1431 |
|
Henry VI of England is crowned King of France. |
1653 |
|
Oliver Cromwell takes on dictatorial powers with the title of “Lord Protector.” |
1773 |
|
To protest the tax on tea from England, a group of young Americans, disguised as Indians, throws chests of tea from British ships in the Boston Harbor. |
1835 |
|
A fire in New York City destroys property
estimated to be worth $20,000,000. It lasts two days, ravages 17 blocks,
and destroys 674 buildings including the Stock Exchange, the Merchants’
Exchange, the Post Office, and the South Dutch Church. |
1863 |
|
Confederate General Joseph Johnston takes command of the Army of Tennessee. |
1864 |
|
Union forces under General George H. Thomas win the Battle at Nashville, smashing an entire Confederate army. |
1930 |
|
In Spain, a general strike is called in support of the revolution. |
1939 |
|
The National Women’s Party urges immediate congressional action on equal rights. |
1940 |
|
British troops carry out an air raid on Italian Somalia. |
1944 |
|
Germany mounts a major offensive in the
Ardennes Forest in Belgium. As the center of the Allied line falls back,
it creates a bulge, leading to the name–the Battle of the Bulge. |
1949 |
|
Chinese Communist leader Mao Tse-tung is received at the Kremlin in Moscow. |
1950 |
|
President Harry Truman declares a state of National Emergency as Chinese communists invade deeper into South Korea. |
1976 |
|
President Jimmy Carter appoints Andrew Young as Ambassador to the United Nations. |
1978 |
|
Cleveland becomes the first U.S. city to default since the depression. |
1998 |
|
The United States launches a missile attack on Iraq for failing to comply with United Nations weapons inspectors. |
2003 |
|
The shrub signs the
CAN-SPAM Act of 2003, which establishes the United States’ first
national standards regarding email and gives the Federal Trade
Commission authority to enforce the act. |
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