http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history
Sep 5, 1836: Sam Houston elected as president of Texas
On this day in 1836, Sam Houston is elected as president of the Republic of Texas, which earned its independence from Mexico in a successful military rebellion.
Born in Virginia in 1793, Houston moved with his family to rural Tennessee after his father's death; as a teenager, he ran away and lived for several years with the Cherokee tribe. Houston served in the War of 1812 and was later appointed by the U.S. government to manage the removal of the Cherokee from Tennessee to a reservation in Arkansas Territory. He practiced law in Nashville and from 1823 to1827 served as a U.S. congressman before being elected governor of Tennessee in 1827.
A brief, failed marriage led Houston to resign from office and live again with the Cherokee. Officially adopted by the tribe, he traveled to Washington to protest governmental treatment of Native Americans. In 1832, President Andrew Jackson sent him to Texas (then a Mexican province) to negotiate treaties with local Native Americans for protection of border traders. Houston arrived in Texas during a time of rising tensions between U.S. settlers and Mexican authorities, and soon emerged as a leader among the settlers. In 1835, Texans formed a provisional government, which issued a declaration of independence from Mexico the following year. At that time, Houston was appointed military commander of the Texas army.
Though the rebellion suffered a crushing blow at the Alamo in early 1836, Houston was soon able to turn his army's fortunes around. On April 21, he led some 800 Texans in a surprise defeat of 1,500 Mexican soldiers under General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna at the San Jacinto River. Santa Anna was captured and brought to Houston, where he was forced to sign an armistice that would grant Texas its freedom. After receiving medical treatment for his war wounds in New Orleans, Houston returned to win election as president of the Republic of Texas on September 5. In victory, Houston declared that "Texas will again lift its head and stand among the nations....It ought to do so, for no country upon the globe can compare with it in natural advantages."
Houston served as the republic's president until 1838, then again from 1841 to 1844. Despite plans for retirement, Houston helped Texas win admission to the United States in 1845 and was elected as one of the state's first two senators. He served three terms in the Senate and ran successfully for Texas' governorship in 1859. As the Civil War loomed, Houston argued unsuccessfully against secession, and was deposed from office in March 1861 after refusing to swear allegiance to the Confederacy. He died of pneumonia in 1863.
Sep 5, 1877: Crazy Horse killed
Oglala Sioux chief Crazy Horse is fatally bayoneted by a U.S. soldier after resisting confinement in a guardhouse at Fort Robinson, Nebraska. A year earlier, Crazy Horse was among the Sioux leaders who defeated George Armstrong Custer's Seventh Cavalry at the Battle of Little Bighorn in Montana Territory. The battle, in which 265 members of the Seventh Cavalry, including Custer, were killed, was the worst defeat of the U.S. Army in its long history of warfare with the Native Americans.
After the victory at Little Bighorn, U.S. Army forces led by Colonel Nelson Miles pursued Crazy Horse and his followers. His tribe suffered from cold and starvation, and on May 6, 1877, Crazy Horse surrendered to General George Crook at the Red Cloud Indian Agency in Nebraska. He was sent to Fort Robinson, where he was killed in a scuffle with soldiers who were trying to imprison him in a cell.
Sep 5, 1774: First Continental Congress convenes
In response to the British Parliament's enactment of the Coercive Acts in the American colonies, the first session of the Continental Congress convenes at Carpenter's Hall in Philadelphia. Fifty-six delegates from all the colonies except Georgia drafted a declaration of rights and grievances and elected Virginian Peyton Randolph as the first president of Congress. Patrick Henry, George Washington, John Adams, and John Jay were among the delegates.
The first major American opposition to British policy came in 1765 after Parliament passed the Stamp Act, a taxation measure designed to raise revenues for a standing British army in America. Under the argument of "no taxation without representation," colonists convened the Stamp Act Congress in October 1765 to vocalize their opposition to the tax. With its enactment in November, most colonists called for a boycott of British goods, and some organized attacks on the customhouses and homes of tax collectors. After months of protest in the colonies, Parliament voted to repeal the Stamp Act in March 1766.
Most colonists continued to quietly accept British rule until Parliament's enactment of the Tea Act in 1773, a bill designed to save the faltering East India Company by greatly lowering its tea tax and granting it a monopoly on the American tea trade. The low tax allowed the East India Company to undercut even tea smuggled into America by Dutch traders, and many colonists viewed the act as another example of taxation tyranny. In response, militant Patriots in Massachusetts organized the "Boston Tea Party," which saw British tea valued at some Ý18,000 dumped into Boston harbor.
Parliament, outraged by the Boston Tea Party and other blatant acts of destruction of British property, enacted the Coercive Acts, also known as the Intolerable Acts, in 1774. The Coercive Acts closed Boston to merchant shipping, established formal British military rule in Massachusetts, made British officials immune to criminal prosecution in America, and required colonists to quarter British troops. The colonists subsequently called the first Continental Congress to consider a united American resistance to the British.
With the other colonies watching intently, Massachusetts led the resistance to the British, forming a shadow revolutionary government and establishing militias to resist the increasing British military presence across the colony. In April 1775, Thomas Gage, the British governor of Massachusetts, ordered British troops to march to Concord, Massachusetts, where a Patriot arsenal was known to be located. On April 19, 1775, the British regulars encountered a group of American militiamen at Lexington, and the first shots of the American Revolution were fired.
More than a year later, on July 4, 1776, the Second Continental Congress officially adopted the Declaration of Independence. Five years later, in October 1781, British General Charles Lord Cornwallis surrendered to American and French forces at Yorktown, Virginia, bringing to an end the last major battle of the Revolution. With the signing of the Treaty of Paris with Britain in 1783, the United States formally became a free and independent nation.
Here's a more detailed look at events that transpired on this date throughout history:
1198 - Philips van Zwaben Hohenstaufen crowned king of Roman
Catholic Germany
1519 - 2nd Battle of Tehuacingo, Mexico: Hernan Cortes vs
Tlascala Aztecs
1550 - William Cecil appoints himself English minister of
foreign affairs
1590 - Alexander Farnese's army forces Henry IV of France to
raise the siege of Paris.
1596 - Dutch fleet commander Cornelis de Houtman taken
hostage in Java
1622 - Richelieu becomes cardinal
1634 - -6] Battle at Nordlingen: King Ferdinand III &
Spain beat Sweden & German protestants
1644 - Prince Frederik Henry conquerors Sas of Gent
1661 - French superintendant of Finance Nicolas Fouquet
arrested
1666 - Great Fire of London ends, leaving 13,200 houses
destroyed and 8 dead
1698 - Russia's Peter the Great imposes a tax on beards
1750 - Decree issued in Paderborn Prussia allows for annual
search of all Jewish homes for stolen or "doubtful" goods
1774 - 1st Continental Congress assembles, in Philadelphia
1781 - Battle of Virginia Capes, French defeat British,
traps Cornwallis
1786 - Montplaisir Ceramic factory opens in Schaarbeek
Belgium
1793 - In the French Revolution, the "Reign of
Terror" begins
1795 - US-Algiers sign peace treaty
1796 - General Salicetti orders equal rights for Jews of
Bologna Italy
1798 - New conscription law goes into effect in France
Russian Tsar Peter the GreatRussian Tsar Peter the Great
1800 - Malta surrenders to British after they blockade French troops
1814 - -15] Battle at Masurische Meren: Germans chase Russ
out of E Prussia
1816 - Louis XVIII has to dissolve the Chambre introuvable
("Unobtainable Chamber").
1836 - Sam Houston elected president of Republic of Texas
1838 - Central Museum opens in Utrecht Netherlands
1839 - The First Opium War begins in China.
1844 - Iron ore discovered in Minnesota's Mesabi Mountains
1862 - Lee crosses Potomac & enters Maryland
1863 - Bread revolt in Mobile Alabama
1864 - British, French & Dutch fleets attacked Japan in
Shimonoseki Straits
1864 - Achille François Bazaine becomes Marshall of France.
1877 - Southern blacks led by Pap Singleton settle in Kansas
1882 - 10,000 workers march in 1st Labor Day parade in NYC
1885 - 1st gasoline pump is delivered to a gasoline dealer
(Ft Wayne, Ind)
1887 - Gas lamp at Theater Royal in Exeter catches fire
killing about 200
1895 - George Washington Murray elected to Congress from SC
1900 - France proclaims a protectorate over Chad
1901 - National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues
forms
1905 - Lillian Mortimer's "No Mother to Guide,"
premieres in Detroit
1905 - Treaty of Portsmouth USA, ends Russo-Japanese War
1906 - 1st legal forward pass (Brandbury Robinson to Jack
Schneider)
1908 - Dodger Nap Rucker no-hits Boston Braves, 6-0
1910 - Jack Coombs begins a record streak of 53 shutout
innings
1913 - Phillies & Braves tie record of only 1 run in a
double header, Phillies win 1st game 1-0, then a scoreless tie into 10th
1914 - Battle of Marne (WW I) begins: Germans chase out
Russians
1914 - French headquarters move to Chatillon-sur-Seine
1914 - Gr Britain/France/Belgium/Russia sign pact of London
1914 - Proclamation prohibits Canadian mint from issuing
gold coins
1915 - 35th US Mens Tennis: William Johnston beats
McLoughlin (16 60 75 108)
1915 - Anti-war conference in Zimmerwald, Switzerland
1916 - 36th US Mens Tennis: R N Williams III beats Johnston
(46 64 06 62 64)
1918 - Due to WW I, 15th World Series begins a month early
1918 - Decree "On Red Terror" is published in
Russia
1920 - Iron monument unveiled at Stone churches, Flanders
1921 - Walter Johnson sets strikeout mark at 2,287
1922 - 17th Davis Cup: USA beats Australasia in New York
(4-1)
1922 - Yankees final game at Polo Grounds (played there 7
years)
1923 - Flyweights Gene LaRue & Kid Pancho KO each other
simultaneously
1925 - 112 F (44°C), Centerville, Alabama (state record)
1925 - 29th US Golf Amateur Championship won by Bobby Jones
1927 - Red Sox beat Yankees 12-11 in 18 innings
1929 - French premier A Briand requests a US of Europe
1932 - The French Upper Volta is broken apart between Ivory
Coast, French Sudan, and Niger.
1936 - Red Sox turn a triple-play on Yankees
1937 - Spanish Civil War: Llanes falls.
1939 - 34th Davis Cup: Australia beats USA in Haverford
(3-2)
32nd US President Franklin D. Roosevelt32nd US President
Franklin D. Roosevelt 1939 - FDR declares US neutrality at start of WW II in
Europe
1939 - US declare itself neutral
1942 - Battle at Alam Halfa ends
1942 - British & US bomb Le Havre & Bremen
1943 - 57th US Womens Tennis: Pauline Betz beats A Louise
Brough (63 57 63)
1943 - US airland at Nadzab, New-Guinea
1944 - "Mad Tuesday" 65,000 Dutch nazi
collaborators flee to Germany
1944 - 5 resistance fighter executed in Terneuzen
1944 - Allies liberate Brussels
1944 - Belgium, Luxembourg & Netherlands sign unity
treaty
1944 - British premier Churchill travels to Scotland
1944 - Dutch Armed Forces forms, under prince Bernhard
1946 - "Yours Is My Heart" opens at Shubert
Theater NYC for 36 performances
1946 - Joe Garagiola plays his 1st major league baseball
game
1948 - In France, Robert Schuman becomes President of the
Council while being Foreign minister, As such, he is the negotiator of the
major treaties of the end of World War II.
1949 - 63rd US Womens Tennis: M Osborne duPont beats Doris
Hart (64 61)
1949 - 69th US Mens Tennis: Pancho Gonzales beat Schroeder
(1618 26 61 62 64)
1950 - 64th US Womens Tennis: Margaret Osborne duPont beats
D Hart (63 63)
1950 - 70th US Mens Tennis: Art Larsen beats Herbert Flam
(63 46 57 64 63)
1950 - 98.3 cm rainfall at Yankeetown, Florida (state
record)
1951 - 65th US Womens Tennis: Mo Connolly beats Shirley J
Fry (63 16 64)
1951 - 71st US Mens Tennis: Frank A Sedgman beats Elias
Seixas Jr (64 61 61)
1952 - General Carlos Ibáñez elected president of Chile
1953 - 1st privately operated atomic reactor-Raleigh NC
1953 - US give Persian premier Zahedi $45 million aid
1954 - Dutch Super Constellation crashes at Shannon, 28 die
1955 - Fred Kaps becomes world champion magician
1955 - Dodger Don Newcombe hits NL pitcher record 7th HR of
season
1955 - WKRG TV channel 5 in Mobile, AL (CBS) begins
broadcasting
1955 - WTTW TV channel 11 in Chicago, IL (PBS) begins
broadcasting
1956 - 20 die in a train crash in Springer NM
Cuban President and Dictator Fulgencio BatistaCuban
President and Dictator Fulgencio Batista 1957 - Cuban dictator Batista bombs
Cienfuegos uprising
1957 - Yugoslavia bans Milovan Djilas' book "new class
marine officers"
1958 - "Doctor Zhivago" by Boris Pasternak
published in US
1958 - 1st color video recording on magnetic tape presented,
Charlotte NC
1958 - WKPC TV channel 15 in Louisville, KY (PBS) begins
broadcasting
1959 - Wash Senator Jim Lemon is 7th to get 6 RBIs in an
inning (3rd)
1960 - Cassius Clay captures Olympic light heavyweight gold
medal
1960 - President Kasavubu fires premier Lumumba of Congo
1960 - Wilma Rudolph wins her 2nd gold medal
1960 - The poet Léopold Sédar Senghor is elected as the
first President of Senegal.
1961 - JFK begins underground nuclear testing
1961 - President Kennedy signs law against hijacking (death
penalty)
1961 - USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern
Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR
1962 - Atletico Madrid wins 2nd Europe Cup II
1962 - Cubs Ken Hubbs sets 2nd base record for consecutive
errorless games at 78 & consecutive errorless chances (418), he errors in
the 4th
1966 - Jerry Lewis' 1st Muscular Dystrophy telethon raises
$15,000
1966 - WRLK TV channel 35 in Columbia, SC (PBS) begins
broadcasting
1967 - -23] Hurricane Beuleah, kills 54 in Caribbean, Mexico
& Texas
1967 - KMEG TV channel 14 in Sioux City, IA (CBS) begins
broadcasting
1967 - WEBA TV channel 14 in Allendale, SC (PBS) begins
broadcasting
1968 - 21 killed by hijackers aboard a Pan Am jet in Karachi
Pakistan
1968 - 82nd US Womens Tennis: Virginia Wade beats Billie
Jean King (64 64)
1968 - 88th US Mens Tennis: Arthur Ashe beats Tom Okker
(1412 57 63 36 63)
Comedian Jerry LewisComedian Jerry Lewis 1968 - USSR
performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR
1969 - Frente Obrero wins Dutch Antilles national elections
1970 - Estimated 15 cm (6") of rainfall, Bug Point,
Utah (state record)
1971 - Astros pitcher J R Richard debut, strikes out 15
Giants in a 5-3 win
1971 - NY Mets Don Hahn hits 1st inside the park homer at
Phillies Vet
1972 - 11 Israeli athletes are slain at Munich Olympics by
Black Sept
1972 - Chemical spill with fog sickens hundreds in Meuse
Valley Belgium
1972 - Jerry Lewis' 7th Muscular Dystrophy telethon, John
& Yoko appear
1972 - Palestinian terrorists kill 11 Israelis at 1972
Munich Olympics
1973 - "Desert Song" opens at Uris Theater NYC for
15 performances
1973 - 1st one-day Cricket international for WI (v Eng) -
lose by 1 wicket
1975 - Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme attempts to
assassinate Ford in Sacramento
1975 - Portugal premier Goncalvez resigns
1975 - Wings release "Letting Go"
1976 - "Rex" closes at Lunt-Fontaine Theater NYC
after 48 performances
1976 - "Very Good Eddie" closes at Booth Theater
NYC after 307 performances
1976 - Sandra Palmer wins LPGA Jerry Lewis Muscular
Dystrophy Golf Classic
1977 - Cleveland Indians stage 1st "I hate the Yankee
Hanky Night"
1977 - Jerry Lewis' 12th Muscular Dystrophy telethon
1977 - RAF kidnap West German work chairman Schleyer
1977 - Voyager 1 (US) launched toward fly-by of Jupiter,
Saturn
1978 - Sadat, Begin & Carter began peace conference at
Camp David, Md
1979 - A's Matt Keough A's beats Brewers 6-1 for 1st win
after 14 straight losses, ended 1978 with 4 loses (1 shy of the record 19)
1979 - Canada puts its 1st gold bullion coin on sale
1979 - Earl of Mountbatten funeral held in London
1979 - Iran army occupies Piranshahr
1979 - Roscoe Tanner fires 11 aces, breaks the net with his
bullet serve & upsets top-seeded Bjorn Borg in US Tennis Open quarterfinals
1980 - Poland party leader Edward Gierek resigns
1980 - World's longest auto tunnel, St Gotthard in Swiss
Alps, opens
1982 - 82nd US Golf Amateur Championship won by Jay Sigel
1982 - Eddie Hill sets propeller-driven boat water speed
record of 229 mph
1983 - 8th Space Shuttle Mission-Challenger 3-lands at
Edwards AFB
1983 - Elmer Trettr sets record for highest terminal
velocity at 201.34 mph
1983 - Jerry Lewis' 18th Muscular Dystrophy telethon raises
$30,691,627
1983 - Lauri Peterson wins LPGA Rail Charity Golf Classic
1984 - 12th Space Shuttle Mission (41-D) -Discovery 1- lands
at Edwards AFB
Singer Whitney HoustonSinger Whitney Houston 1986 - 3rd MTV
Awards: Whitney Houston wins
1986 - Karachi Pakistan army storms hijacked US B-747, 19
killed
1986 - MTV Music Awards - Dire Straits "Money For
Nothing" wins
1986 - NASA awards study contracts to 5 aerospace firms
1986 - NASA launches DOD-1
1987 - Carlton Fisk clubs his 300th career HR off Danny
Jackson
1987 - John McEnroe is fined $17,500 for tirades at US
Tennis Open
1988 - Betsy King wins LPGA Rail Charity Golf Classic
1988 - Jerry Lewis' 23rd Muscular Dystrophy telethon raises
$41,132,113
1988 - CFL's Earl Winfield (Ham) scores TDs on 101-yd punt
return, 100-yd kickoff return & 58-yd pass reception
1989 - Chris Evert last US Open match, she is defeated by
Zina Garrison
1989 - Deborah Norville becomes news anchor of Today Show
1990 - Iraqi Pres Saddam Hussein urges Arabs to rise against
the West
1990 - Pete Sampras ends Ivan Lendl's bid for 9th straight
US Open final
1991 - 8th MTV Awards: REM
Anti-apartheid activist/South African President Nelson
MandelaAnti-apartheid activist/South African President Nelson Mandela 1991 -
Nelson Mandela chosen president of South African ANC
1991 - US trial of former Panamanian leader Manuel Noriega
begins
1992 - Dan O'Brien sets world record decathlon (8891 pts)
1993 - "Fool Moon" closes at Richard Rodgers
Theater NYC after 207 perfs
1993 - "Jelly's Last Jam" closes at Virginia
Theater NYC after 569 perfs
1993 - "Will Rogers Follies" closes at Palace
Theater NYC after 983 perfs
1993 - F Murray Abraham released from hospital after car
accident
1993 - Largest US Tennis Open 2 sessions (total) daily gate
(43,502)
1993 - Noureddine Morceli runs world record mile (3:44,39)
1994 - Barb Mucha wins LPGA State Farm Rail Golf Classic
1994 - Jerry Lewis' 29th Muscular Dystrophy telethon raises
$47,100,000
1994 - Jingyi Le swims world record 100m women's freestyle
(54.01 sec)
1994 - Kirgizia government resigns
1994 - SF 49'er Jerry Rice catches NFL record 127th
touchdown pass
1995 - Cal Ripken Jr ties Gehrig's record of playing in
2,130 straight games
Tennis Player Pete SamprasTennis Player Pete Sampras 1996 -
"Summer & Smoke" opens at Criterion Theater NYC
1996 - MTV Video Music Awards
1997 - Athen's Greece selected for 2004 Olympics
1997 - Orioles beat Yankes 13-9 in longest 9 inning game
1998 - Women's championship at US Tennis Open
2000 - The Haverstraw-Ossining Ferry makes its maiden
voyage.
2005 - Mandala Airlines Flight 091 crashes into a
heavily-populated residential of Sumatra, Indonesia, killing 104 people on
board and at least 39 persons on ground.
2007 - Three terrorists suspected to be a part of Al-Qaeda
are arrested in Germany after allegedly planning attacks on both the Frankfurt
International airport and US military installations.
2009 - Denmark celebrates the first national flagday, in
memory of the fallen Danes in international operations since 1948.
2012 - 54 people are killed and 50 injured after a
firecracker factory explodes in Nadu
2012 - Austerity measure requires Greece to increase its
maximum working days to six per week
2012 - 25 are killed and 4 wounded after an ammunition store
exploded in Afyon, Turkey
1698 - Russia's Peter the Great imposed a tax on beards. 1774 - The first session of the U.S. Continental Congress convenes in Philadelphia. The delegates drafted a declaration of rights and grievances, organized the Continental Association, and elected Peyton Randolph as the first president of the Continental Congress. 1793 - In France, the "Reign of Terror" began. The National Convention enacted measures to repress the French Revolutionary activities. 1836 - Sam Houston was elected as the first president of the Republic of Texas. 1877 - Sioux chief Crazy Horse was killed by the bayonet of a U.S. soldier. The chief allegedly resisted confinement to a jail cell. 1881 - The American Red Cross provided relief for disaster for the first time. The disaster was the Great Fire of 1881 in Michigan. 1882 - The first U.S. Labor Day parade was held in New York City. 1885 - Jake Gumper bought the first gasoline pump to be manufactured in the U.S. 1900 - France proclaimed a protectorate over Chad. 1901 - The National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues was formed in Chicago, IL. It was the first organized baseball league. 1905 - The Treaty of Portsmouth was signed by Russia and Japan to end the Russo-Japanese War. The settlement was mediated by U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt in New Hampshire. 1906 - Bradbury Robinson executed the first legal forward pass in football. Robinson threw the ball to Jack Schneider of St. Louis University in a game against Carroll College. 1914 - Babe Ruth hit his first home run as a professional player in the International League. 1914 - The Battle of the Marne began. The Germans, British and French fought for six days killing half a million people. 1917 - Federal raids were carried out in 24 cities on International Workers of the World (IWW) headquarters. The raids were prompted by suspected anti-war activities within the labor organization. 1930 - Charles Creighton and James Hagris completed the drive from New York City to Los Angeles and back to New York City all in reverse gear. The trip took 42 days in their 1929 Ford Model A. 1938 - The NBC Red network broadcast "Life Can Be Beautiful" for the first time. 1939 - The U.S. proclaimed its neutrality in World War II. 1945 - Iva Toguri D'Aquino was arrested. D'Aquino was suspected of being the wartime radio propagandist "Tokyo Rose". She served six years and was later pardoned by U.S. President Ford. 1953 - The first privately operated atomic reactor opened in Raleigh, NC. 1957 - Jack Kerouac's "On the Road" was first published. 1958 - The first color videotaped program was aired. It was "The Betty Freezor Show" on WBTV-TV in Charlotte, NC. 1958 - Boris Pasternak's "Doctor Zhivago" was published for the first time in the U.S. 1960 - Cassius Clay of Louisville, KY, won the gold medal in light heavyweight boxing at the Olympic Games in Rome, Italy. Clay later changed his name to Muhammad Ali. 1961 - The U.S. government made airline hijacking a federal offense. 1971 - J.R. Richard (Houston Astros) tied Karl Spooner’s record when he struck out 15 batters in his major-league baseball debut. 1977 - The U.S. launched Voyager . 1980 - The St. Gothard Tunnel opened in Switzerland. It is the world's longest highway tunnel at 10.14 miles long. 1982 - Eddie Hill set a propeller-driven boat water speed record when he reached 229 mph. 1983 - U.S. President Reagan denounced the Soviet Union for shooting down a Korean Air Lines. Reagan demanded that the Soviet Union pay reparations for the act that killed 269 people. 1983 - "Sports Illustrated" became the first national weekly magazine to use four-color process illustrations on every page. 1983 - The "MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour" on PBS (Public Broadcasting System) became the first hour-long network news show. 1984 - The space shuttle Discovery landed after its maiden voyage. 1984 - Mortimer Zuckerman purchased the newsmagazine, "U.S. News & World Report" for $163 million. 1985 - Rioting in South Africa spilled into white neighborhoods for the first time. 1986 - Merv Griffin aired his final program for Metromedia Television after 23 years on various talk shows. 1986 - NASA launched DOD-1. 1989 - Chris Evert retired from professional tennis after a 19 year career. 1989 - Deborah Norville became the news anchor of the "Today" show. 1990 - Iraqi President Saddam Hussein urged for a Holy War against the West and former allies. 1991 - Soviet lawmakers created an interim government to usher in the confederation after dissolving the U.S.S.R. The new name the Union of Sovereign States was taken. 1992 - A General Motors Corporation strike ended with a new agreement being approved. Nearly 43,000 workers were on strike. 1995 - France set off an underground nuclear blast in the South Pacific. 1996 - The play "Summer and Smoke" opened at the Criterion Theatre. 2001 - Fox News Channel terminated Paula Zahn for breach of contract. 2003 - In London, magician David Blaine entered a clear plastic box and then suspended by a crane over the banks of the Thames River. He remained there until October 19 surviving only on water.
1698 Russia's Peter the Great levied a tax on bearded men. 1774 The first Continental Congress met in Philadelphia. 1836 The Republic of Texas made miltary hero Sam Houston its first president. 1905 The Treaty of Portsmouth, which ended the Russo-Japanese War, was signed at the Portsmouth naval base in New Hampshire. 1972 Palestinian guerrillas killed 11 Israelis at the Munich Summer Olympics. 1997 Humanitarian Mother Teresa, who won a Nobel Peace Prize for her work with the poor, died in Calcutta, India, at age 87.
The following links are to web sites that were used to complete this blog entry:
http://www.historyorb.com/today/events.php
http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/sep05.htm
http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history
http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory
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