This Day in History: Aug. 15
Published August 15, 2020
On this day, Aug, 15 ...
1969: The Woodstock Music and Art Fair opens in Bethel, N.Y.
Also on this day:
- 1483: The Sistine Chapel is consecrated by Pope Sixtus IV.
- 1945: In a pre-recorded radio address, Japan’s Emperor Hirohito announces that his country has accepted terms of surrender for ending World War II.
- 1947: The Indian Independence Bill creates the two independent states of India and Pakistan.
- 1961: As workers begin constructing a Berlin Wall made of concrete, East German soldier Conrad Schumann leaps to freedom over a tangle of barbed wire in a scene captured in a famous photograph.
- 1965: The Beatles play before more than 55,000 fans at New York’s Shea Stadium.
- 1971: President Richard Nixon announces a 90-day freeze on wages, prices and rents.
- 1995: The Justice Department agrees to pay $3.1 million to white separatist Randy Weaver and his family to settle their claims over the killing of Weaver’s wife and son during a 1992 siege by federal agents at Ruby Ridge, Idaho
- 1998: A car bomb kills 29 people in Omagh, Northern Ireland, the deadliest act of violence in more than 30 years of the “Troubles.”
URL
https://www.foxnews.com/us/this-day-in-history-aug-15