Calendar

Dec
31
Sat
First Bank Opens in US – Anniversary
Dec 31 all-day

First Bank Opens Dec 31, 1781. The first modern bank in the US, the Bank of North America, was organized by Robert Morris and received its charter from the Confederation Congress. It began operations Jan 7, 1782, at Philadelphia, PA.

Image courtesy of Pixabay.com user “DasWortgewand,” CC0

First Night
Dec 31 all-day

First Night Many communities in the US will host family-oriented, non-alcoholic celebrations greeting the New Year. The tradition first began in Boston, Massachusetts in 1976.

Image courtesy of Pixabay user “monicore,” CC0.

New Year’s Eve
Dec 31 all-day

The last evening of the year according to the Gregorian calendar – traditionally a night for merry-making.

Image courtesy of pixabay user “Holiho,” CC0.

Jan
1
Sun
Alfred Stieglitz Birthday – Anniversary
Jan 1 all-day

Alfred  Stieglitz birthday Influential photographer Alfred Stieglitz was born on 1 January 1864 at Hoboken, New Jersey.

Image courtesy of WikimediaCommons.org

Commonwealth Formed – Australia
Jan 1 all-day

On 1 January 1901, the six colonies of Victoria, New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia and Northern Territory were united into one nation.

Image courtesy of WikimediaCommons.org

Data Backup Day
Jan 1 all-day

Data Backup Day On the first day of each month, the genealogy community is urged to back up their genealogy data and all computer data.

 

Image courtesy of Pixabay.com, CC0.

Ellis Island Opens – 125th Anniversary
Jan 1 all-day

Jan 1, 1892. Ellis Island was opened on New Year’s Day in 1892. Over the years more than 20 million individuals were processed through the stations. The island was used as a point of deportation as well: in 1932 alone, 20,000 people were deported from Ellis Island. When the US entered WWII in 1941, Ellis Island became a Coast Guard station. It closed Nov 12, 1954, and was declared a national park in 1956. After years of disuse it was restored, and in 1990 it was reopened as a museum.

Image courtesy of Wikipedia.org

Emancipation Proclamation Takes Effect – Anniversary
Jan 1 all-day

Emancipation Proclamation Effective as of 1 January 1863, President Abraham Lincoln, by executive proclamation of 22 September 1862, declared that on this date “all persons held as slaves within any state or designated part of a state, the people whereof shall then be in rebellion against the United States, shall be then, thenceforward, and forever, free.”

Image: Public domain courtesy of WikimediaCommons.org

First Baby Boomer Born – Anniversary
Jan 1 all-day

Baby BoomersOn 1 January 1946, Kathleen Casey Wilkens was born at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and is considered the first of almost 78 million Baby Boomers born between 1946 and 1964.

New Year’s Day
Jan 1 all-day

New Year's Day First day of the year according to the Gregorian calendar. Traditionally a day of new beginnings and setting out plans for the next year. January 1 has been observed as the beginning of the year in most English-speaking countries since the British Calendar Act of 1751, prior to which the New Year began Mar 25 (approximating the vernal equinox).

Image: Courtesy of Maxpixel.Freegreatpicture.com

Jan
2
Mon
Isaac Asimov Birthday – Anniversary
Jan 2 all-day

Issac Asimov Jan 2, 1920. Although Isaac Asimov was one of the world’s best-known writers of science fiction, his almost 500 books dealt with subjects as diverse as the Bible, works for preschoolers, college course work, mysteries, chemistry, biology, limericks, Shakespeare, Gilbert and Sullivan and modern history. During his prolific career he helped to elevate science fiction from pulp magazines to a more intellectual level. His works include the Foundation trilogy, The Robots of Dawn, Robots and Empire, Nemesis, Murder at the A.B.A. (in which he himself was a character), The Gods Themselves and I, Robot, in which he posited the famous Three Laws of Robotics. His The Clock We Live On is an accessible explanation of the origins of calendars.

Asimov was born near Smolensk, Russia, and died at New York, NY, Apr 6, 1992.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Spain Captures Granada – Anniversary
Jan 2 all-day

On 2 January 1492, Spaniards took the city of Granada from the Moors, ending seven centuries of Muslim rule in Spain.

Image:  La Rendición de Granada – by Pradilla 1881, Public Domain

Jan
3
Tue
‘Queen For a Day’ Television Debut – Anniversary
Jan 3 all-day

Queen for A Day Jan 3, 1956. Game show on which prizes were awarded to the contestant who evoked the most sympathy from the studio audience. The show began some 11 years earlier on the radio with Jack Bailey hosting. Five women were chosen from the audience to appear on stage. Each related her story of misfortune and explained what she needed to remedy the situation, and the audience would vote by applause. The lucky winner was then given the royal treatment— crown, scepter and red robe—plus a prize to help with her problem. This soon became the top-rated daytime show. In 1969 the show went into syndication with Dick Curtis as host, but it didn’t last long.

Image courtesy of wikipedia.org

Admission Day – Alaska
Jan 3 all-day

Alaska Admission Day Jan 3, 1959. Alaska, which had been purchased from Russia in 1867, became the 49th state. The area of Alaska is nearly one-fifth the size of the rest of the US.

Drinking Straw Patented – Anniversary
Jan 3 all-day
Drinking Staws invented

Eight brightly colored drinking straws positioned against a white background, each of them in its own color put together to resemble a rainbow. The plastic tubes have an accordion-like living hinge, making their head flexible.

On 3 January 1888, A drinking straw made out of paraffin-covered paper was patented by Marvin Stone of Washington, DC. It replaced natural rye straws.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Earth at Perihelion
Jan 3 all-day

Earth at Perihelion Jan 3. At approximately 12:43 AM, EST, planet Earth will reach perihelion, that point in its orbit when it is closest to the sun (about 91,400,000 miles). Earth’s mean distance from the sun (mean radius of its orbit) is reached early in the months of April and October. Note that Earth is closest to the sun during the Northern Hemisphere winter.  Read more at https://www.timeanddate.com/astronomy/perihelion-aphelion-solstice.html.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

J.R.R. Tolkein Birthday – Anniversary
Jan 3 all-day

JRR Tolkein birthday Jan 3, 1892. John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, author of The Hobbit (1937) and The Lord of the Rings. Though best known for his fantasies, Tolkien was also a serious philologist. Born at Bloemfontein, South Africa, he died at Bournemouth, England, Sept 2, 1973.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Lucretia Mott’s Birthday – Anniversary
Jan 3 all-day

Lucretia Mott birthday Jan 3, 1793. American teacher, minister, antislavery leader and (with Elizabeth Cady Stanton) one of the founders of the women’s rights movement in the US. Born at Nantucket, MA, she died near Philadelphia, PA, Nov 11, 1880.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, public domain

Jan
4
Wed
Admission Day – Utah
Jan 4 all-day

On 4 January 1896, Utah became the 45th state of the Union.Utah Admission Day

Amnesty for Polygamists – Anniversary
Jan 4 all-day

Jan 4, 1893. President Benjamin Harrison issued a proclamation granting full amnesty and pardon to all persons who had since Nov 1, 1890, abstained from unlawful cohabitation in a polygamous marriage. This was intended in the main for a specific group of elderly Mormons who had continued in the practice of contracting serial marriages. Amnesty was based on the condition that those pardoned must obey the law in the future or be “vigorously prosecuted.” The practice of polygamy was a factor interfering with attainment of statehood for Utah.

Image via Wikimedia Commons, Fair Use.

Louis Braille’s Birthday – Anniversary
Jan 4 all-day

Louis Braille's birthdayJan 4, 1809. The inventor of a widely used touch system of reading and writing for blind people was born at Coupvray, France.

Permanently blinded at the age of three by a leather working awl in his father’s saddle-making shop, Braille developed a system of writing that used, ironically, an awl-like stylus to punch marks in paper that could be felt and interpreted by people who are blind. The system was largely ignored until after Braille died in poverty, suffering from tuberculosis, at Paris, Jan 6, 1852.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Pop Music Chart Introduced – Anniversary
Jan 4 all-day
Pop Muisc Chart Introduced

illustration of music background in doodle style

Jan 4, 1936. Billboard magazine published the first list of bestselling pop records, covering the week that ended Dec 30, 1935. On the list were recordings by the Tommy Dorsey and the Ozzie Nelson orchestras.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Jan
5
Thu
$5 A Day Minimum Wage – Anniversary
Jan 5 all-day

On 5 January 1914, Henry Ford announced that all worthy Ford Motor Company employees would receive a minimum wage of $ 5 a day. Ford explained the policy as “profit sharing and efficiency engineering.” The more cynical attributed it to an attempt to prevent unionization and to obtain a docile workforce that would accept job speedups. To obtain this minimum wage, an employee had to be of “good personal habits.” Whether an individual fit these criteria was determined by a new office created by Ford Motor Company— the Sociological Department.

Image courtesy of Images.com, Creative Commons

George Reeves Birthday – Anniversary
Jan 5 all-day

George Reeves Birthday On 5 January 1914 the boxer turned actor was born George Keefer Brewer at Woodstock, Iowa. Active in the 1940s in minor Hollywood roles (including a small part in Gone with the Wind), Reeves found stardom on the small screen as Superman/ Clark Kent in “The Adventures of Superman,” which ran from 1952 to 1957. Reeves did his own stunts as the “Man of Steel” and was popular with children all over.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Kemmons Wilson’s Birthday – Anniversary
Jan 5 all-day

Source: KWilson.com, fair use

Jan 5, 1913. The “father of the modern hotel,” revolutionized the travel industry by creating the first standardized chain of clean, air-conditioned hotels with swimming pools and ice machines.

Born at Osceola, AR, in 1951 Wilson became angered by the conditions and costs of hotels he encountered during what he called “the most miserable vacation trip of my life.” From this family vacation, the idea for the Holiday Inn chain was born.

Named after the 1942 Bing Crosby film, Holiday Inns were strategically located next to the burgeoning interstate highway system, where growing numbers of post-WWII families could travel from one to the next, knowing there would be no unsavory surprises. Today, there are Holiday Inns in every state and in more than 50 countries worldwide. Wilson died at his home at Memphis, TN, on Feb 12, 2003.

Read more at http://kwilson.com/our-story/history/.

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