1694: The Bank of England was founded with government backing.
1866: The Great Eastern arrived at Heart's Content in Newfoundland, having successfully laid the transatlantic telegraph cable.
1890: Artist Vincent Van Gogh went to the spot where he had painted Cornfield With Flight Of Birds and shot himself. He died two days later, aged 37.
1921: The first insulin was isolated by Canadians Sir Frederick Banting and his assistant Charles Best, providing an effective treatment for diabetes.
1949: The de Havilland Comet, the world's first jet airliner, made its maiden flight.
1953: The Korean Armistice was signed at Panmunjom.
1964: Sir Winston Churchill made his last appearance in the House of Commons.
1980: The deposed Shah of Iran died of cancer in Cairo.
1988: Mercury Communications opened its first non-British Telecom payphones at Waterloo Station.
1989: The Common Cold Research Centre in Salisbury closed after giving colds to 30,000 people over 43 years.
ON THIS DAY LAST YEAR: A couple were convicted of the manslaughter through gross negligence of two children who were allowed to play on a railway line during a family picnic and were killed by a train.
BIRTHDAYS: Jack Higgins, novelist, 73; Baroness (Shirley) Williams, politician, 72; Bobbie Gentry, singer, 58; Allan Border, former cricketer, 47; Christopher Dean, skater, 44; Jo Durie, tennis player, 42; Michael Ball, singer, 40; Tracy Shaw, actress, 29.
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