Chinese Victory at Ch'ongch'on: UN Expelled from North Korea
Chinese forces shattered the UN advance at the Ch'ongch'on River, inflicting over 11,000 casualties and forcing a chaotic 120-mile retreat southward. This decisive rout ended any Allied hope of reunifying Korea by force and transformed the conflict into a grinding stalemate along the 38th parallel.
December 2, 1950
76 years ago
What Else Happened on December 2
Pope Innocent IV arrived in Lyon to escape the suffocating political pressure of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II, turning the French city into the temporary hea…
The University of Leipzig opened because German masters at Prague got tired of being outvoted 3-to-1 by Bohemian colleagues. King Wenceslaus IV had just flipped…
Sir Christopher Wren's St Paul's Cathedral rises from the ashes of the Great Fire, finally receiving its consecration on this day. The new structure replaced th…
Christopher Wren watched his cathedral open after 35 years of construction — he was 65, had survived the Great Fire that leveled the old cathedral, fought with …
The keeper's wife lit a candle to inspect the lantern room. Within minutes, flames had engulfed John Smeaton's wooden tower — the one that had replaced the orig…
The building still stands. But in 1763, Newport's Jewish congregation numbered maybe 58 families — Portuguese and Spanish refugees who'd fled the Inquisition th…
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