Wednesday, 2 March 2016

March 1

March 1

York, Maine becomes the first incorporated American city.
1692Sarah Goode, Sarah Osborne and Tituba are arrested for the supposed practice of witchcraft in Salem, Mass.
1776French minister Charles Gravier advises his Spanish counterpart to support the American rebels against the English.
1780Pennsylvania becomes the first U.S. state to abolish slavery.
1803Ohio becomes the 17th state to join the Union.
1808In France, Napoleon creates an imperial nobility.
1815Napoleon lands at Cannes, France, returning from exile on Elba, with a force of 1,500 men and marches on Paris.
1871German troops enter Paris, France, during the Franco-Prussian War.
1875Congress passes the Civil Rights Act, which is invalidated by the Supreme Court in 1883.
1912Albert Berry completes the first in-flight parachute jump, from a Benoist plane over Kinlock Field in St. Louis, Missouri.
1915The Allies announce their aim to cut off all German supplies and assure the safety of the neutrals.
1919The Korean coalition proclaims their independence from Japan.
1921The Allies reject a $7.5 billion reparations offer in London. German delegations decides to quit all talks.
1932The Lindbergh baby is kidnapped from the Lindbergh home near Princeton, New Jersey.
1935Germany officially establishes the Luftwaffe.
1941Bulgaria joins the Axis as the Nazis occupy Sofia.
1942Japanese troops land on Java in the Pacific.
1943The British RAF conducts strategic bombing raids on all European railway lines.
19601,000 Black students pray and sing the national anthem on the steps of the old Confederate Capitol in Montgomery, Ala.
1968Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara is replaced by Clark Clifford.
1969Mickey Mantle announces his retirement from baseball.
1974A grand jury indicts seven of President Nixon‘s aides for the conspiracy on Watergate.
1985The Pentagon accepts the theory that an atomic war would block the sun, causing a “nuclear winter.”
1992Bosnian Serbs begin sniping in Sarajevo, after Croats and Muslims vote for Bosnian independence.
Born on March 1
1810Frédéric Chopin, composer and pianist.
1837William Dean Howells, novelist.
1904Glenn Miller, big band leader during the 1930s and ’40s.
1914Ralph Waldo Ellison, African-American author (Invisible Man).
1917Robert Lowell, Jr., poet, won Pulitzer Prize in 1947 for Lord Weary’s Castle.
1921Richard Wilbur, Pulitzer Prize winning poet and translator.
1921Howard Nemerov, writer, another Pulitzer Prize recipient.

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