On this day, May 5

Vaping enthusiast Brandy Tseu uses an electronic cigarette at a bar in Los Angeles. Fortunately, hers didn’t explode.. Picture: Reuters

Vaping enthusiast Brandy Tseu uses an electronic cigarette at a bar in Los Angeles. Fortunately, hers didn’t explode.. Picture: Reuters

Published May 5, 2023

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The great bird-poo rush off Namibia; iconic scent released; Japanese fire balloon shot down; South Africa and allies invade Madagascar; and SAS commandos storm embassy

1821 Ousted French Emperor Napoleon dies in exile on the island of Saint Helena.

1866 Britain claims sovereignty and dominion over the guano-rich Ichaboe and adjacent island, the scene of one of Namibia’s lesser-known tales of colonial greed for the “white gold” that at one stage covered the islands up to a depth of 7m thick. (A corruption of the word ‘wanu’, guano was cherished by the Incas as a natural fertiliser long before the colonisers in Peru cottoned on to its worth.) Then a retired British mariner recalled an account by an old US sea captain of islands covered in bird manure, sparking the ‘Guano Rush’ some 15 years later.

1864 Feminist pioneer Elizabeth Cochrane, one of America’s most famous journalists and a pioneer of investigative journalism, is born. Fascinated by Jules Verne’s novel, Around the World in 80 Days, Cochran who writes under the pen-name Nellie Bly, finally gets approval from her editor, Joseph Pulitzer, to try beat the time of Jules’ fictional hero Phileas Fogg. She later publishes the account of her circumnavigation as Around the World in Seventy-Two Days.

1877 The American Indian Wars: Chief Sitting Bull leads his band of Lakota to Canada to avoid harassment by the US Army.

1925 Afrikaans is established as an official language in South Africa.

1941 The first modern perfume, Chanel No. 5 is released by fashion designer Coco Chanel.

1942 A combined British military and naval force, including many South Africans, lands on Madagascar and by the afternoon the town of Diego Suarez has been captured from the Vichy French.

1945 Six people are killed when a Japanese fire balloon explodes near Bly, Oregon. They are the only Americans killed in the contiguous US by Japan during World War II.

1945 Admiral Karl Dönitz, leader of Germany after Hitler’s death, orders all U-boats to return to their bases. (For nearly seven decades, Dönitz was the only head of state to be convicted by an international tribunal until the conviction of Liberia’s Charles Taylor in 2012.)

1980 In full view of the world’s press, British SAS commandos storm the Iranian embassy in London to end a six-day siege.

1981 Bobby Sands, dies in Northern Ireland’s Maze Prison, after a 66-day hunger-strike.

2014 Two boats full of refugees collide in the Aegean Sea off Greece, 22 die.

2018 An electric cigarette explodes killing a man in St Petersburg, Florida – it is the first death from a vaping product.

2021 Evidence of Africa’s earliest-known burial, a three-year-old boy, 78 000 years ago, in a cave in Kenya, is published.

2022 Zimbabwe is in the midst of a severe economic crisis with unemployment at 90%, hyperinflation and a falling Zimbabwe dollar, say economic experts