The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)
TODAY IN HISTORY
FRIDAY APR 2, 2021
1792
Congress passed the Coinage Act, which authorized establishment of the U.S. Mint.
1865
Confederate President Jefferson Davis and most of his Cabinet fled the Confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia, because of advancing Union forces.
1917
President Woodrow Wilson asked Congress to declare war against Germany, saying, “The world must be made safe for democracy.”
1932
Aviator Charles A. Lindbergh and John F. Condon went to a cemetery in The Bronx, New York, where Condon turned over $50,000 to a man in exchange for Lindbergh’s kidnapped son.
1968
“2001: A Space Odyssey,” the groundbreaking sciencefiction film epic produced and directed by Stanley Kubrick and starring Keir Dullea and Gary Lockwood, had its world premiere in Washington, D.C.
1980
President Jimmy Carter signed into law a windfall profits tax on the oil industry.
1982
Several thousand troops from Argentina seized the disputed Falkland Islands, located in the south Atlantic, from Britain.
1986
Four American passengers, including an 8-month-old girl, her mother and grandmother, were killed when a terrorist bomb exploded aboard a TWA jetliner en route from Rome to Athens, Greece.
2003
During the Iraq War, American forces fought their way to within sight of the Baghdad skyline.
2005
Pope John Paul II died in his Vatican apartment at age 84.
2007
In its first case on climate change, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Massachusetts v. Environmental Protection Agency, ruled 5-4 that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases were air pollutants under the Clean Air Act.