Lodi News-Sentinel

On this date

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In 1759, during the French and Indian War, the British defeated the French on the Plains of Abraham overlookin­g Quebec City.

In 1814, during the War of 1812, British naval forces began bombarding Fort McHenry in Baltimore but were driven back by American defenders in a battle that lasted until the following morning.

• In 1911, the song “Oh, You Beautiful Doll,” a romantic rag by Nat D. Ayer and Seymour Brown, was first published by Jerome H. Remick & Co.

• In 1923, Miguel Primo de Rivera, the captain general of Catalonia, seized power in Spain.

• In 1948, Republican Margaret Chase Smith of Maine was elected to the U.S. Senate; she became the first woman to serve in both houses of Congress.

• In 1959, Elvis Presley first met his future wife, 14-year-old Priscilla Beaulieu, while stationed in West Germany with the U.S. Army. (They married in 1967, but divorced in 1973.)

• In 1962, Mississipp­i Gov. Ross Barnett rejected the U.S. Supreme Court’s order for the University of Mississipp­i to admit James Meredith, a black student, declaring in a televised address, “We will not drink from the cup of genocide.”

• In 1971, a four-day inmates’ rebellion at the Attica Correction­al Facility in western New York ended as police and guards stormed the prison; the ordeal and final assault claimed the lives of 32 inmates and 11 hostages.

• In 1977, conductor Leopold Stokowski died in Hampshire, England, at age 95.

In 1989, Fay Vincent was elected commission­er of Major League Baseball, succeeding the late A. Bartlett Giamatti.

• In 1997, funeral services were held in Calcutta, India, for Nobel peace laureate Mother Teresa.

• In 2002, the earliest known online use of the term “selfie” (a photograph­ic self-portrait, usually taken with a smartphone) occurred on an Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp. website forum; it came from a man named Nathan Hope, who denied coining the term, saying it was “common slang.”

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