Tuesday, 14 June 2016

Today in History June 14


1381
The Peasants’ Revolt, led by Wat Tyler, climaxes when rebels plunder and burn the Tower of London and kill the Archbishop of Canterbury.
1642
Massachusetts passes the first compulsory education law in the colonies.
1645
1775
The U.S. Army is founded when the Continental Congress authorizes the muster of troops.
1777
The Continental Congress authorizes the “stars and stripes” flag for the new United States.
1789
Captain William Bligh of the HMS Bounty arrives in Timor in a small boat. He had been forced to leave his ship when his crew mutinied.
1846
A group of settlers declare California to be a republic.
1864
At the Battle of Pine Mountain, Georgia, Confederate General Leonidas Polk is killed by a Union shell.
1893
The city of Philadelphia observes the first Flag Day.
1907
Women in Norway win the right to vote.
1919
1922
President Warren G. Harding becomes the first president to speak on the radio.
1927
Nicaraguan President Porfirio Diaz signs a treaty with the U.S. allowing American intervention in his country.
1932
Representative Edward Eslick dies on the floor of the House of Representatives while pleading for the passage of the bonus bill.
1940
German forces occupy Paris.
1942
The Supreme Court rules that requiring students to salute the American flag is unconstitutional.
1944
Boeing B-29 bombers conduct their first raid against mainland Japan.
1945
Burma is liberated by the British.
1949
The State of Vietnam is formed.
1951
UNIVAC, the first computer built for commercial purposes, is demonstrated in Philadelphia by Dr. John W. Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert, Jr.
1954
Americans take part in the first nation-wide civil defense test against atomic attack.
1965
A military triumvirate takes control in Saigon, South Vietnam.
1982
Argentina surrenders to the United Kingdom ending the Falkland Islands War.
1985
Gunmen hijack a passenger jet over the Middle East.
1989
Congressman William Gray, an African American, is elected Democratic Whip of the House of Representatives.
1995
Chechen rebels take 2,000 people hostage in a hospital in Russia.
Born on June 14
1811
Harriet Beecher Stowe, American author (Uncle Tom’s Cabin).
1820
John Bartlett, editor, compiler of Barlett’s Familiar Quotations.
1855
Robert Marion “Fighting Bob” La Follette, reform movement leader, Governor of Wisconsin, U.S. Senator and Progressive Party presidential candidate.
1906
Margaret Bourke-White, American photojournalist.
1925
Pierre Salinger, press secretary for John F. Kennedy.
1933
Jerzy Kosinski, Polish-American novelist (The Painted Bird, Being There).
1946
Donald Trump, New York real estate mogul.

 

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