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1 |
- National Physical Education and Sport Week, May 1 – 7,
2009
- May Day
- Martha Canary, a.k.a.
Calamity Jane, was born. (1852)
- Kate Smith, singer, was born. (1907)
- Babe Ruth hit his first
Yankee home run. (1920)
- The Empire State Building opened in New York City. (1931)
- Hoover Dam (also known as
Boulder Dam) was completed. (1935)
- American spy plane shot down over Russia. (1960)
- Harper Lee received the
Pulitzer Prize for To Kill a Mockingbird. (1961)
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2 |
- Polish Flag Day
- Leonardo da Vinci, artist, inventor, and
scientist, died. (1519)
- Benjamin Spock was born
in New Haven, Connecticut. (1903)
- Jack Benny, radio (and
later television) personality, broadcast his first talk show on NBC.
(1932)
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3 |
- Be Kind to Animals Week,
May 3 - 9, 2009
- North American
Occupational Safety and Health Week May 3 – 9, 2009
- National Music Week, May
3 - 10, 2009
- World Press Freedom Day
- Niccolo Machiavelli, writer
(The Prince), was born. (1469)
- New Japanese constitution was
enacted, stripping Emperor Hirohito of all power. (1947)
- First successful heart transplant in the United
States was performed by Dr. Denton Cooley. (1968)
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4 |
- National Wildflower Week, May 4 - 10, 2009
- Melanoma
Monday (2009)
- Horace Mann, educator, was born.
(1796)
- Haymarket
Square Riot (1886)
- Bird
Day first observed. (1894)
- Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences was
formed. (1927)
- Ernest
Hemingway is awarded the Pulitzer Prize for The Old Man and the
Sea. (1953)
- Demonstrators at Kent State University were
shot by Ohio National Guard. (1970)
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5 |
- Teacher
Appreciation Day, May 5, 2009
- Mary Kies became the
first woman to be issued a U.S. patent (for her method of weaving
straw and silk). (1809)
- Cinco de Mayo celebration
originated in Mexico. (1862)
- Nellie Bly, U.S. reporter who beat Phileas
Fogg's fictional record of circling the globe in 80 days, was
born. (1864)
- Carnegie Hall opened in
New York City with Tchaikovsky as guest conductor. (1891)
- Astronaut Alan Shepard
became the first American in space. (1961)
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6 |
- National
Mental Health Counseling Week, May 6 – 12, 2009
- National
School Nurse Day, 2009
- France’s Eiffel Tower opened for the
Universal Exhibition in Paris. (1889)
- Hindenburg zeppelin disaster. (1937)
- Roger Bannister ran the
first sub-four-minute-mile. Though it was thought to be physically
impossible, 25-year-old Bannister broke the record. (1954)
- Martín
de Porres canonized by Pope John XXIII. (1962)
- Chunnel opened and linked
England to the European Continent under the English Channel.
(1994)
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7 |
- Pontiac’s Rebellion began, pitting Native American warriors under Chief Pontiac against
British troops. (1763)
- Ninth Symphony, by Beethoven, premiers in Vienna. (1824)
- Peter Illich Tchaikovsky,
composer, was born. (1840)
- George Eastman patented
the Kodak box camera. (1888)
- Lusitania was sunk by German submarine. 1198
lives were lost. (1915)
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8 |
- World Red
Cross Red Crescent Day
- Joan of Arc led French troops to Orleans.
(1429)
- Hernando de Soto, Spanish
conquistador, became the first white man to see and cross the
Mississippi River. (1541)
- A decimal system of measurement was requested by the French National Assembly, which asked that the
system be “stable and simple.” (1790)
- Harry S. Truman, 33rd president of the United
States, was born. (1884)
- Coca-Cola was first sold
by Dr. John S. Pemberton at Jacob's Pharmacy in Atlanta.
(1886)
- V-E Day (Victory in Europe) commemorated
the end of World War II. (1945)
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9 |
- Cornelia
de Lange Syndrome Awareness Day 2009
- Thomas
Blood attempts to steal the Crown Jewels of England. (1671)
- James Barrie, playwright
and author (Peter Pan), was born in Scotland.
(1860)
- Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show opened in
London. (1887)
- Mother's Day proclamation
was made by President Woodrow Wilson. (1914)
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10 |
- Food Allergy Awareness
Week 2009
- National Women's
Health Week 2009
- Reading is Fun
Week, May 10 - 16, 2009
- Mother’s Day celebrated.
(2009)
- Economic Panic of 1837 began the second worst depression in U.S. history.
- First Transcontinental Railroad was completed. (1869)
- Victoria
Woodhull becomes the first woman nominated for President of the
United States. (1872)
- Winston Churchill became
Prime Minister of Britain. (1940)
- Nelson
Mandela becomes the first black president of South Africa.
(1994)
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11 |
- Bike-to-Work Week, May 11 - 15, 2009
- National Etiquette Week, May 11
- 15, 2009
- National
Stuttering Awareness Week May 11 - 17, 2009
- Lt.
Charles Wilkes lands at Fort Nisqually in Puget Sound. (1841)
- Minnesota became the
32nd U.S. state. (1858)
- Irving
Berlin, American composer, born. (1888)
- Salvador Dali, surrealist
artist, was born in Catalonia, Spain. (1904)
- Siam changes its name to Thailand. (1949)
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12 |
- Florence Nightingale,
health activist and nurse, was born in Florence, Italy. (1820)
- Henry
Cabot Lodge, statesman and noted historian, born. (1850)
- Goofy, a.k.a. Dippy Dawg,
first appeared in “Mickey’s Revue” created by Walt
Disney. (1932)
- Douglas MacArthur delivers his famous "Duty, Honor,
Country" valedictory speech at West Point. (1962)
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13 |
- Sir Arthur Sullivan, English composer, best
known for his collaboration with W.S .Gilbert in light operas, was
born. (1842)
- Arlington National
Cemetery, once Arlington House, buried its first soldier, a
Confederate prisoner of war (1864)
- “Conservation as a National Duty” was
President Theodore Roosevelt’s opening address at the outset of
a three-day meeting billed as the Governors' Conference on the
Conservation of Natural Resources. (1908)
- Tiananmen Square became
the center of demonstrations and hunger strikes for thousands of
Chinese students. (1989)
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14 |
- National Transportation Week, May 14 - 20,
2009
- Jamestown, Virginia, was founded by 104
English settlers. (1607)
- Lewis and Clark set out
from St. Louis for the Pacific Coast. (1804)
- First female pages were
appointed to U.S. Senate. (1971)
- Skylab, America ’s first
space station, launched. (1973)
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15 |
- International Day of
Families
- Johannes Kepler, scientist, discovered
harmonics law, which explains principles of planetary motion.
(1618)
- The Seven Years War, a
conflict known in America as the French and Indian War, began.
(1756)
- Lyman Frank Baum, author of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, was born in Chittenango, New York.
(1856)
- Committee of Vigilance was
organized by residents of San Francisco to combat crime in the
rapidly growing town. (1856)
- Nylon stockings went on
sale for the first time in the United States in Wilmington, Delaware.
(1940)
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16 |
- National Safe Boating Week, May 16 - 22,
2009
- Armed Forces Day 2009
- Elizabeth Palmer Peabody,
educator who opened the first English-language kindergarten in the
United States, was born in Massachusetts. (1804)
- The nickel was authorized to replace the silver
half-dime. (1866)
- President Andrew Johnson escaped
impeachment by one vote. (1868)
- Mount
Everest scaled by first woman. (1975)
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17 |
- California Classified School Employee Week, May 17 – 23,
2009
- World Telecommunications Day 2009
- Kentucky Derby was first run.
(1875)
- Brown vs. Board of
Education ruling was released, stating that racial segregation in
public educational facilities was unconstitutional. (1954)
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18 |
- International
Museum Day
- Recreational
Water Illness Prevention Week May 18 – 24, 2009
- Abraham Lincoln was
nominated by the Republican National Convention for President.
(1860)
- Plessy v. Ferguson ruling was handed down, in which the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the
doctrine of “separate but equal.” (1896)
- Dracula,
a novel by author Bram Stoker is published. (1897)
- Grauman’s Chinese Theatre opened in
Hollywood, with 100,000 fans attending Cecil B. DeMille's The
King of Kings. (1927)
- Weather as a weapon of
war was banned, when more than 30 nations signed a United Nations
pact, pledging they would never attack each other by starting
man-made storms, earthquakes, or tidal waves. (1977)
- Mount St. Helens erupted in Washington
State, killing 57 people and devastating hundreds of square miles of
wilderness. (1980)
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19 |
- Click It or Ticket Campaign, May 18 - 31, 2009
- Phelan-McDermid Syndrome Day 2009
- Anne Boleyn, second wife of
England ’s King Henry VIII, was beheaded. (1536)
- Ho Chi Minh, one of many names used by this
founder and first president of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam,
was born. (1890)
- Malcolm X,
African-American activist, was born. (1925)
- T.E. Lawrence, also known as
Lawrence of Arabia, died. (1935)
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20 |
- National
Employee Health and Fitness Day, 2009 (third Wednesday of
May)
- National Geographic
Bee May 19 & 20, 2009
- World
Metrology Day 2009
- Explorer John Cabot sailed to North America. (1497)
- Christopher Columbus,
considered one of the greatest Italian explorers, died in Spain.
(1506)
- Abraham Lincoln signed the Homestead
Act Law, a program designed to grant public land to small farmers
at low cost. (1862)
- Hubble Space Telescope sent its first image
from space. (1990)
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21 |
- World Cultural Diversity Celebration May 11 – 22, 2009
- American Red Cross was founded. (1881)
- Charles Lindbergh, in the Spirit of St. Louis, completed the
world’s first solo, non-stop flight across the Atlantic Ocean.
(1927)
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22 |
- International Day for Biological Diversity
- Martha Washington, wife
to George Washington and the first of First Ladies, died. (1802)
- Richard Wagner, German composer, was born.
(1813)
- Oregon Trail started “the
great migration,” when thousands made the massive move west
from Elm Grove, Missouri. (1843)
- Mystery writer and the creator
of Sherlock Holmes, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, was born.
(1859)
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23 |
- World Turtle Day
- Pirate Captain Kidd was hanged
for his crimes of piracy and murder. (1701)
- Carolus Linnaeus, Swedish
botanist and founder of modern taxonomy, was born. (1707)
- William Harvey Carney,
Civil War hero, was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. He was
the first African American to receive the nation’s highest
military honor. (1900)
- The New York Public Library was
dedicated by President William Howard Taft. (1911)
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24 |
- John
Wesley is converted, essentially launching the Methodist
movement; the day is celebrated annually by Methodists as Aldersgate
Day. (1738)
- Nicolaus Copernicus,
Polish astronomer, died. (1543)
- Samuel F. B. Morse dispatched the first telegraphic message over an experimental line
from Washington D.C. to Baltimore. (1844)
- The Brooklyn Bridge opened after 14
years of construction. (1883)
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25 |
- Memorial Day Celebrated
2009
- Africa Day
- The Constitutional Convention began in Philadelphia. (1787)
- Ralph Waldo Emerson, essayist,
poet, and philosopher, was born. (1803)
- Bill “Bojangles”
Robinson, vaudeville dancer, was born. (1878)
- John T.
Scopes is indicted for teaching Darwin's theory of evolution.
(1925)
- Jessie Owens, world-renowned athlete, set long
jump record at 26' 8". (1935)
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26 |
- Montana became the 41st state, five
years after the territory was created. (1864)
- Czar Nicolas II was
crowned ruler of Russia. (1896)
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27 |
- St. Petersburg, Russia, was
founded by Peter the Great. (1703)
- "Wild Bill" Hickok, Kansas
gunfighter, was born (1837)
- The Golden Gate Bridge opened. (1937)
- The Bismarck, a German battleship, was sunk
by the Royal British Navy near France. (1941)
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28 |
- Ohio Women’s Rights
Convention met in Akron, Ohio. (1851)
- Jim Thorpe, world-class athlete,
was born. (1888)
- Sierra Club was founded. (1892)
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29 |
- Patrick Henry, great
American orator, known for saying, “Give me liberty or give me
death,” was born. (1736)
- Wisconsin became the
30th U.S. state. (1848)
- John Fitzgerald Kennedy,
U.S. president from 1961 until his assassination on November 22,
1963, was born. (1917)
- Edmund Hillary and Tenzing
Norgay became the first to reach the summit of Mount Everest.
(1953)
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30 |
- Peter the Great of Russia
was born. (1672)
- Andrew Jackson, future
President of the United States, participated in a pistol duel and
won. (1806)
- The Treaty of Guadalupe
Hidalgo, ratified on this day by Mexico, gave the U.S. New Mexico
and California, as well as parts of Nevada, Utah, Arizona, and
Colorado, in return for $15 million. (1848)
- Jazz clarinetist Benny
Goodman was born. (1909)
- Wilbur Wright, pioneering aviator, who
together with his brother Orville made the first powered flight in
1903, died. (1912)
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31 |
- World No-Tobacco Day 2009
- Walt Whitman, poet and essayist,
was born. (1819)
- "Flaked cereal"
patent was applied for by Dr. John Harvey Kellogg. (1884)
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