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henric
12-16-2014, 01:10 AM
23181



Events:C/P.

714 – Pepin of Herstal, mayor of the Merovingian palace, dies at Jupille (modern Belgium). He is succeeded by his infant grandson Theudoald while his wife Plectrude holds actual power in the Frankish Kingdom.
755 – An Lushan revolts against Chancellor Yang Guozhong at Yanjing, initiating the An Lushan Rebellion during the Tang Dynasty of China.
1431 – Hundred Years' War: Henry VI of England is crowned King of France at Notre Dame in Paris.
1497 – Vasco da Gama rounds the Cape of Good Hope, the point where Bartolomeu Dias had previously turned back to Portugal.
1575 – An earthquake with an estimated magnitude of 8.5 strikes Valdivia, Chile.
1598 – Seven Year War: Battle of Noryang – The final battle of the Seven Year War is fought between the China and the Korean allied forces and Japanese navies, resulting in a decisive allied forces victory.
1653 – English Interregnum: The Protectorate – Oliver Cromwell becomes Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland.
1689 – Convention Parliament: The Declaration of Right is embodied in the Bill of Rights.
1707 – Last recorded eruption of Mount Fuji in Japan.
1761 – Seven Years' War: After a four-month siege, the Russians under Pyotr Rumyantsev take the Prussian fortress of Kołobrzeg.
1773 – American Revolution: Boston Tea Party – Members of the Sons of Liberty disguised as Mohawk Indians dump hundreds of crates of tea into Boston harbor as a protest against the Tea Act.
1811 – The first two in a series of four severe earthquakes occur in the vicinity of New Madrid, Missouri.
1826 – Benjamin W. Edwards rides into Mexican-controlled Nacogdoches, Texas, and declares himself ruler of the Republic of Fredonia.
1838 – Great Trek: Battle of Blood River – Voortrekkers led by Andries Pretorius and Sarel Cilliers defeat Zulu impis, led by Dambuza (Nzobo) and Ndlela kaSompisi in what is today KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
1850 – The Charlotte Jane and the Randolph bring the first of the Canterbury Pilgrims to Lyttelton, New Zealand.
1863 – American Civil War: Joseph E. Johnston replaces Braxton Bragg as commander of the Confederate Army of Tennessee.
1864 – American Civil War: Battle of Nashville – Major General George Thomas's Union forces defeat Lieutenant General John Bell Hood's Confederate Army of Tennessee.
1903 – Taj Mahal Palace & Tower hotel in Bombay first opens its doors to the guests.
1907 – The American Great White Fleet begins its circumnavigation of the world.
1912 – First Balkan War: The Royal Hellenic Navy defeats the Ottoman Navy at the Battle of Elli.
1914 – World War I: German battleships under Franz von Hipper bombard the English ports of Hartlepool and Scarborough.
1918 – Vincas Mickevičius-Kapsukas declares the formation of the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic.
1920 – The Haiyuan earthquake, magnitude 8.5, rocks the Gansu province in China, killing an estimated 200,000.
1922 – President of Poland Gabriel Narutowicz is assassinated by Eligiusz Niewiadomski at the Zachęta Gallery in Warsaw.
1927 – Donald Bradman makes his debut in first-class cricket for New South Wales against South Australia. Batting at No. 7, he scores a century.
1930 – Bank robber Herman Lamm and members of his crew are killed by a 200-strong posse, following a botched bank robbery in Clinton, Indiana.
1937 – Theodore Cole and Ralph Roe attempt to escape from the American federal prison on Alcatraz Island in San Francisco Bay; neither is ever seen again.
1938 – Adolf Hitler institutes the Cross of Honor of the German Mother.
1941 – World War II: Japanese forces occupy Miri, Sarawak.
1942 – The Holocaust: Schutzstaffel chief Heinrich Himmler orders that Roma candidates for extermination be deported to Auschwitz.
1944 – World War II: The Battle of the Bulge begins with the surprise offensive of three German armies through the Ardennes forest.
1946 – Thailand joins the United Nations.
1947 – William Shockley, John Bardeen and Walter Brattain build the first practical point-contact transistor.
1950 – Korean War: U.S. President Harry S. Truman declares a state of emergency, after Chinese troops enter the fight in support of communist North Korea.
1957 – Sir Feroz Khan Noon replaces Ibrahim Ismail Chundrigar as Prime Minister of Pakistan.
1960 – New York mid-air collision, the midair collision of a United Airlines flight with a TWA flight near Idlewild Airport that killed 133.
1965 – Vietnam War: General William Westmoreland sends U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara a request for 243,000 more men by the end of 1966.
1968 – Second Vatican Council: Official revocation of the Edict of Expulsion of Jews from Spain.
1971 – Bangladesh Liberation War and Indo-Pakistani War of 1971: The surrender of the Pakistan Army brings an end to both conflicts. This is commemorated annually as Victory Day in Bangladesh, and as Vijay Diwas in India.
1971 – The United Kingdom recognizes Bahrain's independence. This is commemorated annually as Bahrain's National Day.
1978 – Cleveland, Ohio, becomes the first major American city to default on its financial obligations since the Great Depression.
1979 – Libya joins four other OPEC nations in raising crude oil prices, which has an immediate, dramatic effect on the United States.
1985 – Paul Castellano and Thomas Bilotti are shot dead on the orders of John Gotti, who assumes leadership of New York's Gambino crime family
1986 – Gennady Kolbin replaces Dinmukhamed Konayev as First Secretary of the Kazakh Communist Party, prompting the Jeltoqsan protests which began the next day.
1989 – Romanian Revolution: Protests break out in Timișoara, Romania, in response to an attempt by the government to evict dissident Hungarian pastor László Tőkés.
1989 – U.S. Appeals Court Judge Robert Smith Vance is assassinated by a mail bomb sent by Walter Leroy Moody, Jr.
2014 – The hostage crisis in Sydney comes to an end after a 13-hour siege—done by Man Haron Monis, killed by police—holding 17 hostage, including two killed.

henric
12-16-2014, 01:14 AM
23182



Today's Canadian Headline...

1992 SPAN OF GREEN CABLES ??
Charlottetown PEI - Ottawa, New Brunswick and PEI sign deal to build 13 km $800 m bridge to mainland; Ottawa to supply $60 m for roads and redevelop Borden, Cape Tormentine; the Confederation Bridge does not yet have a name.

1891
Quebec Quebec - Honoré Mercier 1840-1894 dismissed as Premier of Quebec by Lieutenant-Governor Auguste-Réal Angers; after a federal Senate inquiry and provincial Royal Commission found he awarded subsidies for the Baie des Chaleurs Railway in return for Liberal party funds. In 1902, he is indicted for corruption, but is acquitted Nov. 04, 1892.

1895
Halifax Nova Scotia - Royal Canadian Sea Cadet Corps organized to interest young men in serving in a planned Canadian Navy.



In Other Events...

1994 Montreal Quebec - Pop diva Céline Dion marries her long-time manager René Angélil.
1994 Halifax, Nova Scotia - Last direct VIA train between Montreal and Halifax.
1994 Quebec - Bloc québécois and Parti québécois organizations join forces to fight in the referendum campaign.
1991 Sydney Australia - Conrad Black's Hollinger Inc. purchases 15% of Australia's John Fairfax Group Ltd for $1.32 billion; largest single shareholder.
1991 Ottawa Ontario - Gerald 'Ged' Baldwin dies at age 84; elected MP for Peace River in 1958; served for over 20 years; the prime mover behind Canada's access to information legislation.
1991 Halifax Nova Scotia - Bernard Bradley performs Canada's first transplant of fetal tissue to battle effects of Parkinson's disease; Victoria General Hospital procedure stimulates dopamine.
1991 Ottawa Ontario - Tom Siddon and Inuit of Eastern Arctic draft Nunavut land deal; $1.15 billion in grants, title to 250,000 sq km; plebiscite set for April 1992 after 15 years of negotiation.
1990 Ottawa Ontario - Brian Mulroney 1939- appoints MP Jim Edwards, Senator Gérald Beaudoin to head joint Committee on Constitutional Reform; to devise new amending formula.
1986 Ottawa Ontario - Independent MP Robert Toupin joins the New Democratic Party, giving them their first Member of Parliament from Quebec.
1984 Montreal Quebec - Olympic champion diver Sylvie Bernier announces her retirement from the sport.
1976 Ottawa Ontario - Réal Caouette 1917-1976 dies; politician, leader of the Social Credit Party; born at Amos, Quebec Sept. 26, 1917. Caouette joined the Socreds in 1939; 1946 elected MP in a by-election as a member of the Union des électeurs; 1961 allied his Ralliement des Créditistes with the national Social Credit Party; ran for leadership against Robert Thompson; 1962 won 26 of the 30 Social Credit seats, holding the balance of power in the Diefenbaker minority government; 1963 broke with Thompson as leader of his own Ralliement des créditistes with 12 Quebec MPs; 1971 reunited the party as national leader; 1976 retired due to ill health; André Fortin became leader.
1971 Arvida Quebec - Arvida smelter produces its 10 millionth ingot of aluminum.
1953 Ottawa Ontario - Parliament passes Bill to establish Department of Northern Affairs and Natural Resources.
1951 Ottawa Ontario - Vancouver actor Raymond Burr (later of Perry Mason and Ironside fame) plays Sgt. Joe Friday's boss in an NBC-TV preview of the police drama Dragnet.
1950 Montreal Quebec - Canadien rookies Jean Béliveau and Bernie Geoffrion play their first NHL game, tying the Rangers 1-1; Boom Boom scores his first career goal.
1949 London England - British Parliament amends British North America Act; Canadian Parliament can now amend the Constitution in federal matters only.
1948 Winnipeg Manitoba - Walter Kaufmann conducts the first performance of the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra in the Winnipeg Auditorium; 1958 succeeded by Victor Feldbrill; 1968 moves to the Manitoba Centennial Concert Hall with George Cleve conducting; official orchestra of the Manitoba Opera Association and Royal Winnipeg Ballet.
1922 Toronto Ontario - Montreal Canadiens great Aurèle Joliat scores 2 goals in his NHL debut, but his team loses to the Maple Leafs 7-2.
1910 Ottawa Ontario - Group of 800 farmers marches on Ottawa, to demand US reciprocity and more preference for British goods.
1901 St. John's, Newfoundland - Guglielmo Marconi 1874-1937 is officially notified by the Anglo-American Telegraph Company that it will take legal action against him unless he immediately ceases his wireless experiments and removes his equipment from Newfoundland; Anglo-American had a fifty-year monopoly on electrical communications in Newfoundland, that began in 1858, and is determined to hinder radio telegraphy, which it knows is a serious threat to its transatlantic electric telegraph business operated by submarine cables; Marconi soon decides to move his base of operations to Cape Breton Island, and is welcomed there on Dec. 26 with open arms.
1895 Port Menier, Quebec - French chocolate baron Henri Menier acquires Anticosti Island in the St. Lawrence for $125,000; builds a chateau and imports a herd of deer for hunting; previous attempts at colonization had failed.
1892 Quebec - Louis-Olivier Taillon reelected Conservative Premier of Quebec.
1884 St. Laurent, Saskatchewan - Louis Riel 1844-1885 helps the Metis of St. Laurent send petition on Metis grievances and demands to the Secretary of State in Ottawa.
1837 St-Benoît, Quebec - Sir John Colborne 1778-1863 orders 150 Patriotes captured at St-Benoît released, but puts the village to the torch; orders Colonel Maitland to proceed to St-Scholastique and Ste-Thérèse.
1824 Langley BC - Hudson's Bay Company Chief Trader James McMillan arrives at the Fraser River near Derby; later the site of the first Fort Langley.

End of C/P.