July 8

July

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JULY IS:

National Ice Cream Month 
National Peach Month
National Picnic month

Anti-Boredom Month
National Recreation and Parks Month
 

JULY 8, IS:

Ice Cream Sundae Birthday - Edward Berner of Two Rivers, Wisconsin, served the first ice cream sundae in 1881.

National TV Sports Day - Celebrate the birthday of Roone Arledge by watching your favorite sport on TV. This TV sports executive was born on this day in Forest Hills, New York in 1931. Sponsor: The Life of the Party.

 

 
Born on this Day
 
  • 1545: Don Carlos "the Mad," Prince of Spain

  • 1621: La Fontaine

  • 1792: Lowell Mason, Presbyterian pioneer of congregational singing. He composed over 1,000 hymn tunes, including BETHANY ('Nearer, My God, To Thee'), DENNIS ('Blest Be theTie That Binds'), and HAMBURG ('When I Survey the Wondrous Cross')

  • 1838: Dirigible inventor Ferdinand von Zeppelin

  • 1857: French psychologist Alfred Binet

  • 1839: Oil magnate John D. Rockefeller

  • 19??: Steve Mason (Jars of Clay)

  • 1908: Nelson Rockefeller U.S. Vice President under Gerald Ford

  • 1914: Jazz singer Billy Eckstine

  • 1919: Actor Craig Stevens ("Peter Gunn")

  • 1931: ABC News Chairman Roone Arledge

  • 1932: Singer Jerry Vale (Genaro Vitaliano)

  • 1933: Marty Feldman - (Young Frankenstein)

  • 1935: Singer Steve Lawrence (Sidney Leibowitz)

  • 1944: Actor Jeffrey Tambor

  • 1946: Ballerina Cynthia Gregory

  • 1948: Actress Kim Darby

  • 1948: Children's performer Raffi

  • 1951: Actress Anjelica Huston

  • 1958: Actor Kevin Bacon

  • 1961: Rock musician Andy Fletcher (Depeche Mode)

  • 1961: Country singer Toby Keith

  • 1961: Rock musician Graham Jones (Haircut 100)

  • 1962: Rock singer Joan Osborne

  • 1962: "Late Show with David Letterman" executive producer Rob Burnett

  • 1965: Actor Corey Parker

  • 1968: Actor Billy Crudup

  • 1970: Singer Beck

  • 1970: Country singer Drew Womack (Sons of the Desert)

  • 1977: Rock musician Tavis Werts (Reel Big Fish)

 

 

Events in History on this day
 
  • 0371 BC:Thebans defeat Spartans

  • 0303: Death of St. Procopius

  • 0810: Death of Pepin III, King of France

  • 1115: Death of Peter, the Hermit

  • 1153: Death of St. Eugenius, Pope

  • 1173: Elanor of Aquitaine, wife of Henry II, King of England, sails to England as her husband's prisoner

  • 1249: Death of Alexander II, King of Scotland

  • 1336: Death of St. Elizabeth, Queen of Portugal

  • 1376: Death of Edward, "the Black Prince"

  • 1497: Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama sailed from Lisbon on a voyage that would lead to discovery of a sea route to India around the southern tip of Africa.

  • 1553: Northumberland proclaims Lady Jane Dudley as Queen of England

  • 1617: Beheading of Leonora Galigai, for witchcraft

  • 1623: Death of Pope Gregory XV

  • 1629: The King of Spain sends Charles I of England, an Elephant and five camels

  • 1643: Charles I, King of England, sends to artist Bartolomeo della Stone in Venice to purchase works of art

  • 1663: King Charles the Second of England granted a new charter to Rhode Island. It guaranteed religious freedom regardless of 'differencesin opinion in matters of religion.'

  • 1693: Uniforms for police in New York City were authorized on this day.

  • 1741: Colonial Congregational minister Jonathan Edwards preaches his classic sermon at Enfield, Connecticut: "You are thus in the hands of an angry God; 'tis nothing but his mere pleasure that keeps you from being this moment swallowed up in everlasting destruction." This speech influenced the start of New England's 'Great Awakening.'

  • 1776: Colonel John Nixon gave the first public reading of the Declaration of Independence to a crowd gathered at Independence Square in Philadelphia.

  • 1795: Martin Academy in Washington, TN, changed its name to Washington College becoming the first college to be named after George Washington.

  • 1796: 1st American Passport issued by the US State Department.

  • 1835: The Liberty Bell cracked while being rung during the funeral of U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall in Philadelphia.

  • 1853: An expedition led by Commodore Matthew Perry arrived in Yedo Bay, Japan, on a mission to seek diplomatic and trade relations with the Japanese.

  • 1880: Claude Debussy was hired as a summer piano tutor by Nadezhda von Meck, the rich Russian woman who for so many years provided covert financial support to Tchaikovsky. To get the gig, Debussy lied about his age, pretending his was 20 when he was really only 17.

  • 1881: Edward Berner invents the Sundae.

  • 1889: "The Wall Street Journal" was first published. This first issue was a four page afternoon daily.

  • 1891: Warren G. Harding married Florence K. DeWolfe in Marion, Ohio.

  • 1907: Florenz Ziegfeld staged his first "Follies," on the roof of the New York Theater.

  • 1907: C.E. Barnes of Lowell, MA, patented the machine gun.

  • 1911: Nan Jane Aspinwall became the first woman to ride a horse across the United States. She rode from San Francisco, California to New York City. The trip began on September 1, 1910 and ended on July 8, 1911.

  • 1919: President Wilson received a tumultuous welcome in New York City after his return from the Versailles Peace Conference in France.

  • 1947: Demolition work began in New York City to make way for the new permanent headquarters of the United Nations.

  • 1947: The American League defeated the National League, 2-to-1, in the All-Star game played at Chicago's Wrigley Field.

  • 1948: The Moscow Conference convened to celebrate the 500th anniversary of the independence of the Russian Orthodox Church from control of the Eastern Orthodox Patriarchate of Constantinople.

  • 1950: General Douglas MacArthur was named commander-in-chief of United Nations forces in Korea.

  • 1958: The first gold record album presented by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) was awarded this day -- to the soundtrack LP, "Oklahoma!" The honor signified that the album had reached one million dollars in sales.

  • 1959: Meeting in Oberlin, Ohio, the Congregational Christian and the Evangelical andReformed churches adopted a united statement of faith. The two groups merged to form the United Church of Christ in 1961.

  • 1969: The withdrawal of American troops from Vietnam began.

  • 1975: President Ford announced he would seek the Republican nomination for the presidency in 1976.

  • 1984: John McEnroe defeated Jimmy Connors in straight sets, 6-1, 6-1, 6-2 to become the first American man in 46 years to capture back-to-back Wimbledon tennis titles.

  • 1985: In a speech to the American Bar Association, President Reagan branded Iran, Libya, North Korea, Cuba and Nicaragua "outlaw states" that were engaged in "acts of war" against the United States.

  • 1986: Kurt Waldheim was inaugurated as president of Austria despite controversy over his alleged ties to Nazi war crimes.

  • 1986: Admiral Hyman G. Rickover, widely regarded as the father of the nuclear navy, died in Arlington, Virginia, at age 86.

  • 1987: Kitty Dukakis, wife of Massachusetts Governor and Democratic presidential candidate Michael S. Dukakis, revealed she'd been addicted to amphetamines for 26 years, but had sought help and was drug-free. (However, Mrs. Dukakis later admitted to dependence on alcohol, and entered a recovery program.)

  • 1988: Iran's parliamentary speaker, Hashemi Rafsanjani, said his nation would not seek revenge against the United States for shooting down an Iranian jetliner over the Persian Gulf, killing 290 people.

  • 1989: Carlos Saul Menem was inaugurated as president of Argentina in the country's first transfer of power from one democratically elected civilian leader to another in six decades.

  • 1990: Sweden's Stefan Edberg beat Boris Becker of West Germany to capture his second men's tennis championship at Wimbledon.

  • 1990: West Germany won the World Cup soccer championship by defeating Argentina, 1-0.

  • 1990: The Louisiana Senate passed a tough anti-abortion bill that was successfully vetoed by Governor Buddy Roemer.

  • 1991: Reversing earlier denials, Iraq disclosed for the first time that it was carrying out a nuclear weapons program, including the production of enriched uranium.

  • 1992: Russian President Boris Yeltsin met with Group of Seven leaders holding their economic summit in Munich, Germany, where he offered a startling proposal to swap factories, energy resources and other properties for Russian debt.

  • 1993: Leaders of the Group of Seven, in the second day of their Tokyo summit, warned against the dismembering of Bosnia, but backed away from a threat to use force.

  • 1993: A jury in Boise, Idaho, acquitted white separatist Randy Weaver and a co-defendant of slaying a federal marshal in a shootout at a remote mountain cabin.

  • 1993: The Tanglewood had its first regular concert tonight with Seiji Ozawa and the Boston Symphony. The first part of the evening was the second act of Saint-Saens' "Samson and Delilah" with soloists Jessye Norman, Gary Lakes and Sherrill Milnes. After the intermission: the "Eroica."

  • 1994: Kim Il Sung, North Korea's communist leader since 1948, died at age 82.

  • 1994: O.J. Simpson was ordered to stand trial on charges of murdering his ex-wife, Nicole, and her friend, Ronald Goldman.

  • 1994: Leaders of the Group of Seven nations opened their 20th annual economic summit, in Naples, Italy.

  • 1994: The space shuttle Columbia blasted off on a two-week mission.

  • 1995: Chinese-American human rights activist Harry Wu was arrested in China and charged with obtaining state secrets (he was later convicted of espionage and deported in August 1995).

  • 1995: A deadly heat wave began in the nation's midsection; it claimed more than 800 lives, more than half of them in Illinois.

  • 1995: Steffi Graf won the women's singles title at Wimbledon, defeating Arantxa Sanchez Vicario 4-6, 6-1, 7-5.

  • 1996: Hurricane "Bertha" slammed into the Virgin Islands with torrential rains and winds that gusted to 105 miles-an-hour.

  • 1997: The Senate Governmental Affairs Committee opened politically charged hearings into fund-raising abuses, with chairman Fred Thompson accusing China of trying to influence the 1996 US elections.

  • 1997: NATO extended membership invitations to Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic.

  • 1997: The Mayo Clinic and the government warned the diet-drug combination known as "fen-phen" could cause serious heart and lung damage.

  • 1998: A federal bankruptcy judge tentatively approved a settlement under which an estimated 170,000 women who said silicone breast implants had made them sick would get $3.2 billion from Dow Corning Corporation.

  • 1999: An Air Force cargo jet took off from Seattle on a dangerous mission to Antarctica to drop medicine for Dr. Jerri Nielsen, a physician at the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Research Center who had discovered a lump in her breast. (The mission was successful; Nielsen was evacuated the following October.)

  • 1999: Astronaut Charles "Pete" Conrad Jr., the third man to walk on the moon, died after a motorcycle accident near Ojai, Calif.; he was 69.

  • 2000: The Pentagon's missile defense project suffered its latest setback when a rocket that had taken off from Kwajalein Atoll in the Pacific failed to intercept a target missile launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. 

  • 2000: Venus Williams beat Lindsay Davenport 6-3, 7-6 (3) for her first Grand Slam title, becoming the first black women's champion at Wimbledon since Althea Gibson in 1957-58. 



 

 


Soul Food - devotions, Bible verse and inspiration.

Soul Food July 7 & 8
 


All the Rest - Smiles, quotations and a fact.

All the Rest July 7 & 8
 

 
Today's Daily Miscellany
 

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