Today in History
September 3 | ||
1189 | After the death of Henry II, Richard Lionheart is crowned king of England. | |
1260 | Mamelukes under Sultan Qutuz defeat Mongols and Crusaders at Ain Jalut. | |
1346 | Edward III of England begins the siege of Calais, along the coast of France. | |
1650 | The English under Cromwell defeat a superior Scottish army under David Leslie at the Battle of Dunbar. | |
1777 | The American flag (stars & stripes), approved by Congress on June 14th, is carried into battle for the first time by a force under General William Maxwell. | |
1783 | The Treaty of Paris is signed by Great Britain and the new United States, formally bringing the American Revolution to an end. | |
1838 | Frederick Douglass escapes slavery disguised as a sailor. He would later write The Narrative Life of Frederick Douglass, his memoirs about slave life. | |
1855 | General William Harney defeats Little Thunder’s Brule Sioux at the Battle of Blue Water in Nebraska. | |
1895 | The first professional American football game is played in Latrobe, Pennsylvania between the Latrobe Young Men’s Christian Association and the Jeannette Athletic Club. Latrobe wins 12-0. | |
1914 | The French capital is moved from Paris to Bordeaux as the Battle of the Marne begins. | |
1916 | The German Somme front is broken by an Allied offensive. | |
1918 | The United States recognizes the nation of Czechoslovakia. | |
1939 | After Germany ignores Great Britain’s ultimatum to stop the invasion of Poland, Great Britain declares war on Germany, marking the beginning of World War II in Europe. | |
1939 | The British passenger ship Athenia is sunk by a German submarine in the Atlantic, with 30 Americans among those killed. American Secretary of State Cordell Hull warns Americans to avoid travel to Europe unless absolutely necessary. | |
1943 | British troops invade Italy, landing at Calabria. | |
1944 | The U.S. Seventh Army captures Lyons, France. | |
1945 | General Tomoyuki Yamashita, the Japanese commander of the Philippines, surrenders to Lieutenant General Jonathan Wainwright at Baguio. | |
1967 | Lieutenant General Ngyuen Van Thieu is elected president of South Vietnam. | |
1969 | Ho Chi Minh, the leader of North Vietnam, dies. | |
1976 | The unmanned US spacecraft Viking 2 lands on Mars, takes first close-up, color photos of the planet’s surface. | |
1981 | Egypt arrests some 1,500 opponents of the government. | |
1989 | US begins shipping military aircraft and weapons to Columbia for use against that country’s drug lords. | |
1994 | Russia and China sign a demarcation agreement to end dispute over a stretch of their border and agree they will no longer target each other with nuclear weapons. | |
2001 | Protestant loyalists in Belfast, Ireland, begin an 11-week picket of the Holy Cross Catholic school for girls, sparking rioting. | |
Born on September 3 | ||
1849 | Sarah Orne Jewett, author (Tales of New England, The Country of the Pointed Firs). | |
1856 | Louis H. Sullivan, architect who gained fame for his design of the Chicago Auditorium Theater. | |
1875 | Ferdinand Porsche, automotive engineer, designer of the Volkswagen in 1934 and the Porsche sports car in 1950. | |
1894 | Richard Niebuhr, theologian. | |
1907 | Carl Anderson, physicist and 1936 Nobel prize winner for his discovery of the positron. | |
1914 | Dixie Lee Ray, Chair of the Atomic Energy Commission who received the U.N. Peace Prize in 1977. | |
1927 | Hugh Sidey, news correspondent and author of John F. Kennedy, President. | |
1931 | Albert Henry DeSalvo, a serial killer and rapist known as the "Boston Strangler"; though he confessed to 13 murders, debate continues over which crimes he actually committed. | |
1932 | Eileen Brennan, actress; won Golden Globe and Emmy for her role in the TV adaptation of Private Benjamin. | |
1942 | Alan Charles "Al" Jardine, musician, composer, vocalist, member of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame; founding member of the band The Beach Boys. | |
1949 | Petros VII (Petros Papapetrou), Greek Orthodox Pope and Patriarch of Alexandria and all Africa (1997–2004). | |
1964 | Adam Curry, co-founder of Mevio, Inc., Internet entertainment company. | |
1965 | Charlie Sheen (Carlos Irwin Estevez), actor (Platoon, Two and a Half Men TV series). | |
1976 | Ashley Jones, actress (True Blood and The Young and the Restless TV series). | |
1981 | Fearne Cotton, English radio and television presenter. |
No comments:
Post a Comment