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This Day in U.S. Military History May 11 1690 – In the first major engagement of King William’s War, British troops from Massachusetts seized Port Royal in Acadia (Nova Scotia and New Brunswick) from the French, their objective was to take Quebec. 1846 – Congress declares war against Mexico at request of the President James Polk. 1862 – C.S.S. Virginia blown up by her crew off Craney Island to avoid capture. 1864 – A dismounted Union trooper fatally wounds J.E.B. Stuart, one of the most colorful generals of the South, at the Battle of Yellow Tavern, just six miles north of Richmond. 1866 – Confederate President Jefferson Davis became a free man after spending two years in prison for his role in the American Civil War. 1889 – Major Joseph Wham and group of soldiers, carrying a military payroll of $29,000, were attacked by a dozen outlaws near Fort Thomas, Arizona Territory. 1898 – Revenue Cutter Hudson towed the crippled USS Winslow from certain destruction under the Spanish forts at Cardenas, Cuba during the Spanish-American War. 1898 – Sailors and Marines from USS Marblehead and USS Nashville cut trans-oceanic cable near Cienfuegos, Cuba, isolating Cuba from Spain. 1920 – The 16th Marine Regiment organized at Philadelphia for duty in Cuba, Haiti and the Dominican Republic. 1942 – The Air Medal was authorized by President Roosevelt by Executive Order 9158 and established the award for “any person who, while serving in any capacity in the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, or Coast Guard of the United States subsequent to September 8, 1939, distinguishes, or has distinguished, himself by meritorious achievement while participating in an aerial flight.” Executive Order 9242-A, dated 11 September 1942 amended the previous Executive Order to read “in any capacity in or with the Army”. 1943 – The US 7th Division (commanded by General Brown) lands on Japanese occupied Attu Island. 1943 – Hermann Goering division in Tunisia surrendered. 1944 – The US 5th Army launches new attacks against the German-held Gustav Line. 1944 – The US 9th Air Force begins a series of raids on airfields around Caen. 1944 – The Japanese begin to assemble most of their remaining heavy warships at Tawitawi. Admiral Ozawa commands the forces. The build up is in anticipation of the American offensive against the Mariana Islands to the northeast. 1945 – On Okinawa, American forces conduct a coordinated attack on the Japanese held Shuri Line. 1945 – Four days after Nazi Germany surrendered unconditionally to the Allies, the Coast Guard-manned destroyer escorts USS Vance and USS Durant, underway off the Azores escorting their last convoy to the Mediterranean, sighted a light ahead of the convoy. 1945 – On Luzon, elements of US 1st Corps make contact on Kapintalan Ridge. 1945 – Units of the Soviet 1st and 2nd Ukrainian Fronts eliminate most of the German resistance in Czechoslovakia and make contact with American forces at Pilsen. 1951 – Communist forces conducted a massive shift eastward, completing the move and commencing a new attack on May 16. 1961 – President Kennedy approves sending 400 Special Forces troops and 100 other U.S. military advisers to South Vietnam. 1962 – US sent troops to Thailand.] 1962 – Secretary of Defense McNamara makes the first of many trips to Vietnam and meets with Diem. After 48 hours in the country he concludes, ‘every quantitative measurement…shows that we are winning the war.’ 1965 – U.S. destroyers deliver first shore bombardment of Vietnam War. 1965 – General Westmoreland and Deputy Premier Nguyen Van Thieu make a parachute jump together. 1965 – The 1st marine Aircraft Wing flies in to establish its advance headquarters at Danang. 1967 – In Vietnam the siege of Khe Sanh ended, with the base still in American hands. 1967 – Civilian-operated pacification programs in South Vietnam are handed over to the US military command. The projects are aimed at reestablishing South Vietnamese government control over rural villages and hamlets. 1968 – US and North Vietnamese negotiators complete procedural arrangements for the formal talks. They agree that, for the time being, participation will be limited to representatives of the United States and North Vietnam. 1969 – U.S. and South Vietnamese forces battle North Vietnamese troops for Ap Bia Mountain (Hill 937), one mile east of the Laotian border. 1975 – The Cambodian government seized an American merchant ship, the Mayaguez. 1989 – President Bush ordered nearly 2,000 troops to invade Panama. 1991 – President Bush dispatched an amphibious task force with thousands of Marines and dozens of helicopters to help cyclone-ravaged Bangladesh with disaster relief efforts. 1999 – In Beijing, protests outside the US Embassy over NATO’s bombing of the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade eased after state-run television aired US and NATO apologies for the attack. 1999 – NATO bombings continued in Serbia with strikes against radio and TV towers, oil storage tanks, bridges and army barracks. 1999 – US and British warplanes bombed air defense targets in northern and southern Iraq after they were targeted by radar. 2004 – The Bush administration ordered economic sanctions against Syria for supporting terrorism. Food and medicine were excepted. 2004 – A video, posted on an al-Qaida-linked Web site, showed the beheading of Nick Berg, an American civilian in Iraq. Abu Musab alZarqawi, aka Ahmad Fadhil al Khalayeh, was later identified as the beheader. Nick Berg (26) was from West Chester, Pa.