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Thursday, October 18, 2012

Today in History

1648   The "shoemakers of Boston"–the first labor organization in what would become the United States–was authorized by the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
1685   Edict of Nantes lifted by Louis XIV. The edict, signed at Nantes, France, by King Henry IV in 1598, gave the Huguenots religious liberty, civil rights and security. By revoking the Edict of Nantes, Louis XIV abrogated their religious liberties.
1813   The Allies defeat Napoleon Bonaparte at Leipzig.
1867   The Alaska territory is formally transferred to the U.S. from Russian control.
1867   The rules for American football are formulated at meeting in New York among delegates from Columbia, Rutgers, Princeton and Yale universities.
1883   The weather station at the top of Ben Nevis, Scotland, the highest mountain in Britain, is declared open. Weather stations were set up on the tops of mountains all over Europe and the Eastern United States in order to gather information for the new weather forecasts.
1910   M. Baudry is the first to fly a dirigible across the English Channel–from La Motte-Breil to Wormwood Scrubbs.
1912   The First Balkan War breaks out between the members of the Balkan League–Serbia, Bulgaria, Greece and Montenegro–and the Ottoman Empire.
1918   Czechs seize Prague and renounce Hapsburg's rule.
1919   Madrid opens a subway system.
1921   Russian Soviets grant Crimean independence.
1939   President Franklin D. Roosevelt bans war submarines from U.S. ports and waters.
1944   Lt. General Joseph Stilwell is recalled from China by president Franklin Roosevelt.
1950   The First Turkish Brigade arrives in Korea to assist the U.N. forces fighting there.
1967   A Russian unmanned spacecraft makes the first landing on the surface of Venus.

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