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Today in History: December 18


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Today in History
December 18

1118   Afonso the Battler, the Christian King of Aragon captures Saragossa, Spain, causing a major blow to Muslim Spain.
1812   Napoleon Bonaparte arrives in Paris after his disastrous campaign in Russia.
1862   Nathan B. Forrest engages and defeats a Federal cavalry force near Lexington in his continued effort to disrupt supply lines.
1862   Union General Ulysses S. Grant announces the organization of his army in the West. Sherman, Hurlbut, McPherson, and McClernand are to be corps commanders.
1865   Slavery is abolished in the United Staes. The 13th Amendment is formally adopted into the U.S. Constitution, ensuring that "neither slavery nor involuntary servitude… shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction."
1915   In a single night, about 20,000 Australian and New Zealand troops withdraw from Gallipoli, Turkey, undetected by the Turks defending the peninsula.
1916   The Battle of Verdun ends with the French and Germans each having suffered more than 330,000 killed and wounded in 10 months. It was the longest engagement of World War I.
1925   Soviet leaders Lev Kamenev and Grigori Zinoviev break with Joseph Stalin.
1940   Adolf Hitler issues his secret plans for the invasion of the Soviet Union–Operation Barbarossa.
1941   Defended by 610 fighting men, the American-held island of Guam falls to more than 5,000 Japanese invaders in a three-hour battle.
1941   Japan invades Hong Kong.
1942   Adolf Hitler meets with Benito Mussolini and Pierre Laval.
1944   Japanese forces are repelled from northern Burma by British troops.
1951   North Koreans give the United Nations a list of 3,100 POWs.
1956   Japan is admitted to the United Nations.
1960   A rightist government is installed under Prince Boun Oum in Laos as the United States resumes arms shipments.
1965   U.S. Marines attack VC units in the Que Son Valley during Operation Harvest Moon.
1970   An atomic leak in Nevada forces hundreds of citizens to flee the test site.
1972   President Richard M. Nixon declares that the bombing of North Vietnam will continue until an accord can be reached.
Born on December 18
1879   Paul Klee, Swiss abstract painter.
1886   Ty (Tyrus Raymond) Cobb, American baseball player, first man to be elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame.
1913   Willy Brandt, German political leader. Mayor of Berlin and Chancellor of West Germany.
1946   Steven Spielberg, film director (E.T., Jurassic Park, and Schindler’s List).

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