April 19th is

Bicycle Day *

Rice Ball Day
National Garlic Day
John Parker Day *
Hanging Out Day *
Poetry and the Creative Mind Day *
Oklahoma City Bombing Commemoration Day *
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MORE! Sarah Kemble Knight, Eliot Ness and Rawya Ateya, click
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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS
Brazil – Dia do Indio
(Indigenous peoples day)
Chile – National Census Day
Indonesia – Jakarta:
Gubernatorial Election Day
Myanmar – New Year Week
Swaziland – King’s Birthday
Uruguay – Landing of the 33 Patriots
(returning to begin independence war)
Venezuela – 1810 Declaration Day
(begins independence movement)
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On This Day in HISTORY
AD 65 – Roman freedman Milichus betrays Piso’s plot to kill the Emperor Nero and all the conspirators are arrested
1539 – After the Second Diet of Speyer bans Lutheranism, a group of German rulers, (Fürst) and independent cities protest the reinstatement of the Edict of Worms
1666 – Sarah Kemble Knight born, colonial American teacher and businesswoman, noted for her diary of her journey from Boston to New York City in 1704-05

1770 – James Cook sights the west coast of Australia
1775 – Captain John Parker of the Lexington MA militia gathers his band of farmers and townsfolk on the Lexington Common to confront British regulars under Colonel Francis Smith, who are marching to Concord, about six-and-a-half miles further up the road, to search for weapons and supplies rumored to be hidden there. No one knows who fired the first shot, but eight of Parker’s militiamen are killed, and ten wounded. No British soldiers are hit by militia shots. Later that day, Parker leads his men in ambushing the British as they return from Concord, and they were also engaged during the British Siege of Boston. Five months after “the shot heard round the world,” John Parker dies of consumption. Commemorated as John Parker Day *
1782 – John Adams secures the Dutch Republic’s recognition of the United States as an independent government; the house which he had purchased in The Hague, becomes the first American embassy
1832 – Jose Echegaray y Eizaguirre born, Spanish mathematician, statesman, and dramatist, co-winner of 1904 Nobel Prize in Literature
1831 – Mary Louise Booth born, American author, translator, and editor of Harper’s Bazaar

1877 – Ole Evinrude born in Norway, American inventor
1891 – Françoise Rosay born, French actress and opera singer, pioneer in French cinema who appeared in over 100 films
1892 – Germaine Tailleferre, French composer, only female member of a group of composers known as Les Six
1903 – Eliot Ness born, American crime fighter; headed the “Untouchables” in Chicago
1905 – Sir Thomas Hopkinson born, English pioneering photojournalist
1926 – Rawya Ateya born, Egyptian politician, educator and journalist; first female parliamentarian in the Arab world when she is elected to the National Assembly of Egypt in 1957

1927 – Actress and playwright Mae West is sentenced to 10 days in jail on obscenity charges for her play Sex

1933 – The U.S goes off the gold standard
1943 – Bicycle Day * – Three days after Dr. Albert Hoffman accidently touches his hand to his mouth while synthesizing LSD and discovers its psychedelic effects, he takes a larger dose deliberately, then experiences the first “acid trip” riding his bicycle home
1945 – The musical Carousel opens on Broadway
1951 – Douglas MacArthur quotes an old ballad in his farewell to U.S. Congress: “Old soldiers never die; they just fade away”
1961 – The Federal Communications Commission authorizes regular FM stereo broadcasting, effective June 1, 1961
1978 – Patti Smith releases her single “Because the Night”
1986 – Prince has two top ten hits on the charts: “Kiss” and “Manic Monday”
1993 – The 51-day siege at the Branch Davidian compound near Waco, Texas, ends when fire destroys the structure after federal agents smashed their way in; 76 Davidians, including sect leader David Koresh, are killed, and eleven others arrested; during the siege, four ATF agents are killed, and 16 wounded
1994 – A Los Angeles jury awards $3.8 million to Rodney King, victim of a beating by LAPD caught on video
1995 – Oklahoma City Bombing: the deadliest domestic terrorist attack in U.S. history, on the Federal Building in downtown Oklahoma City OK by three conspirators using a truck bomb: 168 people die, over 680 others are injured; windows shatter and over 324 other buildings are damaged or destroyed within a 16- block radius, with damage estimates of $652 million; the terrorists claim their acts are retaliation for sieges by federal agents at Ruby Ridge and Waco; Timothy McVeigh is executed, Terry Nichols is imprisoned for life without parole, and Michael Fortier, arrested as an accessory, testifies in exchange for a reduced sentence and immunity for his wife (who helped make the fake ID used to rent the truck) and sentenced to 12 years in prison for failure to warn authorities before the attack, is released in 2006 into the Witness Protection Program – since 1996, Oklahoma City Bombing Commemoration Day *
1995 – The first Hanging Out Day * is sponsored by Project Laundry List to encourage people to give their clothes dryer a rest, and hang their laundry up outside

2001 – The musical version of Mel Brooks’ film, The Producers, opens on Broadway
2002 – Poetry and the Creative Mind Day * is launched by the Academy of American Poets to celebrate poetry’s place in our culture, with a gala in Washington DC to benefit the academy’s educational programs for grades K-12, including resources for teachers, the Dear Poet project, and materials distributed to 100,000 libraries and classrooms for National Poetry Month
2011 – 79 year old Raul Castro, brother of Fidel Castro, is elected as first secretary of Cuba’s Communist Party

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Visuals
- Bicycle Day, by anastasia
- Poetry and the Creative Mind Day poster
- International flags
- Sarah Kemble Knight, woman on horseback, and Knight’s gravestone
- Mary Louise Booth
- Rawya Ateya campaigning in 1957
- Mae West, sex quote
- Hanging Out Day banner
- Raul Castro
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