This Date in History, July 07, 2017

''Knowing the past, we can make wise
choices for a brighter, and more positive future.''

1742A Spanish force invading Georgia runs headlong into the colony's British defenders. The battle decides the fate of a colony.
1777American troops give up Fort Ticonderoga, on Lake Champlain, to the British.
1791Benjamin Rush, Richard Allen and Absalom Jones found the Non-denominational African Church.
1795Thomas Paine defends the principal of universal suffrage at the Constitutional Convention in Paris.
1798Napoleon Bonaparte's army begins its march towards Cairo from Alexandria.
1807Czar Alexander meets with Napoleon Bonaparte.
1814Sir Walter Scott's novel Waverley is published anonymously so as not to damage his reputation as a poet.
1815After defeating Napoleon at Waterloo, the victorious Allies march into Paris.
1853Japan opens its ports to trade with the West after 250 years of isolation.
1863Confederate General Robert E. Lee, in Hagerstown, Maryland, reports his defeat at Gettysburg to President Jefferson Davis.
1925Afrikaans is recognized as one of the official languages of South Africa, along with English and Dutch.
1927Christopher Stone becomes the first British 'disc jockey' when he plays records for the BBC.
1941Although a neutral country, the United States sends troops to occupy Iceland to keep it out of Germany's hands.
1943Adolf Hitler makes the V-2 missile program a top priority in armament planning.
1966The U.S. Marine Corps launches Operation Hasting to drive the North Vietnamese Army back across the Demilitarized Zone in Vietnam.
1969The first U.S. units to withdraw from South Vietnam leave Saigon.
1981
Sandra Day O'Connor becomes the first woman to serve on the Supreme Court.

Born on July 7

1752Joseph-Marie Jacquard, French inventor, textile industry pioneer.
1860Gustav Mahler, composer and conductor.
1887Marc Chagall, French painter and designer.
1906Leroy "Satchel" Page, baseball pitcher.
1940Ringo Starr, musician, one of the Beatles.


MUCH MORE HISTORY

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