The Boston Globe

This day in history

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Today is Saturday, Aug. 6, the 218th day of 2022. There are 147 days left in the year.

► Birthdays: Children’s performer Ella Jenkins is 98. Actor Louise Sorel is 82. Actor Catherine Hicks is 71. Actor Stepfanie Kramer is 66. Actor Faith Prince is 65. Actor Leland Orser is 62. Actor Michelle Yeoh is 60. Country singers Patsy and Peggy Lynn are 58. Basketball Hall of Famer David Robinson is 57. Actor Jeremy Ratchford is 57. Actor Benito Martinez is 54. Country singer Lisa Stewart is 54. Filmmaker M. Night Shyamalan is 52. Actor Merrin Dungey is 51. Singer Geri Halliwell Horner is 50. Actor Jason O’Mara is 50. Actor Vera Farmiga is 49. Actor Ever Carradine is 48. Actor Melissa George is 46. Rock singer Travis McCoy is 41. Actor Leslie Odom Jr. is 41. Actor Romola Garai is 40. WNBA star A’ja Wilson is 26.

► In 1806, the Holy Roman Empire went out of existence as Emperor Francis II abdicated.

► In 1825, Upper Peru became the autonomous republic of Bolivia.

► In 1942, Queen Wilhemina of the Netherland­s became the first reigning queen to address a joint session of Congress, telling lawmakers that despite Nazi occupation, her people’s motto remained, “No surrender.”

► In 1945, the US B-29 Superfortr­ess Enola Gay dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, resulting in an estimated 140,000 deaths.

► In 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act.

► In 1973, singer Stevie Wonder was seriously injured in a car accident in North Carolina.

► In 1978, Pope Paul VI died at Castel Gandolfo at age 80.

► In 1991, the World Wide Web made its public debut as a means of accessing webpages over the Internet. TV newsman Harry Reasoner died in Norwalk, Conn., at age 68.

► In 1993, Louis Freeh won Senate confirmati­on as FBI director.

► In 2003, Arnold Schwarzene­gger used an appearance on “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno” to announce his bid to replace California Governor Gray Davis.

► In 2009, Sonia Sotomayor was confirmed as the first Hispanic Supreme Court justice by a Senate vote of 68-31. John Hughes, 59, Hollywood’s youth movie director of the 1980s and ’90s, died in New York City.

► In 2011 insurgents shot down a US military helicopter during fighting in eastern Afghanista­n, killing 30 Americans, most of them belonging to the same elite Navy commando unit that had slain Osama bin Laden; seven Afghan commandos also died.

► In 2012, Syria’s prime minister, Riad Hijab, defected two months after being forced into the position by President Bashar al-Assad. Marvin Hamlisch, 68, who composed or arranged the scores for dozens of movies including “The Sting” and the Broadway smash “A Chorus Line,” died in Los Angeles.

► In 2013, US Army Major Nidal Malik Hasan went on trial at Fort Hood, Texas, charged with killing 13 people and wounding 32 others in a 2009 attack. (Hasan, who admitted carrying out the attack, was convicted and sentenced to death.)

► Last year, American Allyson Felix won her record 10th Olympic track medal at the Tokyo Games with a bronze in the 400 meters, the most medals won by any woman in Olympic history.

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