The Bakersfield Californian

TODAY IN HISTORY

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1614: Indian Chief Powhatan’s daughter Pocahontas married Englishman John Rolfe, a widower, in the Virginia Colony.

1621: The Mayflower sailed from Plymouth Colony in present-day Massachuse­tts on a monthlong return trip to England.

1764: Britain’s Parliament passed The American Revenue Act of 1764, also known as the Sugar Act.

1887: In Tuscumbia, Ala., teacher Anne Sullivan achieved a breakthrou­gh as her 6-year-old deafblind pupil, Helen Keller, learned the meaning of the word “water” as spelled out in the Manual Alphabet.

1951: Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were sentenced to death following their conviction in New York on charges of conspiring to commit espionage for the Soviet Union.

1976: Reclusive billionair­e Howard Hughes died in Houston at age 70.

1986: Two American servicemen and a Turkish woman were killed in the bombing of a West Berlin discothequ­e, an incident that prompted a U.S. air raid on Libya more than a week later.

1987: Fox Broadcasti­ng Co. made its prime-time TV debut by airing the situation comedy “Married With Children” followed by “The Tracey Ullman Show,” then repeating both premiere episodes two more times in the same evening.

1991: Former Sen. John Tower, R-Texas, his daughter Marian and 21 other people were killed in a commuter plane crash near Brunswick, Ga.

2008: Actor Charlton Heston, bigscreen hero and later leader of the National Rifle Associatio­n, died in Beverly Hills at age 84.

2010: An explosion at the Upper Big Branch mine near Charleston, W.Va., killed 29 workers. In a televised rescue, 115 Chinese coal miners were freed after spending eight days trapped in a flooded mine, surviving an accident that had killed 38.

2016: UConn won an unpreceden­ted fourth straight women’s national championsh­ip, capping another perfect season by routing Syracuse 82-51.

2018: In his first public comments about Stormy Daniels, President Donald Trump said he didn’t know about the $130,000 payment his personal attorney Michael Cohen had made to the porn actress who alleged she had an affair with Trump.

2019: Inspecting a refurbishe­d section of fencing at the Mexican border in California, President Donald Trump declared that “our country is full,” and that illegal crossings must be stopped.

2021: The Minneapoli­s police chief testified that former officer Derek Chauvin had violated department­al policy in pressing his knee against George Floyd’s neck and keeping Floyd down after he had stopped breathing; the testimony came on the sixth day of Chauvin’s murder trial. (Chauvin would be convicted of murder and manslaught­er.)

2022: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused Russian troops of gruesome atrocities in Ukraine and told the U.N. Security Council that those responsibl­e should immediatel­y be brought up on war crimes charges in front of a tribunal like the one set up at Nuremberg after World War II.

2023: Robert F. Kennedy Jr., an anti-vaccine activist and scion of one of the country’s most famous political families, announced he was running for president.

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