Sherbrooke Record

Today in History

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In 1906, the city of Saskatoon was incorporat­ed.

In 1908, the first major oil strike in the Middle East occurred in Masjid-isuleiman, Persia (Iran).

In 1913, the first woman magistrate in Britain was appointed.

In 1913, the Actors’ Associatio­n was organized.

In 1919, actor Jay Silverheel­s was born Harold J. Smith on the Six Nations Reserve near Brantford, Ont. Silverheel­s, who was also a star boxer and lacrosse player, gained fame as “The Lone Ranger’s”sidekick “Tonto” on television and in movies during the 1950s. He died on March 5, 1980.

In 1940, the evacuation of allied troops from Dunkirk, France, began during the Second World War.

In 1943, Quebec passed a law requiring free and compulsory education in the province.

In 1946, physicists Janos Von Neumann and Klaus Fuchs were granted a patent for the fusion or “H-bomb.”

In 1966, British Guiana became independen­t and took the name Guyana.

In 1969, the “Apollo 10” astronauts returned to Earth after an eight-day dress rehearsal for the first manned moon landing by the U.S.

In 1972, U.S. President Richard M. Nixon and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev signed the Anti-ballistic Missile Treaty in Moscow.

In 1981, 14 people were killed when a Marine jet crashed onto the flight deck of the aircraft carrier “USS Nimitz”off Florida.

In 1989, riding “Commander Bond” to victory at New York’s Yonkers Raceway, Canada’s Herve Filion became the first harness racing driver to win 10,000 races.

In 2001, Eric Fairclough was acclaimed leader of the Yukon NDP,

Equity becoming the first aboriginal to head a major political party in Canada.

In 2003, a CF-18 jet crashed during training exercises near Cold Lake, Alta., killing the 38-year-old pilot.

In 2003, Prime Minister Jean Chretien announced the creation of the Canadian History Centre, a $90 million institutio­n in Ottawa that would display Canada’s political and civic history.

In 2003, an airplane carrying Spanish peacekeepe­rs back home from Afghanista­n crashed into fog-shrouded mountains near the Black Sea port of Trabzon in Turkey, killing all 75 people on board.

In 2004, the rebel Sudan People’s Liberation Movement signed peace accords with the Sudan government to end their 21-year war, in which two million people died.

In 2004, Labrador Inuit voted overwhelmi­ngly to accept a historic land claim that would create a region of self-government on 15,800 square kilometres of northern Labrador, to be called Nunatsiavu­t. The agreement granted Inuit jurisdicti­on over areas ranging from natural resources, social services, justice, education and health.

In 2004, nine years after the Oklahoma City bombing, Terry Nichols was found guilty of 161 state murder charges for helping carry out the attack. He later received 161 consecutiv­e life sentences.

In 2008, Ethiopia’s Supreme Court sentenced exiled former president Mengistu Haile Mariam and 18 other officials to death for the murder of thousands of people during Mengistu’s 17-year rule.

In 2008, Foreign Affairs Minister Maxime Bernier was forced to resign over a security breach involving classified documents left in his former girlfriend’s Montreal apartment.

In 2011, Gen. Ratko Mladic, Europe’s most wanted war crimes fugitive, was arrested in Serbia. He had been on the run since 1995 when he was indicted by the UN war crimes tribunal in The Hague for genocide in the slaughter of some 8,000 Bosnian Muslims in Srebrenica and other crimes committed by his troops during Bosnia’s 1992-95 war.

In 2011, the Huffington Post news website launched its first internatio­nal incarnatio­n, Huffpost Canada, with blog posts written by environmen­tal activist David Suzuki, Green Party leader Elizabeth May and Victoriara­ised, Oscar-nominated actress Meg Tilly.

In 2014, Narendra Modi took the oath of office as India’s new prime minister. Modi’s inaugurati­on was the first to which India invited leaders from across South Asia, including Pakistan.

In 2016, Conservati­ves bid a formal farewell to Stephen Harper, whose speech at the Conservati­ve party convention was his first since stepping down as leader after his party’s October election defeat. (Harper resigned as an MP in August.)

in 2019, One of the most iconic players in N-F-L and Green Bay Packers history died at the age of 85. The Packers cited the family of Bart Starr in announcing that the Hall of Fame quarterbac­k had died. Starr had been in failing health since suffering two strokes and a heart attack in 2014. Starr was an ordinary quarterbac­k until teaming with Vince Lombardi on the powerhouse Packers teams that ruled the 1960s and ushered in the NFL as America’s most popular sport. Starr led Green Bay to six division titles, five NFL championsh­ips and wins in the first two Super Bowls.

(The Canadian Press)

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