May 24th is
Escargot Day
International Tiara Day
National Scavenger Hunt Day
World Schizophrenia Day *
Aviation Maintenance Technician Day *
_____________________________________
MORE! Ynes Mexia, Joseph Brodsky and Valerie Taylor, click
_____________________________________
WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS
Methodist Christians – Aldersgate Day: the conversion of John Wesley
Belize – Commonwealth Day
Bermuda – Bermuda Day
Bulgaria –
Culture and Literature Day
Canada – Victory Day
Ecuador –
Battle of Pichincha Day
Eritrea – Independence Day
Macedonia –
St Cyril and St Methodius Day
Singapore – Tatinis Art Show
Taiwan – Taipei: Wine & Gourmet Taipei Exhibition
_____________________________________
On This Day in HISTORY
15 BC – Germanicus Julius born, member of the Julio-Claudian dynasty and Roman Empire general noted for his campaigns in Germania
1218 – The Fifth Crusade, organized by Pope Innocent III, and led by King Andrew II of Hungary and Leopold VI, Duke of Austria, leaves Acre, bound for Egypt
1595 – The Nomenclator of Leiden University Library appears, the first printed catalog of an institutional library
1626 – Peter Minuit of the Dutch West India Company buys the island of Manhattan from Seyseys, chief of the Canarsees, for trade goods valued at 60 guilders (most of the island is actually controlled by the Weckquaesgeeks branch of the Wappinger tribe)
1677 – Alexandre de Villenueve born, French classical composer and priest
1686 – Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit born, developed Fahrenheit temperature scale, and invented the mercury thermometer
1743 – Jean-Paul Marat born, French physician, scientist, and journalist, political theorist who was one of the most radical voices of the French Revolution; his advocacy of extreme violence became cruelly ironic when he was assassinated in his bath
1752 – Private Oliver Cromwell born, a free black in New Jersey, who serves in the American Revolutionary War from 1777 to 1781; his discharge papers are signed by Commander-in-Chief George Washington, who awards him the Badge of Military Merit; some years later, he receives a veteran’s pension, and buys a 100-acre farm
1767 – Joseph Ignaz Schnabel born, German composer and violinist
1775 – John Hancock is unanimously elected President of the Continental Congress; he will be the first to sign the Declaration of Independence
1793 – Dr. Philippe Pinel, appointed Chief Physician of the Paris men’s and women’s public insane asylums, ends the practice of chaining patients to the walls (the first patient’s chains were actually removed by an ex-patient who became Pinel’s assistant, now known only as Poussin) (see 1985 entry)
1819 – Queen Victoria born, Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and from 1876 on, also Empress of India (see 2008 entry); opposed to women’s rights for all women, except herself
1830 – “Mary Had a Little Lamb” is first published as a poem by American writer Sarah Josepha Hale, who was also an influential editor
1836 – Joseph Rowntree born, Quaker chocolatier, philanthropist and social reformer; offered free education for employees under 17, provide a library at the chocolate factory, and employed a social welfare officer, doctor and a dentist whose services were free to employees; donated ₤10,000 pounds to establish a pension fund his workers; built low-income housing, and founded three trusts, all still in existence: a research and policy development group, a society to preserves the history and legacy of the Rowntrees, and a charitable trust which gives grants to projects that address the root problems of social issues
1844 – Samuel Morse taps out “What hath God wrought” in the world’s 1st telegraph message
1855 – Arthur Wing Pinero born, British playwright and stage director; The Second Mrs. Tanqueray, The Enchanted Cottage
1868 – Charles Edward Taylor born, American machinist-mechanic-inventor; designed built, and maintained engines for the Wright Brothers airplanes (see 2001 entry)
1870 – Ynes Mexia born, Mexican-American botanist and explorer; although she did not take her first field trip until age 55, she discovered over 132,000 plant species, mostly in the Andes and Central America, providing research institutions with vast collections of specimens with accurate and extensive annotations. In 1929, she began a 2½ year expedition in Peru and Brazil, during which her team was trapped by floods for three months in a deep gorge, before escaping by building a raft and running the river rapids
1878 – Lillian Moller Gilbreth born, American psychologist, industrial engineer, efficiency expert and author; time-and-motion study pioneer; first woman member of the Society of Industrial Engineers and the first woman to win the Hoover Medal for distinguished public service by an engineer; author of Cheaper by the Dozen
1883 – The Brooklyn Bridge opens, after 14 years of construction costing $18 million; the longest suspension bridge in the world at the time
1885 – Susan Sutherland Isaacs born, CBE, British educational psychologist and psychoanalyst, nursery school advocate
1898 – Kathleen Hale born, British author, artist and illustrator; best known for her children’s book series Orlando the Marmalade Cat
1898 – Helen Brooke Taussig born, American physician, and founder of pediatric cardiology; a pioneer in using X-rays and fluoroscopy to identify heart defects in newborns; with Alfred Blalock, developed Blalock-Taussig surgical procedure for treating ‘blue baby’ syndrome, and the Blalock-Taussig shunt (between the pulmonary artery and the aorta). One of the first doctors to expose the terrible birth defects caused by the drug thalidomide; Taussig was the first woman president of the American Heart Association; co-recipient with Blalock of the 1954 Albert Lasker Award, and a 1964 Medal of Freedom from President Lyndon Johnson
1902 – Sylvia Daoust born, French Canadian sculptor, one of the first women sculptors in Québec; noted for portrait busts; lived to age 104
1905 – Mikhail Sholokhov born, Soviet writer; 1965 Nobel Prize; And Quiet Flows the Don
1914 – George Tabori born, Hungarian Jewish writer and theater director; working in Berlin in the 1930s, he had to flee the Nazis, first to London and then to the U.S.; The Cannibals, The Prince
1929 – The first Marx Brothers film, The Cocoanuts, premieres
1930 – Amy Johnson becomes the first woman to fly solo from England to Australia when she lands in Darwin, Northern Territory
1933 – Jane Byrne born, American politician, first woman elected Mayor of Chicago (1979-1983); Chicago’s Consumer Affairs commissioner (1968-1977)
1935 – Joan Micklin Silver born, American filmmaker and screenwriter; best known for Hester Street
1940 – Joseph Brodsky born as Iosif Aleksandrovich Brodsky in Russia, American poet and essayist; won the 1987 Nobel Prize in Literature
1941 – Baroness Patricia Hollis of Heigham born, British Labour politician, historian, and member of the House of Lords since 1990; Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, and author of several books on women’s history and labour history, including Jennie Lee: a life, which won the Orwell Prize for political biography
1941 – Robert Allen Zimmerman born, better known as Bob Dylan, American singer-songwriter, and Nobel Laureate
1944 – Patti LaBelle born, American singer, lead singer for Labelle, first African-American vocal group on the cover of Rolling Stone Magazine
1946 – Tansu Çiller born, Turkish economist and politician, first woman Prime Minister of Turkey (1993-1996); leader of the True Path Party, served concurrently as Turkey’s Deputy Prime Minister and as Minister of Foreign Affairs (1996-1997)
1951 – Racial segregation in Washington, D.C. restaurants ruled illegal
1961 – Lorella Cedroni born, Italian political philosopher and theorist; author of books, articles and papers on political representation, gender studies, party systems in European countries, political language, electoral communication, and human rights
1963 – Valerie E. Taylor born, African American computer scientist, director of the Mathematics and Computer Science Division of Argonne National Laboratory since 2017; head of the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at Texas A&M University (2003-2011); notable for work on high performance computing; fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and of the Association of Computing Machinery
1965 – In Lamont v. Postmaster General, the U.S Supreme Court rules a federal law requiring the post office to detain and deliver only upon the addressee’s request unsealed foreign mailings of “communist political propaganda” is unconstitutional
1966 – The musical Mame, based on the novel Auntie Mame by Patrick Dennis, and starring Angela Lansbury, opens on Broadway for 1508 performances
1969 – The Beatles single “Get Back” becomes #1 for five weeks
1973 – U.S. Congress passes the Emergency Medical Services Systems Act, managed by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA); in 1979, the American Academy of Pediatrics was asked to develop EMS programs specifically for children, and legislation is enacted in 1984-85 to fund these programs as state partnership grants; the first grants are utilized in 1986 – Emergency Medical Services for Children Day *
1976 – In Paris, two California wines win top honors at a blind wine tasting by the best of France’s wine experts, shocking the French; the wine world is changed forever
1983 – The U.S. Supreme Court rules 8-1 in Bob Jones University v. United States that the religion clauses of the First Amendment did not prohibit the Internal Revenue Service from revoking the tax exempt status of a religious university whose practices are contrary to a compelling government public policy, such as eradicating racial discrimination. Bob Jones University had completely excluded black applicants until 1971, and from 1971 until 1975, admitted black students only if they were married. After 1975, the University began to admit unmarried black applicants, but continued to deny “admission to applicants engaged in an interracial marriage or known to advocate interracial marriage or dating.” The University also imposed a disciplinary rule that prohibited interracial dating
1985 – Joann Verbanic is the founder of the Schizophrenia Anonymous (later Alliance) support group, and a founding member in 2008 of the Schizophrenia and Related Disorders Alliance of America (SARDAA), a co-sponsor of World Schizophrenia Day * on the anniversary of the day that Dr. Philippe Pinel ends the practice of chaining mental patients to the walls of the Paris public asylums (see 1793 entry)
1988 – British Parliament passes Section 28 adds Section 2A to the Local Government Act, a local authority “shall not intentionally promote homosexuality or publish material with the intention of promoting homosexuality” or “promote the teaching in any maintained school of the acceptability of homosexuality as a pretended family relationship” It is repealed in Scotland on June 21 2000, one of the first pieces of legislation enacted by the new Scottish Parliament, and on November 18, 2003, by the rest of the U.K.
1990 – American non-violent activists Judi Bari and Darryl Cherney of Earth First! are critically injured when a pipe bomb hidden under Bari’s seat explodes in Oakland; they had been organizing for the Redwood Summer campaign, a grassroots effort to halt logging of the last remaining old-growth redwoods in California. Numerous threats had been made, and a timber worker had already run Bari’s car off an isolated rural road; the threats were reported to Oakland police, but there had been little response; within minutes after the explosion, the police and the FBI arrived on the scene – to arrest the injured activists for “transporting a bomb.” But law enforcement’s case fell apart when a letter from “The Lord’s Avenger” taking credit for the bombing, with credible details kept from the public, was sent to a newspaper reporter; charges were dropped against Bari and Cherney, who sued the FBI and Oakland PD for violating their civil rights, finally being awarded $4.4 million in 2002 (posthumously to Bari’s estate, who died of cancer in 1997). No other arrests have ever been made in the case
1994 – South African President Nelson Mandela reads Ingrid Jonker’s poem Die Kind (The Child) in the original Afrikaans during his address at the opening of the first democratic South African Parliament on this day. Ingrid Jonker witnessed the child in the poem being shot to death by soldiers in Nyanga
2001 – Urged by Richard Dilbeck, the FAA created the prestigious Charles E. Taylor Master Mechanic Award to honor AMTs, who had served at least 50 years in aircraft maintenance. Aviation Maintenance Technician Day * – in 2002, California Senator Knight introduced a resolution honoring Aviation Maintenance Technicians annually in honor of Charles Taylor’s birthday (see 1868 entry)
2004 – North Korea, just weeks after allowing foreign visitors to use cell phones in the country, issues a ban on the use of mobile phones by North Korean nationals; service had only been available in North Korea since 2002. Despite some reports that the ban was prompted by concerns terrorists could use a cellular phone to trigger a bomb, North Korea’s record of repressing civil liberties makes that explanation seem unconvincing
2008 – International Tiara Day * is launched in by Lynanne White in Poulbo, Washington; she says every girl or woman who wants to wear a tiara should be able to wear one (see 1819 entry)
2013 – An unidentified bidder paid $1.5 million USD for the seat next to Leonardo DiCaprio on a future flight into space aboard a Virgin Galactic spacecraft scheduled to take off from New Mexico in 2014. The auction proceeds benefitted AIDS research. Unfortunately, Virgin Galactic has only taken one passenger into space so far, on February 22, 2019. The passenger was Beth Moses, chief astronaut instructor for Virgin Galactic, aboard VSS Unity. She was assessing what a customer experience will be like in the aircraft. Her trip in the passenger seat makes her the first woman to fly as a passenger on a commercial space vehicle. Previous flights have only contained “dummy” passengers
Virgin Galactic Unity
_____________________________________
Ironic: Rowntree institutes liberal policies in the production of chocolate back in the 19th Century. Today, chocolate involves the use of child labor that I actually consider slavery. I know a young woman who was working, essentially as a slave, in Cote d’Ivoire from the age of 6 until 14, whereupon she got trafficked to this country as more or less a “household work slave” and only became freed by accident when the family who was “employing” her (to cook, clean and care for four children, one of whom was developmentally delayed, for a bed in the children’s room, board, plus abou $10 a week) kicked her out for some minor infraction. Then she was “rescued” by some Ivoirian immigrants who had met her and they helped her apply for citizenship and she may be able to get it now. What a journey! And she is a thoroughly upbeat, competent, cheerful, personable woman who says, “Everybody like me because I always laugh but I always laugh because people are always funny!’
Yes, people who think slavery was ended in the 19th and early 20th century have no idea how many people are enslaved around the world today – child labor, forced prostitution, and people like this young woman, sold into forced labor for room and board and little else, who are also constantly demeaned and abused.
We are still such a long way from enlightened and “civilized.”