July 5th
On this Date: Isaac Newton's Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica is first published by the Royal Society (1687 - the publication costs met by Edmund Halley, as the Society had already spent its annual budget for book publication on Frances Willoughby's De Historia Piscium - the Story of Fish); the Olive Branch Petition is created (1775 - an attempt, pricipally by colonial loyalists, to reach compromise and avoid conflict between the British and the American colonists - that worked, then); Thomas Cook organizes his first passenger Excursion trip - from Leicester to Loughborough (1841 - any puzzlement as to what was so dreadful about Leicester that it made its citizens wish to travel to Loughborough is solved when one realizes that this was a Temperance group trip; it's still very difficult to get a decent pint in Loughborough); Frederic Douglass delivers his "What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?" speech to the Rochester Ladies' Anti-Slavery Society (1852); Britain introduces the world's first road speed limit, requiring "self-propelled vehicles" to have a crew of 3, one of whom was to be a man [sic] with a red flag walking at least 60 yards ahead of the vehicle to forewarn pedestrians and other road users, and whom the driver had to obey if ordered to stop - and establishing a speed limit of 4mph on open roads, and 2mph in towns, with a fixed penalty of ten shillings [about £60 in today's values] for contravention (1865); Philadelphia's Liberty Bell makes its final trip from its native city to feature in the Panama-Pacific Exposition in San Francisco (1915); San Francisco police violently attack Longshoremen, who have been on strike for two months, with tear gas, batons, and firearms - 9 workers are killed, more than 1000 injured, and more than 500 arrested (1934 - a year later to the day, President FD Roosevelt signs the National Labor Relations Act, guaranteeing private sector employees the right to form and join Trades Unions); the first tins of Spam go on sale in the US (1937); the first Bikini is modelled by 19-year-old Micheline Bernardini [who had never eaten a morsel of Spam in her life] at the Piscine Molitor open-air swimming pool in Paris (1946 - Mlle Bernardini's "day" job is as a nude dancer, as designer Louis Reard cannot persuade any professional model to appear in such attire); Aneurin Bevan launches the National Health Service (1948); the Knesset passes the Law of Return, granting all Jews the right to emigrate to Israel (1950); Richard Baker reads the UK's first televised daily News bulletin (1954 - probably not mentioning that, in a small recording studio in Tennessee, an unknown young singer called Elvis Presley had on that very day recorded his first song, That's All Right, Mama); Algeria becomes Independent of France (1962); the 26th Amendment to the US Constitution lowers the voting age from 21 to 18 (1971); Zulfikar Ali Bhutto is deposed as Prime Minister of Pakistan in a military coup (1977); Björk's Debut album is released (1993); Dolly the Sheep is born (1996); the Staffordshire Hoard, a collection of over 3,500 items of Anglo-Saxon gold and silver metalwork, is discovered in the village of Hammerwich (2009 - the largest collection of Anglo-Saxon treasure discovered so far); the Inauguration Ceremony of the Shard in London [the tallest building in Europe so far] is performed by the Prime Minister of Qatar (2012); NASA Space Probe Juno begins its polar orbits of Jupiter (2016)
Birthdays Today include: al-Ghazali (1057); Sarah Siddons (1755); William Crotch (1775); George Barrow (1803); PT Barnum (1810); AE Douglass (1867); Joseph Holbrooke (1878); Wanda Landowski (1879); Jan Kubelik (1880); Louise Freeland Jenkins (1888); Jean Cocteau (1889); Giuseppe Caselli (1893); Gordon Jacob (1895); Paul Ben-Haim (1897); Ernst Mayr (1904); George Costakis (1913); Annie Fischer (1914); Livia Rev (1916); George Rochberg (1918); Janos Starker (1924); Paul-Gilbert Langevin (1933); Matthias Bamert (1942); Veronica Guerin (1958);
Final Days for: Stamford Raffles (1826); Wilhelm Backhaus & Walter Gropius (both 1969); Regine Crespin & George Melly (both 2007); Cy Twombly (2011); Pierre Henry (2017)
And the Radio 3 Schedules for the morning of Thursday, 5th July, 1979 were:
Overture: Walton/Howarth "Spitfire" P&F; Dvorak Romance for Vln & Orch; Chopin Rondo in c; Mozart's Musical Joke; Offenbach Orpheus in the Underworld Ovt; Delius 'cello Concerto; Haydn "Philosopher" Symph.
This Week's Composer: Mendelssohn (Songs Without Words Opp 30 & 53; various lieder).
Allegri S4tet: Haydn Op33#3; Bartok Fourth 4tet; Beethoven Op 127
Hilding Rosenberg: Symph #4
On this Date: Isaac Newton's Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica is first published by the Royal Society (1687 - the publication costs met by Edmund Halley, as the Society had already spent its annual budget for book publication on Frances Willoughby's De Historia Piscium - the Story of Fish); the Olive Branch Petition is created (1775 - an attempt, pricipally by colonial loyalists, to reach compromise and avoid conflict between the British and the American colonists - that worked, then); Thomas Cook organizes his first passenger Excursion trip - from Leicester to Loughborough (1841 - any puzzlement as to what was so dreadful about Leicester that it made its citizens wish to travel to Loughborough is solved when one realizes that this was a Temperance group trip; it's still very difficult to get a decent pint in Loughborough); Frederic Douglass delivers his "What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?" speech to the Rochester Ladies' Anti-Slavery Society (1852); Britain introduces the world's first road speed limit, requiring "self-propelled vehicles" to have a crew of 3, one of whom was to be a man [sic] with a red flag walking at least 60 yards ahead of the vehicle to forewarn pedestrians and other road users, and whom the driver had to obey if ordered to stop - and establishing a speed limit of 4mph on open roads, and 2mph in towns, with a fixed penalty of ten shillings [about £60 in today's values] for contravention (1865); Philadelphia's Liberty Bell makes its final trip from its native city to feature in the Panama-Pacific Exposition in San Francisco (1915); San Francisco police violently attack Longshoremen, who have been on strike for two months, with tear gas, batons, and firearms - 9 workers are killed, more than 1000 injured, and more than 500 arrested (1934 - a year later to the day, President FD Roosevelt signs the National Labor Relations Act, guaranteeing private sector employees the right to form and join Trades Unions); the first tins of Spam go on sale in the US (1937); the first Bikini is modelled by 19-year-old Micheline Bernardini [who had never eaten a morsel of Spam in her life] at the Piscine Molitor open-air swimming pool in Paris (1946 - Mlle Bernardini's "day" job is as a nude dancer, as designer Louis Reard cannot persuade any professional model to appear in such attire); Aneurin Bevan launches the National Health Service (1948); the Knesset passes the Law of Return, granting all Jews the right to emigrate to Israel (1950); Richard Baker reads the UK's first televised daily News bulletin (1954 - probably not mentioning that, in a small recording studio in Tennessee, an unknown young singer called Elvis Presley had on that very day recorded his first song, That's All Right, Mama); Algeria becomes Independent of France (1962); the 26th Amendment to the US Constitution lowers the voting age from 21 to 18 (1971); Zulfikar Ali Bhutto is deposed as Prime Minister of Pakistan in a military coup (1977); Björk's Debut album is released (1993); Dolly the Sheep is born (1996); the Staffordshire Hoard, a collection of over 3,500 items of Anglo-Saxon gold and silver metalwork, is discovered in the village of Hammerwich (2009 - the largest collection of Anglo-Saxon treasure discovered so far); the Inauguration Ceremony of the Shard in London [the tallest building in Europe so far] is performed by the Prime Minister of Qatar (2012); NASA Space Probe Juno begins its polar orbits of Jupiter (2016)
Birthdays Today include: al-Ghazali (1057); Sarah Siddons (1755); William Crotch (1775); George Barrow (1803); PT Barnum (1810); AE Douglass (1867); Joseph Holbrooke (1878); Wanda Landowski (1879); Jan Kubelik (1880); Louise Freeland Jenkins (1888); Jean Cocteau (1889); Giuseppe Caselli (1893); Gordon Jacob (1895); Paul Ben-Haim (1897); Ernst Mayr (1904); George Costakis (1913); Annie Fischer (1914); Livia Rev (1916); George Rochberg (1918); Janos Starker (1924); Paul-Gilbert Langevin (1933); Matthias Bamert (1942); Veronica Guerin (1958);
Final Days for: Stamford Raffles (1826); Wilhelm Backhaus & Walter Gropius (both 1969); Regine Crespin & George Melly (both 2007); Cy Twombly (2011); Pierre Henry (2017)
And the Radio 3 Schedules for the morning of Thursday, 5th July, 1979 were:
Overture: Walton/Howarth "Spitfire" P&F; Dvorak Romance for Vln & Orch; Chopin Rondo in c; Mozart's Musical Joke; Offenbach Orpheus in the Underworld Ovt; Delius 'cello Concerto; Haydn "Philosopher" Symph.
This Week's Composer: Mendelssohn (Songs Without Words Opp 30 & 53; various lieder).
Allegri S4tet: Haydn Op33#3; Bartok Fourth 4tet; Beethoven Op 127
Hilding Rosenberg: Symph #4
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