TODAY’S HISTORY LESSON: OCT 25

    24
    0

    TODAY’S HISTORY LESSON: OCT 25
    1415 An English army under Henry V defeats the French at Agincourt, France. The French had out numbered Henry’s troops 60,000 to 12,000 but British longbows turned the tide of the battle.

    1671 Giovanni Cassini discovers Iapetus, satellite of Saturn

    1760 George III of England crowned.

    1812 US frigate United States captures British vessel Macedonian

    1854 “Charge of the Light Brigade” – During the Crimean War, a brigade of British light infantry is destroyed by Russian artillery as they charge down a narrow corridor in full view of the Russians.

    1870 Postcards 1st used in US

    1870 The first U.S. trademark was given. The recipient was the Averill Chemical Paint Company of New York City.

    1923 The Teapot Dome scandal comes to public attention as Senator Thomas J. Walsh of Montana, subcommittee chairman, reveals the findings of the past 18 months of investigation. His case will result in the conviction of Harry F. Sinclair of Mammoth Oil, and later Secretary of the Interior Albert B. Fall, the first cabinet member in American history to go to jail. The scandal, named for the Teapot Dome oil reserves in Wyoming, involved Fall secretly leasing naval oil reserve lands to private companies.

    1924 1st appearance of Little Orphan Annie comic strip

    1940 Benjamin Oliver Davis became the first African-American general in the United States Army.

    1944 The Japanese are defeated in the Battle of Leyte Gulf, the world’s largest sea engagement. From this point on, the depleted Japanese Navy increasingly resorts to the suicidal attacks of Kamikaze fighters.

    1945 Japanese surrender Taiwan to Gen Chiang Kai-shek

    1954 President Eisenhower conducts the first televised Cabinet meeting.

    1958 U.S. Marines withdrew from Beirut, Lebanon. They had been sent in on July 25, 1958, to protect the nation’s pro-Western government.

    1960 Martin Luther King, Jr., is sentenced to four months in jail for a sit-in.

    1962 US Ambassador to the UN Adlai Stevenson demands USSR UN rep Zorin answer regarding Cuban missile bases saying “I am prepared to wait for my answer until hell freezes over”

    1964 Viking Jim Marshall runs 66 yards in the wrong direction for a safety

    1968 Chicago recognizes Jean Baptiste Pointe de Sable as its 1st settler

    1971 The U.N. General Assembly voted to admit mainland China and expel Taiwan.

    1976 Gov Wallace grants full pardon to Clarence Norris, last known survivor of 9 Scottsboro Boys who were convicted in 1931 rape

      1983 1,800 U.S. troops and 300 Caribbean troops land on Grenada. U.S. forces soon turn up evidence of a strong Cuban and Soviet presence–large stores of arms and documents suggesting close links to Cuba.

    1986 International Red Cross ousted from South Africa

    1990 It was announced by U.S. Defense Secretary Dick Cheney that the Pentagon was planning to send 100,000 more troops to Saudi Arabia.

    2001 It was announced that scientists had unearthed the remains of an ancient crocodile which lived 110 million years ago. The animal, found in Gadoufaoua, Niger, grew as long as 40 feet and weighed as much as eight metric tons.

    2009 Terrorist bombings in Baghdad kill over 150 and wound over 700.

    2017 Chinese Premier Xi Jinping unveils his new ruling council in the Great Hall of the People, none of the five are young enough to succeed him

    REFERENCE: HISTORY.NET, ONTHISDAY.COM, TIMEANDDATE.COM, INFOPLEASE.COM, FACTMONSTER.COM, SCOPESYS.COM, ON-THIS-DAY.COM, THEPEOPLEHISTORY.COM

    [pro_ad_display_adzone id="404"]

    LEAVE A REPLY

    Please enter your comment!
    Please enter your name here