Sherbrooke Record

Today in History

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Today in History for June 19: On this date:

In 325, the month-long Council of Nicea closed. Known as the first ecumenical council in the history of the Church, it formulated the Nicene Creed'' and establishe­d the method for calculatin­g when Easter falls.

In 1566, James VI of Scotland was born. Upon the death of Elizabeth I in 1603, he ascended the English throne as James I. He is best remembered for authorizin­g the publicatio­n known today as the King James Version of the Bible.

In 1721, almost half of Montreal was destroyed by fire.

In 1815, artist Cornelius Kreighoff, famed for his portraits of life in 19th-century Quebec, was born in Amsterdam, Holland. He died in 1872.

In 1846, the first baseball game with set rules was played in Hoboken, N.J.

In 1862, slavery was outlawed in U.S. territorie­s.

In 1867, deposed Mexican emperor Maximilian was executed.

In 1896, Wallis Warfield Simpson was born in Pennsylvan­ia. The two-time divorcee became the Duchess of Windsor when she married the former King Edward VIII in 1937, a few months after he abdicated in favour of the woman he loved. The Duchess died in Paris in 1986.

In 1903, the city of Regina was incorporat­ed.

In 1910, Father's Day was celebrated for the first time, in Spokane, Wash. Most historians credit Sonora Smart Dodd of Spokane, Wash., with the idea of making Father's Day a national day of recognitio­n. According to the story, Dodd heard a sermon about the sacrifices made by mothers and thought her own father, Civil War veteran William Jackson Smart, deserved equal accolades because he had raised her and her five siblings after their mother died. Dodd arranged her first Father's Day celebratio­n on June 19, 1910.

In 1914, 188 people died in the Hillcrest mine disaster at Crows Nest Pass, Alta.

In 1917, during the First World War, King George V ordered the Royal Family to drop their German titles and surnames. The family took the name Windsor.

In 1937, Scottish dramatist and novelist J.M. Barrie died. He was best known for Peter Pan.''

In 1953, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were executed at New York's Sing Sing prison after they were convicted of spying for the Soviet Union.

In 1958, the Canadian Parliament approved the establishm­ent of the joint North American Air Defence Command, or NORAD.

In 1963, Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova, the first woman in space, returned from a three-day space flight.

In 1973, Karen Kain and Frank Augustyn of the National Ballet of Canada won first prize at the Internatio­nal Ballet Competitio­n in Moscow.

In 1977, Pope Paul VI proclaimed a 19th-century Philadelph­ia bishop, John Neumann, the first male American saint.

In 1978, the comic strip Garfield'' appeared for the first time.

In 1983, B.C. Place, Vancouver's 60,000-seat domed stadium, opened.

In 1986, artificial heart recipient American Murray Haydon died of kidney failure at age 59. His death came 16 months and two days after receiving the implant.

In 1987, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a Louisiana law requiring public schools to teach creationis­m if they taught evolution. The court ruled that the state law violated the First Amendment.

In 1992, the last two western hostages in Lebanon were freed after three years in captivity. Henrich Struebig and Thomas Kemptner were immediatel­y flown home to Germany. Their release brought an end to a decade in which at least 92 western hostages were taken.

In 1992, Russian President Boris Yeltsin told Canada's Parliament his country had abandoned totalitari­anism for democracy.

In 1999, Prince Edward married Sophie Rhys-jones at Windsor Castle. The Queen gave her youngest son and his wife the titles of Earl and Countess of Wessex.

In 2003, the U.S. Air Force decided not to court martial the two pilots who mistakenly bombed Canadian troops in Afghanista­n in April 2000 -- killing four. The pilots, Maj. Harry Schmidt and Maj. William Umbach, had been charged with involuntar­y manslaught­er, aggravated assault and derelictio­n of duty and faced up to 64 years in prison if convicted.

In 2009, Darrell Dexter was sworn in as Nova Scotia's new premier, the first NDP government in Atlantic Canada's history.

In 2009, Nortel Networks Corp. announced a deal to sell itself piece-bypiece rather than try to restructur­e under bankruptcy protection, winding down a company with a 127-year-old history in Canada.

In 2013, Bob Rae, one-time Ontario NDP premier and former interim federal Liberal leader, announced he was leaving politics after 35 years.

In 2013, James Gandolfini, whose portrayal of mob boss Tony Soprano in HBO'S The Sopranos'' helped create one of TV'S greatest drama series, died of cardiac arrest while vacationin­g in Rome. He was 51.

In 2016, the Cleveland Cavaliers became the first team in NBA Finals history to overcome a 3-1 deficit by beating the defending champion Golden State Warriors 93-89 in Game 7, capturing the franchise's first title and ending Cleveland's 52-year pro sports championsh­ip drought. Lebron James, the Ohio-native who returned to the Cavs in 2014 and promised a title, was named MVP for a third time.

In 2016, Dustin Johnson captured his illusive first major by winning the U.S. Open at Oakmont by three strokes, atoning for his past mishaps in the majors.

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