Calendar

Jan
13
Fri
Alfred Carl Fuller’s Birthday – Anniversary
Jan 13 all-day
Fuller brush Company Logo,

Fuller Brush Company Logo, fair use.

Jan 13, 1885. Founder of the Fuller Brush Company, born at Kings County, NS, Canada. In 1906 the young brush salesman went into business on his own, making brushes at a bench between the furnace and the coal bin in his sister’s basement. Died at Hartford, CT, Dec 4, 1973.

First Radio Broadcast – Anniversary
Jan 13 all-day
First Radio Broadcast

Lee De Forest

On 13 January 1910, radio pioneer and electron tube inventor Lee De Forest arranged the world’s first radio broadcast to the public at New York City. He succeeded in broadcasting the voice of Enrico Caruso along with other stars of the Metropolitan Opera to several receiving locations in the city where listeners with earphones marveled at wireless music from the air. Though only a few were equipped to listen, it was the first broadcast to reach the public and the beginning of a new era in which wireless radio communication became almost universal.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

St. Knut’s Day (Sweden)
Jan 13 all-day

Jan 13. St. Knut’s Day (Tjugondag Knut, or “The 20th Day of Knut”) marks the end of the Christmas season in Sweden— with parties, song and the dismantling of the yule tree (which traditionally is thrown out the window). Named for Knut (or Canute) IV, also Knut the Holy, former king and patron saint of Denmark. Although St. Knut’s feast day is Jan 19, Sweden and Finland have conflated observances of Knut IV with that of his nephew and saint Knut Lavard (feast day is Jan 7).

Image CC BY-SA 3.0 via wikimedia commons.

Tyvendedagen (Norway)
Jan 13 all-day

Tyvendelagen Tyvendedagen or “Twentieth Day” marks the end of the Christmas festivities in Norway.

Jan
14
Sat
‘Today Show’ television debut anniversary
Jan 14 all-day

Today Show Debut AnnivesaryJan 14, 1952. NBC program that started the morning news format we know today. Captained by Dave Garroway, the show was segmented with bits and pieces of news, sports, weather, interviews and other features that were repeated so that viewers did not have to stop their morning routine to watch. The segments were brief and to the point. Sylvester Weaver devised this concept to capitalize on television’s unusual qualities. What used to take three hours to broadcast live across the country was done in two with videotape on a delayed basis. The addition of chimpanzee J. Fred Muggs in 1953 helped push ratings up. There have been a number of hosts over the years, from John Chancellor and Hugh Downs to Tom Brokaw, Bryant Gumbel and Matt Lauer. Female hosts (originally called “Today Girls”) have included Betsy Palmer, Florence Henderson, Barbara Walters, Jane Pauley, Katie Couric and Meredith Viera.

Image public domain, originally published by Macfadden Publications

First Caesarean Section Performed – Anniversary
Jan 14 all-day

First Caesarean On 14 January 1794. Dr. Jesse Bennett, of Edom, Virginia, performed the first successful caesarean section. The patient was his wife.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Ratification Day
Jan 14 all-day

Jan 14, 1784. Anniversary of the act that officially ended the American Revolution and established the US as a sovereign power. On Jan 14, 1784, the Continental Congress, meeting at Annapolis, MD, ratified the Treaty of Paris, thus fulfilling the Declaration of Independence of July 4, 1776.

Jan
15
Sun
Black Dahlia Murder Anniversary
Jan 15 all-day
Black Dallia Murder Elizabeth Short

Elizabeth Short FBI mugshot

Jan 15, 1947. On this day, the body of Elizabeth Short was found in an empty lot in Los Angeles, CA. Short, nicknamed the Black Dahlia for her striking looks, had been murdered and mutilated, and her body’s discovery sparked a media frenzy. Although dozens of men (and women) confessed to the crime, those confessions were discounted. The murder remains Los Angelos, California’s most famous unsolved murder and one that evokes the noirish aura of postwar Los Angelos’s corruption and crime problems.

First Super Bowl Anniversary
Jan 15 all-day

First SuperBowl Jan 15, 1967. The Green Bay Packers won the first NFL– AFL World Championship Game, defeating the Kansas City Chiefs, 35– 10, at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Packers quarterback Bart Starr was named the game’s Most Valuable Player. Pro football’s title game later became known as the Super Bowl.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Martin Luther King Jr Birthday – Anniversary
Jan 15 all-day

Martin Luther King JrJan 15, 1929. Black civil rights leader, minister, advocate of nonviolence and recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (1964). Born at Atlanta, GA, he was assassinated at Memphis, TN, Apr 4, 1968. After his death many states and territories observed his birthday as a holiday. In 1983 Congress approved HR 3706, “A bill to amend Title 5, United States Code, to make the birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr, a legal public holiday.” Signed by the president on Nov 2, 1983, it became Public Law 98– 144. The law sets the third Monday in January for observance of King’s birthday. First observance was Jan 20, 1986.

Pentagon Completed – Anniversary
Jan 15 all-day

Jan 15, 1943. The world’s largest office building with 6.5 million square feet of usable space, the Pentagon is located in Virginia across the Potomac River from Washington, DC, and serves as headquarters for the Department of Defense.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Aerial view of the Pentagon, Arlington, VA

Jan
16
Mon
Civil Service Created – Anniversary
Jan 16 all-day

Jan 16, 1883. The US Congress passed a bill creating the civil service.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Donnie and Marie Television Premiere – Anniversary
Jan 16 all-day

Donnie and Marie Osmond Show Jan 16, 1976. ABC show hosted by brother-and-sister act Donny and Marie Osmond. There were seven other talented siblings in the Osmond family who appeared on the show at times along with regulars Jim Connell and Hank Garcia. The sister-and-brother team could sing, dance and perform on ice skates.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Ethel Merman’s Birthday – Anniversary
Jan 16 all-day

Ethel Merman Jan 16, 1909. Musical comedy star famous for her belting voice and brassy style. Born Ethel Agnes Zimmerman on Jan 16, 1909 (or 1912— the date changed the older she got, but most sources say 1909), at Queens, NY. Died Feb 15, 1984, at New York, NY.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Gulf War Begins – Anniversary
Jan 16 all-day

Jan 16, 1991. Allied forces launched a major air offensive against Iraq to begin the Gulf War. The strike was designed to destroy Iraqi air defenses and command, control and communication centers. As Desert Shield became Desert Storm, the world was able to see and hear for the first time an initial engagement of war as CNN broadcasters, stationed at Baghdad, covered the attack live.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

National Nothing Day
Jan 16 all-day

Nothing Day Jan 16, 1973. Anniversary of National Nothing Day, an event created by newspaperman Harold Pullman Coffin and first observed “to provide Americans with one national day when they can just sit without celebrating, observing or honoring anything.” Since 1975, though many other events have been listed on this day, lighthearted traditional observance of Coffin’s idea has continued. Coffin, a native of Reno, NV, died at Capitola, CA, Sept 12, 1981, at the age of 76.

Image courtesy of Pixabay.com user Geralt, CC0.

Prohibition Amendment – Anniversary
Jan 16 all-day

Prohibition Anniversary Jan 16, 1919. When Nebraska became the 36th state to ratify the prohibition amendment, the 18th Amendment became part of the US Constitution. One year later, Jan 16, 1920, the 18th Amendment took effect and the sale of alcoholic beverages became illegal in the US, with the Volstead Act providing for enforcement. This was the first time that an amendment to the Constitution dealt with a social issue.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Religious Freedom Day
Jan 16 all-day

Religious Freedom Day Jan 16, 1786. The legislature of Virginia adopted a religious freedom statute that protected Virginians against any requirement to attend or support any church and against discrimination. This statute, which had been drafted by Thomas Jefferson and introduced by James Madison, later was the model for the First Amendment to the US Constitution.

Image Courtesy of PublicDomainPictures.net

Jan
17
Tue
‘The Goldbergs’ Television Premiere – Anniversary
Jan 17 all-day

Jan 17, 1949. Originally broadcast by CBS, this show was one of the earliest TV sitcoms. The show centered around a Jewish mother and her family living in the Bronx and later in the suburbs. Gertrude Berg created the hit radio show before she wrote, produced and starred as Molly Goldberg in the television version. Contributing actors and actresses included Philip Loeb, Arlene McQuade, Tom Taylor, Eli Mintz, Menasha Skulnik and Arnold Stang.

 

Benjamin Franklin’s Birthday – Anniversary
Jan 17 all-day

Benjamin Franklin Jan 17, 1706. “Elder statesman of the American Revolution,” oldest signer of both the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, scientist, diplomat, author, printer, publisher, philosopher, philanthropist and self-made, self-educated man. Author, printer and publisher of Poor Richard’s Almanack (1733– 58). Born at Boston, MA, Franklin died at Philadelphia, PA, Apr 17, 1790. His birthday is commemorated each year by the Poor Richard Club of Philadelphia with graveside observance.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Cable Car Patent – Anniversary
Jan 17 all-day

Cable Car Patent Anniversary Jan 17, 1871. Andrew Hallikie received a patent for a cable car system that began service in San Francisco in 1873.

Image of San Francisco Street car courtesy of Pixabay.com user PDPhotos, CC0.

Muhammad Ali’sBirthday – 75th Anniversary
Jan 17 all-day

Muhammad Ali Birthday Muhammad Ali born Jan 17, 1942. Born Cassius Clay at Louisville, KY, boxing’s “The Greatest” lived up to his nickname: winning the gold medal in the light heavyweight division at the 1960 Rome Olympics and winning the world heavyweight title three times (1964, 1974, 1978). Ali was also nicknamed the “Louisville Lip”— always ready with a quote-worthy quip or challenge. He converted to Islam in 1964 (under Malcolm X’s mentorship) and dropped his “slave name” for that of Muhammad Ali. Later, as a conscientious objector, he refused to be drafted to fight in the Vietnam War— he was arrested and stripped of his title. In a battle that went to the US Supreme Court in 1971, overturned. Ali’s refusal to bow to the establishment, his civil rights beliefs and leadership and his outsize personality made him one of the great iconic figures— in sports or otherwise— of the 20th century. After battling Parkinson’s disease (diagnosed in 1984) for more than thirty years, Ali died at Scottsdale, AZ, on June 3, 2016.

Image by Ira Rosenberg courtesy of the United States Library of Congress‘s Prints and Photographs division under the digital ID cph.3c15435

Northridge Earthquake – Anniversary
Jan 17 all-day

Northridge earthquake Jan 17, 1994. An earthquake measuring 6.6 on the Richter scale struck the Los Angeles area about 4: 20 AM. The epicenter was at Northridge in the San Fernando Valley, about 20 miles northwest of downtown Los Angeles. A death toll of 51 was announced Jan 20. Sixteen of the dead were killed in the collapse of one apartment building. More than 25,000 people were made homeless by the quake and 680,000 lost electric power. Many buildings were destroyed and others made uninhabitable due to structural damage. A section of the Santa Monica Freeway, part of the Simi Valley Freeway and three major overpasses collapsed. Hundreds of aftershocks occurred in the following several weeks. Costs to repair the damages were estimated at $ 15– 30 billion.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Queen Liliuokalani Deposed – Anniversary
Jan 17 all-day

Queen Liliuokalani in a black dress Hawaiian Monarchy Hawaii

Jan 17, 1893. Queen Liliuokalani, the last monarch of Hawaii, lost her throne when the monarchy was abolished by the “Committee of Safety,” with the foreknowledge of US minister John L. Stevens, who encouraged the revolutionaries. The Queen’s supporters were intimidated by the 300 US Marines sent to protect American lives and property. Judge Sanford B. Dole became president of the republic and later was Hawaii’s first governor after the US annexed it by joint resolution of Congress on July 7, 1898. Hawaii held incorporated territory status for 60 years. President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the proclamation making Hawaii the 50th state on Aug 21, 1959.

Image courtesy of Wikipedia.org

Jan
18
Wed
First Black US Cabinet Member – Anniversary
Jan 18 all-day

Robert C Weaver first US Cabinet MemberJan 18, 1966. Robert Clifton Weaver was sworn in as secretary of housing and urban development, becoming the first black cabinet member in US history. He was nominated by President Lyndon Johnson. Weaver died at New York, NY, July 17, 1997.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

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