Saturday September 10, 2011: Reference.com On This Day

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Sep 10, 2011, 9:51:53 AM9/10/11
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On This Day:
Saturday September 10, 2011

This is the 253rd day of the year, with 112 days remaining in 2011.

Fact of the Day: chrysanthemum

Chrysanthemum is Greek chrys- 'gold' and anthemon 'flower,' which they mostly were in ancient times. It was originally the herbalists' name for the Corn Marigold, a composite plant with brilliant entirely yellow flowers. Now, the term is ordinarily applied to a number of cultivated species of the genus (especially Chrysanthemum sinense), much prized for the beauty of its flowers and for blooming in November and December.

Holidays

Switzerland: Kaseteilet.
Bulgaria: Liberation Day.
China: Teachers' Day.

Events

1608 - Captain John Smith was elected council president of the Jamestown colony in Virginia.
1623 - Lumber and furs were the first cargo to leave Plymouth, Massachusetts, for England.
1813 - Oliver H. Perry and an American naval force defeated the British at the Battle of Lake Erie in the War of 1812.
1846 - Elias Howe received a U.S. patent for the first sewing machine.
1913 - First paved coast-to-coast road, named the Lincoln Highway, opened in the U.S.
1919 - New boundaries were settled in the Treaty of Saint-Germain, which brought about the end of the Austrian Empire.
1939 - Canada and South Africa declared war on Germany, following the declarations of Britain, France, Australia, and New Zealand on the previous day.
1939 - Canada declared war on Nazi Germany.
1955 - "Gunsmoke" premiered on TV.
1963 - Black students entered Alabama public schools following a standoff between federal authorities and Governor George C. Wallace.
1966 - The "Road Runner Show" premiered.
1974 - Guinea-Bissau declared its independence from Portugal.
1977 - Hamida Djandoubi, a Tunisian immigrant and a convicted murderer, became the last person in France executed with the guillotine.
1981 - Pablo Picasso's painting "Guernica" was returned to Spain and put in Madrid's Prado Museum. Picasso's will said that the painting was not to return to Spain until the Fascists lost power and democracy restored.
1993 - The "X-Files" television series debuted.
2000 - Broadway's longest-running production, "Cats," closed after more than 7,400 performances.
2002 - Switzerland, joins the United Nations.
2006 - Michael Schumacher announced his retirement as a race car driver.

Births

1736 - Carter Braxton, American revolutionary statesman and signer of Declaration of Independence.
1839 - Isaac Kauffman Funk, American publisher.
1929 - Arnold Palmer, American, professional golfer.
1934 - Charles Kuralt, American journalist and broadcaster.
1934 - Roger Maris, American professional baseball player.
1941 - Stephen Jay Gould, paleontologist, biologist, and science writer.
1949 - Bill O'Reilly, American journalist and commentator.
1950 - Joe Perry, American musician.
1957 - Dan Castellaneta, American voice actor.
1974 - Ryan Phillippe, American actor.

Deaths

1797 - Mary Wollstonecraft, English writer and advocate for women's equality.
1935 - Huey Long, American politician, governor of Louisiana and United States senator, assassinated.
1983 - John Vorster, South African Prime Minister and President.
2003 - Swedish Foreign Minister Anna Lindh, 46, was fatally stabbed in a Stockholm department store; she died the following day.
2006 - King Taufa'ahau Tupou IV of Tonga.
2006 - Daniel Wayne Smith, son of Playboy model Anna Nicole Smith.






Reference.com On This Day
http://www.reference.com/thisday/

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