On This Day - 12th July
927
King Athelstan, (also spelled Aethelstan or Ethelstan), became the first West Saxon king to have effective rule over the whole of England. when various local kings accepted his overlordship at Eamont, in Cumbria.
1290
Jews were expelled from England
by order of King Edward I.
1543
England's Henry VIII married
Catherine Parr, his sixth and last wife, at Hampton Court Palace. Catherine
was the fourth commoner Henry had taken as his consort, and she outlived
him. She was also the most-married English queen, having a total of four
husbands.
1690
William of Orange defeated the
deposed Catholic, King James II, at the Battle of the Boyne in Ireland.
1730
The birth of Josiah Wedgwood,
English potter, founder of the Wedgwood company and credited with the
industrialization of the manufacture of pottery. He was a prominent
abolitionist, and is remembered for his 'Am I Not a Man And a Brother?'
anti-slavery medallion. See
picture of typical Wedgewood pottery.
1794
British admiral Horatio Nelson
lost his right eye at the siege of Calvi, in Corsica. Nelson was born at
Burnham Thorpe, Norfolk. (see
picture of Burnham
Thorpe)
1910
Charles Rolls, aged 32,
pioneering pilot and co-founder of Rolls-Royce, (see
picture of a Rolls
Royce)was killed when he crashed his biplane in a flying competition in the
Southbourne distric of Bournemouth. He was the first Briton to be killed in
a flying accident.Rolls is commemorated in Monmouth (see
picture of the memorial ) and his grave is in the Monmouthshire church of
Llangattock-Vibon-Avel, where many of the Rolls family lie buried in
various family tombs.
1932
Yorkshire cricketer Hedley
Verity took 10 wickets for 10 runs in a county championship match against
Nottinghamshire at Headingley, Leeds.
1947
The birth of Gareth Edwards,
former Welsh rugby union footballer and described by the BBC as 'arguably
the greatest player ever to don a Welsh jersey'.
1962
The Rolling Stones performed
their first ever concert, at the Marquee Club in London.
1969
Tony Jacklin became the first
British golfer since 1951 to win the Open Championship.
1974
The manager of Liverpool
football club, Bill Shankly announced his retirement.
1982
Kenneth More, British actor
died. His film roles cast him as an archetypal, carefree and happy-go-lucky
middle-class gentleman. As More himself described it, 'I seem fated to be
either the stiff-upper-lip war hero or the hearty back-slapping idiot'.
1984
Robert Maxwell bought the
Mirror Group newspapers.
1986
Dozens were injured in the
second consecutive night of violent riots in Portadown, County Armagh.
Violence flared when Orangemen converged on the town after their annual
marches to commemorate the Battle of the Boyne (1690).
1989
Judy Leden became the first
woman to cross the English Channel by hang glider. She was launched from a
hot air balloon 13,500 ft above Dover and completed the flight in less than
30 minutes.
2000
House of Commons Speaker Betty
Boothroyd announced that she would resign from the high-profile post and
her seat before the General Election.
2012
The public launch of the Canal
& River Trust (formed on 2nd July 2012). The new charity took over from
British Waterways and was given responsibility for canals and rivers in
England and Wales. It was the largest ever single transfer of state assets
to the voluntary sector. See
picture of the Anderton Boat Lift, one of the 'Seven Wonders of the Waterways'.
2013
Journalist and broadcaster Alan
Whicker died at the age of 87 after suffering from bronchial pneumonia. His
TV career stretched nearly six decades and he was best known for his
documentary series, Whicker's World, which ran from 1959 to 1988 on both
the BBC and ITV. He was made a CBE for services to broadcasting in
2005.
2013
A military funeral was held for
Fusilier Lee Rigby at Bury Parish Church in Greater Manchester. He was
killed outside Woolwich Barracks in May by Michael Adebolajo and Michael
Adebowale. Bury Parish Church (see
picture) is the garrison church of the Lancashire Fusiliers. A plaque in the church (see
picture) commemorates those from the Fusiliers who served in peace and war.