Otago Daily Times

Today in history

-

Today is Tuesday, December 18, the 352nd day of 2018. There are 13 days left in the year. Highlights in history on this date:

1559 — Queen Elizabeth I sends aid to Scottish

lords to drive the French from Scotland.

1620 — Pilgrims go ashore from the ship Mayflower at what is now Plymouth, Massachuse­tts, in the United States.

1644 — Queen Christina comes of age and begins

her reign in Sweden.

1792 — Thomas Paine is tried in England in his

absence for publishing The Rights Of Man.

1843 — New Zealand’s first A&P show is held at the Royal Exchange Hotel in Auckland, with the Domain hosting the livestock sections.

1865 — Slavery is abolished in the United States.

1875 — The first elections for St Kilda mayor and

council are held.

1890 — Frederick Lugard occupies Uganda for the

British East Africa Company.

1903 — The USPanama Treaty places the Canal

Zone in US hands in perpetuity for annual rent.

1912 — At a meeting of the Geological Society of London, Charles Dawson claims a skull found at the Piltdown gravel pit in East Sussex, is that of a primitive man he claims to be the

Piltdown Man. It was later discovered to be a hoax.

1916 — In World War 1, the 10month Battle of Verdun ends after a huge loss of life: 543,000 French and 434,000 German troops were killed.

1934 — The first New Zealand licensed airline, Air

Travel, provides flights from Hokitika. 1940 — A secret plan issued by Adolf Hitler orders German general staff to prepare for the invasion of Russia under the codename Operation Barbarossa.

1957 — The Shippingpo­rt Atomic Power Station in Pennsylvan­ia, the first nuclear facility to generate electricit­y in the US, goes online.

1961 — New Zealand’s first Golden Kiwi lottery is drawn, for a prize of £12,000. The weekly national raffle will be replaced by Lotto in 1989.

1965 — Nine African states break off diplomatic

relations with Britain over the Rhodesia issue.

1970 — The divorce law goes into effect in Italy

despite opposition by the Roman Catholic Church. 1973 — New Zealand character Fred Dagg first appears on New Zealand television screens during the closing moments of the current affairs programme Gallery.

1987 — Ivan Boesky, the Wall Street financier who played a key role in the biggest insider trading scheme in US history, is jailed for three years.

1988 — Air New Zealand is found to be in breach

of the Human Rights Act after over a decade of female cabin crew campaignin­g for the same opportunit­ies as male workers at the airline.

1990 — The Taj Mahal reopens after being closed to tourists due to sectarian violence that took 11 lives in three days of fighting in the Indian city of Agra. 1992 — Ruling party candidate Kim Youngsam accepts victory as South Korea’s first civilian president after 32 years of military rule.

1998 — The Loyalist Volunteer Force becomes the first paramilita­ry organisati­on in Northern Ireland to start to hand over its weapons for decommissi­oning.

2003 — Egon Krenz, East Germany’s last communist leader, is freed from jail after serving almost four years of a sixandahal­fyear sentence.

2011 — The last US troops withdraw from Iraq,

formally ending the Iraq War.

2013 — For the second time in three days, a brief thundersto­rm overwhelms Dunedin’s drainage system, causing flooding of George St retail outlets.

Today’s birthdays:

William Sefton Moorehouse, New Zealand politician (182581); John Hall, New Zealand prime minister 187982 (18241907); Tiaki (Jack) Omana, New Zealand politician (18911970); Eric Tindill, All Black, test cricketer, internatio­nal rugby referee and internatio­nal cricket umpire (19102010); John (Jock) Aird, New Zealand football internatio­nal (1926); Noel McGregor, New Zealand cricketer (19312007); Keith Richards, English rock musician (1943); Stephen Biko, South African antiaparth­eid activist (194677); Steven Spielberg, US film director (1947); Ray Liotta, US actor (1955);

Brad Pitt, US actor (1963); Craig Busch, ‘‘the Lion Man’’, New Zealand television personalit­y (1964); Anna Doig, New Zealand swimming internatio­nal (1965); Julian Arahanga, New Zealand actor (1972); Christina Aguilera, US singer (1980); Rebecca Tegg, New Zealand football internatio­nal (1985).

Quote from history:

‘‘Remember, we play the ball where it lies, and now let’s not talk about this ever again.’’ —

Robert Tyre (Bobby) Jones, US golfer, on being stricken by the rare and debilitati­ng spinal condition syringomye­lia in his mid40s. Jones, the only player to win the grand slam of all four of golf’s most important championsh­ips in one year, died on December 18, 1971.

ODT

 ??  ?? Eric Tindill
Eric Tindill

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand