The Record (Troy, NY)

Today in history

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Today is Saturday, March 25, the 84th day of 2017. There are 281 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History

On March 25, 1947, a coaldust explosion inside the Centralia Coal Co. Mine No. 5 in Washington County, Illinois, claimed 111 lives; 31 men survived.

On this date

In 1306, Robert the Bruce was crowned King of Scots.

In 1776, Gen. George Washington, commander of the Continenta­l Army, was awarded the first Congressio­nal Gold Medal by the Continenta­l Congress.

In 1865, during the Civil War, Confederat­e forces attacked Fort Stedman in Virginia but were forced to withdraw because of counteratt­acking Union troops.

In 1911, 146 people, mostly young female immigrants, were killed when fire broke out at the Triangle Shirtwaist Co. in New York.

In 1924, the Second Hellenic Republic was proclaimed in Greece.

In 1931, in the so-called “Scottsboro Boys” case, nine young black men were taken off a train in Alabama, accused of raping two white women; after years of conviction­s, death sentences and imprisonme­nt, the nine were eventually vindicated. In 1957, a signing ceremony was held for the Treaty of Rome, which establishe­d the European Economic Community.

In 1965, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. led 25,000 people to the Alabama state capitol in Montgomery after a five-day march from Selma to protest the denial of voting rights to blacks. Later that day, civil rights activist Viola Liuzzo, a white Detroit homemaker, was shot and killed by Ku Klux Klansmen.

In 1975, King Faisal (FY’suhl) of Saudi Arabia was shot to death by a nephew with a history of mental ill- ness. (The nephew was beheaded in June 1975.)

In 1987, the Supreme Court, in Johnson v. Transporta­tion Agency, ruled 6-3 that an employer could promote a woman over an arguably more-qualified man to help get women into higherrank­ing jobs.

In 1990, 87 people, most of them Honduran and Dominican immigrants, were killed when fire raced through an illegal social club in New York City. In 1996, an 81-day standoff by the anti-government Freemen began at a ranch near Jordan, Montana.

Ten years ago: Iran announced it was partially suspending cooperatio­n with the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency, citing what it called “illegal and bullying” Security Council sanctions imposed on the country for its refusal to stop enriching uranium. Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdallahi (SEE’-dee oold shayk ahb-duh-LAH’hee) won Mauritania’s first free presidenti­al election in a runoff.

Five years ago: President Barack Obama arrived in South Korea, where he visited the Demilitari­zed Zone separating the South from the communist North, telling American troops stationed nearby they were protectors of “freedom’s frontier.” Pope Benedict XVI, on his first trip to Latin America, urged Mexicans to wield their faith against drug violence, poverty and other ills, celebratin­g Mass before a sea of worshipper­s in Silao.

One year ago: A suicide bomber believed to be a teenager blew himself up in a soccer stadium south of the Iraqi capital, killing 29 people and wounding 60. The Rolling Stones unleashed two hours of thundering rock and roll on an ecstatic crowd of hundreds of thousands of Cubans and foreign visitors in Havana; the free concert came two days after President Barack Obama concluded his historic visit to Cuba.

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