Wikipedia:Main Page history/2023 July 22b

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From today's featured article The 1959–60 Burnley F.C. season was their 61st in the Football League, and their 13th consecutively in the First Division, the top tier of English football. Under their manager, Harry Potts, Burnley won their second First Division championship, the first since their 1920–21 season, on the last day with a 2–1 victory over Manchester City. Only Alex Elder and Jimmy McIlroy had cost a transfer fee; the other players had been recruited from Burnley’s youth academy. In cup competitions, Burnley reached the sixth round of the FA Cup, and won the Lancashire Cup. After the main season ended, the squad travelled to the United States to participate in the first edition of the International Soccer League. Eighteen players made at least one appearance for the club, with Jimmy Adamson, Brian Miller and Ray Pointer present in all 50 matches. The top goalscorer was John Connelly with 24 goals, including 20 in the league. The highest home attendance at Turf Moor that season was 52,850 for the FA Cup fifth round replay match against Bradford City. (Full article...)

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Ongoing:  Recent deaths&#58;   On this day July 22: Feast day of Saint Mary Magdalene (Christianity)  Jules-Albert de Dion  <ul><li>Mary Wriothesley, Countess of Southampton ( b. 1552)</li><li>Indra Lal Roy  ( d. 1918)</li><li>Albertus Soegijapranata ( d. 1963)</li><li>Ursula Franklin ( d. 2016)</li></ul> More anniversaries: <templatestyles src="Hlist/styles.css"/> <templatestyles src="Hlist/styles.css"/>
 * American singer Tony Bennett (pictured) dies at the age of 96.
 * Flooding and landslides in South Korea leave at least 40 people dead and 6 others missing.
 * In the United States, actors in the SAG-AFTRA trade union go on strike, joining writers in the Writers Guild of America strike.
 * Flooding and landslides in northern India leave at least 100 people dead.
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 * 1298 – First War of Scottish Independence: English forces led by Edward I defeated William Wallace's Scottish troops at the Battle of Falkirk.
 * 1864 – American Civil War: Confederate forces unsuccessfully attacked Union troops at the Battle of Atlanta.
 * 1894 – Jules-Albert de Dion (pictured) finished first in the world's first motor race, but did not win as his steam-powered car was against the rules.
 * 1963 – The United Kingdom granted self-government to Sarawak.
 * 1975 – Stanley Forman took the Pulitzer Prize–winning photo Fire Escape Collapse, which spurred action to improve the safety of fire escapes across the United States.
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