October 29
1618 | Sir Walter Raleigh is executed. After the death of Queen Elizabeth, Raleigh's enemies spread rumors that he was opposed the accession of King James. | |
1787 | Mozart's opera Don Giovanni opens in Prague. | |
1814 | The Demologos, the first steam-powered warship, launched in New York City. | |
1901 | Leon Czolgosz is electrocuted for the assassination of US President William McKinley. Czolgosz, an anarchist, shot McKinley on September 6 during a public reception at the Temple of Music in Buffalo, N.Y. Despite early hopes of recovery, McKinley died September 14, in Buffalo, NY. | |
1927 | Russian archaeologist Peter Kozloff apparently uncovers the tomb of Genghis Khan in the Gobi Desert, a claim still in dispute. | |
1929 | Black Tuesday–the most catastrophic day in stock market history, the herald of the Great Depression. 16 million shares were sold at declining prices. By mid-November $30 billion of the $80 billion worth of stocks listed in September will have been wiped out. | |
1945 | The first ball-point pen goes is sold by Gimbell's department store in New York for a price of $12. | |
1949 | Alonzo G. Moron of the Virgin Islands becomes the first African-American president of Hampton Institute, Hampton, Virginia. | |
1952 | French forces launch Operation Lorraine against Viet Minh supply bases in Indochina. | |
1964 | Thieves steal a jewel collection–including the world's largest sapphire, the 565-carat "Star of India," and the 100-carat DeLong ruby–from the Museum of Natural History in New York. The thieves were caught and most of the jewels recovered. | |
1969 | The U.S. Supreme Court orders immediate desegregation, superseding the previous "with all deliberate speed" ruling. | |
1969 | First computer-to-computer link; the link is accomplished through ARPANET, forerunner of the Internet. | |
1972 | Palestinian guerrillas kill an airport employee and hijack a plane, carrying 27 passengers, to Cuba. They force West Germany to release 3 terrorists who were involved in the Munich Massacre. | |
1983 | More than 500,000 people protest in The Hague, The Netherlands, against cruise missiles. | |
1986 | The last stretch of Britain's M25 motorway opens. | |
1998 | South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission reports condemns both sides on the Apartheid issue for committing atrocities. | |
1998 | John Glenn, at age 77, becomes the oldest person to go into outer space. He is part of the crew of Space Shuttle Discovery, STS-95. | |
1998 | The deadliest Atlantic hurricane on record up to that time, Hurricane Mitch, makes landfall in Honduras (in 2005 Hurricane Wilma surpassed it); nearly 11,000 people died and approximately the same number were missing. | |
2004 | For the first time, Osama bin Laden admits direct responsibility for the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the US; his comments are part of a video broadcast by the Al Jazeera network. | |
2008 | Delta and Northwest airlines merge, forming the world's largest airline. | |
2012 | Hurricane Sandy devastates much of the East Coast of the US; nearly 300 die directly or indirectly from the storm. |
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