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On This Day
28 July

On This Day: 28 July

Roman emperor Maximus is defeated near Aquilea by Byzantine emperor Theodosius I Click to show or hide the answer
Crusaders in the Second Crusade abandon their siege of Damascus Click to show or hide the answer
Henry VIII marries Catherine Howard – his fifth wife; Thomas Cromwell is executed, on Henry's orders, on charges of treason Click to show or hide the answer
English polymath Sir Thomas Harriot docks at Plymouth with Europe's first cargo of potatoes, from Colombia Click to show or hide the answer
The English fleet uses fire ships to scatter the Spanish Armada Click to show or hide the answer
Battle of Warsaw begins (Charles X of Sweden invades Poland) Click to show or hide the answer
King Frederik Willhelm I of Prussia introduces compulsory education for children breween 5 and 12 years of age Click to show or hide the answer
Danish explorer Vitus Bering (in service of Russia) discovers Mount St Elias – the second highest mountain in both Canada and the United States, being situated on the border between Yukon Territory and Alaska Click to show or hide the answer
Maria Theresa of Austria and King Frederick the Great of Prussia sign a peace treaty in Berlin, ending the First Silesian War (part of the War of the Austrian Succession) Click to show or hide the answer
The Forth and Clyde Canal is opened Click to show or hide the answer
George II appoints Henry James Pye as Poet Laureate Click to show or hide the answer
Twenty–three leaders of "the Terror", including Maximilien Francois Isadore de Robespierre, are executed by guillotine, to thunderous cheers, in Paris Click to show or hide the answer
Mahmud II becomes Sultan of the Ottoman Empire and Caliph of Islam. Often described as 'Peter the Great of Turkey', the reforms he instituted in his 31–year reign would eventually lead to the birth of the modern Turkish Republic Click to show or hide the answer
A combined British, Portuguese and Spanish army, under the command of Sir Arthur Wellesley, defeats a French force led by Joseph Bonaparte at the Battle of Talavera Click to show or hide the answer
Argentine general José de San Martín declares the independence of Peru from Spain Click to show or hide the answer
King Louis Philippe of France escapes an assassination attempt, but 18 bystanders are killed Click to show or hide the answer
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A total solar eclipse is photographed by daguerrotype Click to show or hide the answer
USS Constellation, the last all–sail warship built by the US Navy and now a museum ship in Baltimore Harbor, is commissioned Click to show or hide the answer
Sir William James Herschel of the Indian Civil Service uses fingerprints as a means of identification for the first time Click to show or hide the answer
Gaspard Mix Tournachon ('Nadar') takes the world's first airborne photograph from his hot air balloon Le Gant, which had a two–storey gondola and its own darkroom Click to show or hide the answer
US Secretary of State William H. Seward announces that the 14th amendment to the US constitution has been ratified, giving African Americans equal personal and property rights to whites Click to show or hide the answer
The USA signs a treaty allowing unlimited Chinese immigration Click to show or hide the answer
A water tricycle with paddle wheels crosses the English Channel in less than eight hours Click to show or hide the answer
Two thousand lives are lost when shocks triggered by volcano Epomeo (on the Isle of Ischia) destroy 1,200 houses at Casamicciola, near Naples Click to show or hide the answer
A petition organised by suffragist Kate Sheppard, signed by over 25,000 women (20% of the country's adult European female population) is delivered to New Zealand's parliament Click to show or hide the answer
The city of Miami, Florida is incorporated Click to show or hide the answer
Louis Lassen serves what the establishment claims to this day to have been the first hamburger sold in the USA, at his lunch wagon in New Haven, Connecticut (Louis' Lunch) Click to show or hide the answer
Vyacheslav Plehve, Russia's Interior Minister (hated for his repressive policies as leader of the most reactionary elements of government) is assassinated when Yegor Sazonov, a member of the Socialist Revolutionary Party, throws a bomb into his carriage on his weekly audience with the Tsar Click to show or hide the answer
In the culmination of the July Crisis, Austria–Hungary declares war on Serbia Click to show or hide the answer
Winston Churchill, First Lord of the Admiralty, orders the British Grand Fleet to Scapa Flow Click to show or hide the answer
US Marines go ashore in Haiti on orders from President Woodrow Wilson, "because of virtual anarchy" – leading to an occupation that would last until 1934 Click to show or hide the answer
Ten thousand African–Americans march through New York City, in protest against recent murders, lynchings, and other violence. This so–called Silent Parade was organised by writer and civil rights activist James Weldon Johnson, in response to riots in East St. Louis, Illinois, where at least 40 black people were killed by white mobs. The riots were sparked, in part, by a labour dispute where blacks were used for strike breaking Click to show or hide the answer
The Games of the IX Olympiad open in Amsterdam Click to show or hide the answer
The Boeing B–17 Flying Fortress makes its first flight at Seattle Click to show or hide the answer
The 34,000–ton Cunard–White Star liner Mauretania is launched at Cammell Laird's Birkenhead yard Click to show or hide the answer
The Sutton Hoo hemlet – described as "the most iconic object" from "one of the most spectacular archaeological discoveries ever made", and perhaps the most important known Anglo–Saxon artefact – is discovered Click to show or hide the answer
In response to alarming German advances, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin orders that all those who retreat or otherwise leave their positions without orders to do so are to be tried in a military court, with punishment ranging from duty in a penal battalion, through imprisonment in a Gulag, to execution Click to show or hide the answer
The Royal Air Force bombs Hamburg, causing a firestorm in which 42,000 German civilians would lose their lives Click to show or hide the answer
Thirteen lives are lost when a B–25 bomber crashes into the Empire State Building Click to show or hide the answer
Disney's Alice in Wonderland is released Click to show or hide the answer
992 lives are lost in a mudslide in Isahaya, western Kyushu, Japan, caused by heavy rain Click to show or hide the answer
Britain's first postcodes are introduced (in Norwich) Click to show or hide the answer
The Volkswagen Act comes into force in Germany, regulating the privatisation of Volkswagen GmbH. In order to maintain government control, it stipulates that votes on major shareholder meeting resolutions require an 80% majority. This is deemed to violate the 'free movement of capital' principle of European company law; only in 2013 would the German parliament finally amend the law to the satisfaction of the EU court Click to show or hide the answer
UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold arrives in the Congo on a mission to end the civil war Click to show or hide the answer
President Johnson sends another 50,000 US troops to Vietnam, bringing the total number to 125,000 Click to show or hide the answer
Edward Heath becomes leader of the Conservative Party Click to show or hide the answer
Lord Justice Denning rules that Mrs. Florence Nagle must be granted a racehorse training licence Click to show or hide the answer
Thousands of British dockers begin an official strike to safeguard jobs. The Government would declare a state of emergency a week later, and after three weeks (on 17 August) the TGWU would call off the strike, accepting terms that include a ban on unregistered dockers, no redundancies, and assurances that all container work would be done inside the ports (precluding the use of cheaper, casual labour) Click to show or hide the answer
An estimated 600,000 rock fans – recognised by Guinness World Records at the time as the largest audience at a pop festival – come to the Watkins Glen Grand Prix Raceway outside Watkins Glen, New York, to see the Allman Brothers Band, Grateful Dead and The Band perform Click to show or hide the answer
Spetsgruppa A – Russia's elite special force – is formed Click to show or hide the answer
Liz Taylor and Richard Burton divorce for the second time Click to show or hide the answer
Almost a quarter of a million lives are lost, and 160,000 people are injured, when the deadliest earthquake of the 20th century strikes the Tangshan area of China Click to show or hide the answer
The Games of the XXIII Olympiad open in Los Angeles Click to show or hide the answer
Laura Davis becomes the first British winner of the US Women's Open Click to show or hide the answer
Paddy Ashdown is elected as the first leader of the new Social and Liberal Democrat Party (formed by the merger of the Liberals and the SDP) Click to show or hide the answer
Winnie Mandela's home in Soweto is destroyed by arson Click to show or hide the answer
Sheikh Abdul Obeid, a leading Lebanese Shi'ite Muslim, is abducted by Israelis Click to show or hide the answer
One of the most complete prehistoric skeletons ever found – around 9,000 years old – is discovered on a bank of the Columbia River in Kennewick, Washington, USA Click to show or hide the answer
Former Liverpool goalkeeper Bruce Grobbelaar wins £85,000 libel damages against The Sun, which said he took bribes to throw matches; however, this is later slashed to £1 after The Sun appeals, the House of Lords ruling that there was adequate evidence of dishonesty. Grobbelaar would be ordered to pay costs estimated at £500,000, and would be declared bankrupt when he was unable to do so Click to show or hide the answer
The last 78 prisoners – 52 Republicans and 26 Loyalists – are freed from the Maze prison in Northern Ireland, under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement Click to show or hide the answer
Australia's Ian Thorpe becomes the first swimmer to win six gold medals at a single World Championship meeting Click to show or hide the answer
Michael Jackson, head of Channel 4, defends his decision to screen Brass Eye's spoof documentary about paedophilia Click to show or hide the answer
Nine coal miners, trapped in the flooded Quecreek Mine in Somerset County, Pennsylvania, are rescued after 77 hours underground Click to show or hide the answer
The Provisional IRA calls an end to its thirty–year armed campaign against British rule in Northern Ireland Click to show or hide the answer
A tornado touches down in a residential area in Birmingham, causing 39 injuries and four million pounds' worth of damage Click to show or hide the answer
Four UN observers are killed in an Israeli air strike as heavy fighting continues in southern Lebanon Click to show or hide the answer
Weston–Super–Mare's Grand Pier burns down for the second time in 80 years Click to show or hide the answer
All 152 people on board lose their lives in Pakistan's deadliest ever aviation accident, and the first involving an Airbus A321, when a domestic flight from Karachi crashes into the Margalla Hills to the north of its destination, Islamabad Click to show or hide the answer
The South African Journal of Science publishes details of the earliest evidence of cancer, found in a 1.7 million–year–old toe fossil from the Swartkrans cave, about 20 miles from Johannesburg (part of the Cradle of Humankind World Heritage Site) Click to show or hide the answer
The Supreme Court of Pakistan disqualifies Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif from office for life, after finding him guilty of corruption charges Click to show or hide the answer
The US Senate votes against 'skinny' repeal of the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) by 51 votes to 49, when Republican John McCain (known as a critic of Donald Trump) casts the deciding vote against; meanwhile, Trump announces retired US Marine Corps general John F. Kelly as his new Chief of Staff (to take office on 31 July) Click to show or hide the answer
Colombia's Egan Bernal, aged 22, becomes the first Latin American winner of the Tour de France Click to show or hide the answer
Former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak is sentenced to 12 years imprisonment and fined nearly $50 million, after being found guilty of corruption Click to show or hide the answer
Halley's Comet is predicted to reach perihelion on its next (31st) passage Click to show or hide the answer

© Haydn Thompson 2020