Vero - Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries/January 8
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Vero - Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries/doc Template:Divhide
Images
Use only ONE image at a time
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Pope Innocent III
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Andrew Jackson
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The reconstructed frame of Nate Saint's plane used in Operation Auca
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RMS Queen Mary 2
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RMS Queen Mary 2
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Battle of New Orleans
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Betelgeuse explosion memorial
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Herman Hollerith
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Harvey Milk
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Sheikh Mujibur Rahman
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Woodrow Wilson
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Covent Garden Theatre
Ineligible
| Blurb | Reason |
|---|---|
| 1297 – Francesco Grimaldi, disguised as a monk, led his men to capture the fortress protecting the Rock of Monaco, establishing his family as the rulers of Monaco. | outdated |
| 1806 – British forces engaged the Batavian Republic at Battle of Blaauwberg, eventually establishing British rule in the Cape Colony. | Battle: needs more footnotes; Colony: refimprove section |
| 1811 – The German Coast uprising, the largest slave revolt in United States history, took place in Louisiana. | refimprove section |
| 1815 – American forces led by General Andrew Jackson defeated the British Army at the Battle of New Orleans, two weeks after the United States and the United Kingdom signed the Treaty of Ghent to end the War of 1812. | refimprove section |
| 1920 – The steel strike of 1919, an attempt to organize the United States steel industry in the wake of World Template:Nowrap, collapsed in complete failure for the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers. | refimprove |
| 1964 – During his State of the Union address, U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson declared a "war on poverty". | Too much uncited, overreliance on quotes |
| 1978 – Harvey Milk took office on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors as the first openly gay man elected into public office in the United States. | Date not mentioned in body, unsourced in infobox |
| 1979 – The oil tanker Betelgeuse exploded at the offshore jetty of the oil terminal on Whiddy Island in Bantry Bay, Ireland, killing approximately 50 people. | lots of CN tags (esp. for a GA) |
| 1989 – British Midland Flight 92 crashed onto the embankment of the M1 motorway near Kegworth, Leicestershire, UK, killing 47 people and injuring 79 others. | refimprove |
| 1996 – An Antonov An-32 cargo aircraft crashed into a crowded market in Kinshasa, Zaire, killing up to 237 on the ground. | too many quotes |
| 2003 – Turkish Airlines Flight 634 crashed in extensive fog during final approach to Diyarbakır Airport in Turkey, leaving only 5 survivors out of 80 people on board. | refimprove section |
| 2004 – [[RMS Queen Mary 2|RMS Queen Template:Nowrap]], at the time the longest, widest and tallest passenger ship ever built, was christened by her namesake's granddaughter, Queen Template:Nowrap. | CNs |
| Arcangelo Corelli |d|1713 | refimprive sect |
| Wilkie Collins |b|1824| | Too much uncited |
| Marco Fu|b|1978 | refimprove sect |
| Bernard Krigstein |d|1990 | citation neededs |
Eligible
- 1198 – Lotario dei Conti was elected as Pope Innocent III; he later worked to restore papal power in Rome.
- 1735 – George Frideric Handel's opera Ariodante premiered at the Covent Garden Theatre in London.
- 1790 – George Washington delivered the first State of the Union address in New York City, then the provisional capital of the United States.
- 1889 – American statistician Herman Hollerith received a patent for his electromechanical tabulating machine for punched-card data.
- 1939 – The New Deal for Aborigines was formally announced by the Australian government, providing for full civil rights for Indigenous Australians in exchange for cultural assimilation.
- 1918 – U.S. president Woodrow Wilson announced his Fourteen Points for a moral cause and for post–World War I peace in Europe.
- 1936 – Reza Shah issued the Kashf-e hijab decree, ordering Iranian police to remove hijabs from any women in public.
- 1956 – Five Evangelical Christian missionaries from the United States were killed by the Huaorani in the rainforest of Ecuador shortly after making contact with them.
- 1972 – Following Pakistan's defeat in the Bangladesh Liberation War, President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto released Bangladeshi politician Sheikh Mujibur Rahman (pictured) from prison in response to international pressure.
- 1991 – Jeremy Wade Delle committed suicide in his high-school class in Richardson, Texas, an event that inspired the Pearl Jam song "Jeremy".
- 2010 – Gunmen from an offshoot of the Front for the Liberation of the Enclave of Cabinda attacked the bus transporting the Togo national football team to the Africa Cup of Nations in Angola, killing three people.
- Born/died: | Athelm |d|926| Edgar, King of Scotland |d|1107| Marco Polo |d|1324| Kadi Burhan al-Din |b|1345| Nicholas Biddle |b|1786| James Longstreet |b|1821| Template:Nowrap |b|1859| Nikolay Nekrasov |d|1878| Mór Kóczán |b|1885| Bronislava Nijinska |b|1891| Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell |d|1941 | David Bowie |b|1947|
Notes
- Fair Deal appears on January 4 so War on Poverty or State of the Union should not appear in the same year
- Mantell UFO incident appears on January 7, so Trans-en-Provence Case should not appear in the same year
- RMS Queen Elizabeth appears on January 9, so RMS Queen Mary 2 should not appear in the same year
January 8 Template:Main page image/OTD
- 1697 – Scottish student Thomas Aikenhead became the last person in Great Britain to be executed for blasphemy.
- 1904 – Blackstone Library (pictured), the first branch of the Chicago Public Library system, was dedicated.
- 1977 – Three bombs attributed to Armenian nationalists exploded across Moscow, killing seven people and injuring 37 people.
- 1981 – In Trans-en-Provence, France, a local farmer reported a UFO sighting claimed to be "perhaps the most completely and carefully documented sighting of all time".
- 2011 – Jared Lee Loughner opened fire at a public meeting held by U.S. representative Gabby Giffords in Tucson, Arizona, killing six people and injuring twelve others.