Sherbrooke Record

Today in History

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In 34, Jesus Christ was crucified, according to mathematic­ian and physicist Sir Isaac Newton, one of the foremost scientific intellects of all time.

In 303, St. George was beheaded on the orders of the Roman Emperor Diocletian. This martyred soldier is not only the patron saint of England and Portugal, but also of soldiers and the Boy Scouts of America.

In 1348, King Edward III establishe­d the Order of the Garter, which is still Britain’s highest honour.

In 1564, English dramatist William Shakespear­e was born. He died on the same day 52 years later.

In 1616, Spanish novelist Miguel de Cervantes, who wrote “Don Quixote,” died in Madrid.

In 1616, English poet and dramatist William Shakespear­e, 52, died on what has been traditiona­lly regarded as the anniversar­y of his birth in 1564.

In 1851, the first Canadian postage stamp, the three-penny beaver, was issued.

In 1879, the city of Guelph, Ont., was incorporat­ed.

In 1896, the Vitascope system for projecting movies onto a screen was demonstrat­ed at a music hall in New York City.

In 1897, Lester Pearson was born in Newtonbroo­k, Ont. The Nobel Peace Prize winner served as Canada’s 14th prime minister from 1963-68. He died on Dec. 27, 1972.

In 1915, Lance-cpl. Fred Fisher of St. Catharines, Ont., won a posthumous Victoria Cross during the Second Battle of Ypres during the First World War. Three other Canadians also won V.C.’S for valour during the battle around the Belgian city.

In 1940, about 200 people died in the Rhythm Night Club fire in Natchez, Miss.

In 1954, Hank Aaron of the Milwaukee Braves hit the first of his 755 home runs, in a game against the St. Louis Cardinals. (Barry Bonds broke Aaron’s major league record in August 2007, and finished his career with 762.)

In 1968, the first public hearings of the newly-formed CRTC were held in Ottawa.

In 1969, Sirhan Sirhan was sentenced to death in Los Angeles for the June 1968 assassinat­ion of U.S. Senator Robert Kennedy. The sentence was later reduced to life imprisonme­nt when the U.S. Supreme Court temporaril­y outlawed the death penalty.

In 1969, John Sinclair completed the greatest recorded feat of continuous marathon walking. He walked over 354 kilometres in nearly 48 hours near Simonstown, South Africa.

In 1978, British scientists Bob Edwards and Patrick Steptoe announced they had successful­ly carried out the first documented “test tube” pregnancy. Lesley Brown had become pregnant in November 1977 through in vitro fertilizat­ion. The process involves fertilizin­g an egg outside the mother’s body, then implanting the embryo in her womb. Louise Brown was born on July 25, 1978.

In 1981, the House of Commons approved the final form of Canada’s proposed constituti­on.

In 1985, Coca-cola announced it was changing the formula for Coke. The public uproar resulted in two Cokes being sold -- “new” Coke and Coca-cola “Classic.” The “new” Coke didn’t last long.

In 1989, the Roman Catholic Church in Newfoundla­nd set up an inquiry into the sexual abuse of children during the 1970s at the Mount Cashel Orphanage.

In 1992, a divorce was granted to Princess Anne and Captain Mark Phillips. They were married for 18 years before separating in August 1989.

In 1995, American sportscast­er Howard Cosell died of cancer at age 75. His flamboyant, caustic style made him the most celebrated, and imitated, sportscast­er of his time.

In 2003, Ontario Provincial Police laid a total of 12 criminal charges against two brothers, Stan and Frank Koebel, who ran Walkerton, Ont.’s water system during the deadly E. coli outbreak in May 2000. (In exchange for guilty pleas to charges of common nuisance, more serious charges were dropped. Stan was sentenced to one year in jail, while Frank got a ninemonth conditiona­l house arrest.)

In 2003, the Geneva-based World Health Organizati­on issued a travel advisory that named Toronto along with Beijing and China’s Shanxi province as places that travellers should avoid in order to minimize the global spread of SARS, the infectious respirator­y disease that killed hundreds of people worldwide. The Toronto ban was lifted a week later when a delegation of Canadian health officials presented mounting evidence that indicated the threat of SARS had greatly diminished in Canada.

In 2004, Paul Martin became the first Canadian prime minister to meet with the Dalai Lama, at a reception and interfaith prayer event in Ottawa. The Tibetan exiled political and spiritual leader arrived in Vancouver on April 17 for a 19-day visit.

In 2005, Youtube uploaded its first video, titled “Me at the Zoo,” consisting of 18 seconds of co-founder Jawed Karim standing in front of an elephant enclosure at the San Diego Zoo.

In 2007, former Russian president Boris Yeltsin died at age 76. He was Russia’s first freely elected president and stood atop a tank to resist an attempted coup by Communist hardliners against former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev in August 1991. He spearheade­d the peaceful end of the Soviet state on Dec. 25th of that year.

In 2009, the Supreme Court of Canada rejected a bid by thousands of women to sue Health Canada for negligence after ruptured breast implants leaked silicon into their bodies.

In 2009, the body of Maj. Michelle Mendes, 30, of Wicklow, Ont., was found in her room at Kandahar airfield. Mendes was the 118th Canadian soldier and third female soldier to die as part of Canada’s combat mission in Afghanista­n since it began in 2002.

In 2012, two workers died and 22 others were injured after a massive explosion rocked the Lakeland Mills sawmill in Prince George, B.C., setting off a massive fire that engulfed the facility.

In 2012, Alberta’s Progressiv­e Conservati­ves under Alison Redford defied the pollsters, winning a 12th consecutiv­e majority. The upstart Wildrose party became the official opposition for the first time.

In 2018, a man drove a rental van into pedestrian­s on a busy stretch of Yonge St. sidewalk in north Toronto, killing 10 people and injuring 16 others. Alek Minassian, 25, was later arrested after a brief standoff with a lone police officer.

In 2018, the Duchess of Cambridge gave birth to a baby boy, Louis Arthur Charles, the third child for Kate and Prince William and fifth in line to the British throne.

In 2019, Voters in P-E-I elected a Tory minority government, while handing the upstart Green party official Opposition status for the first time. The Tories won 12 seats, the Greens took 8, and the incumbent Liberals, led by Premier Wade Maclauchla­n, won six. Maclauchla­n lost his own seat. The three-way race produced the province’s first minority government since 1890.

In 2019, the last Canadian team was knocked out of the N-H-L playoffs. Tuukka (Too’-kah) Rask made 32 saves as the Boston Bruins downed the Toronto Maple Leafs 5-1 to win their first round series in seven games. The Leafs were the last Canadian team left in the post-season after the Calgary Flames and Winnipeg Jets were eliminated the previous week. The last Canadian team to win the Stanley Cup was the 1993 edition of the Montreal Canadiens. The 2018-19 season would mark the eighth straight time two American teams would compete for the iconic trophy.

In 2019, Kawhi Leonard scored 27 points as the Toronto Raptors throttled Orlando 115-96, winning an openingrou­nd playoff series in five games for the first time in franchise history. The Raptors would face Philadelph­ia in the next round after the 76ers beat the Brooklyn Nets 120-100.

In 2020, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised the military would help Ontario and Quebec deal with severe COVID-19 outbreaks sweeping long-term care facilities. He told people who work, live and have relatives in the facilities that they have a right to be angry, frustrated and scared by what’s happening.

In 2020, Canada’s COVID-19 death toll surpassed 2,000.

In 2020, the board of directors for the Calgary Stampede announced the event would be called off due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Stampede was held during the Great Depression, the Second World War and a massive flood seven years prior.

In 2021, Canada’s advisory body on vaccines said the Oxford-astrazenec­a vaccine could be given to people 30 years of age or older. The National Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on said the vaccine is safe, despite rare cases of blood clots linked to its use.

In 2021, Ontario reported its first case of a rare blood clot in a person who received the Oxford-astrazenec­a COVID-19 vaccine. The province said it was the fourth case of the rare clotting condition in Canada, out of more than 1.1 million Astrazenec­a doses given across the country.

In 2021, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his wife, Sophie, got their first shots of the Oxford-astrazenec­a vaccine at a pharmacy in Ottawa.

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