Springfield News-Sun

TODAY IN HISTORY

-

Today’s highlight:

On March 10, 1969, James Earl Ray pleaded guilty in Memphis, Tennessee, to assassinat­ing civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. (Ray later repudiated that plea, maintainin­g his innocence until his death.)

On this date:

In 1496, Christophe­r Columbus concluded his second visit to the Western Hemisphere as he left Hispaniola for Spain.

In 1864, President Abraham Lincoln assigned Ulysses S. Grant, who had just received his commission as lieutenant-general, to the command of the Armies of the United States.

In 1876, Alexander Graham Bell’s assistant, Thomas Watson, heard Bell say over his experiment­al telephone: “Mr. Watson — come here — I want to see you” from the next room of Bell’s Boston laboratory.

In 1906, about 1,100 miners in northern France were killed by a coal-dust explosion.

In 1913, former slave, abo- litionist and Undergroun­d Railroad “conductor” Harriet Tubman died in Auburn, New York; she was in her 90s.

In 1965, Neil Simon’s play “The Odd Couple,” starring Walter Matthau and Art Car- ney, opened on Broadway.

In 1985, Konstantin U. Chernenko, who was the Soviet Union’s leader for 13 months, died at age 73; he was succeeded by Mikhail Gorbachev.

In 1988 , p op singer Andy Gibb died in Oxford, England, at age 30 of heart inflammati­on.

In 2015, breaking her silence in the face of a growing controvers­y over her use of a private email address and server, Hillary Rodham Clinton conceded that she should have used government email as secretary of state but insisted she had not violated any federal laws or Obama administra­tion rules.

In 2019, a Boeing 737 Max 8 operated by Ethiopian Airlines crashed shortly after taking off from the capital, Addis Ababa, killing all 157 people on board; the crash was similar to one in October 2018 in which a 737 Max 8 flown by Indonesia’s Lion Air plunged into the Java Sea minutes after takeoff, killing all 189 people on the plane. (The aircraft would be grounded worldwide after the two disasters, bringing fierce criticism to Boeing over the design and rollout of the jetliner.)

One year ago: Civilians trapped inside Mariupol desperatel­y scrounged for food and fuel as Russian forces kept up their bombardmen­t of the Ukrainian port city amid internatio­nal condemnati­on over an airstrike a day earlier that killed three people at a maternity hospital.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States