This Day in History — January 1
Today is the 1st day of 2014. There are 364 days left in the year.
TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT
1803: Denmark bans import of slaves to the Danish West Indies, becoming the first country to ban slavery.
OTHER EVENTS
1622: Papacy adopts January 1 as beginning of new year instead of March 25.
1801: Act of Union of Britain and Ireland goes into effect.
1804: Haiti declares itself independent from France, becoming the world’s first black republic.
1808: The US Congress officially prohibits African slave trade.
1833: British proclaim sovereignty over Falkland Islands.
1851: The leader of the Taiping rebellion in China, Hung Hsiu-ch’uan, proclaims himself emperor.
1863: US President Abraham Lincoln signs the Emancipation Proclamation declaring slaves free.
1877: England’s Queen Victoria is proclaimed Empress of India.
1892: The Ellis Island Immigrant Station in New York formally opens.
1901: Commonwealth of Australia is proclaimed.
1935: The colonies of Cyrenaica, Tripoli and Eezaan unite to form the country of Libya.
1942: Twenty-six nations sign the UN Declaration.
1949: A UN-brokered ceasefire goes into effect between Pakistani and Indian troops fighting over the Kashmir region.
1951: North Korean and Communist Chinese troops break through UN lines at 38th parallel.
1956: Sudan is proclaimed an independent democratic republic.
1958: European Common Market and Euratom agreements go into effect.
1959: Fidel Castro leads Cuban revolutionaries to victory as dictator Fulgencio Batista flees to Dominica.
1962: Western Samoa becomes first sovereign independent Polynesian state.
1965: The Palestine Liberation Organization is formed.
1979: The United States and China hold celebrations in Washington and Beijing to mark the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries.
1984: Brunei becomes fully independent from Britain.
1986: Portugal is formally admitted to the European Community.
1990: Prices of staple goods double and quadruple in Poland as government enacts radical plan to move from centrally planned to market economy; David Dinkins is sworn in as New York City’s first black mayor.
1991: Four Nicaraguan Sandinista army officers and 11 Salvadorans are arrested for selling Soviet-made anti-aircraft missiles to Salvadoran rebels.
1993: Czechoslovakia peacefully splits into the independent Czech Republic and Slovakia.
1994: Rival Afghan rebel leaders stage a bloody coup attempt that fails but sparks a year of fighting that leaves more than 15,000 people dead; the North America Free Trade Agreement goes into effect.
1995: Austria, Finland and Sweden join European Union, expanding it to 15 members.
1997: Turkish troops cross into northern Iraq and kill at least 72 Kurdish rebels after the guerrillas attack a military outpost in Turkey.
1998: More than 400 people, many of them women and children, are killed in western Algeria in the worst massacre so far in six years of violence by Islamic groups.
1999: Eleven nations in the European Union adopt the euro as their common currency.
2000: An anxious world holds its breath as computers silently switch to 2000, but the dreaded Y2K bug’s first bite is barely felt.
2002: Rwanda unveils a new flag, national anthem and coat-of-arms in an effort to promote reconciliation seven years after a half million people were killed in a state-sponsored genocide.
2003: Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva of the Workers Party is inaugurated as Brazil’s first working-class president and the first elected president from a leftist party.
2007: Ban Ki-moon, a 62-year-old South Korean career diplomat, becomes the United Nations’ eighth secretary-general; passenger jet crashes off coast of Indonesia after facing heavy winds, killing all 102 people on board.
2009: Slovakia becomes 16th country to adopt the euro.
2011: Christians clash with Egyptian police in the northern city of Alexandria, furious over an apparent suicide bombing against worshippers leaving a New Year’s Mass at a church that killed at least 21 people. It was the worst violence against the country’s Christian minority in a decade.
2012: Yemen’s opposition accuses outgoing President Ali Abdullah Saleh of trying to torpedo a power transfer deal by sparking a new crisis, as troops loyal to him clash with opposition forces, killing three.
2013: A crowd stampedes after leaving a New Year’s fireworks show in Ivory Coast’s main city of Abidjan, killing 61 people, many of them children and teenagers — and injuring more than 200.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Paul Revere, US patriot (1735-1818); James George Frazer, British anthropologist (1854-1941); Kim Philby, British intelligence officer, Soviet spy (1912-1988); J D Salinger, US author (1919-2010); Grandmaster Flash, US rapper (1958-)
—AP