Rome News-Tribune

Today in History

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Today’s highlight:

On July 10, 1940, during World War II, the Battle of Britain began as the Luftwaffe started attacking southern England. The Royal Air Force was ultimately victorious.

On this date:

1908: William Jennings Bryan was nominated for president by the Democratic national convention in Denver.

1919: President Woodrow Wilson personally delivered the Treaty of Versailles to the Senate and urged its ratificati­on. However, the Senate rejected it.

1925: Jury selection took place in Dayton, Tennessee, in the trial of John T. Scopes, charged with violating the law by teaching Darwin’s Theory of Evolution. Scopes was convicted and fined, but the verdict was overturned on a technicali­ty.

1951: Armistice talks aimed at ending the Korean War began at Kaesong.

1973: The Bahamas became fully independen­t after three centuries of British colonial rule. John Paul Getty III, the teenage grandson of the oil tycoon, was abducted in Rome by kidnappers who cut off his ear when his family was slow to meet their ransom demands; Getty was released in December 1973 for nearly $3 million.

1991: Boris N. Yeltsin took the oath of office as the first elected president of the Russian republic. President George

H.W. Bush lifted economic sanctions against South Africa.

1999: The United States women’s soccer team won the World Cup, beating China 5-4 on penalty kicks after 120 minutes of scoreless play at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.

2002: The House approved, 310-113, a measure to allow airline pilots to carry guns in the cockpit to defend their planes against terrorists President George W. Bush later signed the measure into law.

2004: President George W. Bush said in his weekly radio address that legalizing gay marriage would redefine the most fundamenta­l institutio­n of civilizati­on, and that a constituti­onal amendment was needed to protect traditiona­l marriage.

2005: A search-and-rescue team found the body of a missing U.S. commando in eastern Afghanista­n, bringing an end to the desperate search for the last member of an illfated, four-man special forces unit that had disappeare­d the previous month.

2018: A daring rescue mission in Thailand was completed successful­ly, as the last four of the 12 boys who were trapped in a flooded cave for more than two weeks were brought to safety along with their soccer coach; the other eight had been brought out in the two preceding days.

Ten years ago: Robotic submarines removed a leaking cap from a gushing oil well in the Gulf of Mexico, sending crude flowing freely into the sea until BP installed a new seal that stopped the oil days later. Grammy-winning country singer

Carrie Underwood married NHL player Mike Fisher at a resort in Greensboro, Georgia.

Five years ago: To the cheers of thousands, South Carolina pulled the Confederat­e flag from its place of honor at the Statehouse after more than 50 years.

One year ago: Britain’s ambassador to the United States, Kim Darroch, resigned following the leak of diplomatic cables that reflected his unflatteri­ng opinions about the Trump administra­tion.

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