On This Day - 18th July
1389
France and Britain agreed to
the Truce of Leulinghem. It inaugurated a 13-year peace; the longest period
of sustained peace during the Hundred Years' War.
1817
Jane Austen, English novelist
of Pride and Prejudice died, aged 41 at this house (see
picture) on College Street in Winchester. See also a (
close up picture) of the commemorative plaque. She was buried at Winchester Cathedral. See
picture of Winchester Cathedral.
1848
William Gilbert Grace,
cricketing legend, was born. Grace was important in the development of the
sport and was universally known as W.G. He played first-class cricket for a
record-equalling 44 seasons, from 1865 to 1908, during which he captained
England, Gloucestershire County Cricket Club, the Gentlemen, MCC and the
United South of England Eleven.
1872
Britain introduced the concept
of voting by secret ballot.
1892
The death of Thomas Cook,
founder of the travel agency that became the Thomas Cook Group in 2007. This statue of Thomas Cook (see
picture) is outside Leicester Railway Station, where he organized, in 1861, the first publicly
advertised railway excursion to a temperance meeting at Loughborough (11 miles away).
1901 The water supply was turned off in Manchester as a heat wave hit the U.K. with the temperature reaching 35 degrees Centigrade.
1920
The unveiling of the Cenotaph
War memorial in Whitehall, London to commemorate the war dead. It was
designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens and takes its name from the Greek words kenos
and taphos meaning empty tomb.
1923
Under the Matrimonial Causes
Bill, British women were given equal divorce rights with men.
1934
The official opening, by King
George V, of the first Mersey Road Tunnel in Liverpool.
1950
Richard Branson, British
entrepreneur, was born. According to the Forbes 2011 list of billionaires,
Branson is the 4th richest citizen of the United Kingdom.
1957
The birth of Sir Nicholas
Alexander Faldo (Nick Faldo), professional golfer who has won three Open
Championships and three Masters. He was ranked the World's No. 1 on the
Official World Golf Ranking for a total of 98 weeks.
1970
Radio 1 DJ Kenny Everett was
sacked after he joked on air that the wife of the conservative transport
minister Mary Peyton had 'crammed a fiver into the examiner's hand', when
taking her driving test.
1975
Former British MP John
Stonehouse was flown back from Australia to face charges relating to his
attempt to falsify his own death.
1992
John Smith was elected leader
of the Labour party, with Margaret Beckett as his deputy.
2000
Police confirmed that the body
they had found in a West Sussex field the previous day was that of missing
eight-year old Sarah Payne. Her murderer, Roy Whiting, was convicted in
December 2001 and sentenced to life imprisonment.
2003
The body of government
scientist Dr. David Kelly was found in woodland, in Oxfordshire. Dr. Kelly
had been at the centre of a row between the British Government and the BBC
about the use of intelligence reports in the run up to the war against
Iraq.
2009
Henry Allingham, the world's
oldest man and one of the last surviving World War I servicemen, died, aged
113.