Thursday, February 11, 2016

What Happened This Day In History - February 11

February 11
660 BCTraditional founding of Japan by Emperor Jimmu Tenno.
1531Henry VIII is recognized as the supreme head of the Church of England.
1805Sixteen-year-old Sacajawea, the Shoshoni guide for Lewis & Clark, gives birth to a son, with Meriwether Lewis serving as midwife.
1809Robert Fulton patents the steamboat.
1815News of the Treaty of Ghent, ending the War of 1812, finally reaches the United States.
185814-year-old Bernadette Soubirous, a French miller’s daughter, claims to have seen an apparition of the Virgin Mary at Lourdes.
1903Congress passes the Expedition Act, giving antitrust cases priority in the courts.
1904President Theodore Roosevelt proclaims strict neutrality for the United States in the Russo-Japanese War.
1910Theodore Roosevelt Jr. and Eleanor Alexander announce their wedding date–June 20, 1910.
1926The Mexican government nationalizes all church property.
1936The Reich arrests 150 Catholic youth leaders in Berlin.
1939The Negrin government returns to Madrid, Spain.
1942The German battleships GneisenauScharnhorst and Prinz Eugen begin their famed channel dash from the French port of Brest. Their journey takes them through the English Channel on their way back to Germany.
1945The meeting of the President Franklin Roosevelt, Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Marshal Joseph Stalin in Yalta, adjourns.
1951U.N. forces push north across the 38th parallel for the second time in theKorean War.
1953Walt Disney’s film Peter Pan premieres.
1954A 75,000-watt light bulb is lit at the Rockefeller Center in New York, to commemorate the 75th anniversary of Thomas Edison’s first light bulb.
1955Nationalist Chinese complete the evacuation of the Tachen Islands.
1959Iran turns down Soviet aid in favor of a U.S. proposal for aid.
1962Poet and novelist Sylvia Plath commits suicide in London at age 30.
1964Cambodian Prince Sihanouk blames the United States for a South Vietnamese air raid on a village in his country.
1965President Lyndon Johnson orders air strikes against targets in North Vietnam, in retaliation for guerrilla attacks on the American military in South Vietnam.
1966Vice President Hubert Humphrey begins a tour of Vietnam.
1974Communist-led rebels shower artillery fire into a crowded area of Phnom Pehn, killing 139 and injuring 46 others.
1975Mrs. Margaret Thatcher becomes the first woman to lead the British Conservative Party.
1990South African political leader Nelson Mandela is released from prison in Paarl, South Africa, after serving more than 27 years of a life sentence.

Born on February 11
1535Gregory XIV, Roman Catholic Pope.
1800William Henry Fox Talbot, photography pioneer, produced the first book with photographic illustrations (The Pencil of Nature).
1833Melville Weston Fuller, eighth U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice.
1847Thomas Alva Edison, prolific American inventor who jointly or singly held over 1,300 patents.
1855Josephine Marshall Jewell Dodge, American educator, pioneer in the concept of day nurseries for children.
1898Leo Szilard, physicist, instrumental in the Manhattan Project.
1907William J. Levitt, U.S. businessman and community builder who led the postwar housing revolutions with his Levittowns.
1908Phillipe Dunne, screenwriter and director (How Green Was My Valley).
1912Roy Fuller, poet and novelist.

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