HISTORY TODAY: August 23, 2017


1305 Scottish patriot William Wallace (Scottish Gaelic: Uilleam Uallas) is hanged, drawn, beheaded, and quartered in London.

''Knowing the past, we can make wise 
choices for a brighter, and more positive future.''

1244Turks expel the crusaders under Frederick II from Jerusalem.
1305Scottish patriot William Wallace is hanged, drawn, beheaded, and quartered in London.
1541Jacques Cartier lands near Quebec on his third voyage to North America.
1711A British attempt to invade Canada by sea fails.
1775King George III of England refuses the American colonies' offer of peace and declares them in open rebellion.
1821After 11 years of war, Spain grants Mexican independence as a constitutional monarchy.
1863Union batteries cease their first bombardment of Fort Sumter, leaving it a mass of rubble but still unconquered by the Northern besiegers.
1900Booker T. Washington forms the National Negro Business League in Boston, Massachusetts.
1902Fanny Farmer, among the first to emphasize the relationship of diet to health, opens her School of Cookery in Boston.
1914The Emperor of Japan declares war on Germany.
1926American film star Rudolph Valentino dies, causing world-wide hysteria and a number of suicides.
1927Immigrant laborers Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti are executed for a robbery they did not commit. Fifty years later, in 1977, Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis establishes a memorial in the victims' honor.
1939Joseph Stalin and German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop sign a non-aggression pact between the Soviet Union and Germany, freeing Adolf Hitler to invade Poland and Stalin to invade Finland.
1942German forces begin an assault on the major Soviet industrial city of Stalingrad.
1944German SS engineers begin placing explosive charges around the Eiffel Tower in Paris.
1950Up to 77,000 members of the U.S. Army Organized Reserve Corps are called involuntarily to active duty to fight the Korean War.
1952Arab League security pact linking seven Arab States in a military, political and economic alliance goes into effect.
1954First flight of the C-130 Hercules transport aircraft.
1958The Second Taiwan Strait crisis begins: People's Liberation Army bombards island of Quemoy during Chinese Civil War.
1961Belgium sends troops to Rwanda-Urundi during bloody Tutsi-Hutu conflict.
1966Lunar Orbiter 1 takes first photograph of Earth from the moon.
1975Pathet Lao communists occupy Vientiane, Laos.
1977Bryan Allen, piloting the Gossamer Condor, wins the Kremer prize for the first human-powered aircraft to fly a one-mile, figure-eight course.
1979Iranian army opens offensive against Kurds.
1979Bolshoi Ballet dancer Alexander Godunov defects in New York City.
1990Armenia declares independence from USSR.
1990East and West Germany announce they will unite on Oct 3.
1996Osama bin Laden issues message entitled "A declaration of war against the Americans occupying the land of the two holy places."
2006Natascha Kampusch,  abducted at the age of 10 in Austria, escapes from her captor, Wolfgang Priklopil, after 8 years of captivity.
2011Libyan leader Muammar al-Gaddafi is overthrown after National Transitional Council forces take control of Bab al-Azizia compound during the 2011 Libyan Civil War.
2011
A 5.8 earthquake centered at Mineral, Virginia, damages the Washington Monument, forcing the landmark to close for repairs.

Born on August 23

1754Louis XVI, King of France during the French Revolution who met his fate at the guillotine.
1755Jean Baptiste Lislet-Geoffroy, French geographer.
1883Jonathan Wainwright, U.S. general who fought against the Japanese on Corregidor in the Philippines and was forced to surrender.
1898Albert Claude, biologist who won the 1974 Nobel for his work on the sub-structure of the cell. He never graduated from high school.
1912Gene Kelly, dancer, choreographer and actor.
1931H.O. Smith, molecular biologist credited with helping 'open the door' on genetic engineering.
1934Sonny (Christian) Jurgensen, professional football player and sports announcer.
1934Barbara Eden, actress (I Dream of Jeannie TV series).
1935Sir Roy Colin Strong, the youngest director of both Britain's National Portrait Gallery and the Victoria and Albert Museum in London; recipient of Shakespeare Prize.
1938Roger John Reginald Greenaway, songwriter ("I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing,"), record producer. He and co-writer Roger Cook were first UK team to receive an Ivor Novello Award as Songwriters of the Year in two successive years.
1942Patricia McBride, ballerina; in 1961 became youngest principal in the New York City Ballet.
1946Keith Moon, drummer in The Who.
1951Queen Noor of Jordan (Lisa Najeeb Halaby), queen consort 1978–99.
1951Akhmad Kadyrov, President of Chechnya (Oct 5, 2003–May 9, 2004).
1956Andreas Floer, mathematician, creator of the Floer homology.
1965Roger Avary, screenwriter, director (Killing Zoe); shared Academy Award with co-writer Quentin Tarantino for best original screenplay (Pulp Fiction).


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