This Day In History — “Chattanooga Choo Choo” goes gold

February 10

1763
Treaty of Paris signed, ending the French and Indian War. France ceded Canada and all its North American territories east of the Mississippi to Great Britain.

1837
Russian poet and novelist Alexander Pushkin was killed in a duel.

1840
Queen Victoria married Prince Albert.

1942
Glenn Miller received the first ever gold record for selling a million copies of “Chattanooga Choo Choo.”

1962
The Soviet Union exchanged captured American U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers for Rudolph Abel, a Soviet spy held by the United States.

1967
The 25th Amendment was ratified, establishing presidential succession.

1996
IBM’s computer, Deep Blue, beat the world chess champion, Garry Kasparov, in the first game of their match.

2005
Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Arthur Miller died.

Birthdays

Boris Pasternak
1890–1960, Russian Author.

Harrison Gray Otis
soldier and journalist (1837)

Jimmy Durante
comedian, actor (1893)

John F. Enders
bacteriologist (1897)

Bertolt Brecht
dramatist (1898)

Leontyne Price
opera singer (1927)

Robert Wagner
actor (1930)

Roberta Flack
singer, songwriter (1939)

Peter Allen
singer, songwriter (1944)

Mark Spitz
swimmer (1950)

Laura Dern
actress (1967)

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