A Focus on History: September 10 through September 16

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September 10

A 25-year-old London taxi driver named George Smith becomes the first person to be arrested for drunk driving after he slams his cab into a building. Smith later pled guilty and was fined 25 shillings. -1897.

September 11

Approximately 75,000 coal miners in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia, end a 10-week strike after winning an eight-hour day, semi-monthly pay, and the abolition of overpriced company-owned stores, where they had been forced to shop. – 1897.

At 7:45 a.m. CDT an American Airlines Boeing 767 crashes into the north tower of the World Trade Center in New York City, N.Y.. The impact left a gaping, burning hole near the 80th floor of the 110-story skyscraper and instantly kills hundreds of individuals and traps hundreds more in higher floors. When the evacuation of the tower and its twin got under way, television cameras broadcast live images of what initially appears to be a freak accident. Then, 18 minutes after the first plane hit, a second Boeing 767 appears out of the sky and slices into the south tower at about the 60th floor. The collision causes a massive explosion that showered burning debris over surrounding buildings and the streets below. The United States was under attack. – 2001.

September 12

Hurricane Gilbert slams into Jamaica. Approximately 80% of the island’s homes were either seriously damaged or destroyed and approximately 500,000 of the country’s 2 Million residents were left homeless and more than 200 persons lost their lives. – 1988.

Representatives from the United States, Great Britain, France, and the Soviet Union sign an agreement to give up all occupation rights in Germany. The largely symbolic action cleared the way for East Germany and West Germany to reunite after being separated by the Berlin Wall during the Cold War. – 1990.

September 13

Francis Scott Key writes a poem which is later set to music and in 1931 becomes the U.S. National Anthem, “The Star-Spangled Banner.” – 1814.

Eleven prison employees and 29 inmates die in four days of rioting at New York State’s Attica Prison and the retaking of the prison. The riot caused the Nation to take a closer look at prison conditions, for inmates and their guards alike. – 1971.

September 14

U.S. president William McKinley dies after being shot by a deranged anarchist during the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, N.Y.. – 1901.

September 15

The Battle of Britain reaches its climax when the Royal Air Force (RAF) shoots down 56 invading German aircraft in two dogfights lasting less than an hour. The costly raid convinced the German high command that the Luftwaffe could not achieve air supremacy over Britain. – 1940.

During the Korean War, U.S. Marines land at Inchon on the West Coast of Korea, 100 miles south of the 38th Parallel and just 25 miles from Seoul. The brilliant landing cut the North Korean forces in two, and the U.S.-led U.N. force push inland to recapture Seoul, the South Korean capital that had fallen to the communists in June. Allied forces converged from the north and the south to devastate the North Korean army and take 125,000 enemy troops prisoner. – 1950.

A bomb explodes during Sunday morning services in the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala. to kill four young girls. A well-known Ku Klux Klan member, Robert Chambliss, was charged with murder and with buying 122 sticks of dynamite. In October 1963, Chambliss was cleared of the murder charge and received a six-month jail sentence and a $100. fine for the dynamite. After Alabama attorney general Bill Baxley reopened the case, Chambliss was convicted in 1977 and sentenced to life in prison. – 1963.

September 16

In his cell at Yerovda Jail near Bombay, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi begins a hunger strike in protest of the British government’s decision to separate India’s electoral system by caste. – 1932.

U.S. president Franklin D. Roosevelt signs the Selective Service and Training Act, which requires all male citizens between the ages of 26 and 35 to register for the military draft. – 1940.

A 34-year-old man goes on a rampage at the Navy Yard in Washington, D.C. and kills 12 individuals and wounds several others over the course of an hour before he is fatally shot by police. Investigators later determined that the gunman was a computer contractor for a private information technology firm and had acted alone. – 2013.

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