This day in history

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Richard Frost
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This day in history

Post by Richard Frost » Thu Dec 29 2022 11:16am

December 29 1940

London is devastated by German air raid

On the evening of December 29, 1940, London suffers its most devastating air raid when Germans firebomb the city. Hundreds of fires caused by the exploding bombs engulfed areas of London, but firefighters showed a valiant indifference to the bombs falling around them and saved much of the city from destruction. The next day, a newspaper photo of St. Paul’s Cathedral standing undamaged amid the smoke and flames seemed to symbolize the capital’s unconquerable spirit during the Battle of Britain.

In May and June 1940, Holland, Belgium, Norway, and France fell one by one to the German Wehrmacht, leaving Great Britain alone in its resistance against Nazi leader Adolf Hitler’s plans for world domination. The British Expeditionary Force escaped the continent with an impromptu evacuation from Dunkirk, but they left behind the tanks and artillery needed to defend their homeland against invasion. With British air and land forces outnumbered by their German counterparts, and U.S. aid not yet begun, it seemed certain that Britain would soon follow the fate of France. However, Winston Churchill, the new British prime minister, promised his nation and the world that Britain would “never surrender,” and the British people mobilized behind their defiant leader.

On June 5, the Luftwaffe began attacks on English Channel ports and convoys, and on June 30 Germany seized control of the undefended Channel Islands. On July 10–the first day of the Battle of Britain according to the RAF—the Luftwaffe intensified its bombing of British ports. Six days later, Hitler ordered the German army and navy to prepare for Operation Sea Lion. On July 19, the German leader made a speech in Berlin in which he offered a conditional peace to the British government: Britain would keep its empire and be spared from invasion if its leaders accepted the German domination of the European continent. A simple radio message from Lord Halifax swept the proposal away.

Germany needed to master the skies over Britain if it was to transport safely its superior land forces across the 21-mile English Channel. On August 8, the Luftwaffe intensified its raids against the ports in an attempt to draw the British air fleet out into the open. Simultaneously, the Germans began bombing Britain’s sophisticated radar defence system and RAF-fighter airfields. During August, as many as 1,500 German aircraft crossed the Channel daily, often blotting out the sun as they flew against their British targets. Despite the odds against them, the outnumbered RAF fliers successfully resisted the massive German air invasion, relying on radar technology, more manoeuvrable aircraft, and exceptional bravery. For every British plane shot down, two Luftwaffe warplanes were destroyed.

At the end of August, the RAF launched a retaliatory air raid against Berlin. Hitler was enraged and ordered the Luftwaffe to shift its attacks from RAF installations to London and other British cities. On September 7, the Blitz against London began, and after a week of almost ceaseless attacks several areas of London were in flames and the royal palace, churches, and hospitals had all been hit. However, the concentration on London allowed the RAF to recuperate elsewhere, and on September 15 the RAF launched a vigorous counterattack, downing 56 German aircraft in two dogfights that lasted less than an hour.

The costly raid convinced the German high command that the Luftwaffe could not achieve air supremacy over Britain, and the next day daylight attacks were replaced with night time sorties as a concession of defeat. On September 19, Nazi leader Adolf Hitler postponed indefinitely “Operation Sea Lion”–the amphibious invasion of Britain. The Battle of Britain, however, continued.

In October, Hitler ordered a massive bombing campaign against London and other cities to crush British morale and force an armistice. Despite significant loss of life and tremendous material damage to Britain’s cities, the country’s resolve remained unbroken. The ability of Londoners to maintain their composure had much to do with Britain’s survival during this trying period. As American journalist Edward R. Murrow reported, “Not once have I heard a man, woman, or child suggest that Britain should throw her hand.” In May 1941, the air raids essentially ceased as German forces massed near the border of the USSR.

By denying the Germans a quick victory, depriving them of forces to be used in their invasion of the USSR, and proving to America that increased arms support for Britain was not in vain, the outcome of the Battle of Britain greatly changed the course of World War II. As Churchill said of the RAF fliers during the Battle of Britain, “Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.”
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Re: This day in history

Post by Richard Frost » Fri Dec 30 2022 9:48am

30th December 1922

USSR established

In post-revolutionary Russia, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) is established, comprising a confederation of Russia, Belorussia, Ukraine and the Transcaucasian Federation (divided in 1936 into the Georgian, Azerbaijan and Armenian republics). Also known as the Soviet Union, the new communist state was the successor to the Russian Empire and the first country in the world to be based on Marxist socialism.

During the Russian Revolution of 1917 and subsequent three-year Russian Civil War, the Bolshevik Party under Vladimir Lenin dominated the soviet forces, a coalition of workers’ and soldiers’ committees that called for the establishment of a socialist state in the former Russian Empire. In the USSR, all levels of government were controlled by the Communist Party, and the party’s politburo, with its increasingly powerful general secretary, effectively ruled the country. Soviet industry was owned and managed by the state, and agricultural land was divided into state-run collective farms.

In the decades after it was established, the Russian-dominated Soviet Union grew into one of the world’s most powerful and influential states and eventually encompassed 15 republics—Russia, Ukraine, Georgia, Belorussia, Uzbekistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia. In 1991, the Soviet Union was dissolved following the collapse of its communist government.

1460
The Duke of York is defeated and killed by Lancastrians at the Battle of Wakefield.

2006
Saddam Hussein, former Iraq dictator, is executed by hanging for crimes committed against his own people during his rule.
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Re: This day in history

Post by Richard Frost » Sat Dec 31 2022 11:25am

31st December

192 Roman Emperor Commodus survives poisoning attempt by his mistress only to be strangled in the bath in assassination plot

406 80,000 Vandals, Alans and Suebians cross the Rhine at Mainz, beginning invasion of Gallia

870 Skirmish at Englefield: Ethelred of Wessex beats Danish invasion army

1229 James I of Aragon the Conqueror enters Medina Mayurqa (Palma) consummating Christian conquest of the island of Majorca

1492 100,000 Jews expelled from Sicily

1660 James II of England is named Duke of Normandy by Louis XIV of France.

1670 France & England sign Boyne-treaty

1695 A window tax is imposed in England, causing many shopkeepers to brick up their windows to avoid the tax.

1711 John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough, fired as English army commander

1744 English astronomer James Bradley announces discovery of Earth's nutation motion (wobble)

1758 British expeditionary army occupies Goree (Dakar) Senegal

1775 Battle of Quebec: American Continental Army led by Richard Montgomery is defeated trying to take the British stronghold of Quebec City in the American Revolutionary War, General Montgomery is killed and Benedict Arnold is injured

1779 British fleet beat Dutch Merchant vessels

1857 Queen Victoria chooses Ottawa as new capital of Canada

1879 Edison gives 1st public demonstration of his incandescent lamp

1906 French, British and Italian treaty concerning rights on Abyssinia

1911 Marie Curie receives her second Nobel Prize, this time in Chemistry, for her work with radioactivity

1923 BBC begins using Big Ben chime ID

1935 Charles Darrow patents the board game Monopoly, goes on to be the 1st millionaire game designer

1945 Ratification of United Nations Charter completed

1951 1st battery to convert radioactive energy to electricity announced

1964 Donald Campbell (UK) sets world water speed record (276.33 mph)

1970 Paul McCartney files a lawsuit to dissolve The Beatles

1972 Martin McGuinness is arrested and held under the new Republic of Ireland legislation

1983 Brunei gains complete independence from Britain

1997 Microsoft buys Hotmail email service for $400 million and re-launches it as MSN Hotmail

1999 Boris Yeltsin resigns as President of Russia, leaving Prime Minister Vladimir Putin as acting President
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his day in history

Post by Richard Frost » Mon Jan 02 2023 9:26am

2nd January

1602 Spanish force in Ireland surrender to the English army at Kinsdale

1757 British troops occupy Calcutta India

1814 Lord Byron completes "The Corsair"

1818 Lord Byron completes "Childe Harold's Pilgrimage" (4th canto)

1818 The British Institution of Civil Engineers is founded.

1833 Re-establishment of British rule on the Falklands.

1879 British battleship Thunder explodes in Gulf of Ismid, 9 die

1885 General Wolseley receives last distress signal of General Gordon in Khartoum

1913 Mahatma Gandhi leaves the Tolstoy Farm in Transvaal, South Africa

1941 World War II: German bombing severely damages the Llandaff Cathedral in Cardiff, Wales

1944 1st use of helicopters during warfare (British Atlantic patrol)

1945 Allied air raid on Nuremberg

1947 Mahatma Gandhi begins march for peace in East Bengal

1968 Cecil Day-Lewis is appointed British Poet Laureate by Queen Elizabeth II

1968 Christiaan Barnard performs the world's second heart transplant on Philip Blaiberg

1969 Australian Rupert Murdoch gains control of the 'News of the World'

1969 The Beatles begin rehearsals, while being filmed, for the Let It Be project at Twickenham Film Studios, London

1971 Spectator crush at Ibrox Park in Glasgow, Scotland as Rangers supporters leave the ground with home team 0-1 behind to Old Firm rivals Celtic; 66 deaths and more than 200 injuries; Rangers score late for 1-1

1972 An anti-internment rally is held in Belfast, North Ireland

1972 Australian Open Women's Tennis: Virginia Wade of England wins her first Grand Slam title; beats home favourite Evonne Goolagong 6-4, 6-4

1972 Mariner 9 begins mapping Mars

1979 Sid Vicious' trial for murder of girlfriend Nancy Spungen begins

1980 British Steel workers go on a national strike

1982 Australian Open Women's Tennis: Martina Navratilova wins her 1st of 3 Australian singles crowns; beats Chris Evert-Lloyd 6-7, 6-4, 7-5

1993 Opposing factions in the Bosnian conflict hold meetings with the aim of ending the nine month conflict

1996 The US deploys troops in Northern Bosnia with the intention of maintaining order and peace between Bosnian Serbs and Muslims

2004 Stardust successfully flies past Comet Wild 2, collecting samples that it will return to Earth two years later

2014 Raúl Castro gives a speech commemorating the 55th anniversary of the Cuban revolution and warns of "neo-liberal and neo-colonial thinking" entering the country

2016 Saudi Arabia executes 47 alleged terrorists, including Shia cleric Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr

2018 Storm Eleanor forms near Ireland then sweeps across the UK and Western Europe in next few days

2021 US President Donald Trump says to Georgia's secretary of state Brad Raffensperger "I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have,” in recording released by the Washington Post

2022 Israel becomes one of the first countries to offer a fourth vaccine dose against COVID-19 amid an Omicron surge

2022 US epidemiologist Dr. Anthony Fauci says focus should be on hospitalizations not case numbers amid huge surge in Omicron COVID-19 cases. Cases up 202%, hospitalizations up 30% in US. [1]
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Re: This day in history

Post by Richard Frost » Tue Jan 03 2023 12:37pm

1431 Joan of Arc handed over to Bishop Pierre Cauchon

1496 Leonardo da Vinci unsuccessfully tests a flying machine

1521 Martin Luther is excommunicated by Pope Leo X from the Roman Catholic Church for failing to recant parts of his Ninety-five Theses which started the Protestant Reformation

1746 "Bonnie Prince Charlie", Prince Charles Edward Stuart's army leaves Glasgow, Scotland [NS=Jan 14]

1777 General George Washington's revolutionary army defeats British forces at Battle of Princeton, New Jersey

1815 France, the United Kingdom, and Austria form an alliance against Russia and Prussia

1825 Scottish factory owner Robert Owen buys 30,000 acres in Indiana as site for New Harmony utopian community

1833 Britain seizes control of Falkland Islands in South Atlantic

1842 Charles Dickens and his wife Catherine leave Liverpool for America on board the RMS Britannia

1910 British miners strike for 8 hour working day

1925 Benito Mussolini dissolves the Italian parliament and proclaims himself dictator of Italy, taking the title "Il Duce" (the Leader)

1944 World War II: Top Ace Major Pappy Boyington is shot down in his Corsair by Japanese Captain Masajiro Kawato flying a Zero

1951 9 Jewish Kremlin physicians "exposed" as British/US agents

1962 Pope John XXIII excommunicates Fidel Castro

1972 The Irish Republican Army (IRA) explodes a bomb in Callender Street, Belfast, injuring over 60 people

1977 Former Home Secretary Roy Jenkins announces his intention to be Britain's first President of the European Commission

1985 Israel government confirms resettlement of 10,000 Ethiopian Jews

1988 Margaret Thatcher becomes longest-serving British PM this century

1991 8 Iraqi embassy officials are expelled from the UK

2004 Flight 604, a Boeing 737 owned by Flash Airlines, an Egyptian airliner, plunges into the Red Sea, killing all 148 people on board.

2007 National Express has its worst ever coach crash just outside Heathrow Airport.

2009 Israeli ground forces invade Gaza.

2009 The Bitcoin network is created as the first block of the digital currency is mined by a person or group of people using the name Satoshi Nakamoto

2018 First bionic hand with a sense of touch, for use outside a lab unveiled in Rome

2019 Chinese Chang'e-4 spacecraft becomes the first ever to touch down on the far side of the Moon
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Re: This day in history

Post by Richard Frost » Thu Jan 05 2023 3:24pm

1463 French poet Francois Villon banished from Paris

1477 Battle of Nancy: Swiss Confederacy led by René II decisively defeats the Duchy of Burgundy, 7,000+ killed including the Duke of Burgundy Charles the Bold

1527 Felix Manz, a leader of the Anabaptist congregation in Zürich, is executed by drowning. (b. 1498)

1709 The Great Frost begins during the night, a sudden cold snap that remains Europe's coldest ever winter. Thousands are killed across the continent and crops fail in France.

1781 British naval expedition led by Benedict Arnold burns Richmond, Virginia

1836 Davy Crockett arrives in Nacogdoches, Texas, to aid the revolution

1840 Records show 95,820 licensed public houses in England on this date

1841 James Clark Ross (UK) is 1st to enter pack ice near Ross Ice Shelf

1886 "Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde" by Robert Louis Stevenson published by Longmans, Green & Co.

1895 French Captain Alfred Dreyfus, convicted of treason, publicly stripped of his rank; later exonerated

1900 Irish leader John Edward Redmond calls for a revolt against British rule

1918 British premier Lloyd George demand for unified peace

1919 Left-wing Spartacus organization instigates a revolt in Berlin; terrified by the spread of Bolshevism, German troops brutally suppress the uprising

1930 Bonnie Parker meets Clyde Barrow for the first time at Clarence Clay's house

270 the following day) make then record stand of 346 for 6th wicket in 3rd Test vs England in Melbourne

1940 FCC hears the 1st transmission of FM radio with clear, static-free signal

1941 British Australian troops conquer Bardia, Libya

1975 14 die when British freighter "Lake Illawarra" rams pylon bridge between Derwent & Hobart, Tasmania & ship sinks

1976 In retaliation for the Reavey and O'Dowd killings, the South Armagh Republican Action Force shoot dead 10 Protestant civilians after stopping their minibus in County Armagh

1981 Peter Sutcliffe, a truck driver confesses that he is the "Yorkshire Ripper" and murdered 13 women

1985 Thousands of Jewish refugees are airlifted from Sudan to Israel

2001 A report reveals that doctor and former GP Harold Shipman has potentially killed hundreds of patients

2005 Eris, the largest known dwarf planet in the solar system, is discovered by the team of Michael E. Brown, Chad Trujillo, and David L. Rabinowitz using images originally taken on October 21, 2003, at the Palomar Observatory.

2020 Chinese professor Zhang Yongzhen publishes the first SARS-CoV-2 genome map online, allowing health professionals worldwide to identify COVID-19

2020 Iran pulls out of the 2015 nuclear deal, will not limit its uranium enrichment

2021 Daily new cases of COVID-19 top 60,000 in the UK as data reveals one in fifty in England had COVID-19 within the last week
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This day in history

Post by Richard Frost » Fri Jan 06 2023 11:18am

Samuel Morse unveils the telegraph, revolutionizing communication

On January 6, 1838, Samuel Morse’s telegraph system is demonstrated for the first time at the Speedwell Iron Works in Morristown, New Jersey. The telegraph, a device which used electric impulses to transmit encoded messages over a wire, would eventually revolutionize long-distance communication, reaching the height of its popularity in the 1920s and 1930s.

Samuel Finley Breese Morse was born April 27, 1791, in Charlestown, Massachusetts. He attended Yale University, where he was interested in art, as well as electricity, still in its infancy at the time. After college, Morse became a painter. In 1832, while sailing home from Europe, he heard about the newly discovered electromagnet and came up with an idea for an electric telegraph. He had no idea that other inventors were already at work on the concept.

Morse spent the next several years developing a prototype and took on two partners, Leonard Gale and Alfred Vail, to help him. In 1838, he demonstrated his invention using Morse code, in which dots and dashes represented letters and numbers. In 1843, Morse finally convinced a skeptical Congress to fund the construction of the first telegraph line in the United States, from Washington, D.C., to Baltimore. In May 1844, Morse sent the first official telegram over the line, with the message: “What hath God wrought!”

Over the next few years, private companies, using Morse’s patent, set up telegraph lines around the Northeast. In 1851, the New York and Mississippi Valley Printing Telegraph Company was founded; it would later change its name to Western Union. In 1861, Western Union finished the first transcontinental line across the United States. Five years later, the first successful permanent line across the Atlantic Ocean was constructed and by the end of the century telegraph systems were in place in Africa, Asia and Australia.

Because telegraph companies typically charged by the word, telegrams became known for their succinct prose–whether they contained happy or sad news. The word “stop,” which was free, was used in place of a period, for which there was a charge. In 1933, Western Union introduced singing telegrams. During World War II, Americans came to dread the sight of Western Union couriers because the military used telegrams to inform families about soldiers’ deaths.

Over the course of the 20th century, telegraph messages were largely replaced by cheap long-distance phone service, faxes and email. Western Union delivered its final telegram in January 2006.

Samuel Morse died wealthy and famous in New York City on April 2, 1872, at age 80.

ALSO ON THIS DAY

2021, U.S. Capitol riot
On the afternoon of January 6, 2021, a mob of President Donald Trump’s supporters descend on the U.S. Capitol, attempting to interfere with the certification of electoral votes from the 2020 presidential election.

1412, Joan of Arc is born
Joan of Arc, the "Maid of Orléans," is believed to have been born on January 6, 1412. She lived only 19 years, but she would become a Roman Catholic saint and a national hero of France for her pivotal role in the Hundred Years’ War. Joan was born to Jacques d'Arc and Isabelle

1066, Harold II crowned king of England
Following the death of Edward the Confessor, Harold Godwineson, head of the most powerful noble family in England, is crowned King Harold II. On his deathbed, Edward supposedly designated Harold the royal heir, but this claim was disputed by William, duke of Normandy and cousin

Blizzard of 1996 begins
On January 6, 1996, snow begins falling in Washington, D.C., and up the Eastern seaboard, beginning a blizzard that kills 154 people and causes over $1 billion in damages before it ends. The Blizzard of 1996 began in typical fashion, as cold air from Canada pushed down
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Re: This day in history

Post by Richard Frost » Sat Jan 07 2023 11:51am

7th January

1325 Afonso IV succeeds Denis as King of Portugal

1558 Calais, last English possession in France, retaken by France

1601 Robert, Earl of Essex, leads revolt in London against Queen Elizabeth

1610 Galileo Galilei discovers the first three moons of Jupiter: Io, Europa & Ganymede

1618 Francis Bacon becomes Lord Chancellor of England

1698 Russian Tsar Peter the Great departs Netherlands for England

1714 Typewriter patented by Englishman Henry Mill (built years later)

1785 1st balloon flight across English Channel by Jean Pierre Blanchard and John Jeffries

1790 French Revolution: A major riot breaks out in Versailles as people demand lower bread prices

1835 HMS Beagle anchors off Chonos Archipelago

1904 Marconi Co establishes "CQD" as 1st international radio distress signal

1915 World War I: Germany's Kaiser Wilhelm approves strategic bombing of Britain, but forbids bombing London, fearing his relatives in the royal family might be killed

1922 The Anglo-Irish Treaty is ratified by Dail Eireann by a 64-57 vote

1927 Commercial transatlantic telephone service inaugurated between New York & London

1945 Lord Haw-Haw (William Joyce) reports total German victory in the Ardennes

1972 Discovery of the first black hole Cygnus X-1 in the constellation Cygnus reported in a paper in "Nature" by Louise Webster and Paul Murdin

1972 Iberian Airlines 'plane crashes into 800ft peak on island of Ibiza, 104 die

1973 Mark Essex's mass shooting comes to an end after he is shot by police more than 200 times on the roof of New Orlean's Holiday Inn hotel. He killed nine people, including five policeman.

1990 Tower of Pisa closed to the public after leaning too far

1998 Former White House intern Monica Lewinsky signs affidavit denying she had an affair with President Bill Clinton

1999 President Bill Clinton's Impeachment trial begins in the US Senate after the House voted to impeach him for lying about his affair with Monica Lewinsky

2015 Terrorist attack on the offices of satirical newspaper "Charlie Hebdo" in Paris kills 12 (including Jean Cabut and Stéphane Charbonnier), injures 11

2018 It snows in the Sahara desert - 15 inches reported in Aïn Séfra, Northwest Algeria

2019 Amazon overtakes Microsoft to become the world's most valuable listed company for the first time, worth $797 billion

2021 Elon Musk, co-founder of Tesla, becomes the world's richest man, worth $186 billion, overtaking Amazon founder Jeff Bezos

2021 Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg blocks President Donald Trump from Facebook and Instagram till January 20, following suspension of his other social media accounts the previous day

2021 WHO warns Europe needs to do more to "flatten the steep vertical line" of COVID-19 cases and control the spread of the new variant, with 230 million already living under lockdown
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This day in history

Post by Richard Frost » Sun Jan 08 2023 12:02pm

871 Battle of Ashdown: Ethelred I of Wessex and his brother Alfred the Great beat invading Danish army

1310 The Great Frost: in London the Thames river froze so thickly bonfires were lit on it

1598 Jews are expelled from Genoa, Italy

1610 Simon Marius. a German astronomer, independently discovers the first three moons of Jupiter one day after Galileo

1746 "Bonnie Prince Charlie", Prince Charles Edward Stuart's troops occupy Stirling, Scotland [NS=Jan 19]

1806 Battle of Blaauwberg: British forces attack French vassal, the Batavian Republic near Cape Town, modern day South Africa

1902 The United Irish League, a leading force for unification in all Ireland and independence from Britain, holds its convention in Dublin

1940 Britain's 1st WW II rationing (bacon, butter & sugar)

1962 Dutch express train crashes into slow commuter train, 93 die (Neth)

1968 Northern Ireland Prime Minister Terence O'Neill travels to Dublin to meet with Irish Prime Minister Jack Lynch to continue discussions on matters of joint interest to the two governments

1979 512 die as oil tanker Bantry Bay blows up

1989 Soviet Union promises to eliminate stockpiles of chemical weapon

2004 RMS Queen Mary 2, the largest passenger ship ever built, is christened by her namesake's granddaughter, Queen Elizabeth II

2020 Duke and Duchess of Sussex announce they are stepping back as "senior" royals, will work towards becoming financially independent

2021 Japan's Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga declares a state of emergency for Tokyo and surrounding areas after COVID-19 cases surge to their highest level

2021 Storm Filomena hits Spain with 50cm (20 inches) of snow falling on Madrid, resulting in four deaths and leaving thousands stranded

2021 Twitter bans US President Donald Trump permanently "due to the risk of further incitement of violence"

2021 US Speaker Nancy Pelosi demands President Donald Trump's resignation or he will face a second impeachment, while also calling for Vice President Mike Pence to invoke the 25th Amendment to remove him in the wake of the January 6 attack of the Capitol

2022 The United Kingdom passes 150,000 COVID-19 deaths, the first country in Europe and the seventh globally
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Re: This day in history

Post by Richard Frost » Tue Jan 10 2023 10:35am

49 BC Julius Caesar defies the Roman Senate and crosses the Rubicon, uttering "alea iacta est" (the die is cast), signalling the start of civil war which would lead to his appointment as Roman dictator for life

1642 King Charles I & family flee London for Oxford

1839 First tea from leaves of indigenous plants of Assam, India arrives in the United Kingdom [date approximate]

1840 Uniform Penny Post mail system starts throughout the United Kingdom an idea championed by Rowland Hill to increase the volume of mail and its availability to poorer classes

1863 1st underground railway opens in London

1897 Ukrainian bacteriologist Wademar Haffkine performs the first human trial for a vaccine for the plague on himself during the Bombay epidemic

1920 Inauguration of the League of Nations held in Paris

1928 Soviet Union orders exile of Marxist Revolutionary Leon Trotsky

1944 British troops conquer Maungdaw, Burma

1946 UN General Assembly meets for 1st time in London

1957 After Anthony Eden's resignation Harold Macmillan becomes Prime Minister of the United Kingdom

1971 Irish Republican Army (IRA) carry out a 'punishment attack', tarring and feathering 4 men accused of criminal activities in Belfast

1979 The Sun paper headline is 'Crisis? What Crisis?' as UK Prime Minister James Callaghan denies that the country is in chaos during the 'Winter of Discontent' strike wave

1990 China lifts martial law, imposed after the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989

1994 Trial of Lorena Bobbitt who cut off her husband's penis, begins

1994 Ukraine says it will give up world's 3rd largest nuclear arsenal

2001 A large piece of the chalk cliff at Beachy Head collapses into the sea.

2019 Oceans warming faster than previous thought due to fossil fuel burning, according to data published in journal "Science"

2022 US reports 1.34 million new COVID-19 infections, a global record, with Omicron variant accounting for an estimated 95% of cases [1]
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