Today in History for Nov. 9
On this date:
In 1674, the great English poet John Milton died in London. His most famous work was "Paradise Lost," an epic poem about man's fall from God's grace.
In 1836, Christian business traveller Samuel Hill was born. In 1899, Hill, John Nicholson and W.J. Knights co-founded the Gideons, a Christian organization that ministers through distribution of the Scriptures. The Gideons have placed millions of Bibles and New Testaments in places such as motel and hotel rooms.
In 1860, John A. Macdonald introduced the first "speaking tour" to Canadian politics.
In 1864, the first shipment of lumber from British Columbia to Australia marked the beginning of a big export trade.
In 1872, the first train from Saint John, N.B., to Halifax inaugurated the Intercolonial Railway between the two provinces.
In 1872, fire destroyed nearly 800 buildings in Boston.
In 1918, Kaiser Wilhelm abdicated and Germany was proclaimed a republic, two days before the end of the First World War.
In 1928, the Imperial Privy Council ruled that gold and silver in land still held by the Hudson's Bay Company belonged to the Dominion government and not to the company.
In 1935, the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) was formed by the unskilled workers in mass-production industries. It merged with AFL in 1955 to jointly face new developments such as automation.
In 1938, more than 30,000 Jews were arrested and synagogues and Jewish businesses were destroyed throughout Germany in what has become known as "Kristallnacht," or "Night of the Broken Glass." Around 2,000-2,500 deaths were directly or indirectly attributable to the pogrom.
In 1942, Werner Janowski, a German secret agent, was arrested after being landed at the Gaspe town of New Carlisle, Que., by submarine.
In 1945, Yugoslavia abolished the monarchy and established itself as a republic.
In 1947, the United Nations General Assembly voted to partition Palestine.
In 1951, the first U.S. underground atomic bomb explosion took place in Frenchman Flat, Nev.
In 1953, Welsh author-poet Dylan Thomas died in New York at age 39.
In 1963, twin disasters struck Japan as some 450 miners were killed in a coal-dust explosion, and about 160 people died in a train crash.
In 1965, the Canadian satellite, "Alouette 2" was launched.
In 1965, a failure of a relay device of Ontario Hydro's Queenston generating station triggered a massive power failure. The outage extended from the Atlantic coast of the United States to Chicago, and from southern Ontario to Florida, lasting up to 12 hours. Officials attributed the blackout to a failure on a 345,000-volt line south of Niagara Falls, N.Y.
In 1967, Aden and South Arabia became the independent state of South Yemen after 128 years of British rule.
In 1967, a "Saturn V" rocket carrying an unmanned "Apollo" spacecraft blasted off from Cape Kennedy on a test flight.
In 1970, Charles de Gaulle, president of France from 1959-69, died at the age of 79.
In 1971, Canadian Pacific announced the withdrawal of the Empress of ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ from transatlantic and cruise service.
In 1972, "Anik-1," ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½'s first domestic communications satellite, roared into orbit atop a "Delta" rocket.
In 1979, the College of Cardinals in Rome disclosed that the Vatican's financial deficit was $20 million.
In 1989, the East German government stunned the world by deciding to open its frontiers. East Germans had their first chance to travel to the west in 28 years, since the Berlin Wall was erected. Officials waived the requirement for visas to travel to West Berlin and thousands streamed across the gates to West Berlin for a night of celebration. An East German border trooper joked that the wall would soon be broken into pieces and sold as souvenirs. He was right. The next day people started dismantling the wall and taking pieces as mementoes.
In 1990, Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev signed a non-aggression treaty with Germany, winning praise from German leaders for his role in the fall of the Berlin Wall.
In 1995, in a historic first public visit to Israel, Yasser Arafat offered his condolences to Leah Rabin, widow of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
In 1998, a federal judge in New York approved a massive antitrust settlement in which leading brokerage firms promised to pay $1.03 billion to investors who had sued over a price-rigging scheme for stocks listed on the Nasdaq market.
In 2003, at least 18 people, mostly Arab expatriates, including five children and a Canadian landed immigrant, were killed and 122 injured in a suicide bombing at a residential compound in Saudi Arabian capital of Riyadh. Seven Canadians were among the injured.
In 2005, suicide bombers struck three Western hotels in Amman, Jordan, killing at least 59 people and wounding 115 others. The terror group al-Qaida in Iraq claimed responsibility.
In 2005, Carolina's Erik Cole became the first player in NHL history to be awarded two penalty shots in one game. (Cole scored on the first, helping the Hurricanes defeat Buffalo 5-3.)
In 2006, award-winning TV journalist Ed Bradley died of leukemia in a New York hospital. He was 65. Bradley broke racial barriers at CBS News and created a distinctive, powerful body of work during his 26 years on "60 Minutes."
In 2007, Merck & Co. Inc. said it would pay US$4.85 billion to settle thousands of lawsuits in the United States over its anti-inflammatory painkiller medication Vioxx.
In 2009, Gov.-Gen. Michaelle Jean presided over the first presentations of the new Sacrifice Medal. Of the first 46 Sacrifice Medals, 21 were awarded posthumously to honour Canadian Forces personnel who lost their lives. Most were killed during tours in Afghanistan.
In 2010, 30-year-old Montreal author Johanna Skibsrud became the youngest recipient of the $50,000 Scotiabank Giller Prize for her novel "The Sentimentalists."
In 2011, legendary Penn State football coach Joe Paterno and school president Graham Spanier were fired amid the growing furor over how the school handled child sex abuse allegations against assistant coach Jerry Sandusky, who was also facing charges of abusing eight boys over a 15-year span, with several of the alleged assaults occurring on Penn State property. (In June 2012, Sandusky was found guilty of 45 counts of sexual abuse and later sentenced to at least 30 years in prison.)
In 2012, Gilles Vaillancourt, the longtime mayor of Laval, Que., resigned amid a provincewide corruption scandal. (In 2016, he pleaded guilty to three-fraud-related charges. He also agreed to reimburse $8.5 million and was sentenced to about six years in prison).
In 2018, Blaine Higgs was sworn-in as the 34th premier of New Brunswick, just a week after the Liberal government of Brian Gallant was defeated on a confidence vote. At the age of 64, Higgs was the oldest person to assume the job of premier in a province with a history of choosing young leaders.
In 2018, the Supreme Court of ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ ruled the Constitution allows Ottawa and the provinces to set up a national securities regulator. It also found that federal draft legislation for countrywide oversight of stocks, bonds and other investments falls within Parliament's powers over trade and commerce.
In 2020, Pfizer said preliminary data suggested its COVID-19 vaccine may be 90 per cent effective in preventing the virus. Pfizer's senior vice-president of clinical development said the company decided to reveal the early data in an effort to offer some hope in the midst of the global health crisis.
In 2021, the Yukon government declared a state of emergency due to COVID-19. The declaration came as the territory reported 80 new infections diagnosed over a three-day period, for a total of 169 active cases.
In 2021, ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ came in 61st on a review tracking the efforts of 64 countries to combat climate change. Thanks to its ambitious targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions, Denmark bumped Sweden off the top in the ranking published by Germanwatch and the New Climate Institute. But the two non-governmental organizations said none of the countries it reviewed met all of its conditions, so it left the top three spots on the list blank.
In 2021, Health ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ approved booster shots of Pfizer-BioNTech's COVID-19 vaccine for people over the age of 18, to be administered at least six months after the first two doses.
In 2021, the Oklahoma Supreme Court overturned a $465-million opioid ruling against drugmaker Johnson & Johnson. The 5-1 decision found a lower court wrongly interpreted the state's public nuisance law. The justices said they were not minimizing the suffering of thousands of Oklahomans because of opioids, but noted J&J no longer promoted any prescription opioids and had not done so for several years.
In 2021, Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said there was no possibility of a coalition between his party and the minority Liberals. Singh said Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole's claim that the Liberals would spend millions to gain the NDP's support was false.
In 2022, the family of a Saskatchewan farmer who served two tours of duty with the Canadian military in Afghanistan said he was killed while fighting in Ukraine. Joseph Hildebrand of Herbert was 33. The family was notified by other people in his unit. A cousin said Hildebrand was apparently with 12 other soldiers on a mission around the city of Bakhmut, a key target of Russia's offensive in the eastern Donetsk region, and that only three of them made it back alive.
In 2023, the federal and Quebec governments said they will each invest $900 million over the following four years to accelerate housing construction. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Quebec Premier Francois Legault announced the deal, calling it a unique move because a province is matching the federal funding on offer.
In 2023, Canadian Tire said it planned to cut about three per cent of its workforce in its fourth quarter as it faced softening consumer demand. The retailer also said it wouldn't fill the majority of its current job vacancies, which would result in another three per cent reduction.
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The Canadian Press