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World War II: 28 May

1940 - Norway - Allied forces under French command occupy Narvik.

1942 - Norway - 258 Jews are executed by the SS to avenge an alleged plot to blow up a Nazi anti-Bolshevist exhibition.

1943 - London - The award of the Victoria Cross to Wing Commander Guy Gibson who led the raids on the Rhur dams is announced.

1944 - Germany - The USAAF attacks oil targets at Heide, Magdeberg, Rottensee, Leuna, and Troglitz.

1945 London - The Royal Navy announces the abolition of convoys in the Atlantic, Indian, and Arctic oceans.


Born On This Day: 28 May

1886 - Sam Trafficante Sr - The Sicilian born Tampa Mafia boss.

1908 - Ian Fleming - The English Author/Journalist, creator of the James Bond novels.

1931 - Carroll Baker - The American sex symbol actress of the 50's & 60's whose films include "Babydoll" and "Giant"

1944 - Rudi Guliani - The American politician & former mayor of New York who gained recognition for his leadership at the time of the September 11th attacks in 2001.

1985 - Cary Mulligan - The English Actress who played Sally Sparrow in Doctor Who and whose films include "Drive" & "The Great Gatsby."
World War II: 29 May

1940 - Europe: The Germans take Ostend and Ypres in Belgium and Lille in France.

1941 - Crete: The British destroyers Hereward and Imperial are sunk.

1942 - France: All Jews are ordered to wear the yellow Star of David.

1942 - Australia: The Commonwealth Boomerang, Australia's first home-designed built aircraft of the war has it's first flight.

1943 - China: Chinese troops halt the Japanese advance on Chunking and recapture Yuyangkwan, east of Ichang.

1944 - Pacific: The first tank battle of the Pacific war is fought on Biak Island.

1945 - Japan: US Superfortress bombers drop incenderies on Yokohama, burning 85% of the port area.

1945 - Norway: The Nobel-Prize winning author Knut Hamsun is arrested for allegedly collaborating with the Nazis.



Born On This Day: 29 May

1897 - Erich Wolfgang Korngold - The Austrian composer, whose film scores include, "The Adventures Of Robin Hood & "The Sea Hawk."

1917 - John Fitzgerald Kennedy - The Ill fated 35th President of the United States.

1949 - Francis Rossi - Lead singer/songwriter with Status Quo.

1953 - Danny Elfman - American composer who scored the 1989 Batman movie.

1960 - Carol Kirkwood - The Scottish Journalist & BBC weather presenter.
1953: Hillary and Tenzing conquer Everest
The New Zealander Edmund Hillary, and the Nepalese Sherpa Tenzing Norgay, have become the first to reach the summit of Mount Everest on the Nepal-Tibet border.
They reached the top of the world at 1130 local time after a gruelling climb up the southern face.


A symmetrical, beautiful snow cone summit

Edmund Hillary

The two men hugged each other with relief and joy but only stayed on the summit for 15 minutes because they were low on oxygen.

Mr Hillary took several photographs of the scenery and of Sherpa Tenzing waving flags representing Britain, Nepal, the United Nations and India.

Sherpa Tenzing buried some sweets and biscuits in the snow as a Buddhist offering to the gods.

They looked for signs of George Mallory and Andrew "Sandy" Irvine who had disappeared in 1924 in a similar attempt to conquer Everest, but found nothing.

Then they began the slow and tortuous descent to rejoin their team leader Colonel John Hunt further down the mountain at Camp VI.

When he saw the two men looking so exhausted Col Hunt assumed they had failed to reach the summit and started planning another attempt.

But then the two climbers pointed to the mountain and signalled they had reached the top, and there were celebrations all round.

Careful planning

Col Hunt attributed the successful climb to advice from other mountaineers who had attempted the feat over the years, careful planning, excellent open-circuit oxygen equipment and good weather.

Mr Hillary described the peak, which is 29,028 feet (8,847 m) above sea level, as "a symmetrical, beautiful snow cone summit".

He was one of the members of the expedition led by Eric Shipton in 1951 that discovered the southern route to the top of the mountain.

A year later, Tenzing reached the record height of 28,215 feet (8,599 m) during a Swiss expedition led by Raymond Lambert.

Mount Everest was named after Sir George Everest, the surveyor-general of India who was the first to produce detailed maps of the Indian subcontintent including the Himalayas.



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The two men only stayed on the summit for 15 minutes


Interview with Sir Edmund Hillary







In Context
News of the conquest of Mount Everest did not reach the outside world until 2 June, the eve of the Queen's coronation.
Colonel Hunt and Edmund Hillary were knighted on their return.

Sir Edmund took part in several expeditions after that including a trip across Antarctica to the South Pole in 1958. He set up a medical and educational trust for the Sherpa people in 1961 and was New Zealand High Commissioner to India in Delhi from 1984 to 1989.

He died aged 88 in January 2008.

Tenzing Norgay was awarded the George Medal for his achievement and later became director of the Himalayan Mountaineering Institute, Darjeeling. He died in 1986.

The body of George Mallory who had attempted the ascent in 1924 was found on Mount Everest in 1999.

By the 50th anniversary of the ascent in May 2003 over 1,300 people had reached the summit of the roof of the world.


Stories From 29 May
1968: Manchester Utd win European Cup
1985: Fans die in Heysel rioting
1953: Hillary and Tenzing conquer Everest
1972: Japanese kill 26 at Tel Aviv airport
1982: Pope makes historic visit to Canterbury
1984: Miners and police clash at Orgreave

http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/witne...932894.stm
70 AD - As part of the Siege of Jerusalem, Titus and his legions breach the Second Wall. The Jewish defenders then retreat to the First Wall. The Romans then build a circumvallation (fortification) to surround the city and cut down all trees within fifteen kilometres.

1431 - Joan of Arc was executed in Rouen, France after being convicted of heresy in a politically motivated trial.

1631 - Publication of La Gazette, the first French newspaper.

1842 - John Francis' assassination attempt on Queen Victoria is foiled at Constitution Hill, London.

1854 - The Kansas-Nebraska Act establishes the territories of Nebraska and Kansas in the US.

1966 - Launch of the Surveyor 1 spacecraft.

1971 - Launch of Mariner 9 in the Mariner Space Program.

1974 - The Airbus A300 passenger aircraft first enters service.
May 31

1902 - Pretoria: After nearly three years the Boar War that began with a string of British defeats ended. The Boer leaders arrived in Pretoria to meet Lord Milner, the high commissioner, and Lord Kitchener, the Commander-in-Chief to sign terms of surrender.

1905 - Paris: An attempted assassination is made on the French President Emile Loubet and King Alfonso of Spain.

1923 - USSR: Petrograd Opera House is badly damaged by a fire.

1926 - Washington: President Calvin Coolidge urges Europe to cut its arms spending in order to bring down taxes and avoid another world war.

1933 - Britain: Lord Derby's Hyperion wins the Derby at Epsom.

1938 - Hungary: The mummified hand of St Stephen, Hungary's patron, leaves Budapest; it has not been moved since 1038.

1961 - Pretoria: South Africa is declared a republic.

1965 - US: Britain's Jim Clark is the first non-American to win the Indianapolis 500.

1973 - Washington: The Senate votes to cut off funds for the bombing of Cambodia.

1986 - Warsaw: Zbigniew Bujak, the fugitive underground leader of Solidarity, is arrested.

1988 - Britain: The BBC's controversial Falklands film "Tumbledown" is broadcast despite Ministry of Defence concerns.

1992 - London: The unveiling by the Queen Mother of a statue of Marshal of the RAF Sir Arthur "Bomber" Harris is marred by demonstrators.

1994 - Rwanda: The death toll of the fighting between Tutsis and Hutus reaches 500,000.

2008 - New York: Jamaican Usain Bolt sets a new world record for the 100 metres in the Reebok Grand Prix at Icahn Stadium.
1 June

1903 - USA: A tornado kills 100 people and destroys the Georgian town of Gainsville.

1911 - Britain: The first electric trolley buses go into service in Leeds and Bradford.

1924 - Vienna: The Austrian Chancellor, Ignaz Seipel is wounded in an assassination attempt by a Socialist.

1931 - Rome: Mussolini bans Catholic Youth organisations.

1938 - Britain: "Bois Roussel" owned by Peter Beatty, ridden by Charlie Elliot, and trained by Fred Darling, wins the Epsom derby by four lengths.

1946 - London: Milkman go on strike for a minimum weekly wage of £5/4/6d

1953 - Britain: Gordon Richards becomes the first jockey to be knighted.

1957 - Britain: ERNIE picks the first premium bond prize winners.

1965 - New York: Governor Nelson Rockefeller abolishes the death sentence in the state.

1967 - Tel Aviv: Moshe Dayan is appointed Israeli defence minister.

1976 - Oslo: Britain and Iceland sign an agreement to end the third cod war.

1983 - Britain: The first prosecution of a "video nasty" is made under the Obscene Publications Act.

1992 - Moscow: President de Klerk of South Africa marks the end of 35 years of severed relations by visiting Russia.

1995 - Vienna: The Austrian parliament votes for a £32million fund for victims of the Nazis.

2011 - Florida: The Space Shuttle "Endeavour" completes it's final mission when landing at Kennedy Space Center.
2 June

1910 - East Indies: British Explorers discover Pygmies in the mountains of Dutch New Guinea.

1925 - Ottawa: The Canadian Government claims all land between Alaska and Greenland up to the North Pole.

1935 - Paris: Britain's Fred Perry beats German Gottfried von Cramm in the French international tennis championship.

1955 - India: A British team under Charles Evans conquer the highest unclimbed peak, Kanchenjunga (28,146ft)

1962 - Britain: Britain's first legal casino, "The Metropole" opens in Brighton.

1967 - Tel Aviv: Israel agrees to sign an Anglo-US declaration asserting the right of free passage in the Gulf of Aqaba.

1979 - Warsaw: Pope John Paul II is welcomed in his native land on the first visit by a Pope to a Communist country.

1984 - London: President Botha arrives amid protests on the first visit by a South African leader for 23 years.

1994 - Mull of Kintyre: A helicopter crash kills 25 of Britain's leading counter-terrorist experts.

1997 - Denver, Colorado: Timothy McVeigh is found guilty of the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma.

2005 - Australia: Glenrowan, Victoria, the place of bushranger Ned Kelly's last stand is made a national heritage site.

2010 - London: The actor Patrick Stewart is knighted by the Queen at Buckingham Palace.
3 June

1918 - Paris: The UK, France and Italy agree to the declaration of an independent Polish state.

1922 - USA: Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen sets out from Seattle on an expedition to the North Pole.

1929 - New York: Actor Douglas Fairbanks Junior marries actress Joan Crawford.

1935 - New York: The French Liner Normandie arrives after a record Atlantic crossing of four days and three hours.

1937 - Spain: Rebel commander General Emilio Mola dies in a plane crash.

1942 - London: The government announces it will take over Britain's coal mines.

1949 - South Africa: The country's richest gold find yet is reported at Farm Erfdeel, Orange Free State.

1952 - Korea: US troops storm rebellious Communist POWs in camps on Koje Island, killing thirty.

1955 - New York: "The Seven Year Itch" starring Marilyn Monroe has it's Premiere.

1964 - South Korea: Martial law is declared in Seoul after riots by 20,000 people.

1968 - New York: Artist Andy Warhol is shot and seriously hurt by Valeria Solanis, an actress in one of his films.

1973 - Jerusalem: Israel frees 56 Arab prisoners in exchange for three captured pilots.

1975 - New York: Brazilian footballer Pele signs a $7million three-year contract with New York Cosmos.

1981 - Britain: The Aga Khan's "Shergar" ridden by Walter Swinburn wins the Epsom Derby by ten lengths.

1990 - Washington: President Bush and Russia's Mikael Gorbachev agree on new arms cuts.

2011 - Los Angeles: The Actor James Arness famous for his role as Marshall Matt Dillon in the TV Western series Gunsmoke, and as the Creature in the sci-fi movie "The Thing from Another World" dies at his home in Brentwood.
1940: Dunkirk rescue is over - Churchill defiant
The Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, has described the "miracle of deliverance" from Dunkirk and warned of an impending invasion.
His moving speech to Parliament came on the day the last allied soldier arrived home from France at the end of a 10-day operation to bring back hundreds of thousands of retreating allied troops trapped by the German Army.

Many French troops remained to hold the perimeter and were captured.

Major-General Harold Alexander inspected the shores of Dunkirk from a motorboat this morning to make sure no-one was left behind before boarding the last ship back to Britain.

The beach and sea were in chaos. There were bodies floating in the water and we were under constant attack from machine-gun fire, bombing, explosions sending shrapnel in every direction.


There were bodies floating in the water and we were under constant attack from machine-gun fire, bombing, explosions sending shrapnel in every direction.

People's War memories »

Battle-weary and hungry soldiers from the retreating British Expeditionary Force (BEF) as well as French and Belgian troops had spent many days waiting to board ships from the one remaining pier, the east mole.

Many thousands were taken straight off the beaches, struggling in shallow waters to board small vessels that transferred them to the waiting ships.

When those who survived the evacuation arrived exhausted in England they were welcomed as returning heroes and offered plenty of tea and sandwiches as they boarded special trains.

Commander-in-chief of the BEF, Lord Gort, arrived back in England on 1 June and was also feted as a hero.

When his force was almost swallowed up by the Germans - after the French were driven south from Sedan and the Belgians surrendered - he took the vital decision to withdraw to Dunkirk where, according to the Times newspaper, four-fifths of his men were rescued.

This afternoon Mr Churchill admitted to the House that when Operation Dynamo was launched on 26 May to rescue allied forces cornered by the advancing Germany Army, he expected about 20,000 or 30,000 would be saved.

But thanks to the valour of the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force, no less than 338,000 British and French troops were rescued and brought back across the Channel to fight another day.

Mr Churchill tempered his admiration for the success of Operation Dynamo with these words: "Wars are not won by evacuations".

He said there was no doubt in his mind that the last few weeks had been a "colossal military disaster".

The BEF had to leave behind all its heavy armour and equipment.

The French army was weakened, the Belgian army had surrendered, Channel ports, valuable mines and factories in France and Belgium had been taken over by the enemy.

He said the nation should brace itself for another blow. "We are told that Herr Hitler has a plan for invading the British Isles," he said.

Returning troops were vital if Britain were to resist such an invasion.

He ended his speech with a defiant message to Hitler's armies.

"We shall defend our island whatever the cost may be. We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills. We shall never surrender."

Britain would "ride out the tyranny of war, if necessary for years, if necessary alone."

Mr Churchill paid special tribute to the Royal Air Force that had provided what protection it could for the ships and stranded soldiers .

The Royal Navy sent 220 light war ships and 650 other vessels under a hail of bombs and artillery fire.



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Some 338,000 stranded troops were rescued from Dunkirk


"We shall fight on the beaches.."







In Context
The evacuation of Dunkirk, codenamed Operation Dynamo, took place between 26 May and 4 June 1940.
A flotilla of 900 naval and civilian craft was sent across the Channel under RAF protection and managed to rescue 338,226 people.

During the evacuation, the Luftwaffe attacked whenever the weather allowed, reducing the town of Dunkirk to rubble and destroying 235 vessels and 106 aircraft. At least 5,000 soldiers lost their lives.

A further 220,000 Allied troops were rescued by British ships from other French ports - Cherbourg, Saint-Malo, Brest, and Saint-Nazaire - bringing the total of Allied troops evacuated to 558,000.

Although the Germans took more than a million Allied prisoners in three weeks at a cost of 60,000 casualties, the evacuation was a major boost to British morale and enabled the Allies to fight another day.

German forces continued their invasion across France until an armistice was signed on 22 June.

Stories of amateur sailors rushing heroically to Dunkirk in their own small boats is largely a myth.

There were a handful of fishing boats that went over to rescue the troops but the operation itself was carefully co-ordinated.

Hundreds of small vessels were co-opted after an order was issued on BBC Radio to "all owners of self-propelled pleasure craft between 30' and l00' in length to send all particulars to the Admiralty".

Most were crewed by naval reservists and were used to ferry men from the beaches to the destroyers. The majority of troops were taken off by Royal Navy destroyers.


Stories From 4 Jun
1940: Dunkirk rescue is over - Churchill defiant
1989: Massacre in Tiananmen Square
1977: Greece releases UK plane-spotters
1991: UK army spending to be cut
1968: Dover begins bird purge


http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/worldwars/w...udio.shtml
June 4

1914 - Britain: Railway and mine workers join builders on strike, Two million are now out on strike action.

1916 - Eastern Front: The Russian offensive against Austro-German forces began under General Alexis Brusilov.

1919 - Britain: Lord Glanely's "Grand Parade" wins the "Victory Derby" run back at Epsom for the first time since 1914.

1927 - Dutch East Indies: Ahmed Sukarno founds the Indonesian Nationalist Party.

1940 - Berlin: The Germans admit they lost over 10,000 men in the invasion of the Low Countries.

1943 - Buenos Aries - A military coup ousts President Ramon Castillo.

1945 - Germany: The first German troops are demobbed and sent to work on the land to aid food production.

1952 - USA: Eisenhower makes the opening speech of his presidential campaign, attacking one-party states.

1953 - USA: The greatest atomic explosion, twice the power of the Hiroshima bomb is detonated in Nevada.

1961 - Britain: Cigarettes go up a half-penny to around 1/9d for a pack of ten.

1963 - USA: Pan Am places an order to buy Concorde.

1967 - Holland: Jim Clark wins the Dutch Grand Prix in a new Lotus-Ford.

1971 - India: A Cholera epidemic in West Bengal is reported to be out of control.

1977 - Britain: Damage estimated at £15,000 is caused when fans dig up the Wembley pitch after Scotland beat England 2-1

1988 - France: Steffi Graf wins the women's French open title beating Natalia Zvereva.

1989 - USSR: Up to 800 people are feared dead when a gas blast causes the USSR's worst rail disaster 750 miles from Moscow.

1991 - Albania: A general strike brings down the hardline Communist government after 22 days.

1996 - French Guiana: The Ariane 5 rocket is blown up on its maiden launch, after it veered off course shortly after lift off.

2009 - Hong Kong: Around 150,000 people assemble to commemorate the 2oth anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre.

2011 - France: Li Na of the Peoples Republic of China, becomes the first Asian tennis player to win a major title by winning the French Open title.
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