Welcome to day 285 of the year! Known as Old Farmers Day and National Pulled Pork Day. If you were born on this day, you were likely conceived the week of January 19th 2023. Your star sign is “Libra”.
1969 – The opening of Preston Bus Station, one of the largest in Western Europe. Threatened with demolition since the year 2000, campaigns and applications were made numerous times to save the building.
Todays birthdays
1944 – Angela Rippon (79), English television journalist, newsreader, writer and presenter (Rip-Off Britain, Come Dancing), born in Plymouth.
1968 – Hugh Jackman (55), Australian stage and screen actor and singer (The Boy from Oz; X-Men -“Wolverine”; The Greatest Showman; Kate And Leopold), born in Sydney, Australia.
1974 – Stephen Lee (49), English former professional snooker player who is currently serving a 12-year ban from the sport. He turned professional in 1992, reached a career-high of fifth in the snooker world rankings for the 2000–01 season, and won five ranking titles, born in Trowbridge, Wiltshire.
1980 – Ledley King (43), English former footballer spending his entire career at Tottenham Hotspur F.C. from 1999 to 2012, born in London.
1983 – Katie Piper (40), English writer, activist, television presenter and model who, back in March 2008, was attacked with acid by her ex-boyfriend and an accomplice, born in Andover, Hampshire.
The day today
1951 – The launch of Holme Moss Transmitting Station, one of the highest in the country, reaching 228m above ground and 524m above sea level. In 1951 it provided BBC television (the only TV programme at the time) but now transmits VHF, FM and DAB radio to Derbyshire, Manchester and West Yorkshire, with coverage of around 13.5 million people.
1969 – The opening of Preston Bus Station, one of the largest in Western Europe. Threatened with demolition since the year 2000, campaigns and applications were made numerous times to save the building. It featured on the 2012 World Monument Fund’s list of sites at risk. Nevertheless, on 7th December 2012, Preston City Council announced that the bus station would be demolished, but in 2013 it was saved when English Heritage granted it the status of a Grade II listed building.
1979 – The publication of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, the first of five books in the Hitchhiker’s Guide comedy science fiction series by the English writer and dramatist Douglas Adams.
1984 – Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher escaped an assassination attempt when an IRA bomb exploded in the Grand Hotel, Brighton which was being used by delegates to the Conservative Party Conference. Five people were killed and 30 people injured, including the Employment Secretary Norman Tebbit and his wife Margaret, who was left permanently disabled.
1989 – The remains of Shakespeare’s original Globe Theatre were found on London’s Bankside.
Today in music
1974 – The Bay City Rollers went to No.1 on the UK album chart with their debut album ‘Rollin.’ The album included three British chart hits ‘Remember’, ‘Shang-a-Lang’, ‘Summerlove Sensation’) and the debut of ‘Saturday Night’, never a British hit yet a No.1 smash in America.
1985 – Jennifer Rush was at No.1 on the UK singles chart with ‘The Power Of Love’. The song stayed at No.1 for five weeks and became the biggest selling single of the year and the biggest single ever for a woman in the UK. Celine Dion enjoyed a No.1 US hit with her version in 1993.
1991 – Simply Reds fourth album ‘Stars’ went to No.1 on the UK chart for the first of five times, featuring the singles ‘Thrill Me’, ‘For Your Babies’ and the title track ‘Stars.’ The album became the biggest seller of 1991 and 1992 in the UK spending 134 week’s on the chart.
2008 – Oasis went to No.1 on the UK album chart with ‘Dig Out Your Soul’ the band’s seventh and final studio album.
2014 – British singer-songwriter George Ezra was at No.1 on the UK album chart with his debut studio album Wanted on Voyage which became the third best-selling album of 2014 in the UK. The album’s title is a reference to the sticker used on the suitcase of Paddington Bear, who was Ezra’s hero when he was a child.
Today in history
632 – The death, at the Battle of Hatfield Chase near Doncaster, of Edwin of Deira. He was the first Christian king of Northumbria and the most powerful English ruler of his day. His death and the defeat of his army led to the temporary collapse of Northumbria.
1537 – Edward VI, the only son of Henry VIII by his third wife Jane Seymour was born. Jane died 13 days after giving birth to him.
1823 – Charles Macintosh of Scotland began selling raincoats, now better known as – Macs. He was first employed as a clerk but before he was twenty resigned his clerkship to take up the manufacture of chemicals. The essence of his patent for waterproof fabrics was the cementing together of two pieces of natural India-rubber, the rubber being made soluble by the action of naphtha, a byproduct of tar. For his various chemical discoveries he was, in 1823, elected a fellow of the Royal Society.
1845 – The death of Elizabeth Fry, English prison reformer, social reformer and, as a Quaker, a Christian philanthropist. She was a major driving force behind new legislation to make the treatment of prisoners more humane. Since 2001, she has been depicted on the Bank of England £5 note.
1915 – Despite international protests, Edith Cavell, an English nurse in Belgium, was shot by a German firing squad, for aiding the escape of Allied prisoners. She was born in Swardeston, close to Norwich and there is a memorial to her outside Norwich Cathedral.