On This Day - 25th February
1570
Queen Elizabeth I was excommunicated by Pope Pius V. He declared her a
usurper for her severe persecution of Roman Catholics in England. It was the last such judgment made against a
reigning monarch by any pope.
1723
The death of Sir Christopher Wren, highly acclaimed English architect and
architect of St Paul's Cathedral.
1765 The birth of Jean Armour, wife of the poet Robert Burns. See her
statue in Dumfries. They had nine children, three of whom survived into adulthood. She was buried beside her famous husband in the mausoleum (see
picture) in Saint Michael's Cemetery, Dumfries.
1890
The birth of Dame Myra Hess, English pianist. Her fame came during World War
II when concert halls were closed at night to avoid being targets of German bombers. For a period of six years she
organized some 1700 lunchtime concerts at the National Gallery which had been emptied of its paintings for the
duration of the war. For her contribution to maintaining the morale of the people of London, King George VI awarded
her the Dame Commander of the British Empire in 1941.
1897
The birth of Peter Llewelyn Davies, the namesake of Peter Pan. The author,
J. M. Barrie publicly identified him as the source of the name for the title character in his famous play Peter
Pan, or The Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up. This identification as 'the original Peter Pan' plagued Davies throughout his
life.
1913
English suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst went on trial for a bomb attack on
the home of David Lloyd George, Chancellor of the Exchequer.
1914
The birth of John Arlott, cricket commentator for the BBC's Test Match
Special. The BBC referred to his 'wonderful gift for evoking cricketing moments'.
1939
The first Anderson air raid shelters appeared. In all, two and a half
million were built.
1953
An inquest heard that the Princess Victoria, a ferry which sank off Belfast
drowning 133 people had met 'a howling gale and an horrific rolling sea that attacked the ship from all
sides.' When the decision was made to turn back towards Stranraer a huge wave forced open the stern doors on
the car deck, buckling them in the process and flooding the car deck which caused the ship to roll over and
sink.
1955
Britain's largest ever aircraft carrier, the Ark Royal, was completed. She
was the fourth ship of that name to have served the Crown.
1972
Miners voted overwhelmingly in favour of a pay settlement after a seven week
strike that seriously affected power supplies in Britain.
1978
Princess Margaret and her friend, Roddy Llewellyn, left for a holiday on the
romantic island of Mustique. On 10th May an announcement was made that the Princess intended to divorce Lord
Snowdon after two years’ separation. A few days later, Roddy said that he had no plans to marry the
Princess.
1978
Ian Botham scored his first test match century, scoring 103 against New
Zealand.
1982
The European Court of Human Rights ruled that corporal punishment in schools
(if it was against the parents' wishes) was a violation of the Human Rights Convention.
1991
After serving 17 years in prison, it was announced that 'the Birmingham Six'
would soon be released when it was decided that their convictions were unsafe. All were jailed in 1975 for an IRA
attack on two pubs in Birmingham in November 1974 in which 21 people died.
2013
British born actor Daniel Day-Lewis made Oscar history by becoming the first
person to win the best actor prize three times. He was rewarded for his role in Steven Spielberg's 'Lincoln'.
2013
It was announced that Britain's most senior Roman Catholic cleric, Cardinal
Keith O'Brien, was to step down as leader of the Scottish Catholic Church. He had been accused of inappropriate
behaviour towards priests dating back to the 1980s, claims that he contested.
2015 Ministers confirmed that they would be changing the law to make it easier to levy tough penalties (up to £500,000) on companies that were behind persistent phone calls and texts that promised compensation for payment protection insurance, mis-selling and cold calls promoting solar panels.
2017 Eighty eight year old Brian Matthew hosted his last Sounds of the 60s on Radio 2. He had presented the popular show for twenty seven years and in October 2016 he became the oldest regular broadcaster on BBC radio. Seventy four year old Tony Blackburn took over as presenter of the show.on 4th March 2017.