Today in History
1607 – About 100 colonists form the first permanent English settlement in North America, at Jamestown, Virginia.
1787 – Eleven ships, later known as the First Fleet, set sail from Portsmouth, England, carrying criminals to Botany Bay, Australia.
1846 – US Congress declares war on Mexico in a dispute over Texas.
1917 – Three children near Fatima, Portugal, report seeing a vision of the Virgin Mary at what has since become a sacred site.
1936 – The New Zealand National Party is formed.
1940 – In his first speech as British prime minister, Winston Churchill, left, tells the House of Commons: ‘‘I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat.’’ 1947 – New Zealand artist Frances Hodgkins dies in Britain aged 78.
1968 – More than amillion people march through Paris as part of a wave of ‘‘May 68’’ protests.
1981 – Pope John Paul II is shot and seriously wounded in Rome by a Turkish gunman.
1989 – About 2000 students begin a hunger strike in Tiananmen Square, Beijing.
1991 – A South African judge convictswinnie Mandela of kidnapping four young men and being an accessory in their beating.
1995 – New Zealand wins the America’s Cup in San Diego.
2006 – Six people drown when the fishing boat Kotuku capsizes in Foveaux Strait while returning from amuttonbirding trip.
2019 – US actor Felicity Huffman pleads guilty to attempting to bribe her daughter’s way into university. She is later jailed for 14 days.