Today in History
1471 – The Battle of Tewkesbury, in the Wars of the Roses, restores Edward IV to the English throne.
1772 – French explorer Marion du Fresne arrives in the Bay of Islands. He and 24 of his crew were killed by local Ma¯ori in mid-June.
1776 – Rhode Island becomes the first American colony to declare independence from Britain.
1780 – The first Epsom Derby is run. 1904 – Building of the Panama Canal begins.
1937 – An avalanche kills two workers building the Homer tunnel in Fiordland.
1945 – German forces in the Netherlands, northern Germany and Denmark surrender; US 7th Army captures Hitler’s country retreat of Berchtesgaden; Salzburg also is captured by the Allies.
1953 – Ernest Hemingway’s The Old
Man and The Sea wins the Pulitzer Prize for Literature.
1970 – Anti-war protest at Kent State University, Ohio, is fired on by the US National Guard, killing four students.
1979 – Margaret Thatcher, left, is sworn in as Britain’s first female prime minister.
1994 – Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat sign accord for Palestinian self-rule.
1998 – Convicted "Unabomber" Theodore Kaczynski is sentenced to four terms of life in prison without parole in the US.
2005 – Constantin Brancusi’s Bird in Space sells for US$27.5m, at the time a record price for a sculpture.
2010 – Three people die in a torched
Athens bank during protests over the government’s planned spending cuts.
Birthdays
Archibald McIndoe, NZ plastic surgeon (1900-60); Hosni Mubarak, Egyptian president (1928-2020); Audrey Hepburn, Belgian-born actor (1929-93); Amos Oz, Israeli writer (1939-2018); Randy Travis, US musician (1959-); Phil Twyford, NZ politician (1963-); Tandi Wright, NZ actor (1970-); Rory McIlroy, UK golfer (1989-).