November 1918

November 1, 1918 (Friday)

November 2, 1918 (Saturday)

November 3, 1918 (Sunday)

November 4, 1918 (Monday)

November 5, 1918 (Tuesday)

November 6, 1918 (Wednesday)

November 7, 1918 (Thursday)

November 8, 1918 (Friday)

November 9, 1918 (Saturday)

November 10, 1918 (Sunday)

November 11, 1918 (Monday)

  • Germany signed an armistice with the Allies between 5:12 AM and 5:20 AM in Marshal Ferdinand Foch's railroad car in Compiègne Forest, France. The end of World War One became official on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month.[88] It was the largest war ever fought until World War Two 21 years later, with 40 million recorded military and civilian casualties including 9 to 15 million combat deaths.[89]
    • American soldier Henry Gunther was killed by machine gun fire at the French village of Chaumont-devant-Damvillers, France one minute before the armistice went into effect, one of the last known Allied soldiers killed in World War One.[90]
    • Canadian soldier George Lawrence Price was killed by a sniper during a skirmish with German unit at Ville-sur-Haine, Belgium. He was the last soldier of the British Empire to die in World War One, two minutes before the armistice was to go into effect.[91]
    • French soldier Augustin Trébuchon was killed 15 minutes before the armistice, becoming the last French military casualty of the war. However, his death was recorded one day earlier as the French army was embarrassed to have soldiers engaged in combat on the day of the armistice.[92]
    • British soldier George Edwin Ellison of the 5th Royal Irish Lancers was killed while on a patrol on the outskirts of Mons, Belgium, 90 minutes before the armistice came into effect. He was the last British soldier to die in World War One.[93]
  • Meuse-Argonne Offensive The armistice immediately suspended all fighting in the campaign. American and French casualties totaled 192,000, while German casualties were around 126,000. It had been the largest American operation of World War One, with 1.2 million soldiers committed to the offense.[94][95]
  • A communist revolution was attempted in the city of Esch-sur-Alzette in Luxembourg. It failed and was quickly suppressed with the help of local German forces.
  • Poland regained independence after 123 years of partitions, with Józef Piłsudski appointed by the Regency Council as Commander-in-Chief. The date since then is celebrated as National Independence Day.[96]
  • Charles I of Austria proclaimed he would give up absolute power in Austria, and again two days later for Hungary. However, he did not formally abdicate the throne in hopes the people of either country to vote to recall him.[97][98]
  • Red Week A mix of Catholic, Protestant and moderate socialist organizations met in The Hague to organize a counter-campaign against the far-left socialist uprising in the Netherlands, calling themselves the "Orange Movement" (Oranjebeweging), after the Dutch royal family Orange-Nassau.[99]
  • The Liberal Party won the parliamentary election in Norway with 51 of the 123 seats in the Parliament of Norway after a second round of votes. Despite receiving the most votes, the Labour Party won just 18 seats, one less compared with the 1915 elections.[100]
  • Battle of Tulgas A joint American, British and Canadian force of 600 men involved in the North Russia Intervention clashed with a Red Army force of 2,500 soldiers at Tulgas, Russia.[101]
  • Battle of Przemyśl Polish artillery shelled Ukrainian defenses in the eastern half of Przemyśl after an ultimatum to withdraw was rejected.[102]
  • A Jewish rally in Kielce, Poland ended in violence after rumors spread of anti-Polish sentiment and speeches were being expressed at the event. Soldiers entered the city theater where the event was being held after the meeting ended, rounding up 300 attendees who remained behind. After searching them for arms, the soldiers handed them over to an angry mob that beat them. Four members of the local Jewish community were killed and several Jewish business and homes were vandalized, but no charges were made against any of the participants.[103]
  • All military aircraft ended operations, with streamers attached to planes' wings to show no hostile intent. Of the states of the air forces of both the Allies and Central Powers at war's end:
    • Royal Flying Corps, Royal Naval Air Service, and Royal Air Force in total suffered 16,623 casualties.[104] However, the RAF remained the largest in the world 20,000 aircraft and over 300,000 personnel, but in nine months the service was reduced to 35,000 personnel.[105]
    • French Aéronautique Militaire finished the war with 3,222 aircraft for the front line. However, it has lost 8,500 pilots by war's end.[106]
    • The Luftstreitkräfte had 2,709 aircraft by war's end but suffered in excess of 15,000 casualties.[107]
    • The Italian Corpo Aeronautico Militare ("Militaty Aviation Corps") finished the war with a strength of 2,725 aircraft. During the war, 105 Italian factories manufactured airframes, aero engines, and aviation propellers, producing 11,986 airplanes, almost half under license and only 2,208 made entirely of Italian components.[108]
    • The U.S. Marine Corps aviation force had grown from seven officers and 43 enlisted men during the United States entry into World War One to 282 officers and 2,180 enlisted men at the end of the war.[109]
  • The Finnish all-women paramilitary force during the Finnish Civil War was reorganized as Lotta Svärd, an all-women auxiliary force that grew to 60,000 members by 1930 and 240,000 members during the height of World War Two.[110][111]
  • The Quaker Oil Products Corporation was established in Conshohocken, Pennsylvania as a manufacturer of lubricant products for the textile industry. It was renamed the Quaker Chemical Corporation in 1930.[112]
  • The Felixstowe Fury, the largest seaplane in the world and first to incorporate servo-assisted controls, made its first flight from the Seaplane Experimental Station in England.[113]
  • The first tractors by Renault were produced at a factory in Billancourt, France.[114]
  • The Strand Theatre, a movie house and vaudeville theater, opened to a double bill night in Dorchester, Massachusetts.[115]
  • Born: Georgie Abrams, American boxer, top contender for the World Middleweight Championship in the 1940s, in Roanoke, Virginia (d. 1994)

November 12, 1918 (Tuesday)

November 13, 1918 (Wednesday)

November 14, 1918 (Thursday)

November 15, 1918 (Friday)

November 16, 1918 (Saturday)

November 17, 1918 (Sunday)

November 18, 1918 (Monday)

November 19, 1918 (Tuesday)

November 20, 1918 (Wednesday)

November 21, 1918 (Thursday)

November 22, 1918 (Friday)

November 23, 1918 (Saturday)

November 24, 1918 (Sunday)

November 25, 1918 (Monday)

November 26, 1918 (Tuesday)

November 27, 1918 (Wednesday)

November 28, 1918 (Thursday)

November 29, 1918 (Friday)

November 30, 1918 (Saturday)

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