HistoryNet mastheadHistoryNetShop Summer Catalog

Today in History: September 18


Previous Day | Next Day

Today in History  | Single Page  | 0 comments  | Print This Post  | Email This Post

Today in History

September 18
1758   James Abercromby is replaced as supreme commander of British forces after his defeat by French commander the Marquis of Montcalm at Fort Ticonderoga during the French and Indian War.
1759   Quebec surrenders to the British after a battle which sees the deaths of both James Wolfe and Louis Montcalm, the British and French commanders.
1793   George Washington lays the foundation stone for the U.S. Capitol.
1830   Tom Thumb, the first locomotive built in the United States, loses a nine-mile race in Maryland to a horse.
1850   Congress passes the second Fugitive Slave Bill into law (the first was enacted in 1793), requiring the return of escaped slaves to their owners.
1862   After waiting all day for a Union attack which never came at Antietam, Confederate General Robert E. Lee begins a retreat out of Maryland and back to Virginia.
1863   Union cavalry troops clash with a group of Confederates at Chickamauga Creek.
1874   The Nebraska Relief and Aid Society is formed to help farmers whose crops were destroyed by grasshoppers swarming throughout the American West.
1911   Russian Premier Piotr Stolypin dies four days after being shot at the Kiev opera house by socialist lawyer Dimitri Bogroff.
1914   The Irish Home Rule Bill becomes law, but is delayed until after World War I.
1929   Charles Lindbergh takes off on a 10,000 mile air tour of South America.
1934   The League of Nations admits the Soviet Union.
1939   A German U-boat sinks the British aircraft carrier Courageous, killing 500 people.
1948   Margaret Chase Smith becomes the first woman elected to the Senate without completing another senator's term when she defeats Democratic opponent Adrian Scolten. Smith is also the only woman to be elected to and serve in both houses of Congress.
1960   Two thousand cheer Castro's arrival in New York for the United Nations session.
1964   U.S. destroyers fire on hostile targets in Vietnam.
1980   Cosmonaut Arnoldo Tamayo, a Cuban, becomes the first black to be sent on a mission in space.

Born on September 18

1709   Samuel Johnson, English lexicographer, essayist, poet and moralist.
1819   Leon Foucault, French physicist.
1827   John Towsend Trowbridge, poet and author of books for boys, wrote the Jack Hazzard and Toby Trafford series.
1839   John Aitken, physician and meterologist.
1895   John G. Diefenbaker, prime minister of Canada from 1957 to 1963.
1905   Greta Garbo, actress nominated for Oscars for her roles in Anna Christie and Ninotcha.
1951   Dr. Benjamin Solomon Carson, Sr., African-American neurosurgeon.

Tags:

HistoryNet.com Subject Locator

Post a Comment

Please note that HistoryNet Staff cannot respond to requests for research of any type. Please visit our research forum to post research questions. If you have a question about our magazines, please use the contact us form.

Related Articles




SPONSORED SITES







HistoryNet Article Archives Historynet Spacer

HISTORYNET READERS' POLL

Given cultural differences and expanding populations, could European settlers and America’s native tribes poossibly have co-existed peacefully?

View Results | See previous polls

Loading ... Loading ...
STAY CONNECTED WITH US 
RSS Feed Daily Email Update
HistoryNet on Twitter HistoryNet RSS Feed

What is HistoryNet?

The HistoryNet.com is brought to you by the Weider History Group, the world's largest publisher of history magazines. HistoryNet.com contains daily features, photo galleries and over 5,000 articles originally published in our various magazines.

If you are interested in a specific history subject, try searching our archives, you are bound to find something to pique your interest.

 Get our RSS!
 Newsletter Signup

From Our Magazines

Weider History Group

Weider History Network:  HistoryNet | Armchair General | Great History | Achtung Panzer!
Today in History | Picture of the Day | Daily Quiz | Daily History Question

Copyright © 2010 Weider History Group. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
Contact Us | Advertise With Us | Subscription Help