1. When John F. Kennedy was shot (22/11/1963)
My parents were children.
2. When Mt. St. Helens blew (18/5/1980)
Still significantly not born.
3. When the space shuttle Challenger exploded (28/1/1986)
Less than one year old, and somewhat less than aware.
4. The Hillsborough disaster. (15/4/1989)
Three. I have no idea of my awareness at the time, because later on lots of people have talked about it and so I remember those times instead.
5. When the Berlin Wall fell (7/11/1989)
Four. I have no particular memory of it. My parents were probably quite excited.
6. When Nelson Mandela was released from gaol. (11/2/1990)
Four still. I'm pretty sure I was aware of this one, on account of my parents being interested.
7. When Thatcher resigned (22/11/1990)
Five. I remember this whole affair quite clearly through TV images. My parents were following it quite avidly, although they were hoping that Labour would win the next election anyhow.
8. When the Gulf War began (16/1/1991)
Five still. I also remember this very clearly through TV news and my parents talking about it. But not anything of my surroundings at the actual time it started.
9. When Princess Di was killed (31/8/1997)
12. I remember catching some of the TV coverage, on account of being bored. One of my grandparents did the whole Collect Far Too Much Memorabilia thing. There were newspapers involved, too.
10. When Omagh was bombed (15/8/1998)
13. I'm not even sure what this refers to now; was this the Unabomber thing, or something different?
11. When Bush was first announced President (7/11/2000)
15. I remember reading stuff online about it and going 'aagh, doom' with a lot of people, and spending quite a while dissing Americans with Naath.
12. When terrorists destroyed the World Trade Center (11/9/2001)
http://www.livejournal.com/users/chess/2001/09/11/
13. When the Queen Mother died (30/3/2002)
I was at
14. When Columbia disintegrated during re-entry over Texas. (1/2/2003)
I was at home, being bored, but without the aid of news things. I heard about it mostly through the New Scientist article on it, and GROGGS, and other online stuff. Mostly decided it was a lot of fuss over very little; shuttles should blow up more often than they do, if you compare things like new aircraft.
In other news, I am spending too much time on the computer, and therefore I will grow up fat and lazy. Ho hum.
no subject
Date: 2004-03-28 10:32 am (UTC)From: