Today in History

11 September 1914
Australia invades the Papua - New Guinea island of New Britain, (capital, Rabaul) defeating a German contingent there.
It was one of the earlies battles of World War l when the Australian Naval Force landed on the island.
They quickly overwhelmed the German forces and occupied the island for the duration of the war.
 

11 September 1928
Charles Kingsford Smith completes the first flight across the Tasman Sea setting out from Richmond, west of Sydney, landing at the Wigram aerodrome, New Zealand
The flight consisted of a four man crew, Pilot Kingsford Smith, co pilot Charles Ulm, navigator Harold Litchfield and radio operator, New Zealander Thomas McWilliams and took 14 hours and 25 minutes.
The flight had been postponed for a week in the hope of good weather over the Tasman but they struck thunderstorms throughout the night which knocked out the radio.
Kingsford Smith was forced to fly blind for much of the journey as heavy rain or ice coated the windshield.
 

11 September 1997
Mars Global Surveyor inserts itself into orbit around Mars.
Launched November 7, 1996, Mars Global Surveyor became the first successful mission to the red planet in two decades.
After a year and a half spent trimming its orbit from a looping ellipse to a circular track around the planet, the spacecraft began its prime mapping mission in March 1999.
The mission has studied the entire Martian surface, atmosphere, and interior. One of the most exciting observations is that the red planet has very repeatable weather patterns.
Weather patterns observed by the spacecraft include some dust storms that repeat in the same location within a week or two of the time they occurred in the previous year. In addition, local disturbances and dust devils may start up at any time after the first day of spring and continue until Martian autumn.
It completed its primary mission in January 2001 and was in its third extended mission phase when, on 2 November 2006, the spacecraft failed to respond to messages and commands. A faint signal was detected three days later which indicated that it had gone into Safe Mode.
Attempts to recontact the spacecraft and resolve the problem failed, and NASA officially ended the mission in January 2007.
Mars Global Surveyor remains in a stable near-polar circular orbit at about 450 km altitude and was expected to crash onto the surface of the planet at some point after 2047.
 
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The night before.......
On this day... 21 years ago 246 people went to sleep in preparation for their morning flights. 2,606 people went to sleep in preparation for work in the morning. 343 firefighters went to sleep in preparation for their morning shift. 60 police officers went to sleep in preparation for morning patrol. 8 paramedics went to sleep in preparation for the morning shift. None of them saw past 10:00am Sept 11, 2001. In one single moment life may never be the same. As you live and enjoy the breaths you take today and tonight before you go to sleep in preparation for your life tomorrow, kiss the ones you love, snuggle a little tighter, and never take one second of your life for granted. #AlwaysRemember #NeverForget #NYPD #FDNY #NYC #ArmedForces #TheDayBefore
 
1883
American architech, James Cutler patents postal mail chute
1926
Spain leaves the League of Nations due to Germany joining
1951
Florence Chatwick becomes the 1st woman to swim the English Channel from England- France, took her 16 hrs, 19 min
1959
U. S. Congress passes bill authorizing food stamps for poor Americans
1970
Ford Pinto is introduced, cost $1,800
1977
The Atari 2600 is released in North America which started the video game industry
 
Sept 11th Birthdays:
1885
D.W. Lawrence- British writer' Lady Chatterly's Lover
1925
Alan Bergman- award winning lyricist with his wife, Marilyn' The Way We Were, How Do You Keep The Music PLaying,You Don't Bring Me Flowers
1940
Brian dePalma- film director 'Body Double, Dressed to Kill,The Untouchables
1950
Amy Madigan- actress Uncle Buck, Twice in a Lifetime, Field of Dreams,Gone Baby Gone, married to actor Ed Harris
1967
Harry Coninck,Jr- pop/jazz singer/ pianist
Deaths:
1956
Billy Bishop- Canadian WWI flying ace 62
1987
Lorne Greene- Canadian actor best known TV role' Ben Cartwright' in NBC Western' Bonanza 72
1994
Jessica Tandy- British born actress- Driving Miss Daisy, Fried Green Tomatoes, Cocoon 85
2003
John Ritter-comedic actor best known TV role' Jack Tripper' in ABC sitcom' Three;s Company' 54
 
On This Day In History, September 12th

1992 First African American Woman goes into Space

Mae C. Jemison, a physician, was a Mission Specialist on STS-47 which was the 50th space flight of NASA’s Space Shuttle Program. It was the space shuttle Endeavour’s second flight. During over 190 hours she spent in space, she conducted experiments on weightlessness and motion sickness.

1974 A Coup in Ethiopia ousts Emperor Haile Selassie

The coup was led by a group of the Ethiopian armed forces and other law enforcement agencies of the country called the Derg. After the coup, Selassie was imprisoned. He died two years later, on August 28, 2015. Selassie is also often considered to be a Messiah by those who follow Rastafarianism, a religious belief that originated in Jamaica.

1970 The Soviet Union launches the Luna 16
It was the first robotic probe to land on the Moon and return to Earth with rock samples. Luna 16 landed on Earth on September 24.

1953 Jacqueline Bouvier Marries John Fitzgerald Kennedy

The much talked about wedding of the season took place in Newport, Rhode Island. At the time of the wedding, John F. Kennedy was a Senator in the US Congress from the state of Massachusetts. In 1960, Kennedy won the presidency after beating Republican candidate Richard Nixon.

1943 The Gran Sasso Raid is conducted by the German paratroopers at the behest of Hitler

The purpose of the airborne operation, also known as Operation Eiche, was to free Italian dictator Benito Mussolini from a ski resort where he was being held on the orders of the Italian king, Victor Emmanuel III. Using gliders, German troops entered the ski resort and successfully rescued Mussolini.
 
Births On This Day, September 12th 🎂

1980 Yao Ming
Chinese basketball player

1967 Louis C.K.
American comedian, actor, screenwriter

1956 Sam Brownback
American politician, 46th Governor of Kansas

1951 Bertie Ahern
Irish politician

1892 Alfred A. Knopf, Sr.
American publisher founded Alfred A. Knopf Inc.

Deaths On This Day, September 12th 🪦


2014 Ian Paisley
Irish minister, politician, 2nd First Minister of Northern Ireland

2009 Norman Borlaug
American agronomist, humanitarian, Nobel Prize laureate

2008 David Foster Wallace
American author

2003 Johnny Cash
American singer-songwriter, guitarist, actor

1977 Robert Lowell
American poet
 
·
The night before.......
On this day... 21 years ago 246 people went to sleep in preparation for their morning flights. 2,606 people went to sleep in preparation for work in the morning. 343 firefighters went to sleep in preparation for their morning shift. 60 police officers went to sleep in preparation for morning patrol. 8 paramedics went to sleep in preparation for the morning shift. None of them saw past 10:00am Sept 11, 2001. In one single moment life may never be the same. As you live and enjoy the breaths you take today and tonight before you go to sleep in preparation for your life tomorrow, kiss the ones you love, snuggle a little tighter, and never take one second of your life for granted. #AlwaysRemember #NeverForget #NYPD #FDNY #NYC #ArmedForces #TheDayBefore

LEST WE FORGET !

Thank you for posting.
 
Sept 12th
1895
Anne Londonberry arrives in Chicago to collect her $10,000 prize for completing the round the world bicycle trip as the 1st woman to do so. It took her 15 months to finish
1958
U.S. Supreme Court orders the all white Central High School in Little Rock Arkansas to intergrate 9 black students are escorted into the school by the Arkansas National Guard
1992
Mae Jemison , a physican/engineer becomes the 1st African American woman astronaut to go into space aboard Space craft Endeavour Her job was doing experiments on weightlessnes/motion sickness on her crew mates and herself
2017
Apple unveils its premium iphone costing $999 along with iphone 8
 
Sept 12th Birthdays:
1818
Richard Gatlin- inventor of the famous Gatlin gun which was 1st hand cranked machine gun
1913
Jesse Owens- U.S. African-American track/field athelete who won 4 gold medals at the Berlin Summer Olympic Games
1931
Ian Holm- British actor 'Alien, The Lord of the Rings,King Lear
1952
Gerry Beckley-singer/ songwriter with band' America' wrote these singles' I Need You,Sister Golden hair,Daisy Jane,Only in Your Heart'
1957
Rachel Ward- actress best known TV role'Meggie{adult} in mini series' The Thorn Birds'
Deaths:
1869
Peter Mark Roget- British lexicographer, inventor of slide rule 90
1972
William Boyd- film actor, cowboy hero 'Hopalong Cassidy' 77
1993
Raymond Burr- Canadian actor, 2 best known TV roles' 'Perry Mason in legal drama' Perry Mason, 'Robert Ironside' in NBC police drama 'Ironside 76{liver cancer}
2003
Johnny Cash- country singer' I Walk the Line, A Boy Name Sue, Ring of Fire' 71
2013
Ray Dolby- U.S. engineer/ sound expert, inventor of Dolby noise reduction system 80
 
13 September 1960
In Britain, the director of public prosecution is called upon to ban the American hit "Tell Laura I Love Her" by Ray Peterson.
The song was being denounced in the press as likely to inspire a teen-age "glorious death cult."
The story tells of a lovesick youngster who drives in a stock car race to win the hand of his sweetheart.
He crashes and just before dying, groans out the words of the title.
 
On This Day In History, September 13th

1993 Oslo accords are signed

Also known as the Declaration of Principles on Interim Self-Government Arrangements, the Accords helped create the Palestinian interim self-government or the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) and called for the withdrawal of the Israeli Defence Forces from the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

1974 French Ambassador is Kidnapped in the Hague
3 members of the Japanese Red Army (JRA), a communist militant group that was formed in Lebanon, stormed the French Embassy in the Hague and took 10 hostages, including the French Ambassador. The siege ended after the militants’ demands for the release of another JRA member, cash, and a plane was met.

1933 A Woman is Elected to New Zealand Parliament for the first time
Elizabeth McCombs won the by-elections for the parliamentary seat of Lyttelton, which was held by her husband before he died in August 1933. New Zealand extended suffrage to women in 1893.

1899 First Recorded Automobile Fatality in the US takes place

Henry H. Bliss was struck by a taxi cab while crossing the street in New York City. He died the next day due to his injuries.

1759 The Battle of Quebec is fought between the British and the French

A key event in the Seven Years’ War that involved the great European powers at the time, the battle took place on the farm of Abraham Martin. Because of this, the battle is also often called the Battle of the Plains of Abraham. British troops under the command of General James Wolfe defeated the French in the very short, 15-minute-long battle and took over Quebec. The Battle resulted in the French giving up their control over areas in present-day Canada and most of North America coming under the control of the British.
 
Births On This Day, September 13th 🎂

1989 Thomas Müller
German footballer

1981 Angelina Love
Canadian wrestler

1969 Shane Warne
Australian cricketer

1916 Roald Dahl
English pilot, author, screenwriter

1819 Clara Schumann
German pianist, composer

Deaths On This Day, September 13th 🪦

1996 Tupac Shakur
American rapper, producer, actor

1977 Leopold Stokowski
Polish/English conductor

1971 Lin Biao
Chinese military officer, politician, and Vice Premier of the People's Republic of China

1806 Charles James Fox
English politician

1598 Philip II of Spain
 
13 September 1828
On this day Sydney's, and Australia's, first bank robbery took place when the Bank of Australia strongroom was breached by thieves entering through a sewer drain and stealing £14,000 (equivalent to $20 million today) mostly in notes but also some gold and silver coins.
To thwart the robbers the bank withdrew all its notes from circulation and its note printing machines worked overtime so that old notes could be exchanged for new.
People surrendering old notes were required to explain how they had acquired them and several who were unable to give a satisfactory provenance were questioned by the police.
There was a surreptitious trade in stolen old notes, at a heavy discount, and several people were subsequently charged with possession of stolen money and receiving stolen goods; most were sentenced to seven or fourteen years in the Moreton Bay penal colony.
The majority of the stolen money was never recovered.
 
13 September 1814
An attack on an American fort on this day gave birth to the country's national anthem, The Star Spangled Banner.

Ironically, since the United States was at war with Britain at the time in what became known as the War of Independence, the tune was the work of a British composer, the little known John Stafford Smith.
In 1814, Baltimore was not only America's third largest city (population 45,000), but also a port from where repeated attacks had been made against British ships.
Determined to teach them a lesson, British warships planned to sail into Baltimore harbour and attack the city with cannons, pounding it into submission. First, though, they needed to neutralise a fortress named Fort McHenry which protected the harbour entrance.
At 6.30 on the morning of 13 September the attack began and during the next 24 hours about 2,000 shells and 800 rockets were fired at the fortress.
Above it flew a giant American flag measuring 42 feet by 30 feet.

Watching the action from a distance was American lawyer, author, and amateur poet Francis Scott Key. When he saw that the huge flag was still flying at dawn the next day, signifying an American victory, he was inspired to write the poem, Defence of Fort M'Henry.

Later, the words were set to John Stafford Smith's music, and renamed The Star Spangled Banner. It became a popular patriotic song.

The work became very popular in America and a powerful expression of patriotism. In 1916 it was proclaimed by President Woodrow Wilson to be the national anthem of all the armed forces.
Finally, in 1931, under an Act of Congress, it became America's national anthem.
 
13th September

1902 The first conviction in Britain using finger-prints as evidence was in the case against Harry Jackson by the Metropolitan Police at the Old Bailey. He had left his thumbprint in wet paint on a window sill and was tracked down through it. He was sentenced to seven years.

1940 Buckingham Palace was hit by a bomb during 'The Blitz'.

1957 The Mousetrap became Britain's longest running play, reaching its 1,998th performance.

1980 Hercules, the bear who went missing on Benbecula (in the Outer Hebrides) while being filmed for a Kleenex television commercial, was recaptured after 24 days 'on the run'. 🐻

1988 Medina Perez, a Cuban diplomat opened fire in a crowded London street because of an American plot to make him defect, (his government said).

1989 Britain's biggest ever banking computer error gave customers an extra £2 billion in a period of 30 minutes; 99.3 per cent of the money was reportedly returned.
 
1881
Lewis Howard Latimer patents electric lamp with a carbon filament
1925
Xavier Univ opens in New Orleans, Louisanna, 1st U. S Univ for African Americans
1955
Swiss inventor George de Mestral receives patent for what became Velcro
1965
The Beatles win their 1st Grammy for 'Best Group'
2008
movie' Slumdog Millionaire' directed by Danny Boyle is released. The story is about a young man who is about to win India's version of game show' Who Wants to Be A Millionaire, but he is accused of cheating. In flashbacks,we learn what his life was like orphaned growing up on streets of Bombay. it starred Dev Patel,Freida Pinto, Madhur Mittal, movie won 8 Oscars inc picture/director, adapted screenplay
 
Sept 13th Birthdays:
1660
Daniel Defoe- novelist' Robinson Crusoe'
1851
Walter Reed -U.S. Army physican/ bacterologist who proved mosquitos transmit yellow fever
1912
Reta Shaw- actress "Mary Poppins', Picnic, her best known TV role' Martha Grant' in sitcom' The Ghost&Mrs Muir' 68-'70
1924
Maurice Jarre-film composer, Fatal Attraction,Lawrence of Arabia, Dr Zhivago, Witness
1944
Peter Cetera- sing/songwriter lead singer with band' Chicago' 67-'85,he wrote these hit singles' Wishing You Were here, Happy Man, Baby What a Big Surprise, If You Leave Me Now'
1971
Stella McCartney- English fashion designer, daughter of Paul & Linda McCartney
Deaths:
1996
Tupac Shakur -rapper who was killed by a drive by shooting 25
2001
Dorothy Mc Guire-actress 'Gentleman's Agreement, Old Yeller, Summer Magic' 85
2019
Eddie Money- U. S. rock singer/songwriter' Take Me Home Tonight,Two Tickets to Paradise' 70{cancer}
 
14 September 1968
The Archies cartoon show first episode screens on CBS.
17 episodes were produced with the final episode screening on January 4 1969.
The show was designed to emulate the live-action series The Monkees by including rock music into each episode.
The fictional group released a series of real-life albums and singles. Their most successful song is Sugar Sugar, which stood at the top of the pop charts for four weeks in 1969.
Sugar, Sugar became the No. 1 song of 1969 on the Billboard charts.
 


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