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Black Thursday
Black Thursday is a term used to refer to typically negative, notable events that have occurred on a Thursday. It has been used in the following cases:
- 6 February 1851, a devastating day of bushfires in Victoria, Australia
- 21 June 1877, an execution of 10 suspected leaders of the "Molly Maguires"
- 8 November 1901 (21 November in the Gregorian calendar), the climax of the gospel riots in Athens.
- 24 October 1929, start of the Wall Street crash of 1929.
- 14 October 1943, when the USAAF suffered large losses during bombing in the second Schweinfurt raid during World War II
- 12 April 1951, during the Korean War, when 25% of the Far East Air Force B-29 bombing force were damaged or destroyed by Soviet MiG-15s in MiG Alley.
- 21 November 1968, day of protests by students at University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh
- 12 April 1973, clashes between the police and right-wing demonstrators in Milan resulted in the killing of policeman Antonio Marino.
- 30 May 1975, the massacre of about 50 Lebanese Christians in the area of Bashoura in West Beirut.
- 22 January 1987, the Mendiola massacre, which claimed the lives of 13 protesters in Manila, Philippines
- 3 September 1987, known as the "Black Thursday of Warsaw Transit", when 15 people died in two separate rail accidents in Warsaw, Poland
- 24 July 2003, when former Guatemalan president Efraín Ríos Montt's supporters rioted in protest of a court decision barring him from standing in the 2003 general election
- 30 September 2009, when the Irish government revealed to its people the alleged full cost of bailing out Anglo-Irish Bank
- 15 November 2018, the Franco-Ontarian jeudi noir when the government of Ontario announced the elimination of several Franco-Ontarian institutions
- 12 March 2020, Black Thursday stock market crash
- A massacre during the 2022 Chadian protests
- "Black Thursday", the week day preceding Black Friday
References
References
- "The Legend of the Molly Maguires {{!}} Pennsylvania Center for the Book".
- Carabott, Philip. (1993). "Politics, orthodoxy, and the language question in Greece: the Gospel Riots of 1901". Journal of Mediterranean Studies.
- (5 September 2022). "stock market crash of 1929".
- "Black Thursday: Schweinfurt, October 14, 1943".
- (3 August 2012). "Black Thursday (November 21, 1968)". Wisconsin Historical Society.
- Ferrari, Saverio. (2016). "12 aprile 1973. Il 'giovedì nero' di Milano. Quando i fascisti uccisero l'agente Antonio Marino". Unaltrastoria.
- (30 September 2010). "Bleak outlook after Irish banks bail out". BBC News.
- (30 September 2010). "Lenihan on Black Thursday". [[Evening Herald]].
- Vachet, Benjamin. (25 November 2018). "Le " jeudi noir " de l'Ontario français".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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