This Day In History – September 18
Today is the 261st day of 2019. There are 104 days left in the year.
TODAY HIGHLIGHT
2001: Letters postmarked in Trenton, New Jersey, that test positive for anthrax are sent to the New York Post and the US NBC broadcasting network anchor Tom Brokaw.
OTHER EVENTS
1739: Peace of Belgrade is signed by Holy Roman Emperor and Turkey, whereby Austria cedes Orsova, Belgrade and Serbia to Turkey.
1759: The French formally surrender Quebec to the British.
1793: George Washington lays the US Capitol building’s cornerstone in Washington.
1810: Chile declares its independence from Spain.
1850: US Congress passes the Fugitive Slave Act, which allows slave owners to reclaim slaves who escaped to free states.
1851: The New York Times newspaper publishes its first issue.
1860: Italian troops under Count Camillo Cavour defeat Papal forces at Castelfidardo.
1898: A British expedition trying to establish a north-south corridor the length of Africa reaches the fort of Fashoda in the Sudan, only to find it occupied by the French. The stand-off brings the countries to the brink of war.
1913: Bulgaria and Turkey sign a treaty settling their frontiers in Thrace.
1916: Greek army surrenders to Germans at Kavalla, Greece, in World War I: Russian offensive under Alexei Brusilov is checked by Germans.
1927: The Columbia Phonograph Broadcasting System — later CBS — debuts in the United States with a network of 16 radio stations.
1947: The US National Security Act, unifying the Navy, Army and newly formed Air Force goes into effect.
1948: Indonesian Communists set up Soviet-style government in Java but are forced to withdraw.
1955: At least 166 people are killed, 100 missing and 1,000 injured due to destructive winds and floods in the central and northern Gulf Coast area of Mexico where Hurricane Hilda struck.
1961: Swedish UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold, 56, is killed in air crash in northern Rhodesia — now Zambia — while on a peace mission to Congo.
1967: United States announces it will build anti-missile network to counter any attack by China; explosives planted by Communist terrorists destroy Taiwan’s embassy in Saigon.
1973: East Germany, West Germany and The Bahamas are admitted to United Nations.
1975: Newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst is captured by the FBI in San Francisco, 19 months after being kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army and then becoming one of its members.
1978: Egypt’s Foreign Minister Ibrahim Kamel and Ambassador to United States Ashraf Ghorbal resign in protest of Egypt’s Camp David agreement with Israel.
1983: British adventurer George Meegan finishes a six-year-long walk from the southernmost tip of South America to Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, covering 30,605 kilometres (19,021 miles).
1988: Burma’s military commander San Maung overthrows Burma’s civilian President Maung Maung in coup.
1993: A United Nations investigation finds Liberian army troops responsible for shooting, bludgeoning, and mutilating more than 400 refugees, most of whom were women and children.
1994: US President Bill Clinton announces Haiti’s strongman Raoul Cedras has agreed to leave power by October 15 and permit US troops to enter the country.
1996: In Lagos, Nigeria, anti-riot police clash with thousands of Muslims and 10 people are killed.
1997: In Cairo, Muslim extremists open fire on a tourist bus outside a museum, killing 10 people, mostly German tourists; media mogul Ted Turner pledges US$1 billion to the United Nations.
2000: Three gangs of armed gunmen break into three jails in the outskirts of Sao Paulo, Brazil, in separate incidents, freeing more than 200 inmates, many of them convicted and suspected drug traffickers.
2002: Burundi’s Government reports 173 civilians are killed by uniformed gunmen. It was one of the worst massacres in the country’s nine-year-old civil war between the Hutu and Tutsi ethnic groups.
2005: Afghans choose a legislature for the first time in decades, embracing their newly recovered democratic rights and braving threats of Taliban attacks to cast votes in schools, tents and mosques.
2007: While there are an estimated 7,000 languages spoken around the world today, one of them dies out about every two weeks, linguistic experts say.
2008: Somchai Wongsawat is inaugurated as Thailand’s prime minister.
2010: Despite Taliban rocket strikes and bombings, Afghans vote for a new parliament, the first election since a fraud-marred presidential ballot last year cast doubt on the legitimacy of the embattled government.
2011: Former International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn breaks his silence four months after a New York hotel maid accused him of sexual assault, calling his encounter with the woman a “moral failing” he deeply regrets, but insisting in an interview on French television that no violence was involved.
2013: The death toll from days of flooding in southern and central Mexico rises to 80 and new reports of landslides near the resort of Acapulco threatens to drive the number of casualties higher.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Samuel Johnson, English poet-critic (1709-1784); Jean-Bernard-Leon Foucault, French scientist (1819-1868); Greta Garbo, Swedish-born actress (1905-1990); Agnes Demille, US dancer/choreographer (1905-1993); Kwame Nkrumah, Ghanaian statesman (1909-1972); Robert Blake, US actor (1933- ); Dee Dee Ramone, US rock musician (1952-2002).
— AP