On this date in: |
1792 | The New York Stock Exchange was founded by brokers meeting under a tree on what is now Wall Street. |
1829 | John Jay, American statesman and the first chief justice of the Supreme Court, died at age 83. |
1875 | The first Kentucky Derby was run; the winner was Aristides. |
1940 | The Nazis occupied Brussels, Belgium, during World War II. |
1946 | President Harry S. Truman seized control of the nation's railroads, delaying a threatened strike by engineers and trainmen. |
1971 | The musical "Godspell" opened off-Broadway. |
1973 | The Senate began hearings into the Watergate scandal.
| Sen. Sam Ervin, D-N.C. |
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AP Photo |
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1980 | Rioting that claimed 18 lives erupted in Miami's Liberty City neighborhood after an all-white jury in Tampa acquitted four former Miami police officers of fatally beating a black man. |
1987 | An Iraqi warplane attacked the U.S. Navy frigate Stark in the Persian Gulf, killing 37 American sailors. Iraq and the United States called the attack a mistake. |
1992 | Orchestra leader Lawrence Welk died at age 89. |
1996 | President Bill Clinton signed "Megan's Law," a measure requiring neighborhood notification when sex offenders move in. |
1998 | New York Yankees pitcher David Wells became the 13th player in modern major league baseball history to throw a perfect game in a 4-0 victory over the Minnesota Twins. |
1999 | Labor Party leader Ehud Barak unseated Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Israeli elections. |
2000 | Two former Ku Klux Klansmen were arrested on murder charges in the 1963 church bombing in Birmingham, Ala., that killed four black girls. |
2004 | Massachusetts became the first state to allow legal same-sex marriages. |
2011 | Actor and former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger issued a statement confirming a Los Angeles Times report that he had fathered a child with a woman on his household staff more than a decade earlier. |
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