The Press

Today in History

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1834 – The city of York in Upper Canada is incorporat­ed as Toronto.

1836 – Alamo mission in San Antonio, Texas, falls to Mexican army after 13-day siege in which

Davy Crockett, right, and 186 other defenders die.

1869 – Dmitri Mendeleev presents the first periodic table of the elements to the Russian Chemical Society.

1899 – German pharmaceut­ical company Bayer patents aspirin, which quickly became the world’s best-selling drug.

1945 – German city of Cologne falls to US First Army in World War II.

1946 – France recognises Vietnam as free state within Indochina Federation.

1947 – Classical music lovers pack Wellington’s Town Hall for the debut performanc­e of New Zealand’s first national orchestra, the NZSO.

1953 – Georgy Malenkov succeeds the late Joseph Stalin as premier of the Soviet Union.

1998 – New Zealand’s recently opened national museum, Te Papa, provokes controvers­y by displaying a statuette of the Virgin Mary enclosed in a condom.

2006 – Fairfax Media pays $700 million for auction site Trade Me, vaulting founder Sam Morgan on to New Zealand’s rich list.

2009 – The retrial of David Bain for the 1995 murders of his parents and three siblings begins at the High Court in Christchur­ch, after his original conviction was quashed by the Privy Council. Three months later, Bain is acquitted.

Birthdays

Michelange­lo, Italian artist

(1475-1564); Cyrano de Bergerac, French author (1620-55); Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Colombian novelist (1927-2014); Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, NZ opera singer (1944-); David Gilmour, Pink Floyd musician

(1946-); Rob Reiner, US director

(1947-); Maurice Williamson, NZ politician (1951-); Shaquille O’Neal, US basketball player (1972-).

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