On this day in history, September 1

Some of the more interesting things that happened on this day.

Members of a specialised unit from SAPS celebrate casual day. Their theme was matric. Picture: Phill Magakoe/File

Published Sep 1, 2023

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Some of the more interesting things that happened on this day.

1853 The world’s first triangular postal stamps – and the first stamps in Africa – are issued in the Cape Colony.

1873 Cetshwayo becomes Zulu king following the death of his father, Mpande.

1879 Britain signs a peace treaty with the Zulus, banishing Cetshwayo and dividing Zululand in to 13 separate chiefdoms under a British Resident.

1900 Commandant Piet Fourie takes Ladybrand, OFS, in a street-by-street fight, but fails to capture the British garrison, which retreats to a position at the foot of Platberg.

1923 The Great Kantō earthquake devastates Tokyo and Yokohama, killing 105 000 people.

1939 Nazi Germany and Slovakia invade Poland. In the ‘scoop of the century’, Telegraph journalist Clare Hollingworth becomes the first to report the start of World War II.

1939 Adolf Hitler orders the extermination of mentally ill, arguing that wartime is the best time to eliminate ‘the incurably ill’.

1952 Ernest Hemingway’s famous novel, The Old Man and the Sea is published.

1958 The Cod Wars with Britain begin as Iceland expands its fishing zone.

1963 The Air Force Memorial – to 3 000 SAAF members who made the ultimate sacrifice – on Bays Hill, south of Pretoria, is inaugurated.

1974 The SR-71 Blackbird spy plane, flying at Mach 2.3, sets (and holds) the record for flying from New York to London in the time of 1 hour, 54 minutes and 56.4 seconds.

1983 A Korean Air Lines 747 is shot down by a Soviet jet fighter when the commercial aircraft strays into Soviet airspace, killing 269 people.

1995 Casual Day starts. A fundraising project benefiting persons with disabilities, it is held on the first Friday of September.

2000 Dingaan Thobela wins the World Boxing Counci­l (WBC) middleweight title.

2004 The Beslan school hostage crisis begins as terrorists take hundreds of school children and adults hostage in North Ossetia, Russia.

2019 Co-founder and CEO of Twitter Jack Dorsey has his Twitter account hacked

2020 Rare protests occur in Mongolia against moves to teach school subjects in Mandarin, instead of Mongolian.

2021 The Paraná River, South America’s second-longest at 4 880km, is at its lowest levels for 77 years due to drought.

2021 Cristiano Ronaldo breaks world record for goals scored in men's international football; hits his 110th and 111th goals for Portugal in 2-1 World Cup qualifying win over Republic of Ireland in Faro.

2022 The TV Series The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power premières on Amazon Prime Video.