On This Day - 11th July
1274
Robert the Bruce, King of
Scotland was born. (see
picture of the statue at Bannockburn ) His body is buried
in Dunfermline Abbey, (
picture of Dunfermline Abbey)while
it is believed his heart was interred in Melrose Abbey. (
picture of Melrose Abbey)
1576
Yorkshire born explorer Martin
Frobisher sighted Greenland. In all he made three voyages to the New World
to look for the Northwest Passage. He was later knighted for his service in
repelling the Spanish Armada.
1656
Ann Austin and Mary Fisher
became the first Quakers to arrive in America and were promptly arrested.
Five weeks later they were deported, back to England.
1776
Captain Cook sailed from
Plymouth in the Resolution, accompanied by the Discovery, on his last
expedition. He was killed in Hawaii in a fight with Hawaiians in 1779. He
left a legacy of scientific and geographical knowledge which was to
influence his successors well into the 20th century and numerous memorials
worldwide have been dedicated to him, including this one at Whitby (see
picture) where Cook served
as a merchant navy apprentice.
1848
London's Waterloo Station was
officially opened. With over 91 million passenger entries and exits between
April 2010 and March 2011, it is Britain's busiest railway station.
1859
A Tale Of Two Cities, by
Charles Dickens, was published.
1859
Big Ben, in the clock tower of
the Houses of Parliament, tolled for the first time. In September it
cracked under the hammer, a mere two months after it officially went into
service. According to the foundry's manager, a hammer more than twice the
maximum weight specified had been used and for three years Big Ben was
taken out of commission.
1884
Old Trafford (Manchester)
became England's 2nd official Test Match cricket ground (after the
Kennington Oval in London).
1930
Australian cricketer Don
Bradman scored a world record 309 runs in one day in a Test match against
England, held at Headingley.
1950
Puppets Andy Pandy, Teddy and
Looby Loo first appeared on BBC TV. The episodes were repeated for more
than 25 years, until the film wore out.
1974
The World Football League
played its first games.
1977
In Britain, Gay News was fined
£1,000 for publishing a poem that portrayed Jesus as homosexual.
1987
War veterans returned to the
scene of the bloodiest battle of World War I to commemorate its 70th
anniversary. The fields of Passchendaele in Belgium claimed the lives of
250,000 troops of the British Commonwealth between July and November
1917.
1989
Laurence Olivier, English actor
and director died.
1991
Labour MP Terry Fields was
sentenced to 60 days in prison for refusing to pay his poll tax.
2000
The World Aids Conference in
South Africa announced that trials for a new HIV vaccine would begin in
Britain.
2013
Greenpeace protesters climbed
to the summit of London's Shard, the tallest building in western Europe at
1,016 ft and then unfurled a blue flag with 'Save the Arctic' written on
it.
2021
8:00pm BST. The EUFA Euro 2020 final, between England and Italy at Wembley. The ongoing Coronavirus pandemic capped attendance at 60,000, with a maximum of 1,000 Italian supporters. Euro 2020 is England's first major football final in 55 years and their first ever European Championship final.