Thursday, July 4, 2013

On This Day in History - July 4 American Independence Day

Once again, it should be reiterated, that this does not pretend to be a very extensive history of what happened on this day (nor is it the most original - the links can be found down below). If you know something that I am missing, by all means, shoot me an email or leave a comment, and let me know!

http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history

July 4, 1776: U.S. declares independence

In Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the Continental Congress adopts the Declaration of Independence, which proclaims the independence of the United States of America from Great Britain and its king. The declaration came 442 days after the first volleys of the American Revolution were fired at Lexington and Concord in Massachusetts and marked an ideological expansion of the conflict that would eventually encourage France's intervention on behalf of the Patriots.  

The first major American opposition to British policy came in 1765 after Parliament passed the Stamp Act, a taxation measure to raise revenues for a standing British army in America. Under the banner of "no taxation without representation," colonists convened the Stamp Act Congress in October 1765 to vocalize their opposition to the tax. With its enactment in November, most colonists called for a boycott of British goods, and some organized attacks on the customhouses and homes of tax collectors. After months of protest in the colonies, Parliament voted to repeal the Stamp Act in March 1766.  

Most colonists continued to quietly accept British rule until Parliament's enactment of the Tea Act in 1773, a bill designed to save the faltering East India Company by greatly lowering its tea tax and granting it a monopoly on the American tea trade. The low tax allowed the East India Company to undercut even tea smuggled into America by Dutch traders, and many colonists viewed the act as another example of taxation tyranny. In response, militant Patriots in Massachusetts organized the "Boston Tea Party," which saw British tea valued at some 18,000 pounds dumped into Boston Harbor.  

Parliament, outraged by the Boston Tea Party and other blatant acts of destruction of British property, enacted the Coercive Acts, also known as the Intolerable Acts, in 1774. The Coercive Acts closed Boston to merchant shipping, established formal British military rule in Massachusetts, made British officials immune to criminal prosecution in America, and required colonists to quarter British troops. The colonists subsequently called the first Continental Congress to consider a united American resistance to the British.  

With the other colonies watching intently, Massachusetts led the resistance to the British, forming a shadow revolutionary government and establishing militias to resist the increasing British military presence across the colony. In April 1775, Thomas Gage, the British governor of Massachusetts, ordered British troops to march to Concord, Massachusetts, where a Patriot arsenal was known to be located. On April 19, 1775, the British regulars encountered a group of American militiamen at Lexington, and the first shots of the American Revolution were fired.  

Initially, both the Americans and the British saw the conflict as a kind of civil war within the British Empire: To King George III it was a colonial rebellion, and to the Americans it was a struggle for their rights as British citizens. However, Parliament remained unwilling to negotiate with the American rebels and instead purchased German mercenaries to help the British army crush the rebellion. In response to Britain's continued opposition to reform, the Continental Congress began to pass measures abolishing British authority in the colonies.  

In January 1776, Thomas Paine published Common Sense, an influential political pamphlet that convincingly argued for American independence and sold more than 500,000 copies in a few months. In the spring of 1776, support for independence swept the colonies, the Continental Congress called for states to form their own governments, and a five-man committee was assigned to draft a declaration.  

The Declaration of Independence was largely the work of Virginian Thomas Jefferson. In justifying American independence, Jefferson drew generously from the political philosophy of John Locke, an advocate of natural rights, and from the work of other English theorists. The first section features the famous lines, "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness." The second part presents a long list of grievances that provided the rationale for rebellion.  

On July 2, 1776, the Continental Congress voted to approve a Virginia motion calling for separation from Britain. The dramatic words of this resolution were added to the closing of the Declaration of Independence. Two days later, on July 4, the declaration was formally adopted by 12 colonies after minor revision. New York approved it on July 19. On August 2, the declaration was signed.  

The American War for Independence would last for five more years. Yet to come were the Patriot triumphs at Saratoga, the bitter winter at Valley Forge, the intervention of the French, and the final victory at Yorktown in 1781. In 1783, with the signing of the Treaty of Paris with Britain, the United States formally became a free and independent nation.




Today is, of course, Independence Day in the United States, honoring July 4, 1776, and the signing of the Declaration of Independence. In fact, the Continental Congress had approved of independence two days earlier, although it was formally ratified on this day. Exactly fifty years afterwards, both John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, who were instrumental during the American Revolution (Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence) died on this date. Another President who played a huge role in this nation's earliest days, James Madison, died on this date a few years later. The Louisiana Purchase was announced to the American public on this date. It was also on this day that Henry David Thoreau settled into his shack and commenced his experiment, if you will, on simple living off the land. Eventually, the work for which he is best known, "Walden", would come out of these experiences. The first electric lighting was exhibited in San Francisco. Bullfighting was first introduced, as was the first rodeo. In Paris, The United States was presented with the Statue of Liberty, which would one day be perhaps it's most iconic symbol. President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Freedom of Information Act. The most intense rain that the nation had ever seen fell in Maryland- -over one inch in a minute!

Of course, newsworthy events occurred on this date outside of the United States. Samuel de Champlain shot and killed two Iroquois, an act which helped to make the two sides highly antagonistic towards one another. The city of Trois-Rivières was founded in what was then New France, and would later be known as Quebec province.The Philippines received full independence. The League of Nations imposed sanctions against Italy for military aggression. The United States began a bombing campaign against Nazi Germany on this date. Not ten years after the final collapse of the Third Reich, West Germany won the World Cup. The Beatles were attacked in the Philippines. The Plastic Yoko Band released "Give Peace a Chance". Klaus Barbie, the well-known Nazi "Butcher of Lyon", was given a life sentence in France.

Here's a more detailed look at events that transpired on this date throughout history:


836 - Pactum Sicardi, peace between the Principality of Benevento and the Duchy of Naples

993 - Saint Ulrich of Augsburg is canonized.

1054 - Brightest known super-nova (Crab Nebula) starts shining (23 days)

1120 - Jordan II of Capua is anointed as prince after his infant nephew's death.

1187 - Battle of Hittin (Tiberias): Saladin defeats Reinoud of Châtillon

1301 - Battle at Breukelen: Holland vs Lichtenberg

1359 - Francesco II Ordelaffi of Forlì surrenders to the Papal commander Gil de Albornoz.

1415 - Angelo Correr renounces his claim to the Papacy as Pope Gregory XII

1453 - 41 Jewish martyrs burned at stake at Breslau

1534 - Christian III is elected King of Denmark and Norway in the town of Rye.

1609 - Samuel de Champlain shot and killed two Iroquois chiefs at Ticonderoga, New York setting the tone of French-Iroquois relations for the next 150 years

1610 - Battle at Klushino: King Sigismund II beats Russian & Sweden

1634 - The city of Trois-Rivières is founded in New France, later to become the Canadian province of Quebec.

1636 - City of Providence, Rhode Island form

1652 - Prince of Condé starts blood bath in Paris

1653 - British Barebones Parliament goes into session

1672 - States of Holland declares "Eternal Edict" void

1693 - Battle at Boussu-lez-Walcourt: French-English vs Dutch army

1708 - Swedish King Karel XII defeated Russians

1754 - George Washington gives Ft Necessity to France

1774 - Orangetown Resolutions adopted in the Province of New York, one of many protests against the British Parliament's Coercive Acts

1776 - US congress proclaims the Declaration of Independence and independence from Britain 1776. The amended Declaration of Independence, prepared by Thomas Jefferson, was approved and signed by John Hancock, the President of the Continental Congress in America.  

1779 - French fleet occupies Grenada

1789 - First US tariff act

1796 - First American Independence Day celebration is held

1802 - The U.S. Military Academy officially opened at West Point, NY.  

1803 - The Louisiana Purchase was announced in newspapers. The property was purchased, by the U.S. from France, was for $15 million (or 3 cents an acre). The "Corps of Discovery," led by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, began the exploration of the territory on May 14, 1804.  

1810 - French troops occupy Amsterdam

1817 - Construction began on the Erie Canal, to connect Lake Erie and the Hudson River.  

1819 - William Herschel makes last telescopic observation of 1819 comet

1826 - Both former presidents John Adams and Thomas Jefferson died on the 50th anniversary of Independence Day.

1827 - Slavery abolished in NY

1828 - Construction begins on B and O (Baltimore-Ohio) 1st US passenger RR

1829 - Cornerstone laid for first US mint (Chestnut & Juniper St, Phila)

1831 - "America (My Country 'Tis of Thee)" is 1st sung in Boston

1831 - Former president James Monroe died.

1836 - Wisconsin Territory forms

1837 - Grand Junction Railway, the world's first long-distance railway, opens between Birmingham and Liverpool.

1838 - Huskar Colliery Mining Disaster in Silkstone England: Mining pit floods during a rainstorm drowning 26 children, leads to the 1842 commission on the employment of children and women in mines which resulted in the banning of female and child labour underground

1840 - The Cunard Line's 700 ton wooden paddle steamer RMS Britannia departs from Liverpool bound for Halifax, Nova Scotia on the first transatlantic crossing with a scheduled end. Naturalist/Pacifist Henry David Thoreau

1845 - American writer Henry David Thoreau moved into his shack and began his two-year experiment in simple living at Walden Pond, near Concord, MA.  

1845 - Texas Congress votes for annexation to US

1848 - In Washington, DC, the cornerstone for the Washington Monument was laid.  

1855 - The first edition of "Leaves of Grass," by Walt Whitman, was published in Brooklyn, NY.  

1859 - Austro-Sardinian War: the Battle of Magenta.

1861 - In a special session of 27th Congress Lincoln requests 400,000 troops

1861 - Skirmish at Harper's Ferry, WV

1862 - Lewis Carroll creates Alice in Wonderland for Alice P Liddell  

1862 - Battle of Port Royal, SC (Port Royal Ferry)

1862 - R Morgan's: Tomkinsville, KY to Somerset, KY [->JUL 28]

1863 - Boise, Idaho founded (now capital of Idaho)

1863 - Failed Confederate assault on Helena Arkansas (640 casualties)

1863 - The Confederate town of Vicksburg, Mississippi,  surrendered to General Ulysses S. Grant and Union forces under his command.  

1863 - General Lee's army withdraws from Gettysburg

1863 - Skirmish at Smithburg, TN

1864 - -9] Battle at Chattahoochee River, Georgia Author of Alice in Wonderland Lewis Carroll

1865 - First edition of "Alice in Wonderland" is published

1866 - Firecracker thrown in wood starts fire destroying half of Portland, Mainee, US

1868 - Battle at Ueno, Japan: last Tokugawa armies defeated

1873 - Aquarium opens in Woodward Gardens

1874 - Social Democratic Workmen's Party of North America formed

1875 - White Democrats kill several blacks in terrorist attacks in Vicksburg

1876 - First public exhibition of electric light in San Francisco

1876 - Batholdi visits Bedloe Island, future home of his Statue of Liberty

1879 - Africaner Union forms by Rev SJ du Toit at Cape colony

1881 - Booker T Washington established Tuskegee Institute (Alabama)  

1882 - Telegraph Hill Observatory opens in SF

1883 - Buffalo Bill Cody presents first wild west show, North Platte, Nebraska

1884 - Bullfighting was introduced in the U.S. in Dodge City, KS.    

1884 - The Statue of Liberty was presented to the United States in Paris.

1886 - First scheduled transcontinental passenger train reaches Pt Moody, BC Education Pioneer Booker Taliaferro Washington

1886 - The first rodeo in America was held at Prescott, AZ.

1887 - The founder of Pakistan, Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, joins Sindh-Madrasa-tul-Islam, Karachi.

1888 - First organized rodeo competition held, Prescott, Ariz

1889 - Washington state constitutional convention holds 1st meeting

1892 - James Keir Hardie chosen 1st socialist in British Lower house

1892 - Western Samoa changes the International Date Line, so that year there were 367 days in this country, with two occurrences of Monday, July 4.

1892 - The first double-decked street car service was inaugurated in San Diego, CA.  

1894 - After seizing power, Judge Stanford B. Dole declared Hawaii a republic.

1894 - Elwood Haynes successfully tests one of 1st US autos at 6 MPH

1894 - Republic of Hawaii proclaimed, Sanford B Dole as president

1895 - Katherine Lee Bates publishes "America the Beautiful"

1898 - French liner "La Bourgogne" collides with bark Cromartyshire, 560 die

1898 - US flag hoisted over Wake Island (Spanish-American War)

1901 - William H. Taft became the American governor of the Philippines.    

1903 - Pacific Cable (SF, Hawaii, Guam, Phil) opens, Pres TR sends message

1905 - Philadelphia A's beat Boston Red Sox 4-2 in 20 inning game

1906 - Gr Brit, France & Italy grant Independence to Ethiopia

1907 - Tommy Burns KOs Bill Squires in 1 for heavyweight boxing title

1908 - NY Giant George "Hooks" Witse no-hits Philadelphia Phillies, 1-0 in 10 inn

1910 - Jack Johnson KOs James J Jeffries in 15 for heavyweight boxing title

1910 - Race riots broke out all over the United States after African-American Jack Johnson knocked out Jim Jeffries in a heavyweight boxing match.

1911 - 105°F (41°C) at Vernon, Vermont (state record)

1911 - 106°F (41°C) at Nashua, New Hampshire (state record)

1911 - Ty Cobb goes 0 for 4 & ends a 40 game hit streak

1911 - White Sox Ed Walsh stops Ty Cobb's 40-game hitting streak

1912 - Detroit Tiger George Mullen no-hits St Louis Browns, 7-0

1912 - Jack Johnson TKOs Jim Flynn in 9 for heavyweight boxing title

1913 - 37th Wimbledon Mens Tennis: A F Wilding beats McLoughlin (86 63 10-8)

1914 - First US motorcycle race (300 miles, Dodge City Ks)

1918 - Altar dedicated at full-scale replica of Stonehenge at Maryhill, Wa

1918 - Ottoman sultan Mehmed VI ascends to the throne.

1919 - ADGB (Allgemeine Deutsche Gewerkschaftsbund) party forms

1919 - Cincinnati Reds are 10½ games back in NL, & win World Series Heavyweight Boxing Champion Jack Dempsey

1919 - Jack Dempsey KOs Jess Willard in Cuba for heavyweight championship

1923 - Jack Dempsey beats Tommy Gibbon in 15 for heavyweight boxing title

1925 - 44 die when Dreyfus Hotel in Boston collapses

1925 - 45th Wimbledon Mens Tennis: Rene Lacoste beats J Borotra (63 63 46 86)

1925 - A's Lefty Grove beats Yanks Herb Pennock 1-0 in 15 innings

1926 - Baronie soccer team forms in Breda Neth 1926 - NSDAP-party forms in Weimar

1927 - Ir Sukarno forms PNI (Perserikatan Nasional Indonesia) in Batavia

1927 - First flight of the Lockheed Vega.

 1929 - AM radio station WOWO, Indiana's transmitter burns down

1930 - 43rd Wimbledon Womens Tennis: Helen Moody beats Elizabeth Ryan (62 62)

1931 - First fireworks are held at Cleveland Stadium

1931 - First trailside museum opens in Cleveland Metroparks

1932 - Bradman scores 260, a North American record, v Western Ontario

1933 - Work begins on Oakland Bay Bridge

1934 - Jordanians revolt in Amsterdam after reduction in employment

1934 - Leo Szilard patents the chain-reaction design for the atomic bomb.

1934 - Boxer Joe Louis won his first professional fight.  

1934 - At Mount Rushmore, George Washington's face was dedicated.  

1936 - 49th Wimbledon Womens Tennis: Hull Jacobs beats H Sperling (62 46 75)

1936 - League of Nations starts sanctions against Italy

1938 - First game at Shribe Park, Phila; Braves beat Phillies 10-5

1938 - France-Turkish friendship treaty

1939 - Red Sox Jim Tabor hits 2 grand slams in 1 game

1939 - Yankees retire 1st uniform (Lou Gehrig #4), first Old Timers Day

1940 - British destroys French battle fleet at Oran, Algeria, 1267 die

1940 - German occupiers forbid anti-Nazi speeches

1941 - Latvia partisans shoot 416 Jews dead

1941 - Politburo of Yugoslav communist party reorganizes Pathologist and Nobel Laureate Howard Florey

1941 - Howard Florey and Norman Heatley meet for 1st time, 11 days later they successfully recreate penicillin

1942 - First American bombing mission over enemy-occupied Europe (WW II)

1942 - US air offensive against Nazi Germany begins

1944 - 1,100 US guns fire 4th of July salute at German lines in Normandy

1944 - First Japanese kamikaze attack, US fleet near Iwo Jima

1944 - Allied assault on Carpiquet airport at Caen

1944 - Gestapo arrests German Social Democrat Julius Leber

1946 - Anti Jewish riots in Kielce Poland, 42 die

1946 - The Philippines achieved full independence for the first time in over four hundred years.    

1947 - 61st Wimbledon Mens Tennis: Jack Kramer beats Tom P Brown (61 63 62)

1950 - Braves Sid Gordon ties season grand slam record with 4

1950 - Harry Truman signs public law 600 (Puerto Ricans write own constitution)

1950 - The first broadcast by Radio Free Europe.

1952 - 66th Wimbledon Mens Tennis: Frank Sedgman beats J Drobny (46 62 63 62)

1952 - Canadain Currency, Mint and Exchange Fund Act allows gold coins of $5, $10, and $20 to be minted

1953 - 60th Wimbledon Womens Tennis: Maureen Connolly beats D Hart (86 75)

1953 - Imre Nagy succeeds Matyas Rákosi as premier of Hungary

1954 - WMSL (WYUR, now WAFF) TV channel 48 in Huntsville, AL (ABC) begins

1954 - West Germany beats Hungary 3-2 for soccer's 5th World Cup in Bern

1954 - Dr Sam Sheppard's wife Marilyn is murdered (he is accused of crime)

1955 - The first king cobra snakes born in captivity in the U.S. hatched at the Bronx Zoo in New York City.        

1956 - Independence National Historical Park forms in Philadelphia

1956 - US most intense rain fall (1.23" in 1 minute) at Unionville Maryland

1957 - Dutch 2nd Chamber accepts temporary tax increase

1957 - The U.S. Postal Service issued the 4¢ Flag stamp.

1958 - 72nd Wimbledon Mens Tennis: A Cooper beats N Fraser (36 63 64 13-11)

1959 - 66th Wimbledon Womens Tennis: Maria Fraser beats Darlene Hard (64 63)

1959 - America's new 49-star flag honoring Alaska statehood unfurled

1959 - Cayman Islands separated from Jamaica, made a crown colony

1960 - America's new 50-star flag honoring Hawaiian statehood unfurled

1960 - Mickey Mantle is 18th to hit 300 HRs

1961 - Walt Disney is one of the two main speakers on the Independence Day in The Rebuild Hills at Skørping in Denmark

1962 - Island Records begins 1962 - KIKU (now KHNL) TV channel 13 in Honolulu, HI (IND) 1st broadcast

1964 - 71st Wimbledon Womens Tennis: Maria Fraser beats M Court (64 79 63)

1964 - Beachboy's "I Get Around" reaches #1

1966 - Beatles attacked in Philippines after insulting Imelda Marcos

1966 - U.S. President Johnson signed the Freedom of Information Act, which went into effect the following year.  

1967 - Opening ceremony of Tassajara Zen Mountain Center

1967 - Phillies Clay Dairymple ties NL record of 6 walks in doubleheader

1968 - Arthur Kopit's "Indians," premieres in London

1968 - Radio astronomy satellite Explorer 38 launched

1969 - "Give Peace a Chance" by Plastic Ono Band is released in UK

1969 - 140,000 attend Atlanta Pop Festival featuring Led Zep & Janis Joplin

1969 - 76th Wimbledon Womens Tennis: Ann Jones beats Billie J King (36 63 62)

1969 - Italian Rumor government resigns

1969 - USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR

1969 - The Ohio Fireworks Derecho kills 18 Ohioans and destroys over 100 boats on Lake Erie.

1970 - 100 injured in race rioting in Asbury Park NJ

1970 - 84th Wimbledon Mens Tennis: Newcombe beats K Rosewall (57 63 62 36 61)

1970 - Casey Kasem's "American Top 40" debuts on LA radio

1970 - Chartered Dan-Air Comet crashes into mountains north of Barcelona, Spain killing 112 vacationing Britons

1971 - France performed nuclear test at Muruora Island

1973 - Alan Ayckbourne's "Absurd Person Singular," premieres in London

1973 - CARICOM - Caribbean Community & Common Market, forms

1973 - In audience with Italian cyclists, Pope Paul VI praises athletes who "offer the magnificent show of a healthy, strong, generous youth"

1974 - Mike Marshall goes 9-0 with 3 saves in 20 appearances in 30 days

1975 - 82nd Wimbledon Womens Tennis: Billie Jean King beats Goolagong (60 61)

1975 - Ted Bundy victim Nancy Baird disappears from Layton, Utah

1976 - The United States celebrated its Bicentennial.  

1976 - Opening ceremony of the Dai Bosatsu monastery Catskill Mt NY

1976 - Raid on Entebbe-Israel rescues 229 Air France passengers

1977 - Cubs use fielder Larry Bittner as a pitcher

1977 - Nigel Harrison replaces Gary Valentine as bassist of Blondie

1977 - Red Sox wallop a major league-record 8 HRs beating Toronto 9-6

1978 - Memphis fire fighters halt 3-day strike under a court order

1979 - Algerian ex-president Ben Bella freed

1980 - Nolan Ryan is 4th to strikeout 3,000 Tennis Great John McEnroe

1981 - 95th Wimbledon Mens Tennis: John McEnroe beats B Borg (46 76 76 64)

1981 - Clive Rice 105* out of 143 all out, Notts v Hants at Bournemouth

1982 - 10th du Maurier Golf Classic (Peter Jackson Classic): Sandra Haynie

1982 - 4th Space Shuttle Mission-Columbia 4 lands at Edwards AFB

1982 - The Soviets performed a nuclear test at Eastern Kazakhl Semipalitinsk.

1982 - 96th Wimbledon Mens Tennis: J Connors beats J McEnroe (36 63 67 76 64)

1982 - Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado elected president of Mexico

1982 - Yankees bat out of order against Indians in 1st inning

1983 - NY Yankee Dave Righetti no-hits the Red Sox

1984 - Funeral for S Nakagawa & burial half his ashes next to N Senzaki

1984 - Kallicharran gets 206 & 6-32 in a NatWest Trophy game

1984 - NY Yankee Phil Niekro is 9th to strikeout 3,000

1984 - Yuri Sedykh of USSR throws hammer a record 86.33 m

1985 - Tinker Bell's nightly flight begins

1987 - 94th Wimbledon Womens Tennis: M Navratilova beats Steffi Graf (75 63)

1987 - Discovery moves to Launch Pad 39B for STS-26 mission

1987 - Imran Khan takes 300th Test Cricket wicket, only Pakistani to do so

1987 - Nazi Klaus Barbie, the former Gestapo chief known as the "Butcher of Lyon," was convicted by a French court of crimes against humanity and sentenced to life in prison.  

1988 - 102nd Wimbledon Mens Tennis: Stefan Edberg beats Becker (46 76 64 62)

1988 - KC releases pitcher Dan Quisenberry, whose 238 saves are the 4th most

1988 - US navy shoots down Iranian civilian jetliner over Gulf, kills 290

1989 - 14 year old actress Drew Barrymore, attempts suicide

1989 - Unmanned Russian Mig-23 crashes in Bellegem-Kooigem, Belgium (1 dies)

1989 - Red's Tom Browning is 3 outs away from his 2nd career perfect game when Phillie Dickie Thon doubles

1990 - 400 New Kids on the Block fans treated for heat exhaustion in Minn

1990 - France performs nuclear test at Muruora Island

1990 - Wrestler Brutus Beefcake injured during para-sailing

1990 - 2 Live Crew release "Banned in the USA" the lyrics quote Star Spangled Banner and; Gettysburg Address

1992 - 99th Wimbledon Womens Tennis: Steffi Graf beats Monica Seles (62 61)

1992 - John Phillips, rocker (Mamas & Papas), undergoes a liver transplant

1993 - 107th Wimbledon Mens Tennis: Pete Sampras beats Courier (76 76 36 63)

1993 - Dave Winfield hits 442nd HR to move into 19th place

1993 - Pilar Fort, crowned 25th Miss Black America

1993 - Pizza Hut blimp deflates & lands safely on W 56th street in NYC

 1994 - Russian manned space craft TM-18, lands

1994 - Rwandese Patriot Front occupies Kigali

1994 - US loses to Brazil 1-0 in 1994 World Cup quarter finals

1995 - Birmingham Barracudas play first CFL game (vs Winnipeg)

1996 - Hot Mail, a free internet E-mail service begins

1997 - The Mars Pathfinder, an unmanned spacecraft, landed in Ares Vallis, on Mars. A rover named Sojourner was deployed to gather data about the surface of the planet.  

1997 - Ferry service between Manhattan and Staten Island was made free of charge. Previously, the charge had ranged from 5 cents to 50 cents.  

2004 - The cornerstone of the Freedom Tower was laid on the site of the World Trade Center in New York City. (This was largely a symbolic event; actual construction would not start for several weeks)

2005 - NASA's Deep Impact spacecraft took pictures as a space probe smashed into the Tempel 1 comet. The mission was aimed at learning more about comets that formed from the leftover buidling blocks of the solar system. The Deep Impact mission launched on January 12, 2005.  

2005 - The Deep Impact collider hits the comet Tempel 1.

2006 - Space Shuttle program: STS-121 Mission - Space Shuttle Discovery launches at 18:37:55 UTC.

2006 - North Korea tests four short-range missiles, one medium-range missile, and a long-range Taepodong-2. The long-range Taepodong-2 reportedly fails in mid-air over the Sea of Japan/East Sea.

2009 - The Statue of Liberty's crown reopened to the public after 8 years, due to security reasons following the World Trade Center attacks in 2001.

2009 - North Korea launched seven ballistic missiles into waters off its east coast that defied U.N. resolutions.  

2012 The European Organization for Nuclear Research, also known as CERN, announced the discovery of a new particle with properties consistent with the Higgs boson.







The following links are to web sites that were used to complete this blog entry:

http://www.historyorb.com/today/events.php

http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/jul04.htm

http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory

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