Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

TODAY IN HISTORY

- Ten years ago: Five years ago: One year ago:

On July 9, 1776, the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce was read aloud to Gen. George Washington’s troops in New York.

Also on this date In 1755,

British General Edward Braddock was mortally wounded as his troops suffered a massive defeat during the French and Indian War. (He died four days later.)

In 1816,

Argentina declared independen­ce from Spain.

In 1850,

the 12th president of the United States, Zachary Taylor, died after serving only 16 months of his term. (He was succeeded by Millard Fillmore.)

In 1918,

101 people were killed in a train collision in Nashville, Tennessee.

In 1918,

the Distinguis­hed Service Cross was establishe­d by an Act of Congress.

In 1937,

a fire at 20th Century Fox’s film storage facility in Little Ferry, New Jersey, destroyed most of the studio’s silent films.

In 1943,

during World War II, the Allies launched Operation Husky, the invasion of Sicily.

In 1947,

the engagement of Britain’s Princess Elizabeth to Lt. Philip Mountbatte­n was announced.

In 1982,

Pan Am Flight 759, a Boeing 727, crashed in Kenner, Louisiana, shortly after takeoff, killing all 145 people aboard and eight people on the ground.

In 1992,

former CBS News commentato­r Eric Sevareid died in Washington at age 79.

In 2004,

a Senate Intelligen­ce Committee report concluded the CIA had provided unfounded assessment­s of the threat posed by Iraq that the Bush administra­tion had relied on to justify going to war.

The largest U.S.Russia spy swap since the Cold War took place at Vienna’s airport, as planes from New York and Moscow arrived with 10 Russian sleeper agents and four prisoners accused by Russia of spying for the West.

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley relegated the Confederat­e flag to the state’s “relic room” after the legislatur­e passed a measure removing the flag from the grounds of the Statehouse in the wake of the murder of nine African Americans at a church Bible study.

A federal appeals court said President Donald Trump was violating the First Amendment any time he blocked a critic on Twitter to silence a viewpoint; the court warned that any elected official who uses social media for “all manner of official purposes” can’t then exclude critics without violating free-speech protection­s.

Associated Press

 ?? AP ?? Allied landing craft are spread along the shore in the first stages of the invasion of Sicily during World War II, which began July 9, 1943.
AP Allied landing craft are spread along the shore in the first stages of the invasion of Sicily during World War II, which began July 9, 1943.

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