The Daily Courier

TODAY IN HISTORY: Titanic launched

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In 1578, Martin Frobisher set sail from England, looking for a Northwest Passage to the Orient. He instead found the Hudson Strait. It was the explorer’s third and last voyage to Canada. He was later knighted for his role in fighting the Spanish Armada. He died at sea after being mortally wounded by the Spanish in 1594.

In 1859, the “Big Ben” clock in London began ticking.

In 1889, more than 2,200 people died when a dam break sent a roof-top-high wave of water, mud, rocks and other debris crashing into Johnstown, Penn.

In 1910, the Union of South Africa was founded.

In 1911, the British liner RMS Titanic was launched from its building berth in Belfast.

In 1916, British and German fleets fought the Battle of Jutland, off Denmark during the First World War.

In 1928, Nova Scotia abolished its upper house, the legislativ­e council.

In 1942, German warplanes bombed Canterbury, England, causing severe damage to Canterbury Cathedral, the seat of Anglicanis­m, in retaliatio­n for the Allied assault on Cologne, Germany.

In 1943, Ernest Manning replaced the late William Aberhart as Alberta’s Social Credit premier. Manning remained in office until 1968.

In 1961, South Africa became an independen­t republic, breaking its 155-year tie with Britain.

In 1962, Nazi SS officer Adolf Eichmann was hanged in Israel for his complicity in killing millions of Jews during the Second World War.

In 1968, Canada’s first heart transplant was performed at the Montreal Heart Institute. A team headed by Dr. Pierre Grondin operated on 58-year-old Albert Murphy.The retired butcher died 46 hours later.

In 1970, 70,000 people died in Peru in what experts called the most destructiv­e earthquake in the Western hemisphere. Its magnitude measured 7.9.

In 1972, Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau announced the introducti­on of Canadian bravery awards, plus a third level of the Order of Canada — Member.

In 1977, the trans-Alaska oil pipeline, three years in the making, was completed.

In 1990, the Supreme Court of Canada said judges must give native rights a generous and liberal interpreta­tion.

In 1997, the Confederat­ion Bridge opened to traffic.

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