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Honored Social Butterfly

๐Ÿ“–๐Ÿ—ฃ๏ธ Notable Events

I found these historic events to be quite interesting, and just wanted to share!  ๐Ÿ™‚

 

Notable Events for October 21st:

[source: National Day Calendar - October 21 | Birthdays & Events]

1774 - The first flag to include the word "Liberty" is flown in Massachusetts.
1867 - The Medicine Lodge Treaty is signed Great Plains Indian leaders, relocating the tribes to a reservation in Indian Territory.

[While the treaty did relocate some Plains tribes, it's important to note that it was a complex event with significant cultural and historical implications. The treaty process was often fraught with misunderstandings and unequal power dynamics.]
1869 - The first shipment of fresh oysters is delivered from Baltimore.
1871 - The first amateur outdoor athletic games begin in NY.
1879 - Thomas Edison applies for a patent for an incandescent light bulb.
1915 - The first radiotelephone message overseas is made from Arlington, VA to Paris, France.

[This was a significant milestone, but it's worth noting that wireless communication had been evolving for several decades before this point.]
1917 - The first U.S. troops see action on the front lines in WWI.
1921 - President Harding delivers the first speech by a sitting U.S. president in opposition of lynching in the South.

[While this was a significant step forward, it's important to recognize that lynching persisted in the South for many years after this speech.]
1940 - Ernest Hemingway's first novel, For Whom the Bell Tolls, is published.
1944 - American forces take the city of Aachen, Germany, after three weeks.

[This was a crucial battle, but it was part of a larger Allied offensive in Western Europe.]

1959 - The Guggenheim Museum opens to the public in NY.
1959 - President Eisenhower approves the transfer of all US Army space-related activities to NASA.
1964 - My Fair Lady, starring Rex Harrison and Audrey Hepburn, premieres in NY.
1967 - Fifty thousand people march from the Lincoln Memorial to the Pentagon in protest of the Vietnam War.

[This was a major event in the history of the anti-war movement, but it's important to note that there were many other protests and demonstrations against the war.]
1975 - Women are allowed to enroll in the Coast Guard Academy for the first time.
1986 - Journalist Edward Tracy is kidnapped in Beirut.

[This was a tragic event, and Tracy was eventually released after several years in captivity.]
1989 - Bertram Lee and Peter Bynoe become the first major sports team owners after they purchase the Denver Nuggets for $65 million.
1991 - Hostage Jesse Turner is released from captivity in Beirut after 5 years.
2019 - Facebook takes down disinformation campaigns from Iran and Russia.
2020 - Over 545 children are left without parents after being separated at the U.S./Mexican border.

[This was a highly controversial policy that led to widespread condemnation and legal challenges.]


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


Made of flesh and bone, not chips and blips.
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Honored Social Butterfly

Notable Events for March 26th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 26 | Birthdays & Events]

[+ Generic AI Search Results, &  Almanac]

 

March 26th is the 85th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (86th in leap years), with 280 days remaining until the end of the year.

 

1790 - Congress passed the Naturalization Act, requiring a two year residency in the country before applying for citizenship.
[The Naturalization Act of 1790 did require a two-year residency.]

1804 - Congress orders removal of Indians east of Mississippi to Louisiana.
[Inaccurate. While the concept of Indian removal was developing, the major legislative push and implementation happened later. The Louisiana Purchase did open up land west of the Mississippi, but a specific congressional order for removal to Louisiana in 1804 is not accurate.]
1804 - Territory of Orleans organizes in Louisiana Purchase.
[The Territory of Orleans was established in 1804 as part of the Louisiana Purchase.]
1812 - The term "gerrymander" is used for the first time in a political cartoon in the Boston-Gazette.
[The term originated from a political cartoon published in the Boston Gazette in March 1812.]
1821 - North West Company merges with Hudsonโ€™s Bay Company.
[The North West Company merged with the Hudson's Bay Company in 1821.]
1830 - The Book of Mormon is first published in Palmyra, New York.
1845 - Joseph Francis patents a sheet-iron lifeboat apparatus.
[Joseph Francis received a patent for his corrugated iron lifeboat in 1845.]
1872 - Thomas Martin receives a patent for a pipe and valve fire extinguisher system.
[Thomas Martin received a patent for a fire extinguisher in 1872.]
1872 - An estimated 7.4-magnitude earthquake occurs in Owens Valley, California.
[A significant earthquake occurred in Owens Valley in 1872.]
1878 - The Sabi Game Reserve, the first official game reserve in the world, opens in South Africa.
[It later became part of Kruger National Park.]
1885 - The Eastman Film Company manufactures the first commercial motion picture film.
1926 - The first lip-reading tournament is held in the U.S.
[The first national lip-reading tournament was held in the U.S. in 1926.]
1931 - Swissair, the national airline of Switzerland, is founded.
1937 - Popeye statue unveiled during spinach festival, Crystal City, Texas.
[A statue of Popeye was unveiled in Crystal City, Texas, during their spinach festival in 1937.]
1942 - A deadly dynamite explosion occurs in quarry, in Sandts Eddy, Pennsylvania.
[A deadly dynamite explosion occurred at a quarry in Sandts Eddy, Pennsylvania, in 1942.]
1943 - Elsie S. Ott becomes the first woman to be awarded the U.S. Air Force Medal.
[Inaccurate. Elsie S. Ott was the first woman to receive an Air Medal, but the U.S. Air Force was not yet an independent branch in 1943 (it was part of the Army Air Forces).]
1945 - The Battle of Iwo Jima in World War II officially ends with the island secured by American forces.
1945 - Allies led by the Marine Corps raise the flag at Iwo Jima.
[U.S. Marines raised the flag on Mount Suribachi, Iwo Jima, in 1945.]
1946 - The U.N. Security Council meet for the first time in New York.
[Inaccurate. The first meeting of the UN Security Council was in London on January 17, 1946. They later moved to New York.]
1951 - The Air Force flag is officially adopted by President Truman.
[President Truman approves the design for the United States Air Force flag.]
1953 - Dr. Jonas Salk announces the development of a polio vaccine.
[Dr. Jonas Salk announced the development of his polio vaccine in 1953.]
1956 - The Medic Alert Foundation is formed.
[The Medic Alert Foundation was established in 1956.]
1958 - The U.S. Army launches Explorer III, its third successful satellite.
1964 - Perpetrators of the Great Train Robbery are convicted in London.
[Several individuals were convicted in London in 1964 for their involvement in the Great Train Robbery.]
1971 - East Pakistan declares its independence from Pakistan, becoming Bangladesh. This marked the beginning of the Bangladesh Liberation War.
1975 - North Vietnamese take Hue (Vietnam War).
[North Vietnamese forces captured Hue in 1975.]
1975 - The Biological Weapons Convention come into force, prohibiting the development, production, and stockpiling of biological and toxin weapons.
1979 - Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin sign the Egyptโ€“Israel Peace Treaty in Washington, D.C., ending 30 years of war between the two countries.
1982 - Groundbreaking ceremonies take place in Washington, D.C., for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, a memorial dedicated to honor American armed forces members killed in the Vietnam War, which was completed and dedicated on November 13, 1982.

1987 - The U.S. government sells its 85% ownership of Conrail, one of the nationโ€™s largest rail systems, and earned $1.6 billion in one of the largest stock offerings in history.
[The Conrail privatization was a significant event in 1987.]
1989 - The post-perestroika Soviet Union holds its first nationwide multiparty, multicandidate elections.
[The Soviet Union held its first contested elections in 1989.]
1991 - Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay sign the Treaty of Asunciรณn, establishing Mercosur, the Southern Common Market.
1991 - A 2-pound 5-ounce yellow hybrid bass is caught in the Kiamichi River of Oklahoma.
[This fish catch is recorded.]
1997 - Thirty-nine bodies are discovered in the Heaven's Gate cult mass suicides in San Diego, California.
1999 - Melissa macro computer virus [or the 'Melissa worm,' a mass-mailing computer virus], is released, begins to spread, affecting/disrupting Microsoft Word and email systems worldwide.
[The Melissa virus caused significant disruption in 1999.]
1999 - A 12-pound walleye is caught with fly tackle in Manistee River, Michigan.
[This fishing record is documented.]
2000 - Vladimir Putin is elected President of Russia.
2024 - The Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, Maryland, collapses after being struck by a container ship.

 

Other Observances:

 

National Nougat Day
National Spinach Day
Epilepsy Awareness Day  (Purple Day)
National Little Red Wagon Day  (Last Wednesday in March)
Manatee Appreciation Day  (Last Wednesday in March)

 

Notable Birthdays for March 26th:

 

William Blount (1749-1800) - Founding father of the U.S. and signer of the Constitution.
Benjamin Thompson (1753-1814) - Inventor of the kitchen stove.
Nathaniel Bowditch (1773-1838) - Considered the founder of modern maritime navigation.
Edward Bellamy (1850-1898) - Utopian visionary and author.
Robert Frost (1874-1963) - Considered one of the best poets of all time.
H. Radclyffe Roberts (1906-1982) - Entomologist who studied grasshopper taxonomy.
Tennessee Williams (1911-1983) - Considered one of the best playwright in the 20th Century.
Christian B. Anfinsen (1916-1995) - Biochemist and academic who made significant advancements in the study of ribonuclease.
Edwin Turney (1929-2008) - Co-founder of Advanced Micro Devices.
Leonard Nimoy (1931-2015) - Famous for playing the character Spock in Star Trek.
James Caan (1940-2022) - Actor known for his ruthless character Sonny Corleone in The Godfather.
Nancy Pelosi (1940-Still Living) - American politician, Speaker of the House
Diana Ross (1944-Still Living) - Lead singer for the Supremes.
Steven Tyler (1948-Still Living) - Lead singer for Aerosmith.
Vicki Lawrence (1949-Still Living) - Actress and comedian known for working side-by-side to Carol Burnett.
Fran Sheehan (1949-Still Living) - Bass player for the rock band Boston.
Teddy Pendergrass (1950-Still Living) - R&B singer.
Gary Ruvkun (1952-Still Living) - Molecular biologist who discovered microRNA.
Curtis Sliwa (1954-Still Living) - Founder of the crime prevention organization Guardian Angels.
Charly McClain (1956-Still Living) - Country music singer best known for her hit song Sleepin' with the Radio On.
Chris Hansen (1959-Still Living) - Reporter and correspondent for Dateline NBC: To Catch A Predator.
Jennifer Grey (1960-Still Living) - Actress who played Baby in Dirty Dancing.
Kenny Chesney (1968-Still Living) - Country music singer and guitarist.
Larry Page (1973-Still Living) - Co-founder of Google.
Jonathan Groff (1985-Still Living) - Voice of Sven in the animation Frozen.

 

Deaths:

 

1827: Ludwig van Beethoven, German composer (b. 1770)
1892: Walt Whitman, American poet (b. 1819)
1973: Noรซl Coward, English playwright, actor, and composer (b. 1899)
1995: Eazy-E, American rapper (N.W.A.) (b. 1963)

 


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


Made of flesh and bone, not chips and blips.

View solution in original post

Honored Social Butterfly

Notable Events for March 26th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 26 | Birthdays & Events]

[+ Generic AI Search Results, &  Almanac]

 

March 26th is the 85th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (86th in leap years), with 280 days remaining until the end of the year.

 

1790 - Congress passed the Naturalization Act, requiring a two year residency in the country before applying for citizenship.
[The Naturalization Act of 1790 did require a two-year residency.]

1804 - Congress orders removal of Indians east of Mississippi to Louisiana.
[Inaccurate. While the concept of Indian removal was developing, the major legislative push and implementation happened later. The Louisiana Purchase did open up land west of the Mississippi, but a specific congressional order for removal to Louisiana in 1804 is not accurate.]
1804 - Territory of Orleans organizes in Louisiana Purchase.
[The Territory of Orleans was established in 1804 as part of the Louisiana Purchase.]
1812 - The term "gerrymander" is used for the first time in a political cartoon in the Boston-Gazette.
[The term originated from a political cartoon published in the Boston Gazette in March 1812.]
1821 - North West Company merges with Hudsonโ€™s Bay Company.
[The North West Company merged with the Hudson's Bay Company in 1821.]
1830 - The Book of Mormon is first published in Palmyra, New York.
1845 - Joseph Francis patents a sheet-iron lifeboat apparatus.
[Joseph Francis received a patent for his corrugated iron lifeboat in 1845.]
1872 - Thomas Martin receives a patent for a pipe and valve fire extinguisher system.
[Thomas Martin received a patent for a fire extinguisher in 1872.]
1872 - An estimated 7.4-magnitude earthquake occurs in Owens Valley, California.
[A significant earthquake occurred in Owens Valley in 1872.]
1878 - The Sabi Game Reserve, the first official game reserve in the world, opens in South Africa.
[It later became part of Kruger National Park.]
1885 - The Eastman Film Company manufactures the first commercial motion picture film.
1926 - The first lip-reading tournament is held in the U.S.
[The first national lip-reading tournament was held in the U.S. in 1926.]
1931 - Swissair, the national airline of Switzerland, is founded.
1937 - Popeye statue unveiled during spinach festival, Crystal City, Texas.
[A statue of Popeye was unveiled in Crystal City, Texas, during their spinach festival in 1937.]
1942 - A deadly dynamite explosion occurs in quarry, in Sandts Eddy, Pennsylvania.
[A deadly dynamite explosion occurred at a quarry in Sandts Eddy, Pennsylvania, in 1942.]
1943 - Elsie S. Ott becomes the first woman to be awarded the U.S. Air Force Medal.
[Inaccurate. Elsie S. Ott was the first woman to receive an Air Medal, but the U.S. Air Force was not yet an independent branch in 1943 (it was part of the Army Air Forces).]
1945 - The Battle of Iwo Jima in World War II officially ends with the island secured by American forces.
1945 - Allies led by the Marine Corps raise the flag at Iwo Jima.
[U.S. Marines raised the flag on Mount Suribachi, Iwo Jima, in 1945.]
1946 - The U.N. Security Council meet for the first time in New York.
[Inaccurate. The first meeting of the UN Security Council was in London on January 17, 1946. They later moved to New York.]
1951 - The Air Force flag is officially adopted by President Truman.
[President Truman approves the design for the United States Air Force flag.]
1953 - Dr. Jonas Salk announces the development of a polio vaccine.
[Dr. Jonas Salk announced the development of his polio vaccine in 1953.]
1956 - The Medic Alert Foundation is formed.
[The Medic Alert Foundation was established in 1956.]
1958 - The U.S. Army launches Explorer III, its third successful satellite.
1964 - Perpetrators of the Great Train Robbery are convicted in London.
[Several individuals were convicted in London in 1964 for their involvement in the Great Train Robbery.]
1971 - East Pakistan declares its independence from Pakistan, becoming Bangladesh. This marked the beginning of the Bangladesh Liberation War.
1975 - North Vietnamese take Hue (Vietnam War).
[North Vietnamese forces captured Hue in 1975.]
1975 - The Biological Weapons Convention come into force, prohibiting the development, production, and stockpiling of biological and toxin weapons.
1979 - Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin sign the Egyptโ€“Israel Peace Treaty in Washington, D.C., ending 30 years of war between the two countries.
1982 - Groundbreaking ceremonies take place in Washington, D.C., for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, a memorial dedicated to honor American armed forces members killed in the Vietnam War, which was completed and dedicated on November 13, 1982.

1987 - The U.S. government sells its 85% ownership of Conrail, one of the nationโ€™s largest rail systems, and earned $1.6 billion in one of the largest stock offerings in history.
[The Conrail privatization was a significant event in 1987.]
1989 - The post-perestroika Soviet Union holds its first nationwide multiparty, multicandidate elections.
[The Soviet Union held its first contested elections in 1989.]
1991 - Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay sign the Treaty of Asunciรณn, establishing Mercosur, the Southern Common Market.
1991 - A 2-pound 5-ounce yellow hybrid bass is caught in the Kiamichi River of Oklahoma.
[This fish catch is recorded.]
1997 - Thirty-nine bodies are discovered in the Heaven's Gate cult mass suicides in San Diego, California.
1999 - Melissa macro computer virus [or the 'Melissa worm,' a mass-mailing computer virus], is released, begins to spread, affecting/disrupting Microsoft Word and email systems worldwide.
[The Melissa virus caused significant disruption in 1999.]
1999 - A 12-pound walleye is caught with fly tackle in Manistee River, Michigan.
[This fishing record is documented.]
2000 - Vladimir Putin is elected President of Russia.
2024 - The Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, Maryland, collapses after being struck by a container ship.

 

Other Observances:

 

National Nougat Day
National Spinach Day
Epilepsy Awareness Day  (Purple Day)
National Little Red Wagon Day  (Last Wednesday in March)
Manatee Appreciation Day  (Last Wednesday in March)

 

Notable Birthdays for March 26th:

 

William Blount (1749-1800) - Founding father of the U.S. and signer of the Constitution.
Benjamin Thompson (1753-1814) - Inventor of the kitchen stove.
Nathaniel Bowditch (1773-1838) - Considered the founder of modern maritime navigation.
Edward Bellamy (1850-1898) - Utopian visionary and author.
Robert Frost (1874-1963) - Considered one of the best poets of all time.
H. Radclyffe Roberts (1906-1982) - Entomologist who studied grasshopper taxonomy.
Tennessee Williams (1911-1983) - Considered one of the best playwright in the 20th Century.
Christian B. Anfinsen (1916-1995) - Biochemist and academic who made significant advancements in the study of ribonuclease.
Edwin Turney (1929-2008) - Co-founder of Advanced Micro Devices.
Leonard Nimoy (1931-2015) - Famous for playing the character Spock in Star Trek.
James Caan (1940-2022) - Actor known for his ruthless character Sonny Corleone in The Godfather.
Nancy Pelosi (1940-Still Living) - American politician, Speaker of the House
Diana Ross (1944-Still Living) - Lead singer for the Supremes.
Steven Tyler (1948-Still Living) - Lead singer for Aerosmith.
Vicki Lawrence (1949-Still Living) - Actress and comedian known for working side-by-side to Carol Burnett.
Fran Sheehan (1949-Still Living) - Bass player for the rock band Boston.
Teddy Pendergrass (1950-Still Living) - R&B singer.
Gary Ruvkun (1952-Still Living) - Molecular biologist who discovered microRNA.
Curtis Sliwa (1954-Still Living) - Founder of the crime prevention organization Guardian Angels.
Charly McClain (1956-Still Living) - Country music singer best known for her hit song Sleepin' with the Radio On.
Chris Hansen (1959-Still Living) - Reporter and correspondent for Dateline NBC: To Catch A Predator.
Jennifer Grey (1960-Still Living) - Actress who played Baby in Dirty Dancing.
Kenny Chesney (1968-Still Living) - Country music singer and guitarist.
Larry Page (1973-Still Living) - Co-founder of Google.
Jonathan Groff (1985-Still Living) - Voice of Sven in the animation Frozen.

 

Deaths:

 

1827: Ludwig van Beethoven, German composer (b. 1770)
1892: Walt Whitman, American poet (b. 1819)
1973: Noรซl Coward, English playwright, actor, and composer (b. 1899)
1995: Eazy-E, American rapper (N.W.A.) (b. 1963)

 


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


Made of flesh and bone, not chips and blips.
Honored Social Butterfly

Notable Events for March 25th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 25 | Birthdays & Events]

[+ Generic AI Search Results, WIKI, & National Today]

 

March 25th is the 84th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar.

 

421 - The city of Venice is traditionally founded with the dedication of the first church, San Giacomo di Rialto.
1306 - Robert the Bruce is crowned King of Scotland.
1524 - Italian explores Giovanni da Verrazano arrived off Outer Banks of North Carolina.
1584 - Sir Walter Raleigh is granted a patent to colonize Virginia.
[Sir Walter Raleigh is granted a patent by Queen Elizabeth I to establish a colony in Virginia.]
1634 - The first settlers found the Maryland colony.
[The Maryland colony was founded in 1634.]
1655 - Christiaan Huygens discovers Titan, the largest moon of Saturn.
1775 - George Washington plants pecans at Mount Vernon.
1776 - Congress authorizes first U.S. medal for Gen. George Washington, for forcing British army to evacuate Boston.
1807 - The Slave Trade Act is passed in the United Kingdom, abolishing the slave trade in the British Empire.
1863 - The first Army Medal of Honor award is given to six soldiers.
[The first Medals of Honor were awarded in 1863 to six soldiers.]
1882 - The first pancake making demonstration takes place in a New York City department store.
[Likely inaccurate. While department stores did demonstrations, it's difficult to verify if this was the first pancake making demonstration. It's possible, but hard to confirm definitively.]
1900 - Socialist Party of the United States organizes at Indianapolis, Indiana.
1902 - Irving Colburn patents the first sheet glass drawing machine.
[Irving Colburn did patent a sheet glass drawing machine in 1902.]
1911 - The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in New York City kills 146 garment workers, leading to significant labor reforms.
1919 - The League of Nations begins.
[The League of Nations was formally established in 1919. The Covenant of the League of Nations is adopted at the Paris Peace Conference, though the organization itself would officially begin in 1920.]
1937 - Washington D.C.โ€™s Daily News is the first U.S. newspaper to have a perfume ad.
1943 - The Jimmy Durante and Garry Moore Show premieres on the radio. The duo replaced the popular Abbott and Costello.
1949 - The Soviet Union begins a mass deportation of over 90,000 people from Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania to Siberia.
1954 - The first color television set is manufactured by RCA, featuring a 12.5-inch screen to be sold for $1,000.
[RCA's first color TV, the CT-100, was released in 1954 with a 12.5-inch screen and a price around $1000.]
1957 - The European Economic Community (EEC) is established by six European nations, a precursor to the European Union.
1958 - Sugar Ray Robinson wins worldโ€™s middleweight boxing championship by defeating Carmen Basilio, in Chicago.
1965 - Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights activists complete their march march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama.
[The Selma to Montgomery marches culminated in the final march ending on March 25, 1965.]
1966 - The Supreme Court rules a "poll tax" (tax per "head" in a household) is unconstitutional.
[The Supreme Court case Harper v. Virginia Board of Elections in 1966 declared poll taxes unconstitutional in state elections.]
1972 - Multinational agreement to coordinate efforts to control trade in narcotic drugs is signed in Geneva.
1975 - King Faisal of Saudi Arabia is assassinated by his nephew.
1987 - The Supreme Court rules that gender-based workplace affirmative action plans do not constitute discrimination.
[The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that an employer may voluntarily act to redress imbalances in the workforce through affirmative action programs for women. It was the first time that the court specifically addressed such programs for women.]
1995 - WikiWikiWeb, the world's first wiki, is launched by Ward Cunningham.
1996 - The U.S. issues a newly-redesigned $100 bill.
[A redesigned $100 bill was issued in 1996.]
2017 - Residents of Innisfail, Australia, set a new Guinness record for longest banana split - 26,377 feet 11.4 inches long and included 40,000 bananas, more than 2,000 gallons of ice cream and 528 gallons of toppings.
2019 - Apple introduces Apple TV+, Apple News+ and an Apple credit card.
2019 - NASA has to cancel an all-female spacewalk because it didn't have enough space suits to fit the women astronauts.
[A planned all-female spacewalk in March 2019 was canceled due to a lack of properly sized spacesuits.]

 

Other Observances:

 

Maryland Day: A state holiday in Maryland commemorating the arrival of the first European settlers.
Tolkien Reading Day: A day for fans of J.R.R. Tolkien to read and celebrate his works.
International Waffle Day is a glorious occasion that hails from Sweden. It started as 'Vรฅffeldagen,' which, thanks to linguistic quirks, sounds suspiciously like 'Vรคrfrudagen [the Feast of the Annunciation].

 


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


Made of flesh and bone, not chips and blips.
Honored Social Butterfly

Notable Events for March 24th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 24 | Birthdays & Events]

[+ Generic AI Search Results]

 

March 24th is the 83rd day of the year in the Gregorian calendar.

 

1603 - Queen Elizabeth I of England dies, marking the end of the Tudor dynasty.
1644 - Roger Williams grants charter for colony Rhode Island.
1868 - The Metropolitan Life Insurance Company is formed.
1874 - The magician Harry Houdini is born.
1882 - German scientist Robert Koch announces the discovery of the bacterium that causes tuberculosis. This day is now observed as World Tuberculosis Day.
1896 - Clement Hardy is issued a patent for a rotary disk plow.
1900 - Ground is broken for the new underground "Rapid Transit Railroad," linking Manhattan and Brooklyn.
[Construction on the Interborough Rapid Transit (IRT), which would connect Manhattan and Brooklyn, began in 1900.]
1942 - The U.S. government begins moving native-born citizens with Japanese ancestry into detention centres (Executive Order 9066) in order to prevent acts of espionage during the war.
[President Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 in 1942, leading to the internment of Japanese Americans.]
1944 - Nicholas Alkemade survives an 18,000-foot fall from a plane.
1944 - A total of 76 allied prisoners of war break out of the German camp Stalag Luft III.
[This event, known as 'The Great Escape,' involved 76 prisoners.]
1945 - British, US & Canadian paratroopers participate in the largest one-day airborne operation of all time to land in Northern Germany.
[This refers to Operation Varsity, the largest single airborne operation in history.]
1947 - Congress proposes a two-term limit for the Presidency.
[The 22nd Amendment, which formalized the two-term limit, was proposed by Congress in 1947 and ratified in 1951.]
1955 - The Tennessee Williams play 'Cat on a Hot Tin Roof' opens on Broadway, with Barbara Bel Geddes as Maggie, Ben Gazarra as Brick, and Burl Ives as Big Daddy.
1958 - Elvis Presley joins the Army.
[Elvis Presley was inducted into the U.S. Army in 1958.]
1965 - Senator Robert Kennedy is the first to reach the summit of Mt. Kennedy in Yukon Territory.
1965 - U.S. spacecraft Ranger 9 crash-lands precisely on target in the Alphonsus crater of the moon after transmitting to Earth 5,814 photographs of the crater region.
1966 - Selective Service gives college deferments based on academic performance.
[The Selective Service began using academic performance as a factor in granting deferments in 1966.]
1975 - The beaver becomes a symbol of Canadian sovereignty.
1977 - Lily Tomlin becomes the first woman to sing a solo on Broadway.
[Incorrect. While Lily Tomlin is a celebrated actress and comedian, she is not known for being the first woman to sing a solo on Broadway. Broadway musicals have featured female soloists since their inception.]
1987 - French premier Jacques Chirac signs a contract to build the first Disneyland-type amusement park in Europe, on the outskirts of Paris.
1989 - Exxon tanker 10.8 million gallons of crude oil in Prince William Sound (AK).
[The Exxon Valdez oil spill, which released approximately 10.8 million gallons of crude oil, occurred in Prince William Sound, Alaska.]
1999 - NATO begins air strikes against Yugoslavia during the Kosovo War.
2002 - Halle Berry and Denzel Washington both win Academy Awards for Best Actress and Best Actor, respectively.
[Denzel Washington was the second African-American to win the Academy Award for Best Actor, following Sidney Poitier for 1963's 'Lilies of the Field.' Halle Berry became the first, and only [as of 2023], African-American to win the Academy Award for Best Actress. Denzel Washington won for Best Actor for 'Training Day,' and Halle Berry won for Best Actress for her role in 'Monster's Ball.']
2003 - An 18.7-inch-long goldfish sets a world record.
2018 - U.S. military use drones for the first time to bomb Al-Qaeda.
[Incorrect. The U.S. military has been using drones for targeted strikes against Al-Qaeda and other militant groups for many years prior to 2018. Drone warfare became a significant aspect of U.S. military operations in the early 2000s.]

 

Other Observances:

 

National Cocktail Day
National Cheesesteak Day
National Chocolate Covered Raisin Day

 


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


Made of flesh and bone, not chips and blips.
Honored Social Butterfly

Notable Events for March 23rd:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 23 | Birthdays & Events]

[+ Generic AI Search Results]

 

March 23rd is the 82nd day of the year 2025 and there are 283 days remaining until the end of the year.

 

1775 - Patrick Henry proclaims "Give me liberty or give me death" in his speech showing support for Virginian troops to join the Revolutionary War.
[Patrick Henry delivered this famous speech at the Second Virginia Convention on March 23, 1775, advocating for the arming of militias in Virginia, which was a precursor to the Revolutionary War.]
1801 - Tsar Paul I of Russia is assassinated in his bedroom.
1806 - After reaching the Pacific Ocean, explorers Lewis and Clark begin their journey home.
1839 - The use of "OK" (oll korrect) is used for the first time by Boston's Morning Post.
[The term 'OK' is widely believed to have originated as an abbreviation of 'oll korrect,' a humorous misspelling of 'all correct,' and its first documented use was in the Boston Morning Post in March 1839.]
1840 - John Draper takes the first successful photo of the Moon in the U.S.
[John W. Draper took what is generally considered the first successful daguerreotype of the moon in the United States on March 23, 1840.]
1848 - The ship John Wickliffe arrives in New Zealand carrying the first Scottish settlers to Dunedin, marking the founding of the Otago province.
1857 - The first elevator is installed at 488 Broadway New York City.
[Mostly Accurate. While elevators existed before this, Elisha Otis installed his safety elevator at 488 Broadway in New York City in 1857. The key here is the safety feature, which prevented the elevator from falling if the cable broke, making them much more practical and widely adopted.]
1858 - The streetcar is patented by E.A. Gardner.
[Inaccurate. While there were patents related to streetcars around this time, E.A. Gardner doesn't appear to be credited with a foundational patent in 1858. The development of the streetcar was a gradual process with contributions from many inventors. You might be thinking of a specific improvement or patent, but the general concept of the streetcar predates this.]
1862 - The First Battle of Kernstown, the opening battle of Stonewall Jackson's Valley Campaign, is fought during the American Civil War.
1888 - The Football League, the world's oldest professional association football league, meets for the first time in England.
1903 - The Wright brothers file their first patent for a flying machine.
[The Wright brothers filed their patent application for their flying machine on March 23, 1903.]
1909 - Former President Roosevelt leaves for an African safari.
[Theodore Roosevelt left for his famous Smithsonian-Roosevelt African Expedition in March 1909, shortly after leaving office.]
1919 - Benito Mussolini founds his Fascist political movement in Milan, Italy.
1933 - The German Reichstag passes the Enabling Act, granting Adolf Hitler dictatorial powers.
1956 - Pakistan becomes the first Islamic republic in the world.
1957 - The Army sell the last last homing pigeons.
[The U.S. Army officially disbanded its Pigeon Service and sold off its last homing pigeons in March 1957, as their role in communication had been superseded by technology.]
1965 - NASA launches Gemini 3, the first crewed mission in the Gemini program, carrying Gus Grissom and John Young.
1977 - Elvis Presley begins his final concert tour.
[Elvis Presley began his final concert tour on March 23, 1977, in Tempe, Arizona.]
1998 - The film Titanic wins 11 Academy Awards, tying the record set by Ben-Hur.
2001 - The Russian space station Mir re-enters Earth's atmosphere and crashes into the Pacific Ocean.
2010 - U.S. President Barack Obama signs the Affordable Care Act into law.
2021 - The container ship Ever Given becomes stuck in the Suez Canal, causing a major disruption to global shipping.
2023 - Utah becomes the first state to limit social media for minors.
[In March 2023, Utah passed legislation requiring parental consent for minors to use social media and imposing other restrictions, making it the first state to enact such comprehensive regulations.]

 

Other Observances:

 

National Near Miss Day

National Chip And Dip Day
National Melba Toast Day
National Puppy Day
National Chia Day

 


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


Made of flesh and bone, not chips and blips.
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Notable Events for March 22nd:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 22 | Birthdays & Events]

[+ Generic AI Search Results]

 

1621 - The Pilgrims of Plymouth Colony sign a peace treaty with Massasoit, the sachem of the Wampanoag tribe.
1622 - The Jamestown Massacre occurs, where Algonquian Native Americans kill 347 English settlers around Jamestown, Virginia.
1631 - The Massachusetts Bay Colony outlaws the possession of gambling paraphernalia (cards, dice, and gaming tables).
1638 - Anne Hutchinson is expelled from Massachusetts Bay Colony for causing conflict on her differing religious view of the times.
1765 - The Stamp Act is passed on American colonies.
[The British Parliament passes the Stamp Act, which imposes a tax on printed materials in the American colonies. ]
1778 - Captain James Cook sees WA state for the first time.
[Inaccurate. Captain James Cook made his third and final voyage to the Pacific in 1778, exploring the coast of what is now the state of Oregon, not Washington. He did explore the Pacific Northwest coast during this voyage.]
1790 - Thomas Jefferson becomes the first Secretary of State.
1794 - The Slave Trade Act of 1794 is passed to ban the export of slaves and import of slaves into the U.S.
[Partially Accurate. The Slave Trade Act of 1794 specifically prohibited the carrying of slaves from the United States to any foreign country. It did not ban the import of slaves into the U.S. That happened later with the Act Prohibiting Importation of Slaves in 1807.]
1822 - The NY Horticultural Society is founded.
1841 - Orlando Jones receives a patent for his method for alkali starch extraction , which was later applied to corn to make cornstarch.
1861 - The first nursing school is chartered in the U.S.
[This refers to the Boston Training School for Nurses.]
1874 - The Young Men's Hebrew Association is organized in NY City.
1894 - The first playoff game for hockey's Stanley Cup is held in Montreal, Canada. The Montreal Hockey Club defeated the Montreal Victorias 3-2.
1933 - President Roosevelt signs the Cullenโ€“Harrison Act (Amendment to the Volstead Act) to legalize the manufacture and sale of of beer containing 3.2% alcohol (by volume) and light wines.
1941 - James Stewart becomes the first major movie star to be inducted into the Army.
1944 - James Stewart flies leads the 2nd Bomb Wing in an attack on Berlin, making the flight his 12the combat mission.
1945 - The Arab League is founded in Cairo, Egypt.
1960 - Arthur Schawlow and Charles Townes receive the first patent for a laser.
1963 - The Beatles release their first album, 'Please Please Me,' in the United Kingdom.
1972 - The U.S. Congress approves the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) but sends it to the states for ratification.
1993 - Intel releases the first Pentium microprocessor.  
1997 - Tara Lipinski becomes the youngest female figure skating world champion at the age of 14.

 

Other Observances:


National Health Care Rights Day
National Goof Off Day
National Bavarian Crepes Day
National West Virginia Day


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 21st:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 21 | Birthdays & Events]

[+ Generic AI Search Results & WIKI]

 

1642 - Georgeana (York) in Maine becomes the first incorporated city in America.
[This is incorrect. St. Augustine, Florida, founded in 1565, is widely considered the oldest continuously inhabited European-established settlement and often referred to as the 'Nation's Oldest City.' While York, Maine, is one of the oldest towns in the U.S., it wasn't the first incorporated city.]
1685 - Johann Sebastian Bach, one of the most famous and influential composers of the Baroque period, is born on 31 March [O.S. 21 March], in Eisenach, Thuringia, Germany.
[Johann Sebastian Bach, German composer, died on July 28th, 1750. He is a cornerstone of Western classical music, his legacy encompassing his profound influence on subsequent composers and his mastery of Baroque musical forms, particularly the fugue.] 
1692 - The Salem Witch Trials begin after Sarah Good, Sarah Osborne and Tituba are brought before local magistrates.
[The Salem Witch Trials officially began in March 1692 with the examination of these three women.]
1768 - [Jean-Baptiste] Joseph Fourier, French mathematician and physicist, is born on March 21st, 1768, in Auxerre, France.
[Joseph Fourier, French mathematician and physicist, died on May 16th, 1830. He is remembered as a brilliant mathematician and physicist who made significant contributions to both science and society.]
1785 - The Promotion of Agriculture is organized.
[This is incorrect. The US Department of Agriculture was established much later, in 1862. It's possible you're thinking of an earlier agricultural society, but 'The Promotion of Agriculture' as a specific organization in 1785 needs verification.]
1788 - A devastating fire begins in New Orleans, Louisiana.

[Destroying most of the city's buildings.]
1790 - The first U.S. census is authorized.
1803 - Ohio becomes 17th state to join the Union.
[This is incorrect. Ohio officially became the 17th state on March 1st, 1803.]
1804 - The Napoleonic Code is approved in France.
[This was a new legal framework enacted by Napoleon Bonaparte, which provided post-revolutionary France with its first coherent set of laws regarding property, colonial affairs, the family, and individual rights.]
1806 - Benito Pablo Juรกrez Garcรญa, Mexican politician, military commander, and lawyer, is born on March 21st, 1806, in the village of San Pablo Guelatao, Oaxaca, located in the mountain range since named for him, the Sierra Juรกrez.
[Benito Pablo Juรกrez Garcรญa was a Mexican politician, military commander, and lawyer who served as the 26th president of Mexico from 1858 until his death in office in 1872. He died on July 18th, 1872.] 
1857 - A massive earthquake strikes Tokyo, Japan, resulting in the deaths of approximately 100,000 people.
1864 - Rebecca Lee becomes the first Black woman to receive a medical degree in the U.S.
[Rebecca Lee Crumpler earned her medical degree in 1864.]
1867 - Florenz Edward Ziegfeld Jr., American Broadway impresario, is born on March 21st, 1867, in Chicago, Illinois. 
[Florenz Edward Ziegfeld Jr. was an American Broadway impresario, notable for his series of theatrical revues, the Ziegfeld Follies (1907โ€“1931), inspired by the Folies Bergรจre of Paris. He also produced the musical Show Boat. He was known as the 'glorifier of the American girl.' Ziegfeld is a member of the American Theater Hall of Fame. He died on July 22nd, 1932.]
1871 - Journalist Henry Morton Stanley began his famous expedition into Africa to find the missing British explorer and missionary, Dr. David Livingstone.
1872 - Yellowstone National Park becomes the world's first national park.
[Yellowstone was established as the first national park in the United States and the world on March 1st, 1872.]
1879 - The Library of Hawaii is founded.
[This is incorrect. While the roots of the Library of Hawaii go back to the Honolulu Library and Reading Room Association founded in 1879, the Library of Hawaii itself was officially established in 1909.]
1909 - The first university school of nursing is established in Minnesota.
[The University of Minnesota School of Nursing was established in 1909 and is considered the first university-affiliated nursing program.]
1918 - During World War I, the German army launch a major offensive on the Western Front, known as the Second Battle of the Somme or the 'Michael Offensive.'
[This was their first large-scale attack in two years, aiming to break through Allied lines.]
1925 - The Butler Act is enacted in Tennessee, prohibiting the teaching of human evolution in public schools.
1935 - The Shah of Iran, Reza Shah Pahlavi, formally requested that the international community refer to Persia by its native name, Iran.
1937 - The first permanent license plates for an automobile are issued in Connecticut.
[This is incorrect. While states started issuing license plates earlier, the move towards permanent plates happened later and wasn't specifically in Connecticut in 1937.]
1940 - Solomon Vincent McDonald Burke, American singer-songwriter, is born [James Solomon McDonald] on March 21st, 1940 [sometimes listed as 1936 or 1939. On his headstone, his birth year is 1940); in the upper floor of his grandmother Eleanor Moore's home, a row house in West Philadelphia.
[Solomon Burke died on October 10th, 2010. He was an American singer who shaped the sound of rhythm and blues as one of the founding fathers of soul music in the 1960s. He's been called 'a key transitional figure bridging R&B and soul,' and was known for his 'prodigious output.']
1943 - A plot by German Army officers to assassinate Adolf Hitler using a suicide bomb fails.
1945 - Towards the end of World War II, British troops liberate Mandalay, Burma.
1946 - Timothy Leonard Dalton Leggett, British actor, is born on March 21st, 1946, in Colwyn Bay, Wales.
[Timothy Leonard Dalton Leggett is a British actor who became internationally famous for his portrayal of James Bond in the 1987 and 1989 films 'The Living Daylights' and 'Licence to Kill.' He also voiced Mr. Pricklepants in Toy Story 3.] 
1958 - Gary Leonard Oldman, English-British actor, is born on March 21st, 1958, in New Cross, London.
[Gary Oldman, English actor and filmmaker, is known for his versatility and intense acting style, he has received various accolades, including an Academy Award, a Golden Globe Award, three British Academy Film Awards, and nominations for two Primetime Emmy Awards. His films have grossed over $11 billion worldwide, making him one of the highest-grossing actors of all time.] 
1960 - The Sharpeville massacre occurs in South Africa. Police opens fire on a group of unarmed Black South African demonstrators protesting against apartheid pass laws, killing 69 people.
1962 - Matthew Broderick, American actor, is born on March 21st, 1962, in Manhattan/New York City, New York.
1962 - Rosie O'Donnell, American comedian, actress, and television personality, was born on March 21st, 1962, in Commack, New York.
1963 - Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary, a notorious prison located on an island in San Francisco Bay, closes its doors after nearly three decades of housing some of America's most dangerous criminals.
1965 - Civil rights demonstrators, led by Reverend Martin Luther King Jr., begin their third and ultimately successful march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, under the protection of U.S. Army and National Guard troops.
1970 - The first Earth Day proclamation is issued by Joseph Alioto, the Mayor of San Francisco.
1980 - U.S. President Jimmy Carter announces that the United States would boycott the 1980 Summer Olympics held in Moscow to protest the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan.  
1990 - Namibia gains independence from South Africa after 75 years of rule.
1998 - The Titanic film grosses over $1 billion worldwide.
[Titanic was released in 1997 and became the first film to gross over $1 billion worldwide in 1998.]
1999 - Bertrand Piccard and Brian Jones become the first people to circumnavigate the Earth in a hot air balloon.
2006 - Jack Dorsey sends the first public message on a new social media platform called Twitter, writing 'just setting up my twttr.'

 


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 19th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 19 | Birthdays & Events]

[+ Other Generic AI Search Results]

 

1649 - The Long Parliament of England abolishes the House of Lords.  
1815 - Napoleon enters Paris after escaping exile on Elba, beginning his 'Hundred Days' rule.
1918 - Congress approves daylight saving time.
[The United States Congress establishes time zones and approves daylight saving time; The Standard Time Act of 1918 introduced daylight saving time to the United States.]
1920 - The U.S. Senate rejects the Treaty of Versailles.
[The U.S. Senate rejected the Treaty of Versailles in November 1919, with the final vote failing to reach the necessary two-thirds majority in March 1920.]
1931 - Nevada makes gambling legal.
[Nevada legalized wide-open gambling in 1931.]
1932 - The Sydney Harbour Bridge in Australia is officially opened.
1945 - World War II: Adolf Hitler issues the "Nero Decree," ordering the destruction of all German infrastructure as Allied forces advance.
1942 - President FDR orders all men between ages 45 and 64 to register for non-military duty.
[Inaccurate. President Roosevelt issued an executive order in 1942 requiring men aged 20 to 44 to register for potential non-military service.]
1942 - The Thoroughbred Racing Association is formed in the U.S.
[The Thoroughbred Racing Association of America was formed in 1942.]
2003 - President George W. Bush announces the invasion of Iraq.
[The United States and its allies begin the invasion of Iraq.]
2011 - The United Nations Security Council authorizes military intervention in Libya to protect civilians from Muammar Gaddafi's forces.

 

Other Observances:

 

National Let's Laugh Day
National Backyard Day

 


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 18th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 18 | Birthdays & Events]

[+ Other Generic AI Search Results]

 

1813 - David Melville patents an apparatus for making coal gas.
[This is generally considered accurate. David Melville did innovate in gas lighting, and while his patents were spread over time, he was indeed working on and patenting apparatuses related to coal gas around this period.]
1818 - Congress approves the first pensions for government service.
[Congress did pass legislation in 1818 providing pensions for Revolutionary War veterans.]
1834 - The first railroad tunnel is completed in Pennsylvania.
[The Allegheny Portage Railroad, which included tunnels, was completed around this time. The Staple Bend Tunnel is often cited as the first railroad tunnel in the U.S.]
1850 - American Express is founded.
1870 - California opens the first National Wildlife Preserve.
[This is generally accurate. Lake Merritt Wildlife Refuge in Oakland, California, established in 1870, is considered one of the earliest, if not the first, wildlife refuges in the United States.]
1892 - Lord Stanley of Preston pledges to donate a challenge cup [the Stanley Cup] for the best ice hockey team in Canada.
1911 - North Dakota enacts a hail insurance law.
[North Dakota was indeed a pioneer in hail insurance legislation.]
1938 - New York becomes the first state to require serological blood tests of pregnant women.
[New York State did enact legislation in 1938 mandating blood tests for syphilis in pregnant women.]
1942 - The War Relocation Authority is established in the U.S. to take Japanese Americans into custody.
[President Roosevelt established the War Relocation Authority (WRA) by Executive Order 9102, which was responsible for the forced relocation and internment of Japanese Americans.]
1952 - The first plastic lens for cataract treatment is fitted in patients.
[Sir Harold Ridley is credited with pioneering intraocular lens implants, and by 1952, he was implanting plastic lenses in cataract patients.]
1959 - The Hawaii Admission Act is signed into law to allow Hawaii to join the Union.
[President Eisenhower signed the Hawaii Admission Act on March 18, 1959, and Hawaii officially became a state on August 21, 1959.]
1962 - The ร‰vian Accords are signed, ending the Algerian War.
1965 - Russian cosmonaut Alexei Leonov becomes the first person to perform a spacewalk.

1990 - East Germany holds its first and only free parliamentary elections.

 

Other Observances:

 

National Biodiesel Day
National Sloppy Joe Day
National Awkward Moments Day
National Agriculture Day  [changes annually]
National Supreme Sacrifice Day

 


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 16th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 16 | Birthdays & Events]

[+ Other Generic AI Search Results]

 

44 BC - While March 15th is famously known as the 'Ides of March,' and the date of Julius Caesar's assassination, it's worth noting the immediate aftermath and the political turmoil that followed would have been significant on March 16th.
37 AD - Death of the Roman Emperor Tiberius; Caligula is proclaimed emperor.  
455 - Emperor Valentinian III is assassinated in the Campus Martius in Rome.
597 - Pope Gregory I (the Great) begins his pontificate.
1190 - Massacre of Jews in York, England.  
1521 - Ferdinand Magellan reaches the Philippines.
1527 - The Emperor Babur defeats the Rajputs at the Battle of Khanwa, establishing Mughal dominance in Northern India.
1660 - The Long Parliament is dissolved in England, paving the way for the Restoration.  
1792 - King Gustav III of Sweden is shot and mortally wounded at a masked ball in Stockholm.
1802 - The United States Military Academy (West Point) is established by an Act of Congress, signed into law by President Thomas Jefferson.
1802 - The Library of Congress is formally established.
1815 - Prince Willem Frederick of Orange proclaims himself Sovereign Prince of the United Netherlands.
1850 - Nathaniel Hawthorne's classic novel, The Scarlet Letter, is published.
1861 - Edward Clark becomes Governor of Texas, replacing Sam Houston who refused to take an oath of allegiance to the Confederacy.
1915 - The First Battle of Champagne begins during World War I.
1916 - The U.S. launches punitive expeditions into Mexico against Pancho Villa.
1918 - Estonia declares independence from Russia.
1924 - The Rome Treaty annexes Fiume to Italy.
1926 - Robert Goddard launches the first liquid-fueled rocket, a significant step in rocketry and space exploration.
1926 - The film 'Ben-Hur' premieres in New York City.
1931 - The Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film 'Trader Horn' is released.
1933 - The first concentration camp in Nazi Germany, Dachau, opens.
1935: Adolf Hitler breaks the military terms of the Treaty of Versailles by ordering the rearming of Germany and resuming military conscription.  
1939 - Germany occupies the rest of Czechoslovakia.
1945 - The Battle of Iwo Jima ends with an American victory.
1950 - The Soviet Union announces that it has the atomic bomb.
1960 - Alfred Hitchcock's iconic suspense film, 'Psycho,' premieres in the United States.
1961 - The British Commonwealth of Nations admits Cyprus as a member.
1968: The My Lai Massacre occurs in Vietnam.  
[The My Lai Massacre occurred during the Vietnam War, where U.S. Army soldiers killed hundreds of unarmed Vietnamese civilians.]
1978 - Super Tuesday in the United States sees Jimmy Carter win several key primaries.
1978 - Aldo Moro, former Prime Minister of Italy, is kidnapped by the Red Brigades.
1984 - William Buckley, the CIA station chief in Beirut, is kidnapped by Hezbollah militants.
1985 - Associated Press correspondent Terry Anderson is kidnapped in Beirut, where he would be held hostage for nearly seven years.
1988 - A poison gas attack kills thousands of civilians in the Kurdish town of Halabja, Iraq, likely ordered by Saddam Hussein.
2003 - Rachel Corrie, an American activist, is killed by an Israeli Defense Forces bulldozer in Rafah, Gaza Strip.
2005 - The World Health Organization confirms the first human cases of bird flu in Vietnam.
2014 - The Crimean status referendum takes place.
2016 - President Barack Obama nominates Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court following the death of Antonin Scalia.

 

In addition:

 

It's  'National Panda Day!'  โœจ ๐Ÿผ โœจ   >>> Aww. <<<

 


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 15th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 15 | Birthdays & Events]

[+ Generic AI Search Results]/[Other sources: WIKI, and Days of the Year.]

 

44 BC - Julius Caesar, the Roman dictator, is assassinated by a group of senators on the Ides of March.
933 - Henry the Fowler, the German King, defeats a Hungarian army at the Battle of Riade.
1493 - Christopher Columbus returns to Spain after his first voyage to the New World.
1820 - Maine is admitted as the twenty-third U.S. state.
1892 - New York unveils the automatic voting machine.
[While there were earlier patents, the voting machine widely attributed as the first successful automatic one was used in Lockport, New York, in 1892.]
1917 - Tsar Nicholas II of Russia abdicates the throne, marking the end of the Romanov dynasty.
[This event is a pivotal moment in history as it marked the end of the Romanov dynasty, which had ruled Russia for over 300 years, and paved the way for the Russian Revolution and the rise of the Soviet Union.]
1937 - The first blood bank opens in Chicago.
[The first blood bank in the United States opened at Cook County Hospital in Chicago in March 1937.]
1939 - Germany occupied Czechoslovakia.
1965 - T.G.I. Friday's opens their first restaurant in N.Y.
[The first T.G.I. Friday's restaurant opened in Manhattan, New York City, in 1965.]
1965 - President Lyndon B. Johnson addresses a joint session of Congress, calling for legislation to guarantee voting rights, which led to the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
1972 - Francis Ford Coppola's film "The Godfather" premieres.
1985 - The first Internet domain (symbolics.com) is registered.
[Symbolics.com was the first domain name registered on March 15, 1985.]
1990 - Mikhail Gorbachev was elected as the first President of the Soviet Union.  
2011 - The Syrian Civil War began.
2012 - Former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich begins serving his prison sentence for corruption.
2018 - A pedestrian bridge under construction in Miami collapses, killing six people.
2019 - A gunman kills 51 people at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand.

 

Here are some other events, holidays, and observances associated with March 15th:

 

National Quilting Day (Third Saturday in March)
National Shoe The World Day
Everything You Think is Wrong Day
National Pears Helene Day

National Kansas Day

Brutus Day
Buzzards Day
Dumbstruck Day
Ides of March
International Day Against Police Brutality  
International Day of Action Against Canadian Seal Slaughter
International Day to Combat Islamophobia  
International Eat an Animal for PETA Day
International Sports Car Racing Day (Third Saturday in March)  
Maple Syrup Saturday (Third Saturday of March)
National Corndog Day (Third Saturday of March)
National Peanut Lovers Day
National VO Day
Play the Recorder Day (Third Saturday of March)
Save the Panther Day (Third Saturday in March)
True Confessions Day
World Consumer Rights Day
World Contact Day
World Essential Workers Day  
World Speech Day
Worldwide Quilting Day (Third Saturday in March)
  
Weekly Holidays that include March 15th:

 

Brain Awareness Week (March 10-16, 2025)
Campfire USA Birthday Week (March 9-15, 2025)
Down's Syndrome Awareness Week (March 15-21, 2025)
Endometriosis Awareness Week (March 4-19, 2025)
Fairtrade Fortnight (March 3-16, 2025)
Girl Scout Week (March 9-15, 2025)
International Brain Awareness Week (March 10-16, 2025)  
Lent (Begins on Ash Wednesday - March 5 - April 17, 2025)
Make Mine Chocolate (Campaign kicks off annually on Feb 15, and ends on Easter which is April 20, 2025)
MS Awareness Week (March 9-15, 2025)  
National Bubble Gum Week (March 9-15, 2025)
National Green Week (February 4 - April 30, 2025)
National Older Workers Employment Week (March 9-15, 2025)
National Pulmonary Rehabilitation Week (March 9-15, 2025)
National Sleep Awareness Week (March 9-15, 2025)
Nutrition and Hydration Week (United Kingdom) (March 10-16, 2025)
Orthodox Lent (Begins on Ash Wednesday - March 3, 2025 - April 19, 2025)
Patient Safety Awareness Week (March 9-15, 2025)
Ramadan (Evening of February 28, 2025 - Evening of March 30, 2025)

 


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 14th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 14 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1794 - Eli Whitney is granted a patent for the cotton gin.
1900 - The Gold Standard Act is passed by the U.S. Congress, placing the United States currency on the gold standard.
1903 - President Roosevelt establishes the first wildlife refuge.

[Pelican Island National Wildlife Refuge.]
1923 - President Warren G. Harding becomes the first U.S. President to file and pay income taxes.
1939 - Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli is elected Pope Pius XII.
1942 - The U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary is established.
1942 - Anne Miller becomes the first patient to be treated with penicillin in the U.S.
[Incorrect. Stating Anne Miller was the first patient is not definitively accurate and often sources point to earlier uses on men. However, on March 14, 1942, doctors in Connecticut administered penicillin (antibiotic) to a woman named Anne Miller, who was deathly ill with streptococcal septicemia. She made a full recovery, and became the first patient cured with penicillin.]
1950 - The FBI's "Ten Most Wanted Fugitives" list is created.
2019 - Emma Haruka Iwao, a Google employee, breaks the world record for calculating pi to 31.4 trillion digits using Google Cloud on Pi Day.

 

Other [Recurring] Observances:

 

โœจ   National Learn About Butterflies Day

โœจ   National Write Your Story Day

โœจ   National Potato Chip Day

โœจ   National Children's Craft Day

 


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 13th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 13 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1781 - Discovery of Uranus: Astronomer William Herschel discovered the planet Uranus.
[This is a major event in the history of astronomy.]
1862 - The Prohibiting the Return of Slaves Act is passed by Congress, setting the stage for the Emancipation Proclamation.
[The 'Act Prohibiting the Return of Slaves' was indeed passed in 1862. It was a significant step towards the Emancipation Proclamation, as it prevented Union forces from returning escaped slaves to their owners.]
1897 - San Diego State University is founded.
[San Diego State University was founded in 1897 as the San Diego Normal School.]
1942 - Julia Flikke becomes first woman colonel in U.S. army.
[Julia C. Flikke was the first woman to be a colonel in the U.S. Army.]
1970 - The Digital Equipment Corp introduces the PDP-11 minicomputer.
[The PDP-11 was a very influential minicomputer.]
2013 - Election of Pope Francis: Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Argentina was elected Pope, taking the name Francis.
[This was a historically significant election, as he's the first pope from the Americas.]
2023 - Vinyl records outsell CDs for the first time since 1987 in the U.S.
[Vinyl record sales have seen a resurgence, and in 2023, they did indeed outsell CDs in the U.S.]


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 12th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 12 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1664 - New Jersey becomes an English colony.
[In 1664, the English took control of the area that is now New Jersey from the Dutch.]
1755 - The first steam engine is installed to pump water from a mine.
[This is generally accurate. Steam engines were indeed used for this purpose in that era. However pinpointing "the first" is very difficult. Early steam engines development was a progressing process. But it is true that in the middle 1700's they were being used to pump water from mines.]
1884 - Mississippi establishes the first state college for women.
[Mississippi established the Industrial Institute and College (now Mississippi University for Women) in 1884. It is recognized as the first state-supported college for women in the United States.]
1894 - Coca-Cola is sold in bottles for the first time.
[1894 was the year Coca-Cola began to be bottled and sold.]
1904 - Andrew Carnegie establishes Carnegie Hero Fund.
[The Carnegie Hero Fund was established by Andrew Carnegie in 1904.]
1912 - The Girl Guides (later renamed the Girl Scouts) is founded.
[Juliette Gordon Low founded the Girl Scouts (originally Girl Guides) in the United States in 1912.]
1945 - New York becomes the first state to prohibit discrimination by race and creed in employment.
[New York did pass legislation in 1945 prohibiting discrimination in employment.]
1970 - The voting age in the U.S. is lowered from 21 to 18.
[The 26th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, ratified in 1971, lowered the voting age to 18. However, congress did pass legislation in 1970 that lowered the voting age in federal elections. So 1970 is the start of the change.]

 

Other Notable Occurrences:

 

โœจ   National Girl Scout Day

 


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 9th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 9 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1776 - Adam Smith publishes The Wealth of Nations.
['An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations' was indeed published in 1776.]
1842 - Gold in California is documented for the first time.
[While the most famous gold discovery that sparked the California Gold Rush happened in 1848, there were earlier documented findings. So, it is correct that gold was documented before 1848. There were discoveries prior to the more famous one.]
1858 - Albert Potts receives the patent for the street mailbox.
[This is generally accurate. Street mailboxes began to be patented and put into use around this time. So that date is within the correct time frame.]
1931 - The electron microscope is invented by German physicist Ernst Ruska.
1933 - President Roosevelt submits the Emergency Banking Act.
[President Franklin D. Roosevelt did submit the Emergency Banking Act in 1933, during the Great Depression.]
1959 - The Barbie doll makes its debut.
[Barbie debuted at the American Toy Fair in New York City on March 9, 1959.]
1961 - The Soviet Union launches Sputnik 9, carrying a dog and a human dummy, paving the way for human spaceflight.
1986 - NASA announces searchers found the remains of Challenger astronauts.
[The Space Shuttle Challenger disaster occurred in January 1986, and the recovery of the crews' remains took place in the following months.]
2011 - Space Shuttle Discovery completes its final mission, landing at Kennedy Space Center.

 

Other Notable Occurrences:

 

Daylight Saving Time Begins  [second Sunday in March]

 

National Observances:

 

โœจ   National Meatball Day

โœจ   National Get Over It Day

โœจ   National Crab Meat Day

โœจ   National Barbie Day

โœจ   National I AM Day  [second Sunday in March]

 


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 8th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 8 | Birthdays & Events]

 

๐Ÿ’ช๐Ÿป๐Ÿ’œ๐Ÿ’ช๐Ÿป  International Women's Day:  This is a global day celebrating the social, economic, cultural, and political achievements of women. It also marks a call to action for accelerating gender parity.

 

1817 - The New York Stock Exchange is founded.
[While the roots of the NYSE go back to the 1792 Buttonwood Agreement, the organization was formally constituted as the 'New York Stock & Exchange Board.' It became the New York Stock Exchange in 1863. Therefore the answer here is a little bit misleading. So I would not say it is completely accurate.]
1884 - Susan B. Anthony addresses the House Judiciary Committee advocating for a woman's right to vote.
[This is generally accurate. Susan B. Anthony was a tireless advocate for women's suffrage, and she did address congressional committees on multiple occasions.]
1910 - Raymonde de Laroche becomes the first woman to receive a pilot's license.
1934 - Edwin Hubble shares a photo galaxies larger than the amount of stars found in the Milky Way.
[Edwin hubble made many contributions to the science of Cosmology. One of those contributions, was his discovery of Galaxies outside of our own. That the universe was bigger than previously thought. The statement is accurate in that Edwin Hubble expanded our knowledge of galaxies and the scale of the universe.]
1945 - The first International Women's Day is observed around the world.
[This is inaccurate. International Women's Day has a complex history, with its roots in socialist movements of the early 20th century. While it gained widespread recognition in the mid-20th century, it was not 'first observed around the world' in 1945. It's origins stem from the early 1900's.]
1965 - The first U.S. combat forces arrive in Vietnam.
[This is generally accurate. While there were U.S. military advisors in Vietnam prior to 1965, the deployment of significant combat forces escalated in that year.]
1971 - In the 'Fight of the Century,' Joe Frazier defeats Muhammad Ali.
1978 - The first episode of the radio comedy 'The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy' is broadcast.

 

Other Observances:

 

โœจ   National Oregon Day

โœจ   National Proofreading Day

โœจ   National Peanut Cluster Day


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 7th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 7 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1778 - Captain James Cook sees the Oregon coast for the first time.
[Captain James Cook did indeed sight the Oregon coast in 1778. Specifically, on March 7, 1778, he made landfall and named Cape Foulweather.]
1801 - Massachusetts enacts first voter registration law.
[Massachusetts was a very early state to implement voter registration laws.]
1876 - Alexander Graham Bell is granted a patent for his telephone.
1929 - The first nonstop flight from America to Asia across the Bering Strait is made by Noel Wien and Calvin Cripe.
1945 - The 9th Armoured Division attacks Remagen Germany and crosses Rhine.
[The capture of the Ludendorff Bridge at Remagen by the 9th Armored Division in March 1945 was a significant event in World War II.]
1965 - 'Bloody Sunday' in Selma, Alabama, where police violently attack civil rights marchers.  
1971 - A speech by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman helps spark the Bangladesh War of Independence.


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 6th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 6 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1646 - Joseph Jenckes receives the first patent for making scythes (hand held crop cutters).
[This is largely accurate. Joseph Jenckes did receive the first machine patent in North America in 1646. This patent covered a water-driven machine for making scythes, sawmill saw blades, and other edged tools. He also later did get a patent for an improved scythe in 1655. So he was very involved in scythe development.]
1808 - The first college orchestra is founded at Harvard.
[This is generally accepted. Harvard is credited with having the first college orchestra.]
1831 - Edgar Allan Poe is court-martialed and dismissed from West Point for gross neglect of duty and disobedience of orders.
[Edgar Allan Poe's time at West Point ended with a court-martial and dismissal.]
1836 - The Battle of the Alamo: The Alamo in San Antonio, Texas, fell to Mexican forces after a 13-day siege. This pivotal event in the Texas Revolution resulted in the deaths of numerous Texan defenders, including Davy Crockett.
1857 - Dred Scott Decision: The U.S. Supreme Court issued the Dred Scott v. Sandford decision, ruling that enslaved people were not citizens and that Congress could not prohibit slavery in territories. This decision significantly deepened the divide leading to the Civil War.
1869 - Mendeleev's Periodic Table: Dmitri Mendeleev presented his first version of the periodic table of elements to the Russian Chemical Society.
1886 - The Nightingale become the first nurses' magazine to be printed in the U.S.
[It is difficult to verify that it was the absolute first. But there where nursing journals that where being published around this time. So while it may not be able to be confirmed as the absolute first, there where nursing publications being produced.]
1933 - First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt becomes to first First Lady to hold a press conference.
[Eleanor Roosevelt did pioneer the practice of First Ladies holding regular press conferences.]
1944 - The U.S. Army Air Forces begins bombing Berlin in the daylight.
[The U.S. Army Air Forces conducted daylight bombing raids on Berlin.]
1957 - Ghana Independence: Ghana gained its independence from British colonial rule, becoming the first sub-Saharan African nation to do so.
1967 - Stalin's Daughter Defection: Joseph Stalin's daughter, Svetlana Alliluyeva, defected to the West, causing an international sensation.

 

Recurring Observances:

 

โœจ   National Oreo Cookie Day

โœจ   National Dress Day

โœจ   National Dentist's Day

โœจ   National Frozen Food Day

 


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 5th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 5 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1770 - The Boston Massacre: This pivotal event in the lead-up to the American Revolution occurred, where British troops fired on a crowd, killing five.  
1836 - The first pistol (36-caliber "Texas" model) is manufactured.
[This is largely accurate. It refers to the Colt Paterson revolver. Samuel Colt patented his design in 1836, and it was produced in Paterson, New Jersey. The .36 caliber 'Texas' model became particularly well-known, especially due to its use by the Texas Rangers.]
1836 - The Alamo: During the Texas Revolution, the Alamo fell to Mexican forces after a 13-day siege.
1849 - Zachary Taylor becomes the 12th President of the U.S.
[Zachary Taylor was sworn in as the 12th President of the United States.]
1933 - President Roosevelt proclaims a 10-day bank holiday to restore confidence in the U.S. caused by the Great Depression.
[In 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared a 'bank holiday' shortly after taking office, as a crucial part of his response to the Great Depression.]
1935 - The first premature baby health law is enacted in Illinois.
1953 - Death of Joseph Stalin: The Soviet Union's longtime leader, Joseph Stalin, died on this day.
1960 - Che Guevara Photograph: Alberto Korda took his iconic photograph of Che Guevara, Guerrillero Heroico.
1963 - Country music stars Patsy Cline, Hawkshaw Hawkins, Cowboy Copas and their pilot Randy Hughes are killed in a plane crash.
[A tragic plane crash that took the lives of these country music legends.]

 

Recurring Observances:

 

Ash Wednesday: In 2025 March 5th is Ash Wednesday, which marks the beginning of lent.
National Cheese Doodle Day: A day to celebrate the popular cheesy snack.
National Absinthe Day: A day to recognize the historic liquor.
National Multiple Personality Day: A day to bring awareness to Dissociative identity disorder.


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 4th:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 4 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1789 - The first Congress meets to put the Constitution into effect.
[The First Congress of the United States convened in 1789. This was a crucial step in establishing the new government under the Constitution.]
1791 - Vermont becomes the 14th state to join the Union.
[Vermont joined the United States in 1791.]
1801 - Thomas Jefferson becomes the first President to be inaugurated in Washington, D.C.
1809 - James Madison becomes first President to be inaugurated in American-made clothes.
1841 - President Harrison delivers the longest Presidential Inauguration Speech with 8,443 words.
[William Henry Harrison's 1841 inaugural address is indeed the longest on record.]
1901 - President McKinley is inaugurated as President for the second time.
[William McKinley was inaugurated for his second term in 1901.]
1913 - The Congress forms the Department of Labor.
[The Department of Labor was established in 1913.]
1913 - The first law regulating the shooting of migratory birds is passed.
[The Weeks-McLean Act was passed in 1913, which was the first federal law that regulated the shooting of migratory birds.]
1929 - Republican Charles Curtis becomes the first Native American to be VP of the U.S.
[Charles Curtis, who had Kaw Native American ancestry, became Vice President in 1929.]
1933 - Franklin D. Roosevelt becomes the 32nd President.
1944 - The U.S. conducts their first bombing of Berlin.
[1944 was the year that the US conducted it's first bombing raids on Berlin.]
1957 - The S&P 500 stock market index is introduced.
1985 - The Food and Drug Administration approves a blood test for HIV infection.

 

It is also of note that due to the passing of the 20th amendment, Presidential inaugurations now take place on January 20th.
___________________________________________________________
There are many 'National Days' that take place on March 4th.

 

These include, but are not limited to:

 

โœจ  National Grammar Day  
โœจ  National Pound Cake Day
โœจ  Paczki Day
โœจ  Fastnacht Day
โœจ  National Sons Day
โœจ  National Hug a G.I. Day
โœจ  Marching Music Day
โœจ  National Pancake Day - IHOP  [changes annually]
โœจ  Fat Tuesday


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 3rd:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 3 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1634 - The first tavern is opened in Boston, Massachusetts.
[This is generally considered accurate.]
1791- The first Internal Revenue Act is implemented taxing taxing distilled spirits & carriages.
[This act is famous for sparking the Whiskey Rebellion.]
1842 - The first child labor law regulating working hours is passed in Massachusetts.
[Massachusetts was indeed a pioneer in early child labor legislation.]
1845 - Florida becomes the 27th to join the Union.
[Florida becomes the 27th state of the United States.]
1849 - Congress establishes the U.S. Home Department (Department of the Interior).
1863 - The first wartime military draft bill is enacted.
[The Enrollment Act of 1863.]
1863 - The Idaho Territory is split from the Dakota, Nebraska, and Washington territories.
1871 - Congress changes Indian tribes status from independent to dependent.
[This is a simplification of a complex legal shift. In 1871, Congress passed the Indian Appropriations Act, which ended the practice of treating tribes as independent nations with whom the U.S. government made treaties. This effectively made them wards of the federal government. So, while it is a simplified statement, it is a generally accurate representation of the shift in federal policy. The 1871 Indian Appropriations Act is the one that changed the tribes status to wards of the federal government.]
1871 - The Civil Service system is established by Congress.
[The Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act was passed in 1883. While efforts towards civil service reform were ongoing, the formal system was established in 1883, not 1871.]
1873 - The U.S. Congress passes the Comstock Law, which prohibits the distribution of 'obscene' materials through the mail.
1879 - Belva Ann Bennett Lockwood becomes the first female lawyer heard by the Supreme Court.
1885 - AT&T becomes a company.
1885 - Congress passes Indian Appropriations Act making Indians wards of federal government.
[As explained above, The 1871 act is the main act that shifted the status of the tribes. the 1885 act did not change the tribes status to wards, that was already done, but continued appropriations and control of the tribes.]
1889 - President Harrison opens 1.9 million-acres of Indian Territory for settlement.
[This was the Oklahoma Land Run.]
1891 - The Shoshone National Forest becomes the first national forest in the world.
1891 - Congress creates the Office of Superintendent of Immigration (later to become the Treasury Department).
1891 - The Office of Immigration is opened by Congress.
[This is redundant to the previous point, but accurate.]
1899 - George Dewey becomes the first Admiral of the Navy.
1903 - NC becomes the first state to require the registration of nurses.
1905 - The Forest Service forms in the U.S.
1913 - The Woman's Suffrage Movement protests through Washington, D.C.
[This was a significant march. Thousands of women march in the Woman Suffrage Procession in Washington, D.C., advocating for voting rights.]
1915 - The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) is created, later becoming NASA.
1923 - Time Magazine is published for the first time.
[The first issue of Time magazine is published.]
1931 - 'The Star-Spangled Banner' is officially adopted as the national anthem of the United States.
1956 - Heartbreak Hotel (Elvis Presley) hits #1 on the Billboard Charts.
1991 - Footage of the beating of Rodney King by Los Angeles police officers is recorded, leading to widespread outrage.


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 2nd:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 2 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1807 - Congress passes the Act Prohibiting Importation of Slaves, making it illegal to import slaves into the U.S.
[The Act Prohibiting Importation of Slaves was passed in 1807, and it took effect on January 1, 1808. It made the importation of slaves into the United States illegal.]
1819 - Congress passes its first immigration law.
[The Immigration Act of 1819 was the first U.S. federal legislation designed to regulate immigration.]
1836 - Texas declares its independence from Mexico.
1866 - The first company in the U.S. begins making sewing needles by machine.
[To verify this level of very specific manufacturing history would require very deep dives into manufacturing history. However, the period of the mid to late 1800's was a period of rapid industrialization, and it is very believable that this type of manufacturing would have begun at this time.]
1867 - The Department of Education is created by Congress.
[This is mostly accurate. In 1867, Congress established the Department of Education. However, it was initially a department that gathered information, it did not have the same functions as the modern Department of Education.]
1867 - Congress passes the first Reconstruction Act to help determine how the southern states will reenter the Union.
[This is generally accurate. The Reconstruction Acts were a series of acts, with the first one being passed in 1867. These acts did set the conditions for the Southern states to re-enter the Union.]
1901 - The U.S. Congress passes the Platt Amendment, which limited the autonomy of Cuba.
1901 - The United States Steel Corporation is founded.
1925 - The U.S. begins marking and numbering roads across the country.
[The Federal Aid Highway Act of 1925 authorized the creation of a national numbering system for highways, which led to the marking and numbering of roads across the U.S.]
1933 - The film 'King Kong' premieres in New York City.
1939 - Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli is elected Pope and took the name Pius XII.
1962 - In Burma, the army led by General Ne Win seizes power in a coup d'รฉtat.
1962 - Wilt Chamberlain scores 100 points in an NBA game, a record that still stands.
1965 - The US and Republic of Vietnam Air Force begin Operation Rolling Thunder, a sustained bombing campaign against North Vietnam.
1969 - The Anglo-French Concorde conducts its first test flight. 
1970 - Rhodesia declares itself a republic.
1972 - The Pioneer 10 space probe is launched.  
1983 - Compact discs and players are released in the United States.

 


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for February 28th:

[source: National Day Calendar -  February 28 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1787 - The charter establishing the the University of Pittsburgh is granted.
[This is largely accurate. The University of Pittsburgh was founded as the Pittsburgh Academy in 1787. So, the charter for the beginning of what is now the University of Pittsburgh was granted in 1787. It is important to note that the name of the institution changed over time.]
1810 - The first fire insurance company is organized.
[To verify this would require a more specific location. There were many early fire insurance companies, and their founding dates vary depending on location. Therefore it is hard to say if that is a universal fact. More specific area information would be needed.]
1909 - The first National Woman's Day is observed in the U.S.
[This is generally correct. The first National Woman's Day in the United States was observed on February 28, 1909.]
1956 - Engineer Wright Forrester is issued a patent for computer core memory.
[It is more commonly known that Fredrick Forrester developed core memory. But looking into Wright Forrester, it is possible that he also had patents in that area. More research would be needed to fully verify this. Core memory development had many contributors.]
1977 - The first killer whale is born in captivity in California.
[This warrants some nuance. While killer whales had been born in captivity before, 1977 saw the birth of the first killer whale to survive in captivity at SeaWorld San Diego. So, the statement is generally accurate, but the detail of survival is important.]


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for March 1st:

[source: National Day Calendar - March 1 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1642 - Georgeana (York) in Maine becomes the first incorporated city in America.
[This is generally considered accurate. York, Maine, then known as Georgeana, holds the distinction of being the first incorporated city in what would become the United States.]
1692 - The Salem Witch Trials begin after Sarah Good, Sarah Osborne and Tituba are brought before local magistrates.
[This event marks the beginning of the infamous Salem Witch Trials.]
1785 - The Promotion of Agriculture is organized.
[This is a little vague. It is true that agricultural societies were being formed at this time. To be more precise, agricultural societies were beginning to form in the late 1700's to promote better farming practices. So the general idea is correct.]
1790 - The first U.S. census authorized.
[The first United States census is authorized.]
1803 - Ohio becomes 17th state to join the Union.
1864 - Dr. Rebecca Lee Crumpler becomes the first Black woman to receive a medical degree in the U.S.
1872 - Yellowstone National Park becomes the world's first national park.
[Yellowstone National Park is established as the world's first national park. Yellowstone's designation as a national park was a landmark event.]
1879 - The Library of Hawaii is founded.
1909 - The first university school of nursing is established in Minnesota.
[To make this more precise, the University of Minnesota School of Nursing was one of the earliest university-based nursing programs in the United States.]
1932 - The infant son of Charles Lindbergh is kidnapped.
1937 - The first permanent license plates for an automobile is issued in Connecticut.
[Connecticut did indeed pioneer the use of 'permanent' license plates in 1937. These plates used annual inserts to indicate the current registration year.]
1961 - President John F. Kennedy establishes the Peace Corps.
1974 - Watergate scandal: Seven are indicted for their role in the Watergate break-in and charged with conspiracy to obstruct justice.
1992 - Bosnia and Herzegovina declares its independence from Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
1998 - The Titanic film grosses over $1 billion worldwide.
[The film 'Titanic' becomes the first film to gross over $1 billion worldwide. James Cameron's 'Titanic' was a massive box office success. The film surpassed the $1 billion mark, in 1998.]


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for February 27th:

[source: National Day Calendar -  February 27 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1801 - Washington, D.C. is placed under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Congress after the District of Columbia Organic Act of 1801 is passed.
[The District of Columbia Organic Act of 1801 did indeed place the District of Columbia under the control of the U.S. Congress.]
1813 - The first federal vaccination legislation enacted.
[During this time period, there was legislation enacted regarding vaccinations.]
1827 - Mardi Gras is celebrated in New Orleans for the first time.
[While Mardi Gras traditions where present before this date, 1827 is the date of the first recorded street processions in New Orleans, Louisiana.]
1919 - The American Association for Hard of Hearing is formed in NYC.
[The organization that would become the Hearing Loss Association of America was indeed founded in New York City, in 1919.]
1933 - Reichstag Fire: Germany's parliament building, the Reichstag, is set on fire.
[This event in Germany, where the Reichstag building was set ablaze, was a pivotal moment in the rise of Nazi power. Adolf Hitler used the fire as a pretext to suppress civil liberties and consolidate his control, and used it as a pretext to suppress political opposition.]
1942 - Battle of the Java Sea: During World War II, this naval battle saw Imperial Japanese forces achieve a decisive victory over the Allies.
1951 - 22nd Amendment Ratified: The 22nd Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which limits a president to two terms in office, is ratified.
1972 - Nixon's Visit to China: President Richard Nixon and Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai issues the Shanghai Communiquรฉ, marking a significant step towards normalizing relations between the United States and China.
1973 - American Indian Movement occupies Wounded Knee.
1991 - Gulf War: U.S. President George H.W. Bush announces that 'Kuwait is liberated.'
[U.S. President George H.W. Bush announces the liberation of Kuwait and the end of the Gulf War.]
2010 - Chile Earthquake: A powerful 8.8 magnitude earthquake struck central Chile, causing widespread damage and triggering a tsunami.
2019 - The House of Representatives passes a new law requiring federal background checks before purchasing a firearm.
[This is generally accurate. In February 2019, the U.S. House of Representatives did pass H.R. 8, the Bipartisan Background Checks Act of 2019, which aimed to expand federal background check requirements for firearm purchases.]


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


Made of flesh and bone, not chips and blips.
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Notable Events for February 26th:

[source: National Day Calendar -  February 26 | Birthdays & Events]

 

747 BC - According to Ptolemy, the epoch (origin) of the Nabonassar Era began at noon on this date. This is significant for historical chronology.
1815 - Napoleon Bonaparte escapes from exile on the island of Elba, leading to his 'Hundred Days' return.
1848 - The 'Communist Manifesto' by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels is published.
1909 - The first public demonstration of Kinemacolor, an early color motion picture process, takes place in London.
1914 - The New York Museum of Science & Industry is created.
[It's important to note that this museum had a history and evolved over time.]
1914 - The launch of the HMHS Britannic at the Harland and Wolff shipyards in Belfast.
[This was the sister ship to the RMS Titanic.]
1919 - The Grand Canyon National Park is created after President Wilson signs the Act from Congress.
[President Woodrow Wilson did sign the act establishing Grand Canyon National Park on February 26, 1919.]
1930 - The first red and green traffic lights are installed in NYC.
[While traffic lights were evolving during that period, it would be difficult to say those where the absolute first. But traffic light technology was advancing in that time period.]
1936 - The February 26 Incident in Japan: a failed coup d'รฉtat attempt by young military officers.
1954 - The first photo engraving is used in Massachusetts.
[This type of very specific local event is hard to generally verify. There is a lot of photogravure history that is complicated, so this could be correct, at a local level.]
1973 - Secretariat wins the Triple Crown.
[Secretariat did not win the triple crown on February 26th. The Triple Crown races take place in May and June. Secretariat won the triple crown in 1973, but those races occurred in the spring.]
1975 - The first televised kidney transplant is aired on the Today Show (NBC).
[It appears that the statement regarding the first televised kidney transplant airing on the Today Show (NBC) in 1975 is generally accepted. However, it's important to understand the nuances of how 'televised' can be interpreted.]
1991 - Tim Berners-Lee introduces WorldWideWeb, the first web browser.
1993 - The World Trade Center bombing: a terrorist attack in New York City where a truck bomb explodes in the parking garage.  
2009 - Former Serbian president Milan Milutinovic was acquitted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia regarding war crimes during the Kosovo War.


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


Made of flesh and bone, not chips and blips.
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Notable Events for February 25th:

[source: National Day Calendar -  February 25 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1751 - The first performing monkey exhibit is held in NYC.
[Historical records indicate that in 1751, a performing monkey was exhibited in New York City, although it's difficult to verify the first performing monkey exhibit in NYC. It is known that in the 18th century, exotic animal exhibits were popular.]
1836 - Samuel Colt is granted a patent for his revolver firearm.
[Samuel Colt did indeed receive a patent for his revolver in 1836. This is a significant event in firearms history.]
1862 - The First Legal Tender Act 1862 passes putting the $1 bill into circulations.
[While the Legal Tender Act of 1862 did authorize the issuance of paper money, these were 'United States Notes,' which were different from the later standardized $1 bills we know today. So, the act did start paper money circulation, but not the modern $1 bill.]
1870 - Hiram Rhodes Revels (R-MS) becomes the first Black to sit in Congress.
[Hiram Rhodes Revels became the first African American to serve in the United States Congress. This was a landmark moment in American political history.]
1879 - Congress passed the first Timberland Protection Act.
[It is true that acts to protect timberlands were passed, and that this time period saw growing federal involvement in those protections. Information shows that there was many timber protection acts through the years, and that one very important date, 1871, is where there was a federal act that provided $5,000 for 'protection of timberlands.' Primarily this was intended for the protection of naval timber reservations.]
1901 - The U.S. Steel Corporation is organized under J. P. Morgan.
[U.S. Steel was indeed formed in 1901 through the efforts of J.P. Morgan. This marked the formation of a major industrial giant.]
1957- Buddy Holly and the Crickets record That'll Be the Day.
[Buddy Holly and the Crickets recorded 'That'll Be the Day' in 1957. This is a very important event in rock and roll history.]
1964 - Muhammad Ali becomes world heavyweight champion. At the time, he was still known as Cassius Clay, and he defeated Sonny Liston.
1986 - Corazon Aquino is sworn in as the 11th President of the Philippines. This followed the People Power Revolution, ending Ferdinand Marcos's rule.  
1991 - The Warsaw Pact is declared disbanded. This signaled the end of a major Cold War alliance.
1994 - Baruch Goldstein commits a mass shooting at the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron. This tragic event caused many deaths and injuries.

 


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


Made of flesh and bone, not chips and blips.
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Notable Events for February 24th:

[source: National Day Calendar -  February 24 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1582 - Pope Gregory XIII announces the Gregorian calendar. This calendar reform is the one used by most of the world today.
[Pope Gregory XIII did indeed introduce the Gregorian calendar in 1582. This calendar reform is the one used by most; The Gregorian calendar is the most widely accepted and used civil calendar in the world today. Here are some key points to add context: The Gregorian calendar was a reform of the Julian calendar, which had become inaccurate over time. The primary motivation for the reform was to correct the date of Easter. While widely used, it's important to note that some cultures and religions still use other calendars. It also took a long time for all countries to accept the Gregorian calendar.]
1803 - In the landmark case of Marbury v. Madison, the Supreme Court of the United States establishes the principle of judicial review.
[Marbury v. Madison (1803): This was a landmark Supreme Court case in the United States. In this case, Chief Justice John Marshall established the principle of judicial review. Judicial review is the power of the courts to declare laws unconstitutional. This decision significantly strengthened the role of the Supreme Court and the judicial branch in the U.S. government.]
1868 - The Mardi Gras parade becomes the first parade to use floats.
[It's important to clarify that the use of floats in Mardi Gras parades developed over time, and there are nuances to this. While 1857 saw the Krewe of Comus introduce organized parades with themed, horse-drawn floats in New Orleans, also Mobile Alabama had very early parades with floats. Also the Order of Myths in Mobile Alabama had parades with floats from 1868. So it is accurate that in 1868 that floats where being used.]
1920 - The Nazi Party (NSDAP) is founded by Adolf Hitler in Munich, Germany.
[To clarify the origins of the Nazi Party: The party's origins: The party began as the German Workers' Party (Deutsche Arbeiterpartei; DAP) in 1919. Adolf Hitler joined the DAP in 1919. In 1920, the DAP was renamed the National Socialist German Workers' Party (Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei; NSDAP), which is commonly known as the Nazi Party. Therefore the year 1920 is accurate for the changing of the name to the Nazi party.]
1938 - Du Pont begins production of nylon toothbrush bristles.
[This is generally accurate. DuPont did indeed introduce nylon bristles for toothbrushes in 1938, marking a significant advancement in toothbrush technology.]
1983 - A special commission of Congress condemns the Japanese American internment camps in the U.S.
[The Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians (CWRIC) released its report in 1983, which condemned the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II.]
2022 - Russia begins their full scale invasion of Ukraine.
[Specifically, on February 24, 2022, Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. This marked a major escalation of the Russo-Ukrainian War, which had begun in 2014.]

_________________________________________

Bit of a chinwag with Gemini, always a lark, isn't it?...

 

Blimey, Gemini! Just think, the old ducks still kicking who've seen all this lot unfold. Makes you feel a right proper spanner, doesn't it? Makes you realise you're just a tiny cog in the grand scheme, eh? Anyway, must dash, have a smashing evening, you! Cheerio!

 

'You're absolutely right. History, even relatively recent history, can feel very distant until you realize there are people who lived through those times. It's a powerful reminder of how quickly things change and how interconnected we are to the past.

 

Thinking about people who were alive in 1938, when nylon toothbrush bristles were invented, or even those who remember the 1983 condemnation of the Japanese American internment, brings those events to life. It makes history less like a list of dates and more like a collection of lived experiences.

 

And yes, it is humbling. It's a good reminder to appreciate the present and to learn from the past.

 

Thank you, and you have a lovely evening as well!'

 

The More You Know.gif


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


Made of flesh and bone, not chips and blips.
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Notable Events for February 23rd:

[source: National Day Calendar -  February 23 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1813 - The first raw cotton-to-cloth mill is opened in Massachusetts.
[This is largely accurate. The Boston Manufacturing Company, established in Waltham, Massachusetts, in 1813, was indeed a pioneering textile mill. It was the first integrated mill in the U.S., meaning it performed all stages of cotton cloth production under one roof.]
1821 - The first pharmacy college is opened (College of Apothecaries).
[To be more precise, the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, which later became the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science (now the University of the Sciences in Philadelphia), was founded in 1821. It is considered the first pharmacy college in the United States and it marked an important step in the professionalization of pharmacy.]
1861 - President-elect Lincoln secretly arrives in Washington, D.C., after thwarting an assassination plot.
[There was indeed a plot to assassinate Lincoln as he traveled to Washington, D.C., for his inauguration. He arrived in Washington secretly on February 23, 1861. The nation was on the brink of civil war, and threats against Lincoln's life were very real.]
1905 - The Rotary Club becomes the first service club in the world.
[The Rotary Club was founded in Chicago, Illinois, in 1905, and it is recognized as the world's first service club. The founding of the Rotary Club is a key moment in the history of service organizations.]
1910- The first radio contest held in Philadelphia.
[It is difficult to verify that this was the very first radio contest. But early radio contests where held around this time period. So it is within the correct time frame of early radio. The first radio contest held in Philadelphia is a great example of the early adoption of radio.]
1927 - President Coolidge signs a bill establishing the FCC (Federal Radio Commission).
[President Coolidge signed the Radio Act of 1927, which established the Federal Radio Commission (FRC), the predecessor to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). The creation of the Federal Radio Commission (FCC) was crucial for regulating the rapidly growing radio industry.]
1940 - Pinocchio is released by Walt Disney.
[Walt Disney's animated film 'Pinocchio' was released in 1940. A classic moment in cinematic history.]
1945 - A group of Marines reach the top of Mount Suribachi (Japan) and are photographed raising the American flag.
[The iconic flag-raising on Iwo Jima occurred in February 1945. The raising of the American flag on Iwo Jima is one of the most iconic images of World War II. It's important to remember the intense fighting that took place on Mount Suribachi.]
1947 - General Eisenhower opens a charity drive to raise $170 million to aid European Jews.
[It is well documented that after World War II, General Eisenhower was involved in aid to displaced persons, and that aid was given to jewish people. So while he was involved in aid, finding information that he specifically opened a 170 million dollar charity drive is difficult. More research would be needed to fully verify this. General Eisenhower's charity drive reflects the post-World War II efforts to aid those affected by the war, particularly Jewish survivors.]
1954 - A mass Polio immunization is conducted at an elementary school in Pennsylvania.
[This is generally accurate. The Salk polio vaccine was introduced in 1954, and mass immunization campaigns began that year. Pennsylvania, like other states, participated in these efforts. The mass polio immunization highlights the public health efforts of the mid-20th century.]
1980 - Speed skater Eric Heiden wins gold medals at one Winter Olympic Games.
[Eric Heiden won five gold medals in speed skating at the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York. Eric Heiden's achievements in speed skating at the Winter Olympics are legendary.]


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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Notable Events for February 22nd:

[source: National Day Calendar -  February 22 | Birthdays & Events]

 

1732 - George Washington is born, the first President of the United States.
[George Washington was born in Westmoreland County, Virginia. It's important to note that there's a slight complexity due to the calendar change. At the time of his birth, the Julian calendar was in use. When Britain and its colonies switched to the Gregorian calendar in 1752, his birthday was adjusted. However, we now recognize his birthday as February 22, 1732. He became the first President of the United States.]
1819 - Spain sells Florida to the U.S. for $5 million.
[This was the Adams-Onรญs Treaty.]
1856 - The Republican Party holds its first national convention.
[This was held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.]
1865 - Tennessee abolishes slavery.
[13th Amendment: Tennessee ratified the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in April 1865. This amendment formally abolished slavery. Emancipation During the Civil War: Tennessee's situation was somewhat unique during the Civil War. Because parts of Tennessee came under Union control earlier than many other confederate states, the process of emancipation happened in a more staggered way. Andrew Johnson, the military governor of Tennessee, played a significant role in this process. August 8th: August 8th is celebrated as 'Emancipation Day' in parts of Tennessee, commemorating the progress of emancipation during the war. Therefore, while it is accurate to say that slavery was abolished in Tennessee in 1865, it is important to understand that this was a process that unfolded over time. The ratification of the 13th amendment was the legal culmination of that process. In summary: Tennessee ratified the 13th Amendment in 1865, which abolished slavery. And, the process of emancipation in Tennessee began earlier during the Civil War.]
1876 - Johns Hopkins University opens its doors.
1879 - The first Woolworth's store opens in NY.
[It opened in Utica, New York.]
1889 - President Cleveland admits North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana and Washington as states.
[President Grover Cleveland signed the bill.]
1935 - Airplanes are permitted from flying over the White House for the first time.
[This statement does not accurately represent the history of presidential air travel and White House airspace. Here's a breakdown of relevant points: Early Presidential Flights: While Theodore Roosevelt flew in an airplane in 1910, Franklin D. Roosevelt was the first sitting president to fly in an airplane during his presidency. In 1943, Franklin D. Roosevelt flew in a Boeing 314 Clipper to the Casablanca Conference, marking a significant milestone. Presidential Aircraft:
The 'Sacred Cow' (Douglas VC-54C) was one of the first aircraft specifically modified for presidential use, and it was used by President Roosevelt and later by President Truman. White House Airspace: Regulations regarding airspace over the White House have evolved over time, especially with increased security concerns. It is difficult to pinpoint a single year like 1935 as the precise moment when all flights were first permitted. Instead the security of the airspace has increased over time. The use of airplanes by the presidents themselves increased greatly during the Franklin D. Roosevelt presidency, especially during world war II. This time period saw great increases in air travel in general. In summary, rather than a single year of permission, the use of aircraft by the president, and the regulation of the airspace above the white house has been an evolving process.]
1942 - President Roosevelt orders General Douglas MacArthur out of the Philippines.
[This was during World War II, as Japanese forces advanced.]
1980 - The 'Miracle on Ice' at the Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York, where the U.S. hockey team defeated the Soviet Union.
[This was the date of the historic ice hockey game at the Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York, where the United States team defeated the Soviet Union. This event is widely known as the 'Miracle on Ice.']
1986 - The peoples power revolution begins in the Philippines.
[From February 22-25, 1986, The People Power Revolution, also known as the EDSA Revolution, took place, over these four days. Therefore, February 22nd marks the beginning of the revolution, and lasted until the 25th. It was a series of popular demonstrations, primarily in Metro Manila. It resulted in the removal of Ferdinand Marcos from power, and the restoration of democracy.]
1997 - The Announcement that Dolly the sheep had been cloned.
[Dolly was born on July 5, 1996. The announcement of Dolly's successful cloning was made on February 22, 1997.]
2011 - A devastating earthquake strikes Christchurch, New Zealand, causing significant casualties.
[A magnitude 6.3 earthquake struck Christchurch, New Zealand. It caused widespread and severe damage to the city. Tragically, 185 people lost their lives. The earthquake resulted in significant damage to buildings and infrastructure. It also caused wide spread liquefaction of the ground, which caused even more damage. Although the magnitude was less than a prior quake in 2010, the shallowness of the quake, and it's location close to the city center, caused it to be far more destructive.]


โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘... โŒžWhat the GLITCH!โŒ ... โญ‘ เน‹เฃญ โญ‘(ใฃ อก อกยฐ - อก อกยฐ ฯ‚)


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