TODAY IN HISTORY
TODAY IS MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2019
1399 - Henry Bolingbroke became the King of England as Henry IV.
1813 - The strange coins “holey dollar” and “dump” are circulated in NSW to combat currency shortages.
1868 - Spain’s Queen Isabella was deposed and fled to France.
1946 - An international military tribunal in Nuremberg, Germany, found 22 Nazi leaders guilty of war crimes.
1949 - The Berlin Airlift came to an end. The airlift had taken 2.3 million tons of food into the western sector despite the Soviet blockade.
1963 - The Soviet Union publicly declared itself on the side of India in their dispute with Pakistan over Kashmir.
1971 - The Soviet Union and the United States signed pacts that were aimed at avoiding an accidental nuclear war.
1980 - Israel issued its new currency, the shekel, to replace the pound.
1987 - Mikhail S. Gorbachev retired President Andrei A. Gromyko from the Politburo and fired other old-guard leaders in a Kremlin shake-up.
1989 - Thousands of East Germans began emigrating under an accord between the NATO nations and the Soviet Union.
1989 - Non-Communist Cambodian guerrillas claimed that they had captured 3 towns and 10 other positions from the residing government forces.
1990 - The Soviet Union and South Korea opened diplomatic relations.
1991 - Haiti’s first freely elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, was overthrown by Brigadier General Raoul Cedras. Aristide was later returned to power.
1992 - Moscow banks distributed privatisation vouchers aimed at turning millions of Russians into capitalists.
1997 - France’s Roman Catholic Church apologised for its silence during the persecution and deportation of Jews the pro-Nazi Vichy regime.
1999 - In Tokaimura, Japan, radiation escaped a nuclear facility after workers accidentally set off an uncontrolled nuclear chain reaction.