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Click on date for list of events

Summer afternoonsummer afternoon; to me those have always been the two most beautiful words in the English language
Summer's lease hath all too short a date.
-William Shakespeare (1564-1616)

Ah, summer, what power you have to make us suffer and like it.
-Russell Baker (1925- )

Leaves of the summer, lovely summers pride,
Sweet is the shade below your silent tree.
-William Barnes (1801 - 1886)

It is summer, it is the solstice
the crowd is
cheering, the crowd is laughing
in detail
permanently, seriously
without thought.
-William Carlos Williams (1883-1963)

But thy eternal summer shall not fade.
-William Shakespeare (1564-1616)

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June
is...
Accordion Awareness Month
Adopt-A-Shelter-Cat Month
Black Music Month
Cancer
from the Sun Month
Candy Month
National Dairy Month
Fireworks Safety Month (through July
31)
National Fresh
Fruits and Vegetables Month
National
Safety Month
Rose Month |
1 |
- Sun Safety Week June 1 - 7, 2009
- Hurricane Season Starts 2009
- Kentucky became the fifteenth state
in the union. (1792)
- Tennessee became the sixteenth state in the union.
(1796)
- Cherokee Nation was annexed by
Georgia
. (1830)
- First
U.S. seismograph was installed at Lick
Observatory in
California
to help detect earthquakes. (1888)
- "New York's Finest" parade
occurred in
Union Square,
New York. (1899)
- Charles de Gaulle called out of retirement to become
Premier of France. (1958)
- Oscar
the Grouch’s birthday. 1969
Back to Top |
2 |
- P.T. Barnum started his first circus tour. (1835)
- Thomas Hardy, author, was born near
Dorchester,
England
.
(1840)
- Native Americans born within the
borders of the
United States
were granted American citizenship by Congress. (1924)
- Queen Elizabeth II was coronation in Westminster
Abbey. (1953)
Back to Top |
3 |
- Hannah Kent Schoff, reformer and PTA founder, was
born. (1853)
- The first Civil War land battle occurred.
(1861)
- Alexander Graham Bell transmitted
the first wireless telephone message on his newly invented
"photophone." (1880)
- Edward VIII (later Duke of Windsor)
married an American divorcee, which led him to give up the British throne.
(1936)
- The reflecting Hale telescope at the Palomar Mountain
Observatory in
California
was dedicated. (1948)
Back to Top |
4 |
- First total solar eclipse was
recorded in
China
.
(780 B.C.)
- Aesop's birthday (620 B.C.)
- Captain George Vancouver claims
Puget Sound for
Great
Britain
. (1792)
- 19th Amendment to the
Constitution (women's suffrage) was approved by the U.S. Congress. (1919)
- Battle of Midway (World War II)
began. (1942)
- Tonga gained independence from
Britain
.
(1970)
- Tiananmen Square Revolt took place
in
Beijing,
China
, where democracy
demonstrators were suppressed. (1989)
Back to Top |
5 |
- World Environment Day 2009
- Ben Franklin flew his famous kite to study
electricity. (1752)
- Uncle Tom's Cabin, by Harriet
Beecher Stowe, began to appear in serial form. (1851)
- Stephen Crane, author (The Red
Badge of Courage), died. (1900)
- The Six-Day War between
Israel
and
Egypt
,
Syria
, and
Jordan
began. (1967)
- Robert Kennedy, Presidential
candidate and brother of the late John F. Kennedy, was assassinated. (1968)
- Ronald Reagan died at age 93 (2004)
Back to Top |
6 |
- National Fishing & Boating Week June 6 - 14, 2009
- National Trail Day 2009 (first
Saturday in June)
- President Andrew Jackson became the first President
to ride a train, or "Iron Horse." (1833)
- Theodore Roosevelt Jr. received the
Congressional Medal of Honor. (1944)
- D-day began in the early morning
hours. (1944)
- James H. Meredith, the first African
American to attend the
University
of
Mississippi, was shot
by a sniper shortly after beginning a civil rights march through the South. He
survived. (1966)
Back to Top |
7 |
- Full Moon 2009
-National Cancer Survivor’s Day 2009 (first Sunday in
June)
- Daniel Boone became the first
frontiersman to see the forests and woodlands of present-day
Kentucky. (1769)
- Paul Gauguin, French painter known
for his colorful series from
Tahiti and many
other impressionist paintings, was born. (1848)
- Mahatma Gandhi initiated his first
act of civil disobedience. (1893)
- King George VI became the first
British monarch to visit the
United
States
. (1939)
- E. M. Forster, British author (A
Passage to
India
),
died. (1970)
Back to Top |
8 |
- World Oceans Day
- Prophet Muhammad (Mohammed), founder
of Islam and unifier of
Arabia, died. (632
C.E.)
- Frank Lloyd Wright, known for his
organic architecture and use of cement and rock, was born. (1867)
- Mark Twain embarked on the journey
through Europe to the
Holy Land that would
inspire The Innocents Abroad. (1867)
- Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell is published.
(1949)
- James Earl Ray was arrested in
London for the
assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. (1968)
Back to Top |
9 |
- Jacques Cartier became the first
European explorer to discover the St. Lawrence River in present-day
Quebec,
Canada
.
(1534)
- Peter the Great, Russian Emperor,
was born. (1672)
- Charles Dickens, author (Tale of Two Cities, Great
Expectations, and Oliver Twist), died. (1870) 
- Cole (Albert) Porter, composer and
lyricist of Broadway shows (Kiss Me Kate), was born. (1891)
- Yo-Yo Manufacturing Company started up in
Santa Barbara,
California.
(1928)
- Donald Duck made his film debut. (1934)
Back to Top |
10 |
- Salem witch trials hanged Bridget
Bishop as a witch in
Salem
Village. (1692)
- Guantánamo Bay,
Cuba
, was occupied by U.S. Marines, the
beginning of the end of Spanish colonial rule in the
Western
Hemisphere. (1898)
- Saul Bellow, author (The
Adventures of Augie March, Herzog, and Henderson the Rain King), was born. (1915)
- Maurice Sendak, author and
illustrator (Chicken Soup with Rice and Where the Wild Things Are), was born. (1928)
- Alcoholics Anonymous was founded in
New York City by two
recovering alcoholics. (1935)
Back to Top |
11 |
- Kamehameha Day is celebrated in
Hawaii.
- King Henry VIII of England married
Catherine of Aragón, the first of six wives he would have. (1509)
- Gerasim Izmailov, Russian explorer,
reaches
Alaska.
(1788)
- Jeannette Pickering Rankin, the
first woman elected to Congress, was born on a ranch near
Missoula,
Montana
Territory. (1880)
- Jacques Yves Cousteau, marine explorer and
co-inventor of the Aqua-Lung, was born. (1910)
- Charles Lindbergh awarded the first
Distinguished Flying Cross. (1927)
- George Wallace, governor of
Alabama, made his "stand in the schoolhouse
door" at the
University
of
Alabama, blocking the
admission of two African-American students. (1963)
Back to Top |
12 |
- Johanna Spyri, Swiss writer of Heidi, was
born. (1827)
- Philippines were formally annexed from
Spain
.
(1898)
- George Bush, 41st U.S. President and father of 43rd
President George W. Bush, was born. (1924)
- Anne Frank was born in
Frankfurt-am-Main,
Germany
.
Thirteen years later, she would receive a diary for her birthday and would
begin to write the memoirs of World War II for which she is remembered. (1929)
- Indira Gandhi, former prime minister
of
India
,
was found guilty of electoral corruption in her successful 1971 campaign.
(1975)
- Russian National Sovereignty
Declaration Day (
Russia
Day). (1990)
Back to Top |
13 |
- William Butler Yeats, Nobel
Prize-winning poet and dramatist, was born in Sandymount,
Dublin. (1865)
- The first women’s golf tournament was held at Royal Lytham,
England
. (1893)
- The Yukon was separated from the
Northwest Territories in
Canada
and given separate
territorial status. (1898)
- Miranda v.
Arizona case decided by Supreme Court.
(1966)
- Thurgood Marshall became the first
African American appointed to the Supreme Court. (1967)
Back to Top |
14 |
- Flag Day is celebrated in the
United States
.
- United States Army was created. (1775)
- Harriet Beecher Stowe, American
writer (Uncle Tom's Cabin), was born. (1811)
- Caldecott Book Medal first awarded.
(1938)
- UNIVAC was dedicated by the U.S.
Census Bureau as the world's first commercially produced electronic digital computer.
(1951)
- Eric Heiden, winner of 5 Olympic gold medals for
speed skating in the 1980 Winter Olympics, was born. (1958)
- Falkland Islands War ended with
Argentina
surrendering to
Great Britain
.
(1982)
Back to Top |
15 |
- Magna Carta, the Great Charter,
received royal seal from King John. (1215)
- Arkansas was admitted to the
Union as the 25th state. (1836)
- U.S. - Canadian border was
established at the 49th parallel of north latitude by the Oregon Treaty. (1846)
- Henry O, Flipper becomes the first African American
cadet to graduate from the
United
States
Military
Academy. (1877)
- Hawaii annexation was approved by
the U.S. House of Representatives and forwarded to Senate. (1897)
Back to Top |
16 |
- Fudge Day
- Valentina Tereshkova became the
first woman to travel into space. (1963)
- Wernher von Braun, German-U.S.
rocket engineer, died. (1977)
Back to Top |
17 |
- Francis Drake, English seaman,
anchored in a harbor just north of present-day
San Francisco,
California,
and claimed the territory for Queen Elizabeth I. (1579)
- The Battle of Bunker Hill was fought
between American and British troops in
Boston.
(1775)
- Igor Fedorovich Stravinsky,
composer, was born. (1882)
- M.C. Escher, Dutch artist widely
known for his use of tessellations and geometric shapes in his drawings and
woodcuts, was born. (1898)
- Iceland becomes independent from
Denmark
and forms a republic. (1944)
- Watergate affair began when five men
were arrested for breaking into the Democratic National Committee headquarters
at the Watergate Hotel in
Washington,
D.C. (1972) 
Back to Top |
18 |
- Eat Your Vegetables (and Fruits) Day
- The War of 1812 began when President
James Madison signed the declaration into law.
- Napoleon Bonaparte suffered defeat
at the hands of the Duke of Wellington at
Waterloo
in
Belgium
.
(1815)
- Amelia Earhart became the first
woman to fly in an airplane across the
Atlantic Ocean.
(1928)
- (James) Paul McCartney, musician
and member of the Beatles, was born. (1942)
- Dr. Sally Ride became the first American female
astronaut. (1983)
Back to Top |
19 |
- Juneteenth is celebrated. It is the oldest known
celebration of the ending of slavery. 
- Austrian Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian,
installed as Emperor of Mexico by French Emperor Napoleon III in 1864, was
executed. (1867)
- Statue of Liberty, a gift of
friendship from the people of
France
to the people of the
United States
,
arrived in
New York City's
harbor. (1885)
-
Kuwait
declares independence from the
United Kingdom
.
(1961)
- Garfield (the cartoon cat) was "born."
(1978)
Back to Top |
20 |
- World Refugee Day 2009
- West Virginia was admitted into the
Union as the 35th state. (1863)
- The Boxer Rebellion was launched in
China
in response to perceived widespread
foreign encroachment upon
China
's national affairs. (1900)
- Muhammad Ali, boxing champion, was
convicted of refusing induction into
U.S.
armed services. (1967)
- Trans-Alaska pipeline was opened.
(1977)
Back to Top |
21 |
- Father's Day 2009
- Summer Solstice 2009
- Helen Keller
Deaf - Blind Awareness Week June 21 – 27, 2009
- Lightning Safety Awareness Week June
21 - 27, 2009
- U.S. Constitution was ratified when
New Hampshire became the
last necessary state to ratify. (1788)
- Pancho Villa, Mexican revolutionary,
brought the
United States
and
Mexico
closer to war
when Mexican government troops attacked U.S. Brigadier General John J.
Pershing's force at
Carrizal,
Mexico
. (1916)
- Okinawa, a
Pacific
Island, was surrendered by Japanese
troops to the
United States
after one of the longest and bloodiest battles of World War II. (1945)
- Prince William, son of
England
's Prince Charles and Princess Diana, was born. (1982) 
Back to Top |
22 |
- National Pollinator Week, June 22 -
28, 2009
- Wimbledon 2009 (June 22 - July 5, 2009)
- Ann Morrow Lindbergh, aviator,
author (Gift from the Sea), and wife of Charles Lindbergh, was born.
(1907)
- Joe Louis won the world heavyweight
boxing title when he defeated American Jim Braddock in an eighth-round
knockout. (1937)
Back to Top |
23 |
- Henry Hudson, English navigator, was
set adrift on his ship Discovery, in
Hudson Bay
by mutineers; he was never seen again. (1611)
- Banff,
Canada
's
first National Park, was created. (1887)
- The Antarctic Treaty, signed by twelve
nations in 1959, took effect. (1961)
Back to Top |
24 |
- John Cabot, Italian navigator and
explorer, claimed North America for
England
. (1497)
- Pablo Picasso's first major art exhibition opened at
a gallery in
Paris.
(1901)
- John Ciardi, poet, was born in
Boston. (1916)
- The term flying saucer became a common
term after a pilot reported seeing strange objects in the sky that looked like
"saucers skipping across the water." (1947)
Back to Top |
25 |
- Virginia was admitted to the
Union. (1788)
- Custer's Last Stand claimed the
lives of George Armstrong Custer and the 265 men under his command in the
Battle of Little Big Horn. (1876)
- George Orwell, author (Animal
Farm and 1984), was born at Motihari in
Bengal,
India
.
(1903)
Back to Top |
26 |
- Take Your Dog to Work Day 2009
- Eye Safety Awareness
Week June 26 - July 6, 2009
- Francisco Pizarro, governor of
Peru
and conqueror of the Inca civilization, was
assassinated in
Lima
by Spanish rivals. (1541)
- Bicycle maker W.K. Clarkson received
the first American patent for an early bicycle, which he called a
"swift-walker." (1819)
- Pearl S. Buck, Nobel Prize-winning
author (The Good Earth), was born. (1892)
- 14,000 U.S. infantry troops landed in
France
at the
port of
Saint Nazaire.
(1917)
- United Nations was founded when delegates from 50
nations signed the United Nations Charter, establishing the world body as a
means of saving "succeeding generations from the scourge of war."
(1945)
- St. Lawrence Seaway officially
opened, creating a navigational channel from the Atlantic Ocean to all the
Great Lakes. (1959)
Back to Top |
27 |
- The yen became the new form of currency in
Japan
. (1871)
- Mildred J. Hill composes "Happy Birthday to You" melody. (1829) 
- Helen Keller, author, educator and advocate for the
blind, was born. (1880)
-
U.S.
forces were sent to South Korea by President Harry S. Truman to aid in
repulsing an invasion by communist
North Korea
. (1950)
Back to Top |
28 |
- The name Coca-Cola was trademarked by John S.
Pemberton. (1887)
- Robert Louis Stevenson, Scottish author (Treasure
Island), left
San Francisco on his first
voyage to the
South Seas. (1888)
- Archduke Ferdinand and his wife,
Sofia, were assassinated in
Sarajevo,
an event that would lead to the start of World War I. (1914)
Back to Top |
29 |
- The Globe Theatre caught fire and
burned to the ground during a performance of Shakespeare's Henry VIII.
(1613)
- Henry Clay, known as "the Great
Compromiser" for his feats of legislative reconciliation between the North
and the South, died. (1852)
- Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, aviator
and author (Night Flight and The Little Prince) was born in
Lyon,
France
.
(1900)
- Argentina's Vice President Isabela
Martinez de Perón, wife of dying President Juan Peron, was sworn in as the
leader of the South American country. (1974)
- Iceland elected Vigdis Finnbogadottir as president,
Europe’s first democratically elected female head of
state. (1980)
Back to Top |
30 |
- Indian Removal Act was signed by
Andrew Jackson. (1830)
- Niagara Falls was crossed on a
tightrope by daredevil Jean-François Gravelet, a Frenchman known professionally
as Émile Blondin. (1859)
- Yosemite was declared a national
park by President Abraham Lincoln. (1864)
- Margaret Mitchell's Gone With the Wind was
published by Macmillan. The novel would set a record in October when 50,000
copies were sold in one day. (1936)
Back to Top |
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