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On This Day
April
26 April

On This Day: 26 April

Italian poet Petrarch climbs Mont Ventoux (1,909 metres, 6,263 feet) – according to his "possibly fictitious" account, written around 1350 Click to show or hide the answer
William Shakespeare is baptised in Stratford–upon–Avon Click to show or hide the answer
English colonists make landfall at Cape Henry, Virginia Click to show or hide the answer
Great Plague begins in London Click to show or hide the answer
John Wilkes Booth is shot dead by troops while trying to escape Click to show or hide the answer
General Johnston surrenders at Durham Station Click to show or hide the answer
John Wilkes Booth is shot dead by troops while trying to escape;
General Johnston surrenders at Durham Station
Click to show or hide the answer
French art critic Louis Leroy coins the term 'Impressionism' Click to show or hide the answer
British forces occupy Port Hamilton (So–Do), Korea Click to show or hide the answer
Canadian cities of Hull and Ottawa swept by fire Click to show or hide the answer
London's first motor cycle patrols begin operating Click to show or hide the answer
Duke of York (later King George VI) marries Lady Elizabeth Bowes–Lyon, in Westminster Abbey Click to show or hide the answer
Paul von Hindenburg becomes the first directly elected head of state of the Weimar Republic Click to show or hide the answer
Madame Tussaud's new building in London opens Click to show or hide the answer
The Gestapo, Nazi Germany's official secret police force, is established Click to show or hide the answer
German planes bomb Guernica in the Spanish Civil War Click to show or hide the answer
Soviet and US troops meet near Torgau in eastern Germany Click to show or hide the answer
FA Cup Final (Charlton v. Burnley): the ball bursts for the second consecutive year. Charlton (last year's losing finalists) win 1–0 after extra time Click to show or hide the answer
Cubans invade Panama Click to show or hide the answer
Revolt in the French army fails; leaders arrested Click to show or hide the answer
NASA lands a spacecraft on the Moon for the first time – the Ranger IV rocket (sic) – but it fails to send back any pictures after all power on board failed two hours after launch Click to show or hide the answer
Tanganyika and Zanzibar unite to form Tanzania Click to show or hide the answer
Mario Soares, leader of Portugal's Socialist Party, emerges as the winner Click to show or hide the answer
Labour party members vote to leave the EU, by almost a two–thirds majority Click to show or hide the answer
Ronald Reagan begins a six–day visit to China – the first by a US president since Nixon in 1972 Click to show or hide the answer
Nuclear reactor melts down in Chernobyl, Ukraine (USSR) Click to show or hide the answer
Bells ring out from the walled Kremlin for the first time since the Bolsheviks vowed to crush Christianity for ever, as Russians celebrate Orthodox Easter Click to show or hide the answer
HM Government announces that the recession is over, after new figures show growth in the economy for the first time in two years Click to show or hide the answer
South Africa holds its first all–race elections for the National Assembly and provincial parliaments Click to show or hide the answer
TV presenter Jill Dando shot dead on the doorstep of her Fulham home Click to show or hide the answer
Home Secretary Jack Straw witnesses nine people being caught attempting to enter the UK illegally as he inspects immigration procedures in Dover Click to show or hide the answer
A 19–year–old failed student shoots dead 17 people, including 14 teachers, at the Johann Gutenberg grammar school in Erfurt, eastern Germany Click to show or hide the answer
Attorney General Lord Goldsmith orders an enquiry into the handling of the Damilola Taylor murder case after all four defendants are acquitted Click to show or hide the answer
Six British plane spotters sentenced to three years in jail in Kalamata, Greece, for spying (but are allowed to fly home while their lawyers appeal) Click to show or hide the answer
Syria pulls the last of 14,000 troops out of Lebanon after occupying the country for 29 years Click to show or hide the answer
The Daily Mirror reveals that deputy prime minister John Prescott, 67, had a two–year affair with his diary secretary Tracey Temple, 43 Click to show or hide the answer
Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt is booed by the annual conference of the Royal College of Nursing in Bournemouth after she insists that there are now more nurses, shorter waiting times, and better results in the NHS than ever before Click to show or hide the answer
American comedian Bill Cosby is found guilty of three counts of aggravated indecent assault against Canadian basketball star Andrea Constand, 30 years his junior (one of 60 women to accuse him of similar offences); he was later (25 September) sentenced to between three and ten years in prison Click to show or hide the answer

© Haydn Thompson 2019