This week in history: Sept.4-10

Massacre at Munich Olympics, “On the Road” published, Ford pardons Nixon, Queen Elizabeth II dies

Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Louis stand on the balcony of Buckingham Palace in June 2022. The monarch died Sept. 8 after 70 years of service to Great Britain. She was 96. (Alastair Grant / AP Photo)

Sept. 4
1781: Los Angeles was founded by Spanish settlers under the leadership of Governor Felipe de Neve.
1957: Arkansas Gov. Orval Faubus ordered Arkansas National Guardsmen to prevent nine Black students from entering all-white Central High School in Little Rock.
1972: The longest-running game show in U.S. history, “The Price is Right,” debuted on CBS.

Sept. 5
1774: The first Continental Congress assembled in Philadelphia.
1905: The Treaty of Portsmouth was signed, ending the Russo-Japanese war; for mediating the peace negotiations, U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt was awarded the Noble Peace Prize the following year.
1957: Jack Kerouac’s novel “On the Road” was published.
1975: President Gerald R. Ford survived an assassination attempt by Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme, a disciple of Charles Manson.
1972: Palestinian militants attacked the Israeli Olympic team in Munich, killing two and taking nine hostages; all hostages and five militants died.

Sept. 6
1901: President William McKinley was shot and mortally wounded by anarchist Leon Czolgosz at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York.
1975: 18-year-old tennis star Martina Navratilova of Czechoslovakia requested political asylum in the United States.
1997: A public funeral was held for Princess Diana at Westminster Abbey in London.

Sept. 7
1940: Nazi Germany began The Blitz, an eight-month bombing campaign on Britain that killed more than 40,000 civilians.
1921: The first Miss America Pageant was held in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
1977: The Panama Canal Treaty, which called for the U.S. to turn over control of the waterway to Panama at the end of 1999, was signed.
1986: Bishop Desmond Tutu was installed as the first Black clergyman to lead the Anglican Church in southern Africa.

Sept. 8
1504: Michelangelo’s towering marble statue of David was unveiled to the public in Florence, Italy.
1565: Spanish settlers founded St. Augustine, the first permanent European settlement in North America.
1664: The Dutch surrendered New Amsterdam to the British, who renamed it New York.
1935: Sen. Huey P. Long, D-La., was fatally shot in the Louisiana State Capitol building.
1974: One month after taking office, President Gerald R. Ford granted a “full, free, and absolute pardon” to former President Richard Nixon.
2022: Queen Elizabeth II, who spent more than seven decades on the British throne, died at age 96.

Sept. 9
1776: The Second Continental Congress formally adopted the name “United States of America.”
1850: California was admitted as the 31st U.S. state.
1919: About 1,100 members of Boston’s 1,500-member police force went on strike.
1948: The People’s Democratic Republic of Korea (North Korea) was declared.
1971: Prisoners seized control of the maximum-security Attica Correctional Facility in New York, taking 42 staff members hostage and demanding better treatment and living conditions.

Sept. 10
1608: John Smith was elected president of the Jamestown colony council in Virginia.
1963: Twenty Black students entered Alabama public schools following a standoff between federal authorities and Gov. George C. Wallace.
1991: The Senate Judiciary Committee held hearings on Clarence Thomas’s Supreme Court nomination, becoming a watershed moment when law professor Anita Hill accused him of sexual harassment.