Otago Daily Times

TODAY IN HISTORY

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TODAY is Monday, August 3, the 216th day of 2020. There are 150 days left in the year. Highlights in history on this date:

1347 — The French city of Calais surrenders to Edward III of England in the Hundred Years’ War.

1460 — King James II of Scotland is killed by the English during a siege of Roxburgh Castle.

1492 — Christophe­r Columbus embarks from Palos de la Frontera, Spain, aboard the

Santa Maria, on his first voyage of westward exploratio­n.

1610 — Captain Henry Hudson, seeking a new passage to the Pacific, discovers the bay which now bears his name.

1778 — La Scala Opera House in Milan, the work of Giuseppe Piermarini, is opened.

1858 — Lake Victoria, the source of the Nile, is discovered by English explorer John Speke.

1863 — Otago Boys’ High School, then situated in Dowling St, opens.

1872 — Anthony Trollope, one of the Victorian era’s most esteemed novelists, arrives in Bluff at the start of a twomonth tour of New Zealand. He had spent the previous year travelling around Australia and in 1873 he published a twovolume book about his travels titled Australia and New Zealand.

1875 — A fire destroys Dunedin’s Princess Theatre in High

St.

1879 — Te Whiti and 46 Maori prisoners, who were found guilty of trespass on European land, arrive at Dunedin prison.

1907 — The Westinghou­se brakes fail on the lead wagons of a train on the Mamaku Incline halfway between Putaruru and Mamaku. The train runs backwards down a steep slope, derailing on an Sbend and crashing over an embankment into a gully. The guard is killed and five of the seven passengers are injured. The wreckage catches fire, killing 45 cattle beasts.

1908 — The North Island main trunk railway line is completed. 1914 — Germany declares war on France; Belgium refuses Germany’s request to allow its troops to enter the country; Britain warns Germany against invading Belgium.

1916 — Sir Roger Casement, Irish nationalis­t leader, is hanged in London for treason.

1936 — US athlete Jesse Owens wins the first of his four gold medals at the Berlin Olympics.

1949 — A referendum on peacetime New Zealand conscripti­on is heavily in favour, with 535,401 voting for it and 152,810 opposed. The first intakes for compulsory military training begin in May 1950. Papakura, Linton and Burnham camps are each expected to receive about 1400 recruits.

1958 — The atomicpowe­red US submarine Nautilus completes the first undersea crossing of the North Pole.

1963 — After nearly 300 performanc­es at the Cavern Club, Liverpool, since 1961, The Beatles play there for the last time.

1964 — Training for New Zealand’s first police Armed Offenders Squad begins. It has been establishe­d because of the deaths of four police officers within a month early in 1963.

1985 — A new $10 million skifield developmen­t in Queenstown, the Remarkable­s, is opened.

1988 — West German Mathias Rust, who landed his light plane near Red Square in 1987, is released from prison and expelled from the Soviet Union.

1999 — Following arbitratio­n, the US Government agrees to pay the heirs of Abraham Zapruder $US16 million for an original copy of the film that he took of the assassinat­ion of President John F. Kennedy.

2012 — Dunedin’s Hamish Bond and teammate Eric Murray begin a 40min golden glow for New Zealand at the London Olympic Games, winning the men’s pairs rowing. Shortly afterwards, Mahe Drysdale wins gold in the single sculls.

2013 — Wolfenden and Russell, a Dunedin clothing retailer for 101 years, closes; following a series of employment cuts in Dunedin, the Otago Daily Times publishes leading articles urging the region to ‘‘stand up’’ and put a stop to the region’s decline through Government directives. The response was overwhelmi­ng and initiated a mayoral summit.

 ?? PHOTO: THE NEW ZEALAND HERALD ?? Hamish Bond and Eric Murray celebrate winning gold in the men’s pair at the 2012 London Olympics.
PHOTO: THE NEW ZEALAND HERALD Hamish Bond and Eric Murray celebrate winning gold in the men’s pair at the 2012 London Olympics.

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