March 18:
37: The Roman Senate annulled the will of Tiberius and names Caligula emperor.
1692: William Penn was deprived of his governing powers in the colony named for him.
1766: After much pressure from the American colonists, the British Parliament repealed the Stamp Act. The Americans hated the idea of "no taxation without representation." Unfortunately, Parliament did not really learn the lesson and immediately passed the Declaratory Act claiming full authority over the colonists. Their mindset was mercantilist while the colonies were operating under a more capitalist economic system.
1782: Birthday of John C. Calhoun, American politician from South Carolina, advocate of southern interests in Congress
1837: Birthday of Stephen Grover Cleveland, 22nd& 24thpresident of the U.S.
1852: Henry Wells and William G. Fargo started their banking and shipping company.
1858: Birthday of Rudolf Diesel, German engineer who designed the compression-ignition engine
1863: Confederate women rioted in Salisbury, N.C. to protest the lack of flour and salt.
1865: The final adjournment of the Confederate Congress.
1869: Birthday of Neville Chamberlain, British Prime Minister most associated with appeasement
1874: Hawaii signed a treaty granting the U.S. exclusive trading rights.
1881: Barnum & Bailey's Greatest Show on Earth opened in Madison Square Garden.
1893: Birthday of Wilfred Owen, British poet who died near the end of WWI
1911: Theodore Roosevelt opened the Roosevelt Dam in Phoenix, Arizona, the largest dam in the country at the time.
1913: King George I of Greece was assassinated.
1922: Mohandas Gandhi was sentenced to six years in prison for civil disobedience in India.
1936: Birthday of Frederik W. de Klerk, President of South Africa who ended Apartheid
1939: Georgia finally ratified the Bill of Rights. The remaining two states, Connecticut and Massachusetts, would do the same later that year.
1942: For the third time in U.S. history, a military draft begins operation.
1943: Adolf Hitler called off the German offensive in the Caucasus.
1965: Cosmonaut Alexei Leonov performed the first spacewalk.
1969: U.S. began bombing Cambodia, targeting the Ho Chi Minh trail used by the Viet Cong to attack South Vietnam through a "neutral" country.
1970: The first postal strike paralyzed the U.S. Postal Service.
1971: American helicopters airlifted 1,000 South Vietnamese soldiers out of Laos.
1986: Buckingham Palace announced the engagement of Prince Andrew to Sarah Ferguson.
37: The Roman Senate annulled the will of Tiberius and names Caligula emperor.
1692: William Penn was deprived of his governing powers in the colony named for him.
1766: After much pressure from the American colonists, the British Parliament repealed the Stamp Act. The Americans hated the idea of "no taxation without representation." Unfortunately, Parliament did not really learn the lesson and immediately passed the Declaratory Act claiming full authority over the colonists. Their mindset was mercantilist while the colonies were operating under a more capitalist economic system.
1782: Birthday of John C. Calhoun, American politician from South Carolina, advocate of southern interests in Congress
1837: Birthday of Stephen Grover Cleveland, 22nd& 24thpresident of the U.S.
1852: Henry Wells and William G. Fargo started their banking and shipping company.
1858: Birthday of Rudolf Diesel, German engineer who designed the compression-ignition engine
1863: Confederate women rioted in Salisbury, N.C. to protest the lack of flour and salt.
1865: The final adjournment of the Confederate Congress.
1869: Birthday of Neville Chamberlain, British Prime Minister most associated with appeasement
1874: Hawaii signed a treaty granting the U.S. exclusive trading rights.
1881: Barnum & Bailey's Greatest Show on Earth opened in Madison Square Garden.
1893: Birthday of Wilfred Owen, British poet who died near the end of WWI
1911: Theodore Roosevelt opened the Roosevelt Dam in Phoenix, Arizona, the largest dam in the country at the time.
1913: King George I of Greece was assassinated.
1922: Mohandas Gandhi was sentenced to six years in prison for civil disobedience in India.
1936: Birthday of Frederik W. de Klerk, President of South Africa who ended Apartheid
1939: Georgia finally ratified the Bill of Rights. The remaining two states, Connecticut and Massachusetts, would do the same later that year.
1942: For the third time in U.S. history, a military draft begins operation.
1943: Adolf Hitler called off the German offensive in the Caucasus.
1965: Cosmonaut Alexei Leonov performed the first spacewalk.
1969: U.S. began bombing Cambodia, targeting the Ho Chi Minh trail used by the Viet Cong to attack South Vietnam through a "neutral" country.
1970: The first postal strike paralyzed the U.S. Postal Service.
1971: American helicopters airlifted 1,000 South Vietnamese soldiers out of Laos.
1986: Buckingham Palace announced the engagement of Prince Andrew to Sarah Ferguson.