Oddly enough for this website, I have seen no comments being made of the tragedy regarding Jo Cox, Labour MP (and some say a rising star in her party) on a London street by an assassin with a gun. From today's news he has connections with some White Supremicists in the U.S (sadly to admit), and a history of mental problems.
Cox is not the first political figure from England (or even in London) to die in an assassination. It is just seen as a rarer phenomenon there than in the States.
Going back to 1605 you'd have
1) The plot to blow up the Houses of Parliament ("the Gunpowder Plot") by Guy Fawkes and his associates - in London
2) George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, by John Felton in 1628.
3) Sir Edmundberry Godfrey (during the "Popish Plot" mania) in 1676 - in London,
4) Fenwick's plot against King William III in 1694.
5) Guiscard's physical attempted murder of Robert Harley, Earl of Oxford in 1711 - in London.
6) The assassination of Prime Minister Spencer Perceval in the old House of Commons in 1812 - in London (to this date the only time a modern British Prime Minister was assassinated).
7) The plot to kill the cabinet at a dinner party (the "Cato Street Plot") of Arthur Thistlewood and his associates in 1820 - in London (one police officer was killed by Thistlewood).
8) The killing of Mr. Edmund Drummond, Secretary to Sir Robert Peel, by Daniel M'Naghten - in London (when M'Naghten was actually trying to kill Peel, and felt Drummond was Peel, as he was leaving 10 Downing Street).
9) The murder of the Earl of Mayo, Viceroy of India, in the Andaman Islands by a convict, in 1872 (though actually in Asia).
10) The Phoenix Park Assassinations of Lord Frederick Cavendish and Mr. Thomas Burke in 1882, though in Dublin.
11) The murders of Sir Curzon Wylie and a doctor, by Mal Dhingra in 1909 - in London
12) The attempt to assassinate Prime Minister David Lloyd George in 1917.
13) The assassination of General (and MP) Sir Henry Wilson, outside his home by two I.R.A. members in 1922 (in London, on Eaton Place).
14) The assassination of Sir Lee Stack, the "Sirdar" to Egypt and the Sudan, in 1923 - on a Cairo Street, however.
15) The assassination of Sir Michael O'Dwyer, and wounding of Lord Zetland, by a Sikh national avenging O'Dwyer's help in "covering-up" the Amritsar Massacre of 1919, in 1940 - in London.
16) The assassination of Lord Moyne, and his chauffeur, by two members of the Stern Gang in 1944 - in Cairo, Egypt.
17) The assassination of Foreign Minister Airey Neave (and several others) in a hotel bombing in 1979, when Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was to attend.
Roughly those were the only ones that came to mind, although the murder (by a bomb) on a yacht, by IRA people of Lord Mountbatten and his grandson and others in 1977 might be added. It, though, was in Ireland, and Mountbatten was then in retirement and not an active member of the armed forces or the government.
Jeff
Cox is not the first political figure from England (or even in London) to die in an assassination. It is just seen as a rarer phenomenon there than in the States.
Going back to 1605 you'd have
1) The plot to blow up the Houses of Parliament ("the Gunpowder Plot") by Guy Fawkes and his associates - in London
2) George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, by John Felton in 1628.
3) Sir Edmundberry Godfrey (during the "Popish Plot" mania) in 1676 - in London,
4) Fenwick's plot against King William III in 1694.
5) Guiscard's physical attempted murder of Robert Harley, Earl of Oxford in 1711 - in London.
6) The assassination of Prime Minister Spencer Perceval in the old House of Commons in 1812 - in London (to this date the only time a modern British Prime Minister was assassinated).
7) The plot to kill the cabinet at a dinner party (the "Cato Street Plot") of Arthur Thistlewood and his associates in 1820 - in London (one police officer was killed by Thistlewood).
8) The killing of Mr. Edmund Drummond, Secretary to Sir Robert Peel, by Daniel M'Naghten - in London (when M'Naghten was actually trying to kill Peel, and felt Drummond was Peel, as he was leaving 10 Downing Street).
9) The murder of the Earl of Mayo, Viceroy of India, in the Andaman Islands by a convict, in 1872 (though actually in Asia).
10) The Phoenix Park Assassinations of Lord Frederick Cavendish and Mr. Thomas Burke in 1882, though in Dublin.
11) The murders of Sir Curzon Wylie and a doctor, by Mal Dhingra in 1909 - in London
12) The attempt to assassinate Prime Minister David Lloyd George in 1917.
13) The assassination of General (and MP) Sir Henry Wilson, outside his home by two I.R.A. members in 1922 (in London, on Eaton Place).
14) The assassination of Sir Lee Stack, the "Sirdar" to Egypt and the Sudan, in 1923 - on a Cairo Street, however.
15) The assassination of Sir Michael O'Dwyer, and wounding of Lord Zetland, by a Sikh national avenging O'Dwyer's help in "covering-up" the Amritsar Massacre of 1919, in 1940 - in London.
16) The assassination of Lord Moyne, and his chauffeur, by two members of the Stern Gang in 1944 - in Cairo, Egypt.
17) The assassination of Foreign Minister Airey Neave (and several others) in a hotel bombing in 1979, when Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was to attend.
Roughly those were the only ones that came to mind, although the murder (by a bomb) on a yacht, by IRA people of Lord Mountbatten and his grandson and others in 1977 might be added. It, though, was in Ireland, and Mountbatten was then in retirement and not an active member of the armed forces or the government.
Jeff
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