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View Full Version : October 28th 2014 - This Date in History.



henric
10-27-2014, 10:31 PM
22861



Events:C/P.

97 – Emperor Nerva is forced by the Praetorian Guard to adopt general Marcus Ulpius Trajanus as his heir and successor.
306 – Maxentius is proclaimed Roman Emperor.
312 – Battle of the Milvian Bridge: Constantine I defeats Maxentius, becoming the sole Roman emperor.
456 – The Visigoths brutally sack the Suebi's capital of Braga (Portugal), and the town's churches are burnt to the ground.
969 – Byzantine general Michael Bourtzes seizes part of Antioch's fortifications. The capture of the city from the Arabs is completed three days later, when reinforcements under Peter Phokas arrive.
1061 – Empress Agnes, acting as regent for her son, brings about the election of bishop Cadalus, the antipope Honorius II.
1344 – The lower town of Smyrna is captured by Crusaders.
1420 – Beijing is officially designated the capital of the Ming dynasty on the same year that the Forbidden City, the seat of government, is completed.
1492 – Christopher Columbus discovered Cuba on his first voyage to the New World. [1]
1516 – Battle of Yaunis Khan: Turkish forces under the Grand Vizier Sinan Pasha defeat the Mamluks near Gaza.
1531 – Battle of Amba Sel: Imam Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi again defeats the army of Lebna Dengel, Emperor of Ethiopia. The southern part of Ethiopia falls under Imam Ahmad's control.
1538 – The first university in the New World (in present-day Dominican Republic), the Universidad Santo Tomás de Aquino, is established.
1628 – French Wars of Religion: The Siege of La Rochelle, which had lasted for 14 months, ends with the surrender of the Huguenots.
1636 – A vote of the Great and General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony establishes the first college in what would become the United States, today known as Harvard University.
1664 – The Duke of York and Albany's Maritime Regiment of Foot, later to be known as the Royal Marines, is established.
1707 – The 1707 Hōei earthquake causes more than 5,000 deaths in Honshu, Shikoku and Kyūshū, Japan
1775 – American Revolutionary War: A British proclamation forbids residents from leaving Boston.
1776 – American Revolutionary War: Battle of White Plains: British Army forces arrive at White Plains, attack and capture Chatterton Hill from the Americans.
1834 – The Battle of Pinjarra is fought in the Swan River Colony in present-day Pinjarra, Western Australia. Between 14 and 40 Aborigines are killed by British colonists.
1835 – The United Tribes of New Zealand is established with the signature of the Declaration of Independence.
1848 – The first railroad in Spain between Barcelona and Mataró is opened.
1864 – American Civil War: The Battle of Fair Oaks & Darbytown Road (also known as the Second Battle of Fair Oaks) ends: Union forces under General Ulysses S. Grant withdraw from Fair Oaks, Virginia, after failing to breach the Confederate defenses around Richmond, Virginia.
1886 – In New York Harbor, President Grover Cleveland dedicates the Statue of Liberty.
1891 – The Mino-Owari earthquake, the largest inland earthquake in Japan's history, strikes Gifu Prefecture.
1893 – Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 6 in B Minor, Pathétique, receives its première performance in St. Petersburg, only nine days before the composer's death.
1904 – Panama and Uruguay establish diplomatic links.
1915 – Richard Strauss conducts the first performance of his tone poem Eine Alpensinfonie in Berlin.
1918 – World War I: Czechoslovakia is granted independence from Austria-Hungary marking the beginning of an independent Czechoslovak state, after 300 years.
1918 – A new Polish government in Western Galicia is established.
1919 – The U.S. Congress passes the Volstead Act over President Woodrow Wilson's veto, paving the way for Prohibition to begin the following January.
1922 – March on Rome: Italian fascists led by Benito Mussolini march on Rome and take over the Italian government.
1928 – Declaration of the Youth Pledge in Indonesia, the first time Indonesia Raya, now the national anthem, was sung.
1929 – Black Monday, a day in the Wall Street Crash of 1929, which also saw major stock market upheaval.
1940 – World War II: Greece rejects Italy's ultimatum. Italy invades Greece through Albania, marking Greece's entry into World War II.
1942 – The Alaska Highway (Alcan Highway) is completed through Canada to Fairbanks, Alaska.
1948 – Swiss chemist Paul Müller is awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his discovery of the insecticidal properties of DDT.
1958 – John XXIII is elected Pope.
1962 – End of Cuban missile crisis: Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev orders the removal of Soviet missiles from Cuba.
1964 – Vietnam War: U.S. officials deny any involvement in bombing North Vietnam.
1965 – Nostra Aetate, the "Declaration on the Relation of the Church with Non-Christian Religions" of the Second Vatican Council, is promulgated by Pope Paul VI; it absolves the Jews of responsibility for the death of Jesus, reversing Innocent III's 760 year-old declaration.
1965 – Construction on the St. Louis Arch is completed.
1971 – Britain launches the satellite Prospero into low Earth orbit atop a Black Arrow carrier rocket, the only British satellite to date launched by a British rocket.
1982 – The Spanish Socialist Workers' Party wins elections, leading to the first Socialist government in Spain after death of Franco. Felipe González becomes Prime Minister-elect.
1990 – The Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic holds the first multiparty legislature election in the country's history.
1995 – Two hundred eighty-nine people are killed and 265 injured in Baku Metro fire, the deadliest subway disaster.
1998 – An Air China jetliner is hijacked by disgruntled pilot Yuan Bin and flown to Taiwan.
2005 – Plame affair: Lewis Libby, Vice-president Dick Cheney's chief of staff, is indicted in the Valerie Plame case. Libby resigns later that day.
2006 – The funeral service takes place for those executed at Bykivnia forest, outside Kiev, Ukraine. Eight hundred seventeen Ukrainian civilians (out of some 100,000) executed by Bolsheviks at Bykivnia in 1930s – early 1940s are reburied.
2006 – A group of ferocious activists of Bangladesh Awami League attacked one of their rival political party meeting in Dhaka with oars and sculls and killed their 14 activists.
2007 – Cristina Fernández de Kirchner becomes the first woman elected President of Argentina.
2009 – The 28 October 2009 Peshawar bombing kills 117 and wounds 213.
2009 – NASA successfully launches the Ares I-X mission, the only rocket launch for its later-cancelled Constellation program.
2013 – Five people are killed and 38 are injured after a car crashes into barriers just outside the Forbidden City in Tiananmen Square, Beijing, China.

henric
10-27-2014, 10:34 PM
22862



Today's Canadian Headline....

1864 PROVINCES DRAFT BLUEPRINT FOR UNION
Quebec Quebec - Quebec Conference adjourns with a celebratory banquet after weeks of discussion and debate. The delegates from Canada, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and PEI summarize proceedings in a blueprint for Confederation called Seventy-Two Resolutions (Quebec Resolutions), which are sent to the British Parliament and the provincial legislatures for approval; it will take two more years before the Confederation proposal is approved.

1830
Dresden Ontario - Josiah Henson 1789-1883 arrives in Upper Canada from Maryland with his wife and four children on the Underground Railway. The escaped American slave becomes pastor of a local church and starts a technical school. He is the model for the hero of Harriet Beecher Stowe's famous novel Uncle Tom's Cabin, the book that Abraham Lincoln said started the US Civil War.



In Other Events....

1997 Nashville Tennessee - Shania Twain's single 'Love Gets Me Every Time' certified Gold.
1992 Ottawa Ontario - Statistics Canada reports more children studying French; 2 million anglophones; plus 300,000 in immersion courses.
1987 Montreal Quebec - Tim Wallach of the Expos named National League Player of the Year.
1980 Ottawa Ontario - Pierre Elliott Trudeau 1919- unveils the National Energy Program (NEP) in the new federal budget; intended to provide oil self-sufficiency and greater Canadian ownership; grants to encourage drilling in remote areas, new PIP, PGRT and export taxes, expanded role for Petro-Canada.
1977 Ottawa Ontario - Pierre Elliott Trudeau 1919- confirms to the House of Commons that the RCMP entered a Montreal office in 1973 without a warrant to copy the membership lists of the Parti Québécois.
1977 New York City - Toronto rocker Neil Young releases his 'Decade' album.
1975 Ottawa Ontario - Jean-Luc Pépin 1924- chairs first Anti-Inflation Board meeting in Ottawa.
1973 Toronto Ontario - Secretariat wins his final race by 6 1/2 lengths in the Canadian International Stakes at Toronto's Woodbine.
1971 Newfoundland - Frank Duff Moores 1933- leads Progressive Conservatives to victory in Newfoundland election; won 21 seats to 20 for Smallwood's Liberals; New Labrador Party wins 1.
1969 New York City - Winnipeg rock group Guess Who's single 'Laughing' certified Gold.
1968 Mexico City - Jim Day 1946-, Jim Elder 1934- and Tom Gayford 1928- of the Canadian Equestrian Team win Canada's only gold medal at the Olympic Games in Mexico City.
1966 Ottawa Ontario - Start of federal-provincial Premiers' conference on fiscal matters.
1960 Toronto Ontario - Garfield Weston 1898-1978 donates $1 million to Banting and Best Department of Medical Research, University of Toronto; grocery magnate, head of Loblaws.
1958 Ottawa Ontario - John George Diefenbaker 1895-1979 starts tour of European and Commonwealth countries until December 19.
1957 Montreal Quebec - Sarto Fournier elected Mayor of Montreal.
1955 Lauzon Quebec - Fire destroys shipyards at Lauzon.
1954 Vancouver BC - Henry Asbjorn Larsen 1899-1964 arrives in Vancouver on the last voyage of the RCMP patrol vessel 'St. Roch'; the ship that circumnavigated North America will be put in a museum.
1953 Winnipeg Manitoba - Winnipeg Blue Bomber Bud Grant intercepts 5 passes for a CFL record.
1942 Kluane Lake Yukon - Canadian Health Minister Ian Mackenzie and Alaska Secretary E.L. Bartlett cut a ribbon to open the Alcan Military Highway, today known as the Alaska Highway. The 2575 km road, from Dawson Creek, BC to Fairbanks Alaska, was built to move supplies and munitions rapidly north in case of Japanese invasion.
1918 Ottawa Ontario - Second Victory Loan for $300 million raises $660 million.
1914 Ottawa Ontario - The War Cabinet orders the registration of all 'alien enemies,' specifically Germans and Austrians; provides for establishment of 'concentration camps' to house internees and their families in exchange for work such as clearing bush and cutting lumber in the national parks.
1910 Hamilton Ontario - Bob Simpson of the Hamilton Tigers kicks a record 11 singles in a Canadian football game.
1900 Paris France - Paris Olympiad closes after 5 months of games; Canada did not send an official team, but George Orton, from Hamilton, Ontario, wins a Gold Medal in the Steeplechase.
1891 Ottawa Ontario - Supreme Court of Canada rules that the Manitoba Separate Schools Act is unconstitutional; abolished separate schools.
1889 Vancouver BC - Stanley Park dedicated in Vancouver; named after the Governor General.
1887 Quebec Quebec - Quebec Premier Honoré Mercier 1840-1894 closes first Interprovincial Premiers Conference: the five premiers adopt 21 resolutions for free trade with the US and other reforms; John A. Macdonald refuses to attend.
1851 Kingston Ontario - Hincks-Morin Ministry takes office; Francis Hincks Inspector-General of Canada West (Ontario); Augustin-Norbert Morin Provincial Secretary of Canada East (Quebec).
1843 Montreal Quebec - Founding of the order of the Soeurs des SS Noms de Jésus et Marie.
1824 Montreal Quebec - First classes begin at Montreal Medical Institute, Canada's first medical school.
1818 Toronto Ontario - Mississaugas cede 263,000 hectares in Wellington, Dufferin, Peel and Halton Counties; 650,000 acres.
1813 Charlottetown PEI - Sancho Byers hanged for stealing a loaf of bread and a pound of butter; poor Charlottetown black.
1790 Madrid Spain - Nootka Sound Convention signed in Madrid; Spain surrenders exclusive rights on Pacific coast.
1741 Quebec Quebec - Fish glue first made in Quebec.
1688 Montreal Quebec - Charon brothers receive land at Montreal for a hospital.
1666 Belleville Ontario - François de Salignac de La Mothe-Fénélon 1641-1679 founds mission for the Seneca and Cayuga at Kenté on the Bay of Quinte, Lake Ontario; with Father Claude Trouvé 1644-1704.

End of C/P.