Otago Daily Times

TODAY IN HISTORY

- ODT and agencies

TODAY is Tuesday, August 4, the 217th day of 2020. There are 149 days left in the year. Highlights in history on this date:

1265 — In the Second Barons’ War in England, the Royalists under Prince Edward defeat the Barons under Simon de Montfort at the Battle of Evesham.

1704 — During the War of the Spanish Succession, a joint AngloDutch force captures the Spanish city of Gibraltar.

1842 — Wellington becomes a munici

pality.

1888 — The South Island West Coast town of Reefton becomes the first place in New Zealand to supply electricit­y to the public.

1892 — Andrew and Abby Borden are axed to death in their home in Fall River, Massachuse­tts; Lizzie, Andrew’s daughter from a previous marriage, was tried for, but acquitted, of the killings.

1908 — The Crimes Act passes into New Zealand law. Among crimes and punishment­s listed are male homosexual practice offenders being liable to imprisonme­nt with hard labour for life, with an option of flogging; the Federation of Miners is formed in Greymouth, representi­ng 2300 miners, and within 12 months becomes the first ‘‘Red’’ Federation of Labour.

1914 — King George V declares that Great Britain and the British Empire are at war with Germany, Austria, Hungary and Italy following the invasion of Belgium.

1916 — Denmark sells the Danish Virgin Islands to the United States for $US25 million.

1921 — The Russian Antarctic Expedition led by Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingsha­usen returns to Kronshtadt after becoming the first to circumnavi­gate Antarctica.

1923 — The Otira Tunnel, connecting Christchur­ch to Greymouth by rail, is officially opened by Prime Minister William Massey. It runs for 8.5km under the Southern Alps between Otira and Arthurs Pass and, with a gradient of mainly 1 in 33, the Otira end of the tunnel is more than 250m lower than the Arthurs Pass end. Constructi­on commenced in 1907 and, at its completion, it was the seventhlon­gest tunnel in the world and the longest in the British Empire.

1936 — Ioannis Metaxas sets up the dictatoria­l Fourth of August Regime in Greece.

1944 — Nazi police capture 14yearold Anne Frank and members of her family in hiding places in Amsterdam.

1954 — Britain’s first supersonic fighter plane, the English Electric Lightning P1, makes its maiden flight.

1961 — Death of Sir Sidney Holland, New Zealand statesman and prime minister from 1949 to 1957.

1964 — The bodies of missing civil rights workers Michael H. Schwerner, Andrew Goodman and James E. Chaney are found buried in an earthen dam in Mississipp­i.

1965 — The Cook Islands become selfgovern­ing but the population remain New Zealand citizens.

1972 — President Idi Amin declares that Uganda will expel 50,000 Asians with British passports to Britain within three months.

1983 — Bettino Craxi is sworn in as Italy’s first socialist prime minister.

1991 — The Greek liner MTS Oceanos sinks in heavy seas off South Africa’s southeast coast. All 402 passengers and 179 crew members survive.

1993 — Two Los Angeles police officers are sentenced to two and ahalf years in prison for beating black motorist Rodney King.

1996 — On the final day of the Atlanta Olympics, Josia Thugwane becomes the first black South African to win a gold medal, in the marathon.

1999 — Contents of letters that Russian president Boris Yeltsin provided to President Clinton are made public, including one written by Jacqueline Kennedy days after husband John F. Kennedy’s assassinat­ion, asking Soviet leaders to maintain peaceful US relations.

2009 — Former Labour MP for Mangere Taito Phillip Field is found guilty in the High Court on charges of bribery and corruption.

Today’s birthdays:

Percy Bysshe Shelley, English poet (17921822); John Richardson, New

Zealand politician and Superinten­dent of Otago Province at the start of the Otago Gold Rush (18101878); Louis

Vuitton, founder of French fashion house (182192); Daniel Louis Mundy, New Zealand photograph­er (18261881); James Colvin, New Zealand politician (18441919); Alexander Bathgate, New Zealand lawyer/company director/writer/conservati­onist (18451930); Neil McLean, New Zealand public works contractor (18571939); Alexander McGeorge, New Zealand engineer/gold dredging entreprene­ur (18681953); Lance Macey, New Zealand lawn bowls player (18811950); Richard Eddy, New Zealand trade unionist (18821955); Sir Sydney Smith, New Zealand forensic scientist (18831969); Randal Mathews Burdon, New Zealand historian (18961965); Bert Sados, New Zealand rower (19011963); Louis Armstrong, US jazz musician (190171); Keith Forsythe, New Zealand field athlete (19272003); Dame Charmian O'Connor, New Zealand physical organic chemist (1937); Frank Vincent, US actor (1939); Sir William Southgate, New Zealand conductor/ composer (1941); Martin Jarvis, English actor (1941); David Lange, 32nd prime minister of New Zealand (19422005); Paul East, New Zealand politician (1946); John Spiers, All Black (1947); Rear Admiral Anthony Jonathan Parr, past Chief of the Royal New Zealand Navy (1955); Billy Bob Thornton, US actor/director (1955); Paul Henry, New Zealand broadcaste­r (1960); Lauren Tom, US actress (1961); Barack

Obama, American president (1961); Kate Trolove, New Zealand field hockey player (1967); Rob Cieka, US rock musician (1968); Jojo Moyes, English journalist/ author (1969); Juliette Haigh, New Zealand rower (1982); Chet Hanks, US actor/ musician (1990); Cole and Dylan Sprouse (twin brothers), US actors (1992).

Quote of the day:

‘‘Every day after school for 10 years, I was on the set of Married . . . with Children, which is a really funny and perverse place for a little girl in a Catholic school uniform to grow up.’’ — Meghan Markle, Duchess of Sussex and US member of the British Royal Family and actress, who was born on this day in 1981.

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Barack Obama

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