Rome News-Tribune

Today in History

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Today’s highlight:

On April 15, 1865, President Abraham Lincoln died nine hours after being shot the night before by John Wilkes Booth at Ford’s Theater in Washington; Andrew Johnson became the nation’s 17th president.

On this date:

1452: Artist and inventor Leonardo da Vinci was born in or near the Tuscan town of Vinci.

1912: The British luxury liner RMS Titanic foundered in the North Atlantic off Newfoundla­nd two hours and 40 minutes after hitting an iceberg; 1,514 people died, while less than half as many survived.

1943: The Ayn Rand novel “The Fountainhe­ad” was first published by Bobbs-Merrill Co.

1945: During World War II, British and Canadian troops liberated the Nazi concentrat­ion camp Bergen-Belsen.

1947: Jackie Robinson, baseball’s first black major league player, made his official debut with the Brooklyn Dodgers on opening day at Ebbets Field. The Dodgers defeated the Boston Braves, 5-3.

1959: Cuban leader Fidel Castro arrived in Washington to begin a goodwill tour of the United States.

1974: Members of the Symbionese Liberation Army held up a branch of the Hibernia Bank in San Francisco; a member of the group was SLA kidnap victim Patricia Hearst, who by this time was going by the name “Tania.” Hearst later said she’d been forced to participat­e.

1985: South Africa said it would repeal laws prohibitin­g sex and marriage between whites and non-whites.

1986: The United States launched an air raid against Libya in response to the bombing of a discothequ­e in Berlin on April 5; Libya said 37 people, mostly civilians, were killed.

1989: 96 people died in a crush of soccer fans at Hillsborou­gh Stadium in Sheffield, England. Students in Beijing launched a series of pro-democracy protests; the demonstrat­ions culminated in a government crackdown at Tiananmen Square.

1998: Pol Pot, the notorious leader of the Khmer Rouge, died at age 72, evading prosecutio­n for the deaths of two million Cambodians.

2013: Two bombs made from pressure cookers exploded at the Boston Marathon finish line, killing two women and an 8-year-old boy and injuring more than 260. Suspected bomber Tamerlan Tsarnaev died in a shootout with police; his brother, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, was tried, convicted and sentenced to death.

Ten years ago: Whipped up by conservati­ve commentato­rs and bloggers, tens of thousands of protesters staged “tea parties” around the country to tap into the collective angst stirred up by a bad economy, government spending and bailouts.

Five years ago: Boko Haram terrorists kidnapped some 276 girls from a school in northeaste­rn Nigeria.

One year ago: A seven-hour battle over territory and money broke out among inmates armed with homemade knives at the Lee Correction­al Institutio­n in South Carolina, leaving seven inmates dead and 22 injured in the worst U.S. prison riot in a quarter-century.

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