Britain's Flags

On This Day - 31st May

1076 Waltheof, Earl of Northumbria and the last of the Anglo-Saxon earls, was beheaded at St. Giles's Hill, near Winchester after rebelling against William the Conqueror. He was the only English aristocrat to be executed during the reign of William I (William the Conqueror).


1256 Selby Abbey (see ©BB picture) became a 'mitred abbey' one of the most defining honours that could be granted and an honour which it shared in the north with St Mary's Abbey, York. It remained so until the time of the 'dissolution'.


1578www.beautifulbritain.co.ukEnglish explorer Martin Frobisher sailed from Harwich to Frobisher Bay in Canada. Over time he brought home1500 tons of 'gold ore'. After years of smelting, it was realized that the presumed gold was merely worthless iron pyrite (fool's gold) that was later used to pave streets in London, leading to the myth that the streets of London were paved with gold.


1678www.beautifulbritain.co.ukThe Godiva Procession, a commemoration of the legendary ride by Lady Godiva (born 990 AD) was instituted On This Day, as part of Coventry fair and was celebrated up to the 1960s. According to the popular story, Lady Godiva took pity on the people of Coventry, who were suffering grievously under her husband's oppressive taxation. Her husband agreed to repeal the taxes if she would strip naked and ride through the streets of the town, clothed only in her long hair. (see ©BB picture of the statue of Lady Godiva). She agreed, conditionally that all persons should stay indoors and shut their windows, but one person, a tailor known ever afterwards as Peeping Tom, disobeyed the proclamation and was struck blind.


1838www.beautifulbritain.co.ukThe last battle on English soil took place at the Battle of Bosenden Wood between armed soldiers and 40 agricultural peasants. They were led by flamboyant Cornish wine merchant (Sir William de Courtenay) and were protesting against the poverty of their lives.


1859www.beautifulbritain.co.ukThe clock in the clock tower of the Houses of Parliament was started, with the bell (Big Ben) sounding for the first time on 11th July 1859.


1889www.beautifulbritain.co.ukA painting of a small dog listening to a phonograph was shown to the general manager of 'The Gramophone Company' in London by the painter, Francis Barraud. It was of his dog, Nipper. The phonograph was painted out and a gramophone substituted. It soon became the famous trademark for the company 'His Master's Voice'.


1902www.beautifulbritain.co.ukThe Peace of Vereeniging ended the Boer War, in which British casualties numbered 5,774 killed (and 16,000 deaths from disease) against 4,000 Boers killed in action.


1904 The first ship berthed at the new Heysham Port, delivered from the builders, John Brown at Clydebank. Current ports served by Heysham (see ©BB picture) are Dublin, Warrenpoint, Douglas and Belfast


1910www.beautifulbritain.co.ukLord Baden-Powell's sister Agnes formed the Girl Guides.


1911www.beautifulbritain.co.ukThe White Star liner Titanic was launched at Belfast. At the ceremony, a White Star Line employee claimed, 'Not even God himself could sink this ship.'


1916www.beautifulbritain.co.ukWorld War 1: The Battle of Jutland in which the Royal Navy lost one battleship, one cruiser and five destroyers. The Germans lost one battleship, one cruiser and one destroyer. At the end of the day, 2,545 men had been killed..


1930www.beautifulbritain.co.ukDon Bradman became the first Australian to score 1,000 runs in England between the start of the cricket season and the end of May.


1939www.beautifulbritain.co.ukTerry Waite, religious adviser to the Archbishop of Canterbury was born. In January 1987 he was held prisoner in Lebanon after being kidnapped on a visit to negotiate the release of hostages.


1956www.beautifulbritain.co.ukLen Hutton, England cricketer, was knighted.


1962www.beautifulbritain.co.ukAdolf Eichmann, the architect of the Nazi holocaust, was hanged in Israel for his crimes against humanity.


1985www.beautifulbritain.co.ukThe Football Association, supported by Margaret Thatcher, banned English clubs from playing in Europe following the Heysel stadium tragedy.


2014 The death of Mary Soames, the youngest of the five children of Sir Winston Churchill and his wife, Clementine. She is buried in St Martin's Churchyard in Bladon, Oxfordshire (see ©BB picture) along with other members of the Churchill family.