On This Day - 26th March
1484
William Caxton printed his translation of Aesop's Fables. As far as is known, Caxton was the first English person to work as a printer and the first to introduce a printing press into England. He was also the first English retailer of printed books.
1839
The Henley Regatta was
born, at a public meeting held in Henley Town Hall. The regatta lasts for 5 days (Wednesday to Sunday) over the first weekend in July.
1885
‘A lady well-known in literary and scientific circles’ was
the only clue The Times gave to the identity of the woman who was cremated
by the Cremation Society in Woking, Surrey. She was the first person to be
officially cremated in Britain and was a Mrs. Pickersgill, the first of three
cremations that year.
1902
The British imperialist Cecil John Rhodes died in Cape Town, aged 48.
Rhodes who controlled 90% of the world's diamond production, was influential
in establishing the British crown in South Africa and Rhodesia.
1920
The British special constables, known as the Black and Tans, arrived in
Ireland. Their nickname came from the colours of their uniform.
1923
BBC Radio started regular weather forecasts.
1945
David Lloyd George, British statesman and Liberal Prime Minister, died. He was Prime Minister of a wartime coalition government between the years 1916–22, Leader of the Liberal Party from 1926–31 and a key figure in the introduction of many reforms which laid the foundations of the modern welfare state. His boyhood home
village was Llanystumdwy (Gwynedd ) which houses the Lloyd George Museum (see
picture).
1973
Women stockbroker were allowed on the floor of the London Stock Exchange
for the first time in its 200 year history.
1973
Noël Coward, English playwright and entertainer died.
1976
Queen Elizabeth II sent the first royal e-mail, from the Royal Signals and Radar Establishment in Worcestershire.
1981
Four Labour defectors, known as the Gang of Four, launched the Social
Democrats party. The four were Roy Jenkins, (former Labour cabinet minister), David Owen, William Rodgers and Shirley Williams. Their aim was to 'reconcile the nation' and 'heal
divisions between classes'.
1999
Ex-miners suffering from lung diseases won a compensation deal worth £2
billion. It was the biggest industrial injuries case in British legal history.
2006
From 6 a.m. the prohibition of smoking in all substantially
enclosed public places came into force in Scotland.
2007
Ian Paisley and Gerry Adams made history in Northern Ireland with their first face-to-face meeting, where they agreed on the restoration of the Stormont assembly and the return of power sharing.
2012
New record temperatures for Scotland were set at Cromdale in Moray, which reached a temperature of 23.3C. making it the hottest 26th March since records began. The unseasonable warm weather made the UK hotter than southerly parts of Europe, including Barcelona, Nice, Majorca and Faro.
2015 Richard III, the only English monarch without a marked grave, was reinterred at Leicester Cathedral after much wrangling, including High Court action over his final resting place. Richard III's body was buried in the now demolished Franciscan Friary in Leicester and was discovered in September 2012 under what had become a car park. From 28th March 2015 the area of Richard III's tomb (see
picture) was open to the public. This funeral crown (see
picture) was commissioned by an historian who was involved in the dig that discovered Richard III's remains.