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About the EdGate Calendar
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January is...
Crime Stoppers Month
National
Birth Defects Prevention Month
National Mentoring Month
National Radon Month
National
Volunteer Blood Donor Month
School Board Recognition Month
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1 |
- New Year’s Day
- Paul Revere,
silversmith and patriot known for "The British are coming!" was born.
(1735)
- Betsy Ross was born. (1752) Did she sew the first American flag?
- Internal Revenue Service was established by an Act of Congress. (1862)
- The Emancipation
Proclamation, President Lincoln's declaration freeing slaves, became
effective. (1863)
- Ellis Island,
gateway to immigration to
America
,
opened. (1892)
- Commonwealth of Australia formed. (1901) 
- All
U.S. cigarette packages began carrying the
health warning: “Caution: Cigarette smoking may be hazardous to your health.”
(1966)
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2 |
- Georgia became the fourth state. (1788)
- Isaac Asimov, science fiction author, was born. (1920)
- DeYoung Museum in
San Francisco’s
Golden Gate
Park
opened. (1921)
- U. S. Marines withdrew from
Nicaragua
.
(1933)
- Cigarette ads were
banned from television. (1971)
- Monarch
butterfly winter home was discovered by Kenneth Brugger in the
mountains of
Mexico
.
(1975)
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3 |
- Lucretia Coffin Mott,
political and social reformer, was born. (1793)
- J.R.R. Tolkien, Lord of the Rings author, was born. (1892)
- March of Dimes was established to raise money to fight disease in infants. (1938)
- Alaska became the
49th and largest state. (1959)
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4 |
- Isaac Newton,
mathematician and physicist, was born. (1643)
- Jakob Grimm, fairy
tale author, was born. (1785)
- Louis Braille,
developer of a system of writing for the blind, was born. (1809)
- Utah became the 45th state. (1896)
- Communist
forces prepared to take
Seoul.
(1951)
- The Euro,
Europe's common currency, debuted. (1999)
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5 |
- Zebulon
Montgomery Pike was born. (1779) What mountain was named after him,
and what song did a view from that mountain inspire?
- George Washington Carver,
scientist and inventor, died. (1943)
- The term Hamburger steak first appeared in a newspaper from
Walla Walla,
Washington.
(1889)
- First X-ray was
demonstrated by German physicist Wilhelm Roentgen. (1896)
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6 |
- Epiphany, 12
days after Christmas
- Joan of Arc was born. (1412)
- Telegraph was
first demonstrated by Samuel Morse. (1838)
- Carl Sandburg,
author and celebrated American, was born. (1878)
- New Mexico became
the 47th state. (1912)
- Theodore Roosevelt,
the 26th president of the
United
States
, died. (1919)
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7 |
- Galileo,
Italian mathematician, discovered four moons of Jupiter. (1610)
- "Dog of the
Yard" was purchased for $3 by the United States Mint as a
watchdog. (1793)
- Millard Fillmore,
13th
U.S.
president, was born. (1800)
- Zora Neale Hurston,
novelist, folklorist, dramatist, and anthropologist, was born. (1891)
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8 |
- George Washington delivered the first State of the Union address. (1790)
- In the Battle of New Orleans of the War of 1812,
U. S.
forces defeated the British. (1815)
- Earth's rotation was proven. (1851)
- Singer Elvis Presley was
born. (1935)
- Stephen Hawking,
British physicist and author of A Brief History of Time, was born.
(1942)
- General
Charles de Gaulle was proclaimed first president of the new
Fifth
Republic
in
France
.
(1959)
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9 |
- Connecticut became the fifth
state. (1788)
- Carrie
Chapman Catt, women's rights leader, was born. (1859)
- The ship Star of West was fired on in first hostile act of American Civil War at Sumter, SC. (1861)
- Edward Bannister,
artist known for his landscape and marine paintings, died. (1901)
- Richard Nixon,
37th president of the
United
States
, born. (1913)
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10 |
- Muharram (Islamic New Year) (2008)
- Save the Eagles Day
- Ethan Allen,
Revolutionary War hero and the leader of the famous Green Mountain Boys, was
born. (1738)
- Carolus Linnaeus,
Swedish scientist who developed the foundation for the modern scheme of
taxonomy, died. (1778)
- A bill to create a Woman's
Suffrage Amendment was approved by the U.S. House of
Representatives. (1918)
- League of Nations formally came into being. (1920)
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11 |
- Diabetes drug
insulin was used for the first time. (1922)
- Amelia
Earhart flew from
Hawaii to
California. (1935)
- Watergate burglary trial began in 1973. This trial resulted in the impeachment of
President Nixon in 1974.
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12 |
- Chemist Jean Baptiste van Helmont, first to realize that there are gases other than air
and who claimed to have coined the word gas, was born. (1579)
- Mother Goose author Charles Perrault was born. (1628)
- John Hancock was born. (1737)
- Jack London,
American author, was born. (1876)
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13 |
- The accordion was
patented by Anthony Faas. (1854)
- Stephen
Foster, American composer, died. (1861)
- National
Geographic Society was founded. (1888) 
- Fort Knox Bullion Depository received its first shipment of gold bullion. (1937)
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14 |
- Treaty of Paris was ratified, officially establishing the
United States
as an independent and
sovereign nation. (1784)
- Albert Schweitzer,
philosopher, musician, physician, humanitarian, and Nobel Peace Prize winner,
was born. (1875)
- Hugh Lofting,
author of Dr. Doolittle, was born. (1886)
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15 |
- Elizabeth I was
crowned queen of
England
.
(1559)
- Democratic donkey had its first appearance as a symbol of the Democratic Party in Harper's
Weekly. (1870)
- Martin
Luther King Jr., civil rights leader, was born. (1929)
- First Super Bowl
football game occurred. The Green Bay Packers played the Kansas City
Chiefs. (1967) 
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16 |
- Prohibition,
the 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, took effect. (1919)
- Dian Fossey,
zoologist and gorilla expert, was born. (1932)
- Persian Gulf War (
Operation
Desert Storm) began. (1991)
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17 |
- Benjamin Franklin,
American inventor, statesman, printer, scientist and writer, was born. (1706)
- Anne Brontë,
novelist and youngest of the three literary Bronte sisters, was born. (1820)
- Muhammed
Ali, boxer, was born (as Cassius Clay). (1942)
- First nuclear submarine voyage occurred. (1955)
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18 |
- Quinine was used for the first time to treat malaria. (1538)
- Captain James Cook became the first European to anchor in the
Hawaiian
Islands. (1778)
- Peter Roget,
author of Roget's Thesaurus, was born. (1779) 
- A.A. (Alan Alexander) Milne,
author of Winnie the Pooh, was born. (1882)
- Robert Scott's
doomed expedition reached the South Pole. (1912)
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19 |
- Popcorn Day
- James Watt,
Scottish inventor of the condensing steam engine, was born. (1736)
- Edgar Allan
Poe, writer, was born. (1809)
- Paul Cezanne,
French Post-impressionist painter, was born. (1839)
- Tour de France bicycle race announced. (1903)
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20 |
- Healthy Weight Week January 20 - 26, 2008
- Roller coasting structure patent was issued to La Marcus Thompson. (1885)
- Joy Adamson,
zoologist and author of several books about lions, was born. (1910)
- Franklin Delano Roosevelt was inaugurated to fourth term as president. (1945)
- John Fitzgerald Kennedy was inaugurated as the 35th president of the
United States
. (1961)
- Maya Angelou read
her poem “On the Pulse of Morning” at Bill Clinton’s first presidential
inauguration. (1993)
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21 |
- Martin Luther King Jr. Day 2008
- King Louis XVI of
France
was executed.
(1793)
- Stonewall (Thomas) Jackson,
Civil War officer, was born. (1824)
- Opera tenor, Placido Domingo, was born. (1941)
- Animal Farm author, George Orwell, died in
London
at age 46. (1950)
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22 |
- Queen Victoria of
England
died, ending 60 years of rule. (1901)
- New Zealand was reached by British colonists. (1840)
- Bloody Sunday in
St. Petersburg,
beginning the 1905 Russian revolution. (1905)
- The Apple Macintosh, consumer computer was introduced via a Super Bowl commercial.
(1984)
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23 |
- National Pie Day -- A day to make, eat, and celebrate your favorite pie.
- Edouard Manet,
French Impressionist artist, was born. (1832)
- Elizabeth Blackwell,
first female doctor, received her medical degree. (1849)
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24 |
- Gold was
discovered at Sutter's Mill, marking the start of the California Gold Rush.
(1848)
- Boy Scouts movement began in
England
.
(1908)
- Microwave oven was patented. (1950)
- Sir Winston
Churchill, the British leader during World War II, died in
London at age 90. (1965)
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25 |
- Robert Burns,
Scottish poet, was born. (1759)
- First transcontinental
telephone service was inaugurated by Alexander Bell. (1915)
- First Winter Olympics occurred. The site was
Chamonix in the French
Alps. (1924)
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26 |
- Brazil was reached by Vicente Yáñez Pinzón, a Spanish explorer. (1500)
- Edward Jenner,
inventor of the smallpox vaccine, died. (1823)
- Michigan became the 26th state. (1837)
- The phrase "Speak softly and carry a big
stick" was first recorded. Later, it became a trademark
description of Theodore Roosevelt's foreign policy. (1900)
- Republic of
India was formed, making it the most populous democracy in the
world. (1950)
- Play-Doh was
patented. (1965)
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27 |
- Composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born. (1756)
- Charles Dodgson,
a.k.a. Lewis Carroll, author of Alice in Wonderland, was born. (1832)
- Television was demonstrated to the public for the first time in
London. (1926)
- Harlem Globetrotters played their first basketball game. (1927)
- Vietnam War ended. (1973)
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28 |
- Tokugawa Ieshige, Japanese shogun, was born. (1712)
- United States Coast Guard was created by the U.S. Congress. (1915)
- Honey bee was
named the
Arkansas
state insect. (1973)
- Challenger disaster caused the loss of the entire crew, including the first teacher
astronaut. (1986)
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29 |
- Kansas became the 34th state. (1861)
- Liliuokalani,
Hawaii's last monarch was proclaimed queen of
Hawaii. (1891) 
- Robert Frost,
American poet from
New England, died. (1963)
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30 |
- USS Monitor, the first American ironclad warship, was launched. (1862)
- Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
32nd
U.S.
president, was born. (1882)
- Mohandas
Karamchand Gandhi, political and spiritual leader of the Indian
independence movement, was assassinated. (1948)
- Tet Offensive begins when Viet Cong forces launch a series of
surprise attacks in
South
Vietnam
. (1968)
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| 31 |
- Zane Grey, American Western writer, born. (1872)
- World War I entered by the
United States
.
(1917)
- Jackie Robinson,
first African American in major league baseball, was born. (1919)
- The Green Hornet radio show debuts. (1936)
- Private Eddie Slovik was executed, the first American soldier since the Civil War to
be executed for desertion. (1945)
- Apollo 14,
the third mission in which humans walked on the lunar surface, was launched.
(1971)
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