Viewing all items in Resource Category: Looking at your Community
Wider community events, and significant anniversaries of historical interest.
- Editor: We continue our column that looks at memorable dates in the month (this time, OCTOBER) down the years. Here is a range from which to pick and choose, as your space allows. Why not consider putting one date at the bottom of each one of your magazine pages? It was: 500 years ago,...All in the month of October
- Editor: Some discoveries change world history. By Tim Lenton. It was 500 years ago, on 21st October 1520, that Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan’s Spanish expedition to the East Indies discovered the Strait of Magellan at the southern tip of Chile. His ships, backed by King Charles I of Spain (soon to become Charles V...Discovering the vital route from Atlantic to Pacific
- Editor: Some people make the world a better place for hundreds of thousands of others. By Tim Lenton. The prison reformer and philanthropist Elizabeth Fry died 175 years ago, on 12th October 1845. She was widely admired during her lifetime and after, and was depicted on the British £5 note between 2001 and 2016....Remembering Elizabeth Fry, prison reformer
- Editor: A significant cultural milestone was passed 100 years ago this month. By Tim Lenton. A century ago, on 7th October 1920, Oxford University allowed women to become full members and study for full degrees for the first time, and the first 100 women were admitted. Women had been attending lectures, taking examinations and...When Oxford accepted women
- Editor: Tim Lenton looks back on a horrific and unnecessary accident. The Hatfield rail crash took place 20 years ago, on 17th October 2000. Four people were killed and more than 70 injured when a high-speed passenger train derailed because of a cracked rail. The crash was caused by metal fatigue and exposed major...Remembering the Hatfield rail crash
- Autumn is in full swing but there is at least one plant that is in full bloom. Not spectacular to look at, yet ivy is an important source of nectar for bees, moths, flies and wasps, and while they are not most people’s favourite insects, they all play a vital part in Nature’s jigsaw. Ivy...Ivy – never underestimate its goodness!
- The RSPCA has been overwhelmed this year by calls for help from people who are ill with Covid-19. The animal welfare charity was swamped with 442,344 calls, and responded to 106,676 incidents of animals in need just between 24th March and 5th August. That averaged out at 790 incidents a day. Such a volume of...RSPCA launches emergency appeal in wake of Covid
- Christmas should start with October’s half-term this year, rather than in November. Christmas lights could be switched on, and shoppers (hopefully) enticed back to the shops. So say many retailers, as they struggle to recover from the pandemic. An executive with the New West End Company in London explains: “If we can bring the start...Shops dreaming of an early Christmas this year
- All in the month of September Celebrating 400th anniversary of the voyage of the Mayflower Louis Pasteur – ‘father’ of microbiology Bring back hedgerows Gorse – cheerful and perfumed, but prickly! Happy Birthday, Glastonbury Festival Now even more plastic ** Editor: We continue our column that looks at memorable dates in the month (this time,...Looking at Community (all articles) for September 2020
- It was: 400 years ago, on 6th September 1620, that 102 English Puritans (now known as the Pilgrims) set sail aboard the Mayflower from Plymouth, for a new life in America. After a perilous journey they landed in what is now Provincetown Harbour, Cape Cod, Massachusetts on 11th November. They had intended landing in Virginia,...All in the month of September
- If we find it difficult to cross the Atlantic just now, it was even worse 400 years this month. On 6th September 1620, 102 determined Puritans climbed on board the Mayflower and set sail from Plymouth. They had 30 crew to steer them across 3000 miles of open, perilous ocean. Those Puritans, or ‘Pilgrim fathers’,...Celebrating 400th anniversary of the voyage of the Mayflower
- A tiny invisible thing that brings disease and death …. where have we heard that before?! But Louis Pasteur, who died 125 years ago this month, on 28th September 1895, was not interested in a virus from China, but in tiny living organisms that brought disease and death in other ways. Pasteur made some outstanding...Louis Pasteur – ‘father’ of microbiology