List of Black Fridays

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Black Friday is a term used to refer to certain events which occur on a Friday. It has been used in the following cases:

Specific events[]

  • Black Friday (1688), imprisonment of the Seven Bishops of the Church of England (8 June), on the eve of the Glorious Revolution.[1]
  • Panic of 1866, sometimes referred to as Black Friday, an international financial downturn that accompanied the failure of Overend, Gurney and Company in London
  • Black Friday (1869), the Fisk-Gould Scandal (24 September), a financial crisis in the United States.
  • Black Friday (1881), the Eyemouth disaster (14 October), in which 189 fishermen died.
  • Haymarket affair (11 November 1887), four Chicago anarchists hanged, without evidence, for the deaths of seven police officers during a labor meeting.
  • Black Friday (1910), a campaign outside the British House of Commons (18 November) of the Women's Social and Political Union after the Conciliation Bill failed.
  • Black Friday (1919), the Battle of George Square (31 January), a riot stemming from industrial unrest in Glasgow, Scotland.
  • Black Friday (1921), the announcement of British transport union leaders (15 April) not to call for strike action against wage reductions for miners.
  • Black Friday (1929), the crash of Wall Street (known as Black Thursday in America and Black Friday in Europe).
  • Black Friday (1939), a day of devastating bushfires (13 January) in Victoria, Australia, which killed 71 people.
  • , an air raid on Dartmouth, Devon (18 September).
  • Black Friday (1944), a disastrous attack by The Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) of Canada (13 October) near Woensdrecht during the Battle of the Scheldt.
  • Black Friday (1945), an air battle over Sunnfjord (9 February), the largest over Norway.
  • Hollywood Black Friday (5 October 1945), a riot at the Warner Bros. studios stemming from a Confederation of Studio Unions (CSU) strike leading to the eventual breakup of the CSU.
  • 1950 Red River Flood, which burst several dikes flooding much of Winnipeg, Manitoba (5 May).
  • The cancellation of the Avro Arrow (20 February 1959), which resulted in massive layoffs in the Canadian Aerospace industry.
  • Black Friday (1960), San Francisco City protest against the House Un-American Activities Committee.
  • Black Friday (1963), the assassination of US President John F Kennedy in Dallas, Texas on 22 November 1963.
  • Black Friday (1978), a massacre of protesters in Iran (8 September).
  • Viernes Negro, beginning of modern economic turmoil in Venezuela (18 February 1983)
  • 1985 United States-Canadian tornado outbreak, (31 May 1985).
  • Edmonton tornado (31 July 1987), a tornado touching down in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
  • Friday the 13th mini-crash (13 October 1989), a stock market crash referred to by some as the "Black Friday" crash
  • Black Friday, an event on 1992 where the screenplay for Aladdin was entirely rewritten by Jeffrey Katzenberg's order.
  • Black Friday (1993), a series of bomb explosions in Mumbai, India
  • Black Friday (19 November 1993), when production of the Pixar film Toy Story (1995) was nearly shut down due to negative reception to the reel by the Disney executives.
  • Murder of Selena (31 March 1995), nicknamed by Hispanics as "Black Friday" when American singer Selena was killed.
  • Uphaar Cinema fire (13 June 1997), in New Delhi, India.
  • Black Friday (Maldives) (13 August 2004), a crackdown in Malé, Maldives on peaceful protesters.
  • Black Friday (2005), student protesters killed in Meghalaya, India (30 September).
  • 2009 Jakarta bombings, terrorist attacks at hotels (17 July), referred to as Black Friday by The Jakarta Post.
  • Black Friday (2011), several online poker sites seized (15 April) as a result of United States v. Scheinberg et al..
  • Black Friday (2015), terrorist attacks in France, Kuwait, Syria and Tunisia (26 June), also called Bloody Friday in English.
  • November 2015 Paris attacks (13 November 2015), referred to as Black Friday (vendredi noir) by several media outlets[2][3]

Repetitive events[]

References[]

  1. ^ Thomas Babington Macaulay, The History Of England From the Accession of James II, Vol. II, Chapter VIII, pg 332, Donohue, Henneberry & Co., Chicago 1890. s:The History Of England From the Accession of James II/Chapter VIII#II.332
  2. ^ Frédéric Ploquin (14 November 2015). "Vendredi noir à Paris". Marianne.
  3. ^ John Lichfield (15 November 2015). "Paris attacks: We are all victims of Black Friday". The Independent.
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