March 25
The Triangle Shirtwaist Company factory in New York City burns down and kills 145 workers. The tragedy led to the development of a series of laws and regulations that better protected the safety of factory workers. – 1911.
An explosion at a coal mine in Centralia, Ill. kills 111 miners. Mineworker’s president John L. Lewis calls for a six-day work stoppage by the Nation’s 400,000 soft coal miners to demand safer working conditions. – 1947.
March 26
In a ceremony at the White House, Egyptian president Anwar el-Sadat and Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin sign an historic peace agreement to end three decades of hostilities between Egypt and Israel. – 1979.
Police enter a mansion in San Diego, Calif., and discover 39 victims of a mass suicide. The deceased all were found lying peaceably in matching dark clothes and Nike sneakers. It was later revealed that the deceased were members of the Heaven’s Gate religious cult, whose leaders preached that suicide would allow them to leave their bodily containers and enter an alien spacecraft hidden behind the Hale-Bopp comet. – 1997.
March 27
The University of Oregon defeats The Ohio State University, 46-33, in the championship game of the first NCAA men’s basketball tournament at Northwestern University in Evanston. The tournament, which started with eight teams, since has grown to 68 teams and has grown exponentially in popularity since 1939. – 1939
U.S. Supreme Court rules that undocumented workers do not have the same rights as Americans when they are wrongly fired. – 2002.
March 28
Martin Luther King, Jr., leads a march of striking sanitation workers in Memphis, Tenn.. Violence during the march persuades him to return the following week to Memphis, where he was assassinated. – 1968.
At 4 a.m. the worst accident in the history of the U.S. nuclear power industry begins when a pressure valve in the Unit-2 reactor at Three Mile Island in Dauphin County, Pa. fails to close. Cooling water, contaminated with radiation, drained from the open valve into adjoining buildings, and the core began to dangerously overheat. – 1979.
March 29
Two months after the signing of the Vietnam peace agreement, the last U.S. combat troops leave South Vietnam and Hanoi, the controlling operation headquarters of North Vietnam, frees the remaining American prisoners of war held in North Vietnam. America’s direct eight-year intervention in the Vietnam War was at an end. In Saigon, some 7,000 U.S. Department of Defense civilian employees remained behind to aid South Vietnam in conducting what looked to be a fierce and ongoing war with communist North Vietnam. – 1973.
March 30
At the height of the Great Depression, 35,000 unemployed march in New York’s Union Square. Police beat many demonstrators and injure 100. – 1930.
The federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act is enacted. – 1970.
President Ronald Reagan is shot in the chest and injured outside a Washington, D.C., hotel by a deranged drifter. – 1981.