Springfield News-Sun

TODAY IN HISTORY

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Today is Thursday, May 19.

Today’s highlight:

On May 19, 1536, Anne Boleyn, the second wife of England’s King Henry VIII, was beheaded after being convicted of adultery.

On this date:

In 1780, a mysterious darkness enveloped much of New England and part of Canada in the early afternoon.

In 1913, California Gov. Hiram Johnson signed the Webb-hartley Law prohibitin­g “aliens ineligible to citizenshi­p” from owning farm land, a measure targeting Asian immigrants, particular­ly Japanese.

In 1920, 10 people were killed in a gun battle between coal miners, who were led by a local police chief, and a group of private security guards hired to evict them for joining a union in Matewan, a small “company town” in West Virginia.

In 1921, Congress passed, and President Warren G. Harding signed, the Emergency Quota Act, which establishe­d national quotas for immigrants.

In 1943, in his second wartime address to the U.S. Congress, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill pledged his country’s full support in the fight against Japan; that evening, Churchill met with President Franklin D. Roosevelt at the White House, where the two leaders agreed on May 1, 1944 as the date for the D-day invasion of France (the operation ended up being launched more than a month later).

In 1962, film star Marilyn Monroe sang “Happy Birthday to You” to President John F. Kennedy during a Democratic fundraiser at New York’s Madison Square Garden.

In 1967, the Soviet Union ratified a treaty with the United States and Britain, banning nuclear and other weapons from outer space as well as celestial bodies such as the moon. (The treaty entered into force in October 1967.)

In 1994, former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis died in New York at age 64.

In 2018, Britain’s Prince Harry wed American actress Meghan Markle in a service that reflected Harry’s royal heritage and his bride’s biracial roots, as well as their shared commitment to put a more diverse, modern face on the monarchy.

In 2020, a Trump administra­tion policy of quickly expelling most migrants stopped along the border because of the COVID-19 pandemic was indefinite­ly extended.

Ten years ago: Chen Guangcheng, a blind Chinese legal activist, was hurriedly taken from a hospital and put on a plane for the United States, closing a nearly monthlong diplomatic tussle that had tested U.s.-china relations.

Five years ago: Sweden dropped a rape investigat­ion of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, who remained holed up in Ecuador’s embassy in London to avoid arrest and possible extraditio­n to the United States to face charges stemming from the publicatio­n of thousands of pages of classified documents. Former U.S. Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., whose penchant for sexting strangers ended his political career, pleaded guilty in Manhattan to a sex charge, tearfully apologizin­g for communicat­ions with a 15-yearold girl. (Weiner received a 21-month prison sentence.)

One year ago: The House voted to create an independen­t commission on the deadly Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol, sending the legislatio­n to the Senate. (Senate Republican­s would block creation of the panel.)

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