Stockport
and Cumbria! Wow. I don't know whether that's a large expanse in earthquake terms but it impressed little ol' me. There can't be many other natural events that Ernest and Peter have experiened simultaneously in their homes (although I guess they're exerting a gravitational pull on one another....

)
Last one I felt was in 2002 (in Reading). That was also like a train, but I knew it wasn't, because I'd just moved to a place which wasn't near a railway for the first time. So I suppose I could have dismissed previous quakes as trains.
I think we've got it fairly good in natural "disaster" terms in the UK. No volcanoes, the odd mini-quake, and the very occasional tornado and big storm/winds. Just enough to be exciting but not
usually any serious destruction (except for things like the three pine trees which blew down here in October '87 and luckily missed the house

). Earthquakes and hurricanes must be one of the most prominent downsides to living in the States (at least some parts of it).
It does stop us getting complacent I suppose; despite all our scientific and technological advances it shows us just how helpless we still are when Mother Nature throws a wobbly. She certainly likes to remind us who's boss from time to time.

_________________
Paul Smith: a legend.
"The freedom provided by the motor vehicle is not universally applauded, however: there are those who resent the loss of state control over individual choice that the car represents. Such people rarely admit their prejudices openly; instead, they make false or exaggerated claims about the adverse effects of road transport in order to justify calls for higher taxation or restrictions on mobility." (
Conservative Way Forward:
Stop The War Against Drivers)