A chronological timetable of historical events that occurred on this
day in history. Historical facts of the day in the areas of military,
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what happened today in history.
Today in History
November 14
Today in History
November 14
1501 | Arthur Tudor of England marries Katherine of Aragon. | |
1812 | As Napoleon Bonaparte’s army retreats form Moscow, temperatures drop to 20 degrees below zero. | |
1851 | Herman Melville’s novel Moby Dick is published in New York. | |
1882 | Billy Clairborne, a survivor of the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, loses his life in a shoot-out with Buckskin Frank Leslie. | |
1908 | Albert Einstein presents his quantum theory of light. | |
1910 | Lieutenant Eugene Ely, U.S. Navy, becomes the first man to take off in an airplane from the deck of a ship. He flew from the ship Birmingham at Hampton Roads to Norfolk. | |
1921 | The Cherokee Indians ask the U.S. Supreme Court to review their claim to 1 million acres of land in Texas. | |
1922 | The British Broadcasting Company (BBC) begins the first daily radio broadcasts from Marconi House. | |
1930 | Right-wing militarists in Japan attempt to assassinate Premier Hamagushi. | |
1935 | Manuel Luis Quezon is sworn in as the first Filipino president, as the Commonwealth of the Philippines is inaugurated. | |
1940 | German bombers devastate Coventry in Great Britain, killing 1,000 in the worst air raid of the war. | |
1951 | The United States and Yugoslavia sign a military aid pact. | |
1951 | French paratroopers capture Hoa Binh, Vietnam. | |
1960 | New Orleans integrates two all-white schools. | |
1960 | President Dwight Eisenhower orders U.S. naval units into the Caribbean after Guatemala and Nicaragua charge Castro with starting uprisings. | |
1961 | President Kennedy increases the number of American advisors in Vietnam from 1,000 to 16,000. | |
1963 | Iceland gets a new island when a volcano pushes its way up out of the sea five miles off the southern coast. | |
1963 | Greece frees hundreds who were jailed in the Communist uprising of 1944-1950. | |
1965 | The U.S. First Cavalry Division battles with the North Vietnamese Army in the Ia Drang Valley, the first ground combat for American troops. | |
1968 | Yale University announces its plan to go co-ed. | |
1969 | The United States launches Apollo 12, the second mission to the Moon, from Cape Kennedy. | |
1979 | US President Jimmy Carter freezes all Iranian assets in the United States in response to Iranian militants holding more than 50 Americans hostage. | |
1982 | Lech Walesa, leader of Poland’s outlawed Solidarity movement, is released by communist authorities after 11 months confinement; he would win the Nobel Peace Prize in 1983 and be elected Poland’s president in 1990. | |
1984 | The Space Shuttle Discovery‘s crew rescues a second satellite. | |
1990 | Poland and the Federal Republic of Germany sign a treaty officially making the Oder-Neisse line the border between their countries. | |
1995 | Budget standoff between Democrats and Republicans in the US Congress forces temporary closure of national parks and museums; federal agencies forced to operate with skeleton staff. | |
2001 | Northern Alliance fighters take control of Afghanistan’s capital, Kabul. | |
2008 | First G-20 economic summit convenes, in Washington, DC. | |
2012 | Israel launches Operation Pillar of Defense against the Hamas-governed Gaza Strip. | |
Born on November 14 | ||
1650 | William III, King of England (1689-1702). | |
1765 | Robert Fulton, American engineer who invented the first steamboat. | |
1840 | Claude Monet, French impressionist painter. | |
1889 | Jawaharala Nehru, Indian nationalist leader. | |
1900 | Aaron Copeland, American composer whose works include Billy the Kidd, Appalachian Spring and Fanfare for the Common Man. | |
1906 | Louise Brooks, silent film star, symbol of the 1920s flapper. | |
1907 | Astrid Lindgren, Swedish children’s writer (Pippi Longstocking). | |
1908 | Joseph McCarthy, anti-Communist senator from Wisconsin. | |
1908 | Harrison Sallisbury, journalist for The New York Times. | |
1917 | Park Chung-hee, Korean general and statesman; led 1961 coup that overthrew the Korean Second Republic; elected president 1963; assassinated Oct. 26, 1979. | |
1921 | Brian Keith, actor (The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming). | |
1922 | Veronica Lake, actress (Sullivan’s Travels). | |
1927 | McLean Stevenson, actor; best known for his role as Lt. Col. Henry Blake on the TV series M*A*S*H*. | |
1930 | Edward Higgins White II, engineer, astronaut; first American to "walk" in space (June 3, 1965); died in explosion at Cape Canaveral (Cape Kennedy) during prelaunch testing for first manned Apollo mission. | |
1935 | Hussein of Jordan, King of Jordan (1952–1999); second Arab head of state to recognize Israel as a sovereign nation. | |
1947 | Buckwheat Zydeco (Stanley Dural Jr.), accordion player, zydeco artist. | |
1948 | Charles, Prince of Wales, heir to the throne of England. | |
1954 | Condoleezza Rice, US Secretary of State under Pres. George W. Bush (2005–2009). |
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