Today in History
1562 – About 1200 Huguenots are killed at Vassy, provoking first War of Religion in France.
1692 – First arrests in what would become the Salem witch trials, in Massachusetts. 1780 – Pennsylvania becomes the first US state to abolish slavery (for newborns only). 1815 – Napoleon Bonaparte lands in France, forcing Louis XVIII to flee. 1872 – Yellowstone, in the United
States, becomes the world’s first national park. 1896 – Henri Becquerel, left,
discovers radioactivity.
1932 – Infant son of US aviation pioneer Charles Lindbergh is kidnapped from New Jersey home.
1941 – Bulgaria joins the Axis powers and allows German forces to enter the country.
1953 – Joseph Stalin suffers a stroke and collapses. He dies four days later.
1971 – The Weather Underground group claims credit for a bomb explosion in Washington DC’s Capitol building. It caused widespread damage, but no-one was killed.
1973 – Pink Floyd release Dark Side
of the Moon, which has since sold more than 45 million copies.
1999 – Alarm over reports linking contraceptive pills to lethal blood clots cause thousands of New Zealand women to call a Ministry of Health helpline, overloading it. 2004 – The Return of the King
wins 11 Academy Awards, including best picture and the best director Oscar for Peter Jackson.
Birthdays
Frederic Chopin, Polish composer (1810-49); Glenn Miller, US musician (1904-44); David Niven, UK actor (1910-83); Roger Daltrey, UK singer (1944-); Anne Tolley, NZ politician (1953-); Sir Mark Todd, NZ horseman (1956-); Sir Russell Coutts, NZ sailor (1962-); Javier Bardem, Spanish actor (1969-); Will Power, Australian motorsport driver (1981-); Justin Bieber, US singer (1994-).