0837 Comet 1P/837 F1 (Halley) approaches within 0.0334 astronomical units (AUs) of Earth 0847 St Leo IV begins his reign as Catholic Pope 0879 Louis III, crowned King of France 1500 France captures duke Ludovico Sforza of Milan 1512 Pope Julius II opens 5th Council of Lateranen 1516 1st ghetto, Jews are compelled to live in specific area of Venice 1552 Henri II of France occupies Metz 1589 Spanish troops conquer Geertruidenberg 1656 Dutch fleet occupiers Colombo Ceylon 1694 Duke Victor Amadeus of Savoye attacks Casale 1739 Dick Turpin executed in England for horse stealing 1741 Prussians defeat Austrians at Mollwitz 1790 US Patent system is established 1790 Robert Gray is 1st American to circumnavigate the Earth 1815 Austria declares war on realm of Naples 1816 2nd Bank of US chartered 1825 1st hotel in Hawaii opens 1825 Nicaraguan constituent assembly meets at León 1835 Charles Darwin returns to Santiago, Chile 1841 New York "Tribune" begins publishing under editor Horace Greeley 1845 More than 1,000 buildings damaged by fire in Pittsburgh PA 1849 Safety pin patented by Walter Hunt (New York NY); sold rights for $100 1863 Rebel General Earl Van Dorn attacks at Franklin TN 1864 Austrian Archduke Maximilian becomes emperor of México 1865 At Appomattox, General Lee issues General Order #9, his last 1866 American Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) forms 1868 British defeat King of Abyssinia at Magdala 1868 1st performance of John Brahms' "Ein german Requiem" 1869 Congress increases number of Supreme Court judges from 7 to 9 1871 William Hammond Hall's maps & surveys of Golden Gate Park accepted 1872 1st National black convention meets in New Orleans 1872 Arbor day 1st celebrated in Nebraska, later changed to April 22 1877 Federal troops withdrawn from Columbia SC 1877 1st human cannonball act performed in London 1878 California State Cable Car Railroad Company starts service 1882 Matson founds his shipping company (San Francisco & Hawaii) 1884 US Senate accepts Belgian administration of Congo 1887 President Abraham Lincoln is re-buried with his wife in Springfield IL 1887 Soccer team Be Quick forms in Hairs Groningen 1896 Greek runner Spiridon Loues wins 1st modern Olympic marathon in Athens (2:58:50) 1912 RMS Titanic sets sail for its 1st & last voyage 1913 President Woodrow Wilson throws out 1st ball, Senators beat Yankees 2-1 1913 Walter Johnson begins string of 56 consecutive scoreless innings 1916 1st professional golf tournament held 1917 Munition factory explosion at Eddystone PA, kills 133 workers 1923 Hitler demands "hatred & more hatred" in Berlin 1924 Tubular steel golf club shafts approved for championship play 1925 F Scott Fitzgerald publishes "The Great Gatsby" 1925 Czarina re-christens Stalingrad (now Volgograd) 1925 Scribners publishes "The Great Gatsby" by F Scott Fitzgerald 1930 Synthetic rubber 1st produced 1930 George Headley scores 223 vs England at Kingston 1932 Paul von Hindenburg re-elected President of Germany 1934 Stanley Cup Chicago Blackhawks beat Detroit Red Wings, 3 games to 1 1935 Vaughan Williams' 4th Symphony premieres in London 1936 200" mirror blank arrives in Pasadena 1938 Austria becomes a state of Germany 1938 2nd government of Blum replaced by Daladier government in France 1938 New York makes syphilis test mandatory in order to get a marriage license 1939 Colijn's Dutch government opens camp Westerbork for German Jews 1939 Grens mobilization due to Italian invasion in Albania 1940 Vidkun Quisling forms Norwegian "national government" 1941 German troops conquer Libyan county Cyrenaica 1942 Cigarettes & candy rationed in Holland 1943 12 Jewish patients of Herren Loo-Lozenoord escape Nazi's 1943 General Montgomery occupies Sfax Tunisia 1944 "Patrolling the Ether" is shown on 3 TV stations simultaneously 1944 Soviet forces liberate Odessa from Nazi's 1945 NFL's Boston Yanks & Brooklyn Tigers merge 1945 Canadian troops conquer Deventer 1945 General Blaskowitz becomes nazi leader of "Fort Holland" 1945 German troops attack Ijsselbrug 1945 US troops land on Tsugen Shima Okinawa 1945 William Schuman & Antony Tudors ballet "Undertow" premieres in NYC 1946 1st election for Japanese Diet 1947 Jackie Robinson became the 1st black in modern major league baseball (Dodgers) 1947 King Frederik IX of Denmark crowned 1948 Jewish Hagana repels an Arab attack on Mishmar HaEmek 1949 13th Golf Masters Championship Sam Snead wins, shooting a 282 1953 "House of Wax", 1st 3-D movie is released (New York NY) 1953 7th NBA Championship Minneapolis Lakers beat New York Knicks, 4 games to 1 1954 KRGV TV channel 5 in Weslaco TX (ABC) begins broadcasting 1955 Ruth Ellis shoots jilting lover David Blakely 1955 19th Golf Masters Championship Cary Middlecoff wins, shooting a 279 1955 9th NBA Championship Syracuse Nationals beat Fort Wayne Pistons, 4 games to 3 1955 Dr Jonas Salk successfully tests Polio vaccine 1956 Philips broadcasts 1st Dutch color TV programs 1956 Stanley Cup Montréal Canadiens beat Detroit Red Wings, 4 games to 1 1957 John Osborne's "Entertainer", premieres in London 1957 Jordanian government of Naboelsi resigns 1957 Suez canal reopens for all traffic 1957 USSR performs atmospheric nuclear test 1958 Northern strip of Spanish Sahara ceded to Morocco 1959 Japan's Crown Prince Akihito marries commoner Michiko Shoda 1960 Senate passes landmark Civil Rights Bill 1960 24th Golf Masters Championship Arnold Palmer wins, shooting a 282 1960 Betsy Rawls wins LPGA Babe Didrikson-Zaharias Golf Open 1961 25th Golf Masters Championship Gary Player wins, shooting a 280 1961 Adolf Eichmann tried as a war criminal in Israel 1961 Dutch foreign minister Luns talks to President John F Kennedy about New Guinea 1961 New Washington Senators loses 1st regular-season game 4-3 to Chicago White Sox 1962 1st major league game in Houston, Colt 45s beat Chicago Cubs, 11-2 1962 New York Yankee Mickey Mantle hits his 375th homerun 1962 1st baseball game at Los Angeles' Dodger Stadium, they lose 6-3 to Cincinnati Reds 1963 Thresher, US atomic-powered submarine, sinks 220 miles east of Boston 1963 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site 1964 Iranian motor launch catches fire & sinks killing 113 (Persian Gulf) 1964 Demolition begins on Polo Grounds to clear way for housing project 1967 39th Academy Awards - "Man For All Seasons", E Taylor & P Scofield win 1968 "George M!" opens at Palace Theater NYC for 435 performances 1968 40th Academy Awards - "Heat of the Night", Rod Steiger & Katharine Hepburn win 1968 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site 1971 1st baseball game at Philadelphia's Veterans Stadium, Phillies beat Montréal Expos 4-1 1971 US table tennis team arrives in People's Rebublic of China 1972 7.0 earthquake kills 1/5 of population of Iranian province of Fars 1972 US, USSR & 70 other nations agree to ban biological weapons 1973 BEA Vanguard Turboprop flight to Basel Switzerland, crashes into wooded hillside during landing, killing 107 of 143 1973 Kansas City opens its new park, Royals Stadium, with 12-1 rout of Texas Rangers 1973 Pakistan suspends constitution 1974 American Boccaccio Association is established 1974 Yitzhak Rabin replaces resigning Israeli PM Golda Meir 1974 Magicians Penn & Teller 1st meet 1975 New York Rangers score 8 goals against New York Islanders in playoffs 1976 Brewers' Don Money's grand slammer disallowed-Yankees win 9-7 1976 Cleveland Cavaliers win their 1st NBA Central Division title 1977 41st Golf Masters Championship Tom Watson wins, shooting a 276 1977 Beverly Klass wins LPGA Women's International Golf Satellite 1977 Cleveland Indians set club record for longest, 9 inning game (3:17) 1978 Formation of the Major Indoor Soccer League is announced 1979 Soyuz 33 launched with a Russian & a Bulgarian 1979 J R Richard throws major league record 6 wild pitches in Astrodome 1981 "Caveman" with Ringo premieres 1981 Computer glitch keeps Space Shuttle Columbia grounded 1981 Imprisoned IRA hunger striker Bobby Sands elected to British Parliament 1981 France performs nuclear test 1982 Los Angeles Kings losing 5-0 to Edmonton Oilers in the 3rd period, win in OT 6-5 1982 Pittsburgh Penguins 2-New York Islanders 1 (OT) - Preliminary - Islanders hold 2-1 lead 1983 Washington Capitals 3-New York Islanders 6 - Patrick Division Semifinals - Islanders win series 3-2 1983 Baltimore's Eddie Murray hits his 1,000 career hit 1983 Hennie Kuiper (Netherlands) wins Paris-Roubaix cycle race 1983 Jordan's King Hussein ceases negotiations with PLO 1983 Nancy Lopez wins LPGA J&B Scotch Pro-Am Golf Tournament 1984 Damaged Solar Max satellite snared by Challenger shuttle 1984 John Long (Detroit) ends NBA free throw streak of 51 games 1984 US Senate condemns CIA mining of Nicaraguan harbors 1985 At 80, Leo Sites becomes oldest bowler to score a 300 game 1985 Challenger moves to Vandenberg AFB for mating of STS 51-B mission 1985 Washington Capitals 4-New York Islanders 3 (OT) - Patrick Division Semifinals - Capitals hold 1-0 lead 1986 "Big Deal" opens at Broadway Theater NYC for 70 performances 1986 Benazir Bhutto returns to Pakistan 1986 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site 1988 Herschel Walker performs the Fort Worth Ballet 1988 New York Islanders beat New Jersey Devils 5-4 (OT) 1st round tied at 2-2 1988 52nd Golf Masters Championship Sandy Lyle wins, shooting a 281 1988 8th Golden Raspberry Awards Leonard Part 6 wins 1988 Ayako Okamoto wins LPGA San Diego Inamori Golf Classic 1989 Intel corp announces shipment of the 80486 chip 1989 10th Emmy Sports Award presentation 1989 24th Academy of Country Music Awards Hank Williams Jr, Alabama win 1989 H J Heinz, Van Camp Seafood & Bumble Bee Seafood say they will not buy tuna caught in nets that also trap dolphins 1990 CUNY/Lehman College, Bronx, opens a branch campus in Hiroshma Japan 1990 Curtly Ambrose takes 8-45 in cricket vs England at Bridgetown 1991 Last automat (coin operated cafeteria) closes (3rd & 42nd St, New York NY) 1991 Boat rams a tanker in Livorno Italy fog, killing about 138 1991 Los Angeles King Wayne Gretzky scores NHL record 93rd playoff goal 1991 Martin Zubero swims world record 200 meter backstroke (1:52.51) 1992 Floriade (Flower Show) opens at the Hague, Netherlands 1992 NHL strike ends after 10 days 1992 25 die in a bus bombing in Sri Lanka 1993 BPAA US Open by Del Ballard Jr 1993 Ottawa Senators win 1st road game (New York Islanders) after 38 straight loses 1993 Pittsburgh Penguins win their NHL record 17 game winning streak 1994 "Les Miserables", opens at Hiten Theatre, Osaka Japan 1994 58th Golf Masters Championship Jose M Olazabal wins, shooting a 279 1995 "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" opens at Lyceum Theater NYC for 24 performances 1995 NYC bans smoking in all restaurants that seat 35 or more ______________________________________________________________________
Missing In Action.........
1967 O'GRADY JOHN F. NEW HYDE PARK NY EJECTED NO RADIO CONTACT 1968 CARVER HARRY F. NEW ALBANY IN 1968 PADGETT SAMUEL J. TULSA OK
BB-39 USS ARIZONA- 04-09-2006
Births which occurred on April 10:
0401 Theodosius II the Younger, Eastern Roman emperor 1512 James I king of Scotland (1513-42) 1569 Emilia van Nassau daughter of Willem of Orange & Anna of Saxon 1583 Hugo Grotius Holland, jurist, father of international law 1633 Werner Fabricius composer 1695 Balthazar Huydecoper Dutch translator/historian 1737 François Giroust composer 1755 Samuel Hahnemann German physician/originator of homeopathy 1778 William Hazlitt Maidstone Kent England, essayist/critic 1783 Hortense E de Beauharnais French queen of Netherlands (1806-10) 1794 Commodore Matthew Calbraith Perry opened Japan 1797 Claude Ambroise Seurat Troyes France, (World's skinniest man) 1806 Leonidas Polk Lieutenant General (Confederate Army), died in 1864 1808 Auguste Franchomme composer 1823 Thomas Reade Rootes Cobb Brigadier General (Confederate Army) 1827 Lewis Wallace Major General (Union volunteers)/lawyer/diplomat/author (Ben Hur) 1829 William Booth founder (Salvation Army) 1833 David McMurtrie Gregg Brevet Major General (Union volunteers) 1833 James Edward Rains Brigadier General (Confederate Army), died in 1862 1847 Joseph Pulitzer Hungary, publisher (St Louis Post-Dispatch, New York World) 1847 Charles Swinnerton Heap composer 1854 Jozef M T Orelio baritone 1857 Henry Ernest Dudeney mathematician/puzzle maker 1864 Eugene Francis Charles D'Albert German pianist/composer (Golem) 1864 Tully Marshall Nevada City CA 1868 George Arliss London England, actor (Devil, Green Goddess) 1877 Alfred Kubin writer 1880 Frances Perkins 1st woman to hold cabinet-level position (Labor) 1882 Simon F H J Berkelbach Van der Sprenkel theologist (Fear & Religion) 1886 Val[entine] Paul Denver CO, silent film actor (Red Red Heart, Lair of the Wolf) 1887 Bernardo A Houssay Argentine physiologist (Nobel 1947) 1887 Heinz Tiessen composer 1891 Tim McCoy Saginaw MI 1892 Egon Freiherr von Eickstedt German anthropologist (Rassenkunde) 1892 Victor de Sabata Trieste Italy, conductor/composer (Il Macigno) 1894 Ben Nicholson English painter/sculptor (Circle) 1896 Edith Day Minneapolis MN 1898 Hans Ehrke German writer/poet (Narrenspiegel, Füer) 19-- Claudette Nevins Birmingham AL, actress (Dark Side of Innocence) 19-- Dale Pulde drag race car driver 19-- Lee Weaver Fort Lauderdale FL, actor (Bill Cosby, Easy Street) 1900 Jean Duvieusart premier (Belgium 1950) 1903 Clare Boothe Luce former US ambassador to Vatican 1903 Nick Stuart Romania, bandleader 1905 Jan H van Roijen diplomat/Netherlands foreign minister 1906 Kathleen Major principal (St Hilda's College, England) 1906 Fud Livingston composer 1906 Lili Darvas Budapest Hungary, actress (Szerelem, Cimmaron) 1907 Pete Desjardins US, platform/springboard diver (Olympics-gold-1928) 1908 Aidan Crawley CEO (London Weekend TV) 1910 Abu-Bakr Khairat composer 1910 David Gilroy Bevan politician 1910 Eddy Duchin Cambridge MA, society pianist/bandleader (Eddy Duchin Orchestra) 1911 Maurice Schumann French statesman/writer (La Voix du couvre-feu) 1912 Clarke Hinkle NFL fullback (Green Bay Packers) 1912 Martin Denny rocker/actor (Forbidden Island) 1912 Roy Hofheinz engineer (Houston Astrodome) 1913 Stefan Heym German/US author (Crusaders, Family Benda) 1914 E A V "Foffie" Williams cricketer (West Indies all-rounder 1939-48) 1914 Jack Badcock cricketer (Tasmania Australian batsman of 30's) 1915 Harry Morgan Detroit MI, actor (December Bride, MASH, Dragnet) 1915 Leo Vroman Dutch/US poet/biologist 1917 Robert Burns Woodward organic chemist (Nobel 1965) 1921 Chuck Connors Brooklyn NY, actor (Rifleman, Branded, Cowboy in Africa) 1921 Sheb Wooley Erick OK, vocalist (Purple People Eater, Hee Haw) 1921 Peter Herbert Penwarden priest 1923 Floyd M Simmons actor/decathlete (Olympics-bronze-1948, 52) 1923 John Watkins cricketer (South African all-rounder in 15 Tests 49-57) 1924 Lee Bergere Brooklyn NY, actor (Joseph-Dynasty) 1924 Johanna M van de Berg actress (What See I?) 1926 Jacques Casterede composer 1926 Johnnie Tillmon civil rights activist (National Welfare Rights Association) 1927 "Alvin" Junior Samples Cummings GA, country performer (Hee Haw) 1929 Max [Carl Adolf] Von Sydow Lund Sweden, actor (Hawaii, Exorcist, Dune, Dreamscape) 1929 Dusan Radic composer 1930 Lord Morton of Shauna, Senator (College of Justice, Scotland) 1930 Shuja-ud-Din cricketer (batted in 19 Tests for Pakistan 1954-62) 1931 Marcel van Maele Belgian poet 1932 Adrian Henri poet/president (Liverpool Academy of Arts) 1932 Hari Rhodes Cincinnati OH, actor (Mike-Daktari, Roots) 1932 Omar Sharif [Michael Shalhoub] Alexandria Egypt, actor (Dr Zhivago, Top Secret) 1932 Delphine Seyrig Beirut Lebanon, actress (Freak Orlando, Reperages) 1932 Mae Heriwentha Faggs Starr New Jersey, 4x100 meter runner (Olympics-gold-1952) 1932 Nathaniel Nelson rocker (Flamingos) 1933 [Ponciano] Poncie Ponce Maui HI, actor (Kazuo Kim-Hawaiian Eye) 1933 Philip Corner composer 1933 Robert Rhodes James historian (Gallipoli) 1934 David Halberstam New York Times international correspondent (New York Times/Pulitzer 1964) 1934 Zsolt Durko composer 1935 Jorge Mester México City México, conductor (Louisville Orchestra 1967-79) 1935 Patrick Garland director (Doll House) 1936 John Madden NFL coach (Oakland Raiders)/sports commentator (CBS, FOX) 1936 Michael Naylor insurance broker 1936 Robert "Bobby" Smith US singer (Spinners) 1937 Stan Mellor British racehorse trainer/jockey 1938 Don Meredith Mount Vernon TX, NFL quarterback (Cowboys)/Mon Night Football 1939 Alan Rothenberg US Soccer president (1990- ) 1939 Daniel Oliver New York NY, CEO (Federal Trade Commission) 1940 Gloria Hunniford British broadcaster/actress (Old Curiosity Shop) 1941 Paul Theroux American travel book writer (Mosquito Coast) 1944 Danny Woods US musician (CEO of the Board) 1945 Vera Misevich USSR, equestrian dressage (Olympics-gold-1980) 1946 Armand [Herman van Loenhout] singer (Blommenkinders) 1947 Bunny Waller vocalist/percussionist (Bob Marley & Wailers) 1947 Karl Russell rocker 1948 Thomas Spencer Member of European Parliament (Conservative) 1949 Frank de Leeuw Dutch rock guitarist (Bob Color) 1950 Dave Peverett rocker (Foghat) 1950 Eddie Hazel US pop guitarist (Funkadelic-Uncle Jam Wants You) 1951 Mark Roth bowler (4-time PBA Player of Year) 1951 Steven Seagal Detroit MI, actor (Above the Law, Hard to Kill) 1953 David Moorcroft British athlete 1953 Terre Roche rocker (Roches) 1954 Jouko Törmänen Finland, 90 meter ski jumper (Olympics-gold-1980) 1954 Peter MacNicol Dallas TX, actor (John Cage-Ally McBeal, Alan Birch-Chicago Hope, Dragonslayer, Sophie's Choice) 1955 Cary Middlecoff golfer (Masters) 1958 Kenneth 'Babyface' Edmonds Indianapolis IN, singer/producer/songwriter (Boyz II Men, Bobby Brown) 1959 Brian Setzer Massapequa Park NY, rock guitarist/vocalist (Stray Cats) 1960 Julie Fulton Evanston IL, actress (Lime Steel) 1961 Jeb Adams Hollywood CA, actor (Lieutenant Jeb Pruitt-Baa Baa Black Sheep) 1961 Olivia Brown Frankfurt German Federal Republic, actress (Detective Trudy Joplin-Miami Vice) 1962 Cathy Turner Rochester NY, short track skater (Olympics-gold-1994 1962 Jukka Tammi hockey goaltender (Team Finland Olympics-bronze-1998) 1962 Steve Tasker wide receiver (Buffalo Bills) 1963 Warren DeMartini heavy metal rocker (Dokken-Alone Again, Ratt) 1963 Claire Smith Ottawa Ontario Canada, equestrian 3 day event (Olympics-96) 1963 Kirk Lowdermilk NFL center (Indianapolis Colts) 1963 Marvin Freeman Chicago IL, pitcher (Colorado Rockies) 1963 Mike Devereaux Casper WY, outfielder (Baltimore Orioles) 1964 Alan "Reni" Wren English pop drummer (Stone Roses-Fools Gold) 1964 Felicia Collins Albany NY, guitarist (David Letterman) 1964 Manon Bollegraf den Bosch Netherlands, tennis star (semi 1996 Australian doubles) 1965 Karen Booker WNBA center (Utah Starzz) 1965 Tim "Herb" Alexander US funk metal drummer (Primus-Prok soda) 1966 Neil Smith NFL defensive end (Kansas City Chiefs, Denver Broncos-Superbowl 32) 1967 Donald Dufresne Rimouski, NHL defenseman (Edmonton Oilers) 1967 Kay Whitmore Sudbury, NHL goalie (New York Rangers) 1969 Billy Jacoby Flushing NY, actor (Brad-Silver Spoons, Maggie) 1969 William Jayne actor (Mikey Randall-Parker Lewis Can't Lose) 1969 Dennis Vial Sault Ste-Marie Canada, NHL defenseman (Ottawa Senators) 1969 Wayne Lammle WLAF kicker/punter (Scotland Claymores) 1970 Enrico Ciccone Montréal Québec Canada, NHL defenseman (Chicago Blackhawks) 1970 J J McCleskey NFL safety (New Orleans Saints, Arizona Cardinals) 1970 Sean Gilbert defensive tackle (Washington Redskins) 1970 Wesley Barnett St Joseph MO, Olympic weightlifter (Pan Am-silver-1987) 1971 Karl Williams wide receiver (Tampa Bay Buccaneers) 1971 Mihai Bagiu Timisoara Romania, US gymnast (Olympics-96) 1971 Nana Miyagi Seattle WA, tennis star (1995 final Surabaya doubles) 1972 Maurice Harrell NFL tight end (San Diego Chargers) 1972 Richard Wearne Australian rower (Olympics-96) 1972 Sue Merz Greenwich CT, ice hockey defense (USA, Olympics-98) 1974 Sherry Johnson Owatonna MN, Miss Minnesota-America (1996) 1975 Eric Den Besten Bettendorf IA, rower (Olympics-1996) 1975 Floris Prince of Netherlands 1975 Steve Washburn Ottawa, NHL center (Florida Panthers) 1977 Claudia Delpin Miss Chile-Universe (1997) 1978 Jessica Davis Greenbrae CA, rhythmic gymnast (Olympics-27th-96) 1984 Zoe Melbourne Australia, 1st frozen-embryo child 1988 Haley Joel Osment Los Angeles CA, actor (Cole Sear-The Sixth Sense, Trevor 'Trev' McKinney-Pay It Forward) ____________________________________________________________________
Deaths which occurred on April 10:
0879 Louis II the stutterer, King of France (877-79), dies 0947 Hugo van Arles count of Arles/king of Italy, dies 1008 Notger bishop of Luik (972-1008), dies 1362 Machteld countess of Holland, dies 1533 Frederik I King of Denmark/Norway (1523-33), dies at 61 1585 Gregory XIII [Ugo Buoncampagni] Italian Pope (1572-85), dies 1640 Agostino Agazzari Italian composer, dies at 61 1640 Charlotte Flandrina van Nassau daughter of Willem I, dies at 60 1712 Yusuf Nabi Turkish poet (Hayriye), dies at about 77 1723 Claude F Tserclaes South Netherlands earl of Tilly, dies at 74 1731 Maximilian Dietrich Freisslich composer, dies at 58 1756 Giacomo Antonio Perti Italian composer, dies at 94 1760 Gerard George Clifford head of East-Indian Company, dies at 75 1784 Simon Fokke book illustrator, dies at 71 1807 Anna Amalia van Brumswijk-Wolfenbüttel duchess of Saxon-Weimar, dies 1810 Konrad Back composer, dies at 60 1825 Paul-Louis Courier (Méré), French writer/interpreter, dies at 53 1848 Godert AGP baron van Capellen Governor-General of Dutch-Indies, dies at 69 1862 William Harvey Lamb Wallace US lawyer/Brigadier-General, dies at 40 1863 Giovanni B Amia Italian astronomer/physicist/botanist, dies at 77 1885 John H Scholten theologist (Free Want), dies at 73 1909 Algernon Charles Swinburne English poet, dies at 72 1911 Mikolajus Konstantinas Ciurlionis composer, dies at 35 1919 Emiliano Zapata Mexican leader, murdered at 39 1920 Moritz B Cantor German mathematician, dies at 90 1920 Tryggve Andersen Norwegian writer (Mod Kvaeld), dies at 53 1927 Ivo Bligh cricketer (8th Earl of Darnley, 4 Tests 1882-83), dies 1929 Edmond Thieffry Belgium, WWI pilot, dies at 36 1932 André Baillon Belgian/French author (& sabots), dies at 56 1937 Algernon Ashton composer, dies at 77 1938 Nana Annor Adjaye Pan-Africanist, dies in West Nzima Ghana 1939 Alfredo Panzini Italian author (Il Bacio de Lesba), dies at 75 1945 Hendrik N Werkman resistance/painter (Blue Boat), executed at 63 1954 Auguste Lumière French photograph/movie pioneer, dies at 81 1954 Ludwig Curtius German archaeologist (Die antike Kunst), dies at 79 1955 Oskar Frederik Lindberg composer, dies at 68 1956 Clarence Beaumont 1st batter in 1st World Series, dies at 75 1956 Bozidar Sirola composer, dies at 66 1956 Jozef Szulc composer, dies at 81 1958 Chuck Willis rocker, dies at 30 1960 Arthur Benjamin Australian composer/pianist (Devil Take Her), dies at 66 1961 Irene Warfield silent screen actress (Satan Sanderson), dies at 65 1962 Stuart Sutcliffe original Beatles bassist, dies of brain hemorrhage at 21 1965 Linda Darnell dies from burns received in a fire at 41 1966 Christian J Modeste Dutch king of gypsies, dies at 71 1966 Evelyn Waugh British writer (Black Mischief), dies at 62 1970 Charles Paton dies at 96 1974 Patricia Collinge dies at 81 1974 Roger Bastide French sociologist, dies at 76 1975 Marjorie Main actress (Ma & Pa Kettle), dies at 85 1975 Sophia JW "Sophie" Hermse actress (But a Dream), dies at 86 1975 Walker Evans US photographer (Fortune Magazine), dies at 71 1979 Henriëtte P "Hetty" Beck actress (Dodendans), dies at 91 1979 Nino Rota Italian composer (Torquemada), dies at 67 1980 Kay Medford actress (Dean Martin Show, To Rome With Love), dies at 65 1983 Issam Sartawi PLO ambassador to Portugal, murdered 1983 Ulf S von Euler-Chelpin Swedish physiologist, dies at 78 1984 Nate Nelson R&B-singer (Flamingos-I'll Be Home), dies on 52 birthday 1984 Ray Middleton dies at 75 1986 Joseph P Addabbo US defence specialist/(Senator-D), dies at 61 1988 Cliff Gladwin cricketer (8 Tests for England 1947-49), dies 1989 Joan Barry dies at 85 1991 Natalie Schafer actress (Gilligan's Island), dies at 90 from cancer 1991 Kevin Peter Hall actor (Harry & Hendersons), dies of AIDS at 35 1992 Sam Kinison loud mouth comedian, dies in a car crash at 38 1993 Chris Hani Secretary-General South Africian Communist Party, assassinated at 50 1994 James L Lyons jazz promoter, dies at 77 1994 Victor Afanasiev Russia, editor-in-chief of Pravda (1976-89), dies at 71 1995 Chen Yun Vice-Premier of China (1949-75, 79-80), dies 1995 Glyn Jones writer, dies at 90 1995 Gunter Guillaume German politican, dies 1995 Joseph Anthony "Joe" Richards singer/actor (Colorado Ranger), dies at 44 1995 Morarji Desai PM of India (1977-79), dies 1996 Jessica Dubroff attempting to be youngest pilot, dies in crash at 7
BB-39 USS ARIZONA- 04-09-2006
1778 John Paul Jones sets out to raid British ships
On April 10, 1778, Commander John Paul Jones and his crew of 140 men aboard the USS Ranger set sail from the naval port at Brest, France, and head toward the Irish Sea to begin raids on British warships. This was the first mission of its kind during the Revolutionary War.
Commander Jones, remembered as one of the most daring and successful naval commanders of the American Revolution, was born in Scotland, on July 6, 1747. He became an apprentice to a merchant at 13 and soon went to sea, traveling first to the West Indies and then to North America as a young man. In Virginia at the onset of the American Revolution, Jones sided with the Patriots and received a commission as a first lieutenant in the Continental Navy on December 7, 1775.
After departing from Brest, Jones successfully executed raids on two forts in England’s Whitehaven Harbor, despite a disgruntled crew more interested in “gain than honor.” Jones then continued to his home territory of Kirkcudbright Bay, Scotland, where he intended to abduct the earl of Selkirk and then exchange him for American sailors held captive by Britain. Although he did not find the earl at home, Jones’ crew was able to steal all his silver, including his wife’s teapot, still containing her breakfast tea. From Scotland, Jones sailed across the Irish Sea to Carrickfergus, where the Ranger captured the HMS Drake after delivering fatal wounds to the British ship’s captain and lieutenant.
In September 1779, Jones fought one of the fiercest battles in naval history when he led the USS Bonhomme Richard battleship, named for Benjamin Franklin, in an engagement with the 50-gun British warship HMS Serapis. After the Bonhomme Richard was struck, it began taking on water and caught fire. When the British captain of the Serapis ordered Jones to surrender, he famously replied, “I have not yet begun to fight!” A few hours later, the captain and crew of the Serapis admitted defeat and Jones took command of the British ship.
One of the greatest naval commanders in history, Jones is remembered as a “Father of the American Navy,” along with fellow Revolutionary War hero Commodore John Barry.
John Paul Jones is buried in a crypt at the U.S. Naval Academy Chapel in Annapolis, Maryland, where a Marine honor guard stands at attention in his honor whenever the crypt is open to the public. __________________________________________________________________
1865 Lee's last orders
One day after surrendering to Union General Ulysses S. Grant, General Robert E. Lee addresses his army for the last time.
"After four years of arduous service, marked by unsurpassed courage and fortitude, the Army of Northern Virginia has been compelled to yield to overwhelming numbers and resources. I need not tell the brave survivors of so many hard-fought battles, who have remained steadfast to the last, that I have consented to the result from no distrust of them...I determined to avoid the useless sacrifice of those whose past services have endeared them to their countrymen...I bid you an affectionate farewell."
This closed the book on one of the most remarkable armies in history. The Army of Northern Virginia had fought against long odds for four years and won most of the battles in which it engaged the Union's Army of the Potomac. Along the way, Lee was lionized by his troops as few military leaders ever have been. The final surrender was a bitter pill for Lee to swallow, but the grace of his final communiquý to his troops exhibited the virtues that made him the single most enduring symbol of the Confederacy. _______________________________________________________________
1918 Congress of Oppressed Nationalities closes in Rome
The Congress of Oppressed Nationalities, convened in Rome, Italy, during the second week of April 1918, closes on April 10, after representatives from the Czechoslovak, South Slav (or Yugoslav), Romanian and Polish National Committees proclaim their right to become “completely independent national States” after World War I ends.
U.S. President Woodrow Wilson’s call for “self-determination” for all nations in his famous Fourteen Points speech, delivered in January 1918, began a decisive year in the history of the diverse peoples of central and eastern Europe. America’s entry into the war brought renewed hope to the exhausted Allies—France Britain, and Italy—and made them far more receptive to plans made by representatives of the Czech and South Slav populations now under control of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Even Italy, with its hopes of territorial expansion along the Dalmatian coast, chose to support the right of the South Slavs to independence. With Russia out of the war, the other Allies no longer had to respect that nation’s claims to Poland, and they also began to defend the notion of a reorganized, independent Poland that would emerge when the war had been won.
The Congress of Oppressed Nationalities was sponsored by the Allies—particularly France and Italy—and designed to encourage the minority populations of different ethnicities inside Germany and particularly Austria-Hungary to assert their right to self-determination and rebel against their oppressors, thus weakening the Central Powers and making an Allied victory more likely. The congress’s closing vote, on April 10, denounced the Hapsburg government as an impediment to the rightful freedom and development of the nations and called for the dismemberment of Austria-Hungary once it had been defeated in the war.
As the delegates who attended the congress recognized, the future of the central and eastern European peoples—to a greater extent than that of anyone else in Europe or the rest of the world—rested wholly on the outcome of World War I. If the Central Powers proved victorious, which still seemed possible in the spring of 1918, the different nationalities living in the Austro-Hungarian Empire would be given autonomous status but would remain under the control of the empire, now ruled by Emperor Karl I of Austria. If the Entente proved victorious, on the other hand, the empire would be broken into pieces, with the South Slavs joined in a large state ruled by the Serbian monarchy and the Czechs and Slovaks united into a single state, Czechoslovakia. In both cases, Poland would likely gain its independence, and would serve as a buffer between Europe and the vast expanse of the newly created Soviet state. __________________________________________________________________
1941 Croatia declares independence
On this day in 1941, the German and Italian invaders of Yugoslavia set up the Independent State of Croatia (also including Bosnia and Herzegovina) and place nationalist leader Ante Pavelic's Ustase, pro-fascist insurgents, in control of what is no more than a puppet Axis regime.
The Ustase began a relentless persecution of Serbs, Jews, Gypsies, and antifascist Croats. As many as 350,000 to 450,000 victims were massacred, and the Jasenovac concentration camp would become infamous as a slaughterhouse.
Croatia's Serbs gave sporadic resistance, but it was the communist partisans, led by Josip Broz Tito (a Croat himself), who provided antifascist leadership. By 1944, most of Croatia--apart from the main cities--was liberated from Axis forces, and Croats joined partisan ranks in large numbers. As the war neared its end, however, many Croats, especially those who had been involved with the Ustase regime or who had opposed the communists, sought refugee status with the Allies. But British commanders handed them over to the partisans, who slaughtered tens of thousands, including civilians, on forced marches and in death camps. __________________________________________________________________
1970 Poll reveals that public approval of Vietnam policy is down
A Gallup Poll shows that 48 percent of the public approves of President Nixon's policy in Vietnam, while 41 percent disapprove. In January, Nixon had a 65 percent approval rating. The drop reflected the growing dissatisfaction with Nixon's failure to end the war in Vietnam. He had been elected in 1968 largely because he claimed to have a plan to end the war, but after three months in office, there was still no announcement about when the plan would be enacted. His approval rating further plummeted later in April, when he announced that U.S. and South Vietnamese forces had crossed the border into Cambodia. This announcement set off a wave of antiwar demonstrations, including one at Kent State University that resulted in the killing of four students by Army National Guard troops. The "Cambodian incursion," as it came to be called, angered many in Congress, who felt that Nixon was illegally widening the war; this resulted in a series of congressional resolutions and legislative initiatives to severely limit the executive power of the president. _____________________________________________________________________
1972 B-52s begin bombing North Vietnam
Although the U.S. command refuses to confirm publicly the location of targets, U.S. B-52 bombers reportedly begin bombing North Vietnam for the first time since November 1967. The bombers struck in the vicinity of Vinh, 145 miles north of the Demilitarized Zone. It was later acknowledged publicly that target priority during these attacks had been given to SAM-2 missile sites, which had made raids over North Vietnam increasingly hazardous. U.S. officials called Hanoi's SAM-2 defenses "the most sophisticated air defenses in the history of air warfare." These defenses consisted of advanced radar and lethally accurate air defense missiles.
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