January 21
1189 | Philip Augustus, Henry II of England and Frederick Barbarossa assemble the troops for the Third Crusade. | |
1648 | In Maryland, the first woman lawyer in the colonies, Margaret Brent, is denied a vote in the Maryland Assembly. | |
1785 | Chippewa, Delaware, Ottawa and Wyandot Indians sign the treaty of Fort McIntosh, ceding present-day Ohio to the United States. | |
1790 | Joseph Guillotine proposes a new, more humane method of execution: a machine designed to cut off the condemned person's head as painlessly as possible. | |
1793 | The French King Louis XVI is guillotined for treason. | |
1910 | Japan rejects the American proposal to neutralize ownership of the Manchurian Railway. | |
1919 | The German Krupp plant begins producing guns under the U.S. armistice terms. | |
1921 | J.D. Rockefeller pledges $1 million for the relief of Europe's destitute. | |
1930 | An international arms control meeting opens in London. | |
1933 | The League of Nations rejects Japanese terms for settlement with China. | |
1941 | The United States lifts the ban on arms to the Soviet Union. | |
1942 | In North Africa, German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel launches a drive to push the British eastward. While the British benefited from radio-intercept-derived Ultra information, the Germans enjoyed an even speedier intelligence source. | |
1943 | A Nazi daylight air raid kills 34 in a London school. When the anticipated invasion of Britain failed to materialize in 1940, Londoners relaxed, but soon they faced a frightening new threat. | |
1951 | Communist troops force the UN army out of Inchon, Korea after a 12-hour attack. | |
1958 | The Soviet Union calls for a ban on nuclear arms in Baghdad Pact countries. | |
1964 | Carl T. Rowan is named the director of the United States Information Agency (USIA). | |
1968 | In Vietnam, the Siege of Khe Sanh begins as North Vietnamese units surround U.S. Marines based on the hilltop headquarters. | |
1974 | The U.S. Supreme Court decides that pregnant teachers can no longer be forced to take long leaves of absence. | |
1976 | Leonid Brezhnev and Henry Kissinger meet to discuss Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT). | |
1977 | President Carter urges 65 degrees as the maximum heat in homes to ease the energy crisis. | |
1993 | Congressman Mike Espy of Mississippi is confirmed as Secretary of the Department of Agriculture. |
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