Rome News-Tribune

Today in History

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Today’s highlight:

On July 18, 2013, Detroit, which was once the very symbol of American industrial might, became the biggest U.S. city to file for bankruptcy, its finances ravaged and its neighborho­ods hollowed out by a long, slow decline in population and auto manufactur­ing.

On this date:

1863: During the Civil War, Union troops spearheade­d by the 54th Massachuse­tts Volunteer Infantry, made up of Black soldiers, charged Confederat­e-held Fort Wagner on Morris Island, South Carolina. The Confederat­es were able to repel the Northerner­s, who suffered heavy losses; the 54th’s commander, Col. Robert Gould Shaw, was among those who were killed.

1940: The Democratic National Convention at Chicago Stadium nominated President Franklin D. Roosevelt,who was monitoring the proceeding­s at the White House, for an unpreceden­ted third term in office; earlier in the day, Eleanor Roosevelt spoke to the convention, becoming the first presidenti­al spouse to address such a gathering.

1944: Hideki Tojo was removed as Japanese premier and war minister because of setbacks suffered by his country in World War II. American forces in France captured the Normandy town of St. Lo.

1964: Nearly a week of rioting erupted in New York’s Harlem neighborho­od following the fatal police shooting of a Black teenager, James Powell, two days earlier.

1969: Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., left a party on Chappaquid­dick Island near Martha’s Vineyard with Mary Jo Kopechne, 28; some time later, Kennedy’s car went off a bridge into the water. Kennedy was able to escape, but Kopechne drowned.

1984: Gunman James Huberty opened fire at a McDonald’s in San Ysidro, California, killing 21 people before being shot dead by police.

1986: The world got its first look at the wreckage of the RMS Titanic resting on the ocean floor as videotape of the British luxury liner, which sank in 1912, was released by the Woods Hole Oceanograp­hic Institutio­n.

1994: A bomb hidden in a van destroyed a Jewish cultural center in Buenos Aires, Argentina, killing 85. Tutsi rebels declared an end to Rwanda’s 14-week-old civil war.

2018: FBI Director Christophe­r Wray said Russia was continuing to use fake news, propaganda and covert operations to sow discord in the United States.

Ten years ago: Pakistan and Afghanista­n sealed a landmark trade deal in the presence of U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, who pushed the two neighbors to step up civilian cooperatio­n and work together against al-Qaida and the Taliban.

Five years ago: Saudi Arabia announced it had broken up planned Islamic State attacks in the kingdom and arrested more than 400 suspects in an anti-terrorism sweep, a day after a powerful blast in neighborin­g Iraq killed more than 100 people in one of the country’s deadliest single attacks since U.S. troops pulled out in 2011.

One year ago: President Donald Trump announced that he would nominate Eugene Scalia, son of the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, to be his new labor secretary. Scalia was confirmed in September.

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