July 19
During Napoleon Bonaparte’s Egyptian campaign, a French soldier discovers a black basalt slab inscribed with ancient writing near the town of Rosetta, about 35 miles north of Alexandria. The irregularly-shaped stone contained fragments of passages written in three different scripts: Greek, Egyptian hieroglyphics, and Egyptian demotic. The ancient Greek on the Rosetta Stone told archaeologists that it was inscribed by priests honoring the king of Egypt, Ptolemy V, in the second century B.C.E.. More startlingly, the Greek passage announced that the three scripts all were of identical meaning. The artifact thus held the key to solving the riddle of hieroglyphics, a written language that had been “dead” for nearly 2,000 years. – 1799.
Women’s Rights Convention opens in Seneca Falls, N.Y.. Delegates adopt a Declaration of Women’s Rights and call for women’s suffrage. – 1848.
July 20
New York City newsboys, many so poor that they were sleeping in the streets, begin a two-week strike. Several rallies drew more than 5,000 newsboys, complete with charismatic speeches by strike leader Kid Blink, who was blind in one eye. The boys had to pay publishers up front for the newspapers; they were successful in forcing the publishers to buy back unsold papers. – 1899.
At 10:56 p.m. EDT, American astronaut Neil Armstrong, 240,000 miles from Earth, speaks these words to more than one billion individuals listening at home: “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.” Stepping off the lunar landing module Eagle, Armstrong became the first human to walk on the surface of the moon. – 1969.
A gunman goes on a rampage at a movie theater in the Denver, Colo. suburb of Aurora and kills 12 individuals and injures at least 70 others. – 2012.
July 21
In the first major land battle of the Civil War, a large Union force of 34,000 soldiers under General Irvin McDowell is routed by a Confederate army of approximately 29,000 men under General Pierre G.T. Beauregard. – 1861.
July 22
Outside Chicago’s Biograph Theatre, notorious criminal John Dillinger, America’s “Public Enemy No. 1,” is killed in a hail of bullets fired by federal agents. In a bank-robbing career that lasted just over one year, Dillinger and his associates robbed 11 banks for more than $300,000, which in today’s money would be approximately $5.2 Million. – 1934.
Milwaukee, Wis. police officers spot Tracy Edwards running down the street in handcuffs, and upon investigation find one of the grisliest scenes in modern history, Jeffrey Dahmer’s apartment. Dahmer confessed to 17 murders in all. – 1991.
July 23
In the early-morning hours of July 23, 1967, one of the worst riots in U.S. history breaks out on 12th Street in the heart of Detroit’s predominantly African-American inner city. By the time it was quelled four days later by 7,000 National Guard and U.S. Army troops, 43 persons were dead, 342 injured, and nearly 1,400 buildings had been burned. – 1967.
July 24
American archeologist Hiram Bingham gets his first look at Machu Picchu, an ancient Inca settlement in Peru that is now one of the world’s top tourist destinations with more than 300,000 tourists visiting every year.- 1911.
The steamer Eastland overturns in the Chicago River; between 800 and 850 of its more than 2,500 passengers drown. The boat was designed to carry 650 passengers, but was retrofitted in 1913 to carry 2,500 passengers. That same year a naval architect told officials the boat had structural defects, but his warning was not heeded. – 1915.
July 25
Workers stage a general strike, believed to be the Nation’s first, in St. Louis, in support of striking railroad workers. The successful strike was ended when some 3,000 federal troops and 5,000 deputized special police kill at least 18 individuals in skirmishes around the city. – 1877.
Louise Joy Brown, the world’s first baby to be conceived through in vitro fertilization (IVF), is born at Oldham and District General Hospital in Manchester, England, to parents Lesley and Peter Brown. The healthy baby was delivered shortly before midnight by caesarean section and weighed in at five pounds, 12 ounces. – 1978.
An Air France Concorde jet crashes upon takeoff in Paris and kills everyone onboard as well as four individuals on the ground. The Concorde, the world’s fastest commercial jet, had enjoyed an exemplary safety record up to that point, with no crashes in the plane’s 31-year history. – 2000.
Sources: History.com, Toil and Trouble, by Thomas R. Brooks; American Labor Struggles, by Samuel Yellen; IWW calendar, Solidarity Forever; Historical Encyclopedia of American Labor, edited by Robert E. Weir and James P. Hanlan; Southwest Labor History Archives/George Meany Center; Geov Parrish’s Radical History; workday Minnesota; Andy Richards and Adam Wright, AFL-CIO Washington DC Metro Council.
• “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” —George Santayana, Philosopher