On This Day - 10th July
138
The death of the Roman Emperor
Hadrian who ordered the building of a wall across northern England to keep
out the 'barbarian Scottish tribes'. This (see
photograph of Hadrian's wall) was taken
close to Housesteads Fort in Northumberland. (see
picture)
1040
Lady Godiva rode naked on
horseback through the streets of Coventry to force her husband, the Earl of
Mercia, to lower taxes. This (see
statue
of her) is at Broadgate in Coventry.
1212
The most severe of several
early fires of London began in Southwark and burned most of the city to the
ground including Southwark Cathedral.
1460
In England's Wars of the Roses,
the Yorkists (commanded by Richard Neville, the 16th Earl of Warwick)
defeated the Lancastrians and captured Henry VI at the Battle of
Northampton.
1553
Lady Jane Grey, the 9 days
Queen, took the throne of England until 19th July when she was succeeded by
Mary I. She was later charged with high treason and executed in November of
the same year.
1940
World War II: The first in a
long series of German bombing raids against Great Britain, as the Battle of
Britain, which lasted three and a half months, began.
1947
The Government announced that
Princess Elizabeth (now Queen Elizabeth II) would get extra clothing
coupons for her wedding dress.
1954
Gordon Richards rode his last
mount, at Sandown; the 21,834th of his almost 34-year racing career.
1958
Britain's first parking meters
were installed, in Mayfair, London.
1972
William Whitelaw, the Secretary
of State for Northern Ireland, broke the news that he had been involved in
secret talks with the provisional IRA in London, as he announced that the
two week ceasefire in Northern Ireland had come to an end.
1985
The Greenpeace flagship Rainbow
Warrior was blown up in Auckland harbour, New Zealand.
1996
The battered bodies of Lin
Russell, 6 year-old daughter Megan and 9 year old daughter Josie, were
found half a mile from their home in Kent. Michael Stone, 38, was later
found guilty of two counts of murder (of Lin and Megan) and one count of
attempted murder (Josie) and given three life sentences. His original
conviction was overturned on appeal but a second trial resulted in another
verdict of guilty after another prisoner claimed that Stone had confessed
to the killings while on remand in jail.
1996
Nelson Mandela received eight
honorary degrees at Buckingham Palace.
1997
More than 100,000 people packed
Hyde Park in London for a countryside rally to protest against Government
proposals to ban fox hunting.
2000
Figures released by the
government showed that one in four British homes were using the
Internet.
2011
The last ever edition of the
News Of The World. The newspaper was launched in 1843 and its closure came
after a string of new allegations about the paper's extent of phone hacking
and corrupt payments made to police officers.