ON THIS DAY: April 1, 2019

April 1st is

April Fools/All Fools Day

Atheist Day *

National Poetry Month *

Edible Book Day *

Fossil Fools Day *

Reading is Funny Day

US Air Force Academy Day *

International Tatting (lace-making) Day

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MORE! Jonathan Swift, Irene Morales and Wangari Maathai, click

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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS

Ancient Rome – Veneralia, festival in honor of Venus Verticordia (Venus the changer of hearts) and Fortuna Virilis (Virile Fortune)

Cyprus – National Day

India – Odisha: Utkal Divas *
(Odisha/Orissa Day)

Iran – Islamic Republic Day
(anniversary of 1979 Islamic referendum victory)

Tanzania – Tree Planting Day

Thailand – National Civil Service Day

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On This Day in HISTORY

325 – Crown Prince Sima Yan, age four, becomes Emperor Cheng Jin of China’s Eastern Jin Dynasty, upon the death of Emperor Ming of Jin

527 – Byzantine Emperor Justin I names his nephew Justinian I as   co-ruler and successor to the throne


Justinian I

528 – The daughter of Emperor Xiaoming of Northern Wei, an unnamed baby girl, whom her grandmother, Empress Dowager Hu, had falsely claimed was a male child, is installed by the Empress Dowager on the throne upon the death of the baby’s father, but Hu replaces her the next day with Yuan Zhao, a 3-year-old cousin of the late emperor, whose reign lasts only 46 days. General Erzhu Rong sends troops to depose Empress Dowager Hu as regent, drowns her and Yuan Zhao in the Yellow River, then puts Yuan Ziyou on the throne as emperor. Nothing is written of the fate of the unnamed baby girl who was “Emperor” for a day

1220 – Japanese Emperor Go-Saga born, who ruled from 1242 to 126, then abdicated in favor of his son, Emperor Go-Fukakusa, but maintained power as a cloistered emperor

1504 – An English statute extends government control over guilds by requiring royal officials be involved in approval of their ordinances; guilds are major charitable organizations of the day in urban areas, supporting widows and orphans; they lobby successfully for protective tariffs, and adjudicate complaints about the quality of a guild member’s work

1578 – William Harvey born, English physician who first records a complete, detailed description of blood circulation



1621 – The first peace treaty between American colonists and an indigenous nation, the Wampanoag-Pilgrim Treaty, is signed

1663 – The town of Gemert in Holland fines unwed motherhood 50 guilders, about two months’ wages for an unskilled worker of the period; apparently, there was no fine for the male impregnator

1693 – Puritan minister Cotton Mather’s four-day-old son dies, and witchcraft is blamed; his writings and sermons strongly influence the infamous Salem witch trials

1724 – Jonathan Swift publishes the first ‘Drapier’s letters’ a series of pamphlets he wrote under the pseudonym ‘M.B., Drapier’ to protest Britain’s imposition of a privately minted copper coinage on Ireland



1735 – Handel’s “Organ Concerto in F major, Op. 4 No. 4” premieres in London

1748 – Roque Joaquín de Alcubierre, an engineer in the Spanish army, discovers the ruins of Pompeii and Herculaneum, while prospecting the estate of Charles, Duke of Parma, heir to the throne of Spain

1755 – Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin born, French lawyer and politician, who was famed as an epicure and gastronome, noted as a pioneer of the gastronomic essay (see also 2000 entry)

1776 – Sophie Germain born, French mathematician, physicist, and philosopher; despite opposition from her parents and society, she taught herself from books in her father’s library, and corresponded with famous mathematicians, such as Lagrange, Legendre and Gauss. A pioneer of elasticity theory, she won the grand prize from the Paris Academy of Sciences for her essay on the subject. Her work on Fermat’s Last Theorem was a foundation for mathematicians exploring the subject for hundreds of years after. She was excluded from a career in mathematics because she was a woman, but worked independently throughout her life. The Academy of Sciences established the Sophie Germain Prize in her honor



1778 – New Orleans merchant and financier of the American Revolution Oliver Pollock popularizes the use of the “$” symbol. It is possibly based on a coin, dubbed a ‘Spanish dollar,’ with a coat of arms adopted by King Charles V to represent Spain’s American possessions, which has a pillar wrapped in a banner which looks like an ‘S’



1789 – U.S. House of Representatives holds its first full meeting in New York City

1792 – Dutch-born French feminist Etta Palm d’Aelders, advocate for the rights of women, proposes a comprehensive divorce bill that allows for wife-initiated divorce, because of her concerns about wife beating, saying the lesser physical strength of women requires laws that protect them against their stronger fathers and husbands



1815 – Otto von Bismarck born, German statesman; the first chancellor of German Empire



1826 – Samuel Morey patents an early two cylinder, internal combustion engine, with a carburetor, using turpentine vapor for fuel

1853 – Cincinnati becomes the first U.S. city to pay fire fighters a regular salary

1865 – Irene Morales born, Chilean seamstress, soldier, and nurse during the War of the Pacific against Bolivia



1866 – Sophonisba Breckenridge born, American lawyer, educator, social scientist and social reformer, first woman admitted to the Kentucky bar, first woman graduate of University of Chicago law school, first woman admitted to the Order of the Coif, an honor society for U.S. law school graduates



1868 – Edmond Rostand born, French dramatist; Cyrano de Bergerac



1873 – Sergei Rachmaninov born, Russian late-Romantic composer, who left Russia with his family after his estate was seized by the Leninist regime in 1917; lived in the U.S. from November 1918 until his death

1877 – Aurelia Henry Reinhardt born, American educator and peace and women’s rights activist, first woman moderator of American Unitarian Association (1940-1942), president of Mills College (1916-1943), president of the American Association of University Women (1923-1927); delegate at the inaugural meeting of the United Nations in 1945


 


1884 – Florence Blanchfield born, U.S. Army Colonel, superintendent of the Army Nursing Corps, first woman commissioned in the regular army, recipient of the Distinguished Service Medal and the Florence Nightingale Medal from International Red Cross



1895 – Alberta Hunter born, American blues singer-songwriter and cabaret singer, who was also a nurse; her first recording was made in 1921 and her last in the 1980s; in 1928, she starred in Showboat with Paul Robeson in London. In 1976, after 20 years working as a nurse, she makes a stunning musical comeback, appearing at Café Society in Greenwich Village, and is signed by Columbia Records. She later sings for President Jimmy Carter at the White House. She died in 1984 at age 89



1902 – Maria Polydouri born, Greek poet



1911 – Augusta Braxton Baker born, African American librarian and storyteller; when she applied to Albany Teacher’s College, she was turned down because of her race, but Eleanor Roosevelt, whose husband was at that time governor of New York, was serving on the Albany Interracial Council, and heavily advocated for Baker. The school was reluctant to admit a black student, but didn’t want to offend the governor’s wife, so they admitted Baker. She taught in public school until 1937, when she was hired as the children’s librarian at the 135th  Street Branch of the New York Public Library in Harlem. In 1939, the branch began an effort to add children’s literature which did not portray black people as derogatory stereotypes. The collection led to publication of a number of bibliographies of books for and about black children for the first time, including Baker’s 1946 extensive bibliography titled Books about Negro Life for Children which was updated and retitled The Black Experience in Children’s Books in 1971.  She was appointed Storytelling Specialist and Assistant Coordinator of Children’s Services in 1953, then promoted to Coordinator of Children’s Services in 1961, becoming the first African-American librarian in an administrative position in the New York Public Library, overseeing children’s programs in the entire NYPL system and setting policies for them. Baker was a consultant for the children’s television series Sesame Street. She retired in 1974, but returned to work in 1980 in the newly created position of Storyteller-in-Residence at the University of South Carolina, until her second retirement in 1994. She was also the co-author with Ellin Green of Storytelling: Art and Technique, published in 1987



1916 – Sheila May Edmonds born, British mathematician, worked on infinite series, Fournier transforms and Parseval’s theorem; lecturer at Cambridge; chair of the University Faculty Board of Mathematics (1975-1976); Vice-Principal of Newnham College (1960-1981)



1918 – Britain’s Royal Air Force (RAF) is established

1926 – Anne McCaffrey born in America, Irish science fiction and fantasy author, first woman to win Hugo and Nebula Awards, Grand Master of Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, inductee to Science Fiction Hall of Fame



1933 – A boycott of Jewish-owned business escalates their persecution by the Nazis

1936 – In India, Orissa is formed as a separate linguistic state; on November 9, 2010, it is renamed Odisha by the Parliament of India, but Utkal Divas * the ‘Orissa Day’ is still celebrated; the area has been invaded and held by many conquerors, but still keeps its language and traditions

1940 – Wangari Muta Maathai born, Kenyan political and environmental activist, founder of the Green Belt Movement, giving education and a monetary token to rural Kenyan women for planting trees, recipient of 2004 Nobel Peace Prize



1953 – Big Bang theory is proposed in Physical Review by Alpher, Bethe & Gamow

1954 – US Air Force Academy Day * – after passage of the National Security Act in 1947, which provides for a separate Air Force within the U.S. military, and some inter-service wrangling, it is agreed that an air force academy must be established; the legislation is signed into law on April 1 by President Eisenhower; the first class is sworn in and takes over a WWII barracks at Lowry Air Force Base in Denver on July 11, 1955, while waiting for construction of the Academy to be completed


U.S. Air Force Academy, 1958 Graduating Class

1960 – The first weather satellite, TIROS-1, is launched from Cape Canaveral

1963 – Aprille Ericsson-Jackson born, American aerospace engineer; first African American woman to earn a Ph.D. in engineering at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center; won the 1997 Women in Science and Engineering Award for best female engineer in the U.S. government; currently instrument manager for a proposed Mars mission to collect dust from the Martian lower atmosphere



1967 – Nicola Roxon born, Australian Labor Party politician; Attorney General of Australia (2011-2013); Minister for Health and Ageing (2007-2011); Member of Australian Parliament (1998-2013)



1970 – The movie Woodstock premieres in Hollywood

1970 – President Nixon signs ban of cigarette ads on radio and TV

1973 – Rachel Maddow born, American television journalist, liberal political commentator and author; since 2008, first openly gay primetime U.S. news program host on MSNBS nightly news and opinion program, The Rachel Maddow Show



1976 – Apple computer is founded

1987 – After over 45,000 reported AIDS-related deaths in the U.S. since 1981, President Reagan, in a speech to doctors in Philadelphia, declares AIDS “public health enemy #1”

1995 – The Academy of American Poets convenes a group of poets, publishers, booksellers, librarians, literary organizations, and teachers to discuss creating a National Poetry Month *, and the first one begins on April 1, 1996; since then, the Clintons host a White House poetry gala (1998); over 10,00o people cast their votes for a poet for a U.S. postage stamp (2001), won by Langston Hughes, whose stamp is issued in January 2002; the Empire State Building is illuminated in blues lights for the 10th anniversary (2005); the Poem-a-Day website is started (2006); and the Dear Poet project invites students to read and write poems, some to be published at Poets.org – Poetry Month also celebrated in Canada



2000 – Edible Book Day * is started by Judith A. Hoffberg and Béatrice Coron, to commemorate the birthday of French gastronome Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin, noted for his book Physiologie du goût, a witty meditation on food (see also 1755 entry)

2001 – The Netherlands is the first country to make same-sex marriage legal

2003 – Atheists Day * begins as an April Fools fake story about an Atheist suing the government because there is no day for Atheists, and the judge declaring that April Fool’s Day is the Atheist’s holiday. The hoax is taken by many to be real, and the story spreads. Atheists say it’s a day that doesn’t actually exist, just like all the gods celebrated on religious holidays – Atheists, along with constitutionalists, do celebrate the first Thursday in May, the National Day of Reason



2003 – University of California Santa Cruz History Professor Judy Yung marries Eddie Fung. She was collecting oral histories, so they met when she interviewed him about his experiences during WWII.  In spite of over 20 years difference in age, they had in common their respect for Chinese tradition and values, love of the outdoors, playing Scrabble, and a fondness for cats. Yung quotes an old Chinese story,  “As soon as we are born, heaven selects a mate for each of us and links us to them with an invisible red thread,” and says, ““I had been looking for my intended at the end of that red thread for a long time.”


The Yung-Fung wedding day, April 1, 2003, and a book by Judy Yung

2004 – Fossil Fools Day * is launched, an environmental demonstration day, to raise awareness of the hazards fossil fuels, and promote the use of alternative, renewable energy sources and technologies, sponsored by the Energy Action Coalition and Rising Tide North America

2008 – The Pentagon makes public a legal memo dated March 14, 2003, that approves the use of harsh interrogation techniques against terror suspects

2016 – First day of the Four Day War between the Artsakh Defense Army, backed by the Armenian Armed Forces, and the Azerbiajani Armed Forces, over a disputed region claimed by self-declared but unrecognized Republic of Artsakh, still regarded by Azerbaijan as part of its country, although also claimed by the Republic of Armenia. A ceasefire is reached April 5, but 350 people, both military and civilian, are killed

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About wordcloud9

Nona Blyth Cloud has lived and worked in the Los Angeles area for over 50 years, spending much of that time commuting on the 405 Freeway. After Hollywood failed to appreciate her genius for acting and directing, she began a second career managing non-profits, from which she has retired. Nona has now resumed writing whatever comes into her head, instead of reports and pleas for funding. She lives in a small house overrun by books with her wonderful husband.
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2 Responses to ON THIS DAY: April 1, 2019

  1. Malisha says:

    I was taught that the dollar sign was a shorthand symbol taken from imposing a flattened capital “S” over an elongated capital “U” so that the U and S formed one symbol, but that it was later shortened so that the “S” remained but only the two vertical lines of the “U” still showed. Then it seemed that typography abbreviated the two vertical lines to only one vertical line..

    • wordcloud9 says:

      There are several stories about where the dollar sign came from. I thought Spanish coin was less likely, but more fun.

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