The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)
TODAY IN HISTORY
TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT Jan. 18, 1943
During World War II, Jewish insurgents in the Warsaw Ghetto launched their initial armed resistance against Nazi troops, who eventually succeeded in crushing the rebellion. The Soviets announced they’d broken through the long Nazi siege of Leningrad. A U.S. ban on the sale of pre-sliced bread _ aimed at reducing bakeries’ demand for metal replacement parts _ went into effect. ALSO ON THIS DATE
1862
The tenth president of the United States, John Tyler, died in Richmond, Virginia, at age 71, shortly before he could take his seat as an elected member of the Confederate Congress.
1911
The first landing of an aircraft on a ship took place as pilot Eugene B. Ely brought his Curtiss biplane in for a safe landing on the deck of the armored cruiser USS Pennsylvania in San Francisco Harbor.
1919
The Paris Peace Conference, held to negotiate peace treaties ending the First World War, opened in Versailles, France.
1936
Nobel Prize-winning author Rudyard Kipling, 70, died in London.
1949
Charles Ponzi, engineer of one of the most spectacular mass swindles in history, died destitute at a hospital in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, at age 66.
1993
The Martin Luther King Jr. holiday was observed in all 50 states for the first time.