1381
|
The Peasants’ Revolt, led by Wat Tyler,
climaxes when rebels plunder and burn the Tower of London and kill the
Archbishop of Canterbury.
|
|
1642
|
Massachusetts passes the first compulsory
education law in the colonies.
|
|
1645
|
||
1775
|
The U.S. Army is founded when the
Continental Congress authorizes the muster of troops.
|
|
1777
|
The Continental Congress authorizes the
“stars and stripes” flag for the new United States.
|
|
1789
|
Captain William Bligh of the HMS Bounty arrives in Timor in a small
boat. He had been forced to leave his ship when his crew mutinied.
|
|
1846
|
A group of settlers declare California to
be a republic.
|
|
1864
|
At the Battle of Pine Mountain, Georgia,
Confederate General
Leonidas Polk is killed by a Union shell.
|
|
1893
|
The city of Philadelphia observes the
first Flag Day.
|
|
1907
|
Women in Norway win the right to vote.
|
|
1919
|
||
1922
|
||
1927
|
Nicaraguan President Porfirio Diaz signs
a treaty with the U.S. allowing American intervention in his country.
|
|
1932
|
Representative Edward Eslick dies on the
floor of the House of Representatives while pleading for the passage of the
bonus bill.
|
|
1940
|
||
1942
|
The Supreme Court rules that requiring
students to salute the American flag is unconstitutional.
|
|
1944
|
||
1945
|
||
1949
|
The State of Vietnam is formed.
|
|
1951
|
UNIVAC, the first computer built for
commercial purposes, is demonstrated in Philadelphia by Dr. John W. Mauchly
and J. Presper Eckert, Jr.
|
|
1954
|
Americans take part in the first
nation-wide civil defense test against atomic attack.
|
|
1965
|
A military triumvirate takes control in
Saigon, South Vietnam.
|
|
1982
|
Argentina surrenders to the United
Kingdom ending the Falkland Islands War.
|
|
1985
|
Gunmen hijack a passenger jet over the
Middle East.
|
|
1989
|
Congressman William Gray, an African
American, is elected Democratic Whip of the House of Representatives.
|
|
1995
|
Chechen rebels take 2,000 people hostage
in a hospital in Russia.
|
|
Born on June 14
|
||
1811
|
Harriet
Beecher Stowe, American author (Uncle Tom’s Cabin).
|
|
1820
|
John Bartlett, editor, compiler of Barlett’s
Familiar Quotations.
|
|
1855
|
Robert Marion “Fighting Bob” La Follette,
reform movement leader, Governor of Wisconsin, U.S. Senator and Progressive
Party presidential candidate.
|
|
1906
|
Margaret Bourke-White, American
photojournalist.
|
|
1925
|
||
1933
|
Jerzy Kosinski, Polish-American novelist
(The Painted Bird, Being There).
|
|
1946
|
Donald
Trump, New York real estate mogul.
|
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