Today in History
October 11
October 11
1531 | The Catholics defeat the Protestants at Kappel during Switzerland’s second civil war. | |
1540 | Charles V of Milan puts his son Philip in control. | |
1727 | George II of England crowned. | |
1795 | In graditude for putting down a rebellion in the streets of Paris, France’s National Convention appoints Napoleon Bonaparte second in command of the Army of the Interior. | |
1862 | The Confederate Congress in Richmond passes a draft law allowing anyone owning 20 or more slaves to be exempt from military service. This law confirms many southerners opinion that they are in a ‘rich man’s war and a poor man’s fight.’ | |
1877 | Outlaw Wild Bill Longley, who killed at least a dozen men, is hanged, but it took two tries; on the first try, the rope slipped and his knees drug the ground. | |
1899 | South African Boers, settler from the Netherlands, declare war on Great Britain. | |
1906 | San Francisco school board orders the segregation of Oriental schoolchildren, inciting Japanese outrage. | |
1915 | Despite international protests, Edith Cavell, an English nurse in Belgium, is executed by Germans for aiding the escape of Allied prisoners. | |
1942 | In the Battle of Cape Esperance, near the Solomon Islands, U.S. cruisers and destroyers decisively defeat a Japanese task force in a night surface encounter. | |
1945 | Negotiations between Nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek and Communist leader Mao Tse-tung break down. Nationalist and Communist troops are soon engaged in a civil war. | |
1950 | The Federal Communications Commission authorizes the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) to begin commercial color TV broadcasts. | |
1962 | Pope John XXIII opens the 21st Ecumenical Council (Vatican II) with a call for Christian unity. This is the largest gathering of the Roman Catholic hierarchy in history; among delegate-observers are representatives of major Protestant denominations, in itself a sign of sweeping change. | |
1968 | Apollo 7, with three men aboard, is successfully launched from Cape Kennedy. | |
1972 | A French mission in Vietnam is destroyed by a U.S. bombing raid. | |
1972 | Race riot breaks out aboard carrier USS Kitty Hawk off Vietnam duringOperation Linebacker. | |
1975 | Saturday Night Live comedy-variety show premiers on NBC, with guest host comedian George Carlin and special guests Janis Ian, Andy Kaufman and Billy Preston; at this writing (2013) the show is still running. | |
1976 | The so-called "Gang of Four," Chairman Mao Tse-tung’s widow and three associates, are arrested in Peking, setting in motion an extended period of turmoil in the Chinese Communist Party. | |
1984 | Astronaut Kathryn D. Sullivan, part of the crew of Space Shuttle Challenger, becomes the first American woman to walk in space. | |
1987 | Operation Pawan by Indian Peace Keeping Force begins in Sri Lanka; thousands of Tamil citizens, along with hundreds of Tamil Tigers militants and Indian Army soldiers will die in the operation. | |
1991 | Confirmation hearings for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas begin. | |
2000 | NASA launches its 100th Space Shuttle mission. | |
2001 | The Polaroid Corporation, which had provided shutterbugs with photo prints in minutes with its "instant cameras" since 1947, files for bankruptcy. | |
Born on October 11
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1820 | Sir George Williams, founder of the YMCA. | |
1844 | Henry Heinz, manufacturer, founder of H.J. Heinz Co. | |
1884 | Eleanor Roosevelt, wife of President Franklin Roosevelt. | |
1885 | Francois Mauriac, Nobel Prize-winning novelist. | |
1887 | Willie Hoppe, billiards champion. | |
1910 | Joseph Alsop, American journalist. | |
1918 | Jerome Robbins, choreographer, won Oscar for West Side Story. | |
1925 | Elmore Leonard, author, screenwriter (Get Shorty, Mr. Majestyk). | |
1928 | Roscoe Robinson Jr., first African American to attain 4-star general status in the US Army. | |
1932 | Dottie West, influential female country singer, songwriter; won Grammy for "Here Comes My Baby Back Again" (1965). | |
1936 | James M. McPherson, historian specializing in the American Civil War; won Pulitzer Prize for Battle Cry of Freedom (1989). | |
1946 | Daryl Hall, singer, songwriter, musician, producer; lead vocalist of Hall & Oates ("Rich Girl," "Maneater"). | |
1957 | Paul Sereno, paleontologist; discovered several new dinosaur species (including Sarcosuchus imperator, "SuperCroc") on various continents. |
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