TODAY’S HISTORY LESSON: NOV 25

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    TODAY’S HISTORY LESSON: NOV 25
    1177 Battle of Montgisard: Baldwin IV of Jerusalem defeats Saladin and a larger Ayyubid force

    1357 Charles IV issues letter of protection of Jews of Strasbourg Alsace

    1715 Sybilla Thomas Masters became the first American to be granted an English patent for cleaning and curing Indian corn.

    1758 The British captured Fort Duquesne (Pittsburgh) in the French and Indian Wars.

    1783 Britain evacuates New York city, its last military position in the United States

    1834 Delmonico’s, one of NY’s finest restaurants, provides a meal of soup, steak, coffee & half a pie for 12 cents

    1841 The slaves who seized the Amistad in 1839 were freed by the Supreme Court. They had been defended by former president John Quincy Adams.

    1850 Texas relinquished one-third of its territory in exchange for $10 million from the U.S. to pay its public debts and settle border disputes.

    1864 Confederate plot to burn NYC, fails

    1876 Colonel Ronald MacKenzie destroys Cheyenne Chief Dull Knife’s village, in the Bighorn Mountains near the Red Fork of the Powder River, during the so-called Great Sioux War.

    1901 Japanese Prince Ito arrives in Russia to seek concessions in Korea.

    1905 Telimco makes the 1st ever advertisement for a radio set, by advertising a $7.50 set in the “Scientific American” which claimed to receive signals for up to one mile

    1914 German Field Marshal Fredrich von Hindenburg calls off the Lodz offensive 40 miles from Warsaw, Poland. The Russians lose 90,000 to the Germans’ 35,000 in two weeks of fighting.

    1923 Transatlantic broadcasting from England to America commences for the first time.

    1946 The U.S. Supreme Court grants the Oregon Indians land payment rights from the U.S. government.

    1947 The Big Four meet to discuss the German and European economy.

    1947 Movie studio executives meeting in New York agreed to blacklist the “Hollywood 10,” who were cited a day earlier and jailed for contempt of Congress when they failed to cooperate with the House Un-American Activities Committee.

    1955 The Interstate Commerce Commission bans segregation in interstate travel.

    1957 President Eisenhower suffers a mild stroke, impairing his speech

    1960 Assassination of the Mirabal Sisters. The 3 Dominican sisters, Patria, Minerva, Antonia Mirabal, were activists that were opposed to the dictatorship of Rafael Trujillo. On this day, they were brutally killed and their deaths staged to look like accidents. In 1999, the United Nations General Assembly declared November 25 as the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women.

    1964 Eleven nations give a total of $3 billion to rescue the value of the British currency.

    1973 Military coup in Greece. President George Papadopoulos was ousted by the army, just a week after student-led protests at the Athens Polytechnic were violently put down by the government.

    1985 Ronald W. Pelton was arrested on espionage charges. Pelton was a former employee of the National Security Agency. He was later convicted of ‘selling secrets’ to Soviet agents.

    1986 U.S. President Reagan and Attorney Gen. Edwin Meese revealed that profits from secret arms sales to Iran had been diverted to rebels in Nicaragua. National Security Advisor John Poindexter resigned and Oliver North was fired.

    1992 Federal Assembly of Czechoslovakia votes to partition the country into the Czech Republic and Slovakia, beginning Jan. 1, 1993.

    1993 Egyptian Prime Minister Atef Sedki escaped an attempt on his life when a bomb was detonated by Islamic militants near his motorcade.

    1998 Britain’s highest court ruled that former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, whose extradition was being sought by Spain, could not claim immunity from prosecution for the crimes he committed during his rule.

    1998 President Jiang Zemin arrived in Tokyo for the first visit to Japan by a Chinese head of state since World War II.

    2002 President George W. Bush signed into law the Department of Homeland Security and named Tom Ridge as head.

    2348 Biblical scholars have long asserted this to be the day of the Great Deluge, or Flood.

    REFERENCES: history.net, onthisday.com, thepeoplehistory.com, timeandate.com, factmonster.com, scopesys.com, on-this-day.com

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