2 November is a day of days. (Huh?)

1698 Scottish settlers made landfall in Panama, establishing the ill-fated Darien colony. The Scots hoped to export haggis, bag pipes, and wool to Central America, having denounced evidence of the climate there as false facts. The Scots had decided they needed an empire to rival England.
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1868 New Zealand became the first country to adopt a standard national time. Local time was gone.
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1922 The Queensland and Northern Territory Air Service (Qantas) established its first regular passenger air service (between Charleville and Cloncurry). Pictured is its first passenger. Customer service has remained unchanged since.
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1948 Despite unanimous predications and polling Harry Truman defeated Thomas Dewey in the United States presidential race. Truman was gracious in victory and Dewey was dignified in defeat. So different from today. There is plenty of video on You Tube.
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1960 Penguin Books was acquitted of the charge of publishing obscenity — the use of four letter words — in the case of D. H. Lawrence’s ‘Lady Chatterley’s Lover.’ The trial was the best free publicity this overwrought and boring novel ever had. The defence was ‘literary merit’ per an act written, introduced, and steered through by Roy Jenkins.
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