This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website.
Boko Haram militants raze the entire town of Baga in north-east Nigeria, starting the 2015 Baga massacre and killing as many as 2,000 people.
The first block of the blockchain of the decentralized payment system Bitcoin, called the Genesis block, was established by the creator of the system, Satoshi Nakamoto.
Flash Airlines Flight 604 crashes into the Red Sea, resulting in 148 deaths, making it one of the deadliest aviation accidents in Egyptian history.
Israeli forces seize the Palestinian freighter Karine A in the Red Sea, finding 50 tons of weapons.
More than seven million people from the former apartheid Homelands receive South African citizenship.
In Moscow, Russia, George Bush and Boris Yeltsin sign the second Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START).
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights entered into force.
A protest by agricultural workers in Baixa de Cassanje, Portuguese Angola, turns into a revolt, opening the Angolan War of Independence, the first of the Portuguese Colonial Wars.
The SL-1 nuclear reactor is destroyed by a steam explosion in the only reactor incident in the United States to cause immediate fatalities.
The United States severs diplomatic relations with Cuba over the latter's nationalization of American assets.
Frances P. Bolton and her son, Oliver from Ohio, become the first mother and son to serve simultaneously in the U.S. Congress.
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, the central bank of the Philippines, is established.
Popular Canadian American jockey George Woolf dies in a freak accident during a race; the annual George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award is created to honor him.
World War II: Admiral Chester W. Nimitz is placed in command of all U.S. Naval forces in preparation for planned assaults against Iwo Jima and Okinawa in Japan.
World War II: Top Ace Major Greg "Pappy" Boyington is shot down in his Vought F4U Corsair by Captain Masajiro Kawato flying a Mitsubishi A6M Zero.
The March of Dimes is established by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Minnie D. Craig becomes the first woman elected as Speaker of the North Dakota House of Representatives, the first woman to hold a Speaker position anywhere in the United States.
Martial law is declared in Honduras to stop a revolt by banana workers fired by the United Fruit Company.
At the Paris Peace Conference, Emir Faisal I of Iraq signs an agreement with Zionist leader Chaim Weizmann on the development of a Jewish homeland in Palestine.
An Atlantic coast storm sets the lowest confirmed barometric pressure reading for a non-tropical system in the continental United States.
A gun battle in the East End of London left two dead and sparked a political row over the involvement of then-Home Secretary Winston Churchill.
A magnitude 7.7 earthquake destroys the city of Almaty in Russian Turkestan.
The James Lick telescope at the Lick Observatory, measuring 91 cm in diameter, is used for the first time. It was the largest refracting telescope in the world at the time.
Meiji Restoration in Japan: The Tokugawa shogunate is abolished; agents of Satsuma and Chōshū seize power.
American Civil War: Delaware votes not to secede from the United States.
Joseph Jenkins Roberts is sworn in as the first president of Liberia.
Stephen F. Austin receives a grant of land in Texas from the government of Mexico.
Austria, the United Kingdom, and France form a secret defensive alliance against Prussia and Russia.
American General George Washington defeats British General Lord Cornwallis at the Battle of Princeton.
The first issue of Berlingske, Denmark's oldest continually operating newspaper, is published.
Benning Wentworth issues the first of the New Hampshire Grants, leading to the establishment of Vermont.
By the Coonan Cross Oath, the Eastern Church in India cuts itself off from colonial Portuguese tutelage.
Pope Leo X excommunicates Martin Luther in the papal bull Decet Romanum Pontificem.