On this day in history….20th June 1906

On this day in history : 20th June 1906 – Dame Catherine Cookson, one of Britain’s most widely read novelists, is born in Tyne Dock, South Shields….

 

Registered as Catherine Ann Davies but known as Kate as a child, Catherine was born at 5, Leam Lane in Tyne Dock, East Jarrod – close to the mouth of the River Tyne…. She was the illegitimate daughter of Kate Fawcett, an alcoholic barmaid who had fallen on hard times…. Catherine grew up thinking that her mother was her sister and she was brought up by her grandparents, Rose and John McMullen; she was 7-years-old before she found out that her ‘sister’ was in fact her mother….

Catherine left school around the age of 14 and went into service as a maid for a while, before going to work as a laundry checker at the Harton Workhouse…. In 1929 she moved to the South Coast to run the laundry at Hastings Workhouse….

She worked hard, saved every penny she could and in 1933 managed to get a £1,000 mortgage….with which she bought a large 14 bedroom Victorian house – ‘The Hurst’…. She turned this into a lodging house/old-peoples’ home/nursing home….

In June 1940 Catherine married Tom Cookson, a teacher at Hastings Grammar School…. They could not have been more like ‘chalk and cheese’…. Whereas Catherine was strong-willed and of a dominant nature, Tom was shy and softly-spoken…. Catherine came from a working-class, poverty-stricken background…. Tom, the son of a verger, was an Oxford graduate…. Catherine was 34 when they married, senior to Tom by 6 years….

Their first child, a boy, was born three months premature and was still-born; during the Second World War years Catherine suffered a further three miscarriages…. It was also discovered she had telangiectasia – a rare vascular disease which causes bleeding…. She had a breakdown which was to take the best part of 15 years to recover from….

 

As part of the therapy for her depression Catherine took up writing…. She had been an avid reader as a child and had written her first short story ‘The Wild Irish Girl’ at the age of 11…. She had sent it to the local newspaper – but it had been returned unpublished….

She joined the Hastings Writers’ Group and started her first novel ‘Kate Hannigan’ in 1946 and it was published in 1950…. But her writing career really took off in the late 1960s; her first major success ‘Our Kate’, published in 1969, took her 12 years to write….

 

Catherine Cookson wrote 103 books, often two a year, selling over 123 million copies – and her work has been translated into nearly 20 languages…. She was also published under the pseudonyms of Catherine Marchant and Katie McMullen…. For 17 years she was the most borrowed author from British libraries…. Many of her books have been adapted for film, radio, stage and particularly TV…. Between 1990 and 2001 some 18 of her books had been adapted for the small screen….

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Most of her novels were set in a run-down North East, reflecting the poverty of her early life; Tyneside was then one of the poorest parts of the Country…. But in later life the North East was where she and Tom were to return…. After living in several locations they finally settled in 1989 in the Jesmond area of Newcastle-upon-Tyne…. Catherine’s health had deteriorated considerably and she spent the last few years of her life bedridden….her final novels were written whilst she was in her sickbed….

Catherine died at home 16 days before her 92nd birthday, on the 11th of June 1998…. She had vascular disease, had suffered five heart attacks and was almost blind…. Her husband died just 17 days later…. After their deaths the couple’s £20m fortune was donated to charities…. Catherine had done much for charity in her lifetime; in 1985 she had given £800,000 to the University of Newcastle….who in gratitude set up a lectureship in haematology….

Catherine was awarded an OBE in 1985 and became a Dame of the British Empire in 1993…. In 1997 she was appointed Honorary Fellow of St. Hilda’s College, Oxford….

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On this day in history….19th June 1997

On this day in history : 19th June 1997 – Fast-food chain McDonald’s wins a two-year libel case in London against two environmental campaigners; it is known as the ‘McLibel Case’….img_3398

McDonald’s brought the case against Helen Steel and David Morris, who became known as the ‘McLibel Two’….

A leaflet had been published claiming that the Company had caused environmental damage, with allegations it was responsible for the destruction of rainforests and causing starvation in the Third World…. It was alleged McDonald’s had treated animals cruelly, exploited workers and served unhealthy food….

Whilst a win for McDonald’s it was in reality a partial victory; Judge Mr. Justice Bell decided that the fast-food chain had treated animals with cruelty and its low paid workers had kept wages down across the catering trade…. He also ruled that it was true that McDonald’s targeted its advertising at children who pressurised their parents into taking them to the restaurants….

Unemployed activists Steel and Morris were ordered to pay £60K in damages…. They had represented themselves in the 314 day trial – one of the longest, if not the longest trial in British legal history…. The pair complained that they had not been able to claim legal aid, as it was not available for libel cases….

In March 1999 the damages were reduced from £60K to £40K by the Court of Appeal…. McDonald’s claimed it had sued in order to protect its reputation….the lawsuit cost it £10M….img_3397

On this day in history….18th June 1583

On this day in history : 18th June 1583 – The first recorded life insurance policy is taken out in London – but when a claim is made, just under a year later, it is disputed….img_3394

Richard Martin, an Alderman, took out the policy on William Gybbons, a salter of meat and fish – it is not known what the relationship between the two was…. The term of the policy was for 12 months and cost Martin £383…. This was a considerable amount of money in the 1500s….the average daily wage was just 10 pennies a day – bearing in mind at the time there were 12 pennies to a shilling and 20 shillings to a £1…. At a premium of 8% if Gybbons were to die Martin could expect to receive around £4,800….

And indeed he did die – on the 29th of May 1584 – although it is unclear what from…. Equally it is unknown who the underwriters of the policy were – but they appear to have been a shady lot…. To try and wriggle out of paying up they argued that the year was not based on calendar months, as would be expected – but rather on lunar months….i.e. a month being a period of 28 days…. Therefore, as far as they were concerned the policy had expired….

Not surprisingly Martin disputed this and took his case to the courts…. Richard Chandler, whom Queen Elizabeth I had appointed to oversee insurers, agreed with Martin…. But it took until 1587 for the case to be resolved when the Admiralty Court (nobody knows how they got involved) finally settled the argument in Martin’s favour….

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On this day in history….17th June 1823

On this day in history : 17th June 1823 – Charles Macintosh patents the fabric used to make waterproof raincoats – which he created by experimenting with the by-products of Glasgow’s new gas industry….

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Charles Macintosh – (John Graham Gilbert) – Public domain

Charles was born in Glasgow on the 29th of December 1766 to parents George Macintosh and Mary Moore…. His father owned a factory which made dye from lichen…. Charles was to study chemistry at Edinburgh University – however his first employment was that of a clerk…. But he still liked to experiment with science in his spare time, especially chemistry – and before reaching 20 he had given up his regular employment to concentrate on the manufacture of chemicals….

By the age of 23 Charles had established Scotland’s first alum works, using waste shale as a raw material, from the oil shale mines…. He also went into partnership with Charles Tennant and together they produced bleaching powder at a chemical works near to Glasgow….

Charles went on to develop many other processes using the by-products of Glasgow’s newly established gas industry…. One successful example being his use of ammonia to produce a wide range of coloured dyes…. But what we really remember him for is the ‘Mackintosh’ coat….

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It was his experiments with naphtha, which is produced by distilling tar, that led to his invention of a waterproof fabric…. He discovered it is possible to dissolve India rubber in naphtha – and by cementing two pieces of cloth together with natural rubber a material was produced resistant to water but still flexible enough to be suitable for clothing…. With its ability to protect against wind and rain it was an ideal fabric with which to make coats….

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Image via Pinterest

Macintosh patented the process in 1823…. Early Mackintoshes had a tendency to melt in hot weather and were a tad on the smelly side – but over time the design improved…. At some point a ‘k’ was added to the name, giving us the ‘Mackintosh’ – which is frequently known as the ‘Mac’….

Bonded cotton is still used but is now produced in Japan – and is then shipped to the Mackintosh factory in Cumbernauld, Scotland…. Techniques used today are little changed since the Mac’s debut nearly 200 years ago…. Classic British style….

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A gentleman’s Mackintosh from an 1893 catalogue – Public domain

On this day in history….16th June 1883

On this day in history : 16th June 1883 – One hundred and eighty-three children are killed in the Victoria Hall stampede in Sunderland, after rushing to claim a prize at the end of a variety show….

The children’s variety show had been put on by the travelling entertainers Mr and Mrs Fay…. At the end of the performance it was announced that children with certain ticket numbers would receive a prize on exit…. At the same time gifts were distributed from the stage to the children in the stalls…. Some 1,100 children in the upper gallery, not wanting to miss out, stampeded for the stairway leading downstairs….

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Public domain

However, the door at the bottom of the stairs opened inwards….and had been bolted in such a way as to only open far enough to let one child at a time through….possibly to ensure orderly checking of tickets…. Those children at the front became trapped – and were crushed to death by the weight of the crowd behind them….

Once the adults realised what was happening they hurried to try and open the door – but were unable to…. Caretaker Frederick Graham rushed up another staircase and managed to lead some 600 children to safety….whilst the adults downstairs continued to pull the ones at the front out one-by-one…. Eventually a man tore the door from its hinges….

This remains the worst disaster of its kind in British history; all of the children were aged between 3 and 14 years old…. Queen Victoria sent a message of condolence to each family who had lost a child…. Donations were sent from all over the Country and were used to pay for the funerals and to erect a memorial in Mowbray Park – a statue of a grieving mother holding her dead child….

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Victoria Hall Disaster Memorial in Mowbray Park – Photo credit: Barliner CC BY 2.5

Following an inquiry legislation was passed that every public entertainment venue had to have a specified number of outward opening emergency exits…. This resulted in the ‘push-bar’ emergency doors we are all familiar with today….

As for the Victoria Hall itself….it continued to be an entertainment venue but was destroyed by a World War 2 parachute bomb in 1941….

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Sunderland Public Libraries via Flickr