''Knowing the past, we can make wise
choices for a brighter, and more positive future.''
| 1099 | The Crusaders launch their final assault on Jerusalem. | |
| 1534 | Ottoman armies capture Tabriz in northwestern Persia. | |
| 1558 | Led by the Count of Egmont, the Spanish army defeats the French at Gravelines, France. | |
| 1585 | A group of 108 English colonists, led by Sir Richard Grenville, reaches Roanoke Island, North Carolina. | |
| 1643 | In England, the Roundheads, led by Sir William Waller, are defeated by Royalist troops under Lord Wilmot in the Battle of Roundway Down. | |
| 1754 | George Washington surrenders Fort Necessity to the French, leaving them in control of the Ohio Valley. | |
| 1787 | Congress, under the Articles of Confederation, enacts the Northwest Ordinance, establishing rules for governing the Northwest Territory, for admitting new states to the Union and limiting the expansion of slavery. | |
| 1798 | English poet William Wordsworth visits the ruins of Tintern Abbey. | |
| 1832 | Henry Schoolcraft discovers the source of the Mississippi River in Minnesota. | |
| 1862 | Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest defeats a Union army at Murfreesboro, Tennessee. | |
| 1863 | Opponents of the draft begin three days of rioting in New York City. | |
| 1866 | The Great Eastern begins a two week voyage to complete a 12-year effort to lay telegraph cable across the Atlantic between Britain and the United States. | |
| 1878 | The Congress of Berlin divides the Balkans among European powers. | |
| 1939 | Frank Sinatra records his first song, "From the Bottom of My Heart," with the Harry James Band. | |
| 1941 | Britain and the Soviet Union sign a mutual aid pact, providing the means for Britain to send war materiel to the Soviet Union. | |
| 1954 | In Geneva, Great Britain, the Soviet Union, the People's Republic of China and France reach an accord on Indochina, dividing Vietnam into two countries, North and South, along the 17th parallel. | |
| 1971 |
The Army of Morocco executes 10 leaders accused of leading a revolt.
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Born on July 13
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| 1793 | John Clare, English poet. | |
| 1886 | Edward J. Flanagan, Catholic priest, founder of Boys' Town. | |
| 1928 | Robert N.C. Nix, Jr., first African-American chief justice of a state supreme court. | |
| 1933 | David Storey, English novelist (The Sporting Life). | |
| 1934 | Wole Soyinka, Nobel Prize-winning Nigerian playwright. | |
| 1935 | Jack Kemp, football player, politician. | |
MUCH MORE HISTORY

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