HISTORY TODAY: November 17, 2017


1918 
Influenza deaths reported in the United States
have far exceeded World War I casualties.

375Enraged by the insolence of barbarian envoys, Valentinian, the Emperor of the West, dies of apoplexy in Pannonia in Central Europe.
1558Queen Elizabeth ascends to the throne of England.
1558The Church of England is re-established.
1636Henrique Dias, Brazilian general, wins a decisive battle against the Dutch in Brazil.
1796Napoleon Bonaparte defeats an Italian army near the Alpine River, Italy.
1800The Sixth Congress (2nd session) convenes for the first time in Washington, D.C.
1842A grim abolitionist meeting is held in Marlboro Chapel, Boston, after the imprisonment of a mulatto named George Latimer, one of the first fugitive slaves to be apprehended in Massachusetts.
1862Union General Ambrose Burnside marches north out of Washington, D.C., to begin the Fredericksburg campaign.
1869The Suez Canal is formally opened.
1877Russia launches a surprise night attack that overruns Turkish forces at Kars, Armenia.
1885The Serbian Army, with Russian support, invades Bulgaria.
1903Vladimir Lenin’s efforts to impose his own radical views on the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party splits the party into two factions, the Bolsheviks, who support Lenin, and the Mensheviks.
1913The first ship sails through the Panama Canal, which connects the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.
1918Influenza deaths reported in the United States have far exceeded World War I casualties.
1918German troops evacuate Brussels.
1931Charles Lindbergh inaugurates Pan Am service from Cuba to South America in the Sikorsky flying boat American Clipper.
1941German Luftwaffe general and World War I fighter-ace Ernst Udet commits suicide. The Nazi government tells the public that he died in a flying accident.
1951Britain reports development of the world’s first nuclear-powered heating system.
1965The NVA ambushes American troops of the 7th Cavalry at Landing Zone Albany in the Ia Drang Valley, almost wiping them out.
1967The American Surveyor 6 makes a six-second flight on the moon, the first lift-off on the lunar surface.
1970The Soviet unmanned Luna 17 touches down on the moon.
1980WHHM Television in Washington, D.C., becomes the first African-American public-broadcasting television station.
1986Renault President Georges Besse is shot to death by leftists of the Direct Action Group in Paris.
1989A student demonstration in Prague is put down by riot police, leading to an uprising (the Velvet Revolution) that will topple the communist government on Dec. 29.
1993The US House of Representatives passes a resolution to establish the North American Free Trade Agreement.
1993Gen. Sani Abacha leads a military coup in Nigeria that overthrows the government of Ernest Shonekan.
2000Controversial President of Peru Alberto Fujimori is removed from office.

Born on November 17

1755Louis XVIII, King of France.
1887Bernard Law Montgomery, British field marshal who defeated Rommel in North Africa and led Allied troops from D-Day to the end of World War II.
1902Eugene Paul Wigner, Hungarian-born physicist.
1916Shelby Foote, American writer, famous for his three-volume narrative on America’s Civil War.
1925Rock Hudson, actor (McMillan & Wife TV series; Giant).
1938Gordon Lightfoot, Canadian singer, songwriter, musician (“Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald,” “In the Early Morning Rain”).
1942Martin Scorsese, film director (Taxi Driver, Raging Bull).
1944Gene Clark, singer, songwriter; member of the bands The Byrds, The New Christy Minstrels, and Dillard & Clark.
1944Danny DeVito, actor, director, producer (Taxi TV series; Throw Momma from the Train, Pulp Fiction).
1944Lorne Michaels, Canadian-American TV producer; created Saturday Night Live.
1949Nguyen Tan Dung, Prime Minister of Vietnam (2006– )


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