This
month on, Yesterday Uncovered, we slip back to the 1960’s and what an amazing
decade that was. Here are a few details to launch our month of the 1960’s
1960 – Lego was seen at
the Brighton Toy Fair for the first time in 1960 and the blocks took Britain by
storm, guess what was on every child’s Christmas list.
1961 - The farthing coin,
used since the thirteenth century, ceases to be legal tender in the United
Kingdom.
1962 – Chris Bonington
and Ian Clough becomes the first Britons to climb the north face of the Eiger
1963 - The Beatles began
their career. They leapt to fame in 1963 with ‘Please, Please Me and had a
Christmas No. 1 with “I Want to Hold Your Hand.
1964 - The British and
French Governments announce commitment to build a tunnel under the English
Channel
*1965 – Sir Winston
Churchill dies aged ninety at Chartwell, his Kent home of more than forty
years.
1966 – England won the football World Cup
1967 - First heart
transplant operation was performed by surgeon Christiaan Barnard.
1968 - Published: A Space Odyssey by Arthur C.
Clarke.
1969 - On 2nd March 1969
Concorde, the world’s first supersonic passenger jet made its maiden voyage
from Toulouse.
*Also in 1965 – The lives of three
families would never be the same after the summer of 1965.
Storm Clouds
Gathering:
Storm clouds are gathering, silently and slowly, too far away to worry about.
Or so it seems. But ignoring what is brewing will have dire consequences for
the people caught up in the maelstrom. Shirley Burton is busy cheating on her
husband. Kathleen Mitchell is too wrapped up in running around after her
beautiful family and Anne Simpson has two things on her mind: her forthcoming
marriage to Paul Betham and his controlling manner.
Storm
Clouds Gathering is a story of human emotion, passion and heart-rending grief.
Set against the backdrop of the mid-sixties, these three families will be
tested to the limit as betrayal, loss and love threaten to change their lives
forever.
Storm Clouds
Gathering is available in Kindle and paperback
1 comment:
Fascinating, Pauline, and how quickly time moves on!
Post a Comment