October 2
Joining with 400,000 coal miners already on strike, 500,000 CIO steel workers close down the Nation’s foundries, steel mills, and iron mills, demand for pensions, better wages, and better working conditions. – 1949.
Actor Rock Hudson, 59, becomes the first major U.S. celebrity to die of complications from AIDS. Hudson’s death raised public awareness of the epidemic, which until that time had been ignored by many in the mainstream as a gay plague. – 1985.
October 3
Expressing gratitude for a pivotal Union Army victory at Gettysburg, U.S. president Abraham Lincoln announces that the Nation will celebrate an official Thanksgiving holiday November 26. – 1863.
The 120,000 workers at 88 Ford plants in 26 states walk out to win higher wages and better benefits for their members. Workers at GM had gone on strike the previous month to win substantial wage and benefit improvements. – 1961.
After a 252-day trial, O.J. Simpson is acquitted of a double murder charge. – 1995.
October 4
Sculpting begins on the face of Mount Rushmore in the Black Hills National Forest of South Dakota, which is completed 12 years later. – 1927
Thirty-seven striking black Louisiana sugar workers are murdered when Louisiana militia, aided by bands of so-called prominent citizens, shoot unarmed workers trying to get a dollar-per-day wage. Two strike leaders were lynched. – 1887.
The Soviet Union inaugurates the Space Age with its launch of Sputnik, the world’s first artificial satellite. -1957.
October 5
U.S. president Harry Truman makes the first televised presidential address from the White House to ask Americans to cut back on their use of grain in order to help starving Europeans. – 1947.
American David Kunst completes the first round-the-world journey on foot, which took four years and 21 pairs of shoes to complete the 14,500-mile journey across the land masses of four continents. During the long journey, he took on sponsors and helped raise money for UNICEF. – 1974.
October 6
The surprise attack by Egyptian and Syrian forces on Israel in October 1973, called the Yom Kippur War, throws the Middle East into turmoil and threatens to bring the United States and the Soviet Union into direct conflict for the first time since the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962. – 1973.
Some 1,700 female flight attendants win 18-year, $37 million suit against United Airlines. They had been fired for getting married. – 1986.
October 7
The most devastating fire in United States history is ignited in Wisconsin. Over the course of the next day, 1,200 individuals lose their lives and 2 billion trees were consumed by flames. – 1871.
A U.S.-led coalition begins attacks on Taliban-controlled Afghanistan with an intense bombing campaign by American and British forces. The invasion of Afghanistan was the opening salvo in the president George W. Bush-led United States war on terrorism and a response to the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the U.S. East Coast. – 2001.
October 8
Flames spark in the Chicago barn of Patrick and Catherine O’Leary and ignite a two-day blaze that kills between 200 and 300 residents, destroys 17,450 buildings, leaves 100,000 homeless, and causes an estimated $200 million, equivalent of $3.8 billion in today’s dollars, in damages. – 1871.
The U.S. House of Representatives votes to proceed toward impeaching president Bill Clinton on charges of perjury and obstruction of justice in alleged involvement in several scandals, including allegedly improper Arkansas real-estate deals, suspected fundraising violations, claims of sexual harassment, and accusations of cronyism involving the firing of White House travel agents. – 1998.
