Viewing all items in Resource Category: Looking at your Community
Wider community events, and significant anniversaries of historical interest.
- Google, the internet search company, was founded 20 years ago this month, on 4th September 1998, by Larry Page and Sergey Brin, both students at Stanford University in California. The company was initially based in a friend’s garage. The friend – Susan Wojcicki – is now CEO of YouTube. The company developed from an idea for...What did we do before Google?
- Eighty years ago this month, on 30th September 1938, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain returned to England in triumph after signing the Munich Agreement with Hitler, declaring there would be “peace for our time”. This is often misquoted as “peace in our time” (as in the Book of Common Prayer) and in that form was...Peace for our time?
- When did you last see a bobby on the beat? A recent national survey found that nearly half of us have not seen a uniformed police officer in our area in the past year. The finding comes as police chiefs say they are struggling with cuts in funding. The inspectorate has previously raised concerns over...Our local policemen
- Girl Guides are to learn how to look after money, after the introduction of a new ‘saver’ badge. Girlguiding UK has created the badge with the aim of improving financial literacy among teenagers. The girls, aged 10 to 14, must prove that they can manage cash efficiently, budget effectively and put aside money for the...Girl Guides to learn about money
- All in the month of August Carnage in Omagh Sir Terry Wogan – a national treasure The spawning of al-Qaeda – from militant Sunni Islamists Diary of a Momentous Year August 1918 – the Battle of Amiens</strong THE WAY I SEE IT – Rating the ‘experience’ Beware foreign plants Millennials see a bleak future August wars...Looking at your Community (all articles)
- It was: 100 years ago, from 8th August to 11th November that the Hundred Days Offensive in France and Belgium, took place. Allied Victory leading to the end of the 1st World War and the collapse of the German empire. 90 years ago, on 6th August 1928 that Andy Warhol, iconic American Pop artist, photographer...All in the month of August
- It was a busy Saturday afternoon in August, in the market town of Omagh, Northern Ireland. A maroon Vauxhall Cavalier with false number plates was parked outside the outfitters’ shop, S.D. Kells. Just after a quarter past two it blew up, killing 29 people including a woman pregnant with twins, and injured 220 others. It...Carnage in Omagh
- Sir Terry Wogan, the Irish radio and TV presenter, was born 80 years ago, on 3rd August 1938. He was the epitome of a much-loved broadcaster – unthreatening, amiable and with a tendency to laugh at himself. Born in Limerick, Ireland’s third largest town, Terry showed no initial signs of immortality. His father was a grocer,...Sir Terry Wogan – a national treasure
- The terrorist organisation al-Qaeda was founded by Osama bin Laden 30 years ago, on 11th August 1988, though there is still dispute about the precise nature and purpose – and indeed spelling – of it. Translatable into English as “The Base”, al-Qaeda was formed initially to fight the influx of the Soviet Union into Afghanistan, but...The spawning of al-Qaeda – from militant Sunni Islamists
- Many historians of the First World War consider that two battles in the summer of 1918 were the final turning points in the eventual outcome of the war and of the settlement which followed it. The second Battle of Marne was in July, and the even more significant Battle of Amiens was in August, exactly...Diary of a Momentous Year August 1918 – the Battle of Amiens
- ‘How did we do?’ (on a scale of one to ten, where ‘ten’ is excellent and ‘one’ is poor?’) ‘Would you recommend us to your friends?’ You can hardly buy anything now, or make use of a service, without an email popping up asking such questions. Some go further into detail about delivery, courtesy or...THE WAY I SEE IT – Rating the ‘experience’
- Gardeners have been told by government ministers not to bring back plants from holiday, in order to stop them inadvertently introducing an invasive species into the UK. Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs officials are becoming increasingly concerned about water-borne threats such as the Dikerogammarus villosus, or killer shrimp; Didemnum vexillum, the carpet sea...Beware foreign plants