The Bakersfield Californian

TODAY IN HISTORY

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1790: President George Washington signed into

law the first U.S. copyright act.

1859: The Big Ben clock tower in London went into

operation, chiming for the first time.

1889: Some 2,200 people in Johnstown, Penn., perished when the South Fork Dam collapsed, sending 20 million tons of water rushing through the town.

1921: A race riot erupted in Tulsa, Okla., as white mobs began looting and leveling the affluent Black district of Greenwood over reports a Black man had assaulted a white woman in an elevator; hundreds are believed to have died.

1949: Former State Department official and accused spy Alger Hiss went on trial in New York, charged with perjury (the jury deadlocked, but Hiss was convicted in a second trial).

1962: Former Nazi official Adolf Eichmann was hanged in Israel a few minutes before midnight for his role in the Holocaust.

1970: A magnitude 7.9 earthquake in Peru claimed an estimated 67,000 lives.

1977: The Trans-Alaska oil pipeline, three years in the making despite objections from environmen­talists and Alaska Natives, was completed. (The first oil began flowing through the pipeline 20 days later.)

1989: House Speaker Jim Wright, dogged by questions about his ethics, announced he would resign. (Tom Foley later succeeded him.)

2009: Dr. George Tiller, a rare provider of lateterm abortions, was shot and killed in a Wichita, Kan., church. (Gunman Scott Roeder was later convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison with no possibilit­y of parole for 50 years.) Millvina Dean, the last survivor of the 1912 sinking of the RMS Titanic, died in Southampto­n, England at 97.

2013: A tornado in the Oklahoma City metro area claimed eight lives, including those of storm chasers Tim Samaras, his son, Paul, and Carl Young; 13 people died in flash flooding. Four firefighte­rs searching for people in a blazing Houston motel and restaurant were killed when part of the structure collapsed. Actor Jean Stapleton, who played Archie Bunker’s far better half, the sweetly naive Edith, in TV’s groundbrea­king 1970s comedy “All in the Family,” died in New York at age 90.

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