The Daily Courier

TODAY IN HISTORY: Charlie Chaplin’s body found

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In 1630, the belts of the planet Jupiter were first observed.

In 1673, Fathers Marquette and Joliet set out across Lake Michigan to rediscover the Mississipp­i River and claim for France all the land and water they might discover.

In 1756, the Seven Year's War began when Britain declared war on France. The war resulted in the British conquest of New France.

In 1792, the New York Stock Exchange was founded.

In 1855, the city of Charlottet­own was incorporat­ed.

In 1861, the first package vacation for a popular market was arranged by Thomas Cook. The Whitsuntid­e Working Men's Excursion left London that day for a sixday trip to Paris.

In 1875, the first Kentucky Derby was run at Churchill Downs in Louisville. The winner was "Aristides."

In 1878, Canada's governor general and his wife, Lord and Lady Dufferin, were treated to a demonstrat­ion of Thomas Edison's recent invention, the phonograph, at Rideau Hall in Ottawa.

In 1898, Group of Seven painter A.J. Casson was born in France.

In 1900, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Iran's former spiritual leader, was born.

In 1916, the world's first daylight savings act was passed in Britain. Clocks were moved forward one hour the following Sunday.

In 1939, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth arrived in Quebec City for the first visit to Canada by a reigning British sovereign.

In 1940, the German army occupied Brussels during the Second World War.

In 1948, the Soviet Union recognized the state of Israel.

In 1949, the Canadian government granted full recognitio­n to the state of Israel.

In 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimousl­y outlawed racial segregatio­n in American public schools.

In 1963, Sgt.-Maj. Walter Leja, a Canadian army engineer, was seriously injured when a terrorist bomb blew up in his hands in Montreal. Three days later, police arrested 20 young members of the FLQ. Mario Bachand, 21, was sentenced to four years in prison for placing the bomb in a mailbox.

In 1973, the U.S. Senate Watergate committee began its hearings.

In 1975, 10 women broke the gender barrier in the Ontario Provincial Police force. They became the first women to begin training in the OPP's 65-year history.

In 1978, police in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, retrieved the body of comic actor Charlie Chaplin and charged two men with extortion. The body had been stolen from a graveyard 11 weeks earlier.

In 1982, negotiatio­ns resumed at the UN aimed at ending the fighting between Britain and Argentina over the Falkland Islands.

In 1984, journalist-broadcaste­r Gordon Sinclair died in Toronto at age 83.

In 1987, a missile from an Iraqi warplane killed 37 sailors on the "USS Stark," a guided-missile frigate in the Persian Gulf. Iraq said it was an accident.

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