July 11

1174 – Baldwin IV, age 13, becomes King of Jerusalem, with Raymond III, Count of Tripoli as regent and William of Tyre as chancellor.

1576 – While exploring the North Atlantic Ocean in an attempt to find the Northwest Passage, the English mariner Martin Frobisher sights Greenland, mistaking it for the hypothesized (but non-existent) island of “Frisland”.

1796 – The U. S. takes possession of Detroit from Britain under terms of the Jay Treaty.

1798 – The United States Marine Corps is re-established after being disbanded after the Revolutionary War.

1804 – Vice President Aaron Burr mortally wounds Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton in a duel with pistols.

1864 – Battle of Fort Stevens; Confederate forces attempt to invade Washington D.C. during the War Between The States.

1895 – Brothers Auguste and Louis Lumière demonstrate motion picture technology

1914 – Babe Ruth makes his debut in Major League Baseball.

1921 – Former President William Taft is sworn in as the 10th Chief Justice of the U.S.

1960 – To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is first published in the U.S.
2 years later it is adapted to film and released.

1962 – Named Project Apollo,  NASA announces that the method of landing  astronauts on the Moon, and returning them to Earth will be via lunar orbit by a main vehicle and decent and return to rendezvous by a separate lander instead of direct landing.

1979 – America’s first space station, Skylab, is destroyed as it re-enters the Earth’s atmosphere over the Indian Ocean.

1983 – A Linea Aerea del Ecuador state airline Boeing 737–200 crashes near Cuenca, Ecuador, killing all 119 passengers and crew on board.

2005 – The final stage of the Department of Defense’s Military to Civilian conversion at Fort Knox’s Consolidated Weapons Facility begins.

2021 – Richard Branson becomes the first civilian to be launched into space on his own Virgin Galactic spacecraft.

July 10

988 – The Norse King Glúniairn recognises Máel Sechnaill mac Domnaill, High King of Ireland, and agrees to pay taxes and accept Brehon Law; the event considered to be the founding of the city of Dublin.

1499 – The Portuguese explorer Nicolau Coelho returns to Lisbon after discovering the sea route to India as a companion of Vasco da Gama.

1584 – William I of Orange is assassinated in his home in Delft, Holland, by Balthasar Gérard. This is the first noted use of a concealable – wheel lock- handgun to kill a political figure and is considered by many the event that influences the political class the most to move for gun control.

1778 –As their part as allies of the U.S.,  Louis XVI of France declares war on the Kingdom of Great Britain.

1832 – President Andrew Jackson vetoes a bill that would recharter the Second Bank of the United States.

1850 – Millard Fillmore is sworn in as the 13th President, the day after President Zachary Taylor’s death.

1890 – Wyoming is admitted as the 44th U.S. state

1913– 134 degrees Fahrenheit, the hottest temperature ever reliably recorded, is reached at Death Valley, California

1925 – In Dayton, Tennessee, the so called “Monkey Trial” begins of John T. Scopes, a young high school science teacher accused of teaching evolution in violation of the Butler Act.

1938 – Howard Hughes begins a 91 hour airplane flight around the world

1942 – An American pilot spots a downed, intact Mitsubishi A6M Zero on Akutan Island that the U.S. Navy uses to learn the aircraft’s flight characteristics.

1962 – Telstar is launched into orbit.

1985 – The Greenpeace vessel Rainbow Warrior is sunk in Auckland harbour, purportedly by French DGSE agents, resulting in 1 crewmember being killed.

1991 – L’Express Airlines Flight 508A, a Beechcraft C99, crashes near Birmingham Municipal Airport in Alabama, killing 13 of the 15 passengers on board.

1992 – In Federal Court held in Miami, former Panamanian leader Manuel Noriega is sentenced to 40 years in prison for drug and racketeering violations.

1998 –  The Catholic Church Diocese of Dallas agrees to pay $23.4 million to nine former altar boys who claimed they were sexually abused by a former priest.

2007 – Turkish American, Erden Eruç begins the first solo human powered circumnavigation of the world.

2019 – The last of the ‘original’ Volkswagen Beetles rolls off the line in Puebla, Mexico.

July 9

1755 – During the French and Indian War, the British Braddock Expedition is soundly defeated by a smaller French and Native American force in its attempt to capture Fort Duquesne in what is now downtown Pittsburgh.

1776 – General George Washington orders the Declaration of Independence to be read out to members of the Continental Army in Manhattan.

1795 – Financier James Swan pays off the $2,024,899 US national debt that had been accrued during the American Revolution.

1811 – Explorer David Thompson posts a sign near what is now Sacajawea State Park in Washington state, claiming the Columbia District for the United Kingdom.

1850 – President Zachary Taylor dies of acute gastroenteritis, called Cholera Morbus at the time, after eating raw fruit and iced milk on the 4th of July while attending holiday celebrations at the Washington Monument. He is succeeded in office by Vice President Millard Fillmore.

1863 – The Siege of Port Hudson ends, giving the Union complete control of the Mississippi River during the Civil War.

1868 – The 14th Amendment to the Constitution is ratified

1875 – Due to the harsh treatment by the rulers of Bosnia, Christian Serbians in Herzegovina rise up against moslem Ottoman rule in the Balkans.

1893 – At Provident Hospital in Chicago, Dr. Daniel Williams performs the first successful open heart surgery in the U.S on a patient who had been attacked and suffered a stab wound in the chest.

1896 – William Jennings Bryan delivers a speech advocating bimetallism (Gold and Silver as legal specie) at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.

1918 – In Nashville, Tennessee, 2 trains operated by the Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis Railway collide head on, killing 101 people and injuring 171 more, the deadliest rail accident in U.S. history.

1922 – Johnny Weissmuller swims the 100 meters freestyle in 58.6 seconds, setting a new world record for the distance.

1932 – The state of São Paulo revolts against the Brazilian Federal Government, starting the Constitutionalist Revolution.

1943 – Allied forces begin the invasion of Sicily

1944 – American forces complete the invasion of Saipan

1958 – A magnitude 7.8 earthquake in Alaska causes a landslide that produces a tsunami wave reaching 1,722 ft up the rim of Lituya Bay, killing 5 people.

1962 – During Operation Fishbowl on Johnston Island in the Pacific, a Thor rocket with the 1.4 megaton thermonuclear device Starfish Prime on board, is launched and detonated at an altitude of 250 miles to test the effects of a nuclear explosion at orbital altitudes.

1982 – Pan Am Flight 759, a Boeing 727, crashes in Kenner, Louisiana, killing all 145 passengers and crew  on board and 8 others on the ground.

2019 – Ross Perot, Rip Torn, and Freddie Jones apparently confirm that ‘Celebrity Deaths Come in Threes’ as they all pass away on the same day

July 8

1099 – Christian soldiers of the 1st Crusade begin the siege of Jerusalem by marching in a religious procession around the city.

1497 – Vasco da Gama sets sail from Portugal on the first direct European voyage to India.

1758 – French forces hold Fort Carillon against the British at Ticonderoga, New York during the French and Indian War.

1760 – British forces defeat French forces on the Restigouche River in what is now southeastern Quebec during the French and Indian War.

1775 – In a final attempt to avoid war between Great Britain and the Colonies, the Second Continental Congress sends the Olive Branch Petition affirming American loyalty to Great Britain and beseeching King George III to prevent further conflict.

1776 – The Liberty Bell is rung after John Nixon delivers the first public reading of the Declaration of Independence of the United States on the steps of Independence Hall in Philadelphia.

1853 – Under orders from President Millard Fillmore, the Perry Expedition arrives in Edo Bay with a treaty requesting trade with Japan.

1876 – The Hamburg massacre, in Hamburg, South Carolina, prior to the 1876 United States presidential election, results in the deaths of 6 black members of the Republican Party, along with one white assailant.

1889 – The first issue of The Wall Street Journal is published.

1898 – Crime boss Jefferson ‘Soapy’ Smith is killed by vigilantes in the ‘Shootout on Juneau Wharf’ in Skagway, Alaska.

1932 – The Dow Jones Industrial Average reaches its lowest level of the Great Depression, closing at 41.22.

1947 – Reports are broadcast that a UFO had crash landed in Roswell, New Mexico in what became known as the Roswell UFO incident.

1948 – The U.S. Air Force accepts its first female recruits into a program called Women in the Air Force (WAF).

1960 – U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers is charged with espionage resulting from his downed flight over the Soviet Union.

1968 – Autoworkers in Detroit, Michigan stage a wildcat strike against the Chrysler corporation.

1970 –President Nixon delivers a special congressional message proclaiming Native American Self Determination as official US Indian policy, leading to the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975.

1972 – Israeli Mossad assassinate Ghassan Kanafani, a leader of the moslem terrorist group responsible for recruiting the Japanese Red Army terrorists who committed an attack at Lod Airport in Israel in May, killing 26 people and injuring 80 others.

2011 – Space Shuttle Atlantis is launched on mission STS-135 the final mission of the U.S. Space Shuttle program.

2021 – President Biden announces that the official conclusion of U.S. involvement in the War in Afghanistan will be on August 31.

July 7

1124 – The city of Tyre falls to the Venetian Crusade after a long siege.

1456 – A retrial verdict acquits Joan of Arc of heresy 25 years after her death.

1534 – Jacques Cartier makes his first contact with native peoples in what is now Canada.

1777 – American forces retreating from Fort Ticonderoga are defeated in the Battle of Hubbardton.

1846 – During the Mexican-American War, US troops of the Pacific Naval Squadron occupy the port towns of Monterey and Yerba Buena (modern day San Francisco) , in the Mexican province of California.

1863 – The United States begins its first military draft; exemptions cost $300.

1865 – 4 conspirators in the assassination of Abraham Lincoln are hanged in the yard of Fort McNair in Washington D.C.

1898 – President McKinley signs the Newlands Resolution annexing Hawaii as a territory of the United States.

1907 – Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. stages his first Follies on the roof of the New York Theater in New York City.

1911 – The U.S., UK, Japan, and Russia sign the North Pacific Fur Seal Convention of 1911, banning open water seal hunting, the first international treaty to address wildlife preservation issues.

1928 – Sliced bread is sold for the first time by the Chillicothe Baking Company of Chillicothe, Missouri.

1930 – Industrialist Henry J. Kaiser begins construction of Boulder Dam (now known as Hoover Dam).

1944 – During the World War II U.S. invasion of Saipan, General Yoshitsugu Saitō orders the largest banzai charge of the war, gathering close to 4,300 Japanese soldiers and charging directly into the U.S. Army’s 1st and 2nd Battalions of the 105th Infantry Regiment, killing or wounding over 2,000 men in a 15 hour battle until almost all the Japanese soldiers taking part in the charge are killed.

1946 – While piloting the plane on its maiden flight, Howard Hughes nearly dies when his XF-11 reconnaissance aircraft prototype crashes in a Beverly Hills neighborhood.

1952 – The ocean liner SS United States passes Bishop Rock on her maiden voyage, breaking the transatlantic speed record to become the fastest passenger ship in the world.

1958 – President Eisenhower signs the Alaska Statehood Act into law.

1981 –President Reagan appoints Sandra Day O’Connor to become the first female member of the Supreme Court.

1983 – Samantha Smith, a US schoolgirl, flies to the Soviet Union at the invitation of Secretary General Yuri Andropov in response to a letter she wrote to him.

1992 – The New York State Court of Appeals rules that women have the same right as men to go topless in public.

2003 – NASA Opportunity rover, MER-B or Mars Exploration Rover–B, is launched aboard a Delta II rocket at Cape Canaveral Launch Site 17B

2013 – A Rediske Air, De Havilland Otter air taxi, crashes in Soldotna, Alaska, killing all 10 passengers and crew aboard.

2016 – A disgruntled black man shoots 14 policemen during an anti police protest in downtown Dallas, Texas, killing 5 of them. He is subsequently killed by a robot delivered bomb while holed up in a college library building.

July 6

640 – The moslem Arab army under ‘Amr ibn al-‘As defeats the Byzantine forces near Heliopolis, Egypt, effectively completing control of both sides of the Nile river delta region and of the Red Sea down to the Sudan.

1415 – Jan Hus is condemned by the assembly of the council in the Konstanz Cathedral, in modern day Germany, as a heretic, sentenced and burned at the stake.

1535 – Sir Thomas More is executed for treason against King Henry VIII of England.

1536 – The explorer Jacques Cartier lands at St. Malo in France at the end of his second expedition to North America.

1614 –  The southeast of Malta, around the town of Żejtun, are unsuccessfully raided by moslem Ottoman forces, ending their attempt to conquer the island.

1777 – After a 4 day long siege, a final bombardment by British artillery under General John Burgoyne forces American troops to retreat from Fort Ticonderoga, New York during the Revolutionary War.

1779 –  The French defeat British naval forces off the island of Grenada during the Revolutionary War.

1854 – The first convention of the U.S. Republican Party is held in Jackson, Michigan

1885 – Louis Pasteur successfully tests his vaccine against rabies

1887 – David Kalākaua, monarch of the Kingdom of Hawaii, is forced to sign the ‘Bayonet Constitution’ (so called because of the force implied), which transfered much of the king’s authority to the Legislature of the Kingdom of Hawaii.

1892 – 3800 striking steelworkers engage in a day long battle with Pinkerton agents during the Homestead Pennsylvania Steelworks Strike, leaving 10 dead and 47 wounded.

1917 – Arabian troops led by T. E. Lawrence and Auda Abu Tayi capture Aqaba from the Ottoman Empire during World War I.

1919 – The British dirigible R34 lands in New York, completing the first crossing of the Atlantic Ocean by an airship.

1933 – The first Major League Baseball All-Star Game is played in Chicago’s Comiskey Park, The American League defeating the National League 4–2.

1942 – Anne Frank and her family go into hiding in the “Secret Annexe” above her father’s office in an Amsterdam warehouse.

1944 – A fire of unknown origin at an afternoon performance of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus at Hartford, Connecticut kills 168 people and injures over 700 more.

1947 – The Автомат Калашникова образца 1947 – the AK-47 – goes into production in the Soviet Union.

1988 – Occidental Petroleum’s Piper Alpha drilling platform in the North Sea is destroyed by explosions and fires. 167 workers are killed, the world’s worst offshore oil disaster in loss of life.

1996 – The pilots of Delta Air Lines Flight 1288, a McDonnell Douglas MD-88 abort takeoff due to engine failure at Pensacola International Airport, with the engine explosion killing 2 and injuring 5 of the 137 passengers on board.

2013 – Asiana Airlines Flight 214, a Boeing 777, crashes at San Francisco International Airport, killing 3 and injuring 181 of the 307 passengers on board. San Francisco television station KTVU news anchor Tori Campbell mistakenly reports faked out names of the flight crew; Sum Ting Wong, Wi Tu Lo, Ho Lee Fuk and Bang Ding Ow.

2022 – The Georgia Guidestones, a monument in the United States, are heavily damaged in a bombing, and are dismantled later the same day.[12]

July 5

1687 – Isaac Newton publishes Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica, a work in three books written in Latin, stating Newton’s laws of motion, forming the foundation of classical mechanics, Newton’s law of universal gravitation; and a derivation of Johannes Kepler’s laws of planetary motion.

1775 – The Second Continental Congress adopts the Olive Branch Petition, a final attempt by the colonists to avoid going to war with Britain during the American Revolution.

1813 – The British raid Fort Schlosser, Black Rock and Plattsburgh, New York during the War of 1812

1814 – American troops under Major General Jacob Brown defeat British troops under General Phineas Riall at Chippawa, Ontario during the War of 1812

1859 – The U.S. discovers and claims Midway Atoll – ‘midway’ between San Francisco and Tokyo.

1865 – The United States Secret Service begins operation.

1915 – The Liberty Bell leaves Philadelphia en route to the Panama–Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco.

1935 – The National Labor Relations Act is signed into law

1937 – Spam® is introduced into the market by the Hormel Foods Corporation.

1943 – During World War II, the fleet for Operation Husky, the Allied invasion of Sicily sails from Tunisia.

1950 –  American forces of Task Force Smith engage North Korean forces during the Korean War.
The Israeli Knesset passes the Law of Return which grants all Jews the right to immigrate to Israel.

1954 – Elvis Presley records his first single, “That’s All Right”, at Sun Records in Memphis, Tennessee.

1971 – The 26th Amendment to the Constitution, lowering the voting age from 21 to 18 years, is ratified

1973 – A boiling liquid expanding vapor explosion (BLEVE) in Kingman, Arizona, following a fire that broke out as propane was being transferred from a railroad car to a storage tank, kills 11 firefighters.

1984 – In the case of United States v. Leon, the States Supreme Court establishes a ‘good faith’ exception from the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule against use of evidence obtained through defective warrants in criminal trials.

1989 –Marine Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North is sentenced to a 3 year suspended prison term, 2 years probation, $150,000 in fines and 1,200 hours community service for his part in the Iran–Contra affair. The conviction is later overturned on appeal

1994 – Jeff Bezos founds Amazon.

1999 – President Clinton imposes trade and economic sanctions against the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.

2016 – The Nasa space probe, Juno, arrives at Jupiter and begins a 20 month orbital survey of the planet.

In CONGRESS, July 4, 1776.
The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America,

When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed,
That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.

Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed.

But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.

Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government. The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States.
To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world.

He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good.

He has forbidden his Governors to pass Laws of immediate and pressing importance, unless suspended in their operation till his Assent should be obtained; and when so suspended, he has utterly neglected to attend to them.

He has refused to pass other Laws for the accommodation of large districts of people, unless those people would relinquish the right of Representation in the Legislature, a right inestimable to them and formidable to tyrants only.

He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and distant from the depository of their public Records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his measures.

He has dissolved Representative Houses repeatedly, for opposing with manly firmness his invasions on the rights of the people.

He has refused for a long time, after such dissolutions, to cause others to be elected; whereby the Legislative powers, incapable of Annihilation, have returned to the People at large for their exercise; the State remaining in the mean time exposed to all the dangers of invasion from without, and convulsions within.

He has endeavoured to prevent the population of these States; for that purpose obstructing the Laws for Naturalization of Foreigners; refusing to pass others to encourage their migrations hither, and raising the conditions of new Appropriations of Lands.

He has obstructed the Administration of Justice, by refusing his Assent to Laws for establishing Judiciary powers.

He has made Judges dependent on his Will alone, for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries.

He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harrass our people, and eat out their substance.

He has kept among us, in times of peace, Standing Armies without the Consent of our legislatures.

He has affected to render the Military independent of and superior to the Civil power.

He has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution, and unacknowledged by our laws; giving his Assent to their Acts of pretended Legislation:

For Quartering large bodies of armed troops among us:

For protecting them, by a mock Trial, from punishment for any Murders which they should commit on the Inhabitants of these States:

For cutting off our Trade with all parts of the world:

For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent:

For depriving us in many cases, of the benefits of Trial by Jury:

For transporting us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences

For abolishing the free System of English Laws in a neighbouring Province, establishing therein an Arbitrary government, and enlarging its Boundaries so as to render it at once an example and fit instrument for introducing the same absolute rule into these Colonies:

For taking away our Charters, abolishing our most valuable Laws, and altering fundamentally the Forms of our Governments:

For suspending our own Legislatures, and declaring themselves invested with power to legislate for us in all cases whatsoever.

He has abdicated Government here, by declaring us out of his Protection and waging War against us.

He has plundered our seas, ravaged our Coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people.

He is at this time transporting large Armies of foreign Mercenaries to compleat the works of death, desolation and tyranny, already begun with circumstances of Cruelty & perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally unworthy the Head of a civilized nation.

He has constrained our fellow Citizens taken Captive on the high Seas to bear Arms against their Country, to become the executioners of their friends and Brethren, or to fall themselves by their Hands.

He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us, and has endeavoured to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the merciless Indian Savages, whose known rule of warfare, is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and conditions.

In every stage of these Oppressions We have Petitioned for Redress in the most humble terms: Our repeated Petitions have been answered only by repeated injury. A Prince whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a Tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people.

Nor have We been wanting in attentions to our Brittish brethren. We have warned them from time to time of attempts by their legislature to extend an unwarrantable jurisdiction over us. We have reminded them of the circumstances of our emigration and settlement here. We have appealed to their native justice and magnanimity, and we have conjured them by the ties of our common kindred to disavow these usurpations, which, would inevitably interrupt our connections and correspondence. They too have been deaf to the voice of justice and of consanguinity. We must, therefore, acquiesce in the necessity, which denounces our Separation, and hold them, as we hold the rest of mankind, Enemies in War, in Peace Friends.

We, therefore, the Representatives of the united States of America, in General Congress, Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the Name, and by Authority of the good People of these Colonies, solemnly publish and declare, That these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be Free and Independent States; that they are Absolved from all Allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain, is and ought to be totally dissolved; and that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do all other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do. And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor.

 

July 4

1054 – A supernova, SN 1054, is seen by Chinese Song dynasty, Arab, and possibly Amerindian observers near the star Zeta Tauri. For several months it remains bright enough to be seen during the day. Its remnants form the Crab Nebula.

1187 – At the Battle of Hattin, the Saracen army of Saladin defeats the Crusader army of Guy of Lusignan, King of Jerusalem.

1584 – Under direction of Sir Walter Raleigh to find land in North America to colonize, 2 ships commanded by Captains Philip Amadas and Arthur Barlowe arrive at Roanoke Island

1744 – Under terms of The Treaty of Lancaster, the Iroquois cede lands between the Allegheny Mountains and the Ohio River to the British.

1774 – The Orangetown Resolutions are adopted in New York, protesting against the British Parliament’s Coercive Acts.

1776 – The United States Declaration of Independence is published by the Second Continental Congress.

1778 – U.S. forces under George Clark capture Kaskaskia during the Illinois campaign of the Revolution.

1802 – The United States Military Academy opens at West Point, New York

1803 – The Louisiana Purchase is announced

1817 – Construction on the Erie Canal begins in Rome, New York

1826 – Revolutionaries, Founders and Presidents, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson die within hours of each other at their respective homes.

1827 – Slavery is abolished in the State of New York.

1831 – Samuel Smith writes the lyrics to the song “My Country, ‘Tis of Thee

1838 – The Iowa Territory is organized.

1862 – Lewis Carroll tells Alice Liddell a story that would grow into Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and its sequels.

1863 – Vicksburg, Mississippi surrenders to U.S. forces under Ulysses S. Grant after 47 days of siege.
Confederate forces are repulsed at the Battle of Helena, Arkansas.
The Army of Northern Virginia withdraws from the battlefield after losing the Battle of Gettysburg

1898 – The Newlands Act to annex Hawaii and organize it as a territory is passed by the Senate and sent to President McKinley to be signed into law.

1903 – The Philippine–American War is officially concluded.

1911 – A massive heat wave strikes the northeastern states, killing 380 people in 11 days and breaking temperature records in several cities.

1934 – Leo Szilard patents the chain reaction reactor design that would later be used in the design of the atomic bomb.

1939 – Lou Gehrig announces his retirement from major league baseball at Yankee Stadium due to the effects of the illness, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis.

1950 – Radio Free Europe begins broadcasting

1951 – At Bell Labs, William Shockley announces the invention of the junction transistor.

1960 – The 50 star Flag of the United States debuts in Philadelphia, due to the post Independence Day admission of Hawaii as the 50th state on August 21 of the previous year.

1966 – President Johnson signs the Freedom of Information Act

1976 – The U.S. celebrates its Bicentennial.
Israeli commandos execute Operation Thunderbolt, raiding Entebbe airport in Uganda, rescuing all but 4 of the passengers and crew of an Air France jetliner seized by Palestinian terrorists, suffering only 1 casualty, the commander of the force, Yonatan Netanyahu.

1997 – NASA’s Pathfinder space probe lands on the surface of Mars.

2004 – The cornerstone of the Freedom Tower is laid on the World Trade Center site in New York City.

2005 – NASA’s Deep Impact collider hits comet Tempel 1 as planned.

2009 – The Statue of Liberty’s crown reopens to the public after eight years of closure for repairs.

2012 – The discovery of the Higgs boson, which is fundamentally how things have ‘mass’, by experiments performed at the Large Hadron Collider near Geneva Switzerland, is announced at CERN.

July 3

1035 – William the Conqueror becomes the Duke of Normandy.

1754 – Colonel George Washington surrenders Fort Necessity to French forces during the French and Indian War.

1767 – Pitcairn Island is discovered by Midshipman Robert Pitcairn aboard HMS Swallow

1775 – General George Washington takes command of the Continental Army, during the Revolutionary War

1778 – During the Revolutionary War, Iroquois allied to Britain, engage troops of the 24th Regiment and  Wyoming Riflemen of the Connecticut Militia supported by Regular Continental troops, wiping out the force and killing more than 360 soldiers and people, which included men, women and children in Exeter and Wyoming, Pennsylvania

1819 – The Bank for Savings in the City of New-York, the first savings bank in the U.S., opens for business.

1839 – The first state normal school in the U.S., the forerunner to today’s Framingham State University, opens in Lexington, Massachusetts with three students.

1852 – Congress establishes the United States mint in San Francisco

1863 – The final day of the Battle of Gettysburg culminates with Pickett’s Charge against the center of the Union Army’s line.

1884 – Dow Jones & Company publishes its first stock average.

1886 – The New-York Tribune becomes the first newspaper to use a linotype machine, eliminating typesetting by hand. Later, the alloy is found to be excellent for making bullets for high powered custom handguns.

1890 – Idaho is admitted as the 43rd state.

1898 – A Spanish squadron, led by Pascual Cervera y Topete, is defeated by an American squadron under William T. Sampson in the Battle of Santiago de Cuba during the Spanish-American War.

1913 – Confederate veterans at the Great Reunion of 1913 reenact Pickett’s Charge; upon reaching the high water mark of the Confederacy on the battlefield, they are met by the outstretched hands of friendship from Union veterans of the battle.

1938 – President Roosevelt dedicates the Eternal Light Peace Memorial and lights the eternal flame at Gettysburg Battlefield.

1952 – The United States Lines’, passenger liner, SS United States sets sail from New York Harbor on her maiden voyage to Southampton. During the voyage, the ship breaks the standing speed record for an Atlantic crossing and takes the Blue Riband award from the RMS Queen Mary, retaining it and the Hales Trophy for the feat without ever being surpassed.

1979 – President Carter signs the first directive for clandestine aid to the opponents of the pro Soviet regime in Kabul Afghanistan.

1988 –Fleet Air Defense officers aboard the guided missile cruiser USS Vincennes mistakenly shoot down Iran Air Flight 655 over the Persian Gulf, killing all 290 passengers and crew aboard

 

July 2

1494 – The Treaty of Tordesillas is ratified. This divided newly discovered lands outside Europe between the Portuguese and the Spanish along a meridian 370 leagues west of the Cape Verde islands in the Atlantic Ocean.

1776 – The Second Continental Congress adopts a resolution offered by Richard Henry Lee of Virginia, severing political ties with the Kingdom of Great Britain.

1881 – Charles J. Guiteau shoots and fatally wounds President Garfield, who dies of complications on September 19.

1890 – The U.S. Congress passes the Sherman Antitrust Act to regulate free competition in commerce.

1897 – British-Italian engineer Guglielmo Marconi obtains a patent for a radio transceiver in London.

1900 – A lighter than air ship designed and constructed by Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin of Germany makes its first flight on Lake Constance near Friedrichshafen.

1921 – President Harding signs the Knox–Porter Resolution formally ending the war between the United States and Germany.

1937 – Amelia Earhart and Fred Noonan disappear over the Pacific ocean on their flight around the world.

1962 – The first Walmart store opens for business in Rogers, Arkansas.

1976 – Communist North Vietnam annexes the former South Vietnam to form the unified Socialist Republic of Vietnam.

1990 –  1,400 moslim pilgrims are suffocated to death and trampled during a stampede in a pedestrian tunnel from the ‘tent city’ of Mina into Mecca.

1994 – USAir Flight 1016,  a McDonnell Douglas DC-9, crashes near Charlotte Douglas International Airport, North Carolina, killing 37 of the 52 passengers, and injuring the other 20 passengers and crew on board.

2001 – The AbioCor self contained artificial heart is first implanted in patient Robert Tools who lives for another 151 days.

2002 – Steve Fossett becomes the first person to fly solo around the world nonstop in a balloon.

2008 – Íngrid Betancourt, a member of the Chamber of Representatives of Colombia, is released from captivity after being held for six and a half years by FARC.

2013 – The International Astronomical Union names Pluto’s 4th and 5th moons, Kerberos and Styx.

July 1

1097 – The army of the First Crusade under the command of Prince Behemond of Antioch, defeats the army of Sultan Kilij Arslan at Dorylaeum near modern day Eskişehir, Turkey.

1431 – Forces of King John of Castile engage those of Sultan Muhammed of Granada at La Higueruela scoring a minor victory during the Reconquista of Spain.

1523 – Jan van Essen and Hendrik Vos, the first Lutheran martyrs, are burned at the stake in Brussels.

1770 – Lexell’s Comet, named after the man who computed its orbit – Anders Johan Lexell – is detected as passing closer to the Earth than any other comet in recorded history to that time, approaching to a distance of 0.0146 astronomical units, 1,360,000 miles.

1782 – During the Revolution, the US privateer, Captain Noah Stoddard of Fairhaven, Massachusetts, commanding the 16 gun schooner Scammel, and other privateer vessels raid the British settlement at Lunenburg, Nova Scotia, following maxim #1; Pillage, then Burn, as they first loot, then destroy the town.

1855 – Under the terms of the Quinault Treaty, the Quinault and the Quileute indian tribes of western Washington state cede their lands to the U.S.

1862 – The Battle of Malvern Hill, near Richmond Virginia, takes place; the last of the ‘Seven Days Battles’ of the Union Virginia Peninsula Campaign during the Civil War.

1863 – The Battle of Gettysburg begins

1870 – Having been signed into law on June 22nd, the act forming the United States Department of Justice comes into effect.

1874 – The Sholes and Glidden typewriter, the first commercially successful model, goes on sale.

1881 – The world’s first international telephone call is made between St. Stephen, New Brunswick, Canada, and Calais, Maine.

1898 – The Battle of San Juan Hill is fought in Santiago de Cuba during the Spanish-American War.

1908 – SOS  ··· – – – ··· is adopted as the international distress signal.

1916 – On the first day of the Battle of the Somme during World War I, 19,000 soldiers of the British Army are killed and 40,000 wounded.

1922 – The Great Railroad Strike of 1922, by 7 of the 16 railroad labor organizations existing at the time, begins in the U.S.

1931 – Wiley Post and Harold Gatty successfully complete their flight of circumnavigation in a single-engined monoplane aircraft.

1942 – The First Battle of El Alamein begins during World War II

1946 – As the start of Operation Crossroads, off Bikini Atoll in the Pacific, the MK3 Nuclear bomb “Gilda“, identical to the one dropped on Nagasaki is dropped from B-29 Dave’s Dream of the 509th Bombardment Group, one of the photographic aircraft on the Nagasaki bombing mission, as the ‘Able’ shot during the first series of nuclear weapon tests after World War II.

1959 – The specific values for the international yard, avoirdupois pound and derived units, e.g. inch, mile and ounce, are adopted after agreement between the U.S., the United Kingdom and other Commonwealth countries.

1963 – ZIP codes are introduced for United States mail

1968 – The United States Central Intelligence Agency’s Phoenix Program, to destroy the Viet Cong operating in South Vietnam, is officially established.

1979 – Sony introduces the Walkman.

1984 – The PG-13 movie rating is introduced by the MPAA.

1991 – The Warsaw Pact is officially dissolved at a meeting in Prague.

2002 – The International Criminal Court is established at The Hague to prosecute individuals for genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and crimes of aggression.

2020 – The United States Mexico Canada Agreement – USMCA, replaces the North American Free Trade Agreement – NAFTA.

June 30

1688 – The ‘Immortal Seven’ issue the Invitation to William, Prince of Orange, which would culminate in the British Glorious Revolution. The letter informed William that if he were to land in England with a small army, the signatories, 6 Earls, the Bishop of London, and their allies would rise up and support him.  The next year, The English Bill of Rights would become law, which was part of the basis from where our current Bill Of Rights came from, a hundred years later.

1794 – During the Northwest Indian War – the ‘northwest’ then being the Ohio region – a greatly superior force of the indian tribes of the Western Confederacy under Shawnee War Chief Blue Jacket attack Fort Recovery, in modern Ohio, inflicting heavy casualties but still failing to take the fort and retreat after 2 days fighting.

1805 – The earlier act of Congress, dividing part of the Indiana Territory and establishing the Michigan Territory, takes effect

1859 – French acrobat Charles Blondin crosses Niagara Falls on a tightrope.

1864 – President Lincoln grants Yosemite Valley to California for “public use, resort and recreation”. Apparently a guy named Sam got all riled up about it.

1882 – Charles Guiteau is executed by hanging in Washington, D.C. for the assassination of President Garfield, nearly a year after shooting him.

1905 – Albert Einstein sends the article On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies, in which he introduces special relativity, for publication in the Annalen der Physik.

1908 – The Tunguska Event, the largest impact event on Earth in human recorded history by a celestial object, results in a massive explosion over Eastern Siberia.

1921 – President Harding appoints former President Taft as Chief Justice of the United States.

1922 – In Washington D.C., U.S. Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes and Dominican Ambassador Francisco J. Peynado sign the Hughes–Peynado agreement, which ends U.S. occupation of the Dominican Republic.

1934 – The Night of the Long Knives, Adolf Hitler’s violent purge of his political rivals in Germany, takes place.

1936 – Emperor Haile Selassie of Abyssinia appeals for aid to the League of Nations against Italy’s invasion of his country.

1937 – The world’s first emergency telephone number, 999, is introduced in London.

1944 – The Battle of Cherbourg ends with the fall of the peninsula and its port to American forces.

1956 – Trans World Airlines Flight 2, a Lockheed L-1049 Super Constellation, and United Airlines Flight 718, a Douglas DC-7, collide above the Grand Canyon in Arizona and crash, killing all 128 passengers and crew on board both airliners.

1971 – Ad Astra Per Aspera – The crew of Soyuz 11, Georgy Dobrovolsky, Vladislav Volkov, and Viktor Patsayev are killed in orbit when their air supply escapes through a faulty valve during reentry preparations.

1985 – 39 American hostages from the hijacked TWA Flight 847 are freed in Beirut after being held for 17 days.

1986 – In the case of Bowers v. Hardwick, the Supreme Court rules that states can outlaw homosexual acts between consenting adults.

1990 – Der Deutschen Einheit – East Germany and West Germany merge after 45 years of being politically separated at the end of World War II.

2013 – 19 of the 20 members of the Granite Mountain Hotshots team of the Prescott Arizona Fire Department are killed while attempting to control a wildfire near Yarnell, Arizona.

2019 – President Trump becomes the first sitting US President to visit North Korea

2021 – The ‘Tiger Fire’ caused by a dry lightning strike in the Prescott National Forest, ignites near Black Canyon City, Arizona, and goes on to burn 16,278 acres of land before being fully contained on July 30.

The end of Islam in Córdoba

Thanks to the efforts of King Ferdinand III of Castile — aka, Saint Ferdinand — today in history, on June 29, 1236, Córdoba, which after the eighth century Muslim conquest of Spain, had become one of the most important “abodes of Islam,” to quote a disgruntled Muslim chronicler, “passed into the hands of the accursed Christians — may Allah destroy them all!”

Six months earlier, in December of 1235, a daring band of Christians, led by a few knights, stormed and took a portion of Córdoba’s eastern quarter. Word reached King Ferdinand in January of 1236, even as he was in mourning over the recent death of his thirty-year-old wife from childbirth complications.

Through their envoy, the Spaniards “implored him to help them because they were placed in most grave peril.” Against the Muslim “multitude of Córdoba, they were very few” and “separated from the Moors only by a certain wall running almost through the middle of the city.” Though at a standstill, time, the envoy made clear, was not on the Christians’ side.

The king, who for years had been spearheading the Reconquista — the Christian attempt to liberate Spain from Islam — was heavily moved by such a heroic feat; and “the grief for the loss” of his wife “did not long suspend his warlike preparations.” On the same evening that the envoy arrived, Ferdinand’s advisors strongly warned him against setting out immediately, during winter; they cited impassable roads due to snow, rain and floods, and possible ambushes from the “innumerable multitude of people in Córdoba” — to say nothing of Ibn Hud, the de facto king of al-Andalus, who was even then headed to relieve the Muslim city.

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June 29

1149 – During the Second Crusade, the army of Raymond of Poitiers, Prince of Antioch is defeated and he is also killed at the Battle of Inab by Nur ad-Din Zangi, leading to the pillage of the whole principality.

1444 – The Albanian Warlord Skanderbeg defeats the Ottoman invasion force of Ali Pasha at Torvioll.

1620 – King James of England bans tobacco growing in England, giving the Virginia Company a monopoly in exchange for tax of one shilling per pound.

1659 – During the Russo-Polish War, the Ukrainian coalition armies of Ivan Vyhovsky take the opportunity to attack and defeat Russian forces led by Prince Trubetskoy, relieving the siege of Konotop in eastern Ukraine

1807 – During the Russo-Turkish War, Russian Admiral Dmitry Senyavin destroys the Ottoman fleet off Mount Athos between the island of Lemnos in the Aegean Sea.

1880 – France annexes Tahiti, renaming the independent Kingdom of Tahiti as “Etablissements de français de l’Océanie”

1889 – Hyde Park and several other Illinois townships vote to be annexed by Chicago, forming the largest U.S. city in area and second largest in population at the time.

1927 – The Bird of Paradise, a U.S. Army Air Corps Fokker tri-motor, crewed by 1st Lt. Lester J. Maitland and 1st Lt. Albert F. Hegenberger, completes the first transpacific flight, from the mainland United States to Hawaii.

1950 – President Truman authorizes a sea blockade of North Korea.

1956 – The Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956 is signed by President Eisenhower, creating the United States Interstate Highway System.

1972 – In the case of Furman v. Georgia, the Supreme Court rules that the then current method of how the death penalty was imposed by the judicial system was unconstitutionally cruel and unusual punishment……..
North Central Airlines Flight 290 a Convair CV-580, collides in mid-air with Air Wisconsin Flight 671, a De Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter above Lake Winnebago near Appleton, Wisconsin, killing all 13 passengers and crew aboard both aircraft.

1975 – Steve Wozniak tests his first prototype of the Apple I computer.

1995 – On NASA Mission STS-71, Shuttle Atlantis docks with the Russian space station Mir for the first time.

2006 – In the case of Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, the Supreme Court rules that President Bush’s plan to try Guantanamo Bay detainees in military tribunals violates U.S. and international law.

2007 – Apple releases its first mobile phone, the iPhone, and away we went to the ‘smart phone’ races

2012 – A derecho – a straight line wind storm -sweeps across a large section of the Midwestern U.S. and across the central Appalachians into the mid-Atlantic states, leaving at least 22 people dead and millions more without power, causing damage totaling $2.9 billion

2014 – The ‘Junior Varsity’ Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant – ISIL – self declares its caliphate in Syria and northern Iraq.

 

June 28

1098 – The army of the First Crusade under the command of Prince Behemond of Taranto, defeats the moslem army of Kerbogha of Mosul.

1776 – During the Revolution, the Battle of Sullivan’s Island in South Carolina ends with an American victory

1778 – During the Revolution, the Battle of Monmouth Courthouse in New Jersey is a draw with both the Continental and British forces suffering heavy casualties.

1838 – Victoria of the United Kingdom if formally crowned Queen Regnant.

1846 – Adolphe Sax patents the Saxophone; and now you know why it’s called that.

1865 – The Army of the Potomac is disbanded.

1870 – Congress establishes the first federal holidays; New Year Day, Independence Day, Thanksgiving, and Christmas.

1894 – Labor Day becomes an official US holiday.

1896 – An explosion in the Newton Coal Company’s Twin Shaft Mine in Pittston, Pennsylvania results in a massive cave-in killing 58 miners.

1902 – Congress passes the Spooner Act, authorizing President Theodore Roosevelt to acquire rights from Colombia for the construction of the Panama Canal.

1914 – Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and his wife Sophie are assassinated in Sarajevo beginning the diplomatic bumbling that results in World War I

1919 – The Treaty of Versailles is signed, officially ending World War I.

1926 – Daimler-Benz Aktiengesellschaft is formed by Gottlieb Daimler and Karl Benz merging their two companies, Daimler Motoren Gesellschaft and Benz & Companie.

1950 – Seoul falls for the first time to invading North Korean forces.

1978 – In the case of Regents of the University of California v. Bakke, the  Supreme Court bars quota systems in college admissions.

2004 – During the Iraq War, sovereign power is handed to the interim government of Iraq by the Coalition Provisional Authority, ending U.S. led rule of that nation.

2016 – An attack by Syrian moslem ISIL terrorists at Turkey’s Istanbul Atatürk Airport kills 42 people and injures more than 230 others.

 

June 27

1499 – Americo Vespucci, on a Spanish financed trip of exploration, sights land south of present day Cape Cassipore, Brazil.

1556 – The 13 Stratford Martyrs are burned at the stake near London for their Protestant beliefs.

1760 – During the Anglo-Cherokee War, Cherokee warriors defeat British forces at the Battle of Echoee near present day Otto, North Carolina.

1838 – Paul Mauser is born in Oberndorf am Neckar, in what was then the Kingdom of Württemberg.

1864 – Confederate forces defeat Union forces during the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain

1895 – The inaugural run of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad’s Royal Blue from Washington, D.C., to New York City is the first U.S. passenger train to use electric locomotives.

1944 – During World War II, the town of Mogaung in Kachin state is the first place in Burma to be liberated from the Japanese by British Chindits, supported by the Chinese

1950 – The U.S decides to send troops to support South Korean forces fighting invading North Korean forces.

1957 – Hurricane Audrey makes landfall near the Texas–Louisiana border, killing over 400 people

1976 – Air France Flight 139 (Tel Aviv-Athens-Paris) is hijacked en route to Paris by the PLO and redirected to Entebbe, Uganda.

1977 – France grants independence to Djibouti.

1982 – Space Shuttle Columbia is launched from the Kennedy Space Center on the final shuttle research and development mission, STS-4.

1994 – Members of the Aum Shinrikyo cult release sarin gas in Matsumoto, Japan, killing 7 people and injuring over 600 more.

2013 – NASA launches the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph probe to observe the Sun.

 

June 26

4  – Emperor Augustus adopts his stepson, Tiberius.

1830 – William IV, age 64,  becomes king of Britain, Ireland and Hanover on the death of his elder brother, George IV of the United Kingdom, setting up his niece Victoria as the heir apparent.

1870 – Christmas is declared a federal holiday in the U.S.

1906 – The first Grand Prix motor race is held at Le Mans

1917 – American Expeditionary Forces begin to arrive in France during World War I.

1918 – Allied forces under General John J. Pershing and James Harbord defeat Imperial German forces under Wilhelm, German Crown Prince in the Battle of Belleau Wood.

1934 – President Roosevelt signs the Federal Credit Union Act, establishing credit unions.

1942 – The first flight of the Grumman F6F Hellcat. 

1945 – The United Nations Charter is signed

1948 – The first supply flights begin during the Berlin Blockade.

1953 – Lavrentiy “Show me the man and I’ll find you the crime” Beria, head of the MVD, is arrested by Nikita Khrushchev

1963 – U.S. President Kennedy states “Ich bin ein Berliner” (‘I am a Berliner’ or ‘I am a Jelly Doughnut’, depending on the correctness of your German)  in West Berlin after the East German puppet government erects the Berlin Wall.

1974 – The Universal Product Code (the Bar Code) is scanned for the first time to sell a package of Wrigley’s chewing gum at the Marsh Supermarket in Troy, Ohio.

1975 – 2 FBI agents and a member of the American Indian Movement are killed in a shootout on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota; Leonard Peltier is later convicted of the murders and sentenced to 2 consecutive terms of life imprisonment.

1977 – Elvis Presley holds his final concert in Indianapolis, Indiana at Market Square Arena.

1997 – In the case of Reno v. ALCU, the Supreme Court rules that the Communications Decency Act is unconstitutional.

2003 – In the case of Lawrence v. Texas, the Supreme Court rules that gender based sodomy laws are unconstitutional.

2012 – The Waldo Canyon fire descends into the Mountain Shadows neighborhood in Colorado Springs burning 347 homes, and killing 2 people.

2013 – In the case of United States v. Windsor, the Supreme Court rules that the Defense of Marriage Act is unconstitutional

2015 – In the case of Obergefell v. Hodges, the Supreme Court rules that under the 14th amendment, the states must recognize same sex marriages.

June 25

1530 – At the Diet of Augsburg the protestant Augsburg Confession is presented to the Holy Roman Emperor by the Lutheran princes and electors of Germany.

1788 – Virginia becomes the tenth state to ratify the Constitution.

1876 – At the Battle of the Little Bighorn, troops of the 7th Cavalry under the command of Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer are wiped out by Sioux and Cheyenne tribesmen led by Sioux Chiefs; Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse and Gall and Cheyenne Chiefs; Lame White Man and Two Moons

1901 – H.R.-Chief Lone Bear- Bartle is born in Richmond, Virginia.

1910 – Congress passes the Mann Act, which prohibits interstate transport of women or girls for “immoral purposes” which is not further defined.

1913 – American Civil War veterans begin arriving at Gettysburg for the Great Reunion of 1913, the 50th anniversary of the battle.

1940 – The French armistice with Germany comes into effect.

1943 – Jews in the Częstochowa Ghetto in Poland stage an uprising against the Nazis

1947 – The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank is published.

1948 – Due to the blockade of travel from West Germany into Berlin by the Soviets, a supply airlift campaign – Operation VITTLES – from airbases in West Germany and elsewhere, to Tempelhof airfield in Berlin is organized

1950 – North Korean troops begin an invasion of South Korea

1960 – 2 cryptographers working for the United States National Security Agency, William H. Martin and Bernon F. Mitchell  leave for vacation to Mexico, and from there defect to the Soviet Union.

1976 – Missouri Governor Kit Bond issues an executive order rescinding the Extermination Order, formally apologizing on behalf of the state of Missouri to members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

1996 – The Khobar Towers apartments in Saudi Arabia is truck-bombed, killing 19 U.S. servicemen.

1998 – In the case of Clinton v. City of New York, the Supreme Court rules the Line Item Veto Act of 1996 is unconstitutional.

2009 – Actress Farrah Fawcett dies, age 62 of cancer and singer Michael Jackson dies, age 50 of a drug overdose.

June 24

109 – Roman emperor Trajan inaugurates the Aqua Traiana, an aqueduct that channels water from Lake Bracciano, 25 miles northwest of Rome to the city. It remains in use for 1500 years and most of it still stands to this day

1230 – During the Spanish Reconquista, the forces of King Ferdinand III of Castile besiege city of Jaén in the southern Spanish area of Andalusia, defended by the Taifa of Jayyān.

1314 – During the first war of Scottish Independence, the Battle of Bannockburn concludes with a decisive victory by Scottish forces led by Robert the Bruce

1497 – John Cabot lands in North America at Newfoundland

1813 – In the Battle of Beaver Dams,  near Thorold, Ontario, a British and Kahnawake Indian combined force defeats the United States Army during the War of 1812.

1916 – Mary Pickford becomes the first female film star to sign a million dollar contract.

1922 – The American Professional Football Association is renamed the National Football League.

1938 – Pieces of a meteor, estimated to have weighed 450 tons when it hit the Earth’s atmosphere and exploded, land near Chicora, Pennsylvania.

1947 – Kenneth Arnold makes the first widely reported UFO sighting near Mount Rainier, Washington.

1948 – In retaliation for the introduction of the West German Deutsche Mark which caused economic upheaval in the Soviet Zone of Occupation, the Soviets begin blocking overland travel between West Germany and West Berlin as a negotiating tactic to have issue of the new currency halted, beginning the ‘Berlin Blockade’.

1949 – The first television western, Hopalong Cassidy, starring William Boyd, is aired on the NBC network.

1957 – In the case of Roth v. United States, the Supreme Court rules that obscenity is not protected by the First Amendment.

1973 – The UpStairs Lounge arson attack takes place at a homosexual hangout located on the 2nd floor of the 3 story building at 141 Chartres Street in the French Quarter of New Orleans. Killing 32 people.

1975 – Eastern Air Lines Flight 66, a Boeing 727, encounters severe wind shear and crashes on final approach to New York’s JFK Airport killing 113 of the 124 passengers and crew on board, making it the deadliest U.S. plane crash at the time.

1994 – Piloted by a known, reckless, daredevil ‘hot dog’ past its operational limits, the crash of a Boeing B-52 Stratofortress at Fairchild Air Force Base near Spokane Washington – killing all 4 crew aboard – is video recorded in detail and later used for training purposes.

2004 – In New York, capital punishment is declared unconstitutional.

2021 – The Champlain Towers South condominium in Surfside, Florida suffers a sudden partial collapse, killing 98 residents.

2022 – In the case of Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the Supreme Court rules that the U.S. Constitution does not assign the authority to regulate abortions to the federal government, returns such authority to the individual states and overturning the prior decisions in Roe v. Wade (1973) and Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992).