The Morning Call (Sunday)

TODAY IN HISTORY

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In 1777, Gen. George Washington’s army routed the British in the Battle of Princeton, New Jersey.

In 1833, Britain seized control of the Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic. (Almost 150 years later, Argentina seized the islands from the British, but Britain took them back after a 74-day war.)

In 1870, groundbrea­king took place for the Brooklyn Bridge.

In 1959, Alaska became the 49th state as President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed a proclamati­on.

In 1961, President Dwight D. Eisenhower announced the United States was formally terminatin­g diplomatic and consular relations with Cuba.

In 1967, Jack Ruby, the man who shot and killed Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of President John F. Kennedy, died in a Dallas hospital.

In 1975, the original version of the TV game show “Jeopardy!,” hosted by Art Fleming, ended its nearly 11-year run on NBC.

In 1977, Apple Computer was incorporat­ed in Cupertino, California, by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak and Mike Markkula Jr.

In 1990, ousted Panamanian leader Manuel Noriega surrendere­d to U.S. forces, 10 days after taking refuge in the Vatican’s diplomatic mission.

In 2000, the last new daily “Peanuts” strip by Charles Schulz ran in 26-hundred newspapers.

In 2007, Gerald R. Ford was laid to rest on the grounds of his presidenti­al museum in Grand Rapids, Michigan, during a ceremony watched by thousands of onlookers.

In 2008, Illinois Sen. Barack

Obama won Democratic caucuses in Iowa, while Mike Huckabee won the Republican caucuses.

In 2011: Democrat Jerry Brown was sworn in as California’s 39th governor, returning to the office he’d left 28 years earlier. Also in 2011: Prosecutor­s in Dallas declared Cornelius Dupree Jr. innocent of a rape and robbery that had put him in prison for 30 years.

In 2013, students from Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticu­t, reconvened at a different building in the town of Monroe about three weeks after the massacre that had claimed the lives of 20 first-graders and six educators. Also in 2013: The new 113th

Congress opened for business, with House Speaker John Boehner reelected to his post despite a mini-revolt in Republican ranks.

In 2016: Republican presidenti­al contender Donald Trump brushed off an African militant group’s video that showed him calling for Muslims to be banned from coming to the U.S., telling the Sunday news shows he wouldn’t be dissuaded from saying what he thought. Also in 2016: Saudi Arabia announced it was severing diplomatic relations with Shiite powerhouse Iran amid escalating tensions over the Sunni kingdom’s execution of a prominent Shiite cleric.

In 2020: Health authoritie­s in the Chinese city of Wuhan said the number of cases of a newly diagnosed respirator­y illness linked to a food market there had risen to 44, with lung damage appearing in a “small number” of cases. Authoritie­s in Hong Kong activated a newly-created “serious response” level as fears spread about the disease that may have been brought back by visitors to Wuhan. Also in 2020: The United States killed Iran’s top general in an airstrike at Baghdad’s internatio­nal airport; the Pentagon said Gen. Qassem Soleimani, the head of Iran’s elite Quds force, had been “actively developing plans to attack American diplomats and service members” in Iraq and elsewhere. Iran warned of retaliatio­n.

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