Western Morning News

On this day

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1748: Isaac Watts, who wrote the hymns When I Survey The Wondrous Cross and O God Our Help In Ages Past, died.

1823: The first pleasure pier, The Chain Pier at Brighton, opened. It closed in 1896 and was destroyed in a storm the same year.

1882: To beat copyright pirates, Iolanthe by Gilbert and Sullivan was premiered in London and America, the first show to open simultaneo­usly in both countries. 1884: Evaporated milk was patented by John Meyenberg, of St Louis, USA.

1952: Agatha Christie’s play The Mousetrap opened in London, at the Ambassador­s Theatre. Richard Attenborou­gh played the detective, and notices said the play had a ‘fair degree of success’.

1969: John Lennon returned his MBE in protest against British involvemen­t in Biafra and support of US action in Vietnam.

1984: Britain’s top rock stars, responding to a call by Bob Geldof, gathered together under the name Band Aid to record Do They Know It’s Christmas, in aid of the Ethiopian famine appeal. 2005: Soccer legend George Best, a former Manchester United, Fulham and Northern Ireland star, who was a long-term alcoholic, died after suffering multiple organ failure, aged 59.

2010: Bernard Matthews died at the age of 80. The farmer and businessma­n

became a household name after he amassed a multimilli­on-pound fortune through his vast poultry empire and appeared in a memorable series of television commercial­s.

ON THIS DAY LAST YEAR:

Levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere had reached another record high, the World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on warned.

 ?? Larry Ellis ?? Bob Geldof and Midge Ure outside SARM Studios, London, during the recording of the Band Aid single ‘Do They Know It’s Christmas?’
Larry Ellis Bob Geldof and Midge Ure outside SARM Studios, London, during the recording of the Band Aid single ‘Do They Know It’s Christmas?’

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