On This Day - 25th March
1199
King Richard I was wounded by a crossbow bolt while fighting in France, leading to his death on 6th April. Richard spent very little time in England and lived in his Duchy of Aquitaine in the southwest of France, preferring to use his kingdom as a source of revenue to support his armies. He produced no legitimate heirs and acknowledged only one illegitimate son, Philip of Cognac. As a result, he was succeeded by his brother John as King of England.
1609
English navigator Henry Hudson (Hudson Bay in Canada was named after
him) set off on his third voyage in an attempt to find the north west passage
from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean.
1736
The death of Nicholas Hawksmoor, British architect. Sir Christopher Wren heard of Hawksmoor's 'early skill and genius' for architecture and took him as his clerk, aged 18. Hawksmoor worked with Wren on projects including Chelsea Hospital, St. Paul's Cathedral, Hampton Court Palace and Greenwich Hospital.
1807
The Slave Trade Act received the royal assent, eventually bringing an
end to the slave trade. British merchants transported nearly three
million black Africans across the Atlantic between 1700 and the early 19th
century. The 1833 Slavery Abolition Act outlawed slavery itself throughout
the British Empire but slaves did not gain their final freedom until 1838.
1876
The first football international between Wales and Scotland took place
in Glasgow. Scotland won 4 0.
1897 The birth of the actor John Laurie. He went to school at Dumfries Acadaemy (see
picture) and performed a wide range of film and theatre work (particularly in Shakespearean roles). In spite of his acting versatility he is probably best remembered for playing the part of Private Frazer in the TV sitcom Dad's Army (1968–1977).
1940
The United States agreed to give Britain and France access to all American
warplanes for the war effort.
1949
The film Hamlet, starring Laurence Olivier, won five Oscars. It was the
first British film to win an academy award.
1957
Six European nations signed the Treaty of Rome thus establishing the
Common Market. They were Belgium, France, West Germany, Italy, Holland and
Luxembourg.
1969
John Lennon and new wife Yoko Ono staged their ‘Beds in Peace’ at
the Amsterdam Hilton. It lasted until 31st March and each day they invited the world's press into their hotel room, between 9 a.m. and 9 p.m. It was Yoko’s idea to get over their peace message while
on honeymoon. Although the press were expecting them to be having sex, the couple were sitting in bed, in John's words 'like angels', talking about peace, with signs over their bed reading 'Hair Peace' and 'Bed Peace'.
1975
The National Front marched through London protesting against integration
with Europe.
1980
Robert Runcie was enthroned as the 102nd Archbishop of Canterbury.
1989
For the first time, both the Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race crews entered
the event with women coxes. The race was won by Oxford.
1999
The 13 year old singer Charlotte Church became the youngest artist to
enter the American top 30 album chart.
2002
The death of Kenneth Wolstenholme, football commentator for BBC television in the 1950s and 1960s. He is perhaps most noted for his commentary during the 1966 FIFA World Cup which included the famous phrase 'Some people are on the pitch...they think it's all over....it is now!', as Geoff Hurst scored England's fourth goal.
2014
The death, aged 93, of Captain Raymond "Jerry" Roberts, the last surviving member of the small Bletchley Park team of cryptographers who broke the Nazis’ top-secret Lorenz code. Historians believe that the Bletchley Park codebreakers may have saved hundreds of thousands of lives, shortened the Second World War by between two and four years and that the outcome of the war itself would have been uncertain without the codebreakers' work.