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Friday, October 5, 2012

Today in History

1762   The British fleet bombards and captures Spanish-held Manila in the Philippines.
1795   The day after he routed counterrevolutionaries in Paris, Napoleon Bonaparte accepts their formal surrender.
1813   U.S. victory at the Battle of the Thames, in Ontario, broke Britain's Indian allies with the death of Shawnee Chief Tecumseh, and made the Detroit frontier safe.
1821   Greek rebels capture Tripolitza, the main Turkish fort in the Peloponnese area of Greece.
1864   At the Battle of Allatoona, a small Union post is saved from Lt. Gen. John Bell Hood's army.
1877   Nez Perce Chief Joseph surrenders to Colonel Nelson Miles in Montana Territory, after a 1,700-mile trek to reach Canada falls 40 miles short.
1880   The first ball-point pen is patented on this day by Alonzo T. Cross.
1882   Outlaw Frank James surrenders in Missouri six months after brother Jesse's assassination.
1915   Germany issues an apology and promises for payment for the 128 American passengers killed in the sinking of the British ship Lusitania.
1931   Clyde Pangborn and Hugh Herndon complete the first heavier than air nonstop flight over the Pacific. Their flight, begun October 3, lasted 41 hours, 31 minutes and covered 5,000 miles. They piloted their Bellanca CH-200 monoplane from Samushiro, 300 miles north of Tokyo, Japan, to Wenatchee, Washington.
1965   U.S. forces in Saigon receive permission to use tear gas.
1966   A sodium cooling system malfunction causes a partial core meltdown at the Enrico Fermi demonstration breeder reactor near Detroit. Radiation is contained.

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