1774 |
|
The first Continental Congress, which protested British measures and called for civil disobedience, concludes in Philadelphia. |
1795 |
|
General Paul Barras resigns his commission
as head of France’s Army of the Interior to become head of the
Directory; his second-in-command becomes the army’s commander—Napoleon Bonaparte. |
1825 |
|
The first boat on the Erie Canal leaves Buffalo, N.Y. |
1881 |
|
Three Earp brothers and Doc Holliday have a shootout with the Clantons and McLaurys at the O.K. Corral in Tombstone, Arizona Territory. |
1905 |
|
Norway signs a treaty of separation with
Sweden. Norway chooses Prince Charles of Denmark as the new king; he
becomes King Haakon VII. |
1918 |
|
Germany’s supreme commander, General Erich
Ludendorff, resigns, protesting the terms to which the German
Government has agreed in negotiating the armistice. This sets the stage
for his later support for Adolf Hitler and the Nazis, who claim that Germany did not lose the war on the battlefield but were “stabbed in the back” by politicians. |
1942 |
|
The Japanese attack Guadalcanal, sinking two U.S. carriers. |
1942 |
|
The U.S. Navy aircraft carrier Hornet is sunk in the Battle of Santa Cruz Island, in the South Pacific. |
1944 |
|
The
Battle of Leyte Gulf ends with an overwhelming U.S. victory as combined
American and Australian forces cripple the Imperial Japanese Navy.
Fought over four days in waters near the Philippine islands of Leyte,
Samar, and Luzon, it is the first battle in which Japanese aircraft
carry out organized kamikaze attacks and will come to be regarded as the
largest naval battle of World War II. |
1950 |
|
A reconnaissance platoon for a South
Korean division reaches the Yalu River. They are the only elements of
the U.N. force to reach the river before the Chinese offensive pushes
the whole army down into South Korea. |
1955 |
|
The Village Voice is first published, backed in part by Norman Mailer. |
1955 |
|
Ngo Dinh Diem declares himself Premier of South Vietnam. |
1957 |
|
The Russian government announces that
Marshal Georgy Zhukov, the nation’s most prominent military hero, has
been relieved of his duties as Minister of Defense. Khrushchev accuses
Zhukov as promoting his own “cult of personality” and sees him as a
threat to his own popularity. |
1958 |
|
The first New York – Paris transatlantic
jet passenger service is inaugurated by Pan Am, while the first New York
– London transatlantic jet passenger service is inaugurated by BOAC. |
1967 |
|
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi crowns himself Emperor of Iran and his wife Farah as Empress. |
1970 |
|
Garry Trudeau’s comic strip Doonesbury first appears. |
1979 |
|
The President of South Korea, Park
Chung-hee, is asssasinated by Kim Jae-kyu, head of the country’s Central
intelligence Agency; Choi Kyu-ha is named acting president. |
1994 |
|
Israel and Jordan sign a peace treaty. |
2001 |
|
The USA PATRIOT Act is signed into law by
Pres. George W. Bush, greatly expanding intelligence and legal agencies’
ability to utilize wiretaps, records searches and surveillance. |
2002 |
|
Russian Spetsnaz storm the Moscow Theatre,
where Chechen terrorists had taken the audience and performers hostage
three days earlier; 50 terrorists and 150 hostages die in the assault. |
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