Today in History for Nov. 6:
In 1689, blacks arrived by ship to Quebec -- probably the first recorded use of black slaves in ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½.
In 1789, following the American Revolution, Father John Carroll was appointed the first Roman Catholic bishop in the newly organized and independent United States of America.
In 1814, Adolphe Sax, inventor of the saxophone, was born in Belgium.
In 1854, John Philip Sousa, the king of American march music, was born in Washington, D.C. He died in 1932.
In 1860, oil was struck at Petrolia, Ont.
In 1860, Abraham Lincoln was elected the 16th president of the United States.
In 1861, the inventor of basketball, Dr. James Naismith, was born in Almonte, Ont.
In 1867, the first session of ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½'s first Parliament opened at the new Parliament buildings in Ottawa. The first speech from the throne was read by the country's first governor general, Sir Charles Stanley Monck, 4th Viscount Monck. The first government was led by the country's first prime minister, Sir John A. Macdonald. Members earned $6 a day.
In 1879, Thanksgiving Day was first observed in ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½. On Jan. 31, 1957, Parliament proclaimed Thanksgiving as a holiday on the second Monday in October.
In 1889, the Eiffel Tower opened in Paris.
In 1893, Russian composer Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky died at age 44 of cholera after drinking contaminated water in St. Petersburg.
In 1901, Kate Greenaway, English writer and illustrator of children's books, died.
In 1906, the first long-distance telephone line was completed from Winnipeg to Regina.
In 1923, Col. Jacob Schick received a U.S. patent for the first electric shaver.
In 1947, NBC's "Meet The Press" went on the air.
In 1956, France and Britain ordered their invasion forces at the Suez Canal to cease fire. Canadian External Affairs Minister Lester Pearson had presented a Suez peacekeeping plan, which was adopted by the UN and won Pearson the next year's Nobel Peace Prize.
In 1959, the Royal Canadian Humane Association awarded its Gold Medal to the citizens of Springhill, N.S. The award is the Society's highest recognition for bravery in life-saving. It was the first time the award had been made to a community. And it followed the disaster of Oct. 23rd, when 74 miners died after a deep underground "bump" in a coal mine. The last survivors were brought to the surface on Nov. 1.
In 1968, the first plastic cornea implant in a human eye was performed in Toronto.
In 1969, Ottawa announced a $50-million program to promote language training across the country.
In 1970, Pierre Laporte suspension bridge, a new bridge over the St. Lawrence River connecting the north and south shore at Quebec City, was officially opened.
In 1970, Bernard Lortie was arrested in the kidnapping and murder the previous month of Quebec Labour Minister Pierre Laporte. (In 1971, he was sentenced to 20 years in prison, but paroled less than a decade later.)
In 1974, at the World Food Conference in Rome, External Affairs Minister Allan MacEachen pledged $785 million in Canadian food aid over a period of three years.
In 1978, the Shah of Iran put his country under military control after two days of heavy rioting by revolutionaries.
In 1984, Colin Thatcher, a former Saskatchewan cabinet minister, was found guilty in Saskatoon of murdering his ex-wife. He was sentenced to life in prison. He was granted full parole on Nov. 30, 2006.
In 1987, a man demanding FBI protection from the Mafia held a cockpit fireaxe over an Air ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ pilot's head but gave up after more than three hours. In the incident at San Francisco International Airport, James Barrett Drake of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., made rambling demands to be flown to Dublin or London.
In 1987, an iceberg 225 metres thick broke away from Antarctica. Scientists estimated the iceberg had enough water to supply a city the size of Los Angeles for nearly 700 years.
In 1990, fire swept through the backlot at Universal Studios in California. Damage was estimated at $25 million.
In 1991, a Canadian team extinguished the last of the 732 oil fires that had been started by Iraqi troops at the end of the Gulf War. It had been the world's worst oil field disaster. Kuwait says it paid US$1.5 billion to put out the fires but world leaders estimated the cost at closer to $2 billion. Smoke from the fires formed a 1,000-kilometre plume that covered much of the Persian Gulf for several months after Iraq's defeat in February.
In 1994, John Ross Taylor, one of the leaders of the white supremacist movement in ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½, died at the age of 80.
In 2002, aggressive American border controls went into effect. U.S. agents started fingerprinting and photographing Canadian citizens born in certain Mideast countries. Critics called it racial profiling.
In 2003, George Radwanski, the former privacy commissioner, became the first Canadian to be found guilty of contempt of Parliament in 90 years, although he escaped penalty with an apology after five months of denying any wrongdoing. He had been accused of deliberately misleading Parliament by altering documents and misrepresenting his lavish expense claims.
In 2007, Ottawa writer Elizabeth Hay won the Giller Prize, ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½'s richest literary award, for her book "Late Nights on Air."
In 2010, Michael Seifert, a former Nazi SS prison guard known as "the beast of Bolzano" for his cruelty, died in an Italian hospital at age 86. The Ukrainian-born Seifert was serving a life sentence at the Santa Maria Capua Vetere prison in southern Italy.
In 2012, U.S. President Barack Obama was re-elected, blunting a mighty challenge by Republican Mitt Romney. Voters made history on two divisive social issues, with Maine and Maryland becoming the first states to approve same-sex marriage by popular vote while Washington state and Colorado legalized recreational use of marijuana.
In 2017, the CBC broadcast its revamped flagship nightly news program "The National" for the first time since longtime anchor Peter Mansbridge retired in July. It aired live across all six time zones, allowing the four hosts — Ian Hanomansing, Adrienne Arsenault, Rosemary Barton and Andrew Chang — to track developing stories in real time from studios in Ottawa, Toronto and Vancouver.
In 2018, former Quebec premier and longtime Parti Quebecois stalwart Bernard Landry died at the age of 81. His death prompted a stream of accolades from his former colleagues about his patriotism, his love of the Quebec people and his conviction that the province would inevitably become a country.
In 2018, longtime Conservative MP Tony Clement announced he was stepping down as the party's justice critic and from committee duties after he was caught in an online sextortion scam. Clement said he sent sexually explicit images and a video to someone he thought was a "consenting female" but who demanded money to keep the material from being made public. Party leader Andrew Scheer said he accepted Clement's assurances it was a one-time lapse in judgment. But the next day he announced Clement had been ousted from the party caucus after new information suggested it was not an isolated incident.
In 2020, Nunavut recorded its first confirmed case of COVID-19. Health officials began contact tracing and a rapid response team was dispatched to the Hudson Bay community of Sanikiluaq. Everyone in the community of about 850 people was urged to stay home and limit contact with others.
In 2021, Premier Scott Moe survived a leadership review at the Saskatchewan Party's convention in Saskatoon, with a majority of members showing strong support for the leader. Over 80 per cent of delegates backed Moe.
In 2021, Peter Aykroyd died at 66. In a brief statement Monday to The Associated Press, Dan Aykroyd said his brother succumbed to septicemia from an internal infection precipitated by an untreated abdominal hernia. Born in Ottawa, Peter Aykroyd was an Emmy-nominated actor and writer on "Saturday Night Live'' for the 1979-80 season. He later worked with Dan on everything from a TV show about the paranormal to such films as ''Dragnet'' and ''Coneheads.''
In 2021, Angelo Mosca, Canadian legend of the gridiron and the wrestling ring, died at the age of 84 after a lengthy battle with Alzheimer's. Mosca was diagnosed with the disease shortly after his 78th birthday in 2015. After a lengthy run in professional football, Mosca turned to pro wrestling and performed in main events at top venues like Toronto's Maple Leaf Gardens and Madison Square Garden in New York.
In 2023, public sector union members in Quebec walked off the job while announcing another series of strikes would happen later in the month. Schools, health-care facilities and social services were all disrupted at some point as the four unions representing some 420,000 workers protested Quebec's latest contract offer.
In 2023, for the first time in the Supreme Court of ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½'s 148-year history, a majority of the justices were women as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau confirmed the appointment of Mary Moreau. The former chief justice of the Court of King's Bench of Alberta is filling a vacancy on the high court created by the retirement of Russell Brown.
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The Canadian Press