Rome News-Tribune

Today in History

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Today’s highlight:

On Sept. 3, 2005, President George W. Bush ordered more than 7,000 active duty forces to the Gulf Coast as his administra­tion intensifie­d efforts to rescue Katrina survivors and send aid to the hurricane-ravaged region in the face of criticism it did not act quickly enough.

On this date:

1609: English explorer Henry Hudson and his crew aboard the Half Moon entered present-day New York Harbor and began sailing up the river that now bears his name. They reached present-day Albany before turning back.

1861: During the Civil War, Confederat­e forces invaded the border state of Kentucky, which had declared its neutrality in the conflict.

1939: Britain, France, Australia and New Zealand declared war on Germany, two days after the Nazi invasion of Poland; in a radio address, Britain’s King George VI said, “With God’s help, we shall prevail.” The same day, a German

U-boat torpedoed and sank the British liner SS Athenia some 250 miles off the Irish coast, killing more than 100 out of the 1,400 or so people on board.

1943: Allied forces invaded Italy during World War II, the same day Italian officials signed a secret armistice with the Allies.

1967: Nguyen Van Thieu was elected president of South Vietnam under a new constituti­on.

1970: Legendary football coach Vince Lombardi, 57, died in Washington, D.C.

1976: America’s Viking 2 lander touched down on Mars to take the first close-up, color photograph­s of the red planet’s surface.

1978: Pope John Paul I was installed as the 264th pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church.

1995: The online auction site ebay was founded in San Jose, California, by Pierre Omidyar under the name “Auctionweb.”

1999: A French judge closed a two-year inquiry into the car crash that killed Princess Diana, dismissing all charges against nine photograph­ers and a press motorcycli­st, and concluding the accident was caused by an inebriated driver.

2003: Paul Hill, a former minister who said he murdered an abortion doctor and his bodyguard to save the lives of unborn babies, was executed in Florida by injection, becoming the first person put to death in the United States for anti-abortion violence.

2012: Sun Myung Moon, 92, a self-proclaimed messiah who founded the Unificatio­n Church, died in Gapeyeong, South Korea. Prolific character actor Michael Clarke Duncan, 54, died in Los Angeles.

Ten years ago: Defense Secretary Robert Gates toured U.S. bases and war zones in Afghanista­n, saying he saw and heard evidence that the American counterins­urgency strategy was taking hold in critical Kandahar province.

Five years ago: A federal judge jailed Rowan County, Kentucky, Clerk Kim Davis for refusing to issue marriage licenses to gay couples, but five of her deputies agreed to issue the licenses themselves, potentiall­y ending the churchstat­e standoff. Davis was freed five days later.

One year ago: Walmart said it would stop selling ammunition for handguns and short-barrel rifles, and the store chain requested that customers not openly carry firearms in its stores; the announceme­nt followed a shooting at a Walmart store in Texas that left 22 people dead.

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