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1620 |
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The Pilgrims land at or near Plymouth Rock. |
1708 |
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French forces seize control of the eastern shore of Newfoundland after winning a victory at St. John’s. |
1790 |
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Samuel Slater opens the first cotton mill in the United States (in Rhode Island). |
1862 |
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The U.S. Congress authorizes the Medal of Honor to be awarded to Navy personnel who have distinguished themselves by their gallantry in action. |
1866 |
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Indians, led by Red Cloud and Crazy Horse, kill Captain William J. Fetterman and 79 other men who had ventured out from Fort Phil Kearny to cut wood. |
1910 |
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Over 2.5 million plague victims are reported in the An-Hul province of China. |
1928 |
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President Calvin Coolidge signs the Boulder Dam bill. |
1944 |
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German troops surround the 101st Airborne Division at Bastogne in Belgium. |
1945 |
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General George S. Patton dies at the age of 60 after being injured in a car accident. |
1946 |
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An earthquake and tidal wave kill hundreds in Japan. |
1963 |
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The Turk minority riots in Cyprus to protest anti-Turkish revisions in the constitution. |
1964 |
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Great Britain’s House of Commons votes to ban the death penalty. |
1965 |
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Four pacifists are indicted in New York for burning draft cards. |
1969 |
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American draft evaders gather for a holiday dinner in Montreal, Canada. |
1986 |
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500,000 Chinese students gather in Shanghai’s People’s Square calling for democratic reforms, including freedom of the press. |
1988 |
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Pan Am Flight 103 from London to New York
explodes in midair over Lockerbie, Scotland, an hour after departure.
All 259 passengers were killed in the explosion caused by a bomb– hidden
inside an audio cassette player — that detonated inside the cargo area
when the plane was at an altitude of 31,000 feet. A shower of airplane
parts falling from the sky also killed 11 Lockerbie residents. |
1994 |
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Popocatepetl, a volcano in Mexico spews forth gases and ash after nearly a half-century of dormancy. |
1995 |
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The city of Bethlehem passes from Israeli to Palestinian control. |
2004 |
|
A suicide bomber attacks the forward
operating base next to the US military airfield at Mosul, Iraq, killing
22 people; it is the deadliest suicide attack on US soldiers during the
Iraq War. |
Born on December 21 |
1804 |
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Benjamin Disraeli, Prime Minister of Great Britain. |
1879 |
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Joseph Stalin, Communist leader of the Soviet Union. |
1911 |
|
Josh Gibson, baseball player for the Negro Leagues, Home-Run King. |
1918 |
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Kurt Waldheim, controversial fourth Secretary General of the United Nations. |
1937 |
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Jane Fonda, actress, political activist, exercise guru; films include Klute and Coming Home. |
1940 |
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Frank Zappa, bandleader, composer, guitarist, satirist, filmmaker and advocate of creative freedom. |
1954 |
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Chris Evert (Chris Evert-Lloyd), No. 1
women’s pro tennis player in the world for 260 weeks in the 1970s; she
reached 34 Grand Slam singles finals, a record unmatched by any other
pro, female or male. |
1959 |
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Florence Griffith Joyner, track star,
Olympic medalist. Died unexpectedly of heart failure at age thirty-eight
on September 21, 1998. |
1966 |
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Kiefer Sutherland, British-born Canadian actor, producer, director; best known as Jack Bauer on the 24 TV series, a role that garnered him several awards including an Emmy and Golden Globe. |