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1477 | | William Claxton publishes the first dated book printed in England. It is a translation from the French of The Dictes and Sayings of the Philosopers by Earl Rivers. |
1626 | | St. Peter’s Cathedral in Rome is officially dedicated.
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1861 | | The first provisional meeting of the Confederate Congress is held in Richmond, Virginia. |
1865 | | Mark Twain’s first story “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County” is published in the New York Saturday Press. |
1901 | | The second Hay-Pauncefote Treaty is signed. The United States is given extensive rights by Britain for building and operating a canal through Central America. |
1905 | | The Norwegian Parliament elects Prince Charles of Denmark to be the next King of Norway. Prince Charles takes the name Haakon VII. |
1906 | | Anarchists bomb St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome. |
1912 | | Cholera breaks out in Constantinople, in the Ottoman Empire. |
1921 | | New York City considers varying work hours to avoid long traffic jams. |
1928 | | Mickey mouse makes his film debut in Steamboat Willie, the first animated talking picture. |
1936 | | The main span of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco is joined. |
1939 | | The Irish Republican Army explodes three bombs in Piccadilly Circus. |
1943 | | RAF bombs Berlin, using 440 aircraft and losing nine of those and 53 air crew members; damage to the German capital is light, with 131 dead. |
1949 | | The U.S. Air Force grounds B-29s after two crashes and 23 deaths in three days. |
1950 | | The Bureau of Mines discloses its first production of oil from coal in practical amounts. |
1968 | | Soviets recover the Zond 6 spacecraft after a flight around the moon. |
1978 | | Peoples Temple cult leader Jim Jones leads his followers to a mass murder-suicide in Jonestown, Guyana, hours after cult member killed Congressman Leo J. Ryan of California. |
1983 | | Argentina announces its ability to produce enriched uranium for nuclear weapons. |
1984 | | The Soviet Union helps deliver American wheat during the Ethiopian famine. |
1991 | | The Croatian city of Vukovar surrenders to Yugoslav People’s Army and allied Serb paramilitary forces after an 87-day siege. |
1993 | | Twenty-one political parties approve a new constitution for South Africa that expands voter rights and ends the rule of the country’s white minority. |
2002 | | UN weapons inspectors under Hans Blix arrive in Iraq. |
2003 | | Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court rules the state’s ban on same-sex marriages is unconstitutional; the legislature fails to act within the mandated 180 days, and on May 17, 2004, Massachusetts becomes the first US state to legalize same-sex marriage. |
Born on November 18 |
1789 | | Louis Jacques Daguerre, French painter, physicist and photography pioneer. |
1810 | | Asa Gray, botanist (Gray’s Manual). |
1836 | | William S. Gilbert, English playwright and humorist, one half of Gilbert & Sullivan. |
1870 | | Dorthea Dix, pseudonym for Elizabeth Gilman, who wrote syndicated advice. |
1874 | | Clarence Day, American writer (Life with Father). |
1899 | | Eugene Ormandy, orchestra conductor. |
1900 | | Dr. Howard Thurman, theologian and first African American to hold a full-time position at Boston University. |
1901 | | George Horatio Gallup, American journalist and statistician. |
1909 | | Johnny Mercer, songwriter. |
1923 | | Alan Shepard, first American astronaut in space. |
1939 | | Margaret Atwood, Canadian writer (The Edible Woman, The Handmaid’s Tale). |
1950 | | Graham Parker, lead singer of the British rock band Graham Parker and the Rumour. |
1950 | | Alan Moore, writer best known for his ground-breaking work in comic books / graphic novels (Watchmen, V for Vendetta). |
1956 | | Warren Moon, quarterback in Canadian and US pro football teams; his numerous passing records include most passing yardage in pro football (surpassed by Damon Allen, Sept. 4, 2006). |
1974 | | Chloe Sevigny, American actress, model and fashion designer noted for her eclectic fashion sense.
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