Today in History
October 21
October 21
1096 | Seljuk Turks at Chivitot slaughter thousands of German crusaders. | |
1529 | The Pope names Henry VIII of England Defender of the Faith after defending the seven sacraments against Luther. | |
1600 | Tokugawa Ieyasu defeats his enemies in battle and affirms his position as Japan’s most powerful warlord. | |
1790 | The Tricolor is chosen as the official flag of France. | |
1805 | Vice Admiral and Viscount Horatio Nelson wins his greatest victory over a Franco-Spanish fleet in the Battle of Trafalgar, fought off Cape Trafalgar, Spain. Nelson is fatally wounded in the battle, but lives long enough to see victory. | |
1837 | Under a flag of truce during peace talks, U.S. troops siege the Indian Seminole Chief Osceola in Florida. | |
1861 | The Battle of Ball’s Bluff, Va. begins, a disastrous Union defeat which sparks Congressional investigations. | |
1867 | Many leaders of the Kiowa, Comanche and Kiowa-Apache sign a peace treaty at Medicine Lodge, Kan. Comanche Chief Quanah Parker refused to accept the treaty terms. | |
1872 | The U.S. Naval Academy admits John H. Conyers, the first African American to be accepted. | |
1879 | After 14 months of testing, Thomas Edison first demonstrates his electric lamp, hoping to one day compete with gaslight. | |
1904 | Panamanians clash with U.S. Marines in Panama in a brief uprising. | |
1917 | The first U.S. troops enter the front lines at Sommerviller under French command. | |
1939 | As war heats up with Germany, the British war cabinet holds its first meeting in the underground war room in London. | |
1940 | Ernest Hemingway’s novel For Whom the Bell Tolls is published. | |
1942 | Eight American and British officers land from a submarine on an Algerian beach to take measure of Vichy French to the Operation Torch landings. | |
1950 | North Korean Premier Kim Il-Sung establishes a new capital at Sinuiju on the Yalu River opposite the Chinese City of Antung. | |
1959 | The Guggenheim Museum, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, opens in Manhattan. | |
1961 | Bob Dylan records his first album in a single day at a cost of $400. | |
1967 | The "March on the Pentagon," protesting American involvement in Vietnam , draws 50,000 protesters. | |
1969 | Israel’s Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan resigns over disagreements with Prime Minister Menachem Begin over policies related to the Palestinians. | |
1983 | The United States sends a ten-ship task force to Grenada. | |
1994 | North Korea and the US sign an agreement requiring North Korea to halts its nuclear weapons program and agree to international inspections. | |
Born on October 21
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1760 | Katsushika Hokusai, Japanese printmaker. | |
1772 | Samuel Taylor Coleridge, English poet ("The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," "Kubla Khan"). | |
1833 | Alfred Nobel, inventor of dynamite and founder of the Nobel Prizes. | |
1917 | Dizzy Gillespie, jazz trumpeter. | |
1929 | Ursula K. Le Guin, science fiction writer (The Left Hand of Darkness) | |
1938 | Carl Brewer, Canadian hockey player; won three Stanley Cups (1962-64) as a member of the Toronto Maple Leafs. | |
1950 | Ronald McNair, astronaut; died when Space Shuttle Challenger exploded shortly after launch on Jan. 2, 1986. | |
1952 | Patti Davis, actress, author; daughter of former US Pres. Ronald Reagan. | |
1956 | Carrie Fisher, actress, author, screenwriter; best known as Prince Leia in the original Star Wars trilogy and he bestselling novel Postcards from the Edge; daughter of singer Eddie Fisher and actress Debbie Reynolds. | |
1969 | Prince Salman bin Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, Crown Prince of Bahrain; presently (2013) First Deputy Prime Minister and Deputy Supreme Commander, he is heir apparent to the Bahrain kingdom. |
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