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On This Day In History


NurembergVillan

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I just about remember Ceausescu. The video of his demise is readily available online. Naturally its poor quality as 80's communist Romania wasn't at the bleeding edge of video technology. 

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2 minutes ago, Xela said:

I just about remember Ceausescu. The video of his demise is readily available online. Naturally its poor quality as 80's communist Romania wasn't at the bleeding edge of video technology. 

Hundreds of soldiers volunteered to be among the one's who pulled the trigger

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8 hours ago, chrisp65 said:

1985

Bradford City Football Club Fire.

56 dead.

 

The speed at which it spread, still shocks me.

Awful :(

 

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4th February 1912

Having only limited success with dummy drops on his own original design for a sort of parachute wing suit, tailor, inventor and wishful thinker Franz Reichelt decides to test it properly.

Franz receives permission to carry out a dummy drop from the first floor of the Eiffel Tower. However, Franz turns up wearing his design and states he’s doing the jump himself. His friends try to talk him out of it, but Franz is having none of it.

Franz makes his way to his jumping off point, with the belief that his invention will bring him safely down the 187 foot drop. 

It doesn’t end well. 

For those interested, a British Pathe video of the test can be found easily on YouTube, and while it’s not explicit (impact is seen from a sufficient distance away), I won’t link it just in case. However here’s a picture of Franz and his suit just before making the jump.

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On 05/02/2023 at 20:41, MakemineVanilla said:

So when did the offence of "obstruction" disappear from the game?

Always so exciting when Tony Daley got the ball on the wing. Proper rampaging winger. 

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3rd May 1808

Despite being a 19th century Parisienne dancer, Mademoiselle Tirevit somehow found herself in a love tryst with both a Monsieur Granpree and a Monsieur Le Pique. 

To settle the matter, a duel between the two men was organised. Nothing particularly unusual there, it was the style at the time. However these two, being as reported at the time, of “elevated minds” agreed to battle it out by firing blunderbusses at each other while each flying in a hot air balloon over Paris.

Both were accompanied in their balloons by their seconds, reaching a height of around half a mile before each firing a shot at the other’s balloon estimated to be about 80 yards away from each other.

Le Pique fired first and missed. Granpree was more accurate, hitting his opponent’s balloon which plummeted to the ground killing both Le Pique and his second (no doubt questioning his life choices as they plummeted), reportedly being crashing on a rooftop.

Mademoiselle Tirevit’s thoughts on the outcome aren’t recorded. Nor the thoughts of the poor sod who lived in the house that Le Pique and his friend crashed into.

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