Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Today in history

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On July 5, 1801, American naval hero David Farragut was born near Knoxville, Tenn.

In 1810 Phineas Taylor Barnum, the circus showman known as “P.T.,” was born in Bethel, Conn.

In 1811 Venezuela became the first South American country to declare independen­ce from Spain.

In 1830 the French occupied the northern African city of Algiers.

In 1853 Cecil Rhodes, financier and empire builder of British South Africa, was born in Bishop’s Stortford, England.

In 1865 William Booth founded the Salvation Army in London.

In 1911 Georges Pompidou, who would become France’s premier (1962-1968) and then president (1969-1974), was born in Mountboudi­f, France.

In 1935 President Franklin Roosevelt signed the National Labor Relations Act, which provided for a National Labor Relations Board, and authorized labor to organize for the purpose of collective bargaining.

In 1940, during World War II, the Vichy government in France broke off relations with Britain.

In 1946 the bikini bathing suit made its debut at a fashion show in Paris.

In 1947 Larry Doby became the second black player in modern major league baseball and the first in the American League when he signed a contract with the Cleveland Indians. (The signing came 81 days after Jackie Robinson had signed with the Brooklyn Dodgers.)

In 1948 Britain’s National Health Service Act took effect, providing government-funded medical and dental care.

In 1954 Elvis Presley’s first commercial recording session took place at Sun Records in Memphis. The result was “That’s All Right (Mama).”

In 1969 Walter Gropius, the German architect who founded the Bauhaus school of design, died in Boston; he was 86.

In 1975 Arthur Ashe defeated Jimmy Connors to become the first black tennis player to win the Wimbledon men’s singles title. Also in 1975 the Cape Verde Islands officially became independen­t after 515 years under Portuguese rule.

In 1980 Sweden’s Bjorn Borg won the Wimbledon men’s singles title for the fifth consecutiv­e year.

In 1989 former National Security Council aide Oliver North was fined $150,000 and given a suspended prison term for his role in the Irancontra affair. (His conviction later were overturned.)

In 1991 a worldwide financial scandal erupted as regulators in eight countries shut down the Bank of Credit and Commerce Internatio­nal, charging it with fraud, drug money laundering and illegal infiltrati­on into the U.S. banking system.

In 1995 more than 100 Grateful Dead fans were injured when a deck on which they were gathered collapsed at a campground near Wentzville, Mo.

In 2011 a jury in Orlando found Casey Anthony, 25, not guilty of murder, manslaught­er and child abuse in the 2008 disappeara­nce and death of her 2-year-old daughter, Caylee.

In 2017 18 horses died when a barn in which they were being housed caught fire in southwest suburban Plainfield.

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GETTY IMAGES/FILE
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AP/FILE

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