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Sunday, September 16, 2012

Today in History

1620   The Pilgrims sail from England on the Mayflower.
1668   King John Casimer V of Poland abdicates the throne.
1747   The French capture Bergen-op-Zoom, consolidating their occupation of Austrian Flanders in the Netherlands.
1789   Jean-Paul Marat sets up a new newspaper in France, L'Ami du Peuple.
1810   A revolution for independence breaks out in Mexico.
1864   Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest leads 4,500 men out of Verona, Miss. to harass Union outposts in northern Alabama and Tennessee.
1889   Robert Younger, in Minnesota's Stillwater Penitentiary for life, dies of tuberculosis. Brothers Cole and Bob remain in the prison.
1893   Some 50,000 "Sooners" claim land in the Cherokee Strip during the first day of the Oklahoma land rush.
1908   General Motors files papers of incorporation.
1920   Thirty people are killed in a terrorist bombing in New York's Wall Street financial district.
1934   Anti-Nazi Lutherans stage protest in Munich.
1940   Congress passes the Selective Service Act, which calls for the first peacetime draft in U.S. history.
1942   The Japanese base at Kiska in the Aleutian Islands is raided by American bombers.
1945   Japan surrenders Hong Kong to Britain.
1950   The U.S. 8th Army breaks out of the Pusan Perimeter in South Korea and begins heading north to meet MacArthur's troops heading south from Inchon.
1972   South Vietnamese troops recapture Quang Tri province in South Vietnam from the North Vietnamese Army.
1974   Limited amnesty is offered to Vietnam-era draft resisters who would now swear allegiance to the United States and perform two years of public service.
1975   Administrators for Rhodes Scholarships announce the decision to begin offering fellowships to women.

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