Friday, August 01, 2014

History for August 1

History for August 1 - On-This-Day.com: 
World Breastfeeding Week begins (Aug 1-7). See www.lalecheleague.org

Lollapalooza, Grant Park, Chicago, IL (Aug 1-3). 23rd anniversary. See www.lollapalooza.com

Twins Day Festival, Twinsburg, OH (Aug 1-3). See www.twinsdays.org
 

Birth anniversary of Herman Melville (1819-91), author of Moby-Dick.
 










Anniversary of the World Wide Web: the creation of what would become the World Wide Web was suggested this month in 1990 by Tim Berners-Lee and Robert Cailliau at CERN. They had designed a prototype Web browser by October.

1790 - The first U.S. census was completed with a total population of 3,929,214 recorded. The areas included were the present states of Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont and Virginia 



1834 - Slavery was outlawed in the British empire with an emancipation bill. 



1893 - Shredded wheat was patented by Henry Perky and William Ford. 



1894 - The first Sino-Japanese War erupted. The dispute was over control of Korea. 



1914 - Germany declared war on Russia at the beginning of World War I. 



1936 - Adolf Hitler presided over the Olympic games as they opened in Berlin. 



1944 - In Warsaw, Poland, an uprising against Nazi occupation began. The revolt continued until October 2 when Polish forces surrendered. 



1944 - Anne Frank wrote her last diary entry.



1956 - The Social Security Act was amended to provide benefits to disabled workers aged 50-64 and disabled adult children. 


In the Aug 1, 1962, issue #15 of Amazing Fantasy, Stan Lee and Steve Ditko introduced a new superhero for Marvel: Spider-Man.



1973 - The movie "American Graffiti" opened. 


1986 - John McEnroe and Tatum O'Neal were married. 



2006 - Cuban leader Fidel Castro turned over absolute power when he gave his brother Raul authority while he underwent an intestinal surgery.

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