September
September (i/ˌsɛptˈɛmbər/ sep-TEM-bər) or Sept. is the ninth month of the year in the Julian and Gregorian Calendars and one of four months with a length of 30 days.
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Some articles on September:
1494) September 1 – Jacques Cartier, French explorer (b. 1491) September 13 – John Cheke, English classical scholar and statesman (b. 1514) September 27 – Emperor Go-Nara of Japan (b ...
99th Operations and Maintenance (later, 99th Operations) 1 September 1991 – 21 September 1995. 31 March 1974 Squadrons 25th Strategic Training Squadron 10 August 1989 – 1 September 1991 99th Air Refueling Squadron 1 January 1966 – 30 September 1973 346th Bombardment (later, 346th ...
1952) September 1 – Othmar Schoeck, Swiss composer (d. 1957) September 4 – Albert Orsborn, the 6th General of The Salvation Army (d. 1967) September 5 – Nell Brinkley, American illustrator and comic artist (d ...
... John Duffy first became interested in making a film about the September 11 attacks when they found Paul Thompson's Complete 911 Timeline website in spring 2003 ... After obtaining funding, they met Thompson in September 2004, who agreed to let them adapt his work ... The film premiered theatrically in September 2006 in New York City and the San Francisco Bay area ...
... September 9 – Generalitat of Catalonia is restored within the Second Spanish Republic from September 25 until the collapse of the Republic in 1939 ... September 10 – The IND Eighth Avenue Line, at this time the world's longest subway line (31 miles (50 km)), begins operation in Manhattan ... September 11 – Canadian operations end on the International Railway (New York – Ontario) ...
Famous quotes containing the word september:
“Any one who knows what the worth of family affection is among the lower classes, and who has seen the array of little portraits stuck over a labourers fireplace ... will perhaps feel with me that in counteracting the tendencies, social and industrial, which every day are sapping the healthier family affections, the sixpenny photograph is doing more for the poor than all the philanthropists in the world.”
—Macmillans Magazine (London, September 1871)
“This seems a long while ago, and yet it happened since Milton wrote his Paradise Lost. But its antiquity is not the less great for that, for we do not regulate our historical time by the English standard, nor did the English by the Roman, nor the Roman by the Greek.... From this September afternoon, and from between these now cultivated shores, those times seemed more remote than the dark ages.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“On 16 September 1985, when the Commerce Department announced that the United States had become a debtor nation, the American Empire died.”
—Gore Vidal (b. 1925)