This Week in History
NOVEMBER 14
Cathy Mulholland was born.
Ryan Quigley was born.
Michael Gliner was born.
Linda Carter-Murray was born.
Ellen May Banks was born.
Keri McManus was born.
1851 – Herman Melville’s novel Moby Dick was published. It mentions Rockaway in the first chapter.
NOVEMBER 15
Roger Clark was born.
Elisabetta Di Stefano was born.
1969 – About 250,000 protesters against the Vietnam War, the largest war protest ever, converged peacefully on Washington, DC.
November 16
Allison Puckhaber was born.
1973 – President Nixon signed the bill authorizing the construction of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline.
2004 – President George W. Bush nominated Condoleezza Rice to replace Colin Powell as Secretary of State.
November 17
Marie Moriarty was born
Lauren Raphael McCallion was born.
Jaime Jordan was born.
Bob Moran was born.
Finbar Devine was born.
1973 – President Nixon said, “I am not a crook.”
November 18
Annie Graves was born.
Jim McDonald was born.
Christy Cook was born.
Colleen Brady was born.
Sean Heeran was born.
1928 – Mickey Mouse made his debut in Steamboat Willie.
1978 – Jim Jones, a U.S. pastor, led 914 of his followers to their deaths at Jonestown, Guyana, by drinking a cyanide-laced fruit drink. Cult members who refused to swallow the drink were shot.
November 19
Tom J. McVeigh was born.
John Edwards was born.
Bobby O’Hara was born.
Scott McCarthy was born.
1863 – Lincoln delivered his Gettysburg Address at the dedication of the national cemetery on the Civil War battlefield of Gettysburg, Pa.
1985 – Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev met for the first time in Geneva.
November 20
Maureen Blue-Kraus was born.
1945 – The war crimes trials of 24 German World War II leaders began in Nuremberg, Germany.
1962 – President John F. Kennedy agreed to lift the American blockade of Cuba, ending the Cuban missile crisis.