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A Day in History!

September 6, 1995: Orioles shortstop Cal Ripken Jr. plays in his 2,131st consecutive game, breaking “Iron Horse” Lou Gehrig’s record for most consecutive games played. “The Iron Man” was credited with reviving interest in baseball after a 1994 work stoppage forced the cancellation of the World Series and soured fans on the national pastime.
 
On this day the Soviet Union admits shooting down Korean Air Lines Flight 007.
 
The First Tank
September 6, 1915: A prototype tank nicknamed Little Willie rolls off the assembly line in England. Little Willie was far from an overnight success. It weighed 14 tons, got stuck in trenches and crawled over rough terrain at only two miles per hour. However, improvements were made to the original prototype and tanks eventually transformed military battlefields.
 
A strike is called in The Major League Baseball cancelling the season.
 
September 14, 1901: Death of William McKinley, President of the United States

On September 6, 1901, while standing in a receiving line at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, President McKinley was approached by Leon Czolgosz, a Polish-American anarchist carrying a concealed .32 revolver in a handkerchief. Drawing his weapon, Czolgosz shot McKinley twice at close range. One bullet deflected off a suit button, but the other entered his stomach, passed through the kidneys, and lodged in his back. When he was operated on, doctors failed to find the bullet, and gangrene soon spread throughout his body. McKinley died eight days later, on September 14, 1901. Czolgosz was convicted of murder and executed soon after the shooting.
 
On this day in 1723 a young Ben Franklin, age 17 entered the city of Philadelphia.
 
October 6, 1981: Assassination of Sadat

Islamic extremists assassinate Anwar Sadat, the president of Egypt, as he reviews troops on the anniversary of the Yom Kippur War. Led by Khaled el Islambouli, a lieutenant in the Egyptian army with connections to the terrorist group Takfir Wal-Hajira, the terrorists, all wearing army uniforms, stopped in front of the reviewing stand and fired shots and threw grenades into a crowd of Egyptian government officials. Sadat, who was shot four times, died two hours later. Ten other people also died in the attack.
 
November 13, 1982: Vietnam Veterans Memorial was dedicated in Washington DC.
 
PEARL HARBOR DAY!

On December 7, 1941 the Japanese declare war on the United States by bombing Pearl Harbor.
 
December 7,1873: Willa Cather is born in Winchester, Virginia. Cather becomes a famous author, best known for her novels O Pioneers! and My
Antonia.
 
WWI History: On this date the United States declares war on Austria-Hungary.
 
December 7, 1787: Delaware becomes the first state to ratify the Constitution.
 
At Sandy Hook Elementary School 28 people were killed in a shooting.
 
December 14, 1911: Norwegian Roald Amundsen becomes the first explorer to reach the South Pole, beating his British rival, Robert Falcon Scott.
 
January 1, 2000.

The beginning of the 21st Century, and the new millennium
 
December 15, 1961: In Tel Aviv, Israel, Adolf Eichmann, the Nazi SS officer who organized Adolf Hitler’s “final solution of the Jewish question,” is condemned to death by an Israeli war crimes tribunal.
 
On this date in 1944 The Battle Of The Bulge begins in WW II.
 
December 16, 1773: A group of Massachusetts colonists disguised as Mohawk Indians board three British tea ships moored in Boston Harbor and dump 342 chests of tea into the water.

Now known as the “Boston Tea Party,” the midnight raid was a protest of the Tea Act of 1773, a bill enacted by the British parliament to save the faltering British East India Company by greatly lowering its tea tax and granting it a virtual monopoly on the American tea trade. The low tax allowed the company to sell its tea even more cheaply than that smuggled into America by Dutch traders. Many colonists viewed the act as yet another example of Britain’s taxation tyranny.
 
On this date in 1968 Apollo orbits the moon for the first time.
 
On January 1, 1971 cigarette advertising was banned on TV.
 
On January 1st, 1902, the first American college football bowl game, the Rose Bowl between Michigan and Stanford, is held in Pasadena, California.
 
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