Historical Events On December 1 - On This Day
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800 Charlemagne judges the accusations against Pope Leo III in the Vatican
- 1167 Northern Italian towns form the Lombard League
1420 Henry V of England enters Paris
- 1640 Portugal regains independence after 60 years of Spanish rule following a revolution by Portuguese nobility; the Portuguese Restoration War begins and lasts until 1668 with recognition by Spain of the country's independence
- 1641 Massachusetts becomes the first colony to formally recognize slavery with the Body of Liberties
- 1653 An athlete from Croydon is reported to have run 20 miles from St Albans to London in less than 90 minutes
- 1656 Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand III signs an alliance with King John II Casimir Vasa of Poland against Sweden
- 1708 The Grand Alliance occupies Brussels
- 1768 The slave ship Fredensborg sinks off Tromøy in Norway (rediscovered 1974)
- 1783 Jacques Charles and Nicolas Robert make the first untethered ascent with a hydrogen balloon in Paris
- 1821 José Núñez de Cáceres proclaims independence from Spain as the Republic of Spanish Haiti
- 1822 Dom Pedro is crowned the first Emperor of Brazil
1822 Franz Liszt, aged 11, debuts as a pianist in Vienna
1824 The US House of Representatives begins to decide the outcome of the election deadlock between John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson; Adams wins
1825 Tsar Nicholas I ascends the throne of the Russian Empire, and Alexandra Feodorovna [Princess Charlotte of Prussia] becomes Empress consort
- 1831 The Erie Canal closes for the entire month due to cold weather
- 1864 Skirmish at Millen's Grove (or Shady Grove), Georgia
1875 Henry John Heinz's first company, the Heinz Noble & Company, goes bankrupt in the aftermath of the Panic of 1873
- 1884 Deputy Sheriff Elfego Baca holds off a gang of 80 Texan cowboys near Frisco, New Mexico, who want to kill him for arresting Charles McCarty
1884 Society of Independent Artists holds its first exhibition in the Polychrome Pavilion in Paris, including Georges Seurat's "Bathers at Asnières"
1887 Sherlock Holmes first appears in print in "A Study in Scarlet" by Arthur Conan Doyle
- 1887 The Sino-Portuguese treaty is signed, recognizing Portugal's control of Macau
- 1896 The first Certified Public Accountants certificates are issued in New York
- 1900 Exiled South African President of Transvaal, Paul Kruger, visits Flanders, and on the same day, a visit from the German Kaiser is declined
1900 Porfirio Díaz is inaugurated for his 6th consecutive term as President of Mexico
- 1903 The first Western film, "The Great Train Robbery," is released, starring Justus D. Barnes and G. M. Anderson
- 1906 German shoemaker Wilhelm Voigt (Captain of Köpenick) is sentenced to four years for forgery after posing as a Prussian officer
- 1909 The first Christmas Club payment is made to the Carlisle Trust Company of Pennsylvania
- 1912 Boston Braves MLB franchise owner James Gaffney buys the Allston Golf Club on Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, with a plan to construct a ballpark there; groundbreaking for Braves Field starts on March 20, 1915
1913 Ford Motor Company institutes the world's first moving assembly line for the Model T Ford
- 1913 The flag of Greece is officially raised at Firka Fortress in Chania, Crete, symbolizing the union of Crete and Greece
- 1913 Whitehill-Gleason Motors opens the first drive-up gasoline station in Pittsburgh
- 1915 The US requests that Germany withdraw its military and naval attaches from the Embassy in Washington, DC
1916 A virtual civil war occurs in Greece as royalists fight Eleftherios Venizelos' Liberal Party, and the Allies ensure a Venizelist victory
- 1918 Denmark recognizes Iceland as an independent and sovereign state
- 1918 Yugoslavia declares independence with a monarchy proclaimed in Belgrade
- 1919 AA Milne's comedy play "Mr Pim Passes By" premieres at the Gaiety Theatre in Manchester and runs for 246 performances
1919 Lady Nancy Astor is sworn in as the first female member of the British Parliament
- 1921 The US Post Office opens its first Philatelic Agency in Washington, DC
1924 "La Révolution surréaliste" publishes its first issue in Paris, edited by André Breton
- 1924 Boston Bruins defeat fellow expansion team Montreal Maroons 2-1 at Boston Arena in the first NHL game played in the United States
- 1924 Plutarco Elías Calles becomes President of Mexico
- 1925 The Peace Treaty of Locarno is signed between Germany, France, Belgium, Great Britain, and Italy
- 1928 National League President John Heydler is the first to propose a baseball rule change calling for a 10th man, or 'designated hitter,' to bat in place of the pitcher; ironically, the American League votes in favor of the proposal, but the National League turns it down
- 1928 The Railway Museum opens in Utrecht, Netherlands
- 1929 American toy salesman Edwin S. Lowe encounters the carnival game "Beano" during his travels and begins marketing it under the name "Bingo"
- 1930 NHL abolishes the 20-minute slashing-about-the-head penalty
- 1931 The Ottawa branch of the Royal Mint begins operation as the Royal Canadian Mint
1933 Rudolf Hess and Ernst Röhm are appointed ministers in Adolf Hitler's government
1934 Leningrad mayor Sergei Kirov is assassinated; Joseph Stalin uses it as an excuse to begin his Great Purge of 1934-38
- 1934 Toronto Maple Leafs defeat St. Louis Eagles 4-3 to set an NHL record for the most wins to start the season with 8; the Leafs do it again 59 years later, winning 10 in a row to start the 1993-94 season
- 1935 Austria celebrates the world's first Day of the Stamp
- 1936 2nd Heisman Trophy Award: Larry Kelley, Yale end
- 1936 Bell Labs tests coaxial cable for TV use
- 1936 Ernest Brundin and Frank Lyon obtain a US patent for the hydroponic (soilless) culture of plants
1937 Japan officially recognizes Nationalist Spain's Franco government in Tokyo
- 1938 A train collides with a school bus in South Jordan, Utah, killing the bus driver and 24 children
- 1940 Four sets of brothers play in one NHL game as the Chicago Blackhawks defeat the New York Rangers 4-1: Lynn and Muzz Patrick, and Neil and Mac Colville (Rangers); Max and Doug Bentley, and Bob and Bill Carse (Chicago)
- 1941 British cruiser HMS Dorsetshire forces the crew of the German submarine supply ship MV Python to scuttle the vessel in the South Atlantic, 1,150 miles west of South Africa
- 1941 The US Civil Air Patrol (CAP) is founded
- 1942 Gasoline is rationed in the US to stop Americans from non-essential driving during wartime
- 1942 With WWII travel restrictions in mind, MLB owners decide to restrict travel to a three-trip schedule rather than the customary four; spring training in 1943 is limited to locations north of the Potomac or Ohio Rivers and east of the Mississippi
- 1943 At the end of the Tehran Conference, the Big Three (Stalin, Churchill and Roosevelt) agree that the invasion of Normandy should take place in May 1944
1944 Béla Bartók's "Concerto for Orchestra" premieres in Symphony Hall, Boston, with the Boston Symphony Orchestra conducted by Serge Koussevitzky
- 1944 Mail routing resumes in the free South Netherlands
- 1948 Jericho Congress names Abdullah I of Jordan as the King of Arab Palestine
- 1948 Piet Roozenburg becomes a world champion draughts player
- 1949 MLB announces attendance for the season is 20.2 million, down from 20.9 million in 1948; the New York Yankees and the Cleveland Indians each finish with over 2.2 million, but the St. Louis Browns fall to 270,000
- 1949 WBNG TV Channel 12 in Binghamton, New York (CBS) begins broadcasting
- 1949 WKTV TV Channel 2 in Utica, New York (NBC) begins broadcasting
- 1951 17th Heisman Trophy Award: Dick Kazmaier, Princeton halfback
1951 Benjamin Britten's opera "Billy Budd" premieres in London
- 1951 The Golden Gate Bridge closes due to high winds of 69 mph
- 1952 KGMB TV Channel 9 in Honolulu, Hawaii (CBS) begins broadcasting
- 1952 The New York Daily News reports the first successful sex reassignment surgery, headlining "Ex-GI Becomes Blonde Beauty"
1953 Hugh Hefner publishes the first edition of Playboy magazine, featuring Marilyn Monroe as the magazine's first centerfold
- 1953 Red Sox trade for slugger Jackie Jensen, sending pitcher Mickey McDermott and outfielder Tom Umphlett to Washington; Jensen averages 25 HRs a year for his 7 seasons in Boston; AL RBI leader x 3, and American League MVP in 1958
- 1954 New York Yankees and Baltimore Orioles complete the largest trade in MLB history as 17 players, including Don Larsen, Gene Woodling, and Bob Turley, change teams; the first phase of the transaction began on November 18 and concludes today after the MLB draft
1955 Rosa Parks is arrested for refusing to move to the back of a bus and give up her seat to a white passenger in Montgomery, Alabama
- 1956 Algerian-born French long-distance runner Alain Mimoun wins the men's marathon in 2:25:00.0 at the Melbourne Olympics; the first time runners follow a painted line
- 1956 American Mildred McDaniel jumps a world record 1.76m to win the women's high jump gold medal at the Melbourne Olympics; Briton Thelma Hopkins and Russian Mariya Pisareva tie for silver (1.67m)
- 1956 Australian women's 4 x 100m relay team of Norma Croker, Betty Cuthbert, Fleur Mellor, and Shirley Strickland de la Hunty runs a world record 44.65 to win the gold medal at the Melbourne Olympics; Cuthbert's third gold of the Games
- 1956 Frank Robinson (NL) and Luis Aparicio (AL) are voted Rookie of the Year
- 1956 Gert Fredriksson of Sweden wins his third consecutive K-1 1,000m canoeing gold medal by 2.5s from Igor Pissarov of the Soviet Union at the Melbourne Olympics; he also wins the K-1 10,000m gold
- 1956 Hungarian boxer László Papp wins his third consecutive Olympic gold medal by defeating future Hall of Famer José Torres, representing the US, on points in the light-middleweight final at the Melbourne Olympics
- 1956 In front of 100,000 fans at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, a US Army baseball team defeats an Australian all-star team 11–5 in an Olympic exhibition game; Sergeant Vance Sutton hits a grand slam for the Army
- 1956 Indonesian Vice President Mohammad Hatta resigns
1956 Led by future Basketball Hall of Famers Bill Russell and K.C. Jones, the US wins its fourth consecutive Olympic gold medal with an 89-55 victory over the Soviet Union at the Melbourne Games
- 1956 Legendary Australian swimmer Dawn Fraser sets a world record of 1:02.0 to win the women's 100m freestyle at the Melbourne Olympics, the first of Fraser's three consecutive gold medals in the event
- 1956 Romanian canoeist Leon Rotman wins the men's C-1 1,000m gold medal at the Melbourne Olympics and claims the singles double after also winning the C-1 10,000m gold
- 1956 US men's 4 x 100m relay team of Thane Baker, Leamon King, Bobby Morrow, and Ira Murchison sets a world record of 39.60s to win the gold medal at the Melbourne Olympics; Morrow's third gold medal of the Games
1957 Buddy Holly and The Crickets make their "Ed Sullivan Show" debut, performing "That'll Be the Day" and "Peggy Sue"; singer Sam Cooke also performs after being bumped due to time constraints on 3 November, singing "You Send Me" and "(I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons" [1] [2]
- 1958 Liberty Records releases single "The Chipmunk Song (Christmas Don't Be Late)" by David Seville and the Chipmunks; it becomes a #1 hit, and wins 3 Grammy Awards (Comedy Performance, Children's Recording, and Best Engineered)
- 1958 Our Lady of Angels School fire kills 92 students and three nuns in Chicago, Illinois
- 1958 The Central African Republic becomes an autonomous member of the French Community (National Day)
- 1959 12 nations sign the Antarctic Treaty for the peaceful scientific use of Antarctica
1959 25th Heisman Trophy Award: Billy Cannon, LSU halfback
1960 British rocker Paul McCartney and drummer Pete Best are accused of attempted arson, arrested, and deported from Hamburg, Germany
1960 Congolese independence leader Patrice Lumumba is captured in Lodi, Congo, by troops of recent coup leader Joseph-Désiré Mobutu
- 1961 The Republic of West Papua is proclaimed, declaring independence from Dutch rule
- 1962 Classifications in minor league baseball are overhauled: Eastern and South Atlantic Leagues are promoted from Class A to Class AA; Classes B, C, and D are abolished, with those leagues being promoted to Class A
- 1963 Nagaland becomes a state of the Indian Union
- 1963 Wendell Scott wins the Grand National Series Jacksonville 200 at Speedway Park in Jacksonville, Florida, becoming the first black driver to win a race at NASCAR's premier level
- 1964 After just three seasons in MLB, the Houston Colt .45s change the name of the team to Astros as owners say the move signals a step into the future for the franchise and the city of Houston
1964 Martin Luther King Jr. speaks to J. Edgar Hoover about his slander campaign
- 1965 Freedom Flights: Airlift of refugees from Cuba to Miami, USA, begins
- 1965 South Africa's government says children of white fathers are white
- 1966 Christian Democrat Union party leader Georg Kiesinger (62) is elected West German chancellor
- 1966 Ecuadorian national baseball team defends its title with a 4-3 win over Brazil in the South American Championship; last win for the next 50 years as Eloy Guerrero drives in Ramón Sotomayor with the winning run
- 1966 Radio time signal WWV moves from Greenbelt, Maryland, to Fort Collins, Colorado
- 1966 The housing and homelessness charity Shelter launches in Britain
- 1967 Pacific Northwest Sports, Inc. is awarded one of the two American League baseball expansion franchises; the new team is named the Seattle Pilots
- 1967 Philadelphia center Wilt Chamberlain scores 52 points in the 76ers' 133-109 win over the Seattle SuperSonics and sets an NBA record for 22 free throw misses
1967 Queen Elizabeth II inaugurates the 98-inch (249 cm) Isaac Newton Telescope
1967 Track Records releases the Jimi Hendrix Experience's second studio album, "Axis: Bold as Love," in the UK, just seven months after their debut release
- 1969 LAPD announces warrants for the arrests of Manson cult members Watson, Krenwinkel, and Kasabian for murder
- 1969 The US government holds its first draft lottery since World War II
- 1970 Independent People's Republic of South Yemen renames itself as the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen
- 1970 Luis Echeverría Álvarez is sworn in as the president of Mexico
1971 John Lennon and Yoko Ono release the single "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)" in the US, which becomes a Christmas classic despite its initial modest commercial success
- 1971 Khmer Rouge rebels intensify assaults on Cambodian government positions, forcing their retreat from Kompong Thmar and nearby Ba Ray
- 1971 The Chicago Cubs release longtime star and future Hall of Famer Ernie Banks, ending his 19-year MLB career; they announce Banks will serve as a coach on manager Leo Durocher's staff. Banks finishes with 512 home runs and 1,636 RBIs
- 1972 Two people are killed and 127 are injured when two car bombs explode in the center of Dublin, Ireland
- 1972 Wings release "Hi, Hi, Hi" in the UK
- 1973 Australia grants self-government to Papua New Guinea
- 1973 Jack Nicklaus finishes at 13-under-par 275 to win the Walt Disney World Open by one stroke over Mason Rudolph and becomes the first player to reach $2 million in PGA Tour career earnings
- 1974 American Jacqueline Hansen runs a women's world record marathon in 2:43:54.5 in Culver City, California
- 1974 Boeing 727-231 crashes into Mount Weather, Virginia, killing all 92 passengers and crew members
- 1974 LA 'Skid Row Slasher' kills first of eight victims
- 1975 "The Robert MacNeil Report," later "The MacNeil-Lehrer Report," and currently known as the "PBS NewsHour" program, premieres nationally in the US on PBS
- 1975 Kuwait reaches an agreement with Gulf Oil and British Petroleum (BP) on the terms of nationalization
1975 US President Gerald Ford visits the People's Republic of China
- 1976 Angola is admitted to the UN
1976 Punk rock band the Sex Pistols use profanity on TV, getting them branded as "rotten punks"
- 1978 Australian cricket fast bowler Rodney Hogg debuts in the 1st Test against England in Brisbane; after Australia is all out for 116, Hogg makes an immediate impact by dismissing both high-profile England openers Graham Gooch (2) and Geoff Boycott (13)
- 1978 US performs a nuclear test at the Nevada Test Site
1978 US President Jimmy Carter more than doubles the size of the national park system
- 1980 46th Heisman Trophy Award: George Rogers, South Carolina running back
- 1980 Mel Harris appears on M*A*S*H in "Cementing Relationships"
- 1980 US Justice Department sues Yonkers, citing racial discrimination
- 1981 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar passes Oscar Robertson (26,710) to become the NBA’s second all-time leading scorer behind Wilt Chamberlain; scores 14 points in 117-86 Lakers' win over Utah Jazz in Los Angeles
- 1981 Yugoslav charter flight crashes into Mont San-Pietro in Corsica, killing all 180 passengers and crew
1982 "Tootsie," directed by Sydney Pollack and starring Dustin Hoffman and Jessica Lange, premieres in Hollywood
- 1982 Miguel de la Madrid is inaugurated as President of Mexico
1984 "Beverly Hills Cop," directed by Martin Brest and starring Eddie Murphy and Judge Reinhold, premieres in Los Angeles
1984 50th Heisman Trophy Award: Doug Flutie, Boston College quarterback
- 1984 American boxer Greg Page knocks out hometown favorite Gerrie Coetzee in the 8th round to win the WBA heavyweight title in Sun City, South Africa
- 1984 France conducts a nuclear test at Moruroa Atoll
- 1985 Noraly Beyer becomes the Netherlands' first Black TV newscaster
- 1985 The Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) officially launches
- 1985 TV miniseries "Anne of Green Gables," based on the novel by Lucy Maud Montgomery and starring Megan Follows, is first released on CBC in Canada
- 1986 Musée d'Orsay opens in Paris
- 1986 Paul McCartney releases the single "Only Love Remains"
- 1987 Digging begins to link England and France under the English Channel
- 1988 Chinese Minister of Foreign Affairs Qian Qichen begins a three-day visit to Moscow
- 1988 First World AIDS day to raise awareness of the global AIDS epidemic
- 1988 NBC bids a record $401 million to capture television broadcasting rights for the 1992 Barcelona Summer Olympic Games
- 1989 East Germany drops communist monopoly from its constitution
- 1989 First "Day Without Art" artists protest against AIDS (now known as Visual AIDS)
- 1989 Mark Langston signs a record $3.2 million per year contract with California Angels
1989 Romanian five-time Olympic gold medal-winning gymnast Nadia Comăneci arrives in New York City, requesting political asylum in the United States, which is granted
1989 USSR President Mikhail Gorbachev meets Pope John Paul II at the Vatican
- 1990 56th Heisman Trophy Award: Ty Detmer, Brigham Young quarterback
1990 British and French workers meet in the middle of the Channel Tunnel, 40 meters under the English Channel, achieving a major engineering feat and fulfilling the long-held dream of linking Britain to Europe
1990 Dictator of Chad, Hissène Habré, flees to Cameroon
- 1990 Iraq accepts US President Bush's offer of direct talks intended to avert war over Kuwait
- 1990 Lithuania, Estonia, and Latvia hold their first joint Baltic Assembly session
- 1990 New York Knicks' center Patrick Ewing scores a career-high 22 field goals in his 50-point haul in a 113-96 win against Charlotte at Madison Square Garden
- 1991 92% of Ukrainians vote for independence from the Soviet Union
- 1991 Colorado Party wins the Paraguayan Constitutional Assembly election
- 1991 Miami quarterback Dan Marino sets an NFL record when he reaches 3,000 yards passing for the eighth time in his career during the Dolphins' 33-14 win over Tampa Bay at Joe Robbie Stadium
1991 Nursultan Nazarbayev wins Kazakhstan's first presidential election with 95% of the votes
1991 Reigning US Open champion Payne Stewart wins only one hole but claims the Skins Game at La Quinta and sets a record in the process with a 3-foot birdie putt at the 14th hole, earning eight skins worth $260,000, a record for most money won on one hole
- 1991 Space Shuttle Atlantis (STS-44), the 75th US crewed space mission, lands at Edwards Air Force Base in California
1992 Amy Fisher is sentenced to 5 to 15 years for shooting Mary Jo Buttafuoco
- 1992 Two C-141B Starlifters collide in Montana and crash, resulting in 13 deaths
- 1993 Northwest Airlink plane crashes in Minnesota, killing 18 people
- 1993 St. Louis Blues' Bob Berry coaches his 800th career NHL game, a 4-2 loss to the Maple Leafs in Toronto; he also coaches the LA Kings, Montreal Canadiens, and Pittsburgh Penguins
- 1994 Ernesto Zedillo is inaugurated as president of Mexico
1994 Jim Bakker, an American televangelist and convicted fraudster, is released from jail
1994 Manuscript by Robert Schumann of his Symphony No. 2 sells for $2.3 million at auction in London, setting a record for any 19th-century work
- 1994 Rapper Tupac Shakur is convicted of a sexual assault charge and is later sentenced to up to 4.5 years in prison
- 1996 South African cricket all-rounder Lance Klusener takes 8-64 on debut in Proteas' 329 run 2nd Test win v India in Kolkata
1996 Wayne Gretzky becomes the first and only player in NHL history to reach the 3,000-point plateau (including playoffs) by recording an assist in the New York Rangers' 6-2 win over the Montreal Canadiens at Madison Square Garden
- 1997 Golden State Warriors NBA guard Latrell Sprewell assaults head coach P.J. Carlesimo; suspended for 10 games
- 1997 Howard Stern Radio Show premieres in Davenport, Iowa on KORB 93.5 FM
- 1997 In their 81st season, the Montreal Canadiens become the first team in history to play 5,000 NHL games; host the Penguins but lose 1-0; franchise record 2,625-1,603-772 with a .620 winning percentage
- 1997 Westinghouse formally changes its name to CBS
- 1998 Exxon announces a $73.7 billion USD deal to buy Mobil, creating ExxonMobil, the world's largest company
- 2001 Captain Bill Compton brings Trans World Airlines Flight 220, an MD-83, into St. Louis International Airport, ending 76 years of TWA operations following the airline's purchase by American Airlines
- 2001 Nicaraguan baseball team wins the Central American Games as Ramon Padilla ends a 15-year stint with the national team by hitting two homers in the 9-0 finale against Guatemala
2003 "The Return of the King," the third and final film in the Lord of the Rings series, directed by Peter Jackson and starring Elijah Wood and Ian McKellen, premieres in Wellington, New Zealand
2005 Musical "The Color Purple," based on the book by Alice Walker, opens on Broadway, produced by Oprah Winfrey and starring LaChanze (Tony Award Best Actress in a Musical)
- 2006 Canadian jockey Russell Baze becomes North American horse racing's all-time win leader when Butterfly Belle wins 4th race at Bay Meadows, San Mateo, California; 9,531 victories passes record of Laffit Pincay Jr
- 2007 T. C. Williams High School’s newly constructed basketball court is named after Earl Lloyd
- 2008 The US economy has been in recession since December 2007, the National Bureau of Economic Research announces today
2009 Ballon d'Or: FC Barcelona forward Lionel Messi is named the best football player in the world; he wins the award by a then-record margin, 240 points ahead of Cristiano Ronaldo of Real Madrid, with Barcelona midfielder Xavi third
- 2012 Bolivia bus crash leaves eight people dead and 36 injured
2012 Enrique Peña Nieto is sworn in as President of Mexico
- 2012 Ex-England soccer captain David Beckham leaves LA Galaxy triumphantly with a second MLS Cup winner's medal after a 3-1 win over Houston Dynamo in Carson, CA, in the final game of a 6-year stint in the US
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December 2, 1906
Flannelfoot, The False Teeth Filcher
December 3, 1937
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