Campbell as Eliza in Pygmalion, first seen today in 1914
0 Herbert Beerbohm Tree as Henry and Mrs Patrick Campbell as Eliza in Pygmalion, first seen today in 1914

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