May 5th is
Cinco de Mayo
Cartoonists’ Day *
Enchilada Day
International Midwives Day *
Revenge of the Fifth Day *
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MORE! Nellie Bly, James Beard and Efrat Mishori, click
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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS
Islam – Ramadan, from sundown May 5 to sundown June 4
Albania – Martyrs’ Day
Denmark – Liberation Day
Ethiopia – Arbegnoch Qen
(Patriots’ victory day)
Guyana – Arrival Day
Japan – Kodomo no Hi (Children’s day)
Kygtzstan – Constitution Day
Mexico – Cinco de Mayo
(May 5th battle won over French troops)
Netherlands – Bevrijdingsdag
(Liberation from Nazi occupation)
Palau – Senior Citizens’ Day
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On This Day in HISTORY
1215 – Rebel barons renounce their allegiance to King John of England, leading to the signing of the Magna Carta
1260 – Kublai Khan, grandson of Genghis Khan, becomes ruler of the Mongol Empire
1479 – Guru Amar Das born, third of the Ten Gurus of Sikhism; noted for introducing the Manji system of appointing trained clergy, and writing and compiling hymns into a Pothi that is part of the Adi Granth (Sikh scriptures)
1494 – On his second voyage, Christopher Columbus sights an island, naming it Santa Gloria (modern-day Jamaica) and claims it for Spain
1646 – English King Charles I, after his army is beaten by Oliver Cromwell’s ‘New Model Army,’ flees (disguised as a servant) giving himself into the hands of the Scottish Presbyterian army besieging Newark. They take him north to Newcastle upon Tyne; nine months later, the Scots make a deal with the parliamentary commissioners and deliver Charles to them
1654 – Cromwell’s Act of Pardon and Grace to the People of Scotland is declared, a general pardon for crimes committed during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. The pardon did not apply to members of the Scottish royal family. Men whose estates had already been forfeited to the Commonwealth, or who had already paid fines, would not have their property or money returned
1798 – U.S. Secretary of War William McHenry orders the USS Constitution made ready for sea
1809 – Mary Kies becomes the first woman awarded a U.S. patent in her own name, for a technique to weave straw with silk and thread in hat-making
1809 – The Swiss canton of Aargau allows Jews to become citizens
1813 – Søren Kierkegaard born, Danish philosopher-theologian and poet; regarded as the first existentialist; Three Discourses on Imagined Occasions
1818 – Karl Marx born, German philosopher socialist revolutionary, economist and author; The Communist Manifesto and Das Kapital
1821 – Napoleon Bonaparte dies in exile of the island of St. Helena
1824 – Lucy Larcom born, American poet and author, editor of Our Young Folks magazine, writes songs, poems and letters describing life working in the cotton mills, and for her book A New England Girlhood
1830 – John B. Stetson born, American hat manufacturer; he develops the ‘Stetson’ cowboy hats
‘Boss of the Plains’ Stetson hat
1862 – The Battle of Puebla took place, now celebrated as Cinco de Mayo
1864 – Nellie Bly born, pseudonym of American journalist and author Elizabeth Jane Cochrane, known as a pioneer in the field of investigative journalism, especially for her exposé of conditions in a mental institution, and for her record-breaking trip around the world in 72 days
1865 – The Thirteenth Amendment is ratified, abolishing slavery in the U.S.
1865 – Helen Maud Merrill born, poet, editor, and author of humorous sketches under the pen name Samantha Spriggins
1882 – Sylvia Pankhurst born, British suffragist and socialist activist; she began working full-time for the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) in 1906, founded by her mother Emmeline Pankhurst and her sister Christabel. She devised the WSPU logo, and many of its leaflets, banners and posters. In 1907, she toured industrial towns in England and Scotland, painting portraits of working women and helping to establish the WSPU presence in Leicester. Unlike her mother and sister, she kept her affiliation with the labour movement, and did most of her campaigning among women labourers. She was arrested many times, and sent to prison, where she was repeatedly force-fed. But she wanted the WSPU to be aligned with the socialist movement and tackle more issues than women’s suffrage. In 1913, she was expelled from the WSPU, and founded the East London Federation of Suffragettes in 1914, which later became the Workers’ Socialist Federation (WSF). She was founder/editor of Women’s (Workers’) Dreadnought. The WSF campaigned against WWI, unlike the WSPU, which supported the war drive and military conscription. The WSF spoke in support of women in the poorer parts of London, and set up “cost-price” restaurants to feed the hungry without the taint of charity. The WSF also helped soldiers’ wives by setting up legal advice centres, and campaigning for the government to provide allowances for poor soldiers’ wives. In 1936, she became a strong supporter of Ethiopia, moving to Addis Ababa in the 1950s, and becoming editor of the Ethiopia Observer. When she died in 1960, Haile Selassie named her “an honorary Ethiopian.” Sylvia Pankhurst is the only foreigner buried in front of Holy Trinity Cathedral in the capital, in a section for patriots of the war against the Italian invasion
1885 – Kingsley Ogilvie Fairbridge born in South Africa, founder in 1909 of the “Society for the Furtherance of Child Emigration to the Colonies,” which later became the Fairbridge Society. His plan was to train London slum boys to work in agriculture, and he raised funds and persuaded the British and Australian governments to contribute to sending over 3000 boys to a farm school on a large piece of land in Western Australia. After his death in 1924, schools named for him were added in other parts of Australia and in Canada and Rhodesia. But most of the schools closed as the economic conditions in Britain improved, and after a ship carrying child emigrants was torpedoed during WWI, the British government discouraged sending children such great distances. In 2008, 205 child migrants who went to Fairbridge Farm School between 1930 and 1971 were among those who were compensated for abuse suffered in State care and state-sponsored facilities
1891 – Music Hall is dedicated in New York City, later renamed Carnegie Hall; the first performer is Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
1890 – Christopher Morley born, American journalist, author and poet; Parnassus on Wheels and The Haunted Bookshop
1892 – U.S. Congress extends the Geary Chinese Exclusion Act for 10 more years. The act requires all Chinese in the U.S. to be registered or face deportation
1892 – Dorothy Garrod born, English archaeologist who directs excavations at Mount Carmel in Palestine (1929-1934), and conducts Paleolithic research at Gibraltar and in Kurdistan; first woman to hold a chair at University of Cambridge (1939-1952); The Upper Paleolithic of Britain
1893 – The Panic of 1893 – the New York Stock Exchange takes a nosedive; by year’s end, the nation is in a depression
1898 – Elsie Eaves born, American civil engineer; first woman associate member, and first woman admitted to full membership, in the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE); founding member of the American Association of Cost Engineering (renamed the Association for the Advancement of Cost Engineering); started her career as a draftsperson for the U.S. Bureau of Public Roads in Colorado, and for the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad, then got her civil engineering degree in 1920 from the University of Colorado. Eaves worked for McGraw-Hill in New York (1926-1963), on the Engineering News-Record and other publications, retiring as the manager of Business News. She created databases on engineering projects and trends across the U.S., before there were computers to compile the information. After retiring from McGraw-Hill, Eaves continued practicing as an adviser on housing costs for the National Commission on Urban Affairs. In 1974, she was honored with the George Norlin Silver Medal, the University of Colorado’s highest alumni award
1900 – Helen Redfield born, American geneticist who did extensive research on Drosophila Melanogaster, the common fruit fly, at Stanford University, Columbia and the California Institute of Technology, then as a research associate at the Institute for Cancer Research (1951-1961)
1903 – James Beard born, American cookbook author and TV cooking show host; The James Beard Cookbook
1907 – ‘Iryna Vilde’ born as Daryna Makohon, Ukrainian author and Soviet correspondent; wrote short stories and novels about family life and society in the Western Ukraine; best known for her two-volume novel Sestry Richynski (Sisters of Richynsky),which won the Shevchenko Prize
1911 – Pritilata Waddedar born, Bengali educator and revolutionary nationalist, teacher and headmistress at Nandankanan Aparnacharan School in Chittagong; she commits suicide rather than be arrested by British authorities after an attack on a European club
1912 – Soviet Communist Party newspaper Pravda begins publishing
1916 – U.S. Marines invade the Dominican Republic
1917 – Eugene Jacques Bullard becomes the first African-American military pilot to earn a flying certificate, with the French Air Service; he originally joined the French Foreign Legion as a WWI infantryman in 1914, but later flew combat missions for France
1921 – Del Martin born, American feminist and gay rights activist; with her partner Phyllis Lyon, she founds the Daughters of Bilitis, the first social and political organization for lesbians in the US, acts as president and editor of The Ladder, helps form the Council on Religion and the Homosexual, and serves in the White House Conference on Aging. Martin and Lyon marry in 2008
Wedding of Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon
1922 – Irene Gut Opdyke born, Polish nurse who aided Jews persecuted by the Nazis during WWII; author of In My Hands, and honored as Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem for risking her life to save 12 Jews from certain death
1925 – John T. Scopes, a biology teacher in Dayton, TN, is arrested for teaching Darwin’s theory of evolution
1926 – Eisenstein’s film Battleship Potemkin is shown in Germany for the first time
1926 – Sinclair Lewis refuses a 1925 Pulitzer for Arrowsmith
1927 – Sylvia Fedoruk born, Canadian physicist, politician and athlete, Lieutenant Governor of Saskatchewan, first woman member of the Atomic Energy Control Board of Canada, former president of the Canadian Ladies Curling Association, member of the Canadian Curling Hall of Fame
1936 – Edward Ravenscroft patents a screw-on bottle cap with a pour lip
1937 – Delia Derbyshire born, English composer of electronic music; known for her electronic arrangement of the Doctor Who theme music
1942 – Tammy Wynette born as Virginia Wynette Pugh; Country singer-songwriter, one of the biggest-selling female singers; known for “Stand by Your Man” and “Till I Can Make It on My Own”
1942 – Baroness Jean Corston, British Labour politician, Member of Parliament (1992-2005); first woman to serve as Chair of the Parliamentary Labour Party (2001-2005); commissioned by the Home Office to write a report on the vulnerable women in the UK’s criminal justice system, which outlines alternative thinking on sending mentally ill women to prison, published as the Corston Report in 2007, which is now the standard by which progress and improvements in the prison and probation services treatment of women are measured
1945 – The Netherlands and Denmark are liberated from Nazi control
1945 – Diane Willcocks born, British academic, social science researcher and administrator; advocate for more inclusive higher education; Vice-Chancellor of York St John University; Deputy Principal of Sheffield Hallam University; Director of Research at the University of North London; appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE, in 2008)
1955 – Damn Yankees opens on Broadway, and runs for 1,019 performances
1961 – Alan Shepard becomes the first American in space when he makes a 15 minute suborbital flight in a capsule
1964 – Efrat Mishori born, Israeli writer, poet, performance artist and filmmaker; recipient of the 2018 Landau Arts Award
1984 – Johanna Hedva born, Korean American genderqueer contemporary artist and writer; known for her 2015 lecture, “My Body Is a Prison of Pain so I Want to Leave It Like a Mystic But I Also Love It & Want it to Matter Politically” which became the “Sick Woman Theory” essay on chronic illness and the Western medical industry
1987 – The U.S. Congressional Iran-Contra hearings open
1990 – The National Cartoonists Society proclaims the first Cartoonists Day *
1991 – In New York, Carnegie Hall marks its 100th anniversary
1991 – International Midwives Day * is launched by the International Confederation of Midwives, now an observance on the United Nations calendar
2000 – Sierra Leone rebels seize UN peacekeepers from Zambia, raising to more than 300 the number of UN personnel they are believed to be holding captive and dealing another blow to UN peacekeeping efforts in Africa
2007 – Revenge of the Fifth Day * celebrates the Dark Side of the Force, playing on Episode III – Revenge of the Sith, for the 30th anniversary of the Star Wars debut
2010 – The Supreme Court of India in a landmark judgment declares the use of narco tests, brain mapping tests and lie detector tests by investigative agencies to be unconstitutional
2014 – China announces it will upgrade Ethiopia’s infrastructure in an effort to improve a China-Africa strategic partnership
2015 – The Obama administration on Tuesday granted licenses to at least four companies to offer ferry service between Florida and Cuba for the first time in more than 50 years. The move is part of an effort, announced by President Obama in December, to restore diplomatic relations between the U.S. and its former Cold War antagonist
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