On this day, March 25

Thousands of people cross the Edmund Pettus Bridge in a re-enactment of the march led by civil rights leader Martin Luther King jr. Picture: AFP

Thousands of people cross the Edmund Pettus Bridge in a re-enactment of the march led by civil rights leader Martin Luther King jr. Picture: AFP

Published Mar 25, 2023

Share

Bloody violence breaks out in KZN; a school for blacks is the first learning facility in Natal; ‘we failed to protect Rwanda’, says US president; how Richard the Lionheart dies; and clueless pilots fly passengers the wrong way, but only notice when they land

1199 England’s King Richard I (the legendary Richard the Lionheart) is hit in the shoulder by a crossbow bolt in France. The wound becomes gangrenous and the king dies, aged 41. Legend has it that the bolt was fired by a boy seeking revenge for his family’s death.

1609 The Dutch East India Company orders Henry Hudson to try again to find a north-western sea route to India.

1658 Slavery begins in the Cape with the arrival of the Amersfoort in Table Bay. Onboard are 170 slaves taken from a Portuguese ship.

1807 The Abolition of the Slave Trade Act is passed by the British Parliament in London, England. It outlaws the slave trade within the British Empire. Any British captain who was caught transporting slaves was fined £100 for every slave on board. However, many captains simply tossed their human cargo overboard to avoid fines.

1835 Durban pioneer Captain Allen Gardiner establishes the first educational institution in Natal when a school for Black children opens its doors on the Berea, at the site of the original St Thomas’s Church, a prefabricated wood and iron structure sent out from England.

1919 US President Woodrow Wilson’s dream of a League of Nations, the forerunner of the United Nations, becomes a reality.

1965 Martin Luther King jnr and activists complete their 4-day, 80km march from Selma to the capital in Montgomery, Alabama.

1990 The first of more than 100 persons to die during the “Seven-Day War”, is murdered outside Pietermaritzburg. About 30 000 people flee and 3 000 houses are burned.

1998 US President Bill Clinton acknowledges that the US and the world failed to protect Rwandans from the 1994 campaign of genocide that killed half a million.

2017 The largest banana split ever, 8.04km long, is made in Innisfail, Australia.

2018 Australian cricket captain Steve Smith gets a one-match ban after admitting his team tampered with the ball in the third Test against South Africa.

2019 Nasa cancels a planned historic all-female spacewalk because it doesn’t have enough spacesuits to fit women.

2019 A British Airways flight from London mistakenly flies to Edinburgh, Scotland, instead of to Düsseldorf, Germany when the wrong flight plan is submitted. (Didn’t they notice they were going the wrong way, when they crossed the English Channel?)