Britain's Flags

On This Day - 27th May

1153www.beautifulbritain.co.ukMalcolm IV became King of Scotland. He was noted for his religious zeal and interest in knighthood and warfare. For much of his reign he was in poor health and died, unmarried, at the age of twenty-four.


1657www.beautifulbritain.co.ukLord Protector Oliver Cromwell refused parliament's offer of the title King of England.


1679www.beautifulbritain.co.ukBritain passed the Habeas Corpus Act which made it illegal to hold anyone in prison without a trial.


1849www.beautifulbritain.co.ukThe Great Hall of Euston station in London was opened. It was the first inter-city railway station to be built in London.


1852 The opening of Grimsby Royal Dock. Grisby once had the largest fishing fleet in the world. Albert, Prince Consort (see ©BB picture) laid the first stone on 17th April 1849. During the Second World War, there were plans to demolish the 309ft (61m) high Dock Tower (see ©BB picture) as it acted as a beacon for German Luftwaffe aircraft heading towards Liverpool. There is a model of the tower at Legoland in Windsor.


1897 The birth of John Cockcroft, English physicist who shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1951 (with Ernest Walton) for splitting the atomic nucleus. They were instrumental in the development of nuclear power. Cockcroft attended the former Todmorden Grammar School (see ©BB picture). In 1973 the school had its second Nobel Prize Winner when Geoffrey Wilkinson was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Remarkably, both were taught by the same science teacher, Luke Sutcliffe.


1914www.beautifulbritain.co.ukJoseph Wilson Swan, British electric lamp inventor, died. Swan received a British patent for his device in 1878, about a year before the American, Thomas Edison.


1919www.beautifulbritain.co.ukOil was struck at Britain's first on-shore oilfield of three wells, at Hardstoft, near Tibshelf in Derbyshire.


1936www.beautifulbritain.co.ukBritain's 80,733 tonne liner Queen Mary left Southampton on her maiden voyage to New York with more than 1800 passengers. Modern day ©BB picture of Southampton Water.


1941www.beautifulbritain.co.ukWorld War II: Royal Naval ships Dorsetshire, King George V and Rodney attacked and sank the German battleship Bismarck in the Atlantic after it had been damaged by torpedoes dropped by British aircraft from HMS Ark Royal.


1955www.beautifulbritain.co.ukAnthony Eden's Conservatives won the general election with a clear majority, ending a five-year political stalemate.


1975www.beautifulbritain.co.ukThe Dibbles Bridge coach crash occurred near Grassington in North Yorkshire. 33 people were killed; the highest ever death toll in a road accident in the United Kingdom. An inquest said that the accident was caused by the inability of the driver to negotiate the bend, (see ©BB picture) owing to deficient brakes on the coach.


1986www.beautifulbritain.co.ukIrish-born singer Bob Geldof was made an honorary Knight of the Realm by Queen Elizabeth II for his efforts to raise money for the starving of Africa.


1994www.beautifulbritain.co.ukAlexander Solzhenitsyn flew back to his native Russia after 20 years living in exile.


1998www.beautifulbritain.co.uk18 year old Michael Owen became the youngest ever England international goalscorer with the only goal in a 1-0 friendly against Morocco in Casablanca.


2000www.beautifulbritain.co.ukScottish farmers who accidentally planted genetically modified seeds said they would fight for compensation.


2008www.beautifulbritain.co.ukHundreds of lorry drivers protested in London over the continuing rising cost of fuel and a two-mile line of lorries crawled along the M4 towards Cardiff.


2014www.beautifulbritain.co.uk34 year old Edward McKenzie-Green, former head of counter-fraud at Oxfam, was jailed for more than two years after using fake companies to defraud Oxfam of more than £64,000.