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The Postcard

 

A postally unused Auto-Photo Series postcard bearing an early image of London Bridge.

 

The Sale and Removal of London Bridge

 

By 1896 the bridge was the busiest point in London, and one of its most congested, with 8,000 pedestrians and 900 vehicles crossing every hour. To designs by engineer Edward Cruttwell, it was widened in 1904 by 13 feet (4.0 m), using granite corbels.

 

However subsequent surveys showed that the bridge was sinking an inch (about 2.5 cm) every eight years, and by 1924 the east side had sunk some three to four inches (about 9 cm) lower than the west side. It was concluded that the bridge would have to be removed and replaced.

 

Council member Ivan Luckin put forward the idea of selling the bridge, and recalled:

 

"They all thought I was completely

crazy when I suggested we should

sell London Bridge when it needed

replacing."

 

Subsequently, in 1968, Council placed the bridge on the market and began to look for potential buyers. On the 18th. April 1968, Rennie's bridge was purchased by the Missourian entrepreneur Robert P. McCulloch of McCulloch Oil for $2,460,000.

 

The claim that McCulloch believed mistakenly that he was buying the more impressive Tower Bridge was denied by Ivan Luckin in a newspaper interview.

 

Before the bridge was taken apart, each granite facing block was marked for later reassembly. The blocks were taken to Merrivale Quarry at Princetown in Devon, where 15 to 20 cm (6 to 8 in) were sliced off the inner faces of many, in order to facilitate their fixing.

 

Stones left behind were sold in an online auction when the quarry was abandoned and flooded in 2003. 10,000 tons of granite blocks were shipped via the Panama Canal to California, then trucked from Long Beach to Arizona.

 

They were used to face a new, purpose-built hollow core steel-reinforced concrete structure, ensuring that the bridge would support the weight of modern traffic. The bridge was reconstructed at Lake Havasu City, Arizona, and was re-dedicated on the 10th. October 1971 in a ceremony attended by London's Lord Mayor and celebrities.

 

The bridge carries the McCulloch Boulevard and spans the Bridgewater Channel, an artificial, navigable waterway that leads from the Uptown area of Lake Havasu City.

 

Terror Attacks on London Bridge and Nearby

 

There have been four terror attacks on or near London Bridge dating back to 1884. They are as follows:

 

(1) The 1884 London Bridge Terror Attack

 

On Saturday 13th. December 1884, two American-Irish Republicans carried out a dynamite attack on London Bridge as part of the Fenian dynamite campaign.

 

The bomb went off prematurely while the men were in a boat attaching it to a bridge pier at 5.45 pm during the evening rush hour. There was little damage to the bridge, and no casualties other than the bombers.

 

However, there was considerable collateral damage, and hundreds of windows were shattered on both banks of the Thames. The men's boat was so completely destroyed that the police initially thought the bombers had fled.

 

On the 25th. December 1884 the mutilated remains of one of the bombers were found. The body of the other man was never recovered, but the police were later able to identify the dead men as two Americans, William Mackey Lomasney, and John Fleming.

 

The men were identified after a landlord reported to police that dynamite had been found in the rented premises of two American gentlemen who had disappeared after the 13th. December, enabling police to piece together who was responsible for the attack.

 

The men had already been under surveillance by the police in both America and Great Britain.

 

(2) The 1992 London Bridge Bombing

 

On Friday the 28th. February 1992, the Provisional IRA exploded a bomb inside London Bridge station during the morning rush hour, causing extensive damage and wounding 29 people. It was one of many bombings carried out by one of the IRA's London active service units. It occurred just over a year after a bomb at Victoria station.

 

-- The 1992 Bombing

 

At around 8:20 am, someone rang Ulster Television's London office warning that a bomb was going to explode in a London station, without saying which one.

 

About ten minutes later, the bomb detonated, which made debris fly almost 50 feet (15 m) away from the blast area. Twenty nine people were hurt in the explosion, most of them from flying glass and other bits of debris; four were seriously hurt, but nobody was killed.

 

The victims were treated at Guy's Hospital.

 

-- Aftermath of the 1992 Explosion

 

The head of Scotland Yard's anti terrorist squad, George Churchill-Coleman, said that the 2 lb (910 g) bomb of high explosives was "clearly designed to kill."

 

Investigations suggested that the bomb had been placed in the men's restrooms. Churchill-Coleman added that the IRA's warning was "deliberately vague," and was given too late to act upon.

 

Prime Minister John Major said that the bombing would not change British policy in Northern Ireland:

 

"It was pointless. It was cowardly. It was

directed against innocent people and it

will make absolutely no difference to

our policy -- no difference at all."

 

Fearing additional IRA attacks on public transport, the security services warned commuters "more than ever" to stay on guard at all times. The next day, another bomb went off in London, by the Crown Prosecution Service office, injuring two more people and bringing the total injured to 31 in the space of just over 24 hours.

 

This was one of dozens of bombs that detonated in London that year, the biggest of which was the Baltic Exchange bombing, killing three people and causing almost £1 billion worth of damage.

 

The IRA maintained this pressure, bombing mainland Britain and especially the City of London as much as possible until the ceasefire of 1994.

 

(3) The 2017 London Bridge Attack

 

On the 3rd. June 2017, a terrorist vehicle-ramming and stabbing took place in London when a van was deliberately driven into pedestrians on London Bridge, and then crashed on Borough High Street, just south of the River Thames.

 

The van's three occupants then ran to the nearby Borough Market area and began stabbing people in and around restaurants and pubs. They were shot dead by Metropolitan and City of London Police authorised firearms officers, and were found to be wearing fake explosive vests.

 

Eight people were killed and 48 were injured, including members of the public and four unarmed police officers who attempted to stop the assailants. British authorities described the perpetrators as radical Islamic terrorists.

 

The Islamic State (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attack.

 

-- Background to the 2017 Attack

 

In March 2017, five people had been killed in a combined vehicle and knife attack at Westminster. In late May, a suicide bomber killed 22 people at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena.

 

After the Manchester bombing, the UK's terror threat level was raised to "critical", its highest level, until the 27th. May 2017, when it was lowered to severe.

 

-- The 2017 Attack

 

The attack was carried out using a white Renault Master hired earlier on the same evening in Harold Hill, by Khuram Butt. He had intended to hire a 7.5 tonne lorry, but was refused due to his failure to provide payment details.

 

The attackers were armed with 12-inch (30 cm) kitchen knives with ceramic blades, which they tied to their wrists with leather straps. They also prepared fake explosive belts by wrapping water bottles in grey tape.

 

At 21:58 on the 3rd. June 2017, the van travelled south across London Bridge, and returned six minutes later, crossing over the bridge northbound, making a U-turn at the northern end and then driving southbound across the bridge.

 

It mounted the pavement three times and hit multiple pedestrians, killing two. Witnesses said the van was travelling at high speed. 999 emergency calls were first recorded at 22:07. The van was later found to contain 13 wine bottles containing flammable liquid with rags stuffed in them, along with blow torches.

 

The van crashed on Borough High Street after crossing the central reservation. The van's tyres were destroyed by the central reservation, and the three attackers, armed with knives, abandoned the vehicle.

 

Then they ran down the steps to Green Dragon Court, where they killed five people outside and near the Boro Bistro pub. The attackers then went back up the steps to Borough High Street and attacked three bystanders.

 

Police tried to fight the attackers, but were stabbed, and Ignacio Echeverría helped them by striking the terrorist Redouane and possibly Zaghba with his skateboard. Echeverría was later killed outside Lobos Meat and Tapas.

 

Members of the public threw bottles and chairs at the attackers. Witnesses reported that the attackers were shouting:

 

"This is for Allah".

 

People in and around a number of other restaurants and bars along Stoney Street were also attacked. During the attack, an unknown man was spared by Rachid Redouane, but despite many efforts the man was never found.

 

A Romanian baker hit one of the attackers over the head with a crate before giving shelter to 20 people inside a bakery inside Borough Market.

 

One man fought the three attackers with his fists in the Black and Blue steakhouse, shouting:

 

"F*** you, I'm Millwall."

 

His actions gave members of the public who were in the restaurant the opportunity to run away. He was stabbed eight times in the hands, chest and head. He underwent surgery at St Thomas' Hospital, and was taken off the critical list on the 4th. June.

 

A British Transport Police officer armed with a baton also took on the attackers, receiving multiple stab wounds and temporarily losing sight in his right eye as a consequence.

 

Off-duty Metropolitan police constables Liam Jones and Stewart Henderson rendered first aid to seriously injured members of the public before protecting over 150 people inside the Thameside Inn and evacuating them by Metropolitan marine support unit and RNLI boats to the north shore of the Thames.

 

The three attackers were then shot dead by armed officers from the City of London and Metropolitan police Specialist Firearms Command eight minutes after the initial emergency call was made.

 

CCTV footage showed the three attackers in Borough Market running at the armed officers; the attackers were shot dead 20 seconds later. A total of 46 rounds were fired by three City of London and five Metropolitan Police officers.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2017 Attack

 

The Metropolitan Police issued 'Run, Hide, Tell' notices via social media during the attack, and asked the public to remain calm and vigilant.

 

All buildings within the vicinity of London Bridge were evacuated, and London Bridge, Borough and Bank Underground stations were closed at the request of the police.

 

The mainline railway stations at London Bridge, Waterloo East, Charing Cross and Cannon Street were also closed. The Home Secretary approved the deployment of a military counter terrorist unit from the Special Air Service (SAS).

 

The helicopters carrying the SAS landed on London Bridge to support the Metropolitan Police because of concerns that there might be more attackers at large.

 

The Metropolitan Police Marine Policing Unit dispatched boats on the River Thames, with assistance from the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI), to contribute to the evacuation of the area and look for any casualties who might have fallen from the bridge.

 

A stabbing incident took place in Vauxhall at 23:45, causing Vauxhall station to be briefly closed; this was later confirmed to be unrelated to the attack.

 

At 01:45 on the 4th. June, controlled explosions took place of the attackers' bomb vests, which were found to be fake.

 

An emergency COBR meeting was held on the morning of the 4th. June. London Bridge mainline railway and underground stations remained closed throughout the 4th. June. A cordon was established around the scene of the attack. London Bridge station reopened at 05:00 on Monday the 5th. June.

 

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said that there was a surge of hate crimes and islamophobic incidents following the attack.

 

New security measures were implemented on eight central London bridges following the attack, to reduce the likelihood of further vehicle attacks, with concrete barriers being installed. The barriers have been criticised for causing severe congestion in cycle lanes during peak hours.

 

Borough Market reopened on the 14th. June.

 

-- Casualties of the 2017 Attack

 

Eight civilians died in the attack: one Spaniard, one Briton, two Australians, one Canadian and three French citizens were killed by the attackers, and the three attackers themselves were killed by armed police.

 

Two of the civilian fatalities were caused in the initial vehicle-ramming attack, while the remaining six were stabbed to death. One body was recovered from the Thames near Limehouse several days after the attack.

 

48 people were injured in the attack, including one New Zealander, two Australians, two Germans and four French citizens.

 

Of the 48 people admitted to hospital, 21 were initially reported to be in a critical condition.

 

Four police officers were among those injured in the attack. A British Transport Police officer was stabbed, and suffered serious injuries to his head, face and neck. An off-duty Metropolitan Police officer was seriously injured when he was stabbed.

 

Two other Metropolitan Police officers received head and arm injuries. As a result of police gunfire, a bystander received an accidental gunshot wound, which was not critical.

 

-- The 2017 Attackers

 

On the 4th. June the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, said that:

 

"We are confident about the fact that

they were radical Islamic terrorists, the

way they were inspired, and we need

to find out more about where this

radicalisation came from."

 

Amaq News Agency, an online outlet associated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), said the attackers were ISIS fighters.

 

On the 5th. June, two of the attackers were identified as Khuram Shazad Butt and Rachid Redouane. The third of the three attackers, Youssef Zaghba, was identified the following day.

 

(a) Khuram Shazad Butt

 

Butt (born 20th. April 1990) was a Pakistan-born British citizen whose family came from Jhelum. He grew up in Great Britain, living in Plaistow.

 

He had a wife and two children. Neighbours told the BBC that Butt had been reported to police for attempting to radicalise children; he had also expressed disgust at the way women dressed.

 

He was known to police as a "heavyweight" member of the banned extremist group al-Muhajiroun. A BBC interviewee said he had a verbal confrontation with Butt in 2013 on the day after another Al-Muhajiroun follower had murdered Fusilier Lee Rigby.

 

Butt was part of an al-Muhajiroun campaign in 2015 to intimidate Muslims who planned to vote in the UK general elections of that year, on the basis that it was forbidden in Islam.

 

He was known for holding extreme views, having been barred from two local mosques. He appeared on a 2016 Channel 4 Television documentary, The Jihadis Next Door, which showed him arguing with police over the unfurling of an ISIL black flag in Regent's Park.

 

According to a friend, he had been radicalised by the YouTube videos of the American Muslim hate preacher Ahmad Musa Jibril. Butt was known to have taken drugs before he became radicalised.

 

After radicalisation, Butt started to stop his neighbours on the street and ask them whether they had been to the mosque.

 

Butt had worked for a man accused of training Mohammad Sidique Khan, the leader of the July 2005 London bombing. The police and MI5 knew of Butt, and he was investigated in 2015. The investigation was later "moved into the lower echelons", and his file was classed as low priority.

 

Butt sometimes manned the desk of the Ummah Fitness Centre gym, where he prayed regularly. CCTV footage was released of Butt, Redouane and Zaghba meeting outside the gym days before the attack. A senior figure at a local mosque had reported the gym to police.

 

The New York Times said that Butt and his brother were part of the UK government's Prevent programme, which aims to stop people from becoming terrorists, and which reports suspected radicals to police programmes.

 

At the time of the attack he was on police bail following an allegation of fraud, though the police had intended to take no further action due to a lack of evidence. He had previously been cautioned by police for fraud in 2008 and common assault in 2010.

 

(b) Rachid Redouane

 

Redouane (born 31 July 1986) was a failed asylum seeker in the UK, whose application was denied in 2009, and not previously known to police. He had claimed to be either Moroccan or Libyan.

 

Redouane worked as a pastry chef, and in 2012 he married an Irish woman in a ceremony in Ireland. He beat and bullied his wife.

 

He used to drink alcohol. He lived variously in Rathmines, a suburb of Dublin, also in Morocco and the UK. According to his wife, Redouane was most likely radicalised in Morocco. Later the couple stayed in the UK on an EU residency card where they had a daughter in 2015.

 

The couple separated in 2016 and she divorced him after he tried to force his extremist beliefs on her.

 

At the time of the attack, he was living in Dagenham, East London.

 

(c) Youssef Zaghba

 

Zaghba (born 1995 in Fez, Morocco) was at the time of the attack living in east London where he worked in a fast-food outlet. He also worked for an Islamic television channel in London.

 

Zaghba was born to a Moroccan Muslim father and an Italian Catholic Christian mother who had converted to Islam when she married. Zaghba had dual Moroccan and Italian nationality.

 

When his parents divorced, he went to Italy with his mother. In 2016, Zaghba was stopped at Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport by Italian officers who found ISIS-related materials on his mobile phone; he was stopped from continuing his journey to Istanbul.

 

Italian authorities said Zaghba was monitored continuously while in Italy and that the UK was informed about him. Giuseppe Amato, an Italian prosecutor, said:

 

"We did our best. We could just monitor

and surveil Zaghba and send a note to

the British authorities, that's all we could

do and we did it.

Since he moved to London, he came back

to Italy once in a while for a total of 10 days.

And during those 10 days we never let him

out of our sight."

 

According to The New York Times, the Italian branch of Al-Muhajiroun had introduced Butt to Zaghba.

 

-- Investigation of the 2017 Attack

 

On the morning of the 4th. June, police made 12 arrests following raids in flats in the Barking area of east London, where one of the attackers lived; controlled explosions were carried out during the raids.

 

Those held included five males aged between 27 and 55, arrested at one address in Barking, and six females aged between 19 and 60, arrested at a separate Barking address. One of the arrested males was subsequently released without charge.

 

Four properties in all were searched, including two in Newham in addition to the two in Barking. Further raids and arrests were made at properties in Newham and Barking early on the morning of the 5th. June.

 

On the 6th. June, a man was arrested in Barking, and another in Ilford the following day. By the 16th. June, all those arrested had been released without charge.

 

-- The Inquest Into the 2017 Attack

 

On the 7th. May 2019, an inquest into the deaths of the victims opened at the Old Bailey in London. Judge Mark Lucraft QC, Chief Coroner of England and Wales, presided, and people related to the dead gave accounts of what happened and who they had lost.

 

The inquest concluded on the 16th. July 2019 that all three attackers had been lawfully killed.

 

(4) The 2019 London Bridge Stabbing

 

On the 29th. November 2019, five people were stabbed, two fatally, in Central London. The attacker, Briton Usman Khan, had been released from prison in 2018 on licence after serving a sentence for terrorist offences.

 

Khan was attending an offender rehabilitation conference in Fishmongers' Hall when he threatened to detonate what turned out to be a fake suicide vest.

 

He started to attack people with two knives taped to his wrists, killing two of the conference participants by stabbing them in the chest.

 

Several people fought back, some attacking Khan with a fire extinguisher, a pike and a narwhal tusk as he fled the building and emerged on to London Bridge, where he was partially disarmed by a plain-clothes police officer.

 

He was restrained by members of the public until additional police officers arrived, pulled away those restraining him, and shot him.

 

-- Background to the 2019 Attack

 

A conference on offender rehabilitation was held on the 29th. November 2019 in Fishmongers' Hall, at the northern end of London Bridge, to celebrate the fifth anniversary of Learning Together. This is a programme run by the Cambridge Institute of Criminology to help offenders reintegrate into society following their release from prison.

 

Learning Together was set up in 2014 by University of Cambridge academics Ruth Armstrong and Amy Ludlow from the Faculty of Law and Institute of Criminology:

 

"To bring together people in criminal justice

and higher education institutions to study

alongside each other in inclusive and

transformative learning communities."

 

The programme served to enable students and prisoners to work together.

 

Former prisoner Usman Khan had been invited to the conference as a previous participant in the programme, and although banned from entering London under the terms of his release, he was granted a one-day exemption to attend.

 

-- The 2019 Attack

 

At 13:58 on the 29th. November, the police were called to Fishmongers' Hall after Khan, wearing a fake suicide vest, threatened to blow up the hall. The police reported that there had been no prior intelligence of the attack.

 

Holding two kitchen knives taped to his wrists, Khan began stabbing people inside the building. Several fought back, including a South African-born Londoner, Darryn Frost, who grabbed a 1.5-metre-long (4.9 ft) narwhal tusk from the wall to use as a weapon, former prisoner John Crilly, and Steven Gallant, a convicted murderer attending the conference on day release from prison.

 

Khan fled and began stabbing pedestrians outside on the north side of the bridge.

 

Several people were injured before members of the public, including a tour guide and a plain-clothes British Transport Police officer, later seen walking away with a knife, restrained and disarmed Khan on the bridge.

 

One of the people who stepped in to fight the attacker drove him back by spraying a fire extinguisher.

 

Armed officers of the City of London Police arrived at 14:03 and surrounded the attacker, who at the time was being restrained by a Ministry of Justice communications worker attending the rehabilitation meeting.

 

The officers pulled this person away to provide a clear shot, before one fired twice. Around 10 minutes after this, Khan started to get up; he was then shot 9 further times by 6 firearms officers. Khan had not been secured after the initial shooting due to the suicide vest. Khan died at the scene.

 

A Transport for London bus which had stopped adjacent to the site of the shooting was found to have damage to both its front and rear windows, possibly caused, according to the Metropolitan Police, by a ricocheting bullet.

 

-- The Victims of the 2019 Attack

 

Three of the victims were associated with Cambridge University's Learning Together prison-rehabilitation programme; two died and one was injured.

 

The two who died from their stab wounds were Jack Merritt and Saskia Jones.

 

Merritt was a 25-year-old law and criminology graduate from Cottenham, Cambridgeshire who had studied at the Universities of Manchester and Cambridge. He worked as a University of Cambridge administration officer, and was a course coordinator for Learning Together.

 

Jones was a 23 year old former Anglia Ruskin University and University of Cambridge student from Stratford-upon-Avon.

 

Funeral services for Merritt and Jones were conducted on the 20th. December 2019.

 

Two other women were seriously injured, while a chef who was working at the event was stabbed but had less serious injuries.

 

-- The Terrorist Usman Khan

 

Usman Khan was a 28-year-old British national from Stoke-on-Trent, of Pakistani descent. Khan appears to have left school with no qualifications after spending part of his late teens in Pakistan.

 

He was known to police, and had links to Islamist extremist groups. In December 2018 he had been automatically released from prison on licence, where he was serving a 16-year sentence for terrorism offences, and was wearing an electronic tag.

 

Khan had been part of a plot, inspired by Al-Qaeda, to establish a terrorist camp on his family's land in Kashmir and bomb the London Stock Exchange. The plot was disrupted by MI5 and the police, as part of MI5's Operation Guava (police Operation Norbury), and Khan was given an indeterminate sentence.

 

Of the nine men involved, Khan was the youngest at 19 and according to Mr Justice Wilkie, Khan and two others were “more serious jihadis” than the others.

 

In 2013, Khan's sentence was revised after an appeal, and he was ordered to serve at least 8 years of his new 16-year sentence, with a 5-year extended licence allowing recall to prison.

 

According to the anti-extremism group Hope not Hate, Khan was a supporter of Al-Muhajiroun, an extremist group with which scores of terrorists were involved. He was a student and personal friend of Anjem Choudary, an Islamist and terrorism supporter.

 

Post-mortem examination showed evidence of occasional use of cocaine by Khan.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2019 Attack

 

The news of the attack was broken live as it happened on the BBC by one of its reporters, John McManus, who witnessed members of the public fighting Khan as he crossed the bridge, and heard two shots being fired by police officers.

 

McManus said that he was certain that more than two shots were fired during the incident.

 

The police, ambulance, and fire services attended the scene, and a major incident was declared. A large police cordon was set up in the area and residents were told to stay away. Police closed both Monument Underground station and London Bridge station after the attack.

 

The Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, returned to Downing Street following the incident, after campaigning in his constituency for the forthcoming general election. Johnson commended the "immense bravery" of the emergency services and members of the public, and claimed that anyone involved in the attack would be hunted down.

 

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, thanked the emergency services and members of the public who helped to restrain the attacker, saying they had shown "breathtaking heroism".

 

The Conservative Party, Labour Party and Liberal Democrats temporarily suspended campaigning in London for the general election. A parliamentary election hustings event scheduled to be held at Great St. Mary's Church in Cambridge on the 30th. November was cancelled and replaced by a memorial vigil for the victims of the attack.

 

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick made a statement following the attack. She said that there would be an increased police presence on the streets, and that cordons in the London Bridge area would remain in place. An appeal was made for the public to submit any film or picture evidence or information that could assist the investigation.

 

In Pakistan, publication of Khan's Pakistani origins by the leading newspaper Dawn were deemed unpatriotic and defamatory, and led to demonstrations demanding that the publisher and the editor be hanged.

 

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack. Its news agency, Amaq, claimed Usman Khan was one of its fighters. A janaza prayer for Khan was held at a mosque in Birmingham, and he was buried in his family's ancestral village in Pakistan, following objections to his burial in the UK by local Muslims in his native Stoke.

 

In 2021, following an inquest, Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation Jonathan Hall QC called for those involved in the planning or preparation of terrorist attacks to be given automatic life sentences. Hall stated:

 

"It is hard to underestimate how serious

Usman Khan’s original offence was."

 

-- Investigations Into the 2019 Attack

 

London Bridge was closed until the early hours of the following Monday for forensic investigation of the scene. A property in Stafford and one in Stoke-on-Trent were searched by police.

 

An inquest into the deaths of Merritt and Jones was opened on the 4th. December 2019 at the Central Criminal Court in London, and was subsequently adjourned.

 

A pre-inquest review hearing took place at the Old Bailey on the 16th. October 2020, before the Chief Coroner of England and Wales, Mark Lucraft QC.

 

The inquest re-opened on the 12th. April 2021, presided over by Lucraft. On the 28th. May 2021 the jury concluded that the victims had been unlawfully killed.

 

They further concluded that insufficient monitoring of Khan, unreasonable belief in his rehabilitation, a lack of information sharing between agencies, and inadequate security planning at the event were all contributing factors in their deaths.

 

Khan's inquest, also overseen by Lucraft, found in June 2021 that Khan was lawfully killed by the police.

 

-- Royal Prerogative of Mercy for Steven Gallant

 

Steven Gallant was granted the Royal prerogative of mercy by the Lord Chancellor on behalf of the Queen in October 2020, in order to bring his parole hearing forward by ten months to June 2021.

 

The Ministry of Justice stated that:

 

"This is in recognition of his exceptionally

brave actions at Fishmongers’ Hall, which

helped save people's lives despite the

tremendous risk to his own".

 

Though the parole board still has to decide on whether to release him, it was reported that it would be unlikely for his case to be denied after the Queen's intervention. The families of both Merritt and of Gallant's 2005 murder victim approved the action due to his heroic deeds and efforts to turn his life around since the murder.

An advertising postcard published by S. Hildesheimer & Co. Ltd. of London and Manchester.

 

The card was posted in London E.C. on Friday the 6th. April 1906 to:

 

Mrs. Venning,

Rosendale,

Chase Green,

Enfield.

 

The address stretches across the undivided back of the card which is perhaps surprising, because divided backs for postcards were introduced in the UK in 1902.

 

The Sale and Removal of London Bridge

 

By 1896 the bridge was the busiest point in London, and one of its most congested, with 8,000 pedestrians and 900 vehicles crossing every hour. To designs by engineer Edward Cruttwell, it was widened in 1904 by 13 feet (4.0 m), using granite corbels.

 

However subsequent surveys showed that the bridge was sinking an inch (about 2.5 cm) every eight years, and by 1924 the east side had sunk some three to four inches (about 9 cm) lower than the west side. It was concluded that the bridge would have to be removed and replaced.

 

Council member Ivan Luckin put forward the idea of selling the bridge, and recalled:

 

"They all thought I was completely

crazy when I suggested we should

sell London Bridge when it needed

replacing."

 

Subsequently, in 1968, Council placed the bridge on the market and began to look for potential buyers. On the 18th. April 1968, Rennie's bridge was purchased by the Missourian entrepreneur Robert P. McCulloch of McCulloch Oil for $2,460,000.

 

The claim that McCulloch believed mistakenly that he was buying the more impressive Tower Bridge was denied by Ivan Luckin in a newspaper interview.

 

Before the bridge was taken apart, each granite facing block was marked for later reassembly. The blocks were taken to Merrivale Quarry at Princetown in Devon, where 15 to 20 cm (6 to 8 in) were sliced off the inner faces of many, in order to facilitate their fixing.

 

Stones left behind were sold in an online auction when the quarry was abandoned and flooded in 2003. 10,000 tons of granite blocks were shipped via the Panama Canal to California, then trucked from Long Beach to Arizona.

 

They were used to face a new, purpose-built hollow core steel-reinforced concrete structure, ensuring that the bridge would support the weight of modern traffic. The bridge was reconstructed at Lake Havasu City, Arizona, and was re-dedicated on the 10th. October 1971 in a ceremony attended by London's Lord Mayor and celebrities.

 

The bridge carries the McCulloch Boulevard and spans the Bridgewater Channel, an artificial, navigable waterway that leads from the Uptown area of Lake Havasu City.

 

Terror Attacks on London Bridge and Nearby

 

There have been four terror attacks on or near London Bridge dating back to 1884. They are as follows:

 

(1) The 1884 London Bridge Terror Attack

 

On Saturday 13th. December 1884, two American-Irish Republicans carried out a dynamite attack on London Bridge as part of the Fenian dynamite campaign.

 

The bomb went off prematurely while the men were in a boat attaching it to a bridge pier at 5.45 pm during the evening rush hour. There was little damage to the bridge, and no casualties other than the bombers.

 

However, there was considerable collateral damage, and hundreds of windows were shattered on both banks of the Thames. The men's boat was so completely destroyed that the police initially thought the bombers had fled.

 

On the 25th. December 1884 the mutilated remains of one of the bombers were found. The body of the other man was never recovered, but the police were later able to identify the dead men as two Americans, William Mackey Lomasney, and John Fleming.

 

The men were identified after a landlord reported to police that dynamite had been found in the rented premises of two American gentlemen who had disappeared after the 13th. December, enabling police to piece together who was responsible for the attack.

 

The men had already been under surveillance by the police in both America and Great Britain.

 

(2) The 1992 London Bridge Bombing

 

On Friday the 28th. February 1992, the Provisional IRA exploded a bomb inside London Bridge station during the morning rush hour, causing extensive damage and wounding 29 people. It was one of many bombings carried out by one of the IRA's London active service units. It occurred just over a year after a bomb at Victoria station.

 

-- The 1992 Bombing

 

At around 8:20 am, someone rang Ulster Television's London office warning that a bomb was going to explode in a London station, without saying which one.

 

About ten minutes later, the bomb detonated, which made debris fly almost 50 feet (15 m) away from the blast area. Twenty nine people were hurt in the explosion, most of them from flying glass and other bits of debris; four were seriously hurt, but nobody was killed.

 

The victims were treated at Guy's Hospital.

 

-- Aftermath of the 1992 Explosion

 

The head of Scotland Yard's anti terrorist squad, George Churchill-Coleman, said that the 2 lb (910 g) bomb of high explosives was "clearly designed to kill."

 

Investigations suggested that the bomb had been placed in the men's restrooms. Churchill-Coleman added that the IRA's warning was "deliberately vague," and was given too late to act upon.

 

Prime Minister John Major said that the bombing would not change British policy in Northern Ireland:

 

"It was pointless. It was cowardly. It was

directed against innocent people and it

will make absolutely no difference to

our policy -- no difference at all."

 

Fearing additional IRA attacks on public transport, the security services warned commuters "more than ever" to stay on guard at all times. The next day, another bomb went off in London, by the Crown Prosecution Service office, injuring two more people and bringing the total injured to 31 in the space of just over 24 hours.

 

This was one of dozens of bombs that detonated in London that year, the biggest of which was the Baltic Exchange bombing, killing three people and causing almost £1 billion worth of damage.

 

The IRA maintained this pressure, bombing mainland Britain and especially the City of London as much as possible until the ceasefire of 1994.

 

(3) The 2017 London Bridge Attack

 

On the 3rd. June 2017, a terrorist vehicle-ramming and stabbing took place in London when a van was deliberately driven into pedestrians on London Bridge, and then crashed on Borough High Street, just south of the River Thames.

 

The van's three occupants then ran to the nearby Borough Market area and began stabbing people in and around restaurants and pubs. They were shot dead by Metropolitan and City of London Police authorised firearms officers, and were found to be wearing fake explosive vests.

 

Eight people were killed and 48 were injured, including members of the public and four unarmed police officers who attempted to stop the assailants. British authorities described the perpetrators as radical Islamic terrorists.

 

The Islamic State (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attack.

 

-- Background to the 2017 Attack

 

In March 2017, five people had been killed in a combined vehicle and knife attack at Westminster. In late May, a suicide bomber killed 22 people at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena.

 

After the Manchester bombing, the UK's terror threat level was raised to "critical", its highest level, until the 27th. May 2017, when it was lowered to severe.

 

-- The 2017 Attack

 

The attack was carried out using a white Renault Master hired earlier on the same evening in Harold Hill, by Khuram Butt. He had intended to hire a 7.5 tonne lorry, but was refused due to his failure to provide payment details.

 

The attackers were armed with 12-inch (30 cm) kitchen knives with ceramic blades, which they tied to their wrists with leather straps. They also prepared fake explosive belts by wrapping water bottles in grey tape.

 

At 21:58 on the 3rd. June 2017, the van travelled south across London Bridge, and returned six minutes later, crossing over the bridge northbound, making a U-turn at the northern end and then driving southbound across the bridge.

 

It mounted the pavement three times and hit multiple pedestrians, killing two. Witnesses said the van was travelling at high speed. 999 emergency calls were first recorded at 22:07. The van was later found to contain 13 wine bottles containing flammable liquid with rags stuffed in them, along with blow torches.

 

The van crashed on Borough High Street after crossing the central reservation. The van's tyres were destroyed by the central reservation, and the three attackers, armed with knives, abandoned the vehicle.

 

Then they ran down the steps to Green Dragon Court, where they killed five people outside and near the Boro Bistro pub. The attackers then went back up the steps to Borough High Street and attacked three bystanders.

 

Police tried to fight the attackers, but were stabbed, and Ignacio Echeverría helped them by striking the terrorist Redouane and possibly Zaghba with his skateboard. Echeverría was later killed outside Lobos Meat and Tapas.

 

Members of the public threw bottles and chairs at the attackers. Witnesses reported that the attackers were shouting:

 

"This is for Allah".

 

People in and around a number of other restaurants and bars along Stoney Street were also attacked. During the attack, an unknown man was spared by Rachid Redouane, but despite many efforts the man was never found.

 

A Romanian baker hit one of the attackers over the head with a crate before giving shelter to 20 people inside a bakery inside Borough Market.

 

One man fought the three attackers with his fists in the Black and Blue steakhouse, shouting:

 

"F*** you, I'm Millwall."

 

His actions gave members of the public who were in the restaurant the opportunity to run away. He was stabbed eight times in the hands, chest and head. He underwent surgery at St Thomas' Hospital, and was taken off the critical list on the 4th. June.

 

A British Transport Police officer armed with a baton also took on the attackers, receiving multiple stab wounds and temporarily losing sight in his right eye as a consequence.

 

Off-duty Metropolitan police constables Liam Jones and Stewart Henderson rendered first aid to seriously injured members of the public before protecting over 150 people inside the Thameside Inn and evacuating them by Metropolitan marine support unit and RNLI boats to the north shore of the Thames.

 

The three attackers were then shot dead by armed officers from the City of London and Metropolitan police Specialist Firearms Command eight minutes after the initial emergency call was made.

 

CCTV footage showed the three attackers in Borough Market running at the armed officers; the attackers were shot dead 20 seconds later. A total of 46 rounds were fired by three City of London and five Metropolitan Police officers.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2017 Attack

 

The Metropolitan Police issued 'Run, Hide, Tell' notices via social media during the attack, and asked the public to remain calm and vigilant.

 

All buildings within the vicinity of London Bridge were evacuated, and London Bridge, Borough and Bank Underground stations were closed at the request of the police.

 

The mainline railway stations at London Bridge, Waterloo East, Charing Cross and Cannon Street were also closed. The Home Secretary approved the deployment of a military counter terrorist unit from the Special Air Service (SAS).

 

The helicopters carrying the SAS landed on London Bridge to support the Metropolitan Police because of concerns that there might be more attackers at large.

 

The Metropolitan Police Marine Policing Unit dispatched boats on the River Thames, with assistance from the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI), to contribute to the evacuation of the area and look for any casualties who might have fallen from the bridge.

 

A stabbing incident took place in Vauxhall at 23:45, causing Vauxhall station to be briefly closed; this was later confirmed to be unrelated to the attack.

 

At 01:45 on the 4th. June, controlled explosions took place of the attackers' bomb vests, which were found to be fake.

 

An emergency COBR meeting was held on the morning of the 4th. June. London Bridge mainline railway and underground stations remained closed throughout the 4th. June. A cordon was established around the scene of the attack. London Bridge station reopened at 05:00 on Monday the 5th. June.

 

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said that there was a surge of hate crimes and islamophobic incidents following the attack.

 

New security measures were implemented on eight central London bridges following the attack, to reduce the likelihood of further vehicle attacks, with concrete barriers being installed. The barriers have been criticised for causing severe congestion in cycle lanes during peak hours.

 

Borough Market reopened on the 14th. June.

 

-- Casualties of the 2017 Attack

 

Eight civilians died in the attack: one Spaniard, one Briton, two Australians, one Canadian and three French citizens were killed by the attackers, and the three attackers themselves were killed by armed police.

 

Two of the civilian fatalities were caused in the initial vehicle-ramming attack, while the remaining six were stabbed to death. One body was recovered from the Thames near Limehouse several days after the attack.

 

48 people were injured in the attack, including one New Zealander, two Australians, two Germans and four French citizens.

 

Of the 48 people admitted to hospital, 21 were initially reported to be in a critical condition.

 

Four police officers were among those injured in the attack. A British Transport Police officer was stabbed, and suffered serious injuries to his head, face and neck. An off-duty Metropolitan Police officer was seriously injured when he was stabbed.

 

Two other Metropolitan Police officers received head and arm injuries. As a result of police gunfire, a bystander received an accidental gunshot wound, which was not critical.

 

-- The 2017 Attackers

 

On the 4th. June the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, said that:

 

"We are confident about the fact that

they were radical Islamic terrorists, the

way they were inspired, and we need

to find out more about where this

radicalisation came from."

 

Amaq News Agency, an online outlet associated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), said the attackers were ISIS fighters.

 

On the 5th. June, two of the attackers were identified as Khuram Shazad Butt and Rachid Redouane. The third of the three attackers, Youssef Zaghba, was identified the following day.

 

(a) Khuram Shazad Butt

 

Butt (born 20th. April 1990) was a Pakistan-born British citizen whose family came from Jhelum. He grew up in Great Britain, living in Plaistow.

 

He had a wife and two children. Neighbours told the BBC that Butt had been reported to police for attempting to radicalise children; he had also expressed disgust at the way women dressed.

 

He was known to police as a "heavyweight" member of the banned extremist group al-Muhajiroun. A BBC interviewee said he had a verbal confrontation with Butt in 2013 on the day after another Al-Muhajiroun follower had murdered Fusilier Lee Rigby.

 

Butt was part of an al-Muhajiroun campaign in 2015 to intimidate Muslims who planned to vote in the UK general elections of that year, on the basis that it was forbidden in Islam.

 

He was known for holding extreme views, having been barred from two local mosques. He appeared on a 2016 Channel 4 Television documentary, The Jihadis Next Door, which showed him arguing with police over the unfurling of an ISIL black flag in Regent's Park.

 

According to a friend, he had been radicalised by the YouTube videos of the American Muslim hate preacher Ahmad Musa Jibril. Butt was known to have taken drugs before he became radicalised.

 

After radicalisation, Butt started to stop his neighbours on the street and ask them whether they had been to the mosque.

 

Butt had worked for a man accused of training Mohammad Sidique Khan, the leader of the July 2005 London bombing. The police and MI5 knew of Butt, and he was investigated in 2015. The investigation was later "moved into the lower echelons", and his file was classed as low priority.

 

Butt sometimes manned the desk of the Ummah Fitness Centre gym, where he prayed regularly. CCTV footage was released of Butt, Redouane and Zaghba meeting outside the gym days before the attack. A senior figure at a local mosque had reported the gym to police.

 

The New York Times said that Butt and his brother were part of the UK government's Prevent programme, which aims to stop people from becoming terrorists, and which reports suspected radicals to police programmes.

 

At the time of the attack he was on police bail following an allegation of fraud, though the police had intended to take no further action due to a lack of evidence. He had previously been cautioned by police for fraud in 2008 and common assault in 2010.

 

(b) Rachid Redouane

 

Redouane (born 31 July 1986) was a failed asylum seeker in the UK, whose application was denied in 2009, and not previously known to police. He had claimed to be either Moroccan or Libyan.

 

Redouane worked as a pastry chef, and in 2012 he married an Irish woman in a ceremony in Ireland. He beat and bullied his wife.

 

He used to drink alcohol. He lived variously in Rathmines, a suburb of Dublin, also in Morocco and the UK. According to his wife, Redouane was most likely radicalised in Morocco. Later the couple stayed in the UK on an EU residency card where they had a daughter in 2015.

 

The couple separated in 2016 and she divorced him after he tried to force his extremist beliefs on her.

 

At the time of the attack, he was living in Dagenham, East London.

 

(c) Youssef Zaghba

 

Zaghba (born 1995 in Fez, Morocco) was at the time of the attack living in east London where he worked in a fast-food outlet. He also worked for an Islamic television channel in London.

 

Zaghba was born to a Moroccan Muslim father and an Italian Catholic Christian mother who had converted to Islam when she married. Zaghba had dual Moroccan and Italian nationality.

 

When his parents divorced, he went to Italy with his mother. In 2016, Zaghba was stopped at Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport by Italian officers who found ISIS-related materials on his mobile phone; he was stopped from continuing his journey to Istanbul.

 

Italian authorities said Zaghba was monitored continuously while in Italy and that the UK was informed about him. Giuseppe Amato, an Italian prosecutor, said:

 

"We did our best. We could just monitor

and surveil Zaghba and send a note to

the British authorities, that's all we could

do and we did it.

Since he moved to London, he came back

to Italy once in a while for a total of 10 days.

And during those 10 days we never let him

out of our sight."

 

According to The New York Times, the Italian branch of Al-Muhajiroun had introduced Butt to Zaghba.

 

-- Investigation of the 2017 Attack

 

On the morning of the 4th. June, police made 12 arrests following raids in flats in the Barking area of east London, where one of the attackers lived; controlled explosions were carried out during the raids.

 

Those held included five males aged between 27 and 55, arrested at one address in Barking, and six females aged between 19 and 60, arrested at a separate Barking address. One of the arrested males was subsequently released without charge.

 

Four properties in all were searched, including two in Newham in addition to the two in Barking. Further raids and arrests were made at properties in Newham and Barking early on the morning of the 5th. June.

 

On the 6th. June, a man was arrested in Barking, and another in Ilford the following day. By the 16th. June, all those arrested had been released without charge.

 

-- The Inquest Into the 2017 Attack

 

On the 7th. May 2019, an inquest into the deaths of the victims opened at the Old Bailey in London. Judge Mark Lucraft QC, Chief Coroner of England and Wales, presided, and people related to the dead gave accounts of what happened and who they had lost.

 

The inquest concluded on the 16th. July 2019 that all three attackers had been lawfully killed.

 

(4) The 2019 London Bridge Stabbing

 

On the 29th. November 2019, five people were stabbed, two fatally, in Central London. The attacker, Briton Usman Khan, had been released from prison in 2018 on licence after serving a sentence for terrorist offences.

 

Khan was attending an offender rehabilitation conference in Fishmongers' Hall when he threatened to detonate what turned out to be a fake suicide vest.

 

He started to attack people with two knives taped to his wrists, killing two of the conference participants by stabbing them in the chest.

 

Several people fought back, some attacking Khan with a fire extinguisher, a pike and a narwhal tusk as he fled the building and emerged on to London Bridge, where he was partially disarmed by a plain-clothes police officer.

 

He was restrained by members of the public until additional police officers arrived, pulled away those restraining him, and shot him.

 

-- Background to the 2019 Attack

 

A conference on offender rehabilitation was held on the 29th. November 2019 in Fishmongers' Hall, at the northern end of London Bridge, to celebrate the fifth anniversary of Learning Together. This is a programme run by the Cambridge Institute of Criminology to help offenders reintegrate into society following their release from prison.

 

Learning Together was set up in 2014 by University of Cambridge academics Ruth Armstrong and Amy Ludlow from the Faculty of Law and Institute of Criminology:

 

"To bring together people in criminal justice

and higher education institutions to study

alongside each other in inclusive and

transformative learning communities."

 

The programme served to enable students and prisoners to work together.

 

Former prisoner Usman Khan had been invited to the conference as a previous participant in the programme, and although banned from entering London under the terms of his release, he was granted a one-day exemption to attend.

 

-- The 2019 Attack

 

At 13:58 on the 29th. November, the police were called to Fishmongers' Hall after Khan, wearing a fake suicide vest, threatened to blow up the hall. The police reported that there had been no prior intelligence of the attack.

 

Holding two kitchen knives taped to his wrists, Khan began stabbing people inside the building. Several fought back, including a South African-born Londoner, Darryn Frost, who grabbed a 1.5-metre-long (4.9 ft) narwhal tusk from the wall to use as a weapon, former prisoner John Crilly, and Steven Gallant, a convicted murderer attending the conference on day release from prison.

 

Khan fled and began stabbing pedestrians outside on the north side of the bridge.

 

Several people were injured before members of the public, including a tour guide and a plain-clothes British Transport Police officer, later seen walking away with a knife, restrained and disarmed Khan on the bridge.

 

One of the people who stepped in to fight the attacker drove him back by spraying a fire extinguisher.

 

Armed officers of the City of London Police arrived at 14:03 and surrounded the attacker, who at the time was being restrained by a Ministry of Justice communications worker attending the rehabilitation meeting.

 

The officers pulled this person away to provide a clear shot, before one fired twice. Around 10 minutes after this, Khan started to get up; he was then shot 9 further times by 6 firearms officers. Khan had not been secured after the initial shooting due to the suicide vest. Khan died at the scene.

 

A Transport for London bus which had stopped adjacent to the site of the shooting was found to have damage to both its front and rear windows, possibly caused, according to the Metropolitan Police, by a ricocheting bullet.

 

-- The Victims of the 2019 Attack

 

Three of the victims were associated with Cambridge University's Learning Together prison-rehabilitation programme; two died and one was injured.

 

The two who died from their stab wounds were Jack Merritt and Saskia Jones.

 

Merritt was a 25-year-old law and criminology graduate from Cottenham, Cambridgeshire who had studied at the Universities of Manchester and Cambridge. He worked as a University of Cambridge administration officer, and was a course coordinator for Learning Together.

 

Jones was a 23 year old former Anglia Ruskin University and University of Cambridge student from Stratford-upon-Avon.

 

Funeral services for Merritt and Jones were conducted on the 20th. December 2019.

 

Two other women were seriously injured, while a chef who was working at the event was stabbed but had less serious injuries.

 

-- The Terrorist Usman Khan

 

Usman Khan was a 28-year-old British national from Stoke-on-Trent, of Pakistani descent. Khan appears to have left school with no qualifications after spending part of his late teens in Pakistan.

 

He was known to police, and had links to Islamist extremist groups. In December 2018 he had been automatically released from prison on licence, where he was serving a 16-year sentence for terrorism offences, and was wearing an electronic tag.

 

Khan had been part of a plot, inspired by Al-Qaeda, to establish a terrorist camp on his family's land in Kashmir and bomb the London Stock Exchange. The plot was disrupted by MI5 and the police, as part of MI5's Operation Guava (police Operation Norbury), and Khan was given an indeterminate sentence.

 

Of the nine men involved, Khan was the youngest at 19 and according to Mr Justice Wilkie, Khan and two others were “more serious jihadis” than the others.

 

In 2013, Khan's sentence was revised after an appeal, and he was ordered to serve at least 8 years of his new 16-year sentence, with a 5-year extended licence allowing recall to prison.

 

According to the anti-extremism group Hope not Hate, Khan was a supporter of Al-Muhajiroun, an extremist group with which scores of terrorists were involved. He was a student and personal friend of Anjem Choudary, an Islamist and terrorism supporter.

 

Post-mortem examination showed evidence of occasional use of cocaine by Khan.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2019 Attack

 

The news of the attack was broken live as it happened on the BBC by one of its reporters, John McManus, who witnessed members of the public fighting Khan as he crossed the bridge, and heard two shots being fired by police officers.

 

McManus said that he was certain that more than two shots were fired during the incident.

 

The police, ambulance, and fire services attended the scene, and a major incident was declared. A large police cordon was set up in the area and residents were told to stay away. Police closed both Monument Underground station and London Bridge station after the attack.

 

The Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, returned to Downing Street following the incident, after campaigning in his constituency for the forthcoming general election. Johnson commended the "immense bravery" of the emergency services and members of the public, and claimed that anyone involved in the attack would be hunted down.

 

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, thanked the emergency services and members of the public who helped to restrain the attacker, saying they had shown "breathtaking heroism".

 

The Conservative Party, Labour Party and Liberal Democrats temporarily suspended campaigning in London for the general election. A parliamentary election hustings event scheduled to be held at Great St. Mary's Church in Cambridge on the 30th. November was cancelled and replaced by a memorial vigil for the victims of the attack.

 

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick made a statement following the attack. She said that there would be an increased police presence on the streets, and that cordons in the London Bridge area would remain in place. An appeal was made for the public to submit any film or picture evidence or information that could assist the investigation.

 

In Pakistan, publication of Khan's Pakistani origins by the leading newspaper Dawn were deemed unpatriotic and defamatory, and led to demonstrations demanding that the publisher and the editor be hanged.

 

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack. Its news agency, Amaq, claimed Usman Khan was one of its fighters. A janaza prayer for Khan was held at a mosque in Birmingham, and he was buried in his family's ancestral village in Pakistan, following objections to his burial in the UK by local Muslims in his native Stoke.

 

In 2021, following an inquest, Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation Jonathan Hall QC called for those involved in the planning or preparation of terrorist attacks to be given automatic life sentences. Hall stated:

 

"It is hard to underestimate how serious

Usman Khan’s original offence was."

 

-- Investigations Into the 2019 Attack

 

London Bridge was closed until the early hours of the following Monday for forensic investigation of the scene. A property in Stafford and one in Stoke-on-Trent were searched by police.

 

An inquest into the deaths of Merritt and Jones was opened on the 4th. December 2019 at the Central Criminal Court in London, and was subsequently adjourned.

 

A pre-inquest review hearing took place at the Old Bailey on the 16th. October 2020, before the Chief Coroner of England and Wales, Mark Lucraft QC.

 

The inquest re-opened on the 12th. April 2021, presided over by Lucraft. On the 28th. May 2021 the jury concluded that the victims had been unlawfully killed.

 

They further concluded that insufficient monitoring of Khan, unreasonable belief in his rehabilitation, a lack of information sharing between agencies, and inadequate security planning at the event were all contributing factors in their deaths.

 

Khan's inquest, also overseen by Lucraft, found in June 2021 that Khan was lawfully killed by the police.

 

-- Royal Prerogative of Mercy for Steven Gallant

 

Steven Gallant was granted the Royal prerogative of mercy by the Lord Chancellor on behalf of the Queen in October 2020, in order to bring his parole hearing forward by ten months to June 2021.

 

The Ministry of Justice stated that:

 

"This is in recognition of his exceptionally

brave actions at Fishmongers’ Hall, which

helped save people's lives despite the

tremendous risk to his own".

 

Though the parole board still has to decide on whether to release him, it was reported that it would be unlikely for his case to be denied after the Queen's intervention. The families of both Merritt and of Gallant's 2005 murder victim approved the action due to his heroic deeds and efforts to turn his life around since the murder.

 

Johnny Ramensky

 

So what else happened on the day that the card was posted?

 

Well, the 6th. April 1906 marked the birth of Johnny Ramensky.

 

Born Jonas Ramanauckas in Glenboig, North Lanarkshire, Scotland, Johnny Ramensky MM, also known as John Ramsay, Gentleman Johnny, and Gentle Johnny, was a Scottish career criminal who used his safe-cracking abilities as a commando during the Second World War.

 

A popular song about him, "The Ballad of Johnny Ramensky", was written in 1959 by Norman Buchan, later to become a Labour Party member of parliament, and recorded by singer Enoch Kent, Buchan's brother-in-law.

 

Though a career criminal, Ramensky received the nickname "Gentle Johnny" as he never used violence when being apprehended by the police.

 

Johnny Ramensky - The Early Years

 

Johnny was the son of Lithuanian immigrant parents. His father died when Ramensky was about eight and the remaining family moved to the Gorbals, in the south side of Glasgow.

 

In Glasgow, he attended Rutherglen Academy, and by eleven he had begun committing crimes. Eventually, he was sent to Polmont Borstal, spending three years there.

 

Johnny initially worked down the coal mines, similar to his father who had been a clay miner, and it was there he became familiar with the uses of dynamite.

 

Johnny Ramensky's Criminal Career

 

Throughout his life, Ramensky demonstrated great strength and gymnastics skills which he used in a career as a burglar, followed by graduating to safe-cracking, also known in the underworld as a Peterman.

 

During his criminal career, Ramensky maintained that he never targeted individuals' houses, but only businesses, and he became known for never resorting to violence despite being arrested numerous times, resulting in the nickname "Gentleman (or Gentle) Johnny".

 

Detective Superintendent Robert Colquhoun, one of his old adversaries, when taken ill, was sent a message by Ramensky wishing him a speedy recovery, suggesting he had been working too hard in pursuing him.

 

In October 1931, Ramensky married Margaret McManus and appears to have stayed out of trouble until March 1934 when he was sentenced to five years at HM Prison Peterhead.

 

Margaret died in 1934 and, after being denied parole to attend her funeral, Ramensky made his first escape on the 4th. November 1934. His escape, the first ever from Peterhead Prison, was short lived. He was caught 28 hours after his escape.

 

After being returned to prison he was placed in solitary confinement and shackled. Later in 1934, Labour MP for Glasgow Shettleston, John McGovern, brought up the shackling issue with the Secretary of State for Scotland. In December 1934, Ramensky was released from his shackles, making him the last man to be shackled in a Scottish prison cell.

 

Johnny Ramensky's Military Career

 

Ramensky was released after serving a sentence in Peterhead Prison on the 8th. October 1942. During his time there, he had written to officials seeking references to join the army.

 

Due to the intervention of a senior police officer from Aberdeen, he had attracted the interest of Robert Laycock who was seeking people with skills which could be used in commando raiding forces.

 

As a result, he was enlisted with the Royal Fusiliers in January 1943, and transferred immediately to the Commandos, where he was trained as a soldier whilst also instructing on the use of explosives. Although being officially enlisted with the Royal Fusiliers, he never actually served with them, spending his entire wartime service with the No. 30 Commando.

 

Ramensky, using his safe-blowing skills, performed sabotage missions, being parachuted behind enemy lines to retrieve documents from Axis headquarters. This culminated during the Italian campaign, where 14 embassy strong boxes or safes were opened in a single day.

 

Johnny's exploits may have been exaggerated, as they include obtaining documents from Erwin Rommel's headquarters in North Africa and items from Carinhall, the country home of Hermann Göring in the Schorfheide-Chorin Reserve.

 

However, the raid on Rommel's headquarters occurred in 1941 while Ramensky was still in prison, and Carinhall's treasures were removed before the home was destroyed by a Luftwaffe demolition squad, on Göring's orders, while Ramensky was in Italy.

 

Johnny remained in the army after the war as a translator for the allied forces who were repatriating approximately 70,000 Lithuanians from camps in the Lübeck area. Following this, he had a short spell as an officer's batman before being demobbed in 1946.

 

Johnny Ramensky - The Later Years and Death

 

Despite his war service and being awarded the Military Medal, Johnny did not give up his safe-cracking lifestyle, and spent the time after the war in and out of jail, including HM Prison Barlinnie and Saughton Prison.

 

In 1955, he married to Lily Mulholland.

 

He was later sentenced to a year in Perth Prison, after being caught on a shop roof in Ayr.

 

After suffering a stroke Johnny died at the age of 66 on the 4th. November 1972 in Perth Royal Infirmary.

 

Hidden Loot

 

Ramensky's friend Sonny Leitch, also a career criminal who served in the armed forces, said that Ramensky told him that he had stolen a hoard of Nazi plunder during the Allied march on Rome in 1944.

 

Johnny also said that this hoard was later kept at the Shepton Mallet military prison in Somerset, and at the Royal Navy supply depot at Carfin, Lanarkshire, after the war.

 

He claimed that the hoard contained portraits of Hitler, Eva Braun, Göring, Goebbels and Himmler, and a treasure trove of jewellery and gold.

For this year’s Bumper Festive Edition I have focused not on the absurdity of the season, but instead on an outsider musical work high in my affections – Modest(e) Mussorgsky’s “Pictures at an Exhibition”. As you probably know, that piece was composed after an exhibition of the work of the composer’s close friend Viktor Hartmann following the latter’s early death, aged 39, from an aneurism in 1873. More tellingly, the music is a response to the event of Hartmann’s death itself, which seems to have had a most profound on the mental state of the composer: Mussorgsky himself, a depressive alcoholic, only lived to be 42 and as you will see early death is a recurring theme in what follows.

 

My “exhibition” is in two tableaux, each represented by a flickr album:

Pictures at an Exhibition (Livhouse) features mostly original photos by me but also one screengrab and some Public Domain “bonus material” in the form of images of other non-Hartmann paintings from his era. In keeping with Mussorgsky’s original work I have remained observational up to the half-way mark, then dwelled on “Ars Longa Vita Brevis” thereafter.

Pictures at an Exhibition (Hartmann) features for cross-reference purposes as many of the Hartmann paintings that inspired the composition as can be attributed – or assumed (More on the “assumed” on the commentary for the relevant photos) and where that is not possible place-markers in the form of a handbill related to the Promenades or plain-grey where the photo is either unknown or missing. Other than the plain-greys, all items here are Public Domain images obtained via the pianist Charles Finnegan, to the relevant section of whose performance on YouTube there are links throughout both tableaux.

 

It is worth noting here that my accidental discovery of Charles Finnegan’s performance while scoping this project was very à-propos, as he too has died far too young after a life that was itself filled with loss, in his case only 3 years ago aged 25 from pancreatic cancer. The project is much enriched by his posthumous presence.

 

There are synopses enough around already of the music and its inspirations, so while I must inevitably touch on that with individual pictures I shall spare you such needless repetition here, other than the statement of the obvious already made about the shift in emphasis around the half-way mark of the program, between tribute and introspection. Suffice to say here that my uploads are more my response-to-the-response, presented in my customary referential and tangential manner. “Stream of consciousness” is an overly-fussy and pretentious way of describing a process with which my regular viewers will already be familiar.

 

Nonetheless, a remark about the nature of my own content may be appropriate. It is fair to say that it concentrates on my own preferences and preoccupations as much as Mussorgsky’s – less so perhaps those of Hartmann whose work is now mostly lost, making us unable to judge. Still, though, there are clues that the painter’s mindset was indeed similar – the close relationship with the composer, the few works that have survived, and the anecdotes from the pair's mutual friend and critic Vladimir Stasov among others. Stasov in his writing has proven an invaluable source of information for posterity. The source article at wikipedia depends on him quite substantially.

 

There a sense of the absurd relieving the gloom. Traders and the business community are easy targets, of course, and my relationship with those is, to put it mildly, ambivalent. I find lots to admire and lots to disdain too. The vanity that is corporate richesse personified by “Samuel” Goldenberg on the one hand and by the preening displays of the nameless constructors of opulent castles on the other; the patrician tossing of crumbs from time to time by both in exchange for subjugation; the noise of those self-made entrepreneurs in every echelon of society who cross the line into self-importance (but note well that not all entrepreneurs do that!); the 21st Century manifestations of the power-elite and that same self-importance of New Money, in unholy and unspoken alliance with the old feudal Lords? There is nothing new in any of that. Likewise the nurture of oppressed youth by encouragement of the very acts for which we go on to reproach them, through a heady mixture of mythology, of body-shaming, of exhortation to indulgence, rash adventure, and warmongering, plus (of course) of official bullying and scare tactics.

 

And … there are castles - three of them, two still extant, and animals. The presence of dogs and the absence in various senses of cattle, sheep, and cats. Dogs are not exactly a metaphor for ourselves. Beware the false metaphor, which is the Fake News of Original Sin. We own dogs almost like cattle, yet we love them almost like family. That is not unlike the relationship the powers-that-be would have us mere minions think they have with us, and so they do - apart from the “almost” and the “love” parts. And that is why we in turn own cattle and dogs – and sheep. Don’t forget the sheep! Also, try not to be one. Sometimes you need to be a cat, and that may be why there are no cats in this exhibition, although in all honesty I hadn’t thought about that until now. Nobody ever truly owns a cat. Quite simply, serendipity and its various natural cohorts didn’t provide any suitably stimulating feline subjects, for whatever reason (if any) of allegory or metaphor pertained.

 

The stimulus for the project was, needless to say, a chance discovery, and as with many such endeavours it was one that prompted me to start at the end. A conversion in progress of former offices and stores to a gated community of retirement apartments had temporarily occasioned removal of the gates to the complex. Temporarily? Six weeks and counting now. Combine this with the notion that the gate of Hartmann’s design ended up never being built and … voila! The Great Gate at Dyserth was born in all its absurdity, and subsequently was duly photographed crying out for the company of its unborn (or do I mean unhatched?) absurdist siblings. There are rants a-plenty available of course, connected with that and several others of my photo subjects, but to rant here and now would lower the tone. And there you have my own self-importance - “lower the tone”, indeed! Anyway, there is space for ranting a-plenty on individual photos.

 

In some cases (eg Bydlo) the absurdity was imposed by me on an entirely innocuous scene, in others (eg Con Mortuis) the absurdity was already present, and in yet others (eg the Old Castle) the truth is somewhere in the middle. In some cases the scenes were sought out, in others they presented themselves to this rural equivalent of a Street Photographer constantly on the lookout.

 

As for the music itself, I think that in order to get the most out of it you have to understand and perhaps identify with the outsider that was Modest Mussorgsky. While I appreciate the merits of the various orchestrations that have appeared over the years, I really can’t love them. Starting with that of Rimsky-Korsakov, a well-meaning friend, through Ravel’s smoothing-over and even the eccentric Stokowski version with its artificial Disney-esque wildness, there have been innumerable attempts to clean it up, to sanitise it, to make it safe. Leonard Slatkin’s compilation of arguably the most notable moments in that canon makes a good fist of “putting it back into the wild”, most notably so in the finale with Douglas Gamley’s bombastic-yet-primitive Great Gate (“The Bogatyr Gate at Kiev” - Gamley's own 1968 recording here) arranged to include a male chorus and Lord-knows-what-else, but for me only the piano version is truly satisfactory. Even that has been handed down to us in a polished-up version thanks to a mix of good intentions and flawed reproductions of the score, but thankfully the province of solo instrumentation leaves room for some Animal Magic by the best performers that the formality of orchestration cannot. Now, though, we are told that the pianist Andrej Hoteev has located and worked from the original 1874 score which differs from the version hitherto thought “genuine”. I look forward to hearing that recording. In the meantime, my performances of choice are the 1958 Sofia recital by Sviatoslav Richter and the recent discovery of Charles Finnegan. Strangely, and as is often the case with classic Soviet Era musicians, the rigid discipline brought to the party by Richter gets closer in spirit to the Wild Child ethos than any other up until Finnegan, whose raw energy I believe has taken Richter's crown.

 

Regarding Finnegan - in his private recording, presented only online as far as I can establish, I believe that he benefits from the same ingenu / rockstar leanings that Mussorgsky had; both men had careers in other fields and immense native talent in whose wake formality and technique eventually followed. While Finnegan has put many other performances of his onto Soundcloud, only his YouTube Mussorgsky excels (thanks to his instincts), for he was at the time of his untimely death still an emerging talent. If only he had been with us for another 40 years! Then again, had he come to the notice of a major label perhaps the Commercial Consideration would have prevented the appearance of any more Golden Eggs. After all, it is well over half a century since Glenn Gould was domesticated.

  

Information sources:

Wikipedia

Jeanette Fang

Brilliant Classics / Nino Gvetadze

Good Music Guide

Computer Weekly

 

Non-original media sources:

Wikimedia Commons

Computer Weekly

Charles Finnegan

   

The Postcard

 

A postally unused Valentine's Series postcard that was printed in Great Britain. The image is a glossy real photograph.

 

On the divided back of the card the publishers have printed:

 

"London Bridge -

The busiest of London

bridges, built of Aberdeen

granite in 1831, widened

1904.

It has five arches in contrast

with the nineteen of its

wooden namesake, which

was lined with quaint houses".

 

The Sale and Removal of London Bridge

 

By 1896 the bridge was the busiest point in London, and one of its most congested, with 8,000 pedestrians and 900 vehicles crossing every hour. To designs by engineer Edward Cruttwell, it was widened in 1904 by 13 feet (4.0 m), using granite corbels.

 

However subsequent surveys showed that the bridge was sinking an inch (about 2.5 cm) every eight years, and by 1924 the east side had sunk some three to four inches (about 9 cm) lower than the west side. It was concluded that the bridge would have to be removed and replaced.

 

Council member Ivan Luckin put forward the idea of selling the bridge, and recalled:

 

"They all thought I was completely

crazy when I suggested we should

sell London Bridge when it needed

replacing."

 

Subsequently, in 1968, Council placed the bridge on the market and began to look for potential buyers. On the 18th. April 1968, Rennie's bridge was purchased by the Missourian entrepreneur Robert P. McCulloch of McCulloch Oil for $2,460,000.

 

The claim that McCulloch believed mistakenly that he was buying the more impressive Tower Bridge was denied by Ivan Luckin in a newspaper interview.

 

Before the bridge was taken apart, each granite facing block was marked for later reassembly. The blocks were taken to Merrivale Quarry at Princetown in Devon, where 15 to 20 cm (6 to 8 in) were sliced off the inner faces of many, in order to facilitate their fixing.

 

Stones left behind were sold in an online auction when the quarry was abandoned and flooded in 2003. 10,000 tons of granite blocks were shipped via the Panama Canal to California, then trucked from Long Beach to Arizona.

 

They were used to face a new, purpose-built hollow core steel-reinforced concrete structure, ensuring that the bridge would support the weight of modern traffic. The bridge was reconstructed at Lake Havasu City, Arizona, and was re-dedicated on the 10th. October 1971 in a ceremony attended by London's Lord Mayor and celebrities.

 

The bridge carries the McCulloch Boulevard and spans the Bridgewater Channel, an artificial, navigable waterway that leads from the Uptown area of Lake Havasu City.

 

Terror Attacks on London Bridge and Nearby

 

There have been four terror attacks on or near London Bridge dating back to 1884. They are as follows:

 

(1) The 1884 London Bridge Terror Attack

 

On Saturday 13th. December 1884, two American-Irish Republicans carried out a dynamite attack on London Bridge as part of the Fenian dynamite campaign.

 

The bomb went off prematurely while the men were in a boat attaching it to a bridge pier at 5.45 pm during the evening rush hour. There was little damage to the bridge, and no casualties other than the bombers.

 

However, there was considerable collateral damage, and hundreds of windows were shattered on both banks of the Thames. The men's boat was so completely destroyed that the police initially thought the bombers had fled.

 

On the 25th. December 1884 the mutilated remains of one of the bombers were found. The body of the other man was never recovered, but the police were later able to identify the dead men as two Americans, William Mackey Lomasney, and John Fleming.

 

The men were identified after a landlord reported to police that dynamite had been found in the rented premises of two American gentlemen who had disappeared after the 13th. December, enabling police to piece together who was responsible for the attack.

 

The men had already been under surveillance by the police in both America and Great Britain.

 

(2) The 1992 London Bridge Bombing

 

On Friday the 28th. February 1992, the Provisional IRA exploded a bomb inside London Bridge station during the morning rush hour, causing extensive damage and wounding 29 people. It was one of many bombings carried out by one of the IRA's London active service units. It occurred just over a year after a bomb at Victoria station.

 

-- The 1992 Bombing

 

At around 8:20 am, someone rang Ulster Television's London office warning that a bomb was going to explode in a London station, without saying which one.

 

About ten minutes later, the bomb detonated, which made debris fly almost 50 feet (15 m) away from the blast area. Twenty nine people were hurt in the explosion, most of them from flying glass and other bits of debris; four were seriously hurt, but nobody was killed.

 

The victims were treated at Guy's Hospital.

 

-- Aftermath of the 1992 Explosion

 

The head of Scotland Yard's anti terrorist squad, George Churchill-Coleman, said that the 2 lb (910 g) bomb of high explosives was "clearly designed to kill."

 

Investigations suggested that the bomb had been placed in the men's restrooms. Churchill-Coleman added that the IRA's warning was "deliberately vague," and was given too late to act upon.

 

Prime Minister John Major said that the bombing would not change British policy in Northern Ireland:

 

"It was pointless. It was cowardly. It was

directed against innocent people and it

will make absolutely no difference to

our policy -- no difference at all."

 

Fearing additional IRA attacks on public transport, the security services warned commuters "more than ever" to stay on guard at all times. The next day, another bomb went off in London, by the Crown Prosecution Service office, injuring two more people and bringing the total injured to 31 in the space of just over 24 hours.

 

This was one of dozens of bombs that detonated in London that year, the biggest of which was the Baltic Exchange bombing, killing three people and causing almost £1 billion worth of damage.

 

The IRA maintained this pressure, bombing mainland Britain and especially the City of London as much as possible until the ceasefire of 1994.

 

(3) The 2017 London Bridge Attack

 

On the 3rd. June 2017, a terrorist vehicle-ramming and stabbing took place in London when a van was deliberately driven into pedestrians on London Bridge, and then crashed on Borough High Street, just south of the River Thames.

 

The van's three occupants then ran to the nearby Borough Market area and began stabbing people in and around restaurants and pubs. They were shot dead by Metropolitan and City of London Police authorised firearms officers, and were found to be wearing fake explosive vests.

 

Eight people were killed and 48 were injured, including members of the public and four unarmed police officers who attempted to stop the assailants. British authorities described the perpetrators as radical Islamic terrorists.

 

The Islamic State (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attack.

 

-- Background to the 2017 Attack

 

In March 2017, five people had been killed in a combined vehicle and knife attack at Westminster. In late May, a suicide bomber killed 22 people at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena.

 

After the Manchester bombing, the UK's terror threat level was raised to "critical", its highest level, until the 27th. May 2017, when it was lowered to severe.

 

-- The 2017 Attack

 

The attack was carried out using a white Renault Master hired earlier on the same evening in Harold Hill, by Khuram Butt. He had intended to hire a 7.5 tonne lorry, but was refused due to his failure to provide payment details.

 

The attackers were armed with 12-inch (30 cm) kitchen knives with ceramic blades, which they tied to their wrists with leather straps. They also prepared fake explosive belts by wrapping water bottles in grey tape.

 

At 21:58 on the 3rd. June 2017, the van travelled south across London Bridge, and returned six minutes later, crossing over the bridge northbound, making a U-turn at the northern end and then driving southbound across the bridge.

 

It mounted the pavement three times and hit multiple pedestrians, killing two. Witnesses said the van was travelling at high speed. 999 emergency calls were first recorded at 22:07. The van was later found to contain 13 wine bottles containing flammable liquid with rags stuffed in them, along with blow torches.

 

The van crashed on Borough High Street after crossing the central reservation. The van's tyres were destroyed by the central reservation, and the three attackers, armed with knives, abandoned the vehicle.

 

Then they ran down the steps to Green Dragon Court, where they killed five people outside and near the Boro Bistro pub. The attackers then went back up the steps to Borough High Street and attacked three bystanders.

 

Police tried to fight the attackers, but were stabbed, and Ignacio Echeverría helped them by striking the terrorist Redouane and possibly Zaghba with his skateboard. Echeverría was later killed outside Lobos Meat and Tapas.

 

Members of the public threw bottles and chairs at the attackers. Witnesses reported that the attackers were shouting:

 

"This is for Allah".

 

People in and around a number of other restaurants and bars along Stoney Street were also attacked. During the attack, an unknown man was spared by Rachid Redouane, but despite many efforts the man was never found.

 

A Romanian baker hit one of the attackers over the head with a crate before giving shelter to 20 people inside a bakery inside Borough Market.

 

One man fought the three attackers with his fists in the Black and Blue steakhouse, shouting:

 

"F*** you, I'm Millwall."

 

His actions gave members of the public who were in the restaurant the opportunity to run away. He was stabbed eight times in the hands, chest and head. He underwent surgery at St Thomas' Hospital, and was taken off the critical list on the 4th. June.

 

A British Transport Police officer armed with a baton also took on the attackers, receiving multiple stab wounds and temporarily losing sight in his right eye as a consequence.

 

Off-duty Metropolitan police constables Liam Jones and Stewart Henderson rendered first aid to seriously injured members of the public before protecting over 150 people inside the Thameside Inn and evacuating them by Metropolitan marine support unit and RNLI boats to the north shore of the Thames.

 

The three attackers were then shot dead by armed officers from the City of London and Metropolitan police Specialist Firearms Command eight minutes after the initial emergency call was made.

 

CCTV footage showed the three attackers in Borough Market running at the armed officers; the attackers were shot dead 20 seconds later. A total of 46 rounds were fired by three City of London and five Metropolitan Police officers.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2017 Attack

 

The Metropolitan Police issued 'Run, Hide, Tell' notices via social media during the attack, and asked the public to remain calm and vigilant.

 

All buildings within the vicinity of London Bridge were evacuated, and London Bridge, Borough and Bank Underground stations were closed at the request of the police.

 

The mainline railway stations at London Bridge, Waterloo East, Charing Cross and Cannon Street were also closed. The Home Secretary approved the deployment of a military counter terrorist unit from the Special Air Service (SAS).

 

The helicopters carrying the SAS landed on London Bridge to support the Metropolitan Police because of concerns that there might be more attackers at large.

 

The Metropolitan Police Marine Policing Unit dispatched boats on the River Thames, with assistance from the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI), to contribute to the evacuation of the area and look for any casualties who might have fallen from the bridge.

 

A stabbing incident took place in Vauxhall at 23:45, causing Vauxhall station to be briefly closed; this was later confirmed to be unrelated to the attack.

 

At 01:45 on the 4th. June, controlled explosions took place of the attackers' bomb vests, which were found to be fake.

 

An emergency COBR meeting was held on the morning of the 4th. June. London Bridge mainline railway and underground stations remained closed throughout the 4th. June. A cordon was established around the scene of the attack. London Bridge station reopened at 05:00 on Monday the 5th. June.

 

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said that there was a surge of hate crimes and islamophobic incidents following the attack.

 

New security measures were implemented on eight central London bridges following the attack, to reduce the likelihood of further vehicle attacks, with concrete barriers being installed. The barriers have been criticised for causing severe congestion in cycle lanes during peak hours.

 

Borough Market reopened on the 14th. June.

 

-- Casualties of the 2017 Attack

 

Eight civilians died in the attack: one Spaniard, one Briton, two Australians, one Canadian and three French citizens were killed by the attackers, and the three attackers themselves were killed by armed police.

 

Two of the civilian fatalities were caused in the initial vehicle-ramming attack, while the remaining six were stabbed to death. One body was recovered from the Thames near Limehouse several days after the attack.

 

48 people were injured in the attack, including one New Zealander, two Australians, two Germans and four French citizens.

 

Of the 48 people admitted to hospital, 21 were initially reported to be in a critical condition.

 

Four police officers were among those injured in the attack. A British Transport Police officer was stabbed, and suffered serious injuries to his head, face and neck. An off-duty Metropolitan Police officer was seriously injured when he was stabbed.

 

Two other Metropolitan Police officers received head and arm injuries. As a result of police gunfire, a bystander received an accidental gunshot wound, which was not critical.

 

-- The 2017 Attackers

 

On the 4th. June the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, said that:

 

"We are confident about the fact that

they were radical Islamic terrorists, the

way they were inspired, and we need

to find out more about where this

radicalisation came from."

 

Amaq News Agency, an online outlet associated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), said the attackers were ISIS fighters.

 

On the 5th. June, two of the attackers were identified as Khuram Shazad Butt and Rachid Redouane. The third of the three attackers, Youssef Zaghba, was identified the following day.

 

(a) Khuram Shazad Butt

 

Butt (born 20th. April 1990) was a Pakistan-born British citizen whose family came from Jhelum. He grew up in Great Britain, living in Plaistow.

 

He had a wife and two children. Neighbours told the BBC that Butt had been reported to police for attempting to radicalise children; he had also expressed disgust at the way women dressed.

 

He was known to police as a "heavyweight" member of the banned extremist group al-Muhajiroun. A BBC interviewee said he had a verbal confrontation with Butt in 2013 on the day after another Al-Muhajiroun follower had murdered Fusilier Lee Rigby.

 

Butt was part of an al-Muhajiroun campaign in 2015 to intimidate Muslims who planned to vote in the UK general elections of that year, on the basis that it was forbidden in Islam.

 

He was known for holding extreme views, having been barred from two local mosques. He appeared on a 2016 Channel 4 Television documentary, The Jihadis Next Door, which showed him arguing with police over the unfurling of an ISIL black flag in Regent's Park.

 

According to a friend, he had been radicalised by the YouTube videos of the American Muslim hate preacher Ahmad Musa Jibril. Butt was known to have taken drugs before he became radicalised.

 

After radicalisation, Butt started to stop his neighbours on the street and ask them whether they had been to the mosque.

 

Butt had worked for a man accused of training Mohammad Sidique Khan, the leader of the July 2005 London bombing. The police and MI5 knew of Butt, and he was investigated in 2015. The investigation was later "moved into the lower echelons", and his file was classed as low priority.

 

Butt sometimes manned the desk of the Ummah Fitness Centre gym, where he prayed regularly. CCTV footage was released of Butt, Redouane and Zaghba meeting outside the gym days before the attack. A senior figure at a local mosque had reported the gym to police.

 

The New York Times said that Butt and his brother were part of the UK government's Prevent programme, which aims to stop people from becoming terrorists, and which reports suspected radicals to police programmes.

 

At the time of the attack he was on police bail following an allegation of fraud, though the police had intended to take no further action due to a lack of evidence. He had previously been cautioned by police for fraud in 2008 and common assault in 2010.

 

(b) Rachid Redouane

 

Redouane (born 31 July 1986) was a failed asylum seeker in the UK, whose application was denied in 2009, and not previously known to police. He had claimed to be either Moroccan or Libyan.

 

Redouane worked as a pastry chef, and in 2012 he married an Irish woman in a ceremony in Ireland. He beat and bullied his wife.

 

He used to drink alcohol. He lived variously in Rathmines, a suburb of Dublin, also in Morocco and the UK. According to his wife, Redouane was most likely radicalised in Morocco. Later the couple stayed in the UK on an EU residency card where they had a daughter in 2015.

 

The couple separated in 2016 and she divorced him after he tried to force his extremist beliefs on her.

 

At the time of the attack, he was living in Dagenham, East London.

 

(c) Youssef Zaghba

 

Zaghba (born 1995 in Fez, Morocco) was at the time of the attack living in east London where he worked in a fast-food outlet. He also worked for an Islamic television channel in London.

 

Zaghba was born to a Moroccan Muslim father and an Italian Catholic Christian mother who had converted to Islam when she married. Zaghba had dual Moroccan and Italian nationality.

 

When his parents divorced, he went to Italy with his mother. In 2016, Zaghba was stopped at Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport by Italian officers who found ISIS-related materials on his mobile phone; he was stopped from continuing his journey to Istanbul.

 

Italian authorities said Zaghba was monitored continuously while in Italy and that the UK was informed about him. Giuseppe Amato, an Italian prosecutor, said:

 

"We did our best. We could just monitor

and surveil Zaghba and send a note to

the British authorities, that's all we could

do and we did it.

Since he moved to London, he came back

to Italy once in a while for a total of 10 days.

And during those 10 days we never let him

out of our sight."

 

According to The New York Times, the Italian branch of Al-Muhajiroun had introduced Butt to Zaghba.

 

-- Investigation of the 2017 Attack

 

On the morning of the 4th. June, police made 12 arrests following raids in flats in the Barking area of east London, where one of the attackers lived; controlled explosions were carried out during the raids.

 

Those held included five males aged between 27 and 55, arrested at one address in Barking, and six females aged between 19 and 60, arrested at a separate Barking address. One of the arrested males was subsequently released without charge.

 

Four properties in all were searched, including two in Newham in addition to the two in Barking. Further raids and arrests were made at properties in Newham and Barking early on the morning of the 5th. June.

 

On the 6th. June, a man was arrested in Barking, and another in Ilford the following day. By the 16th. June, all those arrested had been released without charge.

 

-- The Inquest Into the 2017 Attack

 

On the 7th. May 2019, an inquest into the deaths of the victims opened at the Old Bailey in London. Judge Mark Lucraft QC, Chief Coroner of England and Wales, presided, and people related to the dead gave accounts of what happened and who they had lost.

 

The inquest concluded on the 16th. July 2019 that all three attackers had been lawfully killed.

 

(4) The 2019 London Bridge Stabbing

 

On the 29th. November 2019, five people were stabbed, two fatally, in Central London. The attacker, Briton Usman Khan, had been released from prison in 2018 on licence after serving a sentence for terrorist offences.

 

Khan was attending an offender rehabilitation conference in Fishmongers' Hall when he threatened to detonate what turned out to be a fake suicide vest.

 

He started to attack people with two knives taped to his wrists, killing two of the conference participants by stabbing them in the chest.

 

Several people fought back, some attacking Khan with a fire extinguisher, a pike and a narwhal tusk as he fled the building and emerged on to London Bridge, where he was partially disarmed by a plain-clothes police officer.

 

He was restrained by members of the public until additional police officers arrived, pulled away those restraining him, and shot him.

 

-- Background to the 2019 Attack

 

A conference on offender rehabilitation was held on the 29th. November 2019 in Fishmongers' Hall, at the northern end of London Bridge, to celebrate the fifth anniversary of Learning Together. This is a programme run by the Cambridge Institute of Criminology to help offenders reintegrate into society following their release from prison.

 

Learning Together was set up in 2014 by University of Cambridge academics Ruth Armstrong and Amy Ludlow from the Faculty of Law and Institute of Criminology:

 

"To bring together people in criminal justice

and higher education institutions to study

alongside each other in inclusive and

transformative learning communities."

 

The programme served to enable students and prisoners to work together.

 

Former prisoner Usman Khan had been invited to the conference as a previous participant in the programme, and although banned from entering London under the terms of his release, he was granted a one-day exemption to attend.

 

-- The 2019 Attack

 

At 13:58 on the 29th. November, the police were called to Fishmongers' Hall after Khan, wearing a fake suicide vest, threatened to blow up the hall. The police reported that there had been no prior intelligence of the attack.

 

Holding two kitchen knives taped to his wrists, Khan began stabbing people inside the building. Several fought back, including a South African-born Londoner, Darryn Frost, who grabbed a 1.5-metre-long (4.9 ft) narwhal tusk from the wall to use as a weapon, former prisoner John Crilly, and Steven Gallant, a convicted murderer attending the conference on day release from prison.

 

Khan fled and began stabbing pedestrians outside on the north side of the bridge.

 

Several people were injured before members of the public, including a tour guide and a plain-clothes British Transport Police officer, later seen walking away with a knife, restrained and disarmed Khan on the bridge.

 

One of the people who stepped in to fight the attacker drove him back by spraying a fire extinguisher.

 

Armed officers of the City of London Police arrived at 14:03 and surrounded the attacker, who at the time was being restrained by a Ministry of Justice communications worker attending the rehabilitation meeting.

 

The officers pulled this person away to provide a clear shot, before one fired twice. Around 10 minutes after this, Khan started to get up; he was then shot 9 further times by 6 firearms officers. Khan had not been secured after the initial shooting due to the suicide vest. Khan died at the scene.

 

A Transport for London bus which had stopped adjacent to the site of the shooting was found to have damage to both its front and rear windows, possibly caused, according to the Metropolitan Police, by a ricocheting bullet.

 

-- The Victims of the 2019 Attack

 

Three of the victims were associated with Cambridge University's Learning Together prison-rehabilitation programme; two died and one was injured.

 

The two who died from their stab wounds were Jack Merritt and Saskia Jones.

 

Merritt was a 25-year-old law and criminology graduate from Cottenham, Cambridgeshire who had studied at the Universities of Manchester and Cambridge. He worked as a University of Cambridge administration officer, and was a course coordinator for Learning Together.

 

Jones was a 23 year old former Anglia Ruskin University and University of Cambridge student from Stratford-upon-Avon.

 

Funeral services for Merritt and Jones were conducted on the 20th. December 2019.

 

Two other women were seriously injured, while a chef who was working at the event was stabbed but had less serious injuries.

 

-- The Terrorist Usman Khan

 

Usman Khan was a 28-year-old British national from Stoke-on-Trent, of Pakistani descent. Khan appears to have left school with no qualifications after spending part of his late teens in Pakistan.

 

He was known to police, and had links to Islamist extremist groups. In December 2018 he had been automatically released from prison on licence, where he was serving a 16-year sentence for terrorism offences, and was wearing an electronic tag.

 

Khan had been part of a plot, inspired by Al-Qaeda, to establish a terrorist camp on his family's land in Kashmir and bomb the London Stock Exchange. The plot was disrupted by MI5 and the police, as part of MI5's Operation Guava (police Operation Norbury), and Khan was given an indeterminate sentence.

 

Of the nine men involved, Khan was the youngest at 19 and according to Mr Justice Wilkie, Khan and two others were “more serious jihadis” than the others.

 

In 2013, Khan's sentence was revised after an appeal, and he was ordered to serve at least 8 years of his new 16-year sentence, with a 5-year extended licence allowing recall to prison.

 

According to the anti-extremism group Hope not Hate, Khan was a supporter of Al-Muhajiroun, an extremist group with which scores of terrorists were involved. He was a student and personal friend of Anjem Choudary, an Islamist and terrorism supporter.

 

Post-mortem examination showed evidence of occasional use of cocaine by Khan.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2019 Attack

 

The news of the attack was broken live as it happened on the BBC by one of its reporters, John McManus, who witnessed members of the public fighting Khan as he crossed the bridge, and heard two shots being fired by police officers.

 

McManus said that he was certain that more than two shots were fired during the incident.

 

The police, ambulance, and fire services attended the scene, and a major incident was declared. A large police cordon was set up in the area and residents were told to stay away. Police closed both Monument Underground station and London Bridge station after the attack.

 

The Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, returned to Downing Street following the incident, after campaigning in his constituency for the forthcoming general election. Johnson commended the "immense bravery" of the emergency services and members of the public, and claimed that anyone involved in the attack would be hunted down.

 

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, thanked the emergency services and members of the public who helped to restrain the attacker, saying they had shown "breathtaking heroism".

 

The Conservative Party, Labour Party and Liberal Democrats temporarily suspended campaigning in London for the general election. A parliamentary election hustings event scheduled to be held at Great St. Mary's Church in Cambridge on the 30th. November was cancelled and replaced by a memorial vigil for the victims of the attack.

 

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick made a statement following the attack. She said that there would be an increased police presence on the streets, and that cordons in the London Bridge area would remain in place. An appeal was made for the public to submit any film or picture evidence or information that could assist the investigation.

 

In Pakistan, publication of Khan's Pakistani origins by the leading newspaper Dawn were deemed unpatriotic and defamatory, and led to demonstrations demanding that the publisher and the editor be hanged.

 

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack. Its news agency, Amaq, claimed Usman Khan was one of its fighters. A janaza prayer for Khan was held at a mosque in Birmingham, and he was buried in his family's ancestral village in Pakistan, following objections to his burial in the UK by local Muslims in his native Stoke.

 

In 2021, following an inquest, Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation Jonathan Hall QC called for those involved in the planning or preparation of terrorist attacks to be given automatic life sentences. Hall stated:

 

"It is hard to underestimate how serious

Usman Khan’s original offence was."

 

-- Investigations Into the 2019 Attack

 

London Bridge was closed until the early hours of the following Monday for forensic investigation of the scene. A property in Stafford and one in Stoke-on-Trent were searched by police.

 

An inquest into the deaths of Merritt and Jones was opened on the 4th. December 2019 at the Central Criminal Court in London, and was subsequently adjourned.

 

A pre-inquest review hearing took place at the Old Bailey on the 16th. October 2020, before the Chief Coroner of England and Wales, Mark Lucraft QC.

 

The inquest re-opened on the 12th. April 2021, presided over by Lucraft. On the 28th. May 2021 the jury concluded that the victims had been unlawfully killed.

 

They further concluded that insufficient monitoring of Khan, unreasonable belief in his rehabilitation, a lack of information sharing between agencies, and inadequate security planning at the event were all contributing factors in their deaths.

 

Khan's inquest, also overseen by Lucraft, found in June 2021 that Khan was lawfully killed by the police.

 

-- Royal Prerogative of Mercy for Steven Gallant

 

Steven Gallant was granted the Royal prerogative of mercy by the Lord Chancellor on behalf of the Queen in October 2020, in order to bring his parole hearing forward by ten months to June 2021.

 

The Ministry of Justice stated that:

 

"This is in recognition of his exceptionally

brave actions at Fishmongers’ Hall, which

helped save people's lives despite the

tremendous risk to his own".

 

Though the parole board still has to decide on whether to release him, it was reported that it would be unlikely for his case to be denied after the Queen's intervention. The families of both Merritt and of Gallant's 2005 murder victim approved the action due to his heroic deeds and efforts to turn his life around since the murder.

The Postcard

 

A postally unused postcard bearing no publisher's name. The card has a divided back.

 

The Sale and Removal of London Bridge

 

By 1896 the bridge was the busiest point in London, and one of its most congested, with 8,000 pedestrians and 900 vehicles crossing every hour. To designs by engineer Edward Cruttwell, it was widened in 1904 by 13 feet (4.0 m), using granite corbels.

 

However subsequent surveys showed that the bridge was sinking an inch (about 2.5 cm) every eight years, and by 1924 the east side had sunk some three to four inches (about 9 cm) lower than the west side. It was concluded that the bridge would have to be removed and replaced.

 

Council member Ivan Luckin put forward the idea of selling the bridge, and recalled:

 

"They all thought I was completely

crazy when I suggested we should

sell London Bridge when it needed

replacing."

 

Subsequently, in 1968, Council placed the bridge on the market and began to look for potential buyers. On the 18th. April 1968, Rennie's bridge was purchased by the Missourian entrepreneur Robert P. McCulloch of McCulloch Oil for $2,460,000.

 

The claim that McCulloch believed mistakenly that he was buying the more impressive Tower Bridge was denied by Ivan Luckin in a newspaper interview.

 

Before the bridge was taken apart, each granite facing block was marked for later reassembly. The blocks were taken to Merrivale Quarry at Princetown in Devon, where 15 to 20 cm (6 to 8 in) were sliced off the inner faces of many, in order to facilitate their fixing.

 

Stones left behind were sold in an online auction when the quarry was abandoned and flooded in 2003. 10,000 tons of granite blocks were shipped via the Panama Canal to California, then trucked from Long Beach to Arizona.

 

They were used to face a new, purpose-built hollow core steel-reinforced concrete structure, ensuring that the bridge would support the weight of modern traffic. The bridge was reconstructed at Lake Havasu City, Arizona, and was re-dedicated on the 10th. October 1971 in a ceremony attended by London's Lord Mayor and celebrities.

 

The bridge carries the McCulloch Boulevard and spans the Bridgewater Channel, an artificial, navigable waterway that leads from the Uptown area of Lake Havasu City.

 

Terror Attacks on London Bridge and Nearby

 

There have been four terror attacks on or near London Bridge dating back to 1884. They are as follows:

 

(1) The 1884 London Bridge Terror Attack

 

On Saturday 13th. December 1884, two American-Irish Republicans carried out a dynamite attack on London Bridge as part of the Fenian dynamite campaign.

 

The bomb went off prematurely while the men were in a boat attaching it to a bridge pier at 5.45 pm during the evening rush hour. There was little damage to the bridge, and no casualties other than the bombers.

 

However, there was considerable collateral damage, and hundreds of windows were shattered on both banks of the Thames. The men's boat was so completely destroyed that the police initially thought the bombers had fled.

 

On the 25th. December 1884 the mutilated remains of one of the bombers were found. The body of the other man was never recovered, but the police were later able to identify the dead men as two Americans, William Mackey Lomasney, and John Fleming.

 

The men were identified after a landlord reported to police that dynamite had been found in the rented premises of two American gentlemen who had disappeared after the 13th. December, enabling police to piece together who was responsible for the attack.

 

The men had already been under surveillance by the police in both America and Great Britain.

 

(2) The 1992 London Bridge Bombing

 

On Friday the 28th. February 1992, the Provisional IRA exploded a bomb inside London Bridge station during the morning rush hour, causing extensive damage and wounding 29 people. It was one of many bombings carried out by one of the IRA's London active service units. It occurred just over a year after a bomb at Victoria station.

 

-- The 1992 Bombing

 

At around 8:20 am, someone rang Ulster Television's London office warning that a bomb was going to explode in a London station, without saying which one.

 

About ten minutes later, the bomb detonated, which made debris fly almost 50 feet (15 m) away from the blast area. Twenty nine people were hurt in the explosion, most of them from flying glass and other bits of debris; four were seriously hurt, but nobody was killed.

 

The victims were treated at Guy's Hospital.

 

-- Aftermath of the 1992 Explosion

 

The head of Scotland Yard's anti terrorist squad, George Churchill-Coleman, said that the 2 lb (910 g) bomb of high explosives was "clearly designed to kill."

 

Investigations suggested that the bomb had been placed in the men's restrooms. Churchill-Coleman added that the IRA's warning was "deliberately vague," and was given too late to act upon.

 

Prime Minister John Major said that the bombing would not change British policy in Northern Ireland:

 

"It was pointless. It was cowardly. It was

directed against innocent people and it

will make absolutely no difference to

our policy -- no difference at all."

 

Fearing additional IRA attacks on public transport, the security services warned commuters "more than ever" to stay on guard at all times. The next day, another bomb went off in London, by the Crown Prosecution Service office, injuring two more people and bringing the total injured to 31 in the space of just over 24 hours.

 

This was one of dozens of bombs that detonated in London that year, the biggest of which was the Baltic Exchange bombing, killing three people and causing almost £1 billion worth of damage.

 

The IRA maintained this pressure, bombing mainland Britain and especially the City of London as much as possible until the ceasefire of 1994.

 

(3) The 2017 London Bridge Attack

 

On the 3rd. June 2017, a terrorist vehicle-ramming and stabbing took place in London when a van was deliberately driven into pedestrians on London Bridge, and then crashed on Borough High Street, just south of the River Thames.

 

The van's three occupants then ran to the nearby Borough Market area and began stabbing people in and around restaurants and pubs. They were shot dead by Metropolitan and City of London Police authorised firearms officers, and were found to be wearing fake explosive vests.

 

Eight people were killed and 48 were injured, including members of the public and four unarmed police officers who attempted to stop the assailants. British authorities described the perpetrators as radical Islamic terrorists.

 

The Islamic State (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attack.

 

-- Background to the 2017 Attack

 

In March 2017, five people had been killed in a combined vehicle and knife attack at Westminster. In late May, a suicide bomber killed 22 people at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena.

 

After the Manchester bombing, the UK's terror threat level was raised to "critical", its highest level, until the 27th. May 2017, when it was lowered to severe.

 

-- The 2017 Attack

 

The attack was carried out using a white Renault Master hired earlier on the same evening in Harold Hill, by Khuram Butt. He had intended to hire a 7.5 tonne lorry, but was refused due to his failure to provide payment details.

 

The attackers were armed with 12-inch (30 cm) kitchen knives with ceramic blades, which they tied to their wrists with leather straps. They also prepared fake explosive belts by wrapping water bottles in grey tape.

 

At 21:58 on the 3rd. June 2017, the van travelled south across London Bridge, and returned six minutes later, crossing over the bridge northbound, making a U-turn at the northern end and then driving southbound across the bridge.

 

It mounted the pavement three times and hit multiple pedestrians, killing two. Witnesses said the van was travelling at high speed. 999 emergency calls were first recorded at 22:07. The van was later found to contain 13 wine bottles containing flammable liquid with rags stuffed in them, along with blow torches.

 

The van crashed on Borough High Street after crossing the central reservation. The van's tyres were destroyed by the central reservation, and the three attackers, armed with knives, abandoned the vehicle.

 

Then they ran down the steps to Green Dragon Court, where they killed five people outside and near the Boro Bistro pub. The attackers then went back up the steps to Borough High Street and attacked three bystanders.

 

Police tried to fight the attackers, but were stabbed, and Ignacio Echeverría helped them by striking the terrorist Redouane and possibly Zaghba with his skateboard. Echeverría was later killed outside Lobos Meat and Tapas.

 

Members of the public threw bottles and chairs at the attackers. Witnesses reported that the attackers were shouting:

 

"This is for Allah".

 

People in and around a number of other restaurants and bars along Stoney Street were also attacked. During the attack, an unknown man was spared by Rachid Redouane, but despite many efforts the man was never found.

 

A Romanian baker hit one of the attackers over the head with a crate before giving shelter to 20 people inside a bakery inside Borough Market.

 

One man fought the three attackers with his fists in the Black and Blue steakhouse, shouting:

 

"F*** you, I'm Millwall."

 

His actions gave members of the public who were in the restaurant the opportunity to run away. He was stabbed eight times in the hands, chest and head. He underwent surgery at St Thomas' Hospital, and was taken off the critical list on the 4th. June.

 

A British Transport Police officer armed with a baton also took on the attackers, receiving multiple stab wounds and temporarily losing sight in his right eye as a consequence.

 

Off-duty Metropolitan police constables Liam Jones and Stewart Henderson rendered first aid to seriously injured members of the public before protecting over 150 people inside the Thameside Inn and evacuating them by Metropolitan marine support unit and RNLI boats to the north shore of the Thames.

 

The three attackers were then shot dead by armed officers from the City of London and Metropolitan police Specialist Firearms Command eight minutes after the initial emergency call was made.

 

CCTV footage showed the three attackers in Borough Market running at the armed officers; the attackers were shot dead 20 seconds later. A total of 46 rounds were fired by three City of London and five Metropolitan Police officers.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2017 Attack

 

The Metropolitan Police issued 'Run, Hide, Tell' notices via social media during the attack, and asked the public to remain calm and vigilant.

 

All buildings within the vicinity of London Bridge were evacuated, and London Bridge, Borough and Bank Underground stations were closed at the request of the police.

 

The mainline railway stations at London Bridge, Waterloo East, Charing Cross and Cannon Street were also closed. The Home Secretary approved the deployment of a military counter terrorist unit from the Special Air Service (SAS).

 

The helicopters carrying the SAS landed on London Bridge to support the Metropolitan Police because of concerns that there might be more attackers at large.

 

The Metropolitan Police Marine Policing Unit dispatched boats on the River Thames, with assistance from the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI), to contribute to the evacuation of the area and look for any casualties who might have fallen from the bridge.

 

A stabbing incident took place in Vauxhall at 23:45, causing Vauxhall station to be briefly closed; this was later confirmed to be unrelated to the attack.

 

At 01:45 on the 4th. June, controlled explosions took place of the attackers' bomb vests, which were found to be fake.

 

An emergency COBR meeting was held on the morning of the 4th. June. London Bridge mainline railway and underground stations remained closed throughout the 4th. June. A cordon was established around the scene of the attack. London Bridge station reopened at 05:00 on Monday the 5th. June.

 

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said that there was a surge of hate crimes and islamophobic incidents following the attack.

 

New security measures were implemented on eight central London bridges following the attack, to reduce the likelihood of further vehicle attacks, with concrete barriers being installed. The barriers have been criticised for causing severe congestion in cycle lanes during peak hours.

 

Borough Market reopened on the 14th. June.

 

-- Casualties of the 2017 Attack

 

Eight civilians died in the attack: one Spaniard, one Briton, two Australians, one Canadian and three French citizens were killed by the attackers, and the three attackers themselves were killed by armed police.

 

Two of the civilian fatalities were caused in the initial vehicle-ramming attack, while the remaining six were stabbed to death. One body was recovered from the Thames near Limehouse several days after the attack.

 

48 people were injured in the attack, including one New Zealander, two Australians, two Germans and four French citizens.

 

Of the 48 people admitted to hospital, 21 were initially reported to be in a critical condition.

 

Four police officers were among those injured in the attack. A British Transport Police officer was stabbed, and suffered serious injuries to his head, face and neck. An off-duty Metropolitan Police officer was seriously injured when he was stabbed.

 

Two other Metropolitan Police officers received head and arm injuries. As a result of police gunfire, a bystander received an accidental gunshot wound, which was not critical.

 

-- The 2017 Attackers

 

On the 4th. June the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, said that:

 

"We are confident about the fact that

they were radical Islamic terrorists, the

way they were inspired, and we need

to find out more about where this

radicalisation came from."

 

Amaq News Agency, an online outlet associated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), said the attackers were ISIS fighters.

 

On the 5th. June, two of the attackers were identified as Khuram Shazad Butt and Rachid Redouane. The third of the three attackers, Youssef Zaghba, was identified the following day.

 

(a) Khuram Shazad Butt

 

Butt (born 20th. April 1990) was a Pakistan-born British citizen whose family came from Jhelum. He grew up in Great Britain, living in Plaistow.

 

He had a wife and two children. Neighbours told the BBC that Butt had been reported to police for attempting to radicalise children; he had also expressed disgust at the way women dressed.

 

He was known to police as a "heavyweight" member of the banned extremist group al-Muhajiroun. A BBC interviewee said he had a verbal confrontation with Butt in 2013 on the day after another Al-Muhajiroun follower had murdered Fusilier Lee Rigby.

 

Butt was part of an al-Muhajiroun campaign in 2015 to intimidate Muslims who planned to vote in the UK general elections of that year, on the basis that it was forbidden in Islam.

 

He was known for holding extreme views, having been barred from two local mosques. He appeared on a 2016 Channel 4 Television documentary, The Jihadis Next Door, which showed him arguing with police over the unfurling of an ISIL black flag in Regent's Park.

 

According to a friend, he had been radicalised by the YouTube videos of the American Muslim hate preacher Ahmad Musa Jibril. Butt was known to have taken drugs before he became radicalised.

 

After radicalisation, Butt started to stop his neighbours on the street and ask them whether they had been to the mosque.

 

Butt had worked for a man accused of training Mohammad Sidique Khan, the leader of the July 2005 London bombing. The police and MI5 knew of Butt, and he was investigated in 2015. The investigation was later "moved into the lower echelons", and his file was classed as low priority.

 

Butt sometimes manned the desk of the Ummah Fitness Centre gym, where he prayed regularly. CCTV footage was released of Butt, Redouane and Zaghba meeting outside the gym days before the attack. A senior figure at a local mosque had reported the gym to police.

 

The New York Times said that Butt and his brother were part of the UK government's Prevent programme, which aims to stop people from becoming terrorists, and which reports suspected radicals to police programmes.

 

At the time of the attack he was on police bail following an allegation of fraud, though the police had intended to take no further action due to a lack of evidence. He had previously been cautioned by police for fraud in 2008 and common assault in 2010.

 

(b) Rachid Redouane

 

Redouane (born 31 July 1986) was a failed asylum seeker in the UK, whose application was denied in 2009, and not previously known to police. He had claimed to be either Moroccan or Libyan.

 

Redouane worked as a pastry chef, and in 2012 he married an Irish woman in a ceremony in Ireland. He beat and bullied his wife.

 

He used to drink alcohol. He lived variously in Rathmines, a suburb of Dublin, also in Morocco and the UK. According to his wife, Redouane was most likely radicalised in Morocco. Later the couple stayed in the UK on an EU residency card where they had a daughter in 2015.

 

The couple separated in 2016 and she divorced him after he tried to force his extremist beliefs on her.

 

At the time of the attack, he was living in Dagenham, East London.

 

(c) Youssef Zaghba

 

Zaghba (born 1995 in Fez, Morocco) was at the time of the attack living in east London where he worked in a fast-food outlet. He also worked for an Islamic television channel in London.

 

Zaghba was born to a Moroccan Muslim father and an Italian Catholic Christian mother who had converted to Islam when she married. Zaghba had dual Moroccan and Italian nationality.

 

When his parents divorced, he went to Italy with his mother. In 2016, Zaghba was stopped at Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport by Italian officers who found ISIS-related materials on his mobile phone; he was stopped from continuing his journey to Istanbul.

 

Italian authorities said Zaghba was monitored continuously while in Italy and that the UK was informed about him. Giuseppe Amato, an Italian prosecutor, said:

 

"We did our best. We could just monitor

and surveil Zaghba and send a note to

the British authorities, that's all we could

do and we did it.

Since he moved to London, he came back

to Italy once in a while for a total of 10 days.

And during those 10 days we never let him

out of our sight."

 

According to The New York Times, the Italian branch of Al-Muhajiroun had introduced Butt to Zaghba.

 

-- Investigation of the 2017 Attack

 

On the morning of the 4th. June, police made 12 arrests following raids in flats in the Barking area of east London, where one of the attackers lived; controlled explosions were carried out during the raids.

 

Those held included five males aged between 27 and 55, arrested at one address in Barking, and six females aged between 19 and 60, arrested at a separate Barking address. One of the arrested males was subsequently released without charge.

 

Four properties in all were searched, including two in Newham in addition to the two in Barking. Further raids and arrests were made at properties in Newham and Barking early on the morning of the 5th. June.

 

On the 6th. June, a man was arrested in Barking, and another in Ilford the following day. By the 16th. June, all those arrested had been released without charge.

 

-- The Inquest Into the 2017 Attack

 

On the 7th. May 2019, an inquest into the deaths of the victims opened at the Old Bailey in London. Judge Mark Lucraft QC, Chief Coroner of England and Wales, presided, and people related to the dead gave accounts of what happened and who they had lost.

 

The inquest concluded on the 16th. July 2019 that all three attackers had been lawfully killed.

 

(4) The 2019 London Bridge Stabbing

 

On the 29th. November 2019, five people were stabbed, two fatally, in Central London. The attacker, Briton Usman Khan, had been released from prison in 2018 on licence after serving a sentence for terrorist offences.

 

Khan was attending an offender rehabilitation conference in Fishmongers' Hall when he threatened to detonate what turned out to be a fake suicide vest.

 

He started to attack people with two knives taped to his wrists, killing two of the conference participants by stabbing them in the chest.

 

Several people fought back, some attacking Khan with a fire extinguisher, a pike and a narwhal tusk as he fled the building and emerged on to London Bridge, where he was partially disarmed by a plain-clothes police officer.

 

He was restrained by members of the public until additional police officers arrived, pulled away those restraining him, and shot him.

 

-- Background to the 2019 Attack

 

A conference on offender rehabilitation was held on the 29th. November 2019 in Fishmongers' Hall, at the northern end of London Bridge, to celebrate the fifth anniversary of Learning Together. This is a programme run by the Cambridge Institute of Criminology to help offenders reintegrate into society following their release from prison.

 

Learning Together was set up in 2014 by University of Cambridge academics Ruth Armstrong and Amy Ludlow from the Faculty of Law and Institute of Criminology:

 

"To bring together people in criminal justice

and higher education institutions to study

alongside each other in inclusive and

transformative learning communities."

 

The programme served to enable students and prisoners to work together.

 

Former prisoner Usman Khan had been invited to the conference as a previous participant in the programme, and although banned from entering London under the terms of his release, he was granted a one-day exemption to attend.

 

-- The 2019 Attack

 

At 13:58 on the 29th. November, the police were called to Fishmongers' Hall after Khan, wearing a fake suicide vest, threatened to blow up the hall. The police reported that there had been no prior intelligence of the attack.

 

Holding two kitchen knives taped to his wrists, Khan began stabbing people inside the building. Several fought back, including a South African-born Londoner, Darryn Frost, who grabbed a 1.5-metre-long (4.9 ft) narwhal tusk from the wall to use as a weapon, former prisoner John Crilly, and Steven Gallant, a convicted murderer attending the conference on day release from prison.

 

Khan fled and began stabbing pedestrians outside on the north side of the bridge.

 

Several people were injured before members of the public, including a tour guide and a plain-clothes British Transport Police officer, later seen walking away with a knife, restrained and disarmed Khan on the bridge.

 

One of the people who stepped in to fight the attacker drove him back by spraying a fire extinguisher.

 

Armed officers of the City of London Police arrived at 14:03 and surrounded the attacker, who at the time was being restrained by a Ministry of Justice communications worker attending the rehabilitation meeting.

 

The officers pulled this person away to provide a clear shot, before one fired twice. Around 10 minutes after this, Khan started to get up; he was then shot 9 further times by 6 firearms officers. Khan had not been secured after the initial shooting due to the suicide vest. Khan died at the scene.

 

A Transport for London bus which had stopped adjacent to the site of the shooting was found to have damage to both its front and rear windows, possibly caused, according to the Metropolitan Police, by a ricocheting bullet.

 

-- The Victims of the 2019 Attack

 

Three of the victims were associated with Cambridge University's Learning Together prison-rehabilitation programme; two died and one was injured.

 

The two who died from their stab wounds were Jack Merritt and Saskia Jones.

 

Merritt was a 25-year-old law and criminology graduate from Cottenham, Cambridgeshire who had studied at the Universities of Manchester and Cambridge. He worked as a University of Cambridge administration officer, and was a course coordinator for Learning Together.

 

Jones was a 23 year old former Anglia Ruskin University and University of Cambridge student from Stratford-upon-Avon.

 

Funeral services for Merritt and Jones were conducted on the 20th. December 2019.

 

Two other women were seriously injured, while a chef who was working at the event was stabbed but had less serious injuries.

 

-- The Terrorist Usman Khan

 

Usman Khan was a 28-year-old British national from Stoke-on-Trent, of Pakistani descent. Khan appears to have left school with no qualifications after spending part of his late teens in Pakistan.

 

He was known to police, and had links to Islamist extremist groups. In December 2018 he had been automatically released from prison on licence, where he was serving a 16-year sentence for terrorism offences, and was wearing an electronic tag.

 

Khan had been part of a plot, inspired by Al-Qaeda, to establish a terrorist camp on his family's land in Kashmir and bomb the London Stock Exchange. The plot was disrupted by MI5 and the police, as part of MI5's Operation Guava (police Operation Norbury), and Khan was given an indeterminate sentence.

 

Of the nine men involved, Khan was the youngest at 19 and according to Mr Justice Wilkie, Khan and two others were “more serious jihadis” than the others.

 

In 2013, Khan's sentence was revised after an appeal, and he was ordered to serve at least 8 years of his new 16-year sentence, with a 5-year extended licence allowing recall to prison.

 

According to the anti-extremism group Hope not Hate, Khan was a supporter of Al-Muhajiroun, an extremist group with which scores of terrorists were involved. He was a student and personal friend of Anjem Choudary, an Islamist and terrorism supporter.

 

Post-mortem examination showed evidence of occasional use of cocaine by Khan.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2019 Attack

 

The news of the attack was broken live as it happened on the BBC by one of its reporters, John McManus, who witnessed members of the public fighting Khan as he crossed the bridge, and heard two shots being fired by police officers.

 

McManus said that he was certain that more than two shots were fired during the incident.

 

The police, ambulance, and fire services attended the scene, and a major incident was declared. A large police cordon was set up in the area and residents were told to stay away. Police closed both Monument Underground station and London Bridge station after the attack.

 

The Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, returned to Downing Street following the incident, after campaigning in his constituency for the forthcoming general election. Johnson commended the "immense bravery" of the emergency services and members of the public, and claimed that anyone involved in the attack would be hunted down.

 

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, thanked the emergency services and members of the public who helped to restrain the attacker, saying they had shown "breathtaking heroism".

 

The Conservative Party, Labour Party and Liberal Democrats temporarily suspended campaigning in London for the general election. A parliamentary election hustings event scheduled to be held at Great St. Mary's Church in Cambridge on the 30th. November was cancelled and replaced by a memorial vigil for the victims of the attack.

 

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick made a statement following the attack. She said that there would be an increased police presence on the streets, and that cordons in the London Bridge area would remain in place. An appeal was made for the public to submit any film or picture evidence or information that could assist the investigation.

 

In Pakistan, publication of Khan's Pakistani origins by the leading newspaper Dawn were deemed unpatriotic and defamatory, and led to demonstrations demanding that the publisher and the editor be hanged.

 

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack. Its news agency, Amaq, claimed Usman Khan was one of its fighters. A janaza prayer for Khan was held at a mosque in Birmingham, and he was buried in his family's ancestral village in Pakistan, following objections to his burial in the UK by local Muslims in his native Stoke.

 

In 2021, following an inquest, Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation Jonathan Hall QC called for those involved in the planning or preparation of terrorist attacks to be given automatic life sentences. Hall stated:

 

"It is hard to underestimate how serious

Usman Khan’s original offence was."

 

-- Investigations Into the 2019 Attack

 

London Bridge was closed until the early hours of the following Monday for forensic investigation of the scene. A property in Stafford and one in Stoke-on-Trent were searched by police.

 

An inquest into the deaths of Merritt and Jones was opened on the 4th. December 2019 at the Central Criminal Court in London, and was subsequently adjourned.

 

A pre-inquest review hearing took place at the Old Bailey on the 16th. October 2020, before the Chief Coroner of England and Wales, Mark Lucraft QC.

 

The inquest re-opened on the 12th. April 2021, presided over by Lucraft. On the 28th. May 2021 the jury concluded that the victims had been unlawfully killed.

 

They further concluded that insufficient monitoring of Khan, unreasonable belief in his rehabilitation, a lack of information sharing between agencies, and inadequate security planning at the event were all contributing factors in their deaths.

 

Khan's inquest, also overseen by Lucraft, found in June 2021 that Khan was lawfully killed by the police.

 

-- Royal Prerogative of Mercy for Steven Gallant

 

Steven Gallant was granted the Royal prerogative of mercy by the Lord Chancellor on behalf of the Queen in October 2020, in order to bring his parole hearing forward by ten months to June 2021.

 

The Ministry of Justice stated that:

 

"This is in recognition of his exceptionally

brave actions at Fishmongers’ Hall, which

helped save people's lives despite the

tremendous risk to his own".

 

Though the parole board still has to decide on whether to release him, it was reported that it would be unlikely for his case to be denied after the Queen's intervention. The families of both Merritt and of Gallant's 2005 murder victim approved the action due to his heroic deeds and efforts to turn his life around since the murder.

The Postcard

 

A postally unused Valentine's Series postcard that was printed in Great Britain. The image is a glossy real photograph.

 

On another example of this particular card Valentine's have printed:

 

"London Bridge -

The busiest of London

bridges, built of Aberdeen

granite in 1831, widened

1904.

It has five arches in contrast

with the nineteen of its

wooden namesake, which

was lined with quaint houses".

 

The Sale and Removal of London Bridge

 

By 1896 the bridge was the busiest point in London, and one of its most congested, with 8,000 pedestrians and 900 vehicles crossing every hour. To designs by engineer Edward Cruttwell, it was widened in 1904 by 13 feet (4.0 m), using granite corbels.

 

However subsequent surveys showed that the bridge was sinking an inch (about 2.5 cm) every eight years, and by 1924 the east side had sunk some three to four inches (about 9 cm) lower than the west side. It was concluded that the bridge would have to be removed and replaced.

 

Council member Ivan Luckin put forward the idea of selling the bridge, and recalled:

 

"They all thought I was completely

crazy when I suggested we should

sell London Bridge when it needed

replacing."

 

Subsequently, in 1968, Council placed the bridge on the market and began to look for potential buyers. On the 18th. April 1968, Rennie's bridge was purchased by the Missourian entrepreneur Robert P. McCulloch of McCulloch Oil for $2,460,000.

 

The claim that McCulloch believed mistakenly that he was buying the more impressive Tower Bridge was denied by Ivan Luckin in a newspaper interview.

 

Before the bridge was taken apart, each granite facing block was marked for later reassembly. The blocks were taken to Merrivale Quarry at Princetown in Devon, where 15 to 20 cm (6 to 8 in) were sliced off the inner faces of many, in order to facilitate their fixing.

 

Stones left behind were sold in an online auction when the quarry was abandoned and flooded in 2003. 10,000 tons of granite blocks were shipped via the Panama Canal to California, then trucked from Long Beach to Arizona.

 

They were used to face a new, purpose-built hollow core steel-reinforced concrete structure, ensuring that the bridge would support the weight of modern traffic. The bridge was reconstructed at Lake Havasu City, Arizona, and was re-dedicated on the 10th. October 1971 in a ceremony attended by London's Lord Mayor and celebrities.

 

The bridge carries the McCulloch Boulevard and spans the Bridgewater Channel, an artificial, navigable waterway that leads from the Uptown area of Lake Havasu City.

 

Terror Attacks on London Bridge and Nearby

 

There have been four terror attacks on or near London Bridge dating back to 1884. They are as follows:

 

(1) The 1884 London Bridge Terror Attack

 

On Saturday 13th. December 1884, two American-Irish Republicans carried out a dynamite attack on London Bridge as part of the Fenian dynamite campaign.

 

The bomb went off prematurely while the men were in a boat attaching it to a bridge pier at 5.45 pm during the evening rush hour. There was little damage to the bridge, and no casualties other than the bombers.

 

However, there was considerable collateral damage, and hundreds of windows were shattered on both banks of the Thames. The men's boat was so completely destroyed that the police initially thought the bombers had fled.

 

On the 25th. December 1884 the mutilated remains of one of the bombers were found. The body of the other man was never recovered, but the police were later able to identify the dead men as two Americans, William Mackey Lomasney, and John Fleming.

 

The men were identified after a landlord reported to police that dynamite had been found in the rented premises of two American gentlemen who had disappeared after the 13th. December, enabling police to piece together who was responsible for the attack.

 

The men had already been under surveillance by the police in both America and Great Britain.

 

(2) The 1992 London Bridge Bombing

 

On Friday the 28th. February 1992, the Provisional IRA exploded a bomb inside London Bridge station during the morning rush hour, causing extensive damage and wounding 29 people. It was one of many bombings carried out by one of the IRA's London active service units. It occurred just over a year after a bomb at Victoria station.

 

-- The 1992 Bombing

 

At around 8:20 am, someone rang Ulster Television's London office warning that a bomb was going to explode in a London station, without saying which one.

 

About ten minutes later, the bomb detonated, which made debris fly almost 50 feet (15 m) away from the blast area. Twenty nine people were hurt in the explosion, most of them from flying glass and other bits of debris; four were seriously hurt, but nobody was killed.

 

The victims were treated at Guy's Hospital.

 

-- Aftermath of the 1992 Explosion

 

The head of Scotland Yard's anti terrorist squad, George Churchill-Coleman, said that the 2 lb (910 g) bomb of high explosives was "clearly designed to kill."

 

Investigations suggested that the bomb had been placed in the men's restrooms. Churchill-Coleman added that the IRA's warning was "deliberately vague," and was given too late to act upon.

 

Prime Minister John Major said that the bombing would not change British policy in Northern Ireland:

 

"It was pointless. It was cowardly. It was

directed against innocent people and it

will make absolutely no difference to

our policy -- no difference at all."

 

Fearing additional IRA attacks on public transport, the security services warned commuters "more than ever" to stay on guard at all times. The next day, another bomb went off in London, by the Crown Prosecution Service office, injuring two more people and bringing the total injured to 31 in the space of just over 24 hours.

 

This was one of dozens of bombs that detonated in London that year, the biggest of which was the Baltic Exchange bombing, killing three people and causing almost £1 billion worth of damage.

 

The IRA maintained this pressure, bombing mainland Britain and especially the City of London as much as possible until the ceasefire of 1994.

 

(3) The 2017 London Bridge Attack

 

On the 3rd. June 2017, a terrorist vehicle-ramming and stabbing took place in London when a van was deliberately driven into pedestrians on London Bridge, and then crashed on Borough High Street, just south of the River Thames.

 

The van's three occupants then ran to the nearby Borough Market area and began stabbing people in and around restaurants and pubs. They were shot dead by Metropolitan and City of London Police authorised firearms officers, and were found to be wearing fake explosive vests.

 

Eight people were killed and 48 were injured, including members of the public and four unarmed police officers who attempted to stop the assailants. British authorities described the perpetrators as radical Islamic terrorists.

 

The Islamic State (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attack.

 

-- Background to the 2017 Attack

 

In March 2017, five people had been killed in a combined vehicle and knife attack at Westminster. In late May, a suicide bomber killed 22 people at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena.

 

After the Manchester bombing, the UK's terror threat level was raised to "critical", its highest level, until the 27th. May 2017, when it was lowered to severe.

 

-- The 2017 Attack

 

The attack was carried out using a white Renault Master hired earlier on the same evening in Harold Hill, by Khuram Butt. He had intended to hire a 7.5 tonne lorry, but was refused due to his failure to provide payment details.

 

The attackers were armed with 12-inch (30 cm) kitchen knives with ceramic blades, which they tied to their wrists with leather straps. They also prepared fake explosive belts by wrapping water bottles in grey tape.

 

At 21:58 on the 3rd. June 2017, the van travelled south across London Bridge, and returned six minutes later, crossing over the bridge northbound, making a U-turn at the northern end and then driving southbound across the bridge.

 

It mounted the pavement three times and hit multiple pedestrians, killing two. Witnesses said the van was travelling at high speed. 999 emergency calls were first recorded at 22:07. The van was later found to contain 13 wine bottles containing flammable liquid with rags stuffed in them, along with blow torches.

 

The van crashed on Borough High Street after crossing the central reservation. The van's tyres were destroyed by the central reservation, and the three attackers, armed with knives, abandoned the vehicle.

 

Then they ran down the steps to Green Dragon Court, where they killed five people outside and near the Boro Bistro pub. The attackers then went back up the steps to Borough High Street and attacked three bystanders.

 

Police tried to fight the attackers, but were stabbed, and Ignacio Echeverría helped them by striking the terrorist Redouane and possibly Zaghba with his skateboard. Echeverría was later killed outside Lobos Meat and Tapas.

 

Members of the public threw bottles and chairs at the attackers. Witnesses reported that the attackers were shouting:

 

"This is for Allah".

 

People in and around a number of other restaurants and bars along Stoney Street were also attacked. During the attack, an unknown man was spared by Rachid Redouane, but despite many efforts the man was never found.

 

A Romanian baker hit one of the attackers over the head with a crate before giving shelter to 20 people inside a bakery inside Borough Market.

 

One man fought the three attackers with his fists in the Black and Blue steakhouse, shouting:

 

"F*** you, I'm Millwall."

 

His actions gave members of the public who were in the restaurant the opportunity to run away. He was stabbed eight times in the hands, chest and head. He underwent surgery at St Thomas' Hospital, and was taken off the critical list on the 4th. June.

 

A British Transport Police officer armed with a baton also took on the attackers, receiving multiple stab wounds and temporarily losing sight in his right eye as a consequence.

 

Off-duty Metropolitan police constables Liam Jones and Stewart Henderson rendered first aid to seriously injured members of the public before protecting over 150 people inside the Thameside Inn and evacuating them by Metropolitan marine support unit and RNLI boats to the north shore of the Thames.

 

The three attackers were then shot dead by armed officers from the City of London and Metropolitan police Specialist Firearms Command eight minutes after the initial emergency call was made.

 

CCTV footage showed the three attackers in Borough Market running at the armed officers; the attackers were shot dead 20 seconds later. A total of 46 rounds were fired by three City of London and five Metropolitan Police officers.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2017 Attack

 

The Metropolitan Police issued 'Run, Hide, Tell' notices via social media during the attack, and asked the public to remain calm and vigilant.

 

All buildings within the vicinity of London Bridge were evacuated, and London Bridge, Borough and Bank Underground stations were closed at the request of the police.

 

The mainline railway stations at London Bridge, Waterloo East, Charing Cross and Cannon Street were also closed. The Home Secretary approved the deployment of a military counter terrorist unit from the Special Air Service (SAS).

 

The helicopters carrying the SAS landed on London Bridge to support the Metropolitan Police because of concerns that there might be more attackers at large.

 

The Metropolitan Police Marine Policing Unit dispatched boats on the River Thames, with assistance from the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI), to contribute to the evacuation of the area and look for any casualties who might have fallen from the bridge.

 

A stabbing incident took place in Vauxhall at 23:45, causing Vauxhall station to be briefly closed; this was later confirmed to be unrelated to the attack.

 

At 01:45 on the 4th. June, controlled explosions took place of the attackers' bomb vests, which were found to be fake.

 

An emergency COBR meeting was held on the morning of the 4th. June. London Bridge mainline railway and underground stations remained closed throughout the 4th. June. A cordon was established around the scene of the attack. London Bridge station reopened at 05:00 on Monday the 5th. June.

 

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said that there was a surge of hate crimes and islamophobic incidents following the attack.

 

New security measures were implemented on eight central London bridges following the attack, to reduce the likelihood of further vehicle attacks, with concrete barriers being installed. The barriers have been criticised for causing severe congestion in cycle lanes during peak hours.

 

Borough Market reopened on the 14th. June.

 

-- Casualties of the 2017 Attack

 

Eight civilians died in the attack: one Spaniard, one Briton, two Australians, one Canadian and three French citizens were killed by the attackers, and the three attackers themselves were killed by armed police.

 

Two of the civilian fatalities were caused in the initial vehicle-ramming attack, while the remaining six were stabbed to death. One body was recovered from the Thames near Limehouse several days after the attack.

 

48 people were injured in the attack, including one New Zealander, two Australians, two Germans and four French citizens.

 

Of the 48 people admitted to hospital, 21 were initially reported to be in a critical condition.

 

Four police officers were among those injured in the attack. A British Transport Police officer was stabbed, and suffered serious injuries to his head, face and neck. An off-duty Metropolitan Police officer was seriously injured when he was stabbed.

 

Two other Metropolitan Police officers received head and arm injuries. As a result of police gunfire, a bystander received an accidental gunshot wound, which was not critical.

 

-- The 2017 Attackers

 

On the 4th. June the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, said that:

 

"We are confident about the fact that

they were radical Islamic terrorists, the

way they were inspired, and we need

to find out more about where this

radicalisation came from."

 

Amaq News Agency, an online outlet associated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), said the attackers were ISIS fighters.

 

On the 5th. June, two of the attackers were identified as Khuram Shazad Butt and Rachid Redouane. The third of the three attackers, Youssef Zaghba, was identified the following day.

 

(a) Khuram Shazad Butt

 

Butt (born 20th. April 1990) was a Pakistan-born British citizen whose family came from Jhelum. He grew up in Great Britain, living in Plaistow.

 

He had a wife and two children. Neighbours told the BBC that Butt had been reported to police for attempting to radicalise children; he had also expressed disgust at the way women dressed.

 

He was known to police as a "heavyweight" member of the banned extremist group al-Muhajiroun. A BBC interviewee said he had a verbal confrontation with Butt in 2013 on the day after another Al-Muhajiroun follower had murdered Fusilier Lee Rigby.

 

Butt was part of an al-Muhajiroun campaign in 2015 to intimidate Muslims who planned to vote in the UK general elections of that year, on the basis that it was forbidden in Islam.

 

He was known for holding extreme views, having been barred from two local mosques. He appeared on a 2016 Channel 4 Television documentary, The Jihadis Next Door, which showed him arguing with police over the unfurling of an ISIL black flag in Regent's Park.

 

According to a friend, he had been radicalised by the YouTube videos of the American Muslim hate preacher Ahmad Musa Jibril. Butt was known to have taken drugs before he became radicalised.

 

After radicalisation, Butt started to stop his neighbours on the street and ask them whether they had been to the mosque.

 

Butt had worked for a man accused of training Mohammad Sidique Khan, the leader of the July 2005 London bombing. The police and MI5 knew of Butt, and he was investigated in 2015. The investigation was later "moved into the lower echelons", and his file was classed as low priority.

 

Butt sometimes manned the desk of the Ummah Fitness Centre gym, where he prayed regularly. CCTV footage was released of Butt, Redouane and Zaghba meeting outside the gym days before the attack. A senior figure at a local mosque had reported the gym to police.

 

The New York Times said that Butt and his brother were part of the UK government's Prevent programme, which aims to stop people from becoming terrorists, and which reports suspected radicals to police programmes.

 

At the time of the attack he was on police bail following an allegation of fraud, though the police had intended to take no further action due to a lack of evidence. He had previously been cautioned by police for fraud in 2008 and common assault in 2010.

 

(b) Rachid Redouane

 

Redouane (born 31 July 1986) was a failed asylum seeker in the UK, whose application was denied in 2009, and not previously known to police. He had claimed to be either Moroccan or Libyan.

 

Redouane worked as a pastry chef, and in 2012 he married an Irish woman in a ceremony in Ireland. He beat and bullied his wife.

 

He used to drink alcohol. He lived variously in Rathmines, a suburb of Dublin, also in Morocco and the UK. According to his wife, Redouane was most likely radicalised in Morocco. Later the couple stayed in the UK on an EU residency card where they had a daughter in 2015.

 

The couple separated in 2016 and she divorced him after he tried to force his extremist beliefs on her.

 

At the time of the attack, he was living in Dagenham, East London.

 

(c) Youssef Zaghba

 

Zaghba (born 1995 in Fez, Morocco) was at the time of the attack living in east London where he worked in a fast-food outlet. He also worked for an Islamic television channel in London.

 

Zaghba was born to a Moroccan Muslim father and an Italian Catholic Christian mother who had converted to Islam when she married. Zaghba had dual Moroccan and Italian nationality.

 

When his parents divorced, he went to Italy with his mother. In 2016, Zaghba was stopped at Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport by Italian officers who found ISIS-related materials on his mobile phone; he was stopped from continuing his journey to Istanbul.

 

Italian authorities said Zaghba was monitored continuously while in Italy and that the UK was informed about him. Giuseppe Amato, an Italian prosecutor, said:

 

"We did our best. We could just monitor

and surveil Zaghba and send a note to

the British authorities, that's all we could

do and we did it.

Since he moved to London, he came back

to Italy once in a while for a total of 10 days.

And during those 10 days we never let him

out of our sight."

 

According to The New York Times, the Italian branch of Al-Muhajiroun had introduced Butt to Zaghba.

 

-- Investigation of the 2017 Attack

 

On the morning of the 4th. June, police made 12 arrests following raids in flats in the Barking area of east London, where one of the attackers lived; controlled explosions were carried out during the raids.

 

Those held included five males aged between 27 and 55, arrested at one address in Barking, and six females aged between 19 and 60, arrested at a separate Barking address. One of the arrested males was subsequently released without charge.

 

Four properties in all were searched, including two in Newham in addition to the two in Barking. Further raids and arrests were made at properties in Newham and Barking early on the morning of the 5th. June.

 

On the 6th. June, a man was arrested in Barking, and another in Ilford the following day. By the 16th. June, all those arrested had been released without charge.

 

-- The Inquest Into the 2017 Attack

 

On the 7th. May 2019, an inquest into the deaths of the victims opened at the Old Bailey in London. Judge Mark Lucraft QC, Chief Coroner of England and Wales, presided, and people related to the dead gave accounts of what happened and who they had lost.

 

The inquest concluded on the 16th. July 2019 that all three attackers had been lawfully killed.

 

(4) The 2019 London Bridge Stabbing

 

On the 29th. November 2019, five people were stabbed, two fatally, in Central London. The attacker, Briton Usman Khan, had been released from prison in 2018 on licence after serving a sentence for terrorist offences.

 

Khan was attending an offender rehabilitation conference in Fishmongers' Hall when he threatened to detonate what turned out to be a fake suicide vest.

 

He started to attack people with two knives taped to his wrists, killing two of the conference participants by stabbing them in the chest.

 

Several people fought back, some attacking Khan with a fire extinguisher, a pike and a narwhal tusk as he fled the building and emerged on to London Bridge, where he was partially disarmed by a plain-clothes police officer.

 

He was restrained by members of the public until additional police officers arrived, pulled away those restraining him, and shot him.

 

-- Background to the 2019 Attack

 

A conference on offender rehabilitation was held on the 29th. November 2019 in Fishmongers' Hall, at the northern end of London Bridge, to celebrate the fifth anniversary of Learning Together. This is a programme run by the Cambridge Institute of Criminology to help offenders reintegrate into society following their release from prison.

 

Learning Together was set up in 2014 by University of Cambridge academics Ruth Armstrong and Amy Ludlow from the Faculty of Law and Institute of Criminology:

 

"To bring together people in criminal justice

and higher education institutions to study

alongside each other in inclusive and

transformative learning communities."

 

The programme served to enable students and prisoners to work together.

 

Former prisoner Usman Khan had been invited to the conference as a previous participant in the programme, and although banned from entering London under the terms of his release, he was granted a one-day exemption to attend.

 

-- The 2019 Attack

 

At 13:58 on the 29th. November, the police were called to Fishmongers' Hall after Khan, wearing a fake suicide vest, threatened to blow up the hall. The police reported that there had been no prior intelligence of the attack.

 

Holding two kitchen knives taped to his wrists, Khan began stabbing people inside the building. Several fought back, including a South African-born Londoner, Darryn Frost, who grabbed a 1.5-metre-long (4.9 ft) narwhal tusk from the wall to use as a weapon, former prisoner John Crilly, and Steven Gallant, a convicted murderer attending the conference on day release from prison.

 

Khan fled and began stabbing pedestrians outside on the north side of the bridge.

 

Several people were injured before members of the public, including a tour guide and a plain-clothes British Transport Police officer, later seen walking away with a knife, restrained and disarmed Khan on the bridge.

 

One of the people who stepped in to fight the attacker drove him back by spraying a fire extinguisher.

 

Armed officers of the City of London Police arrived at 14:03 and surrounded the attacker, who at the time was being restrained by a Ministry of Justice communications worker attending the rehabilitation meeting.

 

The officers pulled this person away to provide a clear shot, before one fired twice. Around 10 minutes after this, Khan started to get up; he was then shot 9 further times by 6 firearms officers. Khan had not been secured after the initial shooting due to the suicide vest. Khan died at the scene.

 

A Transport for London bus which had stopped adjacent to the site of the shooting was found to have damage to both its front and rear windows, possibly caused, according to the Metropolitan Police, by a ricocheting bullet.

 

-- The Victims of the 2019 Attack

 

Three of the victims were associated with Cambridge University's Learning Together prison-rehabilitation programme; two died and one was injured.

 

The two who died from their stab wounds were Jack Merritt and Saskia Jones.

 

Merritt was a 25-year-old law and criminology graduate from Cottenham, Cambridgeshire who had studied at the Universities of Manchester and Cambridge. He worked as a University of Cambridge administration officer, and was a course coordinator for Learning Together.

 

Jones was a 23 year old former Anglia Ruskin University and University of Cambridge student from Stratford-upon-Avon.

 

Funeral services for Merritt and Jones were conducted on the 20th. December 2019.

 

Two other women were seriously injured, while a chef who was working at the event was stabbed but had less serious injuries.

 

-- The Terrorist Usman Khan

 

Usman Khan was a 28-year-old British national from Stoke-on-Trent, of Pakistani descent. Khan appears to have left school with no qualifications after spending part of his late teens in Pakistan.

 

He was known to police, and had links to Islamist extremist groups. In December 2018 he had been automatically released from prison on licence, where he was serving a 16-year sentence for terrorism offences, and was wearing an electronic tag.

 

Khan had been part of a plot, inspired by Al-Qaeda, to establish a terrorist camp on his family's land in Kashmir and bomb the London Stock Exchange. The plot was disrupted by MI5 and the police, as part of MI5's Operation Guava (police Operation Norbury), and Khan was given an indeterminate sentence.

 

Of the nine men involved, Khan was the youngest at 19 and according to Mr Justice Wilkie, Khan and two others were “more serious jihadis” than the others.

 

In 2013, Khan's sentence was revised after an appeal, and he was ordered to serve at least 8 years of his new 16-year sentence, with a 5-year extended licence allowing recall to prison.

 

According to the anti-extremism group Hope not Hate, Khan was a supporter of Al-Muhajiroun, an extremist group with which scores of terrorists were involved. He was a student and personal friend of Anjem Choudary, an Islamist and terrorism supporter.

 

Post-mortem examination showed evidence of occasional use of cocaine by Khan.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2019 Attack

 

The news of the attack was broken live as it happened on the BBC by one of its reporters, John McManus, who witnessed members of the public fighting Khan as he crossed the bridge, and heard two shots being fired by police officers.

 

McManus said that he was certain that more than two shots were fired during the incident.

 

The police, ambulance, and fire services attended the scene, and a major incident was declared. A large police cordon was set up in the area and residents were told to stay away. Police closed both Monument Underground station and London Bridge station after the attack.

 

The Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, returned to Downing Street following the incident, after campaigning in his constituency for the forthcoming general election. Johnson commended the "immense bravery" of the emergency services and members of the public, and claimed that anyone involved in the attack would be hunted down.

 

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, thanked the emergency services and members of the public who helped to restrain the attacker, saying they had shown "breathtaking heroism".

 

The Conservative Party, Labour Party and Liberal Democrats temporarily suspended campaigning in London for the general election. A parliamentary election hustings event scheduled to be held at Great St. Mary's Church in Cambridge on the 30th. November was cancelled and replaced by a memorial vigil for the victims of the attack.

 

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick made a statement following the attack. She said that there would be an increased police presence on the streets, and that cordons in the London Bridge area would remain in place. An appeal was made for the public to submit any film or picture evidence or information that could assist the investigation.

 

In Pakistan, publication of Khan's Pakistani origins by the leading newspaper Dawn were deemed unpatriotic and defamatory, and led to demonstrations demanding that the publisher and the editor be hanged.

 

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack. Its news agency, Amaq, claimed Usman Khan was one of its fighters. A janaza prayer for Khan was held at a mosque in Birmingham, and he was buried in his family's ancestral village in Pakistan, following objections to his burial in the UK by local Muslims in his native Stoke.

 

In 2021, following an inquest, Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation Jonathan Hall QC called for those involved in the planning or preparation of terrorist attacks to be given automatic life sentences. Hall stated:

 

"It is hard to underestimate how serious

Usman Khan’s original offence was."

 

-- Investigations Into the 2019 Attack

 

London Bridge was closed until the early hours of the following Monday for forensic investigation of the scene. A property in Stafford and one in Stoke-on-Trent were searched by police.

 

An inquest into the deaths of Merritt and Jones was opened on the 4th. December 2019 at the Central Criminal Court in London, and was subsequently adjourned.

 

A pre-inquest review hearing took place at the Old Bailey on the 16th. October 2020, before the Chief Coroner of England and Wales, Mark Lucraft QC.

 

The inquest re-opened on the 12th. April 2021, presided over by Lucraft. On the 28th. May 2021 the jury concluded that the victims had been unlawfully killed.

 

They further concluded that insufficient monitoring of Khan, unreasonable belief in his rehabilitation, a lack of information sharing between agencies, and inadequate security planning at the event were all contributing factors in their deaths.

 

Khan's inquest, also overseen by Lucraft, found in June 2021 that Khan was lawfully killed by the police.

 

-- Royal Prerogative of Mercy for Steven Gallant

 

Steven Gallant was granted the Royal prerogative of mercy by the Lord Chancellor on behalf of the Queen in October 2020, in order to bring his parole hearing forward by ten months to June 2021.

 

The Ministry of Justice stated that:

 

"This is in recognition of his exceptionally

brave actions at Fishmongers’ Hall, which

helped save people's lives despite the

tremendous risk to his own".

 

Though the parole board still has to decide on whether to release him, it was reported that it would be unlikely for his case to be denied after the Queen's intervention. The families of both Merritt and of Gallant's 2005 murder victim approved the action due to his heroic deeds and efforts to turn his life around since the murder.

The Postcard

 

A postally unused Gravure Series postcard published by Raphael Tuck & Sons Ltd., art publishers to Their Majesties the King and Queen.

 

The publishers modestly state on the divided back of the card that they are:

 

"The World's Art Service".

 

The card was printed in England.

 

Tucks have also printed:

 

"We have to gain the victory.

That is our task".

-- The Prime Minister.

 

The quotation is from a speech given by Winston Churchill in August 1940. Here is the context of the quotation:

 

"The right to guide the course of world history

is the noblest prize of victory. We are still toiling

up the hill; we have not yet reached the crest-line

of it; we cannot survey the landscape or even

imagine what its condition will be when that

longed-for morning comes.

The task which lies before us immediately is at

once practical, more simple and more stern.

I hope - indeed I pray - that we shall not be found

unworthy of our victory if after toil and tribulation

it is granted to us.

For the rest, we have to gain the victory. That is

our task."

-- Winston S. Churchill, 20th. August 1940.

 

The nature of the quotation indicates that the card was published during WWII before the end of hostilities in 1945.

 

The Sale and Removal of London Bridge

 

By 1896 the bridge was the busiest point in London, and one of its most congested, with 8,000 pedestrians and 900 vehicles crossing every hour. To designs by engineer Edward Cruttwell, it was widened in 1904 by 13 feet (4.0 m), using granite corbels.

 

However subsequent surveys showed that the bridge was sinking an inch (about 2.5 cm) every eight years, and by 1924 the east side had sunk some three to four inches (about 9 cm) lower than the west side. It was concluded that the bridge would have to be removed and replaced.

 

Council member Ivan Luckin put forward the idea of selling the bridge, and recalled:

 

"They all thought I was completely

crazy when I suggested we should

sell London Bridge when it needed

replacing."

 

Subsequently, in 1968, Council placed the bridge on the market and began to look for potential buyers. On the 18th. April 1968, Rennie's bridge was purchased by the Missourian entrepreneur Robert P. McCulloch of McCulloch Oil for $2,460,000.

 

The claim that McCulloch believed mistakenly that he was buying the more impressive Tower Bridge was denied by Ivan Luckin in a newspaper interview.

 

Before the bridge was taken apart, each granite facing block was marked for later reassembly. The blocks were taken to Merrivale Quarry at Princetown in Devon, where 15 to 20 cm (6 to 8 in) were sliced off the inner faces of many, in order to facilitate their fixing.

 

Stones left behind were sold in an online auction when the quarry was abandoned and flooded in 2003. 10,000 tons of granite blocks were shipped via the Panama Canal to California, then trucked from Long Beach to Arizona.

 

They were used to face a new, purpose-built hollow core steel-reinforced concrete structure, ensuring that the bridge would support the weight of modern traffic. The bridge was reconstructed at Lake Havasu City, Arizona, and was re-dedicated on the 10th. October 1971 in a ceremony attended by London's Lord Mayor and celebrities.

 

The bridge carries the McCulloch Boulevard and spans the Bridgewater Channel, an artificial, navigable waterway that leads from the Uptown area of Lake Havasu City.

 

Terror Attacks on London Bridge and Nearby

 

There have been four terror attacks on or near London Bridge dating back to 1884. They are as follows:

 

(1) The 1884 London Bridge Terror Attack

 

On Saturday 13th. December 1884, two American-Irish Republicans carried out a dynamite attack on London Bridge as part of the Fenian dynamite campaign.

 

The bomb went off prematurely while the men were in a boat attaching it to a bridge pier at 5.45 pm during the evening rush hour. There was little damage to the bridge, and no casualties other than the bombers.

 

However, there was considerable collateral damage, and hundreds of windows were shattered on both banks of the Thames. The men's boat was so completely destroyed that the police initially thought the bombers had fled.

 

On the 25th. December 1884 the mutilated remains of one of the bombers were found. The body of the other man was never recovered, but the police were later able to identify the dead men as two Americans, William Mackey Lomasney, and John Fleming.

 

The men were identified after a landlord reported to police that dynamite had been found in the rented premises of two American gentlemen who had disappeared after the 13th. December, enabling police to piece together who was responsible for the attack.

 

The men had already been under surveillance by the police in both America and Great Britain.

 

(2) The 1992 London Bridge Bombing

 

On Friday the 28th. February 1992, the Provisional IRA exploded a bomb inside London Bridge station during the morning rush hour, causing extensive damage and wounding 29 people. It was one of many bombings carried out by one of the IRA's London active service units. It occurred just over a year after a bomb at Victoria station.

 

-- The 1992 Bombing

 

At around 8:20 am, someone rang Ulster Television's London office warning that a bomb was going to explode in a London station, without saying which one.

 

About ten minutes later, the bomb detonated, which made debris fly almost 50 feet (15 m) away from the blast area. Twenty nine people were hurt in the explosion, most of them from flying glass and other bits of debris; four were seriously hurt, but nobody was killed.

 

The victims were treated at Guy's Hospital.

 

-- Aftermath of the 1992 Explosion

 

The head of Scotland Yard's anti terrorist squad, George Churchill-Coleman, said that the 2 lb (910 g) bomb of high explosives was "clearly designed to kill."

 

Investigations suggested that the bomb had been placed in the men's restrooms. Churchill-Coleman added that the IRA's warning was "deliberately vague," and was given too late to act upon.

 

Prime Minister John Major said that the bombing would not change British policy in Northern Ireland:

 

"It was pointless. It was cowardly. It was

directed against innocent people and it

will make absolutely no difference to

our policy -- no difference at all."

 

Fearing additional IRA attacks on public transport, the security services warned commuters "more than ever" to stay on guard at all times. The next day, another bomb went off in London, by the Crown Prosecution Service office, injuring two more people and bringing the total injured to 31 in the space of just over 24 hours.

 

This was one of dozens of bombs that detonated in London that year, the biggest of which was the Baltic Exchange bombing, killing three people and causing almost £1 billion worth of damage.

 

The IRA maintained this pressure, bombing mainland Britain and especially the City of London as much as possible until the ceasefire of 1994.

 

(3) The 2017 London Bridge Attack

 

On the 3rd. June 2017, a terrorist vehicle-ramming and stabbing took place in London when a van was deliberately driven into pedestrians on London Bridge, and then crashed on Borough High Street, just south of the River Thames.

 

The van's three occupants then ran to the nearby Borough Market area and began stabbing people in and around restaurants and pubs. They were shot dead by Metropolitan and City of London Police authorised firearms officers, and were found to be wearing fake explosive vests.

 

Eight people were killed and 48 were injured, including members of the public and four unarmed police officers who attempted to stop the assailants. British authorities described the perpetrators as radical Islamic terrorists.

 

The Islamic State (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attack.

 

-- Background to the 2017 Attack

 

In March 2017, five people had been killed in a combined vehicle and knife attack at Westminster. In late May, a suicide bomber killed 22 people at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena.

 

After the Manchester bombing, the UK's terror threat level was raised to "critical", its highest level, until the 27th. May 2017, when it was lowered to severe.

 

-- The 2017 Attack

 

The attack was carried out using a white Renault Master hired earlier on the same evening in Harold Hill, by Khuram Butt. He had intended to hire a 7.5 tonne lorry, but was refused due to his failure to provide payment details.

 

The attackers were armed with 12-inch (30 cm) kitchen knives with ceramic blades, which they tied to their wrists with leather straps. They also prepared fake explosive belts by wrapping water bottles in grey tape.

 

At 21:58 on the 3rd. June 2017, the van travelled south across London Bridge, and returned six minutes later, crossing over the bridge northbound, making a U-turn at the northern end and then driving southbound across the bridge.

 

It mounted the pavement three times and hit multiple pedestrians, killing two. Witnesses said the van was travelling at high speed. 999 emergency calls were first recorded at 22:07. The van was later found to contain 13 wine bottles containing flammable liquid with rags stuffed in them, along with blow torches.

 

The van crashed on Borough High Street after crossing the central reservation. The van's tyres were destroyed by the central reservation, and the three attackers, armed with knives, abandoned the vehicle.

 

Then they ran down the steps to Green Dragon Court, where they killed five people outside and near the Boro Bistro pub. The attackers then went back up the steps to Borough High Street and attacked three bystanders.

 

Police tried to fight the attackers, but were stabbed, and Ignacio Echeverría helped them by striking the terrorist Redouane and possibly Zaghba with his skateboard. Echeverría was later killed outside Lobos Meat and Tapas.

 

Members of the public threw bottles and chairs at the attackers. Witnesses reported that the attackers were shouting:

 

"This is for Allah".

 

People in and around a number of other restaurants and bars along Stoney Street were also attacked. During the attack, an unknown man was spared by Rachid Redouane, but despite many efforts the man was never found.

 

A Romanian baker hit one of the attackers over the head with a crate before giving shelter to 20 people inside a bakery inside Borough Market.

 

One man fought the three attackers with his fists in the Black and Blue steakhouse, shouting:

 

"F*** you, I'm Millwall."

 

His actions gave members of the public who were in the restaurant the opportunity to run away. He was stabbed eight times in the hands, chest and head. He underwent surgery at St Thomas' Hospital, and was taken off the critical list on the 4th. June.

 

A British Transport Police officer armed with a baton also took on the attackers, receiving multiple stab wounds and temporarily losing sight in his right eye as a consequence.

 

Off-duty Metropolitan police constables Liam Jones and Stewart Henderson rendered first aid to seriously injured members of the public before protecting over 150 people inside the Thameside Inn and evacuating them by Metropolitan marine support unit and RNLI boats to the north shore of the Thames.

 

The three attackers were then shot dead by armed officers from the City of London and Metropolitan police Specialist Firearms Command eight minutes after the initial emergency call was made.

 

CCTV footage showed the three attackers in Borough Market running at the armed officers; the attackers were shot dead 20 seconds later. A total of 46 rounds were fired by three City of London and five Metropolitan Police officers.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2017 Attack

 

The Metropolitan Police issued 'Run, Hide, Tell' notices via social media during the attack, and asked the public to remain calm and vigilant.

 

All buildings within the vicinity of London Bridge were evacuated, and London Bridge, Borough and Bank Underground stations were closed at the request of the police.

 

The mainline railway stations at London Bridge, Waterloo East, Charing Cross and Cannon Street were also closed. The Home Secretary approved the deployment of a military counter terrorist unit from the Special Air Service (SAS).

 

The helicopters carrying the SAS landed on London Bridge to support the Metropolitan Police because of concerns that there might be more attackers at large.

 

The Metropolitan Police Marine Policing Unit dispatched boats on the River Thames, with assistance from the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI), to contribute to the evacuation of the area and look for any casualties who might have fallen from the bridge.

 

A stabbing incident took place in Vauxhall at 23:45, causing Vauxhall station to be briefly closed; this was later confirmed to be unrelated to the attack.

 

At 01:45 on the 4th. June, controlled explosions took place of the attackers' bomb vests, which were found to be fake.

 

An emergency COBR meeting was held on the morning of the 4th. June. London Bridge mainline railway and underground stations remained closed throughout the 4th. June. A cordon was established around the scene of the attack. London Bridge station reopened at 05:00 on Monday the 5th. June.

 

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said that there was a surge of hate crimes and islamophobic incidents following the attack.

 

New security measures were implemented on eight central London bridges following the attack, to reduce the likelihood of further vehicle attacks, with concrete barriers being installed. The barriers have been criticised for causing severe congestion in cycle lanes during peak hours.

 

Borough Market reopened on the 14th. June.

 

-- Casualties of the 2017 Attack

 

Eight civilians died in the attack: one Spaniard, one Briton, two Australians, one Canadian and three French citizens were killed by the attackers, and the three attackers themselves were killed by armed police.

 

Two of the civilian fatalities were caused in the initial vehicle-ramming attack, while the remaining six were stabbed to death. One body was recovered from the Thames near Limehouse several days after the attack.

 

48 people were injured in the attack, including one New Zealander, two Australians, two Germans and four French citizens.

 

Of the 48 people admitted to hospital, 21 were initially reported to be in a critical condition.

 

Four police officers were among those injured in the attack. A British Transport Police officer was stabbed, and suffered serious injuries to his head, face and neck. An off-duty Metropolitan Police officer was seriously injured when he was stabbed.

 

Two other Metropolitan Police officers received head and arm injuries. As a result of police gunfire, a bystander received an accidental gunshot wound, which was not critical.

 

-- The 2017 Attackers

 

On the 4th. June the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, said that:

 

"We are confident about the fact that

they were radical Islamic terrorists, the

way they were inspired, and we need

to find out more about where this

radicalisation came from."

 

Amaq News Agency, an online outlet associated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), said the attackers were ISIS fighters.

 

On the 5th. June, two of the attackers were identified as Khuram Shazad Butt and Rachid Redouane. The third of the three attackers, Youssef Zaghba, was identified the following day.

 

(a) Khuram Shazad Butt

 

Butt (born 20th. April 1990) was a Pakistan-born British citizen whose family came from Jhelum. He grew up in Great Britain, living in Plaistow.

 

He had a wife and two children. Neighbours told the BBC that Butt had been reported to police for attempting to radicalise children; he had also expressed disgust at the way women dressed.

 

He was known to police as a "heavyweight" member of the banned extremist group al-Muhajiroun. A BBC interviewee said he had a verbal confrontation with Butt in 2013 on the day after another Al-Muhajiroun follower had murdered Fusilier Lee Rigby.

 

Butt was part of an al-Muhajiroun campaign in 2015 to intimidate Muslims who planned to vote in the UK general elections of that year, on the basis that it was forbidden in Islam.

 

He was known for holding extreme views, having been barred from two local mosques. He appeared on a 2016 Channel 4 Television documentary, The Jihadis Next Door, which showed him arguing with police over the unfurling of an ISIL black flag in Regent's Park.

 

According to a friend, he had been radicalised by the YouTube videos of the American Muslim hate preacher Ahmad Musa Jibril. Butt was known to have taken drugs before he became radicalised.

 

After radicalisation, Butt started to stop his neighbours on the street and ask them whether they had been to the mosque.

 

Butt had worked for a man accused of training Mohammad Sidique Khan, the leader of the July 2005 London bombing. The police and MI5 knew of Butt, and he was investigated in 2015. The investigation was later "moved into the lower echelons", and his file was classed as low priority.

 

Butt sometimes manned the desk of the Ummah Fitness Centre gym, where he prayed regularly. CCTV footage was released of Butt, Redouane and Zaghba meeting outside the gym days before the attack. A senior figure at a local mosque had reported the gym to police.

 

The New York Times said that Butt and his brother were part of the UK government's Prevent programme, which aims to stop people from becoming terrorists, and which reports suspected radicals to police programmes.

 

At the time of the attack he was on police bail following an allegation of fraud, though the police had intended to take no further action due to a lack of evidence. He had previously been cautioned by police for fraud in 2008 and common assault in 2010.

 

(b) Rachid Redouane

 

Redouane (born 31 July 1986) was a failed asylum seeker in the UK, whose application was denied in 2009, and not previously known to police. He had claimed to be either Moroccan or Libyan.

 

Redouane worked as a pastry chef, and in 2012 he married an Irish woman in a ceremony in Ireland. He beat and bullied his wife.

 

He used to drink alcohol. He lived variously in Rathmines, a suburb of Dublin, also in Morocco and the UK. According to his wife, Redouane was most likely radicalised in Morocco. Later the couple stayed in the UK on an EU residency card where they had a daughter in 2015.

 

The couple separated in 2016 and she divorced him after he tried to force his extremist beliefs on her.

 

At the time of the attack, he was living in Dagenham, East London.

 

(c) Youssef Zaghba

 

Zaghba (born 1995 in Fez, Morocco) was at the time of the attack living in east London where he worked in a fast-food outlet. He also worked for an Islamic television channel in London.

 

Zaghba was born to a Moroccan Muslim father and an Italian Catholic Christian mother who had converted to Islam when she married. Zaghba had dual Moroccan and Italian nationality.

 

When his parents divorced, he went to Italy with his mother. In 2016, Zaghba was stopped at Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport by Italian officers who found ISIS-related materials on his mobile phone; he was stopped from continuing his journey to Istanbul.

 

Italian authorities said Zaghba was monitored continuously while in Italy and that the UK was informed about him. Giuseppe Amato, an Italian prosecutor, said:

 

"We did our best. We could just monitor

and surveil Zaghba and send a note to

the British authorities, that's all we could

do and we did it.

Since he moved to London, he came back

to Italy once in a while for a total of 10 days.

And during those 10 days we never let him

out of our sight."

 

According to The New York Times, the Italian branch of Al-Muhajiroun had introduced Butt to Zaghba.

 

-- Investigation of the 2017 Attack

 

On the morning of the 4th. June, police made 12 arrests following raids in flats in the Barking area of east London, where one of the attackers lived; controlled explosions were carried out during the raids.

 

Those held included five males aged between 27 and 55, arrested at one address in Barking, and six females aged between 19 and 60, arrested at a separate Barking address. One of the arrested males was subsequently released without charge.

 

Four properties in all were searched, including two in Newham in addition to the two in Barking. Further raids and arrests were made at properties in Newham and Barking early on the morning of the 5th. June.

 

On the 6th. June, a man was arrested in Barking, and another in Ilford the following day. By the 16th. June, all those arrested had been released without charge.

 

-- The Inquest Into the 2017 Attack

 

On the 7th. May 2019, an inquest into the deaths of the victims opened at the Old Bailey in London. Judge Mark Lucraft QC, Chief Coroner of England and Wales, presided, and people related to the dead gave accounts of what happened and who they had lost.

 

The inquest concluded on the 16th. July 2019 that all three attackers had been lawfully killed.

 

(4) The 2019 London Bridge Stabbing

 

On the 29th. November 2019, five people were stabbed, two fatally, in Central London. The attacker, Briton Usman Khan, had been released from prison in 2018 on licence after serving a sentence for terrorist offences.

 

Khan was attending an offender rehabilitation conference in Fishmongers' Hall when he threatened to detonate what turned out to be a fake suicide vest.

 

He started to attack people with two knives taped to his wrists, killing two of the conference participants by stabbing them in the chest.

 

Several people fought back, some attacking Khan with a fire extinguisher, a pike and a narwhal tusk as he fled the building and emerged on to London Bridge, where he was partially disarmed by a plain-clothes police officer.

 

He was restrained by members of the public until additional police officers arrived, pulled away those restraining him, and shot him.

 

-- Background to the 2019 Attack

 

A conference on offender rehabilitation was held on the 29th. November 2019 in Fishmongers' Hall, at the northern end of London Bridge, to celebrate the fifth anniversary of Learning Together. This is a programme run by the Cambridge Institute of Criminology to help offenders reintegrate into society following their release from prison.

 

Learning Together was set up in 2014 by University of Cambridge academics Ruth Armstrong and Amy Ludlow from the Faculty of Law and Institute of Criminology:

 

"To bring together people in criminal justice

and higher education institutions to study

alongside each other in inclusive and

transformative learning communities."

 

The programme served to enable students and prisoners to work together.

 

Former prisoner Usman Khan had been invited to the conference as a previous participant in the programme, and although banned from entering London under the terms of his release, he was granted a one-day exemption to attend.

 

-- The 2019 Attack

 

At 13:58 on the 29th. November, the police were called to Fishmongers' Hall after Khan, wearing a fake suicide vest, threatened to blow up the hall. The police reported that there had been no prior intelligence of the attack.

 

Holding two kitchen knives taped to his wrists, Khan began stabbing people inside the building. Several fought back, including a South African-born Londoner, Darryn Frost, who grabbed a 1.5-metre-long (4.9 ft) narwhal tusk from the wall to use as a weapon, former prisoner John Crilly, and Steven Gallant, a convicted murderer attending the conference on day release from prison.

 

Khan fled and began stabbing pedestrians outside on the north side of the bridge.

 

Several people were injured before members of the public, including a tour guide and a plain-clothes British Transport Police officer, later seen walking away with a knife, restrained and disarmed Khan on the bridge.

 

One of the people who stepped in to fight the attacker drove him back by spraying a fire extinguisher.

 

Armed officers of the City of London Police arrived at 14:03 and surrounded the attacker, who at the time was being restrained by a Ministry of Justice communications worker attending the rehabilitation meeting.

 

The officers pulled this person away to provide a clear shot, before one fired twice. Around 10 minutes after this, Khan started to get up; he was then shot 9 further times by 6 firearms officers. Khan had not been secured after the initial shooting due to the suicide vest. Khan died at the scene.

 

A Transport for London bus which had stopped adjacent to the site of the shooting was found to have damage to both its front and rear windows, possibly caused, according to the Metropolitan Police, by a ricocheting bullet.

 

-- The Victims of the 2019 Attack

 

Three of the victims were associated with Cambridge University's Learning Together prison-rehabilitation programme; two died and one was injured.

 

The two who died from their stab wounds were Jack Merritt and Saskia Jones.

 

Merritt was a 25-year-old law and criminology graduate from Cottenham, Cambridgeshire who had studied at the Universities of Manchester and Cambridge. He worked as a University of Cambridge administration officer, and was a course coordinator for Learning Together.

 

Jones was a 23 year old former Anglia Ruskin University and University of Cambridge student from Stratford-upon-Avon.

 

Funeral services for Merritt and Jones were conducted on the 20th. December 2019.

 

Two other women were seriously injured, while a chef who was working at the event was stabbed but had less serious injuries.

 

-- The Terrorist Usman Khan

 

Usman Khan was a 28-year-old British national from Stoke-on-Trent, of Pakistani descent. Khan appears to have left school with no qualifications after spending part of his late teens in Pakistan.

 

He was known to police, and had links to Islamist extremist groups. In December 2018 he had been automatically released from prison on licence, where he was serving a 16-year sentence for terrorism offences, and was wearing an electronic tag.

 

Khan had been part of a plot, inspired by Al-Qaeda, to establish a terrorist camp on his family's land in Kashmir and bomb the London Stock Exchange. The plot was disrupted by MI5 and the police, as part of MI5's Operation Guava (police Operation Norbury), and Khan was given an indeterminate sentence.

 

Of the nine men involved, Khan was the youngest at 19 and according to Mr Justice Wilkie, Khan and two others were “more serious jihadis” than the others.

 

In 2013, Khan's sentence was revised after an appeal, and he was ordered to serve at least 8 years of his new 16-year sentence, with a 5-year extended licence allowing recall to prison.

 

According to the anti-extremism group Hope not Hate, Khan was a supporter of Al-Muhajiroun, an extremist group with which scores of terrorists were involved. He was a student and personal friend of Anjem Choudary, an Islamist and terrorism supporter.

 

Post-mortem examination showed evidence of occasional use of cocaine by Khan.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2019 Attack

 

The news of the attack was broken live as it happened on the BBC by one of its reporters, John McManus, who witnessed members of the public fighting Khan as he crossed the bridge, and heard two shots being fired by police officers.

 

McManus said that he was certain that more than two shots were fired during the incident.

 

The police, ambulance, and fire services attended the scene, and a major incident was declared. A large police cordon was set up in the area and residents were told to stay away. Police closed both Monument Underground station and London Bridge station after the attack.

 

The Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, returned to Downing Street following the incident, after campaigning in his constituency for the forthcoming general election. Johnson commended the "immense bravery" of the emergency services and members of the public, and claimed that anyone involved in the attack would be hunted down.

 

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, thanked the emergency services and members of the public who helped to restrain the attacker, saying they had shown "breathtaking heroism".

 

The Conservative Party, Labour Party and Liberal Democrats temporarily suspended campaigning in London for the general election. A parliamentary election hustings event scheduled to be held at Great St. Mary's Church in Cambridge on the 30th. November was cancelled and replaced by a memorial vigil for the victims of the attack.

 

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick made a statement following the attack. She said that there would be an increased police presence on the streets, and that cordons in the London Bridge area would remain in place. An appeal was made for the public to submit any film or picture evidence or information that could assist the investigation.

 

In Pakistan, publication of Khan's Pakistani origins by the leading newspaper Dawn were deemed unpatriotic and defamatory, and led to demonstrations demanding that the publisher and the editor be hanged.

 

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack. Its news agency, Amaq, claimed Usman Khan was one of its fighters. A janaza prayer for Khan was held at a mosque in Birmingham, and he was buried in his family's ancestral village in Pakistan, following objections to his burial in the UK by local Muslims in his native Stoke.

 

In 2021, following an inquest, Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation Jonathan Hall QC called for those involved in the planning or preparation of terrorist attacks to be given automatic life sentences. Hall stated:

 

"It is hard to underestimate how serious

Usman Khan’s original offence was."

 

-- Investigations Into the 2019 Attack

 

London Bridge was closed until the early hours of the following Monday for forensic investigation of the scene. A property in Stafford and one in Stoke-on-Trent were searched by police.

 

An inquest into the deaths of Merritt and Jones was opened on the 4th. December 2019 at the Central Criminal Court in London, and was subsequently adjourned.

 

A pre-inquest review hearing took place at the Old Bailey on the 16th. October 2020, before the Chief Coroner of England and Wales, Mark Lucraft QC.

 

The inquest re-opened on the 12th. April 2021, presided over by Lucraft. On the 28th. May 2021 the jury concluded that the victims had been unlawfully killed.

 

They further concluded that insufficient monitoring of Khan, unreasonable belief in his rehabilitation, a lack of information sharing between agencies, and inadequate security planning at the event were all contributing factors in their deaths.

 

Khan's inquest, also overseen by Lucraft, found in June 2021 that Khan was lawfully killed by the police.

 

-- Royal Prerogative of Mercy for Steven Gallant

 

Steven Gallant was granted the Royal prerogative of mercy by the Lord Chancellor on behalf of the Queen in October 2020, in order to bring his parole hearing forward by ten months to June 2021.

 

The Ministry of Justice stated that:

 

"This is in recognition of his exceptionally

brave actions at Fishmongers’ Hall, which

helped save people's lives despite the

tremendous risk to his own".

 

Though the parole board still has to decide on whether to release him, it was reported that it would be unlikely for his case to be denied after the Queen's intervention. The families of both Merritt and of Gallant's 2005 murder victim approved the action due to his heroic deeds and efforts to turn his life around since the murder.

The Postcard

 

A postally unused postcard published by the Photochrom Co. Ltd.

 

The cranes to the right of the photograph have been added later.

 

The Photochrom Co. Ltd.

 

The Photochrom Co. Ltd. of London and Royal Tunbridge Wells originally produced Christmas cards before becoming a major publisher and printer of tourist albums, guide books, and postcards.

 

These mainly captured worldwide views as real photos, or were printed in black & white, monochrome, and color.

 

They also published many advertising, comic, silhouette, novelty, panoramic, and notable artist-signed cards in named series as well. The huge number of titles that Photochrom produced may well exceed 40,000.

 

In 1896 they took over Fussli’s London office established three years earlier, and began publishing similar photo-chromolithographic postcards after securing the exclusive English licence for the Swiss photochrom process.

 

This technique was used to produce a great number of view-cards of both England and Europe. While they captured the same fine details as the Swiss prints, their colours were much softer and reduced.

 

Apart from their better known photochroms, they produced their Celesque series of view-cards printed in tricolor.

 

One of the largest unnamed series that Photochrom produced was of view-cards printed in brown rotogravure. Many of these cards were simply hand coloured with a dominant red and blue, which gives these cards a distinct appearance. They are similar to cards produced in their Photogravure and Velvet Finish Series.

 

Photochrom postcard series include:

 

-- Night Series - Line block halftone over a blue tint depicting London.

-- Carbofoto Series - Black & white real photo cards.

-- Sepiatone Series - Sepia real photo cards.

-- Grano Series - View-cards printed in black & white.

-- Exclusive Photo-Color Series - View-cards printed in colour.

-- Duotype Process Series - View-cards printed in two tones.

 

The Sale and Removal of London Bridge

 

By 1896 the bridge was the busiest point in London, and one of its most congested, with 8,000 pedestrians and 900 vehicles crossing every hour. To designs by engineer Edward Cruttwell, it was widened in 1904 by 13 feet (4.0 m), using granite corbels.

 

However subsequent surveys showed that the bridge was sinking an inch (about 2.5 cm) every eight years, and by 1924 the east side had sunk some three to four inches (about 9 cm) lower than the west side. It was concluded that the bridge would have to be removed and replaced.

 

Council member Ivan Luckin put forward the idea of selling the bridge, and recalled:

 

"They all thought I was completely

crazy when I suggested we should

sell London Bridge when it needed

replacing."

 

Subsequently, in 1968, Council placed the bridge on the market and began to look for potential buyers. On the 18th. April 1968, Rennie's bridge was purchased by the Missourian entrepreneur Robert P. McCulloch of McCulloch Oil for $2,460,000.

 

The claim that McCulloch believed mistakenly that he was buying the more impressive Tower Bridge was denied by Ivan Luckin in a newspaper interview.

 

Before the bridge was taken apart, each granite facing block was marked for later reassembly. The blocks were taken to Merrivale Quarry at Princetown in Devon, where 15 to 20 cm (6 to 8 in) were sliced off the inner faces of many, in order to facilitate their fixing.

 

Stones left behind were sold in an online auction when the quarry was abandoned and flooded in 2003. 10,000 tons of granite blocks were shipped via the Panama Canal to California, then trucked from Long Beach to Arizona.

 

They were used to face a new, purpose-built hollow core steel-reinforced concrete structure, ensuring that the bridge would support the weight of modern traffic. The bridge was reconstructed at Lake Havasu City, Arizona, and was re-dedicated on the 10th. October 1971 in a ceremony attended by London's Lord Mayor and celebrities.

 

The bridge carries the McCulloch Boulevard and spans the Bridgewater Channel, an artificial, navigable waterway that leads from the Uptown area of Lake Havasu City.

 

Terror Attacks on London Bridge and Nearby

 

There have been four terror attacks on or near London Bridge dating back to 1884. They are as follows:

 

(1) The 1884 London Bridge Terror Attack

 

On Saturday 13th. December 1884, two American-Irish Republicans carried out a dynamite attack on London Bridge as part of the Fenian dynamite campaign.

 

The bomb went off prematurely while the men were in a boat attaching it to a bridge pier at 5.45 pm during the evening rush hour. There was little damage to the bridge, and no casualties other than the bombers.

 

However, there was considerable collateral damage, and hundreds of windows were shattered on both banks of the Thames. The men's boat was so completely destroyed that the police initially thought the bombers had fled.

 

On the 25th. December 1884 the mutilated remains of one of the bombers were found. The body of the other man was never recovered, but the police were later able to identify the dead men as two Americans, William Mackey Lomasney, and John Fleming.

 

The men were identified after a landlord reported to police that dynamite had been found in the rented premises of two American gentlemen who had disappeared after the 13th. December, enabling police to piece together who was responsible for the attack.

 

The men had already been under surveillance by the police in both America and Great Britain.

 

(2) The 1992 London Bridge Bombing

 

On Friday the 28th. February 1992, the Provisional IRA exploded a bomb inside London Bridge station during the morning rush hour, causing extensive damage and wounding 29 people. It was one of many bombings carried out by one of the IRA's London active service units. It occurred just over a year after a bomb at Victoria station.

 

-- The 1992 Bombing

 

At around 8:20 am, someone rang Ulster Television's London office warning that a bomb was going to explode in a London station, without saying which one.

 

About ten minutes later, the bomb detonated, which made debris fly almost 50 feet (15 m) away from the blast area. Twenty nine people were hurt in the explosion, most of them from flying glass and other bits of debris; four were seriously hurt, but nobody was killed.

 

The victims were treated at Guy's Hospital.

 

-- Aftermath of the 1992 Explosion

 

The head of Scotland Yard's anti terrorist squad, George Churchill-Coleman, said that the 2 lb (910 g) bomb of high explosives was "clearly designed to kill."

 

Investigations suggested that the bomb had been placed in the men's restrooms. Churchill-Coleman added that the IRA's warning was "deliberately vague," and was given too late to act upon.

 

Prime Minister John Major said that the bombing would not change British policy in Northern Ireland:

 

"It was pointless. It was cowardly. It was

directed against innocent people and it

will make absolutely no difference to

our policy -- no difference at all."

 

Fearing additional IRA attacks on public transport, the security services warned commuters "more than ever" to stay on guard at all times. The next day, another bomb went off in London, by the Crown Prosecution Service office, injuring two more people and bringing the total injured to 31 in the space of just over 24 hours.

 

This was one of dozens of bombs that detonated in London that year, the biggest of which was the Baltic Exchange bombing, killing three people and causing almost £1 billion worth of damage.

 

The IRA maintained this pressure, bombing mainland Britain and especially the City of London as much as possible until the ceasefire of 1994.

 

(3) The 2017 London Bridge Attack

 

On the 3rd. June 2017, a terrorist vehicle-ramming and stabbing took place in London when a van was deliberately driven into pedestrians on London Bridge, and then crashed on Borough High Street, just south of the River Thames.

 

The van's three occupants then ran to the nearby Borough Market area and began stabbing people in and around restaurants and pubs. They were shot dead by Metropolitan and City of London Police authorised firearms officers, and were found to be wearing fake explosive vests.

 

Eight people were killed and 48 were injured, including members of the public and four unarmed police officers who attempted to stop the assailants. British authorities described the perpetrators as radical Islamic terrorists.

 

The Islamic State (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attack.

 

-- Background to the 2017 Attack

 

In March 2017, five people had been killed in a combined vehicle and knife attack at Westminster. In late May, a suicide bomber killed 22 people at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena.

 

After the Manchester bombing, the UK's terror threat level was raised to "critical", its highest level, until the 27th. May 2017, when it was lowered to severe.

 

-- The 2017 Attack

 

The attack was carried out using a white Renault Master hired earlier on the same evening in Harold Hill, by Khuram Butt. He had intended to hire a 7.5 tonne lorry, but was refused due to his failure to provide payment details.

 

The attackers were armed with 12-inch (30 cm) kitchen knives with ceramic blades, which they tied to their wrists with leather straps. They also prepared fake explosive belts by wrapping water bottles in grey tape.

 

At 21:58 on the 3rd. June 2017, the van travelled south across London Bridge, and returned six minutes later, crossing over the bridge northbound, making a U-turn at the northern end and then driving southbound across the bridge.

 

It mounted the pavement three times and hit multiple pedestrians, killing two. Witnesses said the van was travelling at high speed. 999 emergency calls were first recorded at 22:07. The van was later found to contain 13 wine bottles containing flammable liquid with rags stuffed in them, along with blow torches.

 

The van crashed on Borough High Street after crossing the central reservation. The van's tyres were destroyed by the central reservation, and the three attackers, armed with knives, abandoned the vehicle.

 

Then they ran down the steps to Green Dragon Court, where they killed five people outside and near the Boro Bistro pub. The attackers then went back up the steps to Borough High Street and attacked three bystanders.

 

Police tried to fight the attackers, but were stabbed, and Ignacio Echeverría helped them by striking the terrorist Redouane and possibly Zaghba with his skateboard. Echeverría was later killed outside Lobos Meat and Tapas.

 

Members of the public threw bottles and chairs at the attackers. Witnesses reported that the attackers were shouting:

 

"This is for Allah".

 

People in and around a number of other restaurants and bars along Stoney Street were also attacked. During the attack, an unknown man was spared by Rachid Redouane, but despite many efforts the man was never found.

 

A Romanian baker hit one of the attackers over the head with a crate before giving shelter to 20 people inside a bakery inside Borough Market.

 

One man fought the three attackers with his fists in the Black and Blue steakhouse, shouting:

 

"F*** you, I'm Millwall."

 

His actions gave members of the public who were in the restaurant the opportunity to run away. He was stabbed eight times in the hands, chest and head. He underwent surgery at St Thomas' Hospital, and was taken off the critical list on the 4th. June.

 

A British Transport Police officer armed with a baton also took on the attackers, receiving multiple stab wounds and temporarily losing sight in his right eye as a consequence.

 

Off-duty Metropolitan police constables Liam Jones and Stewart Henderson rendered first aid to seriously injured members of the public before protecting over 150 people inside the Thameside Inn and evacuating them by Metropolitan marine support unit and RNLI boats to the north shore of the Thames.

 

The three attackers were then shot dead by armed officers from the City of London and Metropolitan police Specialist Firearms Command eight minutes after the initial emergency call was made.

 

CCTV footage showed the three attackers in Borough Market running at the armed officers; the attackers were shot dead 20 seconds later. A total of 46 rounds were fired by three City of London and five Metropolitan Police officers.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2017 Attack

 

The Metropolitan Police issued 'Run, Hide, Tell' notices via social media during the attack, and asked the public to remain calm and vigilant.

 

All buildings within the vicinity of London Bridge were evacuated, and London Bridge, Borough and Bank Underground stations were closed at the request of the police.

 

The mainline railway stations at London Bridge, Waterloo East, Charing Cross and Cannon Street were also closed. The Home Secretary approved the deployment of a military counter terrorist unit from the Special Air Service (SAS).

 

The helicopters carrying the SAS landed on London Bridge to support the Metropolitan Police because of concerns that there might be more attackers at large.

 

The Metropolitan Police Marine Policing Unit dispatched boats on the River Thames, with assistance from the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI), to contribute to the evacuation of the area and look for any casualties who might have fallen from the bridge.

 

A stabbing incident took place in Vauxhall at 23:45, causing Vauxhall station to be briefly closed; this was later confirmed to be unrelated to the attack.

 

At 01:45 on the 4th. June, controlled explosions took place of the attackers' bomb vests, which were found to be fake.

 

An emergency COBR meeting was held on the morning of the 4th. June. London Bridge mainline railway and underground stations remained closed throughout the 4th. June. A cordon was established around the scene of the attack. London Bridge station reopened at 05:00 on Monday the 5th. June.

 

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said that there was a surge of hate crimes and islamophobic incidents following the attack.

 

New security measures were implemented on eight central London bridges following the attack, to reduce the likelihood of further vehicle attacks, with concrete barriers being installed. The barriers have been criticised for causing severe congestion in cycle lanes during peak hours.

 

Borough Market reopened on the 14th. June.

 

-- Casualties of the 2017 Attack

 

Eight civilians died in the attack: one Spaniard, one Briton, two Australians, one Canadian and three French citizens were killed by the attackers, and the three attackers themselves were killed by armed police.

 

Two of the civilian fatalities were caused in the initial vehicle-ramming attack, while the remaining six were stabbed to death. One body was recovered from the Thames near Limehouse several days after the attack.

 

48 people were injured in the attack, including one New Zealander, two Australians, two Germans and four French citizens.

 

Of the 48 people admitted to hospital, 21 were initially reported to be in a critical condition.

 

Four police officers were among those injured in the attack. A British Transport Police officer was stabbed, and suffered serious injuries to his head, face and neck. An off-duty Metropolitan Police officer was seriously injured when he was stabbed.

 

Two other Metropolitan Police officers received head and arm injuries. As a result of police gunfire, a bystander received an accidental gunshot wound, which was not critical.

 

-- The 2017 Attackers

 

On the 4th. June the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, said that:

 

"We are confident about the fact that

they were radical Islamic terrorists, the

way they were inspired, and we need

to find out more about where this

radicalisation came from."

 

Amaq News Agency, an online outlet associated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), said the attackers were ISIS fighters.

 

On the 5th. June, two of the attackers were identified as Khuram Shazad Butt and Rachid Redouane. The third of the three attackers, Youssef Zaghba, was identified the following day.

 

(a) Khuram Shazad Butt

 

Butt (born 20th. April 1990) was a Pakistan-born British citizen whose family came from Jhelum. He grew up in Great Britain, living in Plaistow.

 

He had a wife and two children. Neighbours told the BBC that Butt had been reported to police for attempting to radicalise children; he had also expressed disgust at the way women dressed.

 

He was known to police as a "heavyweight" member of the banned extremist group al-Muhajiroun. A BBC interviewee said he had a verbal confrontation with Butt in 2013 on the day after another Al-Muhajiroun follower had murdered Fusilier Lee Rigby.

 

Butt was part of an al-Muhajiroun campaign in 2015 to intimidate Muslims who planned to vote in the UK general elections of that year, on the basis that it was forbidden in Islam.

 

He was known for holding extreme views, having been barred from two local mosques. He appeared on a 2016 Channel 4 Television documentary, The Jihadis Next Door, which showed him arguing with police over the unfurling of an ISIL black flag in Regent's Park.

 

According to a friend, he had been radicalised by the YouTube videos of the American Muslim hate preacher Ahmad Musa Jibril. Butt was known to have taken drugs before he became radicalised.

 

After radicalisation, Butt started to stop his neighbours on the street and ask them whether they had been to the mosque.

 

Butt had worked for a man accused of training Mohammad Sidique Khan, the leader of the July 2005 London bombing. The police and MI5 knew of Butt, and he was investigated in 2015. The investigation was later "moved into the lower echelons", and his file was classed as low priority.

 

Butt sometimes manned the desk of the Ummah Fitness Centre gym, where he prayed regularly. CCTV footage was released of Butt, Redouane and Zaghba meeting outside the gym days before the attack. A senior figure at a local mosque had reported the gym to police.

 

The New York Times said that Butt and his brother were part of the UK government's Prevent programme, which aims to stop people from becoming terrorists, and which reports suspected radicals to police programmes.

 

At the time of the attack he was on police bail following an allegation of fraud, though the police had intended to take no further action due to a lack of evidence. He had previously been cautioned by police for fraud in 2008 and common assault in 2010.

 

(b) Rachid Redouane

 

Redouane (born 31 July 1986) was a failed asylum seeker in the UK, whose application was denied in 2009, and not previously known to police. He had claimed to be either Moroccan or Libyan.

 

Redouane worked as a pastry chef, and in 2012 he married an Irish woman in a ceremony in Ireland. He beat and bullied his wife.

 

He used to drink alcohol. He lived variously in Rathmines, a suburb of Dublin, also in Morocco and the UK. According to his wife, Redouane was most likely radicalised in Morocco. Later the couple stayed in the UK on an EU residency card where they had a daughter in 2015.

 

The couple separated in 2016 and she divorced him after he tried to force his extremist beliefs on her.

 

At the time of the attack, he was living in Dagenham, East London.

 

(c) Youssef Zaghba

 

Zaghba (born 1995 in Fez, Morocco) was at the time of the attack living in east London where he worked in a fast-food outlet. He also worked for an Islamic television channel in London.

 

Zaghba was born to a Moroccan Muslim father and an Italian Catholic Christian mother who had converted to Islam when she married. Zaghba had dual Moroccan and Italian nationality.

 

When his parents divorced, he went to Italy with his mother. In 2016, Zaghba was stopped at Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport by Italian officers who found ISIS-related materials on his mobile phone; he was stopped from continuing his journey to Istanbul.

 

Italian authorities said Zaghba was monitored continuously while in Italy and that the UK was informed about him. Giuseppe Amato, an Italian prosecutor, said:

 

"We did our best. We could just monitor

and surveil Zaghba and send a note to

the British authorities, that's all we could

do and we did it.

Since he moved to London, he came back

to Italy once in a while for a total of 10 days.

And during those 10 days we never let him

out of our sight."

 

According to The New York Times, the Italian branch of Al-Muhajiroun had introduced Butt to Zaghba.

 

-- Investigation of the 2017 Attack

 

On the morning of the 4th. June, police made 12 arrests following raids in flats in the Barking area of east London, where one of the attackers lived; controlled explosions were carried out during the raids.

 

Those held included five males aged between 27 and 55, arrested at one address in Barking, and six females aged between 19 and 60, arrested at a separate Barking address. One of the arrested males was subsequently released without charge.

 

Four properties in all were searched, including two in Newham in addition to the two in Barking. Further raids and arrests were made at properties in Newham and Barking early on the morning of the 5th. June.

 

On the 6th. June, a man was arrested in Barking, and another in Ilford the following day. By the 16th. June, all those arrested had been released without charge.

 

-- The Inquest Into the 2017 Attack

 

On the 7th. May 2019, an inquest into the deaths of the victims opened at the Old Bailey in London. Judge Mark Lucraft QC, Chief Coroner of England and Wales, presided, and people related to the dead gave accounts of what happened and who they had lost.

 

The inquest concluded on the 16th. July 2019 that all three attackers had been lawfully killed.

 

(4) The 2019 London Bridge Stabbing

 

On the 29th. November 2019, five people were stabbed, two fatally, in Central London. The attacker, Briton Usman Khan, had been released from prison in 2018 on licence after serving a sentence for terrorist offences.

 

Khan was attending an offender rehabilitation conference in Fishmongers' Hall when he threatened to detonate what turned out to be a fake suicide vest.

 

He started to attack people with two knives taped to his wrists, killing two of the conference participants by stabbing them in the chest.

 

Several people fought back, some attacking Khan with a fire extinguisher, a pike and a narwhal tusk as he fled the building and emerged on to London Bridge, where he was partially disarmed by a plain-clothes police officer.

 

He was restrained by members of the public until additional police officers arrived, pulled away those restraining him, and shot him.

 

-- Background to the 2019 Attack

 

A conference on offender rehabilitation was held on the 29th. November 2019 in Fishmongers' Hall, at the northern end of London Bridge, to celebrate the fifth anniversary of Learning Together. This is a programme run by the Cambridge Institute of Criminology to help offenders reintegrate into society following their release from prison.

 

Learning Together was set up in 2014 by University of Cambridge academics Ruth Armstrong and Amy Ludlow from the Faculty of Law and Institute of Criminology:

 

"To bring together people in criminal justice

and higher education institutions to study

alongside each other in inclusive and

transformative learning communities."

 

The programme served to enable students and prisoners to work together.

 

Former prisoner Usman Khan had been invited to the conference as a previous participant in the programme, and although banned from entering London under the terms of his release, he was granted a one-day exemption to attend.

 

-- The 2019 Attack

 

At 13:58 on the 29th. November, the police were called to Fishmongers' Hall after Khan, wearing a fake suicide vest, threatened to blow up the hall. The police reported that there had been no prior intelligence of the attack.

 

Holding two kitchen knives taped to his wrists, Khan began stabbing people inside the building. Several fought back, including a South African-born Londoner, Darryn Frost, who grabbed a 1.5-metre-long (4.9 ft) narwhal tusk from the wall to use as a weapon, former prisoner John Crilly, and Steven Gallant, a convicted murderer attending the conference on day release from prison.

 

Khan fled and began stabbing pedestrians outside on the north side of the bridge.

 

Several people were injured before members of the public, including a tour guide and a plain-clothes British Transport Police officer, later seen walking away with a knife, restrained and disarmed Khan on the bridge.

 

One of the people who stepped in to fight the attacker drove him back by spraying a fire extinguisher.

 

Armed officers of the City of London Police arrived at 14:03 and surrounded the attacker, who at the time was being restrained by a Ministry of Justice communications worker attending the rehabilitation meeting.

 

The officers pulled this person away to provide a clear shot, before one fired twice. Around 10 minutes after this, Khan started to get up; he was then shot 9 further times by 6 firearms officers. Khan had not been secured after the initial shooting due to the suicide vest. Khan died at the scene.

 

A Transport for London bus which had stopped adjacent to the site of the shooting was found to have damage to both its front and rear windows, possibly caused, according to the Metropolitan Police, by a ricocheting bullet.

 

-- The Victims of the 2019 Attack

 

Three of the victims were associated with Cambridge University's Learning Together prison-rehabilitation programme; two died and one was injured.

 

The two who died from their stab wounds were Jack Merritt and Saskia Jones.

 

Merritt was a 25-year-old law and criminology graduate from Cottenham, Cambridgeshire who had studied at the Universities of Manchester and Cambridge. He worked as a University of Cambridge administration officer, and was a course coordinator for Learning Together.

 

Jones was a 23 year old former Anglia Ruskin University and University of Cambridge student from Stratford-upon-Avon.

 

Funeral services for Merritt and Jones were conducted on the 20th. December 2019.

 

Two other women were seriously injured, while a chef who was working at the event was stabbed but had less serious injuries.

 

-- The Terrorist Usman Khan

 

Usman Khan was a 28-year-old British national from Stoke-on-Trent, of Pakistani descent. Khan appears to have left school with no qualifications after spending part of his late teens in Pakistan.

 

He was known to police, and had links to Islamist extremist groups. In December 2018 he had been automatically released from prison on licence, where he was serving a 16-year sentence for terrorism offences, and was wearing an electronic tag.

 

Khan had been part of a plot, inspired by Al-Qaeda, to establish a terrorist camp on his family's land in Kashmir and bomb the London Stock Exchange. The plot was disrupted by MI5 and the police, as part of MI5's Operation Guava (police Operation Norbury), and Khan was given an indeterminate sentence.

 

Of the nine men involved, Khan was the youngest at 19 and according to Mr Justice Wilkie, Khan and two others were “more serious jihadis” than the others.

 

In 2013, Khan's sentence was revised after an appeal, and he was ordered to serve at least 8 years of his new 16-year sentence, with a 5-year extended licence allowing recall to prison.

 

According to the anti-extremism group Hope not Hate, Khan was a supporter of Al-Muhajiroun, an extremist group with which scores of terrorists were involved. He was a student and personal friend of Anjem Choudary, an Islamist and terrorism supporter.

 

Post-mortem examination showed evidence of occasional use of cocaine by Khan.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2019 Attack

 

The news of the attack was broken live as it happened on the BBC by one of its reporters, John McManus, who witnessed members of the public fighting Khan as he crossed the bridge, and heard two shots being fired by police officers.

 

McManus said that he was certain that more than two shots were fired during the incident.

 

The police, ambulance, and fire services attended the scene, and a major incident was declared. A large police cordon was set up in the area and residents were told to stay away. Police closed both Monument Underground station and London Bridge station after the attack.

 

The Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, returned to Downing Street following the incident, after campaigning in his constituency for the forthcoming general election. Johnson commended the "immense bravery" of the emergency services and members of the public, and claimed that anyone involved in the attack would be hunted down.

 

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, thanked the emergency services and members of the public who helped to restrain the attacker, saying they had shown "breathtaking heroism".

 

The Conservative Party, Labour Party and Liberal Democrats temporarily suspended campaigning in London for the general election. A parliamentary election hustings event scheduled to be held at Great St. Mary's Church in Cambridge on the 30th. November was cancelled and replaced by a memorial vigil for the victims of the attack.

 

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick made a statement following the attack. She said that there would be an increased police presence on the streets, and that cordons in the London Bridge area would remain in place. An appeal was made for the public to submit any film or picture evidence or information that could assist the investigation.

 

In Pakistan, publication of Khan's Pakistani origins by the leading newspaper Dawn were deemed unpatriotic and defamatory, and led to demonstrations demanding that the publisher and the editor be hanged.

 

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack. Its news agency, Amaq, claimed Usman Khan was one of its fighters. A janaza prayer for Khan was held at a mosque in Birmingham, and he was buried in his family's ancestral village in Pakistan, following objections to his burial in the UK by local Muslims in his native Stoke.

 

In 2021, following an inquest, Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation Jonathan Hall QC called for those involved in the planning or preparation of terrorist attacks to be given automatic life sentences. Hall stated:

 

"It is hard to underestimate how serious

Usman Khan’s original offence was."

 

-- Investigations Into the 2019 Attack

 

London Bridge was closed until the early hours of the following Monday for forensic investigation of the scene. A property in Stafford and one in Stoke-on-Trent were searched by police.

 

An inquest into the deaths of Merritt and Jones was opened on the 4th. December 2019 at the Central Criminal Court in London, and was subsequently adjourned.

 

A pre-inquest review hearing took place at the Old Bailey on the 16th. October 2020, before the Chief Coroner of England and Wales, Mark Lucraft QC.

 

The inquest re-opened on the 12th. April 2021, presided over by Lucraft. On the 28th. May 2021 the jury concluded that the victims had been unlawfully killed.

 

They further concluded that insufficient monitoring of Khan, unreasonable belief in his rehabilitation, a lack of information sharing between agencies, and inadequate security planning at the event were all contributing factors in their deaths.

 

Khan's inquest, also overseen by Lucraft, found in June 2021 that Khan was lawfully killed by the police.

 

-- Royal Prerogative of Mercy for Steven Gallant

 

Steven Gallant was granted the Royal prerogative of mercy by the Lord Chancellor on behalf of the Queen in October 2020, in order to bring his parole hearing forward by ten months to June 2021.

 

The Ministry of Justice stated that:

 

"This is in recognition of his exceptionally

brave actions at Fishmongers’ Hall, which

helped save people's lives despite the

tremendous risk to his own".

 

Though the parole board still has to decide on whether to release him, it was reported that it would be unlikely for his case to be denied after the Queen's intervention. The families of both Merritt and of Gallant's 2005 murder victim approved the action due to his heroic deeds and efforts to turn his life around since the murder.

Story and photos by 1st Lt. Austin Liu

6-52 Air Defense Artillery

 

SUWON AIR BASE — Captain Carlos Tristan and Chief Warrant Officer 2 David Bates sit quietly inside the compact Tactical Control Station (TCS), both reviewing the maintenance record for their equipment one final time. The two leaders observe every miniscule detail, flipping the record pages back and forth to ensure no mistakes slip past their eyes.

Outside the TCS, darkness engulfs the airbase as temperature hover just above freezing.

As the senior officer in charge of Fire Direction Section (FDS) of 6th Battalion, 52nd Air Defense Artillery Battalion, Tristan knows he has the paramount responsibility for the success or failure of the mission to lead his crew to a successful PATRIOT Gunnery Table VIII certification.

He also knows the key to success is attention to detail, not only in the execution of the crew drills, but also in the studious maintenance of records.

The Fire Direction Section serves as the command and control nodule for an air defense artillery battalion. FDS also has the important mission to manage air battles and de-conflict tracks for the firing batteries underneath.

It has only been a week since Tristan took over as the officer in charge of the FDS, but he has already demonstrated unspoken confidence and proficiency during the gunnery qualification.

Whenever he felt he needed support and guidance, Tristan could always look to Bates, the battalion’s primary tactical director and the officer in charge of his first crew.

Bates is a veteran air defender with over 14 years of service. He proved to be the subject matter expert in air defense operations during his last assignment as the battery trainer.

“I am completely confident in the FDS’ war fighting capabilities,” Bates said.

“I felt pretty good about passing the evaluation … I have an amazing group of Soldiers on my team who work extremely well together,” Tristan said. “At the end of the day, it is all about being able to fight the fight in accordance with doctrine and standard … and you really only get one shot to prove to the evaluators that you can achieve just that.”

In a few hours, Tristan and Bates will get that shot.

Meanwhile, a couple of blocks down the road, Spc. Mary Mott could not fall asleep. She was excited but also anxious. It was a mixture of emotions all rolled into one.

As the team leader for the Antenna Mast Group under the Fire Direction Section, Mott was responsible for training new Soldiers on the team. It was only a couple months before that Mott herself was considered the new Soldier, but Mott matured quickly and earned a team leader spot.

This week marks the one year anniversary of Mott’s arrival in Korea, and she enrolled in the Army Incentive Program to stay one more year here.

The 24 year-old Appalachian State University graduate had a sound training plan for her Soldiers.

“The training took months … and it took place in three phases,” Mott explained. “I first had the new crew study the technical manuals, and then I have them observe the experienced crews conducting their drills, and finally I have them execute drills themselves under my close supervision. It was a good training plan and I knew my crews were ready.”

In a few hours, she will get the chance to prove she is right.

As that time approaches, Pfc. Davey Martin is looking up at the ceiling of his room. He, too, was feeling anxious about the evaluation.

It has been only six months since he first saw the imposing Iron Horse Statue outside of the battalion headquarters.

He thought “time really flew by when you have so much to learn in such a short amount of time.”

The 20-years old communication specialist never learned about the Information Coordination Central (ICC, the equipment he is currently assigned to) during Advanced Individual Training at Fort Gordon, Ga.

“Since I got to the unit, I was able to learn how to operate every single radio inside the ICC and everything else I need to learn communication-wise to get us through the air battles,” said Martin, who is assigned to the first crew under the Fire Direction Section. “Thankfully I had a wonderful group of leaders and first line supervisors in FDS that really cared for me and ensured I am trained well.”

All the sweat and effort will pay off when they become certified in the next few hours, Martin constantly reminded himself. He forced himself not to think otherwise.

PATRIOT Gunnery Table VIII evaluation is an extremely important event for an air defense artillery unit. It poses grueling physical and mental challenges to all air defense Soldiers. The first portion of the evaluation consists of an inspection of equipment mission capability and maintenance paperwork. Evaluators examine equipment and supporting documents meticulously. Many units fail the evaluation within the first half hour of the inspection.

The second part of the evaluation is the simulation of wartime situation where the battalion Fire Direction Section, receives a movement order and road marches and places all its equipment onto another location and then quickly assumes posture to conduct and manage air battles against hostile aerial threats. This portion of the process is timed.

“Before you could attempt a Gunnery Table VIII evaluation, the individual within the team must first be able to accomplish all the tasks under Gunnery Tables I through VI,” Tristan said. “Table VIII is really the culmination of all these tasks.”

“We trained hard and put in a lot of efforts to prepare for the Table VIII evaluations,” Mott added.

The Battalion Fire Direction Section, as the higher echelon unit above firing batteries, must face another challenge.

“The hardest part is really the coordination … for the FDS to successfully pass its certification, it relies on our subordinate firing units to do their part and provide us with timely support,” Tristan said. “This is a criteria that is unique to the FDS.”

Fast forward to the next afternoon, where the FDS team is about to find out whether their hard work and efforts have paid off.

As the dust settles and the FDS vehicles are finally placed on their new location and ready to defend the South Korea airspace, all there is left to do for the team is to wait for the results.

“Time always seem to pass slower during waiting time after evaluation,” Mott said.

Finally, the evaluators came out and smiled.

“You could hear on the headset the cheering of Bates and his crew inside the ICC,” Tristan said.

Mott celebrated by giving her crew members high-fives.

“We put our best foot forward and we succeeded,” she told them.

As Bates and his crew came out of the ICC, Tristan greeted them with a big handshake and words of congratulation.

“We can celebrate now but the battle is not over,” Tristan reminded everyone. “Remember that even though the FDS has passed today, our brothers in communication relay group and other firing batteries will be conducting their table VIII next week.”

“Let’s do everything we can in our power to support them.” Bates added. “In the air defense world, nobody can successfully carry out the mission by themselves.”

 

For more information on U.S. Army Garrison Humphreys and living and working in Korea visit: USAG-Humphreys' official web site or check out our online videos.

The Postcard

 

A postally unused postcard bearing no publisher's name. The card, which has a divided back, was printed in Germany.

 

Note the riverside cranes which were being used in the very centre of London.

 

The Sale and Removal of London Bridge

 

By 1896 the bridge was the busiest point in London, and one of its most congested, with 8,000 pedestrians and 900 vehicles crossing every hour. To designs by engineer Edward Cruttwell, it was widened in 1904 by 13 feet (4.0 m), using granite corbels.

 

However subsequent surveys showed that the bridge was sinking an inch (about 2.5 cm) every eight years, and by 1924 the east side had sunk some three to four inches (about 9 cm) lower than the west side. It was concluded that the bridge would have to be removed and replaced.

 

Council member Ivan Luckin put forward the idea of selling the bridge, and recalled:

 

"They all thought I was completely

crazy when I suggested we should

sell London Bridge when it needed

replacing."

 

Subsequently, in 1968, Council placed the bridge on the market and began to look for potential buyers. On the 18th. April 1968, Rennie's bridge was purchased by the Missourian entrepreneur Robert P. McCulloch of McCulloch Oil for $2,460,000.

 

The claim that McCulloch believed mistakenly that he was buying the more impressive Tower Bridge was denied by Ivan Luckin in a newspaper interview.

 

Before the bridge was taken apart, each granite facing block was marked for later reassembly. The blocks were taken to Merrivale Quarry at Princetown in Devon, where 15 to 20 cm (6 to 8 in) were sliced off the inner faces of many, in order to facilitate their fixing.

 

Stones left behind were sold in an online auction when the quarry was abandoned and flooded in 2003. 10,000 tons of granite blocks were shipped via the Panama Canal to California, then trucked from Long Beach to Arizona.

 

They were used to face a new, purpose-built hollow core steel-reinforced concrete structure, ensuring that the bridge would support the weight of modern traffic. The bridge was reconstructed at Lake Havasu City, Arizona, and was re-dedicated on the 10th. October 1971 in a ceremony attended by London's Lord Mayor and celebrities.

 

The bridge carries the McCulloch Boulevard and spans the Bridgewater Channel, an artificial, navigable waterway that leads from the Uptown area of Lake Havasu City.

 

Terror Attacks on London Bridge and Nearby

 

There have been four terror attacks on or near London Bridge dating back to 1884. They are as follows:

 

(1) The 1884 London Bridge Terror Attack

 

On Saturday 13th. December 1884, two American-Irish Republicans carried out a dynamite attack on London Bridge as part of the Fenian dynamite campaign.

 

The bomb went off prematurely while the men were in a boat attaching it to a bridge pier at 5.45 pm during the evening rush hour. There was little damage to the bridge, and no casualties other than the bombers.

 

However, there was considerable collateral damage, and hundreds of windows were shattered on both banks of the Thames. The men's boat was so completely destroyed that the police initially thought the bombers had fled.

 

On the 25th. December 1884 the mutilated remains of one of the bombers were found. The body of the other man was never recovered, but the police were later able to identify the dead men as two Americans, William Mackey Lomasney, and John Fleming.

 

The men were identified after a landlord reported to police that dynamite had been found in the rented premises of two American gentlemen who had disappeared after the 13th. December, enabling police to piece together who was responsible for the attack.

 

The men had already been under surveillance by the police in both America and Great Britain.

 

(2) The 1992 London Bridge Bombing

 

On Friday the 28th. February 1992, the Provisional IRA exploded a bomb inside London Bridge station during the morning rush hour, causing extensive damage and wounding 29 people. It was one of many bombings carried out by one of the IRA's London active service units. It occurred just over a year after a bomb at Victoria station.

 

-- The 1992 Bombing

 

At around 8:20 am, someone rang Ulster Television's London office warning that a bomb was going to explode in a London station, without saying which one.

 

About ten minutes later, the bomb detonated, which made debris fly almost 50 feet (15 m) away from the blast area. Twenty nine people were hurt in the explosion, most of them from flying glass and other bits of debris; four were seriously hurt, but nobody was killed.

 

The victims were treated at Guy's Hospital.

 

-- Aftermath of the 1992 Explosion

 

The head of Scotland Yard's anti terrorist squad, George Churchill-Coleman, said that the 2 lb (910 g) bomb of high explosives was "clearly designed to kill."

 

Investigations suggested that the bomb had been placed in the men's restrooms. Churchill-Coleman added that the IRA's warning was "deliberately vague," and was given too late to act upon.

 

Prime Minister John Major said that the bombing would not change British policy in Northern Ireland:

 

"It was pointless. It was cowardly. It was

directed against innocent people and it

will make absolutely no difference to

our policy -- no difference at all."

 

Fearing additional IRA attacks on public transport, the security services warned commuters "more than ever" to stay on guard at all times. The next day, another bomb went off in London, by the Crown Prosecution Service office, injuring two more people and bringing the total injured to 31 in the space of just over 24 hours.

 

This was one of dozens of bombs that detonated in London that year, the biggest of which was the Baltic Exchange bombing, killing three people and causing almost £1 billion worth of damage.

 

The IRA maintained this pressure, bombing mainland Britain and especially the City of London as much as possible until the ceasefire of 1994.

 

(3) The 2017 London Bridge Attack

 

On the 3rd. June 2017, a terrorist vehicle-ramming and stabbing took place in London when a van was deliberately driven into pedestrians on London Bridge, and then crashed on Borough High Street, just south of the River Thames.

 

The van's three occupants then ran to the nearby Borough Market area and began stabbing people in and around restaurants and pubs. They were shot dead by Metropolitan and City of London Police authorised firearms officers, and were found to be wearing fake explosive vests.

 

Eight people were killed and 48 were injured, including members of the public and four unarmed police officers who attempted to stop the assailants. British authorities described the perpetrators as radical Islamic terrorists.

 

The Islamic State (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attack.

 

-- Background to the 2017 Attack

 

In March 2017, five people had been killed in a combined vehicle and knife attack at Westminster. In late May, a suicide bomber killed 22 people at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena.

 

After the Manchester bombing, the UK's terror threat level was raised to "critical", its highest level, until the 27th. May 2017, when it was lowered to severe.

 

-- The 2017 Attack

 

The attack was carried out using a white Renault Master hired earlier on the same evening in Harold Hill, by Khuram Butt. He had intended to hire a 7.5 tonne lorry, but was refused due to his failure to provide payment details.

 

The attackers were armed with 12-inch (30 cm) kitchen knives with ceramic blades, which they tied to their wrists with leather straps. They also prepared fake explosive belts by wrapping water bottles in grey tape.

 

At 21:58 on the 3rd. June 2017, the van travelled south across London Bridge, and returned six minutes later, crossing over the bridge northbound, making a U-turn at the northern end and then driving southbound across the bridge.

 

It mounted the pavement three times and hit multiple pedestrians, killing two. Witnesses said the van was travelling at high speed. 999 emergency calls were first recorded at 22:07. The van was later found to contain 13 wine bottles containing flammable liquid with rags stuffed in them, along with blow torches.

 

The van crashed on Borough High Street after crossing the central reservation. The van's tyres were destroyed by the central reservation, and the three attackers, armed with knives, abandoned the vehicle.

 

Then they ran down the steps to Green Dragon Court, where they killed five people outside and near the Boro Bistro pub. The attackers then went back up the steps to Borough High Street and attacked three bystanders.

 

Police tried to fight the attackers, but were stabbed, and Ignacio Echeverría helped them by striking the terrorist Redouane and possibly Zaghba with his skateboard. Echeverría was later killed outside Lobos Meat and Tapas.

 

Members of the public threw bottles and chairs at the attackers. Witnesses reported that the attackers were shouting:

 

"This is for Allah".

 

People in and around a number of other restaurants and bars along Stoney Street were also attacked. During the attack, an unknown man was spared by Rachid Redouane, but despite many efforts the man was never found.

 

A Romanian baker hit one of the attackers over the head with a crate before giving shelter to 20 people inside a bakery inside Borough Market.

 

One man fought the three attackers with his fists in the Black and Blue steakhouse, shouting:

 

"F*** you, I'm Millwall."

 

His actions gave members of the public who were in the restaurant the opportunity to run away. He was stabbed eight times in the hands, chest and head. He underwent surgery at St Thomas' Hospital, and was taken off the critical list on the 4th. June.

 

A British Transport Police officer armed with a baton also took on the attackers, receiving multiple stab wounds and temporarily losing sight in his right eye as a consequence.

 

Off-duty Metropolitan police constables Liam Jones and Stewart Henderson rendered first aid to seriously injured members of the public before protecting over 150 people inside the Thameside Inn and evacuating them by Metropolitan marine support unit and RNLI boats to the north shore of the Thames.

 

The three attackers were then shot dead by armed officers from the City of London and Metropolitan police Specialist Firearms Command eight minutes after the initial emergency call was made.

 

CCTV footage showed the three attackers in Borough Market running at the armed officers; the attackers were shot dead 20 seconds later. A total of 46 rounds were fired by three City of London and five Metropolitan Police officers.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2017 Attack

 

The Metropolitan Police issued 'Run, Hide, Tell' notices via social media during the attack, and asked the public to remain calm and vigilant.

 

All buildings within the vicinity of London Bridge were evacuated, and London Bridge, Borough and Bank Underground stations were closed at the request of the police.

 

The mainline railway stations at London Bridge, Waterloo East, Charing Cross and Cannon Street were also closed. The Home Secretary approved the deployment of a military counter terrorist unit from the Special Air Service (SAS).

 

The helicopters carrying the SAS landed on London Bridge to support the Metropolitan Police because of concerns that there might be more attackers at large.

 

The Metropolitan Police Marine Policing Unit dispatched boats on the River Thames, with assistance from the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI), to contribute to the evacuation of the area and look for any casualties who might have fallen from the bridge.

 

A stabbing incident took place in Vauxhall at 23:45, causing Vauxhall station to be briefly closed; this was later confirmed to be unrelated to the attack.

 

At 01:45 on the 4th. June, controlled explosions took place of the attackers' bomb vests, which were found to be fake.

 

An emergency COBR meeting was held on the morning of the 4th. June. London Bridge mainline railway and underground stations remained closed throughout the 4th. June. A cordon was established around the scene of the attack. London Bridge station reopened at 05:00 on Monday the 5th. June.

 

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said that there was a surge of hate crimes and islamophobic incidents following the attack.

 

New security measures were implemented on eight central London bridges following the attack, to reduce the likelihood of further vehicle attacks, with concrete barriers being installed. The barriers have been criticised for causing severe congestion in cycle lanes during peak hours.

 

Borough Market reopened on the 14th. June.

 

-- Casualties of the 2017 Attack

 

Eight civilians died in the attack: one Spaniard, one Briton, two Australians, one Canadian and three French citizens were killed by the attackers, and the three attackers themselves were killed by armed police.

 

Two of the civilian fatalities were caused in the initial vehicle-ramming attack, while the remaining six were stabbed to death. One body was recovered from the Thames near Limehouse several days after the attack.

 

48 people were injured in the attack, including one New Zealander, two Australians, two Germans and four French citizens.

 

Of the 48 people admitted to hospital, 21 were initially reported to be in a critical condition.

 

Four police officers were among those injured in the attack. A British Transport Police officer was stabbed, and suffered serious injuries to his head, face and neck. An off-duty Metropolitan Police officer was seriously injured when he was stabbed.

 

Two other Metropolitan Police officers received head and arm injuries. As a result of police gunfire, a bystander received an accidental gunshot wound, which was not critical.

 

-- The 2017 Attackers

 

On the 4th. June the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, said that:

 

"We are confident about the fact that

they were radical Islamic terrorists, the

way they were inspired, and we need

to find out more about where this

radicalisation came from."

 

Amaq News Agency, an online outlet associated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), said the attackers were ISIS fighters.

 

On the 5th. June, two of the attackers were identified as Khuram Shazad Butt and Rachid Redouane. The third of the three attackers, Youssef Zaghba, was identified the following day.

 

(a) Khuram Shazad Butt

 

Butt (born 20th. April 1990) was a Pakistan-born British citizen whose family came from Jhelum. He grew up in Great Britain, living in Plaistow.

 

He had a wife and two children. Neighbours told the BBC that Butt had been reported to police for attempting to radicalise children; he had also expressed disgust at the way women dressed.

 

He was known to police as a "heavyweight" member of the banned extremist group al-Muhajiroun. A BBC interviewee said he had a verbal confrontation with Butt in 2013 on the day after another Al-Muhajiroun follower had murdered Fusilier Lee Rigby.

 

Butt was part of an al-Muhajiroun campaign in 2015 to intimidate Muslims who planned to vote in the UK general elections of that year, on the basis that it was forbidden in Islam.

 

He was known for holding extreme views, having been barred from two local mosques. He appeared on a 2016 Channel 4 Television documentary, The Jihadis Next Door, which showed him arguing with police over the unfurling of an ISIL black flag in Regent's Park.

 

According to a friend, he had been radicalised by the YouTube videos of the American Muslim hate preacher Ahmad Musa Jibril. Butt was known to have taken drugs before he became radicalised.

 

After radicalisation, Butt started to stop his neighbours on the street and ask them whether they had been to the mosque.

 

Butt had worked for a man accused of training Mohammad Sidique Khan, the leader of the July 2005 London bombing. The police and MI5 knew of Butt, and he was investigated in 2015. The investigation was later "moved into the lower echelons", and his file was classed as low priority.

 

Butt sometimes manned the desk of the Ummah Fitness Centre gym, where he prayed regularly. CCTV footage was released of Butt, Redouane and Zaghba meeting outside the gym days before the attack. A senior figure at a local mosque had reported the gym to police.

 

The New York Times said that Butt and his brother were part of the UK government's Prevent programme, which aims to stop people from becoming terrorists, and which reports suspected radicals to police programmes.

 

At the time of the attack he was on police bail following an allegation of fraud, though the police had intended to take no further action due to a lack of evidence. He had previously been cautioned by police for fraud in 2008 and common assault in 2010.

 

(b) Rachid Redouane

 

Redouane (born 31 July 1986) was a failed asylum seeker in the UK, whose application was denied in 2009, and not previously known to police. He had claimed to be either Moroccan or Libyan.

 

Redouane worked as a pastry chef, and in 2012 he married an Irish woman in a ceremony in Ireland. He beat and bullied his wife.

 

He used to drink alcohol. He lived variously in Rathmines, a suburb of Dublin, also in Morocco and the UK. According to his wife, Redouane was most likely radicalised in Morocco. Later the couple stayed in the UK on an EU residency card where they had a daughter in 2015.

 

The couple separated in 2016 and she divorced him after he tried to force his extremist beliefs on her.

 

At the time of the attack, he was living in Dagenham, East London.

 

(c) Youssef Zaghba

 

Zaghba (born 1995 in Fez, Morocco) was at the time of the attack living in east London where he worked in a fast-food outlet. He also worked for an Islamic television channel in London.

 

Zaghba was born to a Moroccan Muslim father and an Italian Catholic Christian mother who had converted to Islam when she married. Zaghba had dual Moroccan and Italian nationality.

 

When his parents divorced, he went to Italy with his mother. In 2016, Zaghba was stopped at Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport by Italian officers who found ISIS-related materials on his mobile phone; he was stopped from continuing his journey to Istanbul.

 

Italian authorities said Zaghba was monitored continuously while in Italy and that the UK was informed about him. Giuseppe Amato, an Italian prosecutor, said:

 

"We did our best. We could just monitor

and surveil Zaghba and send a note to

the British authorities, that's all we could

do and we did it.

Since he moved to London, he came back

to Italy once in a while for a total of 10 days.

And during those 10 days we never let him

out of our sight."

 

According to The New York Times, the Italian branch of Al-Muhajiroun had introduced Butt to Zaghba.

 

-- Investigation of the 2017 Attack

 

On the morning of the 4th. June, police made 12 arrests following raids in flats in the Barking area of east London, where one of the attackers lived; controlled explosions were carried out during the raids.

 

Those held included five males aged between 27 and 55, arrested at one address in Barking, and six females aged between 19 and 60, arrested at a separate Barking address. One of the arrested males was subsequently released without charge.

 

Four properties in all were searched, including two in Newham in addition to the two in Barking. Further raids and arrests were made at properties in Newham and Barking early on the morning of the 5th. June.

 

On the 6th. June, a man was arrested in Barking, and another in Ilford the following day. By the 16th. June, all those arrested had been released without charge.

 

-- The Inquest Into the 2017 Attack

 

On the 7th. May 2019, an inquest into the deaths of the victims opened at the Old Bailey in London. Judge Mark Lucraft QC, Chief Coroner of England and Wales, presided, and people related to the dead gave accounts of what happened and who they had lost.

 

The inquest concluded on the 16th. July 2019 that all three attackers had been lawfully killed.

 

(4) The 2019 London Bridge Stabbing

 

On the 29th. November 2019, five people were stabbed, two fatally, in Central London. The attacker, Briton Usman Khan, had been released from prison in 2018 on licence after serving a sentence for terrorist offences.

 

Khan was attending an offender rehabilitation conference in Fishmongers' Hall when he threatened to detonate what turned out to be a fake suicide vest.

 

He started to attack people with two knives taped to his wrists, killing two of the conference participants by stabbing them in the chest.

 

Several people fought back, some attacking Khan with a fire extinguisher, a pike and a narwhal tusk as he fled the building and emerged on to London Bridge, where he was partially disarmed by a plain-clothes police officer.

 

He was restrained by members of the public until additional police officers arrived, pulled away those restraining him, and shot him.

 

-- Background to the 2019 Attack

 

A conference on offender rehabilitation was held on the 29th. November 2019 in Fishmongers' Hall, at the northern end of London Bridge, to celebrate the fifth anniversary of Learning Together. This is a programme run by the Cambridge Institute of Criminology to help offenders reintegrate into society following their release from prison.

 

Learning Together was set up in 2014 by University of Cambridge academics Ruth Armstrong and Amy Ludlow from the Faculty of Law and Institute of Criminology:

 

"To bring together people in criminal justice

and higher education institutions to study

alongside each other in inclusive and

transformative learning communities."

 

The programme served to enable students and prisoners to work together.

 

Former prisoner Usman Khan had been invited to the conference as a previous participant in the programme, and although banned from entering London under the terms of his release, he was granted a one-day exemption to attend.

 

-- The 2019 Attack

 

At 13:58 on the 29th. November, the police were called to Fishmongers' Hall after Khan, wearing a fake suicide vest, threatened to blow up the hall. The police reported that there had been no prior intelligence of the attack.

 

Holding two kitchen knives taped to his wrists, Khan began stabbing people inside the building. Several fought back, including a South African-born Londoner, Darryn Frost, who grabbed a 1.5-metre-long (4.9 ft) narwhal tusk from the wall to use as a weapon, former prisoner John Crilly, and Steven Gallant, a convicted murderer attending the conference on day release from prison.

 

Khan fled and began stabbing pedestrians outside on the north side of the bridge.

 

Several people were injured before members of the public, including a tour guide and a plain-clothes British Transport Police officer, later seen walking away with a knife, restrained and disarmed Khan on the bridge.

 

One of the people who stepped in to fight the attacker drove him back by spraying a fire extinguisher.

 

Armed officers of the City of London Police arrived at 14:03 and surrounded the attacker, who at the time was being restrained by a Ministry of Justice communications worker attending the rehabilitation meeting.

 

The officers pulled this person away to provide a clear shot, before one fired twice. Around 10 minutes after this, Khan started to get up; he was then shot 9 further times by 6 firearms officers. Khan had not been secured after the initial shooting due to the suicide vest. Khan died at the scene.

 

A Transport for London bus which had stopped adjacent to the site of the shooting was found to have damage to both its front and rear windows, possibly caused, according to the Metropolitan Police, by a ricocheting bullet.

 

-- The Victims of the 2019 Attack

 

Three of the victims were associated with Cambridge University's Learning Together prison-rehabilitation programme; two died and one was injured.

 

The two who died from their stab wounds were Jack Merritt and Saskia Jones.

 

Merritt was a 25-year-old law and criminology graduate from Cottenham, Cambridgeshire who had studied at the Universities of Manchester and Cambridge. He worked as a University of Cambridge administration officer, and was a course coordinator for Learning Together.

 

Jones was a 23 year old former Anglia Ruskin University and University of Cambridge student from Stratford-upon-Avon.

 

Funeral services for Merritt and Jones were conducted on the 20th. December 2019.

 

Two other women were seriously injured, while a chef who was working at the event was stabbed but had less serious injuries.

 

-- The Terrorist Usman Khan

 

Usman Khan was a 28-year-old British national from Stoke-on-Trent, of Pakistani descent. Khan appears to have left school with no qualifications after spending part of his late teens in Pakistan.

 

He was known to police, and had links to Islamist extremist groups. In December 2018 he had been automatically released from prison on licence, where he was serving a 16-year sentence for terrorism offences, and was wearing an electronic tag.

 

Khan had been part of a plot, inspired by Al-Qaeda, to establish a terrorist camp on his family's land in Kashmir and bomb the London Stock Exchange. The plot was disrupted by MI5 and the police, as part of MI5's Operation Guava (police Operation Norbury), and Khan was given an indeterminate sentence.

 

Of the nine men involved, Khan was the youngest at 19 and according to Mr Justice Wilkie, Khan and two others were “more serious jihadis” than the others.

 

In 2013, Khan's sentence was revised after an appeal, and he was ordered to serve at least 8 years of his new 16-year sentence, with a 5-year extended licence allowing recall to prison.

 

According to the anti-extremism group Hope not Hate, Khan was a supporter of Al-Muhajiroun, an extremist group with which scores of terrorists were involved. He was a student and personal friend of Anjem Choudary, an Islamist and terrorism supporter.

 

Post-mortem examination showed evidence of occasional use of cocaine by Khan.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2019 Attack

 

The news of the attack was broken live as it happened on the BBC by one of its reporters, John McManus, who witnessed members of the public fighting Khan as he crossed the bridge, and heard two shots being fired by police officers.

 

McManus said that he was certain that more than two shots were fired during the incident.

 

The police, ambulance, and fire services attended the scene, and a major incident was declared. A large police cordon was set up in the area and residents were told to stay away. Police closed both Monument Underground station and London Bridge station after the attack.

 

The Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, returned to Downing Street following the incident, after campaigning in his constituency for the forthcoming general election. Johnson commended the "immense bravery" of the emergency services and members of the public, and claimed that anyone involved in the attack would be hunted down.

 

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, thanked the emergency services and members of the public who helped to restrain the attacker, saying they had shown "breathtaking heroism".

 

The Conservative Party, Labour Party and Liberal Democrats temporarily suspended campaigning in London for the general election. A parliamentary election hustings event scheduled to be held at Great St. Mary's Church in Cambridge on the 30th. November was cancelled and replaced by a memorial vigil for the victims of the attack.

 

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick made a statement following the attack. She said that there would be an increased police presence on the streets, and that cordons in the London Bridge area would remain in place. An appeal was made for the public to submit any film or picture evidence or information that could assist the investigation.

 

In Pakistan, publication of Khan's Pakistani origins by the leading newspaper Dawn were deemed unpatriotic and defamatory, and led to demonstrations demanding that the publisher and the editor be hanged.

 

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack. Its news agency, Amaq, claimed Usman Khan was one of its fighters. A janaza prayer for Khan was held at a mosque in Birmingham, and he was buried in his family's ancestral village in Pakistan, following objections to his burial in the UK by local Muslims in his native Stoke.

 

In 2021, following an inquest, Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation Jonathan Hall QC called for those involved in the planning or preparation of terrorist attacks to be given automatic life sentences. Hall stated:

 

"It is hard to underestimate how serious

Usman Khan’s original offence was."

 

-- Investigations Into the 2019 Attack

 

London Bridge was closed until the early hours of the following Monday for forensic investigation of the scene. A property in Stafford and one in Stoke-on-Trent were searched by police.

 

An inquest into the deaths of Merritt and Jones was opened on the 4th. December 2019 at the Central Criminal Court in London, and was subsequently adjourned.

 

A pre-inquest review hearing took place at the Old Bailey on the 16th. October 2020, before the Chief Coroner of England and Wales, Mark Lucraft QC.

 

The inquest re-opened on the 12th. April 2021, presided over by Lucraft. On the 28th. May 2021 the jury concluded that the victims had been unlawfully killed.

 

They further concluded that insufficient monitoring of Khan, unreasonable belief in his rehabilitation, a lack of information sharing between agencies, and inadequate security planning at the event were all contributing factors in their deaths.

 

Khan's inquest, also overseen by Lucraft, found in June 2021 that Khan was lawfully killed by the police.

 

-- Royal Prerogative of Mercy for Steven Gallant

 

Steven Gallant was granted the Royal prerogative of mercy by the Lord Chancellor on behalf of the Queen in October 2020, in order to bring his parole hearing forward by ten months to June 2021.

 

The Ministry of Justice stated that:

 

"This is in recognition of his exceptionally

brave actions at Fishmongers’ Hall, which

helped save people's lives despite the

tremendous risk to his own".

 

Though the parole board still has to decide on whether to release him, it was reported that it would be unlikely for his case to be denied after the Queen's intervention. The families of both Merritt and of Gallant's 2005 murder victim approved the action due to his heroic deeds and efforts to turn his life around since the murder.

Story and photos by 1st Lt. Austin Liu

6-52 Air Defense Artillery

 

SUWON AIR BASE — Captain Carlos Tristan and Chief Warrant Officer 2 David Bates sit quietly inside the compact Tactical Control Station (TCS), both reviewing the maintenance record for their equipment one final time. The two leaders observe every miniscule detail, flipping the record pages back and forth to ensure no mistakes slip past their eyes.

Outside the TCS, darkness engulfs the airbase as temperature hover just above freezing.

As the senior officer in charge of Fire Direction Section (FDS) of 6th Battalion, 52nd Air Defense Artillery Battalion, Tristan knows he has the paramount responsibility for the success or failure of the mission to lead his crew to a successful PATRIOT Gunnery Table VIII certification.

He also knows the key to success is attention to detail, not only in the execution of the crew drills, but also in the studious maintenance of records.

The Fire Direction Section serves as the command and control nodule for an air defense artillery battalion. FDS also has the important mission to manage air battles and de-conflict tracks for the firing batteries underneath.

It has only been a week since Tristan took over as the officer in charge of the FDS, but he has already demonstrated unspoken confidence and proficiency during the gunnery qualification.

Whenever he felt he needed support and guidance, Tristan could always look to Bates, the battalion’s primary tactical director and the officer in charge of his first crew.

Bates is a veteran air defender with over 14 years of service. He proved to be the subject matter expert in air defense operations during his last assignment as the battery trainer.

“I am completely confident in the FDS’ war fighting capabilities,” Bates said.

“I felt pretty good about passing the evaluation … I have an amazing group of Soldiers on my team who work extremely well together,” Tristan said. “At the end of the day, it is all about being able to fight the fight in accordance with doctrine and standard … and you really only get one shot to prove to the evaluators that you can achieve just that.”

In a few hours, Tristan and Bates will get that shot.

Meanwhile, a couple of blocks down the road, Spc. Mary Mott could not fall asleep. She was excited but also anxious. It was a mixture of emotions all rolled into one.

As the team leader for the Antenna Mast Group under the Fire Direction Section, Mott was responsible for training new Soldiers on the team. It was only a couple months before that Mott herself was considered the new Soldier, but Mott matured quickly and earned a team leader spot.

This week marks the one year anniversary of Mott’s arrival in Korea, and she enrolled in the Army Incentive Program to stay one more year here.

The 24 year-old Appalachian State University graduate had a sound training plan for her Soldiers.

“The training took months … and it took place in three phases,” Mott explained. “I first had the new crew study the technical manuals, and then I have them observe the experienced crews conducting their drills, and finally I have them execute drills themselves under my close supervision. It was a good training plan and I knew my crews were ready.”

In a few hours, she will get the chance to prove she is right.

As that time approaches, Pfc. Davey Martin is looking up at the ceiling of his room. He, too, was feeling anxious about the evaluation.

It has been only six months since he first saw the imposing Iron Horse Statue outside of the battalion headquarters.

He thought “time really flew by when you have so much to learn in such a short amount of time.”

The 20-years old communication specialist never learned about the Information Coordination Central (ICC, the equipment he is currently assigned to) during Advanced Individual Training at Fort Gordon, Ga.

“Since I got to the unit, I was able to learn how to operate every single radio inside the ICC and everything else I need to learn communication-wise to get us through the air battles,” said Martin, who is assigned to the first crew under the Fire Direction Section. “Thankfully I had a wonderful group of leaders and first line supervisors in FDS that really cared for me and ensured I am trained well.”

All the sweat and effort will pay off when they become certified in the next few hours, Martin constantly reminded himself. He forced himself not to think otherwise.

PATRIOT Gunnery Table VIII evaluation is an extremely important event for an air defense artillery unit. It poses grueling physical and mental challenges to all air defense Soldiers. The first portion of the evaluation consists of an inspection of equipment mission capability and maintenance paperwork. Evaluators examine equipment and supporting documents meticulously. Many units fail the evaluation within the first half hour of the inspection.

The second part of the evaluation is the simulation of wartime situation where the battalion Fire Direction Section, receives a movement order and road marches and places all its equipment onto another location and then quickly assumes posture to conduct and manage air battles against hostile aerial threats. This portion of the process is timed.

“Before you could attempt a Gunnery Table VIII evaluation, the individual within the team must first be able to accomplish all the tasks under Gunnery Tables I through VI,” Tristan said. “Table VIII is really the culmination of all these tasks.”

“We trained hard and put in a lot of efforts to prepare for the Table VIII evaluations,” Mott added.

The Battalion Fire Direction Section, as the higher echelon unit above firing batteries, must face another challenge.

“The hardest part is really the coordination … for the FDS to successfully pass its certification, it relies on our subordinate firing units to do their part and provide us with timely support,” Tristan said. “This is a criteria that is unique to the FDS.”

Fast forward to the next afternoon, where the FDS team is about to find out whether their hard work and efforts have paid off.

As the dust settles and the FDS vehicles are finally placed on their new location and ready to defend the South Korea airspace, all there is left to do for the team is to wait for the results.

“Time always seem to pass slower during waiting time after evaluation,” Mott said.

Finally, the evaluators came out and smiled.

“You could hear on the headset the cheering of Bates and his crew inside the ICC,” Tristan said.

Mott celebrated by giving her crew members high-fives.

“We put our best foot forward and we succeeded,” she told them.

As Bates and his crew came out of the ICC, Tristan greeted them with a big handshake and words of congratulation.

“We can celebrate now but the battle is not over,” Tristan reminded everyone. “Remember that even though the FDS has passed today, our brothers in communication relay group and other firing batteries will be conducting their table VIII next week.”

“Let’s do everything we can in our power to support them.” Bates added. “In the air defense world, nobody can successfully carry out the mission by themselves.”

 

For more information on U.S. Army Garrison Humphreys and living and working in Korea visit: USAG-Humphreys' official web site or check out our online videos.

Peter Foley/European Pressphoto Agency

 

The TriBeCa Film Festival, which recently ended its two-week run, sold 135,000 tickets to 700 screenings

 

May 12, 2005

New York: 'Little' Films Grow Big

By DAVID CARR

 

When the Cannes Film Festival opened yesterday, the first of what could be a long stream of distribution deals was announced: "Transamerica," a comedic road movie starring Felicity Huffman of "Desperate Housewives," will be coming to a screen near you soon. The film is a New York project from beginning to end, written, directed and partly shot in a city that has carved out its own place in the film industry - a place that only occasionally intersects with what Hollywood likes to call "the movie business."

 

Culturally vibrant, if economically still fragile, New York has quietly been emerging as the world's primary clearinghouse for a fast-expanding pool of very-low-budget movies. A ragtag posse of former college film series promoters, ex-gofers at major studios and chronically underfinanced filmmakers - their way paved by the low costs and relative ease of digital technology - has coalesced here into a commercial brokerage and cinematic salon devoted largely to the "little" film.

 

Long a force in the independent film world, the industry in New York suffered a bit of a slump in the 90's as Hollywood studios trimmed Manhattan staff and all but stopped holding big premiere parties in the city. And while the two men who embodied New York filmmaking over the last decade, Bob and Harvey Weinstein, the co-founders of Miramax Films, are parting ways with the company they built after a drawn-out battle with the Walt Disney Company, even they are playing a role in the city's new film game. Even as they round up financing for a new company to be based in Manhattan, they are buying the North American distribution rights for "Transamerica," directed by Duncan Tucker and produced by Linda Moran, René Bastian and Sebastian Dungan, New Yorkers all, on a budget of about $1 million. "New York used to be seen as this kind of colonial outpost of L.A.," said Mark Urman, head of theatrical distribution for New York-based ThinkFilm, which earlier this year won attention for its "Murderball," an unlikely documentary about quadriplegic rugby players, by screening it at the New Directors/New Films Festival sponsored by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and the Museum of Modern Art. He expects the picture to compete against Hollywood fare like "Bewitched" and "Fantastic Four" this summer.

 

Now, Mr. Urman said, filmmakers, many of them based in New York, are increasingly inclined to gamble by shooting their pictures without waiting for a green light from a Hollywood studio, hoping companies like his will find viewers for them.

 

While Hollywood concentrates on selling blockbusters around the globe - and has crashed the party with well-financed art house divisions like Universal's Focus Features and Sony Pictures Classics, both based here, New York companies like ThinkFilm and Killer Films have emerged as central players in a more guerrillalike industry, reaching far beyond traditional independent production and finance. The latest generation of New York players are creating a system of their own to get movies seen. They win recognition for hundreds of pictures a year via film festival screens and a Rube Goldberg patchwork of local sites, both commercial and nonprofit, garnering just enough exposure to push the movies into the marketplace, including the increasingly lucrative DVD market.

 

"Transamerica" opened last month at the TriBeCa Film Festival, which cast its own light on the robustness and growing power of the New York film industry. In its fourth year, the festival sold 135,000 tickets to 700 screenings even as the popcorn index soared: Regal Cinemas, in TriBeCa, peddled more than 5,000 bags a week during the festival, versus its usual 800.

 

For the first time in its short history, several pictures that opened at TriBeCa, including a Showtime documentary, "After Innocence," and the Dutch drama "Simon," were picked up for national distribution. Conceived as a civic gesture for a neighborhood down on its luck after the events of Sept. 11, Robert De Niro's brainchild had taken its place in a booming local commercial film culture.

 

"When we announced what we were going to do, who knew how successful or powerful it was going to be?" Mr. De Niro said.

 

Hollywood studios - which accounted for about $7.4 billion in worldwide film revenue - released about 138 pictures last year, according to Exhibitor Relations Company, which tracks box office revenues. In all, more than 500 films are released in domestic theaters in a typical year, many of them by about a dozen Manhattan companies like Think and Killer.

 

Several more players are poised to join the fray, including the Weinsteins' still-unnamed new company and two Time Warner units, New Line and HBO, which have combined to form another independent film distributor in New York. At the end of last month, 2929 Entertainment, a digital entertainment company based here, signed a six-picture deal with Steven Soderbergh, the director of "Traffic" and "Erin Brockovich," for six high-definition films that will be simultaneously released in theaters, on DVD and on television.

 

"Ten years ago, the driving force behind the movies we show was Miramax," said Graham Leggat, who helps program screenings at Lincoln Center. "Now there are a number of other distributors." The growing echelon of New York distributors appears to be matched by an expansion in the ranks of film being shot here. Last year, 202 movies were filmed at least in part in New York city. And the enactment of a combined city-state tax break of 15 percent has already yielded almost $300 million in new business, according to the Mayor's Office of Film, Theater and Broadcasting.

 

The New York distribution companies are also fed by a torrent of new films from around the world. This year, more than 2,600 feature-length pictures were submitted to the Sundance Film Festival, in Park City, Utah, up 29 percent from a year earlier, providing a rough measure of the growth in the pool of films made outside of the studio system.

 

As those pictures scramble to be seen, New York - with its confluence of ethnic communities, film schools, enthusiasts and media outlets - has forged a cultural ecosystem, processing the pictures and pushing many of them toward commercial release. The New York Times, by some accounts, plays a part in the process: Under longstanding practice, every full-length feature that plays on a New York screen for at least a week is reviewed in the paper.

 

If the film business, especially as it is practiced in New York, remains a notoriously chancy affair - Dan Talbot, longtime head of New Yorker Films, describes it as "a casino" - that has not doused an optimism that was palpable only weeks ago in TriBeCa.

 

During the festival, fans lined up around the block at Stuyvesant High School to see "The Great New Wonderful," a film about the aftermath of 9/11, starring Maggie Gyllenhaal and directed by a Brooklyn native, Danny Leiner. The young crowd buzzed with the sort of anticipation that usually accompanies the opening of a new downtown club.

 

"Ninety percent of the industry is in L.A.," said Mr. Leiner, who now lives there. "But the 10 percent who are here are among the most creative people making movies."

 

A peculiar hallmark of New York's cinematic counterculture is the role that the city's intense, sophisticated audience has played in pushing once-fragile films like "Open Water" and "Garden State" into prominence. Often, small movies that break out have taken root on a single screen at the Angelika Film Center, Film Forum or Lincoln Center, where an enthusiastic reception has opened the door to a wider audience in other cities and on DVD. That audience seems to renew itself each generation, with fans of newer styles and genres (like Asian horror or Dogme, the Danish-based film movement) joining the aging cinéastes who devour sophisticated European fare. And the tribe has grown through the Web, which is alive with blogs and enthusiast sites like indiewire.com that create viral marketing and lead fans elsewhere to order up DVD's of lesser-known films.

 

"If you want to integrate a film into the culture, this is the place you have to start," said Michael Barker, who with his partner Tom Bernard established Sony Pictures Classics, a unit of the giant Japanese entertainment company, as one of the most active studio specialty divisions.

 

If the current blossoming of New York filmmaking, some of it shot with digital equipment that does not require the time or expense of film, has put an unusually democratic face on the local film culture, some players caution that to make a movie worth seeing still requires sweat and magic. "The fact is, most of these movies deal in narrative, which should be something that works well in digital form," said James Schamus, co-president of Focus Features. "The fact remains that you can compose a poem with a pencil and a piece of paper, but not everyone can do it."

 

And for many in this reinvented industry, the big dollars that represent a measure of success remain elusive. "Nobody is making any real money," said the New York director Eugene Jarecki, whose documentary, "Why We Fight," won the American Documentary Grand Jury prize at Sundance this year and will be distributed by Sony Pictures Classics. Besides, he said, "it is less than six degrees of separation between all of us, so we tend to depend on each other as opposed to seeing each other as competitors."

 

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The Postcard

 

A postally unused postcard that was published by The Muchmore Art Co. of 92 & 93, Great Russell Street, London W.C. The card was printed in England.

 

In the space for the stamp it states 'Postage Inland, ½d., Foreign 1d.' Inland postal rates for postcards were raised to 1d. in June 1918 in order to help pay for the Great War, therefore the card was published prior to this date.

 

The publishers have provided some information about the bridge on the divided back of the card:

 

'London Bridge.

Completed in 1831 at a cost of

about £2,000,000, was designed

by John Rennie, and has recently

been greatly improved by widening:

the total breadth now is 65 feet,

while the footways are each 15 feet

wide.

The lamp-posts on the bridge were

cast from French cannon taken in

the Peninsular War.'

 

-- The Sale and Removal of the Bridge

 

By 1896 the bridge was the busiest point in London, and one of its most congested, with 8,000 pedestrians and 900 vehicles crossing every hour. To designs by engineer Edward Cruttwell, it was widened in 1904 by 13 feet (4.0 m), using granite corbels.

 

However subsequent surveys showed that the bridge was sinking an inch (about 2.5 cm) every eight years, and by 1924 the east side had sunk some three to four inches (about 9 cm) lower than the west side. It was concluded that the bridge would have to be removed and replaced.

 

Council member Ivan Luckin put forward the idea of selling the bridge, and recalled:

 

"They all thought I was completely

crazy when I suggested we should

sell London Bridge when it needed

replacing."

 

Subsequently, in 1968, Council placed the bridge on the market and began to look for potential buyers. On the 18th. April 1968, Rennie's bridge was purchased by the Missourian entrepreneur Robert P. McCulloch of McCulloch Oil for $2,460,000.

 

The claim that McCulloch believed mistakenly that he was buying the more impressive Tower Bridge was denied by Ivan Luckin in a newspaper interview.

 

Before the bridge was taken apart, each granite facing block was marked for later reassembly. The blocks were taken to Merrivale Quarry at Princetown in Devon, where 15 to 20 cm (6 to 8 in) were sliced off the inner faces of many, in order to facilitate their fixing.

 

Stones left behind were sold in an online auction when the quarry was abandoned and flooded in 2003. 10,000 tons of granite blocks were shipped via the Panama Canal to California, then trucked from Long Beach to Arizona.

 

They were used to face a new, purpose-built hollow core steel-reinforced concrete structure, ensuring that the bridge would support the weight of modern traffic. The bridge was reconstructed at Lake Havasu City, Arizona, and was re-dedicated on the 10th. October 1971 in a ceremony attended by London's Lord Mayor and celebrities.

 

The bridge carries the McCulloch Boulevard and spans the Bridgewater Channel, an artificial, navigable waterway that leads from the Uptown area of Lake Havasu City.

 

Terror Attacks on London Bridge and Nearby

 

There have been four terror attacks on or near London Bridge dating back to 1884. They are as follows:

 

(1) The 1884 London Bridge Terror Attack

 

On Saturday 13th. December 1884, two American-Irish Republicans carried out a dynamite attack on London Bridge as part of the Fenian dynamite campaign.

 

The bomb went off prematurely while the men were in a boat attaching it to a bridge pier at 5.45 pm during the evening rush hour. There was little damage to the bridge, and no casualties other than the bombers.

 

However, there was considerable collateral damage, and hundreds of windows were shattered on both banks of the Thames. The men's boat was so completely destroyed that the police initially thought the bombers had fled.

 

On the 25th. December 1884 the mutilated remains of one of the bombers were found. The body of the other man was never recovered, but the police were later able to identify the dead men as two Americans, William Mackey Lomasney, and John Fleming.

 

The men were identified after a landlord reported to police that dynamite had been found in the rented premises of two American gentlemen who had disappeared after the 13th. December, enabling police to piece together who was responsible for the attack.

 

The men had already been under surveillance by the police in both America and Great Britain.

 

(2) The 1992 London Bridge Bombing

 

On Friday the 28th. February 1992, the Provisional IRA exploded a bomb inside London Bridge station during the morning rush hour, causing extensive damage and wounding 29 people. It was one of many bombings carried out by one of the IRA's London active service units. It occurred just over a year after a bomb at Victoria station.

 

-- The 1992 Bombing

 

At around 8:20 am, someone rang Ulster Television's London office warning that a bomb was going to explode in a London station, without saying which one.

 

About ten minutes later, the bomb detonated, which made debris fly almost 50 feet (15 m) away from the blast area. Twenty nine people were hurt in the explosion, most of them from flying glass and other bits of debris; four were seriously hurt, but nobody was killed.

 

The victims were treated at Guy's Hospital.

 

-- Aftermath of the 1992 Explosion

 

The head of Scotland Yard's anti terrorist squad, George Churchill-Coleman, said that the 2 lb (910 g) bomb of high explosives was "clearly designed to kill."

 

Investigations suggested that the bomb had been placed in the men's restrooms. Churchill-Coleman added that the IRA's warning was "deliberately vague," and was given too late to act upon.

 

Prime Minister John Major said that the bombing would not change British policy in Northern Ireland:

 

"It was pointless. It was cowardly. It was

directed against innocent people and it

will make absolutely no difference to

our policy -- no difference at all."

 

Fearing additional IRA attacks on public transport, the security services warned commuters "more than ever" to stay on guard at all times. The next day, another bomb went off in London, by the Crown Prosecution Service office, injuring two more people and bringing the total injured to 31 in the space of just over 24 hours.

 

This was one of dozens of bombs that detonated in London that year, the biggest of which was the Baltic Exchange bombing, killing three people and causing almost £1 billion worth of damage.

 

The IRA maintained this pressure, bombing mainland Britain and especially the City of London as much as possible until the ceasefire of 1994.

 

(3) The 2017 London Bridge Attack

 

On the 3rd. June 2017, a terrorist vehicle-ramming and stabbing took place in London when a van was deliberately driven into pedestrians on London Bridge, and then crashed on Borough High Street, just south of the River Thames.

 

The van's three occupants then ran to the nearby Borough Market area and began stabbing people in and around restaurants and pubs. They were shot dead by Metropolitan and City of London Police authorised firearms officers, and were found to be wearing fake explosive vests.

 

Eight people were killed and 48 were injured, including members of the public and four unarmed police officers who attempted to stop the assailants. British authorities described the perpetrators as radical Islamic terrorists.

 

The Islamic State (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attack.

 

-- Background to the 2017 Attack

 

In March 2017, five people had been killed in a combined vehicle and knife attack at Westminster. In late May, a suicide bomber killed 22 people at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena.

 

After the Manchester bombing, the UK's terror threat level was raised to "critical", its highest level, until the 27th. May 2017, when it was lowered to severe.

 

-- The 2017 Attack

 

The attack was carried out using a white Renault Master hired earlier on the same evening in Harold Hill, by Khuram Butt. He had intended to hire a 7.5 tonne lorry, but was refused due to his failure to provide payment details.

 

The attackers were armed with 12-inch (30 cm) kitchen knives with ceramic blades, which they tied to their wrists with leather straps. They also prepared fake explosive belts by wrapping water bottles in grey tape.

 

At 21:58 on the 3rd. June 2017, the van travelled south across London Bridge, and returned six minutes later, crossing over the bridge northbound, making a U-turn at the northern end and then driving southbound across the bridge.

 

It mounted the pavement three times and hit multiple pedestrians, killing two. Witnesses said the van was travelling at high speed. 999 emergency calls were first recorded at 22:07. The van was later found to contain 13 wine bottles containing flammable liquid with rags stuffed in them, along with blow torches.

 

The van crashed on Borough High Street after crossing the central reservation. The van's tyres were destroyed by the central reservation, and the three attackers, armed with knives, abandoned the vehicle.

 

Then they ran down the steps to Green Dragon Court, where they killed five people outside and near the Boro Bistro pub. The attackers then went back up the steps to Borough High Street and attacked three bystanders.

 

Police tried to fight the attackers, but were stabbed, and Ignacio Echeverría helped them by striking the terrorist Redouane and possibly Zaghba with his skateboard. Echeverría was later killed outside Lobos Meat and Tapas.

 

Members of the public threw bottles and chairs at the attackers. Witnesses reported that the attackers were shouting:

 

"This is for Allah".

 

People in and around a number of other restaurants and bars along Stoney Street were also attacked. During the attack, an unknown man was spared by Rachid Redouane, but despite many efforts the man was never found.

 

A Romanian baker hit one of the attackers over the head with a crate before giving shelter to 20 people inside a bakery inside Borough Market.

 

One man fought the three attackers with his fists in the Black and Blue steakhouse, shouting:

 

"F*** you, I'm Millwall."

 

His actions gave members of the public who were in the restaurant the opportunity to run away. He was stabbed eight times in the hands, chest and head. He underwent surgery at St Thomas' Hospital, and was taken off the critical list on the 4th. June.

 

A British Transport Police officer armed with a baton also took on the attackers, receiving multiple stab wounds and temporarily losing sight in his right eye as a consequence.

 

Off-duty Metropolitan police constables Liam Jones and Stewart Henderson rendered first aid to seriously injured members of the public before protecting over 150 people inside the Thameside Inn and evacuating them by Metropolitan marine support unit and RNLI boats to the north shore of the Thames.

 

The three attackers were then shot dead by armed officers from the City of London and Metropolitan police Specialist Firearms Command eight minutes after the initial emergency call was made.

 

CCTV footage showed the three attackers in Borough Market running at the armed officers; the attackers were shot dead 20 seconds later. A total of 46 rounds were fired by three City of London and five Metropolitan Police officers.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2017 Attack

 

The Metropolitan Police issued 'Run, Hide, Tell' notices via social media during the attack, and asked the public to remain calm and vigilant.

 

All buildings within the vicinity of London Bridge were evacuated, and London Bridge, Borough and Bank Underground stations were closed at the request of the police.

 

The mainline railway stations at London Bridge, Waterloo East, Charing Cross and Cannon Street were also closed. The Home Secretary approved the deployment of a military counter terrorist unit from the Special Air Service (SAS).

 

The helicopters carrying the SAS landed on London Bridge to support the Metropolitan Police because of concerns that there might be more attackers at large.

 

The Metropolitan Police Marine Policing Unit dispatched boats on the River Thames, with assistance from the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI), to contribute to the evacuation of the area and look for any casualties who might have fallen from the bridge.

 

A stabbing incident took place in Vauxhall at 23:45, causing Vauxhall station to be briefly closed; this was later confirmed to be unrelated to the attack.

 

At 01:45 on the 4th. June, controlled explosions took place of the attackers' bomb vests, which were found to be fake.

 

An emergency COBR meeting was held on the morning of the 4th. June. London Bridge mainline railway and underground stations remained closed throughout the 4th. June. A cordon was established around the scene of the attack. London Bridge station reopened at 05:00 on Monday the 5th. June.

 

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said that there was a surge of hate crimes and islamophobic incidents following the attack.

 

New security measures were implemented on eight central London bridges following the attack, to reduce the likelihood of further vehicle attacks, with concrete barriers being installed. The barriers have been criticised for causing severe congestion in cycle lanes during peak hours.

 

Borough Market reopened on the 14th. June.

 

-- Casualties of the 2017 Attack

 

Eight civilians died in the attack: one Spaniard, one Briton, two Australians, one Canadian and three French citizens were killed by the attackers, and the three attackers themselves were killed by armed police.

 

Two of the civilian fatalities were caused in the initial vehicle-ramming attack, while the remaining six were stabbed to death. One body was recovered from the Thames near Limehouse several days after the attack.

 

48 people were injured in the attack, including one New Zealander, two Australians, two Germans and four French citizens.

 

Of the 48 people admitted to hospital, 21 were initially reported to be in a critical condition.

 

Four police officers were among those injured in the attack. A British Transport Police officer was stabbed, and suffered serious injuries to his head, face and neck. An off-duty Metropolitan Police officer was seriously injured when he was stabbed.

 

Two other Metropolitan Police officers received head and arm injuries. As a result of police gunfire, a bystander received an accidental gunshot wound, which was not critical.

 

-- The 2017 Attackers

 

On the 4th. June the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, said that:

 

"We are confident about the fact that

they were radical Islamic terrorists, the

way they were inspired, and we need

to find out more about where this

radicalisation came from."

 

Amaq News Agency, an online outlet associated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), said the attackers were ISIS fighters.

 

On the 5th. June, two of the attackers were identified as Khuram Shazad Butt and Rachid Redouane. The third of the three attackers, Youssef Zaghba, was identified the following day.

 

(a) Khuram Shazad Butt

 

Butt (born 20th. April 1990) was a Pakistan-born British citizen whose family came from Jhelum. He grew up in Great Britain, living in Plaistow.

 

He had a wife and two children. Neighbours told the BBC that Butt had been reported to police for attempting to radicalise children; he had also expressed disgust at the way women dressed.

 

He was known to police as a "heavyweight" member of the banned extremist group al-Muhajiroun. A BBC interviewee said he had a verbal confrontation with Butt in 2013 on the day after another Al-Muhajiroun follower had murdered Fusilier Lee Rigby.

 

Butt was part of an al-Muhajiroun campaign in 2015 to intimidate Muslims who planned to vote in the UK general elections of that year, on the basis that it was forbidden in Islam.

 

He was known for holding extreme views, having been barred from two local mosques. He appeared on a 2016 Channel 4 Television documentary, The Jihadis Next Door, which showed him arguing with police over the unfurling of an ISIL black flag in Regent's Park.

 

According to a friend, he had been radicalised by the YouTube videos of the American Muslim hate preacher Ahmad Musa Jibril. Butt was known to have taken drugs before he became radicalised.

 

After radicalisation, Butt started to stop his neighbours on the street and ask them whether they had been to the mosque.

 

Butt had worked for a man accused of training Mohammad Sidique Khan, the leader of the July 2005 London bombing. The police and MI5 knew of Butt, and he was investigated in 2015. The investigation was later "moved into the lower echelons", and his file was classed as low priority.

 

Butt sometimes manned the desk of the Ummah Fitness Centre gym, where he prayed regularly. CCTV footage was released of Butt, Redouane and Zaghba meeting outside the gym days before the attack. A senior figure at a local mosque had reported the gym to police.

 

The New York Times said that Butt and his brother were part of the UK government's Prevent programme, which aims to stop people from becoming terrorists, and which reports suspected radicals to police programmes.

 

At the time of the attack he was on police bail following an allegation of fraud, though the police had intended to take no further action due to a lack of evidence. He had previously been cautioned by police for fraud in 2008 and common assault in 2010.

 

(b) Rachid Redouane

 

Redouane (born 31 July 1986) was a failed asylum seeker in the UK, whose application was denied in 2009, and not previously known to police. He had claimed to be either Moroccan or Libyan.

 

Redouane worked as a pastry chef, and in 2012 he married an Irish woman in a ceremony in Ireland. He beat and bullied his wife.

 

He used to drink alcohol. He lived variously in Rathmines, a suburb of Dublin, also in Morocco and the UK. According to his wife, Redouane was most likely radicalised in Morocco. Later the couple stayed in the UK on an EU residency card where they had a daughter in 2015.

 

The couple separated in 2016 and she divorced him after he tried to force his extremist beliefs on her.

 

At the time of the attack, he was living in Dagenham, East London.

 

(c) Youssef Zaghba

 

Zaghba (born 1995 in Fez, Morocco) was at the time of the attack living in east London where he worked in a fast-food outlet. He also worked for an Islamic television channel in London.

 

Zaghba was born to a Moroccan Muslim father and an Italian Catholic Christian mother who had converted to Islam when she married. Zaghba had dual Moroccan and Italian nationality.

 

When his parents divorced, he went to Italy with his mother. In 2016, Zaghba was stopped at Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport by Italian officers who found ISIS-related materials on his mobile phone; he was stopped from continuing his journey to Istanbul.

 

Italian authorities said Zaghba was monitored continuously while in Italy and that the UK was informed about him. Giuseppe Amato, an Italian prosecutor, said:

 

"We did our best. We could just monitor

and surveil Zaghba and send a note to

the British authorities, that's all we could

do and we did it.

Since he moved to London, he came back

to Italy once in a while for a total of 10 days.

And during those 10 days we never let him

out of our sight."

 

According to The New York Times, the Italian branch of Al-Muhajiroun had introduced Butt to Zaghba.

 

-- Investigation of the 2017 Attack

 

On the morning of the 4th. June, police made 12 arrests following raids in flats in the Barking area of east London, where one of the attackers lived; controlled explosions were carried out during the raids.

 

Those held included five males aged between 27 and 55, arrested at one address in Barking, and six females aged between 19 and 60, arrested at a separate Barking address. One of the arrested males was subsequently released without charge.

 

Four properties in all were searched, including two in Newham in addition to the two in Barking. Further raids and arrests were made at properties in Newham and Barking early on the morning of the 5th. June.

 

On the 6th. June, a man was arrested in Barking, and another in Ilford the following day. By the 16th. June, all those arrested had been released without charge.

 

-- The Inquest Into the 2017 Attack

 

On the 7th. May 2019, an inquest into the deaths of the victims opened at the Old Bailey in London. Judge Mark Lucraft QC, Chief Coroner of England and Wales, presided, and people related to the dead gave accounts of what happened and who they had lost.

 

The inquest concluded on the 16th. July 2019 that all three attackers had been lawfully killed.

 

(4) The 2019 London Bridge Stabbing

 

On the 29th. November 2019, five people were stabbed, two fatally, in Central London. The attacker, Briton Usman Khan, had been released from prison in 2018 on licence after serving a sentence for terrorist offences.

 

Khan was attending an offender rehabilitation conference in Fishmongers' Hall when he threatened to detonate what turned out to be a fake suicide vest.

 

He started to attack people with two knives taped to his wrists, killing two of the conference participants by stabbing them in the chest.

 

Several people fought back, some attacking Khan with a fire extinguisher, a pike and a narwhal tusk as he fled the building and emerged on to London Bridge, where he was partially disarmed by a plain-clothes police officer.

 

He was restrained by members of the public until additional police officers arrived, pulled away those restraining him, and shot him.

 

-- Background to the 2019 Attack

 

A conference on offender rehabilitation was held on the 29th. November 2019 in Fishmongers' Hall, at the northern end of London Bridge, to celebrate the fifth anniversary of Learning Together. This is a programme run by the Cambridge Institute of Criminology to help offenders reintegrate into society following their release from prison.

 

Learning Together was set up in 2014 by University of Cambridge academics Ruth Armstrong and Amy Ludlow from the Faculty of Law and Institute of Criminology:

 

"To bring together people in criminal justice

and higher education institutions to study

alongside each other in inclusive and

transformative learning communities."

 

The programme served to enable students and prisoners to work together.

 

Former prisoner Usman Khan had been invited to the conference as a previous participant in the programme, and although banned from entering London under the terms of his release, he was granted a one-day exemption to attend.

 

-- The 2019 Attack

 

At 13:58 on the 29th. November, the police were called to Fishmongers' Hall after Khan, wearing a fake suicide vest, threatened to blow up the hall. The police reported that there had been no prior intelligence of the attack.

 

Holding two kitchen knives taped to his wrists, Khan began stabbing people inside the building. Several fought back, including a South African-born Londoner, Darryn Frost, who grabbed a 1.5-metre-long (4.9 ft) narwhal tusk from the wall to use as a weapon, former prisoner John Crilly, and Steven Gallant, a convicted murderer attending the conference on day release from prison.

 

Khan fled and began stabbing pedestrians outside on the north side of the bridge.

 

Several people were injured before members of the public, including a tour guide and a plain-clothes British Transport Police officer, later seen walking away with a knife, restrained and disarmed Khan on the bridge.

 

One of the people who stepped in to fight the attacker drove him back by spraying a fire extinguisher.

 

Armed officers of the City of London Police arrived at 14:03 and surrounded the attacker, who at the time was being restrained by a Ministry of Justice communications worker attending the rehabilitation meeting.

 

The officers pulled this person away to provide a clear shot, before one fired twice. Around 10 minutes after this, Khan started to get up; he was then shot 9 further times by 6 firearms officers. Khan had not been secured after the initial shooting due to the suicide vest. Khan died at the scene.

 

A Transport for London bus which had stopped adjacent to the site of the shooting was found to have damage to both its front and rear windows, possibly caused, according to the Metropolitan Police, by a ricocheting bullet.

 

-- The Victims of the 2019 Attack

 

Three of the victims were associated with Cambridge University's Learning Together prison-rehabilitation programme; two died and one was injured.

 

The two who died from their stab wounds were Jack Merritt and Saskia Jones.

 

Merritt was a 25-year-old law and criminology graduate from Cottenham, Cambridgeshire who had studied at the Universities of Manchester and Cambridge. He worked as a University of Cambridge administration officer, and was a course coordinator for Learning Together.

 

Jones was a 23 year old former Anglia Ruskin University and University of Cambridge student from Stratford-upon-Avon.

 

Funeral services for Merritt and Jones were conducted on the 20th. December 2019.

 

Two other women were seriously injured, while a chef who was working at the event was stabbed but had less serious injuries.

 

-- The Terrorist Usman Khan

 

Usman Khan was a 28-year-old British national from Stoke-on-Trent, of Pakistani descent. Khan appears to have left school with no qualifications after spending part of his late teens in Pakistan.

 

He was known to police, and had links to Islamist extremist groups. In December 2018 he had been automatically released from prison on licence, where he was serving a 16-year sentence for terrorism offences, and was wearing an electronic tag.

 

Khan had been part of a plot, inspired by Al-Qaeda, to establish a terrorist camp on his family's land in Kashmir and bomb the London Stock Exchange. The plot was disrupted by MI5 and the police, as part of MI5's Operation Guava (police Operation Norbury), and Khan was given an indeterminate sentence.

 

Of the nine men involved, Khan was the youngest at 19 and according to Mr Justice Wilkie, Khan and two others were “more serious jihadis” than the others.

 

In 2013, Khan's sentence was revised after an appeal, and he was ordered to serve at least 8 years of his new 16-year sentence, with a 5-year extended licence allowing recall to prison.

 

According to the anti-extremism group Hope not Hate, Khan was a supporter of Al-Muhajiroun, an extremist group with which scores of terrorists were involved. He was a student and personal friend of Anjem Choudary, an Islamist and terrorism supporter.

 

Post-mortem examination showed evidence of occasional use of cocaine by Khan.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2019 Attack

 

The news of the attack was broken live as it happened on the BBC by one of its reporters, John McManus, who witnessed members of the public fighting Khan as he crossed the bridge, and heard two shots being fired by police officers.

 

McManus said that he was certain that more than two shots were fired during the incident.

 

The police, ambulance, and fire services attended the scene, and a major incident was declared. A large police cordon was set up in the area and residents were told to stay away. Police closed both Monument Underground station and London Bridge station after the attack.

 

The Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, returned to Downing Street following the incident, after campaigning in his constituency for the forthcoming general election. Johnson commended the "immense bravery" of the emergency services and members of the public, and claimed that anyone involved in the attack would be hunted down.

 

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, thanked the emergency services and members of the public who helped to restrain the attacker, saying they had shown "breathtaking heroism".

 

The Conservative Party, Labour Party and Liberal Democrats temporarily suspended campaigning in London for the general election. A parliamentary election hustings event scheduled to be held at Great St. Mary's Church in Cambridge on the 30th. November was cancelled and replaced by a memorial vigil for the victims of the attack.

 

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick made a statement following the attack. She said that there would be an increased police presence on the streets, and that cordons in the London Bridge area would remain in place. An appeal was made for the public to submit any film or picture evidence or information that could assist the investigation.

 

In Pakistan, publication of Khan's Pakistani origins by the leading newspaper Dawn were deemed unpatriotic and defamatory, and led to demonstrations demanding that the publisher and the editor be hanged.

 

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack. Its news agency, Amaq, claimed Usman Khan was one of its fighters. A janaza prayer for Khan was held at a mosque in Birmingham, and he was buried in his family's ancestral village in Pakistan, following objections to his burial in the UK by local Muslims in his native Stoke.

 

In 2021, following an inquest, Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation Jonathan Hall QC called for those involved in the planning or preparation of terrorist attacks to be given automatic life sentences. Hall stated:

 

"It is hard to underestimate

how serious Usman Khan’s

original offence was."

 

-- Investigations Into the 2019 Attack

 

London Bridge was closed until the early hours of the following Monday for forensic investigation of the scene. A property in Stafford and one in Stoke-on-Trent were searched by police.

 

An inquest into the deaths of Merritt and Jones was opened on the 4th. December 2019 at the Central Criminal Court in London, and was subsequently adjourned.

 

A pre-inquest review hearing took place at the Old Bailey on the 16th. October 2020, before the Chief Coroner of England and Wales, Mark Lucraft QC.

 

The inquest re-opened on the 12th. April 2021, presided over by Lucraft. On the 28th. May 2021 the jury concluded that the victims had been unlawfully killed.

 

They further concluded that insufficient monitoring of Khan, unreasonable belief in his rehabilitation, a lack of information sharing between agencies, and inadequate security planning at the event were all contributing factors in their deaths.

 

Khan's inquest, also overseen by Lucraft, found in June 2021 that Khan was lawfully killed by the police.

 

-- Royal Prerogative of Mercy for Steven Gallant

 

Steven Gallant was granted the Royal prerogative of mercy by the Lord Chancellor on behalf of the Queen in October 2020, in order to bring his parole hearing forward by ten months to June 2021.

 

The Ministry of Justice stated that:

 

"This is in recognition of his exceptionally

brave actions at Fishmongers’ Hall, which

helped save people's lives despite the

tremendous risk to his own".

 

Though the parole board still has to decide on whether to release him, it was reported that it would be unlikely for his case to be denied after the Queen's intervention. The families of both Merritt and of Gallant's 2005 murder victim approved the action due to his heroic deeds and efforts to turn his life around since the murder.

 

2023 © SoulRider.222 / Eric Rider

 

The 142nd Wing is a unit of the Oregon Air National Guard and the United States Air Force, stationed at Portland Air National Guard Base, Oregon. As a state militia unit, the 142nd Wing is under the jurisdiction of the Oregon Air National Guard unless it is federalized by order of the President of the United States.

 

How good is the F-15C?

The F-15 is the most badass U.S. fighter jet ever.

The F-15 has never lost a dogfight.

 

The F-15 has an air-to-air record of 104 and 0. That's better than the F-16 (76-1), the F-14 Tomcat (135-4), and even Mike Tyson (50-6).

 

As the F-15 is coming up to 50 years old, it's top speed of Mach 2.5 (1650 mph) is still impressive, even by todays standards.

 

-----------------------------------------------------------------

A New Bird in the Oregon Roost: The Beginning of the Eagle Era in the 142nd Fighter Wing

 

Published May 28, 2019

By Lt. Col. Terrence G. Popravak, Jr., USAF (Ret.)

142nd Fighter Wing/Public Affairs

PORTLAND, Ore. --

May 24th, 2019 marked 30 years of F-15 Eagle operations by the 142nd Fighter Wing of the Oregon Air National Guard, and thirty years of incredible growth in mission capability and employment as well, taking the 142FW from the dedicated air defense mission and growing to include the air superiority domain. This was achieved with the hard work and day-to-day training by many professionals in air and ground echelons through successive versions of the F-15.

 

But the Eagle era at Portland actually had beginnings in 1987 as the Viper era, back when the wing was designated as the 142nd Fighter-Interceptor Group (142nd FIG). Yes, you read correctly, Viper, as in F-16. At the time the 142nd FIG had two fighter squadrons assigned, the Portland-based 123rd Fighter-Interceptor Squadron (123rd FIS) and the Kingsley Field, Klamath Falls, OR-based 114th Tactical Fighter Training Squadron (114th TFTS). Both were to receive the F-16 Air Defense Fighter variant then under development; the ADF was a modified F-16A Block 15.

 

The initial conversion from the F-4 to the F-16 was first broached in public discussion at least as early as May, 1987, and by January, 1988, pilot Maj Larry Kemp and maintenance programs and analysis MSgt Gene Jaramillo were initially identified as project coordinators. A USAF site activation team visited Portland between 26-29 January 1988 to help in the process. The unit was expected to complete conversion from the F-4 to the F-16 in June/July of 1989, with the initial two to three aircraft expected on hand by March/April 1989.

 

The Portland F-16 conversion plan changed abruptly on 18 February 1988 when Secretary of the Air Force Aldridge announced some major force structure changes and reductions meant to meet Congressional budget restrictions. Of the eight ANG units mentioned in aircraft upgrades, only the 123rd Fighter-Interceptor Squadron was slated to change to the F-15 in late 1989 with all the other ANG units affected in this specific announcement converting to the F-16.* Of note, plans for conversion of the unit’s 114th TFTS to the F-16 Air Defense Fighter (ADF) continued and the 114th converted from the F-4 to the F-16 later that year. But that is a separate story.

 

As a result of the force structure change, in May, 1988, Maj Don Wimberly, Maj Larry Kemp and SSgt David Hansen were identified as the focal points for coordinating F-15 conversion planning, with 192 task items to accomplish. A Site Activation Task Force visited Portland to assist.

 

As the time grew near for the first F-15 to arrive at Portland, the USAF sent the 142nd some F-15 expertise. On 15 May 1989, Maj Dennis Gavin, the new active duty advisor to the ORANG and an F-15 pilot, arrived from Tyndall AFB, FL for duty with the group.

 

It wasn’t long after that that the Eagle era formally and officially began at Portland. It started when Col (later Maj Gen) D.E.B. Ward was the group commander, on May 24, 1989, when Maj Gavin flew in to Portland with McDonnell Douglas F-15B Eagle 76-0139-17-MC. This F-15 transferred to the Redhawks from the 318th FIS at McChord AFB, WA and began in earnest the 123rd’s transition from the F-4 Phantom II into the F-15 Eagle era.

 

Not content with Portland’s workload in converting to a new airframe alone, higher headquarters also changed the unit’s alert responsibilities. On 26 June 1989, official notification arrived directing that that Det 1, 123rd FIS at Kingsley be redesignated as Det 1, 142nd FIG, retroactively effective to 1 April 1988, and furthermore would move in the near future from Klamath Falls to McChord AFB. The North Dakota ANG was tasked to take over Klamath alert duty on 1 October 1989 while 142nd FIG focused on completing its conversion to the F-15.

 

At this point the F-15s were only trickling in to Portland. By 30 June 1989, there were two F-15A and one F-15B two-seater at Portland. Seventeen more Eagles were expected by December, 1989, at a rate of some two to three aircraft per month until transfer completion. But the low number of aircraft was no indicator of the intensity of conversion activity going on in the unit. By August, 1989, nearly half of the pilots, 22 of 48, were at school for transition. School was about two and a half months at Luke AFB, AZ and at Tyndall AFB. Four pilots had completed the program but were off on temporary duty for Mission Qualification Training (MQT). The unit’s goal was to conduct all MQT at Portland starting from 1 October 1989.

 

About 40 Consolidated Aircraft Maintenance Squadron (CAMS) maintainers were trained and ready. Aircraft maintenance coordinator MSgt Claudia Polen was mentioned in the unit history as having a key role in the conversion. Maj Gen D.E.B. Ward remembers that she “…did an outstanding job. We utilized the PERT (Program Evaluation and Review Technique) system. All scheduling, organizational and coordination tasks for the Group were posted on the PERT chart and monitored for compliance by MSgt. Polen.” Some 279 maintainers were to be trained by December, 1989.

 

As the F-15s came in, the F-4s departed. There were still 10 x F-4C on hand during the August 1989 Unit Training Assembly (UTA). Two of these venerable F-4C Phantom II fighter jets were ultimately retained at Portland, with one (63-7679) going to the memorial park on base and the other, 64-0776, ultimately, to the Boeing Museum of Flight in Seattle, WA.

 

In September 1989, the cost of new and/or improved facilities needed for F-15 conversion at the base was given as around $17 million. This encompassed changes in existing facilities and new construction on the flightline as well as behind the flightline.

 

And if conversion and alert location changes weren’t enough, unit leadership also changed during this period. On 17 September 1989, 142nd FIG Commander Col D.E.B. Ward was selected to replace Maj Gen Sams as ORANG Commander. Lt Col Terry Bernhardt became the new group commander.

 

Construction efforts on the base proceeded apace. New alert barns for the F-15 were expected to be ready by 1 January 1990. The F-15 Simulator from McChord was anticipated to arrive in March 1990 and be placed into the new flight simulator building by the operations building.

 

Even with the full conversion still underway, the unit met the date to open the new alert site at McChord AFB. On 1 Feb 1990, the 142nd FIG activated the alert detachment (Det 1) at McChord with two F-15s, two pilots and 25 support personnel. (Note: From 1 October 1989 to 1 February 1990 the 48th FIS from Langley AFB, VA covered alert duty at McChord after the unfortunate demise of the 318th FIS.)

 

The 142nd was well enough along in the conversion process to be given some interesting tasking in addition to standing up the new alert detachment. In June, 1990, 142nd FIG F-15s escorted Soviet Su-27/FLANKER fighters from Canada to airshows in the US. F-15s from Portland and Det 1 were involved in the effort. They initially escorted the Soviet fighters on 11 June to Paine Field, WA. On 13 June, they escorted them from Paine Field to Oklahoma. Then on 18 June they escorted them from Oklahoma back to Canada from which they returned to the Soviet Union.

 

Unit leadership changes continued to occur though the conversion marched on. On 17 June 1990, Lt Col Bernhardt moved to Salem as new HQ ORANG Deputy for operations (DO). Lt Col Terry "Spike" McKinsey became the new 142nd FIG commander.

 

On 1 July 1990, the conversion was deemed complete and the unit was fully operational in the F-15. During the July Unit Training Assembly (UTA) awards were presented for accomplishments in the conversion. It was a thoroughly accomplished, professional conversion that laid the foundation for three outstanding decades of F-15 Eagle operations at Portland Air National Guard Base.

 

In the F-15 the 142nd FIG continued a mission transformation that actually began in the F-4 era when the unit began air superiority mission training in addition to the long-standing air defense mission of the unit. What began in the F-4 (another great story) was fully realized in the F-15 era as the unit grew in experience and proficiency. This is seen in the historical record of the last 30 years as the unit maintained its air defense alert responsibility, called Aerospace Control Alert (ACA). It is also reflected in the many air superiority taskings and deployments the unit has performed.

 

A similar and equally successful F-15 conversion process in the Oregon ANG also took place in 1998 at Kingsley Field when the 114th Fighter Squadron of the 173rd Fighter Wing converted from the F-16 ADF to the F-15 Eagle. Between the two bases now, the Oregon Air National Guard has amassed over 50 years of experience in flying the F-15 Eagle.

 

But in looking over the last 30 years, one can definitely say that the F-15 of 2019 is not the F-15 of 1989. The 142nd has operated the A-model with elements of the second Multistage Improvement Program (MSIP II, MSIP I for A-models having been cancelled), C-Model MSIP II and now the Golden Eagle upgrades with the Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) radar, latest avionics and most current weapons. New capabilities are in the works for the F-15C as well, such as an Infrared Search and Track (IRST) pod to give pilots an additional option for detecting and tracking targets beyond visual range, including at night.

 

Today, the men and women of the 142nd Fighter Wing operate and maintain the most capable F-15s in the inventory. They are ready to serve the nation with the Eagle in the ACA mission here at home, and also ready for expeditionary deployment and employment in the air superiority mission when and where required.

 

*Note: The 101st Fighter-Interceptor Squadron of the Massachusetts ANG was the first ANG air defense squadron to convert to the F-15A as Tactical Air Command turned its air defense mission over to the ANG, with Eagle jets from the inactivating active duty 5th FIS at Minot AFB, beginning in April, 1988. This conversion was already planned when the announcement came in February, 1988, that the 123rd FIS would convert to the F-15.

 

www.142wg.ang.af.mil/News/Article-Display/Article/1858378...

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=TEkkEPSfODs&list=TLPQMDYwMzIw...

2023 © SoulRider.222 / Eric Rider

 

The 142nd Wing is a unit of the Oregon Air National Guard and the United States Air Force, stationed at Portland Air National Guard Base, Oregon. As a state militia unit, the 142nd Wing is under the jurisdiction of the Oregon Air National Guard unless it is federalized by order of the President of the United States.

 

How good is the F-15C?

The F-15 is the most badass U.S. fighter jet ever.

The F-15 has never lost a dogfight.

 

The F-15 has an air-to-air record of 104 and 0. That's better than the F-16 (76-1), the F-14 Tomcat (135-4), and even Mike Tyson (50-6).

 

As the F-15 is coming up to 50 years old, it's top speed of Mach 2.5 (1650 mph) is still impressive, even by todays standards.

 

-----------------------------------------------------------------

A New Bird in the Oregon Roost: The Beginning of the Eagle Era in the 142nd Fighter Wing

 

Published May 28, 2019

By Lt. Col. Terrence G. Popravak, Jr., USAF (Ret.)

142nd Fighter Wing/Public Affairs

PORTLAND, Ore. --

May 24th, 2019 marked 30 years of F-15 Eagle operations by the 142nd Fighter Wing of the Oregon Air National Guard, and thirty years of incredible growth in mission capability and employment as well, taking the 142FW from the dedicated air defense mission and growing to include the air superiority domain. This was achieved with the hard work and day-to-day training by many professionals in air and ground echelons through successive versions of the F-15.

 

But the Eagle era at Portland actually had beginnings in 1987 as the Viper era, back when the wing was designated as the 142nd Fighter-Interceptor Group (142nd FIG). Yes, you read correctly, Viper, as in F-16. At the time the 142nd FIG had two fighter squadrons assigned, the Portland-based 123rd Fighter-Interceptor Squadron (123rd FIS) and the Kingsley Field, Klamath Falls, OR-based 114th Tactical Fighter Training Squadron (114th TFTS). Both were to receive the F-16 Air Defense Fighter variant then under development; the ADF was a modified F-16A Block 15.

 

The initial conversion from the F-4 to the F-16 was first broached in public discussion at least as early as May, 1987, and by January, 1988, pilot Maj Larry Kemp and maintenance programs and analysis MSgt Gene Jaramillo were initially identified as project coordinators. A USAF site activation team visited Portland between 26-29 January 1988 to help in the process. The unit was expected to complete conversion from the F-4 to the F-16 in June/July of 1989, with the initial two to three aircraft expected on hand by March/April 1989.

 

The Portland F-16 conversion plan changed abruptly on 18 February 1988 when Secretary of the Air Force Aldridge announced some major force structure changes and reductions meant to meet Congressional budget restrictions. Of the eight ANG units mentioned in aircraft upgrades, only the 123rd Fighter-Interceptor Squadron was slated to change to the F-15 in late 1989 with all the other ANG units affected in this specific announcement converting to the F-16.* Of note, plans for conversion of the unit’s 114th TFTS to the F-16 Air Defense Fighter (ADF) continued and the 114th converted from the F-4 to the F-16 later that year. But that is a separate story.

 

As a result of the force structure change, in May, 1988, Maj Don Wimberly, Maj Larry Kemp and SSgt David Hansen were identified as the focal points for coordinating F-15 conversion planning, with 192 task items to accomplish. A Site Activation Task Force visited Portland to assist.

 

As the time grew near for the first F-15 to arrive at Portland, the USAF sent the 142nd some F-15 expertise. On 15 May 1989, Maj Dennis Gavin, the new active duty advisor to the ORANG and an F-15 pilot, arrived from Tyndall AFB, FL for duty with the group.

 

It wasn’t long after that that the Eagle era formally and officially began at Portland. It started when Col (later Maj Gen) D.E.B. Ward was the group commander, on May 24, 1989, when Maj Gavin flew in to Portland with McDonnell Douglas F-15B Eagle 76-0139-17-MC. This F-15 transferred to the Redhawks from the 318th FIS at McChord AFB, WA and began in earnest the 123rd’s transition from the F-4 Phantom II into the F-15 Eagle era.

 

Not content with Portland’s workload in converting to a new airframe alone, higher headquarters also changed the unit’s alert responsibilities. On 26 June 1989, official notification arrived directing that that Det 1, 123rd FIS at Kingsley be redesignated as Det 1, 142nd FIG, retroactively effective to 1 April 1988, and furthermore would move in the near future from Klamath Falls to McChord AFB. The North Dakota ANG was tasked to take over Klamath alert duty on 1 October 1989 while 142nd FIG focused on completing its conversion to the F-15.

 

At this point the F-15s were only trickling in to Portland. By 30 June 1989, there were two F-15A and one F-15B two-seater at Portland. Seventeen more Eagles were expected by December, 1989, at a rate of some two to three aircraft per month until transfer completion. But the low number of aircraft was no indicator of the intensity of conversion activity going on in the unit. By August, 1989, nearly half of the pilots, 22 of 48, were at school for transition. School was about two and a half months at Luke AFB, AZ and at Tyndall AFB. Four pilots had completed the program but were off on temporary duty for Mission Qualification Training (MQT). The unit’s goal was to conduct all MQT at Portland starting from 1 October 1989.

 

About 40 Consolidated Aircraft Maintenance Squadron (CAMS) maintainers were trained and ready. Aircraft maintenance coordinator MSgt Claudia Polen was mentioned in the unit history as having a key role in the conversion. Maj Gen D.E.B. Ward remembers that she “…did an outstanding job. We utilized the PERT (Program Evaluation and Review Technique) system. All scheduling, organizational and coordination tasks for the Group were posted on the PERT chart and monitored for compliance by MSgt. Polen.” Some 279 maintainers were to be trained by December, 1989.

 

As the F-15s came in, the F-4s departed. There were still 10 x F-4C on hand during the August 1989 Unit Training Assembly (UTA). Two of these venerable F-4C Phantom II fighter jets were ultimately retained at Portland, with one (63-7679) going to the memorial park on base and the other, 64-0776, ultimately, to the Boeing Museum of Flight in Seattle, WA.

 

In September 1989, the cost of new and/or improved facilities needed for F-15 conversion at the base was given as around $17 million. This encompassed changes in existing facilities and new construction on the flightline as well as behind the flightline.

 

And if conversion and alert location changes weren’t enough, unit leadership also changed during this period. On 17 September 1989, 142nd FIG Commander Col D.E.B. Ward was selected to replace Maj Gen Sams as ORANG Commander. Lt Col Terry Bernhardt became the new group commander.

 

Construction efforts on the base proceeded apace. New alert barns for the F-15 were expected to be ready by 1 January 1990. The F-15 Simulator from McChord was anticipated to arrive in March 1990 and be placed into the new flight simulator building by the operations building.

 

Even with the full conversion still underway, the unit met the date to open the new alert site at McChord AFB. On 1 Feb 1990, the 142nd FIG activated the alert detachment (Det 1) at McChord with two F-15s, two pilots and 25 support personnel. (Note: From 1 October 1989 to 1 February 1990 the 48th FIS from Langley AFB, VA covered alert duty at McChord after the unfortunate demise of the 318th FIS.)

 

The 142nd was well enough along in the conversion process to be given some interesting tasking in addition to standing up the new alert detachment. In June, 1990, 142nd FIG F-15s escorted Soviet Su-27/FLANKER fighters from Canada to airshows in the US. F-15s from Portland and Det 1 were involved in the effort. They initially escorted the Soviet fighters on 11 June to Paine Field, WA. On 13 June, they escorted them from Paine Field to Oklahoma. Then on 18 June they escorted them from Oklahoma back to Canada from which they returned to the Soviet Union.

 

Unit leadership changes continued to occur though the conversion marched on. On 17 June 1990, Lt Col Bernhardt moved to Salem as new HQ ORANG Deputy for operations (DO). Lt Col Terry "Spike" McKinsey became the new 142nd FIG commander.

 

On 1 July 1990, the conversion was deemed complete and the unit was fully operational in the F-15. During the July Unit Training Assembly (UTA) awards were presented for accomplishments in the conversion. It was a thoroughly accomplished, professional conversion that laid the foundation for three outstanding decades of F-15 Eagle operations at Portland Air National Guard Base.

 

In the F-15 the 142nd FIG continued a mission transformation that actually began in the F-4 era when the unit began air superiority mission training in addition to the long-standing air defense mission of the unit. What began in the F-4 (another great story) was fully realized in the F-15 era as the unit grew in experience and proficiency. This is seen in the historical record of the last 30 years as the unit maintained its air defense alert responsibility, called Aerospace Control Alert (ACA). It is also reflected in the many air superiority taskings and deployments the unit has performed.

 

A similar and equally successful F-15 conversion process in the Oregon ANG also took place in 1998 at Kingsley Field when the 114th Fighter Squadron of the 173rd Fighter Wing converted from the F-16 ADF to the F-15 Eagle. Between the two bases now, the Oregon Air National Guard has amassed over 50 years of experience in flying the F-15 Eagle.

 

But in looking over the last 30 years, one can definitely say that the F-15 of 2019 is not the F-15 of 1989. The 142nd has operated the A-model with elements of the second Multistage Improvement Program (MSIP II, MSIP I for A-models having been cancelled), C-Model MSIP II and now the Golden Eagle upgrades with the Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) radar, latest avionics and most current weapons. New capabilities are in the works for the F-15C as well, such as an Infrared Search and Track (IRST) pod to give pilots an additional option for detecting and tracking targets beyond visual range, including at night.

 

Today, the men and women of the 142nd Fighter Wing operate and maintain the most capable F-15s in the inventory. They are ready to serve the nation with the Eagle in the ACA mission here at home, and also ready for expeditionary deployment and employment in the air superiority mission when and where required.

 

*Note: The 101st Fighter-Interceptor Squadron of the Massachusetts ANG was the first ANG air defense squadron to convert to the F-15A as Tactical Air Command turned its air defense mission over to the ANG, with Eagle jets from the inactivating active duty 5th FIS at Minot AFB, beginning in April, 1988. This conversion was already planned when the announcement came in February, 1988, that the 123rd FIS would convert to the F-15.

 

www.142wg.ang.af.mil/News/Article-Display/Article/1858378...

2023 © SoulRider.222 / Eric Rider

 

The 142nd Wing is a unit of the Oregon Air National Guard and the United States Air Force, stationed at Portland Air National Guard Base, Oregon. As a state militia unit, the 142nd Wing is under the jurisdiction of the Oregon Air National Guard unless it is federalized by order of the President of the United States.

 

How good is the F-15C?

The F-15 is the most badass U.S. fighter jet ever.

The F-15 has never lost a dogfight.

 

The F-15 has an air-to-air record of 104 and 0. That's better than the F-16 (76-1), the F-14 Tomcat (135-4), and even Mike Tyson (50-6).

 

As the F-15 is coming up to 50 years old, it's top speed of Mach 2.5 (1650 mph) is still impressive, even by todays standards.

 

-----------------------------------------------------------------

A New Bird in the Oregon Roost: The Beginning of the Eagle Era in the 142nd Fighter Wing

 

Published May 28, 2019

By Lt. Col. Terrence G. Popravak, Jr., USAF (Ret.)

142nd Fighter Wing/Public Affairs

PORTLAND, Ore. --

May 24th, 2019 marked 30 years of F-15 Eagle operations by the 142nd Fighter Wing of the Oregon Air National Guard, and thirty years of incredible growth in mission capability and employment as well, taking the 142FW from the dedicated air defense mission and growing to include the air superiority domain. This was achieved with the hard work and day-to-day training by many professionals in air and ground echelons through successive versions of the F-15.

 

But the Eagle era at Portland actually had beginnings in 1987 as the Viper era, back when the wing was designated as the 142nd Fighter-Interceptor Group (142nd FIG). Yes, you read correctly, Viper, as in F-16. At the time the 142nd FIG had two fighter squadrons assigned, the Portland-based 123rd Fighter-Interceptor Squadron (123rd FIS) and the Kingsley Field, Klamath Falls, OR-based 114th Tactical Fighter Training Squadron (114th TFTS). Both were to receive the F-16 Air Defense Fighter variant then under development; the ADF was a modified F-16A Block 15.

 

The initial conversion from the F-4 to the F-16 was first broached in public discussion at least as early as May, 1987, and by January, 1988, pilot Maj Larry Kemp and maintenance programs and analysis MSgt Gene Jaramillo were initially identified as project coordinators. A USAF site activation team visited Portland between 26-29 January 1988 to help in the process. The unit was expected to complete conversion from the F-4 to the F-16 in June/July of 1989, with the initial two to three aircraft expected on hand by March/April 1989.

 

The Portland F-16 conversion plan changed abruptly on 18 February 1988 when Secretary of the Air Force Aldridge announced some major force structure changes and reductions meant to meet Congressional budget restrictions. Of the eight ANG units mentioned in aircraft upgrades, only the 123rd Fighter-Interceptor Squadron was slated to change to the F-15 in late 1989 with all the other ANG units affected in this specific announcement converting to the F-16.* Of note, plans for conversion of the unit’s 114th TFTS to the F-16 Air Defense Fighter (ADF) continued and the 114th converted from the F-4 to the F-16 later that year. But that is a separate story.

 

As a result of the force structure change, in May, 1988, Maj Don Wimberly, Maj Larry Kemp and SSgt David Hansen were identified as the focal points for coordinating F-15 conversion planning, with 192 task items to accomplish. A Site Activation Task Force visited Portland to assist.

 

As the time grew near for the first F-15 to arrive at Portland, the USAF sent the 142nd some F-15 expertise. On 15 May 1989, Maj Dennis Gavin, the new active duty advisor to the ORANG and an F-15 pilot, arrived from Tyndall AFB, FL for duty with the group.

 

It wasn’t long after that that the Eagle era formally and officially began at Portland. It started when Col (later Maj Gen) D.E.B. Ward was the group commander, on May 24, 1989, when Maj Gavin flew in to Portland with McDonnell Douglas F-15B Eagle 76-0139-17-MC. This F-15 transferred to the Redhawks from the 318th FIS at McChord AFB, WA and began in earnest the 123rd’s transition from the F-4 Phantom II into the F-15 Eagle era.

 

Not content with Portland’s workload in converting to a new airframe alone, higher headquarters also changed the unit’s alert responsibilities. On 26 June 1989, official notification arrived directing that that Det 1, 123rd FIS at Kingsley be redesignated as Det 1, 142nd FIG, retroactively effective to 1 April 1988, and furthermore would move in the near future from Klamath Falls to McChord AFB. The North Dakota ANG was tasked to take over Klamath alert duty on 1 October 1989 while 142nd FIG focused on completing its conversion to the F-15.

 

At this point the F-15s were only trickling in to Portland. By 30 June 1989, there were two F-15A and one F-15B two-seater at Portland. Seventeen more Eagles were expected by December, 1989, at a rate of some two to three aircraft per month until transfer completion. But the low number of aircraft was no indicator of the intensity of conversion activity going on in the unit. By August, 1989, nearly half of the pilots, 22 of 48, were at school for transition. School was about two and a half months at Luke AFB, AZ and at Tyndall AFB. Four pilots had completed the program but were off on temporary duty for Mission Qualification Training (MQT). The unit’s goal was to conduct all MQT at Portland starting from 1 October 1989.

 

About 40 Consolidated Aircraft Maintenance Squadron (CAMS) maintainers were trained and ready. Aircraft maintenance coordinator MSgt Claudia Polen was mentioned in the unit history as having a key role in the conversion. Maj Gen D.E.B. Ward remembers that she “…did an outstanding job. We utilized the PERT (Program Evaluation and Review Technique) system. All scheduling, organizational and coordination tasks for the Group were posted on the PERT chart and monitored for compliance by MSgt. Polen.” Some 279 maintainers were to be trained by December, 1989.

 

As the F-15s came in, the F-4s departed. There were still 10 x F-4C on hand during the August 1989 Unit Training Assembly (UTA). Two of these venerable F-4C Phantom II fighter jets were ultimately retained at Portland, with one (63-7679) going to the memorial park on base and the other, 64-0776, ultimately, to the Boeing Museum of Flight in Seattle, WA.

 

In September 1989, the cost of new and/or improved facilities needed for F-15 conversion at the base was given as around $17 million. This encompassed changes in existing facilities and new construction on the flightline as well as behind the flightline.

 

And if conversion and alert location changes weren’t enough, unit leadership also changed during this period. On 17 September 1989, 142nd FIG Commander Col D.E.B. Ward was selected to replace Maj Gen Sams as ORANG Commander. Lt Col Terry Bernhardt became the new group commander.

 

Construction efforts on the base proceeded apace. New alert barns for the F-15 were expected to be ready by 1 January 1990. The F-15 Simulator from McChord was anticipated to arrive in March 1990 and be placed into the new flight simulator building by the operations building.

 

Even with the full conversion still underway, the unit met the date to open the new alert site at McChord AFB. On 1 Feb 1990, the 142nd FIG activated the alert detachment (Det 1) at McChord with two F-15s, two pilots and 25 support personnel. (Note: From 1 October 1989 to 1 February 1990 the 48th FIS from Langley AFB, VA covered alert duty at McChord after the unfortunate demise of the 318th FIS.)

 

The 142nd was well enough along in the conversion process to be given some interesting tasking in addition to standing up the new alert detachment. In June, 1990, 142nd FIG F-15s escorted Soviet Su-27/FLANKER fighters from Canada to airshows in the US. F-15s from Portland and Det 1 were involved in the effort. They initially escorted the Soviet fighters on 11 June to Paine Field, WA. On 13 June, they escorted them from Paine Field to Oklahoma. Then on 18 June they escorted them from Oklahoma back to Canada from which they returned to the Soviet Union.

 

Unit leadership changes continued to occur though the conversion marched on. On 17 June 1990, Lt Col Bernhardt moved to Salem as new HQ ORANG Deputy for operations (DO). Lt Col Terry "Spike" McKinsey became the new 142nd FIG commander.

 

On 1 July 1990, the conversion was deemed complete and the unit was fully operational in the F-15. During the July Unit Training Assembly (UTA) awards were presented for accomplishments in the conversion. It was a thoroughly accomplished, professional conversion that laid the foundation for three outstanding decades of F-15 Eagle operations at Portland Air National Guard Base.

 

In the F-15 the 142nd FIG continued a mission transformation that actually began in the F-4 era when the unit began air superiority mission training in addition to the long-standing air defense mission of the unit. What began in the F-4 (another great story) was fully realized in the F-15 era as the unit grew in experience and proficiency. This is seen in the historical record of the last 30 years as the unit maintained its air defense alert responsibility, called Aerospace Control Alert (ACA). It is also reflected in the many air superiority taskings and deployments the unit has performed.

 

A similar and equally successful F-15 conversion process in the Oregon ANG also took place in 1998 at Kingsley Field when the 114th Fighter Squadron of the 173rd Fighter Wing converted from the F-16 ADF to the F-15 Eagle. Between the two bases now, the Oregon Air National Guard has amassed over 50 years of experience in flying the F-15 Eagle.

 

But in looking over the last 30 years, one can definitely say that the F-15 of 2019 is not the F-15 of 1989. The 142nd has operated the A-model with elements of the second Multistage Improvement Program (MSIP II, MSIP I for A-models having been cancelled), C-Model MSIP II and now the Golden Eagle upgrades with the Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) radar, latest avionics and most current weapons. New capabilities are in the works for the F-15C as well, such as an Infrared Search and Track (IRST) pod to give pilots an additional option for detecting and tracking targets beyond visual range, including at night.

 

Today, the men and women of the 142nd Fighter Wing operate and maintain the most capable F-15s in the inventory. They are ready to serve the nation with the Eagle in the ACA mission here at home, and also ready for expeditionary deployment and employment in the air superiority mission when and where required.

 

*Note: The 101st Fighter-Interceptor Squadron of the Massachusetts ANG was the first ANG air defense squadron to convert to the F-15A as Tactical Air Command turned its air defense mission over to the ANG, with Eagle jets from the inactivating active duty 5th FIS at Minot AFB, beginning in April, 1988. This conversion was already planned when the announcement came in February, 1988, that the 123rd FIS would convert to the F-15.

 

www.142wg.ang.af.mil/News/Article-Display/Article/1858378...

The Postcard

 

A Lesco Series postcard that was published by the London Stereoscopic Company and printed at their works in England,

 

On the divided back of the card they have printed:

 

'Completed in 1831 at a cost of about £2,000,000,

was designed by John Rennie, and has recently

been greatly improved by widening; the total

breadth is now 65 feet, while the footways are

each fifteen feet wide.

The lamp-posts on the bridge were cast from

French cannon taken in the Peninsular War.'

 

The card was posted in London using a 1d. stamp on the 26th. August 1907. It was sent to:

 

Madame Marcelle Labé,

Maison Antony Marlotte,

Seine-et-Marne,

France.

 

The Sale and Removal of London Bridge

 

By 1896 the bridge was the busiest point in London, and one of its most congested, with 8,000 pedestrians and 900 vehicles crossing every hour. To designs by engineer Edward Cruttwell, it was widened in 1904 by 13 feet (4.0 m), using granite corbels.

 

However subsequent surveys showed that the bridge was sinking an inch (about 2.5 cm) every eight years, and by 1924 the east side had sunk some three to four inches (about 9 cm) lower than the west side. It was concluded that the bridge would have to be removed and replaced.

 

Council member Ivan Luckin put forward the idea of selling the bridge, and recalled:

 

"They all thought I was completely

crazy when I suggested we should

sell London Bridge when it needed

replacing."

 

Subsequently, in 1968, Council placed the bridge on the market and began to look for potential buyers. On the 18th. April 1968, Rennie's bridge was purchased by the Missourian entrepreneur Robert P. McCulloch of McCulloch Oil for $2,460,000.

 

The claim that McCulloch believed mistakenly that he was buying the more impressive Tower Bridge was denied by Ivan Luckin in a newspaper interview.

 

Before the bridge was taken apart, each granite facing block was marked for later reassembly. The blocks were taken to Merrivale Quarry at Princetown in Devon, where 15 to 20 cm (6 to 8 in) were sliced off the inner faces of many, in order to facilitate their fixing.

 

Stones left behind were sold in an online auction when the quarry was abandoned and flooded in 2003. 10,000 tons of granite blocks were shipped via the Panama Canal to California, then trucked from Long Beach to Arizona.

 

They were used to face a new, purpose-built hollow core steel-reinforced concrete structure, ensuring that the bridge would support the weight of modern traffic. The bridge was reconstructed at Lake Havasu City, Arizona, and was re-dedicated on the 10th. October 1971 in a ceremony attended by London's Lord Mayor and celebrities.

 

The bridge carries the McCulloch Boulevard and spans the Bridgewater Channel, an artificial, navigable waterway that leads from the Uptown area of Lake Havasu City.

 

Terror Attacks on London Bridge and Nearby

 

There have been four terror attacks on or near London Bridge dating back to 1884. They are as follows:

 

(1) The 1884 London Bridge Terror Attack

 

On Saturday 13th. December 1884, two American-Irish Republicans carried out a dynamite attack on London Bridge as part of the Fenian dynamite campaign.

 

The bomb went off prematurely while the men were in a boat attaching it to a bridge pier at 5.45 pm during the evening rush hour. There was little damage to the bridge, and no casualties other than the bombers.

 

However, there was considerable collateral damage, and hundreds of windows were shattered on both banks of the Thames. The men's boat was so completely destroyed that the police initially thought the bombers had fled.

 

On the 25th. December 1884 the mutilated remains of one of the bombers were found. The body of the other man was never recovered, but the police were later able to identify the dead men as two Americans, William Mackey Lomasney, and John Fleming.

 

The men were identified after a landlord reported to police that dynamite had been found in the rented premises of two American gentlemen who had disappeared after the 13th. December, enabling police to piece together who was responsible for the attack.

 

The men had already been under surveillance by the police in both America and Great Britain.

 

(2) The 1992 London Bridge Bombing

 

On Friday the 28th. February 1992, the Provisional IRA exploded a bomb inside London Bridge station during the morning rush hour, causing extensive damage and wounding 29 people. It was one of many bombings carried out by one of the IRA's London active service units. It occurred just over a year after a bomb at Victoria station.

 

-- The 1992 Bombing

 

At around 8:20 am, someone rang Ulster Television's London office warning that a bomb was going to explode in a London station, without saying which one.

 

About ten minutes later, the bomb detonated, which made debris fly almost 50 feet (15 m) away from the blast area. Twenty nine people were hurt in the explosion, most of them from flying glass and other bits of debris; four were seriously hurt, but nobody was killed.

 

The victims were treated at Guy's Hospital.

 

-- Aftermath of the 1992 Explosion

 

The head of Scotland Yard's anti terrorist squad, George Churchill-Coleman, said that the 2 lb (910 g) bomb of high explosives was "clearly designed to kill."

 

Investigations suggested that the bomb had been placed in the men's restrooms. Churchill-Coleman added that the IRA's warning was "deliberately vague," and was given too late to act upon.

 

Prime Minister John Major said that the bombing would not change British policy in Northern Ireland:

 

"It was pointless. It was cowardly. It was

directed against innocent people and it

will make absolutely no difference to

our policy -- no difference at all."

 

Fearing additional IRA attacks on public transport, the security services warned commuters "more than ever" to stay on guard at all times. The next day, another bomb went off in London, by the Crown Prosecution Service office, injuring two more people and bringing the total injured to 31 in the space of just over 24 hours.

 

This was one of dozens of bombs that detonated in London that year, the biggest of which was the Baltic Exchange bombing, killing three people and causing almost £1 billion worth of damage.

 

The IRA maintained this pressure, bombing mainland Britain and especially the City of London as much as possible until the ceasefire of 1994.

 

(3) The 2017 London Bridge Attack

 

On the 3rd. June 2017, a terrorist vehicle-ramming and stabbing took place in London when a van was deliberately driven into pedestrians on London Bridge, and then crashed on Borough High Street, just south of the River Thames.

 

The van's three occupants then ran to the nearby Borough Market area and began stabbing people in and around restaurants and pubs. They were shot dead by Metropolitan and City of London Police authorised firearms officers, and were found to be wearing fake explosive vests.

 

Eight people were killed and 48 were injured, including members of the public and four unarmed police officers who attempted to stop the assailants. British authorities described the perpetrators as radical Islamic terrorists.

 

The Islamic State (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attack.

 

-- Background to the 2017 Attack

 

In March 2017, five people had been killed in a combined vehicle and knife attack at Westminster. In late May, a suicide bomber killed 22 people at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena.

 

After the Manchester bombing, the UK's terror threat level was raised to "critical", its highest level, until the 27th. May 2017, when it was lowered to severe.

 

-- The 2017 Knife Attack

 

The attack was carried out using a white Renault Master hired earlier on the same evening in Harold Hill, by Khuram Butt. He had intended to hire a 7.5 tonne lorry, but was refused due to his failure to provide payment details.

 

The attackers were armed with 12-inch (30 cm) kitchen knives with ceramic blades, which they tied to their wrists with leather straps. They also prepared fake explosive belts by wrapping water bottles in grey tape.

 

At 21:58 on the 3rd. June 2017, the van travelled south across London Bridge, and returned six minutes later, crossing over the bridge northbound, making a U-turn at the northern end and then driving southbound across the bridge.

 

It mounted the pavement three times and hit multiple pedestrians, killing two. Witnesses said the van was travelling at high speed. 999 emergency calls were first recorded at 22:07. The van was later found to contain 13 wine bottles containing flammable liquid with rags stuffed in them, along with blow torches.

 

The van crashed on Borough High Street after crossing the central reservation. The van's tyres were destroyed by the central reservation, and the three attackers, armed with knives, abandoned the vehicle.

 

Then they ran down the steps to Green Dragon Court, where they killed five people outside and near the Boro Bistro pub. The attackers then went back up the steps to Borough High Street and attacked three bystanders.

 

Police tried to fight the attackers, but were stabbed, and Ignacio Echeverría helped them by striking the terrorist Redouane and possibly Zaghba with his skateboard. Echeverría was later killed outside Lobos Meat and Tapas.

 

Members of the public threw bottles and chairs at the attackers. Witnesses reported that the attackers were shouting:

 

"This is for Allah".

 

People in and around a number of other restaurants and bars along Stoney Street were also attacked. During the attack, an unknown man was spared by Rachid Redouane, but despite many efforts the man was never found.

 

A Romanian baker hit one of the attackers over the head with a crate before giving shelter to 20 people inside a bakery inside Borough Market.

 

One man fought the three attackers with his fists in the Black and Blue steakhouse, shouting:

 

"F*** you, I'm Millwall."

 

His actions gave members of the public who were in the restaurant the opportunity to run away. He was stabbed eight times in the hands, chest and head. He underwent surgery at St Thomas' Hospital, and was taken off the critical list on the 4th. June.

 

A British Transport Police officer armed with a baton also took on the attackers, receiving multiple stab wounds and temporarily losing sight in his right eye as a consequence.

 

Off-duty Metropolitan police constables Liam Jones and Stewart Henderson rendered first aid to seriously injured members of the public before protecting over 150 people inside the Thameside Inn and evacuating them by Metropolitan marine support unit and RNLI boats to the north shore of the Thames.

 

The three attackers were then shot dead by armed officers from the City of London and Metropolitan police Specialist Firearms Command eight minutes after the initial emergency call was made.

 

CCTV footage showed the three attackers in Borough Market running at the armed officers; the attackers were shot dead 20 seconds later. A total of 46 rounds were fired by three City of London and five Metropolitan Police officers.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2017 Attack

 

The Metropolitan Police issued 'Run, Hide, Tell' notices via social media during the attack, and asked the public to remain calm and vigilant.

 

All buildings within the vicinity of London Bridge were evacuated, and London Bridge, Borough and Bank Underground stations were closed at the request of the police.

 

The mainline railway stations at London Bridge, Waterloo East, Charing Cross and Cannon Street were also closed. The Home Secretary approved the deployment of a military counter terrorist unit from the Special Air Service (SAS).

 

The helicopters carrying the SAS landed on London Bridge to support the Metropolitan Police because of concerns that there might be more attackers at large.

 

The Metropolitan Police Marine Policing Unit dispatched boats on the River Thames, with assistance from the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI), to contribute to the evacuation of the area and look for any casualties who might have fallen from the bridge.

 

A stabbing incident took place in Vauxhall at 23:45, causing Vauxhall station to be briefly closed; this was later confirmed to be unrelated to the attack.

 

At 01:45 on the 4th. June, controlled explosions took place of the attackers' bomb vests, which were found to be fake.

 

An emergency COBR meeting was held on the morning of the 4th. June. London Bridge mainline railway and underground stations remained closed throughout the 4th. June. A cordon was established around the scene of the attack. London Bridge station reopened at 05:00 on Monday the 5th. June.

 

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said that there was a surge of hate crimes and islamophobic incidents following the attack.

 

New security measures were implemented on eight central London bridges following the attack, to reduce the likelihood of further vehicle attacks, with concrete barriers being installed. The barriers have been criticised for causing severe congestion in cycle lanes during peak hours.

 

Borough Market reopened on the 14th. June.

 

-- Casualties of the 2017 Attack

 

Eight civilians died in the attack: one Spaniard, one Briton, two Australians, one Canadian and three French citizens were killed by the attackers, and the three attackers themselves were killed by armed police.

 

Two of the civilian fatalities were caused in the initial vehicle-ramming attack, while the remaining six were stabbed to death. One body was recovered from the Thames near Limehouse several days after the attack.

 

48 people were injured in the attack, including one New Zealander, two Australians, two Germans and four French citizens.

 

Of the 48 people admitted to hospital, 21 were initially reported to be in a critical condition.

 

Four police officers were among those injured in the attack. A British Transport Police officer was stabbed, and suffered serious injuries to his head, face and neck. An off-duty Metropolitan Police officer was seriously injured when he was stabbed.

 

Two other Metropolitan Police officers received head and arm injuries. As a result of police gunfire, a bystander received an accidental gunshot wound, which was not critical.

 

-- The 2017 Attackers

 

On the 4th. June the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, said that:

 

"We are confident about the fact that

they were radical Islamic terrorists, the

way they were inspired, and we need

to find out more about where this

radicalisation came from."

 

Amaq News Agency, an online outlet associated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), said the attackers were ISIS fighters.

 

On the 5th. June, two of the attackers were identified as Khuram Shazad Butt and Rachid Redouane. The third of the three attackers, Youssef Zaghba, was identified the following day.

 

(a) Khuram Shazad Butt

 

Butt (born 20th. April 1990) was a Pakistan-born British citizen whose family came from Jhelum. He grew up in Great Britain, living in Plaistow.

 

He had a wife and two children. Neighbours told the BBC that Butt had been reported to police for attempting to radicalise children; he had also expressed disgust at the way women dressed.

 

He was known to police as a "heavyweight" member of the banned extremist group al-Muhajiroun. A BBC interviewee said he had a verbal confrontation with Butt in 2013 on the day after another Al-Muhajiroun follower had murdered Fusilier Lee Rigby.

 

Butt was part of an al-Muhajiroun campaign in 2015 to intimidate Muslims who planned to vote in the UK general elections of that year, on the basis that it was forbidden in Islam.

 

He was known for holding extreme views, having been barred from two local mosques. He appeared on a 2016 Channel 4 Television documentary, The Jihadis Next Door, which showed him arguing with police over the unfurling of an ISIL black flag in Regent's Park.

 

According to a friend, he had been radicalised by the YouTube videos of the American Muslim hate preacher Ahmad Musa Jibril. Butt was known to have taken drugs before he became radicalised.

 

After radicalisation, Butt started to stop his neighbours on the street and ask them whether they had been to the mosque.

 

Butt had worked for a man accused of training Mohammad Sidique Khan, the leader of the July 2005 London bombing. The police and MI5 knew of Butt, and he was investigated in 2015. The investigation was later "moved into the lower echelons", and his file was classed as low priority.

 

Butt sometimes manned the desk of the Ummah Fitness Centre gym, where he prayed regularly. CCTV footage was released of Butt, Redouane and Zaghba meeting outside the gym days before the attack. A senior figure at a local mosque had reported the gym to police.

 

The New York Times said that Butt and his brother were part of the UK government's Prevent programme, which aims to stop people from becoming terrorists, and which reports suspected radicals to police programmes.

 

At the time of the attack he was on police bail following an allegation of fraud, though the police had intended to take no further action due to a lack of evidence. He had previously been cautioned by police for fraud in 2008 and common assault in 2010.

 

(b) Rachid Redouane

 

Redouane (born 31 July 1986) was a failed asylum seeker in the UK, whose application was denied in 2009, and not previously known to police. He had claimed to be either Moroccan or Libyan.

 

Redouane worked as a pastry chef, and in 2012 he married an Irish woman in a ceremony in Ireland. He beat and bullied his wife.

 

He used to drink alcohol. He lived variously in Rathmines, a suburb of Dublin, also in Morocco and the UK. According to his wife, Redouane was most likely radicalised in Morocco. Later the couple stayed in the UK on an EU residency card where they had a daughter in 2015.

 

The couple separated in 2016 and she divorced him after he tried to force his extremist beliefs on her.

 

At the time of the attack, he was living in Dagenham, East London.

 

(c) Youssef Zaghba

 

Zaghba (born 1995 in Fez, Morocco) was at the time of the attack living in east London where he worked in a fast-food outlet. He also worked for an Islamic television channel in London.

 

Zaghba was born to a Moroccan Muslim father and an Italian Catholic Christian mother who had converted to Islam when she married. Zaghba had dual Moroccan and Italian nationality.

 

When his parents divorced, he went to Italy with his mother. In 2016, Zaghba was stopped at Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport by Italian officers who found ISIS-related materials on his mobile phone; he was stopped from continuing his journey to Istanbul.

 

Italian authorities said Zaghba was monitored continuously while in Italy and that the UK was informed about him. Giuseppe Amato, an Italian prosecutor, said:

 

"We did our best. We could just monitor

and surveil Zaghba and send a note to

the British authorities, that's all we could

do and we did it.

Since he moved to London, he came back

to Italy once in a while for a total of 10 days.

And during those 10 days we never let him

out of our sight."

 

According to The New York Times, the Italian branch of Al-Muhajiroun had introduced Butt to Zaghba.

 

-- Investigation of the 2017 Attack

 

On the morning of the 4th. June, police made 12 arrests following raids in flats in the Barking area of east London, where one of the attackers lived; controlled explosions were carried out during the raids.

 

Those held included five males aged between 27 and 55, arrested at one address in Barking, and six females aged between 19 and 60, arrested at a separate Barking address. One of the arrested males was subsequently released without charge.

 

Four properties in all were searched, including two in Newham in addition to the two in Barking. Further raids and arrests were made at properties in Newham and Barking early on the morning of the 5th. June.

 

On the 6th. June, a man was arrested in Barking, and another in Ilford the following day. By the 16th. June, all those arrested had been released without charge.

 

-- The Inquest Into the 2017 Attack

 

On the 7th. May 2019, an inquest into the deaths of the victims opened at the Old Bailey in London. Judge Mark Lucraft QC, Chief Coroner of England and Wales, presided, and people related to the dead gave accounts of what happened and who they had lost.

 

The inquest concluded on the 16th. July 2019 that all three attackers had been lawfully killed.

 

(4) The 2019 London Bridge Stabbing

 

On the 29th. November 2019, five people were stabbed, two fatally, in Central London. The attacker, Briton Usman Khan, had been released from prison in 2018 on licence after serving a sentence for terrorist offences.

 

Khan was attending an offender rehabilitation conference in Fishmongers' Hall when he threatened to detonate what turned out to be a fake suicide vest.

 

He started to attack people with two knives taped to his wrists, killing two of the conference participants by stabbing them in the chest.

 

Several people fought back, some attacking Khan with a fire extinguisher, a pike and a narwhal tusk as he fled the building and emerged on to London Bridge, where he was partially disarmed by a plain-clothes police officer.

 

He was restrained by members of the public until additional police officers arrived, pulled away those restraining him, and shot him.

 

-- Background to the 2019 Attack

 

A conference on offender rehabilitation was held on the 29th. November 2019 in Fishmongers' Hall, at the northern end of London Bridge, to celebrate the fifth anniversary of Learning Together. This is a programme run by the Cambridge Institute of Criminology to help offenders reintegrate into society following their release from prison.

 

Learning Together was set up in 2014 by University of Cambridge academics Ruth Armstrong and Amy Ludlow from the Faculty of Law and Institute of Criminology:

 

"To bring together people in criminal justice

and higher education institutions to study

alongside each other in inclusive and

transformative learning communities."

 

The programme served to enable students and prisoners to work together.

 

Former prisoner Usman Khan had been invited to the conference as a previous participant in the programme, and although banned from entering London under the terms of his release, he was granted a one-day exemption to attend.

 

-- The 2019 Attack

 

At 13:58 on the 29th. November, the police were called to Fishmongers' Hall after Khan, wearing a fake suicide vest, threatened to blow up the hall. The police reported that there had been no prior intelligence of the attack.

 

Holding two kitchen knives taped to his wrists, Khan began stabbing people inside the building. Several fought back, including a South African-born Londoner, Darryn Frost, who grabbed a 1.5-metre-long (4.9 ft) narwhal tusk from the wall to use as a weapon, former prisoner John Crilly, and Steven Gallant, a convicted murderer attending the conference on day release from prison.

 

Khan fled and began stabbing pedestrians outside on the north side of the bridge.

 

Several people were injured before members of the public, including a tour guide and a plain-clothes British Transport Police officer, later seen walking away with a knife, restrained and disarmed Khan on the bridge.

 

One of the people who stepped in to fight the attacker drove him back by spraying a fire extinguisher.

 

Armed officers of the City of London Police arrived at 14:03 and surrounded the attacker, who at the time was being restrained by a Ministry of Justice communications worker attending the rehabilitation meeting.

 

The officers pulled this person away to provide a clear shot, before one fired twice. Around 10 minutes after this, Khan started to get up; he was then shot 9 further times by 6 firearms officers. Khan had not been secured after the initial shooting due to the suicide vest. Khan died at the scene.

 

A Transport for London bus which had stopped adjacent to the site of the shooting was found to have damage to both its front and rear windows, possibly caused, according to the Metropolitan Police, by a ricocheting bullet.

 

-- The Victims of the 2019 Attack

 

Three of the victims were associated with Cambridge University's Learning Together prison-rehabilitation programme; two died and one was injured.

 

The two who died from their stab wounds were Jack Merritt and Saskia Jones.

 

Merritt was a 25-year-old law and criminology graduate from Cottenham, Cambridgeshire who had studied at the Universities of Manchester and Cambridge. He worked as a University of Cambridge administration officer, and was a course coordinator for Learning Together.

 

Jones was a 23 year old former Anglia Ruskin University and University of Cambridge student from Stratford-upon-Avon.

 

Funeral services for Merritt and Jones were conducted on the 20th. December 2019.

 

Two other women were seriously injured, while a chef who was working at the event was stabbed but had less serious injuries.

 

-- The Terrorist Usman Khan

 

Usman Khan was a 28-year-old British national from Stoke-on-Trent, of Pakistani descent. Khan appears to have left school with no qualifications after spending part of his late teens in Pakistan.

 

He was known to police, and had links to Islamist extremist groups. In December 2018 he had been automatically released from prison on licence, where he was serving a 16-year sentence for terrorism offences, and was wearing an electronic tag.

 

Khan had been part of a plot, inspired by Al-Qaeda, to establish a terrorist camp on his family's land in Kashmir and bomb the London Stock Exchange. The plot was disrupted by MI5 and the police, as part of MI5's Operation Guava (police Operation Norbury), and Khan was given an indeterminate sentence.

 

Of the nine men involved, Khan was the youngest at 19 and according to Mr Justice Wilkie, Khan and two others were “more serious jihadis” than the others.

 

In 2013, Khan's sentence was revised after an appeal, and he was ordered to serve at least 8 years of his new 16-year sentence, with a 5-year extended licence allowing recall to prison.

 

According to the anti-extremism group Hope not Hate, Khan was a supporter of Al-Muhajiroun, an extremist group with which scores of terrorists were involved. He was a student and personal friend of Anjem Choudary, an Islamist and terrorism supporter.

 

Post-mortem examination showed evidence of occasional use of cocaine by Khan.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2019 Attack

 

The news of the attack was broken live as it happened on the BBC by one of its reporters, John McManus, who witnessed members of the public fighting Khan as he crossed the bridge, and heard two shots being fired by police officers.

 

McManus said that he was certain that more than two shots were fired during the incident.

 

The police, ambulance, and fire services attended the scene, and a major incident was declared. A large police cordon was set up in the area and residents were told to stay away. Police closed both Monument Underground station and London Bridge station after the attack.

 

The Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, returned to Downing Street following the incident, after campaigning in his constituency for the forthcoming general election. Johnson commended the "immense bravery" of the emergency services and members of the public, and claimed that anyone involved in the attack would be hunted down.

 

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, thanked the emergency services and members of the public who helped to restrain the attacker, saying they had shown "breathtaking heroism".

 

The Conservative Party, Labour Party and Liberal Democrats temporarily suspended campaigning in London for the general election. A parliamentary election hustings event scheduled to be held at Great St. Mary's Church in Cambridge on the 30th. November was cancelled and replaced by a memorial vigil for the victims of the attack.

 

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick made a statement following the attack. She said that there would be an increased police presence on the streets, and that cordons in the London Bridge area would remain in place. An appeal was made for the public to submit any film or picture evidence or information that could assist the investigation.

 

In Pakistan, publication of Khan's Pakistani origins by the leading newspaper Dawn were deemed unpatriotic and defamatory, and led to demonstrations demanding that the publisher and the editor be hanged.

 

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack. Its news agency, Amaq, claimed Usman Khan was one of its fighters. A janaza prayer for Khan was held at a mosque in Birmingham, and he was buried in his family's ancestral village in Pakistan, following objections to his burial in the UK by local Muslims in his native Stoke.

 

In 2021, following an inquest, Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation Jonathan Hall QC called for those involved in the planning or preparation of terrorist attacks to be given automatic life sentences. Hall stated:

 

"It is hard to underestimate how serious

Usman Khan’s original offence was."

 

-- Investigations Into the 2019 Attack

 

London Bridge was closed until the early hours of the following Monday for forensic investigation of the scene. A property in Stafford and one in Stoke-on-Trent were searched by police.

 

An inquest into the deaths of Merritt and Jones was opened on the 4th. December 2019 at the Central Criminal Court in London, and was subsequently adjourned.

 

A pre-inquest review hearing took place at the Old Bailey on the 16th. October 2020, before the Chief Coroner of England and Wales, Mark Lucraft QC.

 

The inquest re-opened on the 12th. April 2021, presided over by Lucraft. On the 28th. May 2021 the jury concluded that the victims had been unlawfully killed.

 

They further concluded that insufficient monitoring of Khan, unreasonable belief in his rehabilitation, a lack of information sharing between agencies, and inadequate security planning at the event were all contributing factors in their deaths.

 

Khan's inquest, also overseen by Lucraft, found in June 2021 that Khan was lawfully killed by the police.

 

-- Royal Prerogative of Mercy for Steven Gallant

 

Steven Gallant was granted the Royal prerogative of mercy by the Lord Chancellor on behalf of the Queen in October 2020, in order to bring his parole hearing forward by ten months to June 2021.

 

The Ministry of Justice stated that:

 

"This is in recognition of his exceptionally

brave actions at Fishmongers’ Hall, which

helped save people's lives despite the

tremendous risk to his own".

 

Though the parole board still has to decide on whether to release him, it was reported that it would be unlikely for his case to be denied after the Queen's intervention. The families of both Merritt and of Gallant's 2005 murder victim approved the action due to his heroic deeds and efforts to turn his life around since the murder.

 

Teresa Gomes

 

So what else happened on the day that the card was posted?

 

Well, on the 26th. August 1907, Teresa Gomes got married.

 

Teresa was a Portuguese actress. She was born Tereza Gomes on the 26th. November 1883 in Santa Isabel, Lisbon.

 

At the age of 23, on the 26th. August 1907, she married the merchant António Sampaio Martins, in the oratory of the Cadeia da Relação in Porto, where her fiancé was imprisoned for unknown reasons. She later separated from him.

 

Teresa's vocation for the theatre was awakened when she was 26, on a voyage aboard a packet boat from Brazil during which she came into contact with the theatre company of Afonso Taveira.

 

On the same boat trip Teresa also met her second husband, the actor Álvaro de Almeida, with whom she got together, even though she was still married to her first husband.

 

In 1911, she made her debut as a backing vocalist in the revue A Musa dos Estudantes, at the Trindade Theatre, where she remained for eight years, and from then on played important roles, such as the emblematic Alfacinhas.

 

Having established herself as a class act, she moved on to the São Luiz Theatre, where her comedic flair was revealed in her first revue as an actress, in Eduardo Schwalbach's Pé de Meia, in 1919.

 

Teresa also received acclaim for her interpretation of the role of "Comadre Zefa" in the play Dois Garotos, among many others.

 

In addition to the Portuguese revue, Teresa Gomes experimented with declamatory theatre, operetta, comic opera and the dramatic genre.

 

She was a very popular actress and held in high esteem by the public.

 

-- Teresa Gomes' Death

 

Having retired, Teresa died of natural causes on the 13th. November 1962, aged 78, on the fourth floor of 166 Rua Rodrigues Sampaio in Lisbon, where she lived.

 

Her funeral, which left the Estrela Basilica for the Prazeres Cemetery, where the actress was buried in the Talhão dos Artistas, was largely attended by the local population, who wanted to pay their last respects.

 

Tata Steel

 

Also on the 26th. August 1907, Tata Iron and Steel Company (TISCO) was founded by Jamsetji Nusserwanji Tata and established by Sir Dorabji Tata.

 

TISCO started pig iron production in 1911, and began producing steel in 1912. The first steel ingot was manufactured on 16 February 1912. During the Great War the company made rapid progress.

 

Tata Steel is among the largest steel producing companies in the world, with an annual crude steel capacity of 35 million tonnes. It is one of the world's most geographically diversified steel producers, with operations and commercial presence across the world.

The Postcard

 

A postally unused postcard that was published by Hildesheimer & Co. Ltd. of London and Manchester. The card, which has a divided back, was printed in Bavaria.

 

The Sale and Removal of London Bridge

 

By 1896 the bridge was the busiest point in London, and one of its most congested, with 8,000 pedestrians and 900 vehicles crossing every hour. To designs by engineer Edward Cruttwell, it was widened in 1904 by 13 feet (4.0 m), using granite corbels.

 

However subsequent surveys showed that the bridge was sinking an inch (about 2.5 cm) every eight years, and by 1924 the east side had sunk some three to four inches (about 9 cm) lower than the west side. It was concluded that the bridge would have to be removed and replaced.

 

Council member Ivan Luckin put forward the idea of selling the bridge, and recalled:

 

"They all thought I was completely

crazy when I suggested we should

sell London Bridge when it needed

replacing."

 

Subsequently, in 1968, Council placed the bridge on the market and began to look for potential buyers. On the 18th. April 1968, Rennie's bridge was purchased by the Missourian entrepreneur Robert P. McCulloch of McCulloch Oil for $2,460,000.

 

The claim that McCulloch believed mistakenly that he was buying the more impressive Tower Bridge was denied by Ivan Luckin in a newspaper interview.

 

Before the bridge was taken apart, each granite facing block was marked for later reassembly. The blocks were taken to Merrivale Quarry at Princetown in Devon, where 15 to 20 cm (6 to 8 in) were sliced off the inner faces of many, in order to facilitate their fixing.

 

Stones left behind were sold in an online auction when the quarry was abandoned and flooded in 2003. 10,000 tons of granite blocks were shipped via the Panama Canal to California, then trucked from Long Beach to Arizona.

 

They were used to face a new, purpose-built hollow core steel-reinforced concrete structure, ensuring that the bridge would support the weight of modern traffic. The bridge was reconstructed at Lake Havasu City, Arizona, and was re-dedicated on the 10th. October 1971 in a ceremony attended by London's Lord Mayor and celebrities.

 

The bridge carries the McCulloch Boulevard and spans the Bridgewater Channel, an artificial, navigable waterway that leads from the Uptown area of Lake Havasu City.

 

Terror Attacks on London Bridge and Nearby

 

There have been four terror attacks on or near London Bridge dating back to 1884. They are as follows:

 

(1) The 1884 London Bridge Terror Attack

 

On Saturday 13th. December 1884, two American-Irish Republicans carried out a dynamite attack on London Bridge as part of the Fenian dynamite campaign.

 

The bomb went off prematurely while the men were in a boat attaching it to a bridge pier at 5.45 pm during the evening rush hour. There was little damage to the bridge, and no casualties other than the bombers.

 

However, there was considerable collateral damage, and hundreds of windows were shattered on both banks of the Thames. The men's boat was so completely destroyed that the police initially thought the bombers had fled.

 

On the 25th. December 1884 the mutilated remains of one of the bombers were found. The body of the other man was never recovered, but the police were later able to identify the dead men as two Americans, William Mackey Lomasney, and John Fleming.

 

The men were identified after a landlord reported to police that dynamite had been found in the rented premises of two American gentlemen who had disappeared after the 13th. December, enabling police to piece together who was responsible for the attack.

 

The men had already been under surveillance by the police in both America and Great Britain.

 

(2) The 1992 London Bridge Bombing

 

On Friday the 28th. February 1992, the Provisional IRA exploded a bomb inside London Bridge station during the morning rush hour, causing extensive damage and wounding 29 people. It was one of many bombings carried out by one of the IRA's London active service units. It occurred just over a year after a bomb at Victoria station.

 

-- The 1992 Bombing

 

At around 8:20 am, someone rang Ulster Television's London office warning that a bomb was going to explode in a London station, without saying which one.

 

About ten minutes later, the bomb detonated, which made debris fly almost 50 feet (15 m) away from the blast area. Twenty nine people were hurt in the explosion, most of them from flying glass and other bits of debris; four were seriously hurt, but nobody was killed.

 

The victims were treated at Guy's Hospital.

 

-- Aftermath of the 1992 Explosion

 

The head of Scotland Yard's anti terrorist squad, George Churchill-Coleman, said that the 2 lb (910 g) bomb of high explosives was "clearly designed to kill."

 

Investigations suggested that the bomb had been placed in the men's restrooms. Churchill-Coleman added that the IRA's warning was "deliberately vague," and was given too late to act upon.

 

Prime Minister John Major said that the bombing would not change British policy in Northern Ireland:

 

"It was pointless. It was cowardly. It was

directed against innocent people and it

will make absolutely no difference to

our policy -- no difference at all."

 

Fearing additional IRA attacks on public transport, the security services warned commuters "more than ever" to stay on guard at all times. The next day, another bomb went off in London, by the Crown Prosecution Service office, injuring two more people and bringing the total injured to 31 in the space of just over 24 hours.

 

This was one of dozens of bombs that detonated in London that year, the biggest of which was the Baltic Exchange bombing, killing three people and causing almost £1 billion worth of damage.

 

The IRA maintained this pressure, bombing mainland Britain and especially the City of London as much as possible until the ceasefire of 1994.

 

(3) The 2017 London Bridge Attack

 

On the 3rd. June 2017, a terrorist vehicle-ramming and stabbing took place in London when a van was deliberately driven into pedestrians on London Bridge, and then crashed on Borough High Street, just south of the River Thames.

 

The van's three occupants then ran to the nearby Borough Market area and began stabbing people in and around restaurants and pubs. They were shot dead by Metropolitan and City of London Police authorised firearms officers, and were found to be wearing fake explosive vests.

 

Eight people were killed and 48 were injured, including members of the public and four unarmed police officers who attempted to stop the assailants. British authorities described the perpetrators as radical Islamic terrorists.

 

The Islamic State (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attack.

 

-- Background to the 2017 Attack

 

In March 2017, five people had been killed in a combined vehicle and knife attack at Westminster. In late May, a suicide bomber killed 22 people at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena.

 

After the Manchester bombing, the UK's terror threat level was raised to "critical", its highest level, until the 27th. May 2017, when it was lowered to severe.

 

-- The 2017 Attack

 

The attack was carried out using a white Renault Master hired earlier on the same evening in Harold Hill, by Khuram Butt. He had intended to hire a 7.5 tonne lorry, but was refused due to his failure to provide payment details.

 

The attackers were armed with 12-inch (30 cm) kitchen knives with ceramic blades, which they tied to their wrists with leather straps. They also prepared fake explosive belts by wrapping water bottles in grey tape.

 

At 21:58 on the 3rd. June 2017, the van travelled south across London Bridge, and returned six minutes later, crossing over the bridge northbound, making a U-turn at the northern end and then driving southbound across the bridge.

 

It mounted the pavement three times and hit multiple pedestrians, killing two. Witnesses said the van was travelling at high speed. 999 emergency calls were first recorded at 22:07. The van was later found to contain 13 wine bottles containing flammable liquid with rags stuffed in them, along with blow torches.

 

The van crashed on Borough High Street after crossing the central reservation. The van's tyres were destroyed by the central reservation, and the three attackers, armed with knives, abandoned the vehicle.

 

Then they ran down the steps to Green Dragon Court, where they killed five people outside and near the Boro Bistro pub. The attackers then went back up the steps to Borough High Street and attacked three bystanders.

 

Police tried to fight the attackers, but were stabbed, and Ignacio Echeverría helped them by striking the terrorist Redouane and possibly Zaghba with his skateboard. Echeverría was later killed outside Lobos Meat and Tapas.

 

Members of the public threw bottles and chairs at the attackers. Witnesses reported that the attackers were shouting:

 

"This is for Allah".

 

People in and around a number of other restaurants and bars along Stoney Street were also attacked. During the attack, an unknown man was spared by Rachid Redouane, but despite many efforts the man was never found.

 

A Romanian baker hit one of the attackers over the head with a crate before giving shelter to 20 people inside a bakery inside Borough Market.

 

One man fought the three attackers with his fists in the Black and Blue steakhouse, shouting:

 

"F*** you, I'm Millwall."

 

His actions gave members of the public who were in the restaurant the opportunity to run away. He was stabbed eight times in the hands, chest and head. He underwent surgery at St Thomas' Hospital, and was taken off the critical list on the 4th. June.

 

A British Transport Police officer armed with a baton also took on the attackers, receiving multiple stab wounds and temporarily losing sight in his right eye as a consequence.

 

Off-duty Metropolitan police constables Liam Jones and Stewart Henderson rendered first aid to seriously injured members of the public before protecting over 150 people inside the Thameside Inn and evacuating them by Metropolitan marine support unit and RNLI boats to the north shore of the Thames.

 

The three attackers were then shot dead by armed officers from the City of London and Metropolitan police Specialist Firearms Command eight minutes after the initial emergency call was made.

 

CCTV footage showed the three attackers in Borough Market running at the armed officers; the attackers were shot dead 20 seconds later. A total of 46 rounds were fired by three City of London and five Metropolitan Police officers.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2017 Attack

 

The Metropolitan Police issued 'Run, Hide, Tell' notices via social media during the attack, and asked the public to remain calm and vigilant.

 

All buildings within the vicinity of London Bridge were evacuated, and London Bridge, Borough and Bank Underground stations were closed at the request of the police.

 

The mainline railway stations at London Bridge, Waterloo East, Charing Cross and Cannon Street were also closed. The Home Secretary approved the deployment of a military counter terrorist unit from the Special Air Service (SAS).

 

The helicopters carrying the SAS landed on London Bridge to support the Metropolitan Police because of concerns that there might be more attackers at large.

 

The Metropolitan Police Marine Policing Unit dispatched boats on the River Thames, with assistance from the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI), to contribute to the evacuation of the area and look for any casualties who might have fallen from the bridge.

 

A stabbing incident took place in Vauxhall at 23:45, causing Vauxhall station to be briefly closed; this was later confirmed to be unrelated to the attack.

 

At 01:45 on the 4th. June, controlled explosions took place of the attackers' bomb vests, which were found to be fake.

 

An emergency COBR meeting was held on the morning of the 4th. June. London Bridge mainline railway and underground stations remained closed throughout the 4th. June. A cordon was established around the scene of the attack. London Bridge station reopened at 05:00 on Monday the 5th. June.

 

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said that there was a surge of hate crimes and islamophobic incidents following the attack.

 

New security measures were implemented on eight central London bridges following the attack, to reduce the likelihood of further vehicle attacks, with concrete barriers being installed. The barriers have been criticised for causing severe congestion in cycle lanes during peak hours.

 

Borough Market reopened on the 14th. June.

 

-- Casualties of the 2017 Attack

 

Eight civilians died in the attack: one Spaniard, one Briton, two Australians, one Canadian and three French citizens were killed by the attackers, and the three attackers themselves were killed by armed police.

 

Two of the civilian fatalities were caused in the initial vehicle-ramming attack, while the remaining six were stabbed to death. One body was recovered from the Thames near Limehouse several days after the attack.

 

48 people were injured in the attack, including one New Zealander, two Australians, two Germans and four French citizens.

 

Of the 48 people admitted to hospital, 21 were initially reported to be in a critical condition.

 

Four police officers were among those injured in the attack. A British Transport Police officer was stabbed, and suffered serious injuries to his head, face and neck. An off-duty Metropolitan Police officer was seriously injured when he was stabbed.

 

Two other Metropolitan Police officers received head and arm injuries. As a result of police gunfire, a bystander received an accidental gunshot wound, which was not critical.

 

-- The 2017 Attackers

 

On the 4th. June the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, said that:

 

"We are confident about the fact that

they were radical Islamic terrorists, the

way they were inspired, and we need

to find out more about where this

radicalisation came from."

 

Amaq News Agency, an online outlet associated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), said the attackers were ISIS fighters.

 

On the 5th. June, two of the attackers were identified as Khuram Shazad Butt and Rachid Redouane. The third of the three attackers, Youssef Zaghba, was identified the following day.

 

(a) Khuram Shazad Butt

 

Butt (born 20th. April 1990) was a Pakistan-born British citizen whose family came from Jhelum. He grew up in Great Britain, living in Plaistow.

 

He had a wife and two children. Neighbours told the BBC that Butt had been reported to police for attempting to radicalise children; he had also expressed disgust at the way women dressed.

 

He was known to police as a "heavyweight" member of the banned extremist group al-Muhajiroun. A BBC interviewee said he had a verbal confrontation with Butt in 2013 on the day after another Al-Muhajiroun follower had murdered Fusilier Lee Rigby.

 

Butt was part of an al-Muhajiroun campaign in 2015 to intimidate Muslims who planned to vote in the UK general elections of that year, on the basis that it was forbidden in Islam.

 

He was known for holding extreme views, having been barred from two local mosques. He appeared on a 2016 Channel 4 Television documentary, The Jihadis Next Door, which showed him arguing with police over the unfurling of an ISIL black flag in Regent's Park.

 

According to a friend, he had been radicalised by the YouTube videos of the American Muslim hate preacher Ahmad Musa Jibril. Butt was known to have taken drugs before he became radicalised.

 

After radicalisation, Butt started to stop his neighbours on the street and ask them whether they had been to the mosque.

 

Butt had worked for a man accused of training Mohammad Sidique Khan, the leader of the July 2005 London bombing. The police and MI5 knew of Butt, and he was investigated in 2015. The investigation was later "moved into the lower echelons", and his file was classed as low priority.

 

Butt sometimes manned the desk of the Ummah Fitness Centre gym, where he prayed regularly. CCTV footage was released of Butt, Redouane and Zaghba meeting outside the gym days before the attack. A senior figure at a local mosque had reported the gym to police.

 

The New York Times said that Butt and his brother were part of the UK government's Prevent programme, which aims to stop people from becoming terrorists, and which reports suspected radicals to police programmes.

 

At the time of the attack he was on police bail following an allegation of fraud, though the police had intended to take no further action due to a lack of evidence. He had previously been cautioned by police for fraud in 2008 and common assault in 2010.

 

(b) Rachid Redouane

 

Redouane (born 31 July 1986) was a failed asylum seeker in the UK, whose application was denied in 2009, and not previously known to police. He had claimed to be either Moroccan or Libyan.

 

Redouane worked as a pastry chef, and in 2012 he married an Irish woman in a ceremony in Ireland. He beat and bullied his wife.

 

He used to drink alcohol. He lived variously in Rathmines, a suburb of Dublin, also in Morocco and the UK. According to his wife, Redouane was most likely radicalised in Morocco. Later the couple stayed in the UK on an EU residency card where they had a daughter in 2015.

 

The couple separated in 2016 and she divorced him after he tried to force his extremist beliefs on her.

 

At the time of the attack, he was living in Dagenham, East London.

 

(c) Youssef Zaghba

 

Zaghba (born 1995 in Fez, Morocco) was at the time of the attack living in east London where he worked in a fast-food outlet. He also worked for an Islamic television channel in London.

 

Zaghba was born to a Moroccan Muslim father and an Italian Catholic Christian mother who had converted to Islam when she married. Zaghba had dual Moroccan and Italian nationality.

 

When his parents divorced, he went to Italy with his mother. In 2016, Zaghba was stopped at Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport by Italian officers who found ISIS-related materials on his mobile phone; he was stopped from continuing his journey to Istanbul.

 

Italian authorities said Zaghba was monitored continuously while in Italy and that the UK was informed about him. Giuseppe Amato, an Italian prosecutor, said:

 

"We did our best. We could just monitor

and surveil Zaghba and send a note to

the British authorities, that's all we could

do and we did it.

Since he moved to London, he came back

to Italy once in a while for a total of 10 days.

And during those 10 days we never let him

out of our sight."

 

According to The New York Times, the Italian branch of Al-Muhajiroun had introduced Butt to Zaghba.

 

-- Investigation of the 2017 Attack

 

On the morning of the 4th. June, police made 12 arrests following raids in flats in the Barking area of east London, where one of the attackers lived; controlled explosions were carried out during the raids.

 

Those held included five males aged between 27 and 55, arrested at one address in Barking, and six females aged between 19 and 60, arrested at a separate Barking address. One of the arrested males was subsequently released without charge.

 

Four properties in all were searched, including two in Newham in addition to the two in Barking. Further raids and arrests were made at properties in Newham and Barking early on the morning of the 5th. June.

 

On the 6th. June, a man was arrested in Barking, and another in Ilford the following day. By the 16th. June, all those arrested had been released without charge.

 

-- The Inquest Into the 2017 Attack

 

On the 7th. May 2019, an inquest into the deaths of the victims opened at the Old Bailey in London. Judge Mark Lucraft QC, Chief Coroner of England and Wales, presided, and people related to the dead gave accounts of what happened and who they had lost.

 

The inquest concluded on the 16th. July 2019 that all three attackers had been lawfully killed.

 

(4) The 2019 London Bridge Stabbing

 

On the 29th. November 2019, five people were stabbed, two fatally, in Central London. The attacker, Briton Usman Khan, had been released from prison in 2018 on licence after serving a sentence for terrorist offences.

 

Khan was attending an offender rehabilitation conference in Fishmongers' Hall when he threatened to detonate what turned out to be a fake suicide vest.

 

He started to attack people with two knives taped to his wrists, killing two of the conference participants by stabbing them in the chest.

 

Several people fought back, some attacking Khan with a fire extinguisher, a pike and a narwhal tusk as he fled the building and emerged on to London Bridge, where he was partially disarmed by a plain-clothes police officer.

 

He was restrained by members of the public until additional police officers arrived, pulled away those restraining him, and shot him.

 

-- Background to the 2019 Attack

 

A conference on offender rehabilitation was held on the 29th. November 2019 in Fishmongers' Hall, at the northern end of London Bridge, to celebrate the fifth anniversary of Learning Together. This is a programme run by the Cambridge Institute of Criminology to help offenders reintegrate into society following their release from prison.

 

Learning Together was set up in 2014 by University of Cambridge academics Ruth Armstrong and Amy Ludlow from the Faculty of Law and Institute of Criminology:

 

"To bring together people in criminal justice

and higher education institutions to study

alongside each other in inclusive and

transformative learning communities."

 

The programme served to enable students and prisoners to work together.

 

Former prisoner Usman Khan had been invited to the conference as a previous participant in the programme, and although banned from entering London under the terms of his release, he was granted a one-day exemption to attend.

 

-- The 2019 Attack

 

At 13:58 on the 29th. November, the police were called to Fishmongers' Hall after Khan, wearing a fake suicide vest, threatened to blow up the hall. The police reported that there had been no prior intelligence of the attack.

 

Holding two kitchen knives taped to his wrists, Khan began stabbing people inside the building. Several fought back, including a South African-born Londoner, Darryn Frost, who grabbed a 1.5-metre-long (4.9 ft) narwhal tusk from the wall to use as a weapon, former prisoner John Crilly, and Steven Gallant, a convicted murderer attending the conference on day release from prison.

 

Khan fled and began stabbing pedestrians outside on the north side of the bridge.

 

Several people were injured before members of the public, including a tour guide and a plain-clothes British Transport Police officer, later seen walking away with a knife, restrained and disarmed Khan on the bridge.

 

One of the people who stepped in to fight the attacker drove him back by spraying a fire extinguisher.

 

Armed officers of the City of London Police arrived at 14:03 and surrounded the attacker, who at the time was being restrained by a Ministry of Justice communications worker attending the rehabilitation meeting.

 

The officers pulled this person away to provide a clear shot, before one fired twice. Around 10 minutes after this, Khan started to get up; he was then shot 9 further times by 6 firearms officers. Khan had not been secured after the initial shooting due to the suicide vest. Khan died at the scene.

 

A Transport for London bus which had stopped adjacent to the site of the shooting was found to have damage to both its front and rear windows, possibly caused, according to the Metropolitan Police, by a ricocheting bullet.

 

-- The Victims of the 2019 Attack

 

Three of the victims were associated with Cambridge University's Learning Together prison-rehabilitation programme; two died and one was injured.

 

The two who died from their stab wounds were Jack Merritt and Saskia Jones.

 

Merritt was a 25-year-old law and criminology graduate from Cottenham, Cambridgeshire who had studied at the Universities of Manchester and Cambridge. He worked as a University of Cambridge administration officer, and was a course coordinator for Learning Together.

 

Jones was a 23 year old former Anglia Ruskin University and University of Cambridge student from Stratford-upon-Avon.

 

Funeral services for Merritt and Jones were conducted on the 20th. December 2019.

 

Two other women were seriously injured, while a chef who was working at the event was stabbed but had less serious injuries.

 

-- The Terrorist Usman Khan

 

Usman Khan was a 28-year-old British national from Stoke-on-Trent, of Pakistani descent. Khan appears to have left school with no qualifications after spending part of his late teens in Pakistan.

 

He was known to police, and had links to Islamist extremist groups. In December 2018 he had been automatically released from prison on licence, where he was serving a 16-year sentence for terrorism offences, and was wearing an electronic tag.

 

Khan had been part of a plot, inspired by Al-Qaeda, to establish a terrorist camp on his family's land in Kashmir and bomb the London Stock Exchange. The plot was disrupted by MI5 and the police, as part of MI5's Operation Guava (police Operation Norbury), and Khan was given an indeterminate sentence.

 

Of the nine men involved, Khan was the youngest at 19 and according to Mr Justice Wilkie, Khan and two others were “more serious jihadis” than the others.

 

In 2013, Khan's sentence was revised after an appeal, and he was ordered to serve at least 8 years of his new 16-year sentence, with a 5-year extended licence allowing recall to prison.

 

According to the anti-extremism group Hope not Hate, Khan was a supporter of Al-Muhajiroun, an extremist group with which scores of terrorists were involved. He was a student and personal friend of Anjem Choudary, an Islamist and terrorism supporter.

 

Post-mortem examination showed evidence of occasional use of cocaine by Khan.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2019 Attack

 

The news of the attack was broken live as it happened on the BBC by one of its reporters, John McManus, who witnessed members of the public fighting Khan as he crossed the bridge, and heard two shots being fired by police officers.

 

McManus said that he was certain that more than two shots were fired during the incident.

 

The police, ambulance, and fire services attended the scene, and a major incident was declared. A large police cordon was set up in the area and residents were told to stay away. Police closed both Monument Underground station and London Bridge station after the attack.

 

The Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, returned to Downing Street following the incident, after campaigning in his constituency for the forthcoming general election. Johnson commended the "immense bravery" of the emergency services and members of the public, and claimed that anyone involved in the attack would be hunted down.

 

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, thanked the emergency services and members of the public who helped to restrain the attacker, saying they had shown "breathtaking heroism".

 

The Conservative Party, Labour Party and Liberal Democrats temporarily suspended campaigning in London for the general election. A parliamentary election hustings event scheduled to be held at Great St. Mary's Church in Cambridge on the 30th. November was cancelled and replaced by a memorial vigil for the victims of the attack.

 

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick made a statement following the attack. She said that there would be an increased police presence on the streets, and that cordons in the London Bridge area would remain in place. An appeal was made for the public to submit any film or picture evidence or information that could assist the investigation.

 

In Pakistan, publication of Khan's Pakistani origins by the leading newspaper Dawn were deemed unpatriotic and defamatory, and led to demonstrations demanding that the publisher and the editor be hanged.

 

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack. Its news agency, Amaq, claimed Usman Khan was one of its fighters. A janaza prayer for Khan was held at a mosque in Birmingham, and he was buried in his family's ancestral village in Pakistan, following objections to his burial in the UK by local Muslims in his native Stoke.

 

In 2021, following an inquest, Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation Jonathan Hall QC called for those involved in the planning or preparation of terrorist attacks to be given automatic life sentences. Hall stated:

 

"It is hard to underestimate how serious

Usman Khan’s original offence was."

 

-- Investigations Into the 2019 Attack

 

London Bridge was closed until the early hours of the following Monday for forensic investigation of the scene. A property in Stafford and one in Stoke-on-Trent were searched by police.

 

An inquest into the deaths of Merritt and Jones was opened on the 4th. December 2019 at the Central Criminal Court in London, and was subsequently adjourned.

 

A pre-inquest review hearing took place at the Old Bailey on the 16th. October 2020, before the Chief Coroner of England and Wales, Mark Lucraft QC.

 

The inquest re-opened on the 12th. April 2021, presided over by Lucraft. On the 28th. May 2021 the jury concluded that the victims had been unlawfully killed.

 

They further concluded that insufficient monitoring of Khan, unreasonable belief in his rehabilitation, a lack of information sharing between agencies, and inadequate security planning at the event were all contributing factors in their deaths.

 

Khan's inquest, also overseen by Lucraft, found in June 2021 that Khan was lawfully killed by the police.

 

-- Royal Prerogative of Mercy for Steven Gallant

 

Steven Gallant was granted the Royal prerogative of mercy by the Lord Chancellor on behalf of the Queen in October 2020, in order to bring his parole hearing forward by ten months to June 2021.

 

The Ministry of Justice stated that:

 

"This is in recognition of his exceptionally

brave actions at Fishmongers’ Hall, which

helped save people's lives despite the

tremendous risk to his own".

 

Though the parole board still has to decide on whether to release him, it was reported that it would be unlikely for his case to be denied after the Queen's intervention. The families of both Merritt and of Gallant's 2005 murder victim approved the action due to his heroic deeds and efforts to turn his life around since the murder.

 

The Postcard

 

A postcard bearing no publisher's name. The card has a divided back.

 

The card was posted in London NW using a 1d. stamp on Tuesday the 8th. July 1924. It was sent to:

 

Familie Schneider,

De Moystraat 23,

Antwerp,

Belgium.

 

The Sale and Removal of London Bridge

 

By 1896 the bridge was the busiest point in London, and one of its most congested, with 8,000 pedestrians and 900 vehicles crossing every hour. To designs by engineer Edward Cruttwell, it was widened in 1904 by 13 feet (4.0 m), using granite corbels.

 

However subsequent surveys showed that the bridge was sinking an inch (about 2.5 cm) every eight years, and by 1924 the east side had sunk some three to four inches (about 9 cm) lower than the west side. It was concluded that the bridge would have to be removed and replaced.

 

Council member Ivan Luckin put forward the idea of selling the bridge, and recalled:

 

"They all thought I was completely

crazy when I suggested we should

sell London Bridge when it needed

replacing."

 

Subsequently, in 1968, Council placed the bridge on the market and began to look for potential buyers. On the 18th. April 1968, Rennie's bridge was purchased by the Missourian entrepreneur Robert P. McCulloch of McCulloch Oil for $2,460,000.

 

The claim that McCulloch believed mistakenly that he was buying the more impressive Tower Bridge was denied by Ivan Luckin in a newspaper interview.

 

Before the bridge was taken apart, each granite facing block was marked for later reassembly. The blocks were taken to Merrivale Quarry at Princetown in Devon, where 15 to 20 cm (6 to 8 in) were sliced off the inner faces of many, in order to facilitate their fixing.

 

Stones left behind were sold in an online auction when the quarry was abandoned and flooded in 2003. 10,000 tons of granite blocks were shipped via the Panama Canal to California, then trucked from Long Beach to Arizona.

 

They were used to face a new, purpose-built hollow core steel-reinforced concrete structure, ensuring that the bridge would support the weight of modern traffic. The bridge was reconstructed at Lake Havasu City, Arizona, and was re-dedicated on the 10th. October 1971 in a ceremony attended by London's Lord Mayor and celebrities.

 

The bridge carries the McCulloch Boulevard and spans the Bridgewater Channel, an artificial, navigable waterway that leads from the Uptown area of Lake Havasu City.

 

Terror Attacks on London Bridge and Nearby

 

There have been four terror attacks on or near London Bridge dating back to 1884. They are as follows:

 

(1) The 1884 London Bridge Terror Attack

 

On Saturday 13th. December 1884, two American-Irish Republicans carried out a dynamite attack on London Bridge as part of the Fenian dynamite campaign.

 

The bomb went off prematurely while the men were in a boat attaching it to a bridge pier at 5.45 pm during the evening rush hour. There was little damage to the bridge, and no casualties other than the bombers.

 

However, there was considerable collateral damage, and hundreds of windows were shattered on both banks of the Thames. The men's boat was so completely destroyed that the police initially thought the bombers had fled.

 

On the 25th. December 1884 the mutilated remains of one of the bombers were found. The body of the other man was never recovered, but the police were later able to identify the dead men as two Americans, William Mackey Lomasney, and John Fleming.

 

The men were identified after a landlord reported to police that dynamite had been found in the rented premises of two American gentlemen who had disappeared after the 13th. December, enabling police to piece together who was responsible for the attack.

 

The men had already been under surveillance by the police in both America and Great Britain.

 

(2) The 1992 London Bridge Bombing

 

On Friday the 28th. February 1992, the Provisional IRA exploded a bomb inside London Bridge station during the morning rush hour, causing extensive damage and wounding 29 people. It was one of many bombings carried out by one of the IRA's London active service units. It occurred just over a year after a bomb at Victoria station.

 

-- The 1992 Bombing

 

At around 8:20 am, someone rang Ulster Television's London office warning that a bomb was going to explode in a London station, without saying which one.

 

About ten minutes later, the bomb detonated, which made debris fly almost 50 feet (15 m) away from the blast area. Twenty nine people were hurt in the explosion, most of them from flying glass and other bits of debris; four were seriously hurt, but nobody was killed.

 

The victims were treated at Guy's Hospital.

 

-- Aftermath of the 1992 Explosion

 

The head of Scotland Yard's anti terrorist squad, George Churchill-Coleman, said that the 2 lb (910 g) bomb of high explosives was "clearly designed to kill."

 

Investigations suggested that the bomb had been placed in the men's restrooms. Churchill-Coleman added that the IRA's warning was "deliberately vague," and was given too late to act upon.

 

Prime Minister John Major said that the bombing would not change British policy in Northern Ireland:

 

"It was pointless. It was cowardly. It was

directed against innocent people and it

will make absolutely no difference to

our policy -- no difference at all."

 

Fearing additional IRA attacks on public transport, the security services warned commuters "more than ever" to stay on guard at all times. The next day, another bomb went off in London, by the Crown Prosecution Service office, injuring two more people and bringing the total injured to 31 in the space of just over 24 hours.

 

This was one of dozens of bombs that detonated in London that year, the biggest of which was the Baltic Exchange bombing, killing three people and causing almost £1 billion worth of damage.

 

The IRA maintained this pressure, bombing mainland Britain and especially the City of London as much as possible until the ceasefire of 1994.

 

(3) The 2017 London Bridge Attack

 

On the 3rd. June 2017, a terrorist vehicle-ramming and stabbing took place in London when a van was deliberately driven into pedestrians on London Bridge, and then crashed on Borough High Street, just south of the River Thames.

 

The van's three occupants then ran to the nearby Borough Market area and began stabbing people in and around restaurants and pubs. They were shot dead by Metropolitan and City of London Police authorised firearms officers, and were found to be wearing fake explosive vests.

 

Eight people were killed and 48 were injured, including members of the public and four unarmed police officers who attempted to stop the assailants. British authorities described the perpetrators as radical Islamic terrorists.

 

The Islamic State (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attack.

 

-- Background to the 2017 Attack

 

In March 2017, five people had been killed in a combined vehicle and knife attack at Westminster. In late May, a suicide bomber killed 22 people at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena.

 

After the Manchester bombing, the UK's terror threat level was raised to "critical", its highest level, until the 27th. May 2017, when it was lowered to severe.

 

-- The 2017 Knife Attack

 

The attack was carried out using a white Renault Master hired earlier on the same evening in Harold Hill, by Khuram Butt. He had intended to hire a 7.5 tonne lorry, but was refused due to his failure to provide payment details.

 

The attackers were armed with 12-inch (30 cm) kitchen knives with ceramic blades, which they tied to their wrists with leather straps. They also prepared fake explosive belts by wrapping water bottles in grey tape.

 

At 21:58 on the 3rd. June 2017, the van travelled south across London Bridge, and returned six minutes later, crossing over the bridge northbound, making a U-turn at the northern end and then driving southbound across the bridge.

 

It mounted the pavement three times and hit multiple pedestrians, killing two. Witnesses said the van was travelling at high speed. 999 emergency calls were first recorded at 22:07. The van was later found to contain 13 wine bottles containing flammable liquid with rags stuffed in them, along with blow torches.

 

The van crashed on Borough High Street after crossing the central reservation. The van's tyres were destroyed by the central reservation, and the three attackers, armed with knives, abandoned the vehicle.

 

Then they ran down the steps to Green Dragon Court, where they killed five people outside and near the Boro Bistro pub. The attackers then went back up the steps to Borough High Street and attacked three bystanders.

 

Police tried to fight the attackers, but were stabbed, and Ignacio Echeverría helped them by striking the terrorist Redouane and possibly Zaghba with his skateboard. Echeverría was later killed outside Lobos Meat and Tapas.

 

Members of the public threw bottles and chairs at the attackers. Witnesses reported that the attackers were shouting:

 

"This is for Allah".

 

People in and around a number of other restaurants and bars along Stoney Street were also attacked. During the attack, an unknown man was spared by Rachid Redouane, but despite many efforts the man was never found.

 

A Romanian baker hit one of the attackers over the head with a crate before giving shelter to 20 people inside a bakery inside Borough Market.

 

One man fought the three attackers with his fists in the Black and Blue steakhouse, shouting:

 

"F*** you, I'm Millwall."

 

His actions gave members of the public who were in the restaurant the opportunity to run away. He was stabbed eight times in the hands, chest and head. He underwent surgery at St Thomas' Hospital, and was taken off the critical list on the 4th. June.

 

A British Transport Police officer armed with a baton also took on the attackers, receiving multiple stab wounds and temporarily losing sight in his right eye as a consequence.

 

Off-duty Metropolitan police constables Liam Jones and Stewart Henderson rendered first aid to seriously injured members of the public before protecting over 150 people inside the Thameside Inn and evacuating them by Metropolitan marine support unit and RNLI boats to the north shore of the Thames.

 

The three attackers were then shot dead by armed officers from the City of London and Metropolitan police Specialist Firearms Command eight minutes after the initial emergency call was made.

 

CCTV footage showed the three attackers in Borough Market running at the armed officers; the attackers were shot dead 20 seconds later. A total of 46 rounds were fired by three City of London and five Metropolitan Police officers.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2017 Attack

 

The Metropolitan Police issued 'Run, Hide, Tell' notices via social media during the attack, and asked the public to remain calm and vigilant.

 

All buildings within the vicinity of London Bridge were evacuated, and London Bridge, Borough and Bank Underground stations were closed at the request of the police.

 

The mainline railway stations at London Bridge, Waterloo East, Charing Cross and Cannon Street were also closed. The Home Secretary approved the deployment of a military counter terrorist unit from the Special Air Service (SAS).

 

The helicopters carrying the SAS landed on London Bridge to support the Metropolitan Police because of concerns that there might be more attackers at large.

 

The Metropolitan Police Marine Policing Unit dispatched boats on the River Thames, with assistance from the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI), to contribute to the evacuation of the area and look for any casualties who might have fallen from the bridge.

 

A stabbing incident took place in Vauxhall at 23:45, causing Vauxhall station to be briefly closed; this was later confirmed to be unrelated to the attack.

 

At 01:45 on the 4th. June, controlled explosions took place of the attackers' bomb vests, which were found to be fake.

 

An emergency COBR meeting was held on the morning of the 4th. June. London Bridge mainline railway and underground stations remained closed throughout the 4th. June. A cordon was established around the scene of the attack. London Bridge station reopened at 05:00 on Monday the 5th. June.

 

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said that there was a surge of hate crimes and islamophobic incidents following the attack.

 

New security measures were implemented on eight central London bridges following the attack, to reduce the likelihood of further vehicle attacks, with concrete barriers being installed. The barriers have been criticised for causing severe congestion in cycle lanes during peak hours.

 

Borough Market reopened on the 14th. June.

 

-- Casualties of the 2017 Attack

 

Eight civilians died in the attack: one Spaniard, one Briton, two Australians, one Canadian and three French citizens were killed by the attackers, and the three attackers themselves were killed by armed police.

 

Two of the civilian fatalities were caused in the initial vehicle-ramming attack, while the remaining six were stabbed to death. One body was recovered from the Thames near Limehouse several days after the attack.

 

48 people were injured in the attack, including one New Zealander, two Australians, two Germans and four French citizens.

 

Of the 48 people admitted to hospital, 21 were initially reported to be in a critical condition.

 

Four police officers were among those injured in the attack. A British Transport Police officer was stabbed, and suffered serious injuries to his head, face and neck. An off-duty Metropolitan Police officer was seriously injured when he was stabbed.

 

Two other Metropolitan Police officers received head and arm injuries. As a result of police gunfire, a bystander received an accidental gunshot wound, which was not critical.

 

-- The 2017 Attackers

 

On the 4th. June the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, said that:

 

"We are confident about the fact that

they were radical Islamic terrorists, the

way they were inspired, and we need

to find out more about where this

radicalisation came from."

 

Amaq News Agency, an online outlet associated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), said the attackers were ISIS fighters.

 

On the 5th. June, two of the attackers were identified as Khuram Shazad Butt and Rachid Redouane. The third of the three attackers, Youssef Zaghba, was identified the following day.

 

(a) Khuram Shazad Butt

 

Butt (born 20th. April 1990) was a Pakistan-born British citizen whose family came from Jhelum. He grew up in Great Britain, living in Plaistow.

 

He had a wife and two children. Neighbours told the BBC that Butt had been reported to police for attempting to radicalise children; he had also expressed disgust at the way women dressed.

 

He was known to police as a "heavyweight" member of the banned extremist group al-Muhajiroun. A BBC interviewee said he had a verbal confrontation with Butt in 2013 on the day after another Al-Muhajiroun follower had murdered Fusilier Lee Rigby.

 

Butt was part of an al-Muhajiroun campaign in 2015 to intimidate Muslims who planned to vote in the UK general elections of that year, on the basis that it was forbidden in Islam.

 

He was known for holding extreme views, having been barred from two local mosques. He appeared on a 2016 Channel 4 Television documentary, The Jihadis Next Door, which showed him arguing with police over the unfurling of an ISIL black flag in Regent's Park.

 

According to a friend, he had been radicalised by the YouTube videos of the American Muslim hate preacher Ahmad Musa Jibril. Butt was known to have taken drugs before he became radicalised.

 

After radicalisation, Butt started to stop his neighbours on the street and ask them whether they had been to the mosque.

 

Butt had worked for a man accused of training Mohammad Sidique Khan, the leader of the July 2005 London bombing. The police and MI5 knew of Butt, and he was investigated in 2015. The investigation was later "moved into the lower echelons", and his file was classed as low priority.

 

Butt sometimes manned the desk of the Ummah Fitness Centre gym, where he prayed regularly. CCTV footage was released of Butt, Redouane and Zaghba meeting outside the gym days before the attack. A senior figure at a local mosque had reported the gym to police.

 

The New York Times said that Butt and his brother were part of the UK government's Prevent programme, which aims to stop people from becoming terrorists, and which reports suspected radicals to police programmes.

 

At the time of the attack he was on police bail following an allegation of fraud, though the police had intended to take no further action due to a lack of evidence. He had previously been cautioned by police for fraud in 2008 and common assault in 2010.

 

(b) Rachid Redouane

 

Redouane (born 31 July 1986) was a failed asylum seeker in the UK, whose application was denied in 2009, and not previously known to police. He had claimed to be either Moroccan or Libyan.

 

Redouane worked as a pastry chef, and in 2012 he married an Irish woman in a ceremony in Ireland. He beat and bullied his wife.

 

He used to drink alcohol. He lived variously in Rathmines, a suburb of Dublin, also in Morocco and the UK. According to his wife, Redouane was most likely radicalised in Morocco. Later the couple stayed in the UK on an EU residency card where they had a daughter in 2015.

 

The couple separated in 2016 and she divorced him after he tried to force his extremist beliefs on her.

 

At the time of the attack, he was living in Dagenham, East London.

 

(c) Youssef Zaghba

 

Zaghba (born 1995 in Fez, Morocco) was at the time of the attack living in east London where he worked in a fast-food outlet. He also worked for an Islamic television channel in London.

 

Zaghba was born to a Moroccan Muslim father and an Italian Catholic Christian mother who had converted to Islam when she married. Zaghba had dual Moroccan and Italian nationality.

 

When his parents divorced, he went to Italy with his mother. In 2016, Zaghba was stopped at Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport by Italian officers who found ISIS-related materials on his mobile phone; he was stopped from continuing his journey to Istanbul.

 

Italian authorities said Zaghba was monitored continuously while in Italy and that the UK was informed about him. Giuseppe Amato, an Italian prosecutor, said:

 

"We did our best. We could just monitor

and surveil Zaghba and send a note to

the British authorities, that's all we could

do and we did it.

Since he moved to London, he came back

to Italy once in a while for a total of 10 days.

And during those 10 days we never let him

out of our sight."

 

According to The New York Times, the Italian branch of Al-Muhajiroun had introduced Butt to Zaghba.

 

-- Investigation of the 2017 Attack

 

On the morning of the 4th. June, police made 12 arrests following raids in flats in the Barking area of east London, where one of the attackers lived; controlled explosions were carried out during the raids.

 

Those held included five males aged between 27 and 55, arrested at one address in Barking, and six females aged between 19 and 60, arrested at a separate Barking address. One of the arrested males was subsequently released without charge.

 

Four properties in all were searched, including two in Newham in addition to the two in Barking. Further raids and arrests were made at properties in Newham and Barking early on the morning of the 5th. June.

 

On the 6th. June, a man was arrested in Barking, and another in Ilford the following day. By the 16th. June, all those arrested had been released without charge.

 

-- The Inquest Into the 2017 Attack

 

On the 7th. May 2019, an inquest into the deaths of the victims opened at the Old Bailey in London. Judge Mark Lucraft QC, Chief Coroner of England and Wales, presided, and people related to the dead gave accounts of what happened and who they had lost.

 

The inquest concluded on the 16th. July 2019 that all three attackers had been lawfully killed.

 

(4) The 2019 London Bridge Stabbing

 

On the 29th. November 2019, five people were stabbed, two fatally, in Central London. The attacker, Briton Usman Khan, had been released from prison in 2018 on licence after serving a sentence for terrorist offences.

 

Khan was attending an offender rehabilitation conference in Fishmongers' Hall when he threatened to detonate what turned out to be a fake suicide vest.

 

He started to attack people with two knives taped to his wrists, killing two of the conference participants by stabbing them in the chest.

 

Several people fought back, some attacking Khan with a fire extinguisher, a pike and a narwhal tusk as he fled the building and emerged on to London Bridge, where he was partially disarmed by a plain-clothes police officer.

 

He was restrained by members of the public until additional police officers arrived, pulled away those restraining him, and shot him.

 

-- Background to the 2019 Attack

 

A conference on offender rehabilitation was held on the 29th. November 2019 in Fishmongers' Hall, at the northern end of London Bridge, to celebrate the fifth anniversary of Learning Together. This is a programme run by the Cambridge Institute of Criminology to help offenders reintegrate into society following their release from prison.

 

Learning Together was set up in 2014 by University of Cambridge academics Ruth Armstrong and Amy Ludlow from the Faculty of Law and Institute of Criminology:

 

"To bring together people in criminal justice

and higher education institutions to study

alongside each other in inclusive and

transformative learning communities."

 

The programme served to enable students and prisoners to work together.

 

Former prisoner Usman Khan had been invited to the conference as a previous participant in the programme, and although banned from entering London under the terms of his release, he was granted a one-day exemption to attend.

 

-- The 2019 Attack

 

At 13:58 on the 29th. November, the police were called to Fishmongers' Hall after Khan, wearing a fake suicide vest, threatened to blow up the hall. The police reported that there had been no prior intelligence of the attack.

 

Holding two kitchen knives taped to his wrists, Khan began stabbing people inside the building. Several fought back, including a South African-born Londoner, Darryn Frost, who grabbed a 1.5-metre-long (4.9 ft) narwhal tusk from the wall to use as a weapon, former prisoner John Crilly, and Steven Gallant, a convicted murderer attending the conference on day release from prison.

 

Khan fled and began stabbing pedestrians outside on the north side of the bridge.

 

Several people were injured before members of the public, including a tour guide and a plain-clothes British Transport Police officer, later seen walking away with a knife, restrained and disarmed Khan on the bridge.

 

One of the people who stepped in to fight the attacker drove him back by spraying a fire extinguisher.

 

Armed officers of the City of London Police arrived at 14:03 and surrounded the attacker, who at the time was being restrained by a Ministry of Justice communications worker attending the rehabilitation meeting.

 

The officers pulled this person away to provide a clear shot, before one fired twice. Around 10 minutes after this, Khan started to get up; he was then shot 9 further times by 6 firearms officers. Khan had not been secured after the initial shooting due to the suicide vest. Khan died at the scene.

 

A Transport for London bus which had stopped adjacent to the site of the shooting was found to have damage to both its front and rear windows, possibly caused, according to the Metropolitan Police, by a ricocheting bullet.

 

-- The Victims of the 2019 Attack

 

Three of the victims were associated with Cambridge University's Learning Together prison-rehabilitation programme; two died and one was injured.

 

The two who died from their stab wounds were Jack Merritt and Saskia Jones.

 

Merritt was a 25-year-old law and criminology graduate from Cottenham, Cambridgeshire who had studied at the Universities of Manchester and Cambridge. He worked as a University of Cambridge administration officer, and was a course coordinator for Learning Together.

 

Jones was a 23 year old former Anglia Ruskin University and University of Cambridge student from Stratford-upon-Avon.

 

Funeral services for Merritt and Jones were conducted on the 20th. December 2019.

 

Two other women were seriously injured, while a chef who was working at the event was stabbed but had less serious injuries.

 

-- The Terrorist Usman Khan

 

Usman Khan was a 28-year-old British national from Stoke-on-Trent, of Pakistani descent. Khan appears to have left school with no qualifications after spending part of his late teens in Pakistan.

 

He was known to police, and had links to Islamist extremist groups. In December 2018 he had been automatically released from prison on licence, where he was serving a 16-year sentence for terrorism offences, and was wearing an electronic tag.

 

Khan had been part of a plot, inspired by Al-Qaeda, to establish a terrorist camp on his family's land in Kashmir and bomb the London Stock Exchange. The plot was disrupted by MI5 and the police, as part of MI5's Operation Guava (police Operation Norbury), and Khan was given an indeterminate sentence.

 

Of the nine men involved, Khan was the youngest at 19 and according to Mr Justice Wilkie, Khan and two others were “more serious jihadis” than the others.

 

In 2013, Khan's sentence was revised after an appeal, and he was ordered to serve at least 8 years of his new 16-year sentence, with a 5-year extended licence allowing recall to prison.

 

According to the anti-extremism group Hope not Hate, Khan was a supporter of Al-Muhajiroun, an extremist group with which scores of terrorists were involved. He was a student and personal friend of Anjem Choudary, an Islamist and terrorism supporter.

 

Post-mortem examination showed evidence of occasional use of cocaine by Khan.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2019 Attack

 

The news of the attack was broken live as it happened on the BBC by one of its reporters, John McManus, who witnessed members of the public fighting Khan as he crossed the bridge, and heard two shots being fired by police officers.

 

McManus said that he was certain that more than two shots were fired during the incident.

 

The police, ambulance, and fire services attended the scene, and a major incident was declared. A large police cordon was set up in the area and residents were told to stay away. Police closed both Monument Underground station and London Bridge station after the attack.

 

The Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, returned to Downing Street following the incident, after campaigning in his constituency for the forthcoming general election. Johnson commended the "immense bravery" of the emergency services and members of the public, and claimed that anyone involved in the attack would be hunted down.

 

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, thanked the emergency services and members of the public who helped to restrain the attacker, saying they had shown "breathtaking heroism".

 

The Conservative Party, Labour Party and Liberal Democrats temporarily suspended campaigning in London for the general election. A parliamentary election hustings event scheduled to be held at Great St. Mary's Church in Cambridge on the 30th. November was cancelled and replaced by a memorial vigil for the victims of the attack.

 

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick made a statement following the attack. She said that there would be an increased police presence on the streets, and that cordons in the London Bridge area would remain in place. An appeal was made for the public to submit any film or picture evidence or information that could assist the investigation.

 

In Pakistan, publication of Khan's Pakistani origins by the leading newspaper Dawn were deemed unpatriotic and defamatory, and led to demonstrations demanding that the publisher and the editor be hanged.

 

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack. Its news agency, Amaq, claimed Usman Khan was one of its fighters. A janaza prayer for Khan was held at a mosque in Birmingham, and he was buried in his family's ancestral village in Pakistan, following objections to his burial in the UK by local Muslims in his native Stoke.

 

In 2021, following an inquest, Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation Jonathan Hall QC called for those involved in the planning or preparation of terrorist attacks to be given automatic life sentences. Hall stated:

 

"It is hard to underestimate how serious

Usman Khan’s original offence was."

 

-- Investigations Into the 2019 Attack

 

London Bridge was closed until the early hours of the following Monday for forensic investigation of the scene. A property in Stafford and one in Stoke-on-Trent were searched by police.

 

An inquest into the deaths of Merritt and Jones was opened on the 4th. December 2019 at the Central Criminal Court in London, and was subsequently adjourned.

 

A pre-inquest review hearing took place at the Old Bailey on the 16th. October 2020, before the Chief Coroner of England and Wales, Mark Lucraft QC.

 

The inquest re-opened on the 12th. April 2021, presided over by Lucraft. On the 28th. May 2021 the jury concluded that the victims had been unlawfully killed.

 

They further concluded that insufficient monitoring of Khan, unreasonable belief in his rehabilitation, a lack of information sharing between agencies, and inadequate security planning at the event were all contributing factors in their deaths.

 

Khan's inquest, also overseen by Lucraft, found in June 2021 that Khan was lawfully killed by the police.

 

-- Royal Prerogative of Mercy for Steven Gallant

 

Steven Gallant was granted the Royal prerogative of mercy by the Lord Chancellor on behalf of the Queen in October 2020, in order to bring his parole hearing forward by ten months to June 2021.

 

The Ministry of Justice stated that:

 

"This is in recognition of his exceptionally

brave actions at Fishmongers’ Hall, which

helped save people's lives despite the

tremendous risk to his own".

 

Though the parole board still has to decide on whether to release him, it was reported that it would be unlikely for his case to be denied after the Queen's intervention. The families of both Merritt and of Gallant's 2005 murder victim approved the action due to his heroic deeds and efforts to turn his life around since the murder.

 

A Protracted Procedure

 

So what else happened on the day that the card was posted?

 

Well, on the 8th. July 1924, at the Democratic National Convention, delegates were divided between Alfred E. Smith (who had moved into the front after the 86th. ballot) and former frontrunner William G. McAdoo.

 

After a recess following the 93rd. ballot, Smith offered to take his name out of contention if McAdoo would do the same.

 

Indiana U.S. Senator Samuel M. Ralston who was in third place released his delegates, but McAdoo refused the Smith offer before it could be announced on the floor of the convention.

 

On the 94th. ballot, McAdoo took the lead again with 395 over 364 for Smith.

 

Balloting continued past midnight until an adjournment at 4:00 a.m.

 

A Resolution in Moscow

 

Also on that day, the Communist International in Moscow condemned the U.S. Immigration Act and passed a resolution advocating unrestricted worldwide immigration.

 

Walter R. Allman

 

The 8th. July 1924 also marked the death at the age of 40 of Walter R. Allman.

 

Walter Rease Allman, who was born on the 27th. February 1884, was an American cartoonist who created the newspaper gag comic The Doings of the Duffs.

 

The strip was launched on the 30th. July 1914.

 

Allman's last strip was dated 16th. January 1924, but the strip continued under other artists until the 15th. August 1931.

 

Walter Allman worked in the grain business at a young age, but didn't have much interest in the trade, spending his time drawing on the sides of boxes and crates.

 

His talent soon landed him a job at an engraving company; he later found employment with the Toledo News-Bee newspaper.

 

His cartoon work was picked up by the Scripps syndicate NEA Service, and his comic Doings of the Duffs became a nationwide feature.

 

His The Doings of the Duffs comic strip gained a similar level of fame with the public as the Mutt and Jeff strip had.

 

Allman died in Cleveland at the age of 40 after suffering a nervous breakdown in 1923.

 

The Postcard

 

A Sepia Plate-Marked Series postcard that was published by Raphael Tuck and Sons, art publishers to Their Majesties the King and Queen.

 

The card was posted in Anvers on Saturday the 25th. September 1909. It was sent to:

 

Mademoiselle W. Ronnefeldt,

14, Avenue Gounod,

Anvers,

Belgique.

 

The Sale and Removal of London Bridge

 

By 1896 the bridge was the busiest point in London, and one of its most congested, with 8,000 pedestrians and 900 vehicles crossing every hour. To designs by engineer Edward Cruttwell, it was widened in 1904 by 13 feet (4.0 m), using granite corbels.

 

However subsequent surveys showed that the bridge was sinking an inch (about 2.5 cm) every eight years, and by 1924 the east side had sunk some three to four inches (about 9 cm) lower than the west side. It was concluded that the bridge would have to be removed and replaced.

 

Council member Ivan Luckin put forward the idea of selling the bridge, and recalled:

 

"They all thought I was completely

crazy when I suggested we should

sell London Bridge when it needed

replacing."

 

Subsequently, in 1968, Council placed the bridge on the market and began to look for potential buyers. On the 18th. April 1968, Rennie's bridge was purchased by the Missourian entrepreneur Robert P. McCulloch of McCulloch Oil for $2,460,000.

 

The claim that McCulloch believed mistakenly that he was buying the more impressive Tower Bridge was denied by Ivan Luckin in a newspaper interview.

 

Before the bridge was taken apart, each granite facing block was marked for later reassembly. The blocks were taken to Merrivale Quarry at Princetown in Devon, where 15 to 20 cm (6 to 8 in) were sliced off the inner faces of many, in order to facilitate their fixing.

 

Stones left behind were sold in an online auction when the quarry was abandoned and flooded in 2003. 10,000 tons of granite blocks were shipped via the Panama Canal to California, then trucked from Long Beach to Arizona.

 

They were used to face a new, purpose-built hollow core steel-reinforced concrete structure, ensuring that the bridge would support the weight of modern traffic. The bridge was reconstructed at Lake Havasu City, Arizona, and was re-dedicated on the 10th. October 1971 in a ceremony attended by London's Lord Mayor and celebrities.

 

The bridge carries the McCulloch Boulevard and spans the Bridgewater Channel, an artificial, navigable waterway that leads from the Uptown area of Lake Havasu City.

 

Terror Attacks on London Bridge and Nearby

 

There have been four terror attacks on or near London Bridge dating back to 1884. They are as follows:

 

(1) The 1884 London Bridge Terror Attack

 

On Saturday 13th. December 1884, two American-Irish Republicans carried out a dynamite attack on London Bridge as part of the Fenian dynamite campaign.

 

The bomb went off prematurely while the men were in a boat attaching it to a bridge pier at 5.45 pm during the evening rush hour. There was little damage to the bridge, and no casualties other than the bombers.

 

However, there was considerable collateral damage, and hundreds of windows were shattered on both banks of the Thames. The men's boat was so completely destroyed that the police initially thought the bombers had fled.

 

On the 25th. December 1884 the mutilated remains of one of the bombers were found. The body of the other man was never recovered, but the police were later able to identify the dead men as two Americans, William Mackey Lomasney, and John Fleming.

 

The men were identified after a landlord reported to police that dynamite had been found in the rented premises of two American gentlemen who had disappeared after the 13th. December, enabling police to piece together who was responsible for the attack.

 

The men had already been under surveillance by the police in both America and Great Britain.

 

(2) The 1992 London Bridge Bombing

 

On Friday the 28th. February 1992, the Provisional IRA exploded a bomb inside London Bridge station during the morning rush hour, causing extensive damage and wounding 29 people. It was one of many bombings carried out by one of the IRA's London active service units. It occurred just over a year after a bomb at Victoria station.

 

-- The 1992 Bombing

 

At around 8:20 am, someone rang Ulster Television's London office warning that a bomb was going to explode in a London station, without saying which one.

 

About ten minutes later, the bomb detonated, which made debris fly almost 50 feet (15 m) away from the blast area. Twenty nine people were hurt in the explosion, most of them from flying glass and other bits of debris; four were seriously hurt, but nobody was killed.

 

The victims were treated at Guy's Hospital.

 

-- Aftermath of the 1992 Explosion

 

The head of Scotland Yard's anti terrorist squad, George Churchill-Coleman, said that the 2 lb (910 g) bomb of high explosives was "clearly designed to kill."

 

Investigations suggested that the bomb had been placed in the men's restrooms. Churchill-Coleman added that the IRA's warning was "deliberately vague," and was given too late to act upon.

 

Prime Minister John Major said that the bombing would not change British policy in Northern Ireland:

 

"It was pointless. It was cowardly. It was

directed against innocent people and it

will make absolutely no difference to

our policy -- no difference at all."

 

Fearing additional IRA attacks on public transport, the security services warned commuters "more than ever" to stay on guard at all times. The next day, another bomb went off in London, by the Crown Prosecution Service office, injuring two more people and bringing the total injured to 31 in the space of just over 24 hours.

 

This was one of dozens of bombs that detonated in London that year, the biggest of which was the Baltic Exchange bombing, killing three people and causing almost £1 billion worth of damage.

 

The IRA maintained this pressure, bombing mainland Britain and especially the City of London as much as possible until the ceasefire of 1994.

 

(3) The 2017 London Bridge Attack

 

On the 3rd. June 2017, a terrorist vehicle-ramming and stabbing took place in London when a van was deliberately driven into pedestrians on London Bridge, and then crashed on Borough High Street, just south of the River Thames.

 

The van's three occupants then ran to the nearby Borough Market area and began stabbing people in and around restaurants and pubs. They were shot dead by Metropolitan and City of London Police authorised firearms officers, and were found to be wearing fake explosive vests.

 

Eight people were killed and 48 were injured, including members of the public and four unarmed police officers who attempted to stop the assailants. British authorities described the perpetrators as radical Islamic terrorists.

 

The Islamic State (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attack.

 

-- Background to the 2017 Attack

 

In March 2017, five people had been killed in a combined vehicle and knife attack at Westminster. In late May, a suicide bomber killed 22 people at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena.

 

After the Manchester bombing, the UK's terror threat level was raised to "critical", its highest level, until the 27th. May 2017, when it was lowered to severe.

 

-- The 2017 Attack

 

The attack was carried out using a white Renault Master hired earlier on the same evening in Harold Hill, by Khuram Butt. He had intended to hire a 7.5 tonne lorry, but was refused due to his failure to provide payment details.

 

The attackers were armed with 12-inch (30 cm) kitchen knives with ceramic blades, which they tied to their wrists with leather straps. They also prepared fake explosive belts by wrapping water bottles in grey tape.

 

At 21:58 on the 3rd. June 2017, the van travelled south across London Bridge, and returned six minutes later, crossing over the bridge northbound, making a U-turn at the northern end and then driving southbound across the bridge.

 

It mounted the pavement three times and hit multiple pedestrians, killing two. Witnesses said the van was travelling at high speed. 999 emergency calls were first recorded at 22:07. The van was later found to contain 13 wine bottles containing flammable liquid with rags stuffed in them, along with blow torches.

 

The van crashed on Borough High Street after crossing the central reservation. The van's tyres were destroyed by the central reservation, and the three attackers, armed with knives, abandoned the vehicle.

 

Then they ran down the steps to Green Dragon Court, where they killed five people outside and near the Boro Bistro pub. The attackers then went back up the steps to Borough High Street and attacked three bystanders.

 

Police tried to fight the attackers, but were stabbed, and Ignacio Echeverría helped them by striking the terrorist Redouane and possibly Zaghba with his skateboard. Echeverría was later killed outside Lobos Meat and Tapas.

 

Members of the public threw bottles and chairs at the attackers. Witnesses reported that the attackers were shouting:

 

"This is for Allah".

 

People in and around a number of other restaurants and bars along Stoney Street were also attacked. During the attack, an unknown man was spared by Rachid Redouane, but despite many efforts the man was never found.

 

A Romanian baker hit one of the attackers over the head with a crate before giving shelter to 20 people inside a bakery inside Borough Market.

 

One man fought the three attackers with his fists in the Black and Blue steakhouse, shouting:

 

"F*** you, I'm Millwall."

 

His actions gave members of the public who were in the restaurant the opportunity to run away. He was stabbed eight times in the hands, chest and head. He underwent surgery at St Thomas' Hospital, and was taken off the critical list on the 4th. June.

 

A British Transport Police officer armed with a baton also took on the attackers, receiving multiple stab wounds and temporarily losing sight in his right eye as a consequence.

 

Off-duty Metropolitan police constables Liam Jones and Stewart Henderson rendered first aid to seriously injured members of the public before protecting over 150 people inside the Thameside Inn and evacuating them by Metropolitan marine support unit and RNLI boats to the north shore of the Thames.

 

The three attackers were then shot dead by armed officers from the City of London and Metropolitan police Specialist Firearms Command eight minutes after the initial emergency call was made.

 

CCTV footage showed the three attackers in Borough Market running at the armed officers; the attackers were shot dead 20 seconds later. A total of 46 rounds were fired by three City of London and five Metropolitan Police officers.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2017 Attack

 

The Metropolitan Police issued 'Run, Hide, Tell' notices via social media during the attack, and asked the public to remain calm and vigilant.

 

All buildings within the vicinity of London Bridge were evacuated, and London Bridge, Borough and Bank Underground stations were closed at the request of the police.

 

The mainline railway stations at London Bridge, Waterloo East, Charing Cross and Cannon Street were also closed. The Home Secretary approved the deployment of a military counter terrorist unit from the Special Air Service (SAS).

 

The helicopters carrying the SAS landed on London Bridge to support the Metropolitan Police because of concerns that there might be more attackers at large.

 

The Metropolitan Police Marine Policing Unit dispatched boats on the River Thames, with assistance from the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI), to contribute to the evacuation of the area and look for any casualties who might have fallen from the bridge.

 

A stabbing incident took place in Vauxhall at 23:45, causing Vauxhall station to be briefly closed; this was later confirmed to be unrelated to the attack.

 

At 01:45 on the 4th. June, controlled explosions took place of the attackers' bomb vests, which were found to be fake.

 

An emergency COBR meeting was held on the morning of the 4th. June. London Bridge mainline railway and underground stations remained closed throughout the 4th. June. A cordon was established around the scene of the attack. London Bridge station reopened at 05:00 on Monday the 5th. June.

 

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said that there was a surge of hate crimes and islamophobic incidents following the attack.

 

New security measures were implemented on eight central London bridges following the attack, to reduce the likelihood of further vehicle attacks, with concrete barriers being installed. The barriers have been criticised for causing severe congestion in cycle lanes during peak hours.

 

Borough Market reopened on the 14th. June.

 

-- Casualties of the 2017 Attack

 

Eight civilians died in the attack: one Spaniard, one Briton, two Australians, one Canadian and three French citizens were killed by the attackers, and the three attackers themselves were killed by armed police.

 

Two of the civilian fatalities were caused in the initial vehicle-ramming attack, while the remaining six were stabbed to death. One body was recovered from the Thames near Limehouse several days after the attack.

 

48 people were injured in the attack, including one New Zealander, two Australians, two Germans and four French citizens.

 

Of the 48 people admitted to hospital, 21 were initially reported to be in a critical condition.

 

Four police officers were among those injured in the attack. A British Transport Police officer was stabbed, and suffered serious injuries to his head, face and neck. An off-duty Metropolitan Police officer was seriously injured when he was stabbed.

 

Two other Metropolitan Police officers received head and arm injuries. As a result of police gunfire, a bystander received an accidental gunshot wound, which was not critical.

 

-- The 2017 Attackers

 

On the 4th. June the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, said that:

 

"We are confident about the fact that

they were radical Islamic terrorists, the

way they were inspired, and we need

to find out more about where this

radicalisation came from."

 

Amaq News Agency, an online outlet associated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), said the attackers were ISIS fighters.

 

On the 5th. June, two of the attackers were identified as Khuram Shazad Butt and Rachid Redouane. The third of the three attackers, Youssef Zaghba, was identified the following day.

 

(a) Khuram Shazad Butt

 

Butt (born 20th. April 1990) was a Pakistan-born British citizen whose family came from Jhelum. He grew up in Great Britain, living in Plaistow.

 

He had a wife and two children. Neighbours told the BBC that Butt had been reported to police for attempting to radicalise children; he had also expressed disgust at the way women dressed.

 

He was known to police as a "heavyweight" member of the banned extremist group al-Muhajiroun. A BBC interviewee said he had a verbal confrontation with Butt in 2013 on the day after another Al-Muhajiroun follower had murdered Fusilier Lee Rigby.

 

Butt was part of an al-Muhajiroun campaign in 2015 to intimidate Muslims who planned to vote in the UK general elections of that year, on the basis that it was forbidden in Islam.

 

He was known for holding extreme views, having been barred from two local mosques. He appeared on a 2016 Channel 4 Television documentary, The Jihadis Next Door, which showed him arguing with police over the unfurling of an ISIL black flag in Regent's Park.

 

According to a friend, he had been radicalised by the YouTube videos of the American Muslim hate preacher Ahmad Musa Jibril. Butt was known to have taken drugs before he became radicalised.

 

After radicalisation, Butt started to stop his neighbours on the street and ask them whether they had been to the mosque.

 

Butt had worked for a man accused of training Mohammad Sidique Khan, the leader of the July 2005 London bombing. The police and MI5 knew of Butt, and he was investigated in 2015. The investigation was later "moved into the lower echelons", and his file was classed as low priority.

 

Butt sometimes manned the desk of the Ummah Fitness Centre gym, where he prayed regularly. CCTV footage was released of Butt, Redouane and Zaghba meeting outside the gym days before the attack. A senior figure at a local mosque had reported the gym to police.

 

The New York Times said that Butt and his brother were part of the UK government's Prevent programme, which aims to stop people from becoming terrorists, and which reports suspected radicals to police programmes.

 

At the time of the attack he was on police bail following an allegation of fraud, though the police had intended to take no further action due to a lack of evidence. He had previously been cautioned by police for fraud in 2008 and common assault in 2010.

 

(b) Rachid Redouane

 

Redouane (born 31 July 1986) was a failed asylum seeker in the UK, whose application was denied in 2009, and not previously known to police. He had claimed to be either Moroccan or Libyan.

 

Redouane worked as a pastry chef, and in 2012 he married an Irish woman in a ceremony in Ireland. He beat and bullied his wife.

 

He used to drink alcohol. He lived variously in Rathmines, a suburb of Dublin, also in Morocco and the UK. According to his wife, Redouane was most likely radicalised in Morocco. Later the couple stayed in the UK on an EU residency card where they had a daughter in 2015.

 

The couple separated in 2016 and she divorced him after he tried to force his extremist beliefs on her.

 

At the time of the attack, he was living in Dagenham, East London.

 

(c) Youssef Zaghba

 

Zaghba (born 1995 in Fez, Morocco) was at the time of the attack living in east London where he worked in a fast-food outlet. He also worked for an Islamic television channel in London.

 

Zaghba was born to a Moroccan Muslim father and an Italian Catholic Christian mother who had converted to Islam when she married. Zaghba had dual Moroccan and Italian nationality.

 

When his parents divorced, he went to Italy with his mother. In 2016, Zaghba was stopped at Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport by Italian officers who found ISIS-related materials on his mobile phone; he was stopped from continuing his journey to Istanbul.

 

Italian authorities said Zaghba was monitored continuously while in Italy and that the UK was informed about him. Giuseppe Amato, an Italian prosecutor, said:

 

"We did our best. We could just monitor

and surveil Zaghba and send a note to

the British authorities, that's all we could

do and we did it.

Since he moved to London, he came back

to Italy once in a while for a total of 10 days.

And during those 10 days we never let him

out of our sight."

 

According to The New York Times, the Italian branch of Al-Muhajiroun had introduced Butt to Zaghba.

 

-- Investigation of the 2017 Attack

 

On the morning of the 4th. June, police made 12 arrests following raids in flats in the Barking area of east London, where one of the attackers lived; controlled explosions were carried out during the raids.

 

Those held included five males aged between 27 and 55, arrested at one address in Barking, and six females aged between 19 and 60, arrested at a separate Barking address. One of the arrested males was subsequently released without charge.

 

Four properties in all were searched, including two in Newham in addition to the two in Barking. Further raids and arrests were made at properties in Newham and Barking early on the morning of the 5th. June.

 

On the 6th. June, a man was arrested in Barking, and another in Ilford the following day. By the 16th. June, all those arrested had been released without charge.

 

-- The Inquest Into the 2017 Attack

 

On the 7th. May 2019, an inquest into the deaths of the victims opened at the Old Bailey in London. Judge Mark Lucraft QC, Chief Coroner of England and Wales, presided, and people related to the dead gave accounts of what happened and who they had lost.

 

The inquest concluded on the 16th. July 2019 that all three attackers had been lawfully killed.

 

(4) The 2019 London Bridge Stabbing

 

On the 29th. November 2019, five people were stabbed, two fatally, in Central London. The attacker, Briton Usman Khan, had been released from prison in 2018 on licence after serving a sentence for terrorist offences.

 

Khan was attending an offender rehabilitation conference in Fishmongers' Hall when he threatened to detonate what turned out to be a fake suicide vest.

 

He started to attack people with two knives taped to his wrists, killing two of the conference participants by stabbing them in the chest.

 

Several people fought back, some attacking Khan with a fire extinguisher, a pike and a narwhal tusk as he fled the building and emerged on to London Bridge, where he was partially disarmed by a plain-clothes police officer.

 

He was restrained by members of the public until additional police officers arrived, pulled away those restraining him, and shot him.

 

-- Background to the 2019 Attack

 

A conference on offender rehabilitation was held on the 29th. November 2019 in Fishmongers' Hall, at the northern end of London Bridge, to celebrate the fifth anniversary of Learning Together. This is a programme run by the Cambridge Institute of Criminology to help offenders reintegrate into society following their release from prison.

 

Learning Together was set up in 2014 by University of Cambridge academics Ruth Armstrong and Amy Ludlow from the Faculty of Law and Institute of Criminology:

 

"To bring together people in criminal justice

and higher education institutions to study

alongside each other in inclusive and

transformative learning communities."

 

The programme served to enable students and prisoners to work together.

 

Former prisoner Usman Khan had been invited to the conference as a previous participant in the programme, and although banned from entering London under the terms of his release, he was granted a one-day exemption to attend.

 

-- The 2019 Attack

 

At 13:58 on the 29th. November, the police were called to Fishmongers' Hall after Khan, wearing a fake suicide vest, threatened to blow up the hall. The police reported that there had been no prior intelligence of the attack.

 

Holding two kitchen knives taped to his wrists, Khan began stabbing people inside the building. Several fought back, including a South African-born Londoner, Darryn Frost, who grabbed a 1.5-metre-long (4.9 ft) narwhal tusk from the wall to use as a weapon, former prisoner John Crilly, and Steven Gallant, a convicted murderer attending the conference on day release from prison.

 

Khan fled and began stabbing pedestrians outside on the north side of the bridge.

 

Several people were injured before members of the public, including a tour guide and a plain-clothes British Transport Police officer, later seen walking away with a knife, restrained and disarmed Khan on the bridge.

 

One of the people who stepped in to fight the attacker drove him back by spraying a fire extinguisher.

 

Armed officers of the City of London Police arrived at 14:03 and surrounded the attacker, who at the time was being restrained by a Ministry of Justice communications worker attending the rehabilitation meeting.

 

The officers pulled this person away to provide a clear shot, before one fired twice. Around 10 minutes after this, Khan started to get up; he was then shot 9 further times by 6 firearms officers. Khan had not been secured after the initial shooting due to the suicide vest. Khan died at the scene.

 

A Transport for London bus which had stopped adjacent to the site of the shooting was found to have damage to both its front and rear windows, possibly caused, according to the Metropolitan Police, by a ricocheting bullet.

 

-- The Victims of the 2019 Attack

 

Three of the victims were associated with Cambridge University's Learning Together prison-rehabilitation programme; two died and one was injured.

 

The two who died from their stab wounds were Jack Merritt and Saskia Jones.

 

Merritt was a 25-year-old law and criminology graduate from Cottenham, Cambridgeshire who had studied at the Universities of Manchester and Cambridge. He worked as a University of Cambridge administration officer, and was a course coordinator for Learning Together.

 

Jones was a 23 year old former Anglia Ruskin University and University of Cambridge student from Stratford-upon-Avon.

 

Funeral services for Merritt and Jones were conducted on the 20th. December 2019.

 

Two other women were seriously injured, while a chef who was working at the event was stabbed but had less serious injuries.

 

-- The Terrorist Usman Khan

 

Usman Khan was a 28-year-old British national from Stoke-on-Trent, of Pakistani descent. Khan appears to have left school with no qualifications after spending part of his late teens in Pakistan.

 

He was known to police, and had links to Islamist extremist groups. In December 2018 he had been automatically released from prison on licence, where he was serving a 16-year sentence for terrorism offences, and was wearing an electronic tag.

 

Khan had been part of a plot, inspired by Al-Qaeda, to establish a terrorist camp on his family's land in Kashmir and bomb the London Stock Exchange. The plot was disrupted by MI5 and the police, as part of MI5's Operation Guava (police Operation Norbury), and Khan was given an indeterminate sentence.

 

Of the nine men involved, Khan was the youngest at 19 and according to Mr Justice Wilkie, Khan and two others were “more serious jihadis” than the others.

 

In 2013, Khan's sentence was revised after an appeal, and he was ordered to serve at least 8 years of his new 16-year sentence, with a 5-year extended licence allowing recall to prison.

 

According to the anti-extremism group Hope not Hate, Khan was a supporter of Al-Muhajiroun, an extremist group with which scores of terrorists were involved. He was a student and personal friend of Anjem Choudary, an Islamist and terrorism supporter.

 

Post-mortem examination showed evidence of occasional use of cocaine by Khan.

 

-- Aftermath of the 2019 Attack

 

The news of the attack was broken live as it happened on the BBC by one of its reporters, John McManus, who witnessed members of the public fighting Khan as he crossed the bridge, and heard two shots being fired by police officers.

 

McManus said that he was certain that more than two shots were fired during the incident.

 

The police, ambulance, and fire services attended the scene, and a major incident was declared. A large police cordon was set up in the area and residents were told to stay away. Police closed both Monument Underground station and London Bridge station after the attack.

 

The Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, returned to Downing Street following the incident, after campaigning in his constituency for the forthcoming general election. Johnson commended the "immense bravery" of the emergency services and members of the public, and claimed that anyone involved in the attack would be hunted down.

 

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, thanked the emergency services and members of the public who helped to restrain the attacker, saying they had shown "breathtaking heroism".

 

The Conservative Party, Labour Party and Liberal Democrats temporarily suspended campaigning in London for the general election. A parliamentary election hustings event scheduled to be held at Great St. Mary's Church in Cambridge on the 30th. November was cancelled and replaced by a memorial vigil for the victims of the attack.

 

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick made a statement following the attack. She said that there would be an increased police presence on the streets, and that cordons in the London Bridge area would remain in place. An appeal was made for the public to submit any film or picture evidence or information that could assist the investigation.

 

In Pakistan, publication of Khan's Pakistani origins by the leading newspaper Dawn were deemed unpatriotic and defamatory, and led to demonstrations demanding that the publisher and the editor be hanged.

 

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack. Its news agency, Amaq, claimed Usman Khan was one of its fighters. A janaza prayer for Khan was held at a mosque in Birmingham, and he was buried in his family's ancestral village in Pakistan, following objections to his burial in the UK by local Muslims in his native Stoke.

 

In 2021, following an inquest, Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation Jonathan Hall QC called for those involved in the planning or preparation of terrorist attacks to be given automatic life sentences. Hall stated:

 

"It is hard to underestimate how serious

Usman Khan’s original offence was."

 

-- Investigations Into the 2019 Attack

 

London Bridge was closed until the early hours of the following Monday for forensic investigation of the scene. A property in Stafford and one in Stoke-on-Trent were searched by police.

 

An inquest into the deaths of Merritt and Jones was opened on the 4th. December 2019 at the Central Criminal Court in London, and was subsequently adjourned.

 

A pre-inquest review hearing took place at the Old Bailey on the 16th. October 2020, before the Chief Coroner of England and Wales, Mark Lucraft QC.

 

The inquest re-opened on the 12th. April 2021, presided over by Lucraft. On the 28th. May 2021 the jury concluded that the victims had been unlawfully killed.

 

They further concluded that insufficient monitoring of Khan, unreasonable belief in his rehabilitation, a lack of information sharing between agencies, and inadequate security planning at the event were all contributing factors in their deaths.

 

Khan's inquest, also overseen by Lucraft, found in June 2021 that Khan was lawfully killed by the police.

 

-- Royal Prerogative of Mercy for Steven Gallant

 

Steven Gallant was granted the Royal prerogative of mercy by the Lord Chancellor on behalf of the Queen in October 2020, in order to bring his parole hearing forward by ten months to June 2021.

 

The Ministry of Justice stated that:

 

"This is in recognition of his exceptionally

brave actions at Fishmongers’ Hall, which

helped save people's lives despite the

tremendous risk to his own".

 

Though the parole board still has to decide on whether to release him, it was reported that it would be unlikely for his case to be denied after the Queen's intervention. The families of both Merritt and of Gallant's 2005 murder victim approved the action due to his heroic deeds and efforts to turn his life around since the murder.

 

Major Sunspot Activity

 

So what else happened on the day that the card was posted?

 

Well, on the 25th. September 1909, sunspot activity produced a magnetic storm that disrupted telegraph communications across the world, starting at 1200 noon GMT (7 am EST).

 

Sir Florizel Glasspole

 

The day also marked the birth, in Kingston, Jamaica, of Florizel Glasspole. He was the third and longest-serving governor-general of Jamaica, in office from 1973 to 1991.

 

Florizel died in Kingston, Jamaica at the age of 91 on the 25th. November 2000.

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