View Full Version : On This Day In History
Bikkie
2nd July 2025, 10:18
1600 -Battle at Nieuwpoort: Maurice Count of Nassau leads an Anglo-Dutch army to victory over the Spanish led by Albert, Duke of Burgundy
1613 -The first English expedition from Massachusetts against Acadia led by Samuel Argall
1644- Battle of Marston Moor, North Yorkshire: Parliamentary forces under Lords Fairfax and Manchester defeat royalists led by Prince Rupe
1679- Europeans first visit Minnesota and see headwaters of Mississippi in an expedition led by Daniel Greysolon de Du Luth
1681- Earl of Shaftesbury arrested for high treason
1687-King James II disbands English parliament1776 -At the Continental Congress, John Dickinson abstains from the votes that declare independence
1776-- New Jersey gives the right to vote to all adults who could show a net worth of 50 pounds
1843- An alligator falls from sky during a thunderstorm in Charleston, South Carolina
1847- Envelope bearing 1st US 10 cent stamps used (still exists today)
1850 -Benjamin Lane patents gas mask with a breathing apparatus
1858- Partial emancipation of Russian serfs
1861- Battle of Hoke's Run, West Virginia - small Union victory
1862- Lincoln signs act granting land for state agricultural colleges
Slavery Divide Triggers America’s Civil War
1863- 2nd day of the Battle of Gettysburg (US Civil War)
Music History
2015-For the first time ever, Rush make the cover of Rolling Stone. The magazine and their cohorts at the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame (which didn't induct the band until 2013), have given Rush short shrift throughout their career, but even diehard fans are pleased with the piece.
2014-On her website, Jewel announces she will be divorcing husband Ty Murray after almost six years of marriage.
2014-In Grand Rapids, Michigan, a new group called The Raskins play their first show on the Mötley Crüe Final Tour, which also includes Alice Cooper. They later süe the Crüe, claiming they paid $1 million for the privilege, but received heaps of abuse in return.More
2001-Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher welcomes his first child, Gene Gallagher, with girlfriend (and future wife) Nicole Appleton (of All Saints).
2001-Liverpool renames its airport the "Liverpool John Lennon Airport" after its famous native.
1994-Green Day frontman Billie Joe Armstrong marries Adrienne Nesser. The next day, Adrienne discovers she is pregnant with their son, Joseph.
1992-Mick Jagger's daughter Jade makes him a grandfather when her daughter Assisi Lola Jackson is born.
Ice Cube Stars In Boyz N The Hood
1991-In his first acting role, Ice Cube stars alongside Cuba Gooding Jr. in the acclaimed drama Boyz N the Hood. Writer/director John Singleton wrote the role of troubled gangster Darrin "Doughboy" Baker specifically for the ex-N.W.A rapper.More
Under The Cherry Moon Released
1986-The second Prince movie, Under the Cherry Moon, hits theaters. Unlike the first, Purple Rain, Prince directs it himself.More
1983-Michelle Branch is born in Sedona, Arizona.
1982-Harmonica player DeFord Bailey dies at age 82. A cast member at the Grand Ole Opry throughout the 1930s, he was the first African American inducted into the institution. In 2005, he entered the Country Music Hall of Fame.
1981-Bruce Springsteen plays the first of six sold-out shows at the new Byrne Arena in New Jersey. His average show lasts 28 songs.
1980-Grateful Dead's Mickey Hart and Bob Weir are arrested and charged with inciting a riot at San Diego Sports Arena to break up a drug bust.
1976-A battered Tina Turner leaves husband Ike in Dallas, Texas, after one final blowout. She files for divorce later in the month.
1973-Brian Eno quits Roxy Music over a spat with lead singer Bryan Ferry.
1970-Rapper Monie Love is born Simone Gooden in Battersea, London, England.
1969-Mountain form in Long Island with former Vagrants member Leslie West at the helm.
1969-Barbra Streisand starts a month-long run of shows to open the new 2000-seat theater at the International Hotel in Las Vegas. She's breaking in the venue for Elvis Presley, who starts a run of shows there on July 31.
1967-Rick Nelson stars in the short-lived (it lasts three months) TV series Malibu U on ABC.
1965-Dave Parsons (bassist for Bush) is born in Hillingdon, London, England.
1963-Little-known Barbra Streisand plays Las Vegas for the first time, opening for Liberace at the Riviera. She returns to Vegas as a top draw in 1969, becoming the first artist to play the Showroom Internationale in the International Hotel.
1958-Elvis Presley's fourth movie, King Creole, opens while The King is serving in the Army. Elvis gets surprisingly good reviews for his acting.
1956-Elvis Presley records "Hound Dog" at the RCA studios in New York City. Needing a B-side, Elvis and his team listen to some demos and find a song called "Don't Be Cruel," which they also record in the session. The two songs are released 11 days later as a double-A-side single and set numerous records for sales and chart position.
1955-The Lawrence Welk Show premieres on ABC.
1954-Pete Briquette (bassist for The Boomtown Rats) is born Patrick Martin Cusack in Ballyjamesduff, County Cavan, Ireland. His stage name is a nod to his homeland, where peat briquettes were burned for heat.
1952-Johnny Colla, who plays guitar and saxophone for Huey Lewis & the News and also assists with songwriting, is born in Sacramento, California.
1949-Roy "The Professor" Bittan (keyboardist for Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band) is born in Rockaway Beach, Queens, New York.
1939-Leapy Lee, known for the 1968 hit single "Little Arrows," is born Graham Pulleyblank in Eastbourne, England.
1939-Paul Williams (original lead singer for The Temptations) is born in Birmingham, Alabama.
1934-Folk singer Tom Springfield (of The Springfields) is born Dionysius P. A. O'Brien in Hampstead, London, England. He'll welcome sister Dusty Springfield a few years later.
1714-Opera composer Christoph Willibald Gluck is born in what is now Bavaria, Germany.
Bikkie
3rd July 2025, 11:37
1428- Treaty of Delft signed between Jacqueline of Bavaria and Philip the Good of Burgundy, ending the Hook and Cod wars in the County of Holland
Founding of Quebec
1608- Samuel de Champlain founds the city of Quebec
1630- Emperor Ferdinand II opens German Parliament
1720- Sweden and Denmark sign peace treaty
Washington Surrenders
1754 -George Washington surrenders to French, Fort Necessity (7 Years' War)
1767 -Norway's oldest newspaper still in print, Adresseavisen, is founded (first edition published this date)
1767- Pitcairn Island is discovered by Midshipman Robert Pitcairn on an expeditionary voyage in the Pacific, commanded by Philip Carteret
1775- George Washington takes command of Continental Army at Cambridge, Massachusetts
1778- British forces massacre 360 men, women and children in Wyoming, Pennsylvania
1778- Prussia declares war on Austria
1806- Michael Keens exhibits 1st large-scale cultivated strawberry—a large fruit strawberry, called the Keen Seedling
1814- Americans capture Fort Erie, Canada (War of 1812)
1819- 1st savings bank in US (Bank of Savings in NYC) opens its doors
1839 -1st state normal school in US opens, Lexington, Massachusetts, with 3 students
1841 -John Couch Adams decides to determine position of an unknown planet by irregularities it causes in the motion of Uranus
1844 -The last pair of Great Auks is killed
Théâtre Robert-Houdin Opens
1845- Pioneering French magician Jean Eugène Robert-Houdin opens his magic theatre in Paris
1848- Slaves freed in Danish West Indies (now US Virgin Islands)
1849- The French enter Rome in order to restore Pope Pius IX to power; proves a major obstacle to Italian unification
1852 -Congress authorizes US's 2nd mint (San Francisco, California)
1861- Colonel Jackson receives his commission as brigadier general
1861- Martinsburg, Virginia - Confederate forces pull out before US advance
Pony Express
1861 -Pony Express arrives in San Francisco with overland letters from NY
1883 -SS Daphne sinks on Clyde River in Scotland; 195 die
1884 -Dow Jones publishes its first stock index, the Dow Jones Transportation Average
1886 -1st NY Tribune printing using 1st commercial linotype machine
Music History
2021-Gwen Stefani and Blake Shelton get married at Shelton's ranch in Oklahoma. They met in 2014 when they were judges on the TV show The Voice and started dating a year later.
2020-Ryan Adams publicly apologizes for mistreating women he has worked with, claiming he is now sober and chastened. Sixteen months earlier, several female musicians he worked with, including his ex-wife Mandy Moore, accused him of controlling and sometimes abusive behavior.
2016-Maren Morris releases her first major-label album, Hero. It goes to #1 on the Country chart and includes one of her most enduring songs, "My Church."
2012-Frank Ocean posts a letter on his Tumblr detailing an unrequited love for a man when he was 19, inspiration for his song "Bad Religion." It's an early example of a high-profile hip-hop artist addressing a same-sex relationship.
2009-Algerian music star Cheb Mami (real name Ahmed Khelifati Mohammed) is sentenced by a French court to five years in prison for abducting his former girlfriend and trying to force her to have an abortion. Mami is best known in America for his collaboration with Sting on the song "Desert Rose."
2008-Colin Cooper (leader of Climax Blues Band) dies of cancer at age 69.
2007-Boots Randolph, known for the 1968 hit "Yakety Sax," dies of a brain hemorrhage a month after his 80th birthday.
2004-Glenn Danzig gets in a fight backstage after a Danzig show when a member of support band North Side Kings confronts him because they were bumped from the bill and didn't play that night. Danzig pushes the guy but gets punched in the face in retaliation.
2001-Sum 41 release their debut single, "Fat Lip." The song goes on to top the Modern Rock Tracks chart.
2001-Delia Derbyshire, who helped create the electronic sounds on the Doctor Who theme, dies aged 64.
1996-At the Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Alice in Chains play their last show with lead singer Layne Staley, who dies in 2002.
1996-Cliff Richard leads the Wimbledon Centre Court crowd in singing during a rain delay. His backing singers are former tennis stars Virginia Wade, Martina Navratilova, Hana Mandlíková, Pam Shriver, Liz Smylie, Gigi Fernández and Conchita Martinez.
1995-D'Angelo releases his debut album, Brown Sugar.
1990P-olice pursue Slick Rick through the streets of New York after the rapper attempts to shoot his cousin and former bodyguard, Mark Plummer, and wounds an innocent bystander instead. Plummer had been extorting money from Rick and threatening the rapper's family, so Rick took matters - and weapons - into his own hands. He's charged with a host of crimes, including two counts of attempted murder, and serves five years at Rikers Island.
1986-Bono's 26-year-old personal assistant Greg Carroll is killed in a motorcycle act while running an errand in Dublin. U2's next album, The Joshua Tree, is dedicated to Carroll, who inspired the song "One Tree Hill."
feet.More
1976-At a show in Anaheim, California, Brian Wilson appears onstage with The Beach Boys for the first time in 12 years.
1976-Shane Lynch (of Boyzone) is born in Donaghmede, North-east Dublin, Ireland.
1975-Labelle is the first Black vocal group to appear on the cover of Rolling Stone. Donning sexy space-age costumes, the "Lady Marmalade" hitmakers are given the tagline "Comin' Comin' Comin' To Getcha."
1975-Three Dog Night's Chuck Negron is arrested in his hotel room and charged with cocaine possession on the opening night of a tour.
1969-Kevin Hearn (keyboardist for Barenaked Ladies) is born in Grimsby, Ontario, Canada.
1965-The Beach Boys Summer Spectacular tour stops at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles. This date includes performances by The Byrds, Sonny & Cher, The Righteous Brothers, and of course, The Beach Boys. Also on the bill: The Kinks, who are having a miserable time in America and at war with their manager Larry Page, who flies back to England the next day.
1960-Synth-pop innovator Vince Clarke is born Vincent John Martin in South Woodford, England. An early member of Depeche Mode, he writes the group's breakthrough hit, "Just Can't Get Enough," before forming Yazoo ("Only You," "Situation") and Erasure ("A Little Respect," "Chains of Love").
1960-Muddy Waters brings the blues to a wider audience with a riveting performance at the Newport Jazz Festival punctuated by his rendition of "Got My Mojo Working."
1958-Country singer Aaron Tippin is born in Pensacola, Florida, but will be raised in Travelers Rest, South Carolina.
1957-Stephen Pearcy (former frontman of Ratt) is born in San Diego, California.
1952-Bass guitarist/vocalist Andy Fraser (of Free) is born in Paddington, London, England.
1952-Pop singer Laura Branigan ("Gloria," "Self Control") is born. She is raised in Armonk, New York.
1951-Mike Corby (keyboardist/lead guitarist of The Babys, which he founded) is born in Windsor, Berkshire, England.
1947-Actress/singer Betty Buckley, Tony Award-winner for her role as Grizabella in the original Broadway production of Cats, is born in Big Spring, Texas.
1943-Judith Durham (lead singer of The Seekers) is born Judith Mavis Cock in Essendon, Victoria, Australia.
1940-Fontella Bass, known for the 1965 soul hit "Rescue Me," is born in St. Louis, Missouri.
1929-David Lynch (of The Platters) is born in St. Louis, Missouri.
1895-Scott Joplin's "A Picture Of Her Face" is copyrighted.
1854-Czech composer Leoš Janáček is born in Hukvaldy, Moravia.
Bikkie
4th July 2025, 10:56
The Declaration of Independence (1776)
The most iconic event associated with July 4th is the adoption of the Declaration of Independence in 1776. This monumental document, drafted primarily by Thomas Jefferson, was officially adopted by the Continental Congress in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It marked the Thirteen Colonies’ formal separation from Great Britain and the birth of the United States of America.
The Declaration of Independence articulated the colonies’ grievances against King George III and emphasized the fundamental rights of individuals, including life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. It was a radical assertion of self-governance and human rights that inspired numerous other movements for independence and democratic governance worldwide. The principles enshrined in the Declaration continue to resonate globally, symbolizing the enduring quest for freedom and equality.
Louisiana Purchase (1803)
On July 4, 1803, President Thomas Jefferson announced the Louisiana Purchase, a landmark deal between the United States and France. This agreement involved the acquisition of approximately 828,000 square miles of territory west of the Mississippi River, effectively doubling the size of the United States at that time.
The Louisiana Purchase was negotiated by American envoys Robert R. Livingston and James Monroe, who secured the territory for $15 million. This strategic acquisition opened vast tracts of land for settlement and exploration, significantly expanding the young nation’s geographic and economic horizons. It also demonstrated the United States’ growing influence and ambition on the global stage, setting the stage for further westward expansion and manifest destiny.
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865)
July 4, 1865, marked the publication of “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland,” a novel by Lewis Carroll (the pen name of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson). This whimsical tale of a young girl’s journey through a fantastical world has become one of the most beloved and enduring works of children’s literature.
Carroll’s imaginative storytelling, combined with John Tenniel’s iconic illustrations, created a timeless classic that continues to captivate readers of all ages. The book’s exploration of logic, language, and absurdity has also made it a subject of academic interest and literary analysis. “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” has inspired countless adaptations in various media, cementing its place in the cultural canon.
The First Independence Day Celebrations (1777)
The first anniversary of American independence was celebrated on July 4, 1777, with great fanfare. The city of Philadelphia, where the Declaration of Independence had been signed, hosted a grand celebration that included bonfires, fireworks, and public speeches.
This inaugural Independence Day set the precedent for future celebrations, establishing traditions that continue to this day. Fireworks, parades, and patriotic displays have become hallmarks of July 4th festivities, reflecting the enduring pride and unity of the American people. The holiday serves as a reminder of the nation’s founding principles and the ongoing commitment to liberty and democracy.
The Deaths of John Adams and Thomas Jefferson (1826)
In a remarkable coincidence, two of the Founding Fathers and former U.S. Presidents, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, both died on July 4, 1826, exactly 50 years after the Declaration of Independence was adopted. Their deaths on such a significant date added a poignant layer to their legacies.
Adams and Jefferson were key figures in the American Revolution and played crucial roles in the drafting and promotion of the Declaration. Despite their political differences and rivalries, both men profoundly influenced the nation’s early development. Their passing on Independence Day was seen by many as a symbolic reminder of their contributions to the founding of the United States.
The Erie Canal Completion (1817)
Construction of the Erie Canal began on July 4, 1817. This ambitious project aimed to create a navigable water route from the Atlantic Ocean to the Great Lakes, facilitating the movement of goods and people between the eastern seaboard and the western frontier.
The Erie Canal, completed in 1825, was a monumental engineering achievement that significantly boosted economic growth and development in the United States. It reduced transportation costs, spurred the growth of cities along its route, and helped establish New York City as a major commercial hub. The canal’s success underscored the importance of infrastructure in national development and set the stage for future transportation projects.
The Birth of American Composer Stephen Foster (1826)
Stephen Foster, often referred to as the “father of American music,” was born on July 4, 1826. Foster’s contributions to American music were profound, as he composed some of the most enduring and popular songs of the 19th century.
Foster’s works, including “Oh! Susanna,” “Camptown Races,” “My Old Kentucky Home,” and “Beautiful Dreamer,” captured the spirit and culture of America during his time. His songs have remained popular through the years, influencing various genres of American music. Foster’s ability to blend different musical traditions helped create a uniquely American sound that continues to resonate with audiences today.
The Battle of Vicksburg (1863)
The Battle of Vicksburg, a crucial engagement during the American Civil War, concluded on July 4, 1863, with the surrender of Confederate forces to Union General Ulysses S. Grant. This victory gave the Union control of the Mississippi River, effectively splitting the Confederacy and disrupting its supply lines.
The fall of Vicksburg, along with the Union victory at Gettysburg (which concluded on July 3), marked a turning point in the Civil War. It boosted Northern morale and weakened the Confederate war effort. The surrender on July 4th added symbolic weight to the Union’s cause, reinforcing the connection between the fight for national unity and the principles of independence celebrated on that day.
The United States Military Academy at West Point (1802)
On July 4, 1802, the United States Military Academy at West Point formally opened. Established by President Thomas Jefferson, West Point became a premier institution for training future military leaders.
West Point has played a vital role in American military history, producing many of the nation’s most distinguished military figures. Its rigorous academic and physical training programs have set high standards for military education, emphasizing leadership, discipline, and service. The academy’s graduates have significantly influenced U.S. military strategy and operations throughout the nation’s history.
The Philippine Declaration of Independence (1946)
On July 4, 1946, the Philippines gained full independence from the United States, marking the end of American colonial rule. The Treaty of Manila was signed, officially recognizing the sovereignty of the Republic of the Philippines.
This date was chosen to coincide with American Independence Day, symbolizing the Philippines’ emergence as an independent nation. The journey to independence was marked by significant struggles, including the Philippine Revolution against Spanish rule, the subsequent Philippine-American War, and the Japanese occupation during World War II. The attainment of independence on July 4, 1946, was a momentous occasion that celebrated the resilience and determination of the Filipino people.
The Birth of Calvin Coolidge (1872)
Calvin Coolidge, the 30th President of the United States, was born on July 4, 1872. Coolidge, known for his quiet and reserved demeanor, served as president from 1923 to 1929, a period marked by economic prosperity known as the “Roaring Twenties.”
Coolidge’s presidency emphasized limited government intervention in the economy, tax cuts, and reducing the national debt. His leadership style, characterized by integrity and a hands-off approach to governance, earned him the nickname “Silent Cal.” Coolidge’s impact on American politics and his promotion of conservative fiscal policies continue to be studied and debated by historians.
NASA’s Pathfinder Mission to Mars (1997)
On July 4, 1997, NASA’s Pathfinder spacecraft, carrying the Sojourner rover, successfully landed on Mars. This mission marked a significant achievement in planetary exploration, as it was the first successful Mars landing since the Viking missions in the 1970s.
The Pathfinder mission provided valuable data about the Martian surface, atmosphere, and climate. The Sojourner rover conducted experiments and sent back images, offering unprecedented insights into the red planet. This mission demonstrated the potential for robotic exploration of Mars and paved the way for subsequent missions, including the Mars Exploration Rovers and the Curiosity rover.
The “Freedom Train” (1947)
The “Freedom Train,” a traveling exhibition of American historical documents, was launched on July 4, 1947. Sponsored by the American Heritage Foundation, the train toured the United States, displaying significant documents such as the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights.
The Freedom Train aimed to promote patriotism and unity in the post-World War II era, emphasizing the importance of American democratic principles and civic responsibility. It visited over 300 cities and attracted millions of visitors, reinforcing a sense of national identity and pride. The success of the Freedom Train inspired similar initiatives to preserve and celebrate American history.
The Birth of George M. Cohan (1878)
George M. Cohan, a renowned American entertainer, playwright, composer, and producer, was born on July 4, 1878. Cohan is often referred to as “the man who owned Broadway,” due to his significant contributions to American theater and music.
Cohan’s prolific career included writing and performing in numerous Broadway shows, as well as composing iconic songs such as “Yankee Doodle Dandy,” “Give My Regards to Broadway,” and “You’re a Grand Old Flag.” His work helped define the American musical theater genre and left an indelible mark on the entertainment industry. Cohan’s patriotic songs and performances became especially significant during times of national celebration and wartime morale-boosting.
The Founding of the Tuskegee Institute (1881)
The Tuskegee Institute, a historically black college in Alabama, was founded on July 4, 1881, by Booker T. Washington. The institute played a crucial role in the education and empowerment of African Americans in the post-Reconstruction era.
Under Washington’s leadership, Tuskegee emphasized vocational training and practical skills, preparing students for careers in agriculture, mechanics, and industry. The institute became a model for similar educational institutions and significantly contributed to the advancement of African Americans in the United States. Tuskegee’s legacy includes notable alumni and faculty, such as George Washington Carver, who made significant contributions to science and agriculture.
Conclusion
July 4th is a date rich in historical significance, encompassing a wide range of events that have shaped the course of human history. From the adoption of the Declaration of Independence and pivotal battles to groundbreaking scientific achievements and cultural milestones, this day has witnessed moments of profound importance. Reflecting on these events offers valuable insights into the complexities of our past and the enduring impact of July 4th on the global stage. Whether celebrating independence, honoring historical figures, or marking scientific milestones, July 4th remains a day that resonates with historical significance and collective memory.
Music History
2024-In Vancouver, Missy Elliott launches her first-ever headlining tour, with support acts Ciara and Busta Rhymes. Elliott, who is introverted and suffers from Graves' disease, kept a light performance schedule since 2004, the last time she toured.
2023-At his show in Las Vegas, Usher cozies up to the actress Keke Palmer while singing "There Goes My Baby." It blows up on social media and causes a rift with her boyfriend, Darius Jackson. In August, Palmer stars in Usher's video for "Boyfriend," poking fun at the controversy.
2020-On Twitter, Kanye West announces he's running for president. He forms his own political party, the "Birthday Party," telling supporters, "When we win, it's everybody's birthday."
Ariana Grande Licks Donuts
2015-Ariana Grande licks some donuts on a display counter at Wolfee Donuts in Lake Elsinore, California.More
2014-The first Beatles movie, A Hard Day's Night, is re-released in American theaters to celebrate its 50th anniversary.
2014-Sia, the hit songwriter behind Rihanna's "Diamonds" and David Guetta's "Titanium," releases her album 1000 Forms Of Fear, which goes to #1 in America. For a "layer of protection," she wears a wig that covers her face while promoting the album and doesn't appear in the videos for the singles "Chandelier" and "Elastic Heart," which instead feature interpretive dancing by Maddie Ziegler.
2013-Jay-Z releases his twelfth studio album, Magna Carta... Holy Grail, as a free download, but only for Samsung customers who can access it through the Jay-Z Magna Carta app. Non-Samsung users will have to tough it out and buy the album at retail price four days later.
2010-After attending a gay pride parade in London, George Michael crashes his Range Rover into a Snappy Snaps photo store in Hampstead, England. Convicted of driving under the influence of cannabis, he goes to prison on September 21 and serves four weeks.
2009-Allen Klein, an influential music publisher who simultaneously managed The Rolling Stones and The Beatles, dies of respiratory failure at age 77 after years of diabetes-related complications and an Alzheimer's diagnosis.
2009-Drake Levin (guitarist for Paul Revere and the Raiders) dies of cancer at age 62.
2007-Bill Pinkney (of The Drifters) dies of a heart attack at age 81.
2005-Rockabilly entertainer "Big" Al Downing dies of leukemia at age 65.
2003-Barry White, age 58, dies two months after suffering a severe stroke while awaiting a kidney transplant.
2002-Michael Abram, the man who attacked and nearly murdered George Harrison some 19 months earlier, is given a conditional release by a Mental Health Review Tribunal, to the fury of George's widow, Olivia. Says Abram: "If I could turn back the clock I would give anything not to have done what I did. But I have come to realise that I was very ill at that time, really not in control."
1995-Backstage at the Lollapalooza stop in George, Washington, Courtney Love of Hole punches Bikini Kill frontwoman Kathleen Hanna in the face. Hanna presses charges, and Love pleads guilty to fourth degree assault.
1995-Foo Fighters release their self-titled debut album. It's essentially a Dave Grohl solo project - he wrote, produced, and played all the instruments except for some guitar on "X-Static" by Greg Dulli.
1995-Post Malone is born Austin Richard Post in Syracuse, New York. Raised in Grapevine, Texas, from age 9, he's living in Los Angeles when his song "White Iverson" takes off on SoundCloud in 2015 and launches him to stardom.
1992-John Phillips of The Mamas & The Papas receives a liver transplant in Los Angeles.
1988-Kylie Minogue releases her debut album, Kylie, featuring her hit cover of "The Loco-Motion." The album marks a rebirth of disco, a genre Minogue proudly embraces.
1987-Genesis close out their Invisible Tour with a sold-out show at Wembley Stadium in London. They played the venue the previous three nights as well, also to sell-out crowds.
1986-Run-DMC release their rap version of "Walk This Way" featuring Steven Tyler and Joe Perry of Aerosmith, the group that released the original version in 1975. It's the first major collaboration between rappers and rockers, proof positive that the styles can work together. Both groups get a huge boost when the song becomes a hit; for Aerosmith, it launches a comeback.
1986-Flotsam and Jetsam's only full-length studio album with bassist Jason Newsted, Doomsday for the Deceiver, is released via Metal Blade Records. Doomsday is co-produced by the band with the label's head, Brian Slagel, and is the only album in the history of Kerrang! Magazine to receive a "six K" review (out of a possible five "K's").
1985-Dire Straits play the first of 14 consecutive nights at Wembley Arena in London. On Day 10 of the residency (July 13), they first play an afternoon set across the parking lot at Wembley Stadium as part of Live Aid.
1984-Ringo Starr sits in with The Beach Boys during their Miami concert.
1984-Jack Wagner, in character as Frisco Jones, sings the ballad "All I Need" on the soap opera General Hospital. The song is released as a single and climbs to #2, making Wagner the second cast member on the show to become a real-life musician, following Rick Springfield.
1980-500,000 attend a free Beach Boys concert in Washington DC.
1978-Stephen McNally (who puts the "Mak" in BBMak) is born in Liverpool, England.
1977-Blondie bassist Gary Valentine quits the band.
1976-Paul Revere is married during the intermission of his concert at King's Island Amusement Park in Cincinnati on America's bicentennial.
1976-In a defining moment for punk rock in Britain, the Ramones play the Roundhouse in Camden. Local acts like The Sex Pistols and The Clash soon gain notoriety.
1974-Singer Inara George is born in Towson, Maryland, near where her dad, Lowell George, recorded the Feats Don't Fail Me Now album with his band Little Feat. Her middle name is "Maryland" in tribute.
1974-Barry White marries Glodean James of Love Unlimited.
1974-Steely Dan (Walter Becker and Donald Fagan) give up live performing after a show in Santa Monica so they can focus on studio work, including the album Katy Lied. They don't tour again until 1993.
1974-The Tony Orlando & Dawn TV show debuts on CBS.
1972-William Goldsmith (drummer for Foo Fighters) is born in Seattle, Washington.
1971-Andrew Creeggan (original percussionist, keyboardist for Barenaked Ladies) is born in Scarborough, Ontario, Canada.
1971-Following a week-long celebration with performances by Santana, The Grateful Dead, Boz Scaggs and several other acts that played there since it opened in 1968, San Francisco's Fillmore West concert hall closes.
1971-R&B singer Don McPherson (of The Main Ingredient) dies of leukemia at age 29.
1969-Grand Funk Railroad, which formed just a few months earlier, play to a huge crowd at the Atlanta Pop Festival. Lead singer Mark Farner sheds his shirt because of the heat and gets such a reaction from the crowd that he decides to play every show shirtless.
1966-The Beatles play two shows in the Philippines, first in the afternoon to a crowd of 30,000, then in the evening to another 50,000. They fly to India the next day.
1966-The Lovin' Spoonful release "Summer In The City."
1964-Millie Small, part of the British Invasion, reaches #2 in America with "My Boy Lollipop."
1964-The Rolling Stones appear on the BBC's Juke Box Jury show as panelists, where they pass judgment on various records. A review in The Daily Sketch calls them "gum-chewing, ill-mannered, ill-humoured, illiberal and illogical jurors."
1963-Matt Malley (former bass guitarist for Counting Crows) is born in Oakland, California.
1959-The Brothers Four release "Greenfields."
1959-Chris Blackwell, Graeme Goodall, and Leslie Kong found Island Records in Jamaica, taking the label's name from Harry Belafonte's "Island in the Sun."
1958-INXS guitarist Kirk Pengilly is born in Kew, Victoria, Australia.
1955-Gene Vincent's leg is crushed when his motorcycle is struck by a car in Franklin, Virginia.
1952-John Waite (lead vocalist, bass guitarist of The Babys and lead vocalist of Bad English) is born in Lancaster, Lancashire, England.
1951Ralph Johnson (drummer for Earth, Wind & Fire) is born in Los Angeles, California.
1948-Jeremy Spencer (guitarist, pianist for Fleetwood Mac) is born in Hartlepool, County Durham, England.
1943-Alan "Blind Owl" Wilson (guitarist, harmonica player for Canned Heat) is born in Arlington, Massachusetts.
1940-Dave Rowberry (keyboardist for The Animals) is born in Mapperley, Nottinghamshire, England.
1938-Bill Withers is born in Slab Fork, West Virginia.
1911-Mitch Miller, an influential A&R executive at Columbia Records throughout the '50s and '60s, is born in Rochester, New York. Signed Aretha Franklin to her first record deal.
1828-"Hail to the Chief" is performed by the United States Marine Band for President John Quincy Adams during the groundbreaking ceremony for the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal.
F5 Dave
4th July 2025, 18:44
Jesus what a lot of American crap. :tugger:
Fuk em, pull ot the plug and let em all sink.
Bikkie
5th July 2025, 10:10
1687 -Isaac Newton's great work Principia is published by the Royal Society in England, outlining his laws of motion and universal gravitation
1811- Venezuelan Declaration of Independence: Seven provinces declare themselves independent of Spain
1852- Fugitive slave Frederick Douglass delivers his 'What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?' speech to the Ladies' Anti-Slavery Society in Rochester, condemns the celebration as hypocritical sham
1865- US Secret Service begins operating under the Treasury Department
1881-Poll tax imposed on Chinese
Parliament passed the Chinese Immigrants Act, which introduced a ‘poll tax’ of £10 (equivalent to nearly $1700 today) on Chinese migrants and restricted the number allowed to land from each ship arriving in New Zealand.
1994 -Amazon.com is founded by Jeff Bezos in Bellevue, Washington
2004 -First direct presidential election held in Indonesia, eventually won by Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
Music History
2004 -First direct presidential election held in Indonesia, eventually won by Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
2005-Shirley Goodman (of Shirley & Lee, Shirley & Company) dies at age 69.
2004-On the 50th anniversary of the day he recorded the song, Elvis Presley's first single, That's Alright, is re-released. In the UK, it's a hit, going to #3.
2003-The Lollapalooza tour returns for the first time since 1997 with a show in Noblesville, Indiana. Original headliner Jane's Addiction is on the bill along with Audioslave and Incubus. The tour limps along, plagued by poor ticket sales and cancelled shows.
2001-R&B singer Ernie K-Doe dies of kidney and liver failure at age 65 due to years of alcohol abuse.
1997-Mrs. (Elva) Miller, who charted with an off-key rendition of "Downtown" in 1966, dies at age 89.
1996-Dolly the Sheep, the first mammal to be cloned from an adult cell, is born. She is named after Dolly Parton because the scientist thought the country star was the person most synonymous with mammary glands.
1992-Helix guitarist Paul Hackman, age 38, is killed after a concert in Vancouver when the band's van rolls down a 40-foot embankment and throws him from the vehicle.
1984-The The Everly Brothers 1984 Reunion Concert Tour kicks off in Cincinnati. After 10 years apart the group reunited in 1983 for a reunion concert, which led to the album Story of Me and the subsequent tour.
1983-Suicidal Tendencies release their self-titled debut album. The album spawns the band's biggest hit to date, "Institutionalized."
1982-Dave Haywood of Lady A is born in Augusta, Georgia.
1981-At the "Rock Werchter" festival in Belgium, The Cure play a 9-minute version of "A Forest" when they are told to hurry off stage so Robert Palmer can begin his set.More
1980-At a concert in Munich, Simon Kirke of Bad Company joins Led Zeppelin to provide a two-drum assault on the song "Whole Lotta Love." Kirke is the last guest musician to perform with the band, as the tour ends two days later and John Bonham dies in September.
1980-Lifehouse frontman Jason Wade is born in Camarillo, California.
1974-Linda Ronstadt records her breakthrough hit "You're No Good" at the Sound Factory in Hollywood with producer Peter Asher.
1973-Bengt Lagerberg (drummer for The Cardigans) is born in Jönköping, Sweden.
1973-Bengt Lagerberg (drummer for The Cardigans) is born in Jönköping, Sweden.
1969-The Who release "I'm Free."
1969-Jerry Butler and The Impressions "reunite" on American Bandstand, singing separately.
1969-The Rolling Stones put on a free concert in London's Hyde Park, which becomes a tribute to their founding member Brian Jones, who died two days earlier.
1969-Robert Fitzgerald Diggs, the future RZA, is born in Brownsville, New York. He will become leader of Wu-Tang Clan .
1966-Bill Medley of The Righteous Brothers has an operation in a Los Angeles hospital to remove nodes on his vocal cords.
1965-Dick Clark launches a musical variety show called Where The Action Is, with Paul Revere & the Raiders as the house band. The show lasts 3 seasons on ABC and features many top musical acts of the era.
1965-Motown President Berry Gordy, Jr. appears on the popular TV show To Tell The Truth. The Supremes perform after his identity is revealed.
1965-The Four Tops release "It's the Same Old Song."
1964-US President Lyndon Johnson invites The Four Seasons to play at the White House.
1964-Them (with Van Morrison) release "Gloria."
1961-Ray Charles releases "Hit The Road Jack" and "Unchain My Heart."
1959-Marc Cohn is born in Cleveland, Ohio.
1955-Chuck Berry's song "Maybellene" is copyrighted in Berry's name alone, but Alan Freed's name is added as a form of payola.
1954-Elvis Presley makes his first professional recording, putting down "That's All Right" at Sun Studio in Memphis.
1950-Huey Lewis is born Hugh Anthony Cregg III in New York City. He forms Huey Lewis & the News in San Francisco.
1950-Michael Monarch (original lead guitarist for Steppenwolf) is born in Los Angeles, California.
1943-Robbie Robertson (lead guitarist for The Band) is born Jaime Royal Robertson in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
1941-Terry Cashman (of Cashman & West, The Buchanan Brothers) is born Dennis Minogue in New York.
1938-Thomas "Snuff" Garrett, a record producer known for his work with Bobby Vee, Del Shannon, Sonny Curtis, and Sonny & Cher, is born in Dallas, Texas.
1913-R&B singer and guitarist Smiley Lewis, known for the 1955 hit "I Hear You Knocking," is born Overton Amos Lemons in DeQuincy, Louisiana.
1912-Prolific songwriter Mack David, known for his work on Disney films such as Cinderella and Alice In Wonderland, is born in New York City. His younger brother is songwriter Hal David, known for his collaborations with Burt Bacharach.
Bikkie
6th July 2025, 10:13
1189 – King Henry II of England dies, is succeeded by Richard I.
1483 – King Richard III crowned.
1535 – Sir Thomas More is executed in England for treason.
1885 – Louis Pasteur performs the first inoculation of a human being: a young boy bitten by a rabid dog.
1923 – Auckland-Wellington express train ploughs into a huge slip at Ōngarue, north of Taumaruni. Seventeen people die.
1928 – First all-talking feature film, The Lights of New York, premieres in New York.
1942 – Diarist Anne Frank’s family take refuge from Nazis in Amsterdam.
1957 – Althea Gibson becomes the first black tennis player to win a Wimbledon singles title; John Lennon meets Paul McCartney for the first time at a church event in Liverpool.
Music History
2020-On his 85th birthday, The Dalai Lama releases the album Inner World, a collection of Buddhist mantras and prayers set to music.
2020-Charlie Daniels dies at 83 after suffering a stroke.
2019-With 13 weeks at #1, "Old Town Road" by Lil Nas X breaks the record for longest-running hip-hop song on the Hot 100. "Lose Yourself," "Boom Boom Pow" and "See You Again" all had runs of 12 weeks.
2016-In a small ceremony at Peckforton Castle in Liverpool, England, Ciara marries Russell Wilson, quarterback of the Seattle Seahawks.
2009-Alanis Morissette begins an eight-episode stint on the Showtime drama Weeds, playing obstetrician Audra Kitson.
2009-Guitarist Ryan Ross and bassist Jon Walker announce they are leaving Panic At The Disco. That leaves vocalist Brendon Urie and drummer Spencer Smith to continue the band.
2003-Skip Battin (bassist for The Byrds, NRPS, Flying Burrito Brothers) dies of complications from Alzheimer's disease at age 69.
1999-Folk singer Richie Havens publishes his autobiography, They Can't Hide Us Anymore.
1998-Roy Rogers, star of many Western films in which he sang, dies of heart failure at 86. The other singing cowboy of his era, Gene Autry, dies a few months later.
Forrest Gump Debuts
1994-The light-hearted drama Forrest Gump hits theaters. Aside from becoming the top-grossing film of the year in North America and winning multiple Academy Awards, the movie spawns a hit soundtrack with songs from Elvis Presley, Three Dog Night, The Doors, The Byrds, The Mamas & the Papas, Buffalo Springfield, and more.More
1991-Grunge music takes baby steps into the mainstream as the Alice in Chains album Facelift peaks at #42 in the US, and "Man In The Box" goes to #18 on the Mainstream Rock chart.
1987-Neil Young & Crazy Horse release Life, their last album under the Geffen label. With the exceptions of studio recordings "Cryin' Eyes" and "We Never Danced," the tracks are all taken from live performances.
1985-Phil Collins' "Sussudio" - a song about a girl with a funny name - hits #1. It holds the position for one week.
1979-Van McCoy, known for the 1975 disco hit "The Hustle," dies of a heart attack at age 39.
1979-The B-52s release their self-titled debut album, featuring one of their signature songs in "Rock Lobster."
1967-Pink Floyd appear on the British TV show Top Of The Pops for the first time, performing "See Emily Play."
1966-Elvis Presley's Paradise Hawaiian Style movie opens nationwide.
1965-Jackie Wilson releases "Higher And Higher."
1965-Marty Balin starts recruiting members for the band that will become Jefferson Airplane.
1964-The first Beatles' movie, A Hard Day's Night, debuts in London.
1963-Guitarist Tim Bricheno (of The Sisters Of Mercy) is born in Huddersfield, Yorkshire, England.
1959-John Keeble (drummer for Spandau Ballet) is born in Hampstead, London, England.
1953-Nanci Griffith is born in Seguin, Texas.
1949-Mike Shrieve (drummer for Santana) is born in San Francisco, California.
1945-Rik Elswit (lead guitarist for Dr. Hook) is born in California.
1943-Soul singer Jan Bradley, who becomes popular by covering Curtis Mayfield tunes before writing her own songs, is born Addie Bradley in Byhalia, Mississippi.
1937-Gene Chandler is born Eugene Dixon in Chicago, Illinois.
1932-Big Dee Irwin is born DiFosco T. Ervin Jr. in Harlem, New York. Recorded a popular version of "Swinging on a Star" with Little Eva.
1931-Della Reese is born Delloreese Patricia Early in the Black Bottom neighborhood of Detroit, Michigan.
1925-Bill Haley is born in Highland Park, Michigan.
1924-Jazz drummer Louie Bellson, famous for his work with Duke Ellington, is born in Illinois.
1911-Contralto singer LaVerne Sophia Andrews (firstborn of The Andrews Sisters) is born in Mound, Minnesota.
1865-Emile Jaques-Dalcroze, a composer who developed Dalcroze Eurhythmics to teach music to students, is born in Vienna, Austria
Bikkie
7th July 2025, 10:59
1495- King Ferdinand II returns to Naples
Vienna Court Music Ensemble
1498 Emperor Maximilian I orders appointment of a conductor, two bass singers and six choir boys, establishing the Vienna Court Music Ensemble; later includes Vienna Boys Choir
Battle of Otumba, Mexico
1520 -Hernán Cortés and the Tlaxcalans defeat a numerically superior Aztec force in the Battle of Otumba in Mexico
1534- European colonization of the Americas: first known exchange between Europeans and natives of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, in New Brunswick
First French Amerindian Trade
1534- First act of trade between the French and Amerindians when Jacques Cartier trades items with Micmacs at Chaleur Bay [1
1543 -French troops invade Luxembourg
1550 -Traditional date chocolate thought to have been introduced to Europe
1585- King Henri III and Duke De Guise signs Treaty of Nemours: French Huguenots lose all freedoms
1600- English explorer John Mildenhall leaves Aleppo with a caravan of 600 people bound for Lahore - one of the first Englishmen to reach India overland
1647 -People's uprising against high prices and Spanish rule in Naples
Isaac Newton Graduates
1668 -Isaac Newton receives MA from Trinity College, Cambridge
Music History
2022-The only copy of Bob Dylan's newly recorded "Blowin' In The Wind" sells at auction for £1,482,000 ($1.7 million). Dylan recorded it with producer T Bone Burnett and the song was pressed to a disc in Burnett's new format, Ionic Original, which is made of aluminium but plays on a turntable.
2018-The Cure stage a 40th anniversary show in London's Hyde Park as part of the annual British Summer Time concert series. Frontman Robert Smith chose the lineup of opening acts, including Slowdive, Editors, Ride, Interpol, Goldfrapp, and The Twilight Sad.
2009-Lionel Richie got his first big break when The Commodores snagged 42 dates in the opening slot for The Jackson 5 in 1972. Thirty-seven years later on the same date, he performs The Commodores song "Jesus is Love" at a memorial service for the late Michael Jackson at the Staples Center in Los Angeles.
2006-Pink Floyd founder Syd Barrett dies at age 60.
2005-Former calypso artist Arthur Edlin Frederick is one of 52 innocent people killed in the 7/7 terrorist attacks in London.
2001-Sharon becomes the first Corr to wed when she marries Gavin Bonnar, a Belfast barrister. They will have two children, Cathal Robert Gerard and Flori Jean Elizabeth.
2001-Fred Neil, a folk singer-songwriter known for writing Harry Nilsson's hit "Everybody's Talkin'," dies during a battle with skin cancer at age 65.
1998-Barenaked Ladies release their fourth studio album, Stunt. It's the Canadian band's breakthrough record in the US, where it lands at #3 on the Billboard 200 albums chart.
1998-Along with his financial partner Don Barden, Michael Jackson announces plans to build an entertainment complex in Detroit called "The Majestic Kingdom." It never materializes.
1993-Mia Zapata (lead singer of The Gits), age 27, is murdered after being accosted by a stranger outside of Seattle's Comet Tavern. The case goes unsolved for years until DNA evidence links the crime to Florida fisherman Jesus Mezquia in 2003, who eventually is sentenced to 36 years in prison.
1992-Spinal Tap cap their reunion tour with a sold-out show at Royal Albert Hall in London.More
1992-Dream Theater release their second album, Images And Words, a progressive metal landmark.
1973-Paul McCartney & Wings release "Live And Let Die."
1973-Billy Preston's "Will It Go Round In Circles" hits #1 in America.
1971-Bjorn Ulvaeus and Agnetha Faltskog of ABBA are married in Verum, Sweden (it lasts eight years).
1968-The folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary appear as the "mystery guest" on CBS-TV's What's My Line?
1968-The Yardbirds disband immediately after a gig in Luton, England. Jimmy Page begins forming what will become Led Zeppelin.
1968-The Yardbirds perform their final gig in Luton, England.
1963-Vonda Shepard is born in New York, but will be raised in California.
1962-David Rose's "The Stripper" hits #1.
1962-Spin Doctors bass player Mark White is born in New York City.
1956-A riot breaks out at a Fats Domino concert in San Jose, California, with twelve injured.
1956-The Platters release "My Prayer."
1956-With his song "I Walk The Line" climbing the charts, Johnny Cash makes his first appearance at the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville. There, he meets his future wife, June Carter.
1950-Johnny Cash joins the US Air Force, enlisting at 18 just six weeks after graduating from high school in Dyess, Arkansas. He serves as a Morse code intercept operator and rises to the rank of Staff Sergeant before being honorably discharged in 1954 and launching his music career.
1948-Larry "Rhino" Reinhardt (guitarist for Iron Butterfly) is born in Florida.
1947-David Hodo (Village People construction worker) is born in Palo Alto, California.
1944-Warren Entner (guitarist for The Grass Roots) is born in Boston, Massachusetts.
1941-Jim Rodford (bass guitarist for Argent, The Kinks) is born in St Albans, Hertfordshire, England.
1940-Beatles drummer Ringo Starr is born Richard Starkey in Liverpool, England. He has a run of solo hits in the '70s that includes "It Don't Come Easy" and "Photograph," but he doesn't tour until 1989, when he introduces his All Starr Band.
1936-Tommy Dee, known for the 1959 hit "Three Stars," a tribute to the late Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and The Big Bopper, is born in Vicker, Virginia.
1924-Mary Ford is born Iris Colleen Summers in El Monte, California.
1911-Composer Gian Carlo Menotti, known for the popular Christmas opera Amahl and the Night Visitors, is born in Cadegliano-Viconago, Italy.
Bikkie
8th July 2025, 10:29
1663 -King Charles II of England approves the Rhode Island Royal Charter giving royal recognition to the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations and freedoms to its colonists, among them Roger William
1680 -The first confirmed tornado in America kills a servant at Cambridge, Massachusetts
1693- New York City authorizes the first police uniforms in the American colonies
1709- Battle of Poltava; Russians defeat Swedes, end of Swedish empire as a major power
1716- Great Northern War: Battle of Dynekilen, a Danish-Norwegian force under Peter Tordenskjold traps and defeats Swedish force
1731 Theologian Jonathan Edwards preaches his sermon "God Glorified in Man's Dependence" in Boston, later his first published sermo
1741- Theologian Jonathan Edwards preaches perhaps the most famous of all American sermons "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" at Enfield, Connecticut, part of the Great Awakening
1758- British and Colonial assault on French forces at Fort Ticonderoga, New York
United States Declaration of Independence
1776 -Colonel John Nixon gives the first public reading of the Declaration of Independence to an assemblage of citizens in Philadelphia
1777- Independent Vermont introduces a new constitution, prohibiting slavery
1778 -George Washington headquarters at West Point for his Continental Army
1792- France declares war on Prussia
1796 -US State Department issues first US passport
1797- 1st US senator (William Blount of Tennessee) expelled by impeachment
1800- Dr. Benjamin Waterhouse gives the first cowpox vaccination in the United States to his son to prevent smallpox
1805 -American Bill Richmond knocks out Jack Holmes, Kilburn Wells, England
1816 -Frost in Waltham, Massachusetts during "year without a summer"
1822- Chippewas turn over huge tract of land in Ontario to the United Kingdom
1833- Russia and Turkey sign defense treaty
1844- nearly five years after the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi that the first hostile action took place in the far north in the fifth largest town in the colony of New Zealand, Kororareka.
1862-New Zealand’s first prize fight?
The boxing bout was fought in an improvised ring on the banks of the Waimakariri River near Kaiapoi after police were ejected from the scene. London prizefighter Harry Jones defeated labourer George Barton over 30 bloody bare-knuckle rounds for a purse of £100
1893-New Zealand Racing Conference meets
The New Zealand Racing Conference was formed to control the thoroughbred horse-racing in the colony.
Music History
2016-Geri Horner, Emma Bunton and Mel B of the Spice Girls announce that they are forming a new group called GEM, which is what you want. What you really, really want.More
2011-Troubadours: The Rise Of The Singer-Songwriter is screened by the BBC.
2006-"Promiscuous" by Nelly Furtado goes to #1 for the first of six weeks. It features the red-hot producer Timbaland, who goes back and forth with Furtado on the song as they play out a flirtation in a club. Furtado says it's a positive song, with the girl letting the guy run his best game and then deciding if he's up to her standards.
2003-A tooth from the mouth of Elvis Presley, once the property of former girlfriend Linda Thompson, goes up for auction on eBay. Along with a lock of his hair and a gold record, it fetches over $100,000.
2002-Michael Jackson unleashes a sudden tirade on the music industry, accusing several music execs of racism and calling Sony head Tommy Mottola in particular "very, very, very devilish."
2000-"The Real Slim Shady" debuts at #1 in the UK, giving Eminem his first chart-topper on the Singles chart. He doesn't reach #1 in America until two years later with "Lose Yourself."
1998-The Smithsonian and Library of Congress agree to house the music and film archives of Frank Sinatra.
1997-Weezer fan club founders Mykel Allan, 31, and her sister Carli, 29, are killed along with their younger sister, Trysta, in a car accident in Colorado on the way back from one of the band's shows. The girls, who had befriended many up-and-coming Los Angeles-based bands, are honored through many tribute songs, including Weezer's "Mykel and Carli" and Jimmy Eat World's "Hear You Me."
1992-Garth Brooks and wife Sandy welcome their first child, daughter Taylor Mayne Pearl Brooks.
1978-The Clash's Joe Strummer and Paul Simonon are arrested on drunk and disorderly charges following a concert at The Apollo in Glasgow, Scotland.
1974-David Bowie releases David Live, recorded at Tower Theater in Philadelphia. It is Bowie's first official live album.
1971-A mini-riot during a Mott The Hoople concert prompts London's Royal Albert Hall to temporarily ban rock groups from the venue.
1970 -Fantasy records releases "Cosmo's Factory", the fifth studio album by American rock band Creedence Clearwater Revival; it is critically acclaimed and becomes their biggest seller, spawning six singles that reach the top 5 of the Billboard charts
1970-Beck is born Bek David Campbell in Los Angeles, California. He adopts the surname Hansen from his mom, former Andy Warhol protege Bibbe Hansen.
1969-Singer/actress Marianne Faithfull, girlfriend of Mick Jagger, attempts suicide with barbiturates while on the set of the film Ned Kelly (also starring Mick). She is dropped from the cast of the movie, eventually recovers, and when awaking from her coma, tells friends that "wild horses couldn't drag me away." The Rolling Stones song "Wild Horses" is built around that phrase.
1965-The Dave Clark Five's first movie, Having A Wild Weekend, opens in London. (For American audiences, it's entitled Catch Us If You Can, after their hit of the same name.)
1962-Joan Osborne is born in Anchorage, Kentucky.
1961-Toby Keith is born Toby Keith Covel in Clinton, Oklahoma. He works in the oil fields and for a rodeo company before launching his music career in his 30s. His pre-music life informs many of his songs, including "Beer For My Horses," inspired by his rodeo days.
1961-Depeche Mode founder Andy Fletcher is born in Nottingham, England.
1954- Elvis Presley ’s debut single, “That’s All Right,” was played for the very first time on Memphis’ WHBQ.
1958-The RIAA gives its first ever Gold album to the Oklahoma! soundtrack for $1 million in sales. The Gold standard for albums is changed in 1975 to reflect sales of over 500,000.
1957-Elvis Presley's "(Let Me Be Your) Teddy Bear" hits #1 in America the day before it appears in his second film, Loving You. It holds the top spot for seven weeks.
1946-Ava Gardner divorces bandleader Artie Shaw after one year of marriage. Her next husband is Frank Sinatra.
1944-Jai Johanny Johanson (drummer for The Allman Brothers Band) is born Johnny Lee Johnson in Ocean Springs, Mississippi.
1935-Steve Lawrence is born Sidney Liebowitz in Brooklyn, New York City.
1930-Italian American singer Jerry Vale is born Genaro Louis Vitaliano in the Bronx, New York City.
1914-Swing era bandleader Billy Eckstine is born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Known for his 1948 rendition of "I Apologize."
1908-Bandleader Louis Jordan, whose jazz and blues music leads to rock and roll, is born in Brinkley, Arkansas.
1900-Avant-garde composer George Antheil is born Georg Johann Carl Antheil in Trenton, New Jersey.
Bikkie
9th July 2025, 11:16
1609 – Bohemia is granted freedom of religion through the Letter of Majesty by the Holy Roman Emperor, Rudolf II.
1701 – A Bourbon force under Nicolas Catinat withdraws from a smaller Habsburg force under Prince Eugene of Savoy in the Battle of Carpi.
1745 – French victory in the Battle of Melle allows them to capture Ghent in the days after.
1755 – The Braddock Expedition is soundly defeated by a smaller French and Native American force in its attempt to capture Fort Duquesne in what is now downtown Pittsburgh.
1762 – Catherine the Great becomes Empress of Russia following the coup against her husband, Peter III.[5]
1763 – The Mozart family grand tour of Europe began, lifting the profile of son Wolfgang Amadeus.[6]
1776 – George Washington orders the Declaration of Independence to be read out to members of the Continental Army in Manhattan, while thousands of British troops on Staten Island prepare for the Battle of Long Island.[7]
1789 – In Versailles, the National Assembly reconstitutes itself as the National Constituent Assembly and begins preparations for a French constitution.
1790 – The Swedish Navy captures one third of the Russian Baltic fleet.
1793 – The Act Against Slavery in Upper Canada bans the importation of slaves and will free those who are born into slavery after the passage of the Act at 25 years of age.
1795 – Financier James Swan pays off the $2,024,899 US national debt that had been accrued during the American Revolution.[8]
1807 – The second Treaty of Tilsit is signed between France and Prussia, ending the War of the Fourth Coalition.
1810 – Napoleon annexes the Kingdom of Holland as part of the First French Empire.
1811 – Explorer David Thompson posts a sign near what is now Sacajawea State Park in Washington state, claiming the Columbia District for the United Kingdom.
1815 – Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord becomes the first Prime Minister of France.
1816 – Argentina declares independence from Spain.
1821 – Four hundred and seventy prominent Cypriots including Archbishop Kyprianos are executed in response to Cypriot aid to the Greek War of Independence.
1850 – U.S. President Zachary Taylor dies after eating raw fruit and iced milk; he is succeeded in office by Vice President Millard Fillmore.
1850 – Persian prophet Báb is executed in Tabriz, Persia.
1860-The slave ship Clotilda was scuttled ,after arriving in Mobile, Alabama,to conceal evidence of the illegal voyage, the ship was burned and sunk in the Mobile River.
1863-First tree planted in Christchurch Botanical Gardens New Zealand.
The Albert Edward Oak is the oldest tree in the Botanical Gardens.
This tree was planted on 9 July 1863 in celebration of the marriage of Prince Albert to Princess Alexandra of Denmark. This tree is now regarded to be the beginning of the gardens that we know today.
On the same day, another Oak was planted at the intersection of Ferry Road (was then known as Sumner Road) and the East Belt (Fitzgerald Ave) by Mrs. R. Bealey, Mrs. F. Fitzgerald, Mrs. G. Bowen and Mrs. R. Hall, the wives of four of our most influential politicians in Canterbury. Sadly this Oak is no longer with us. This tree and the Albert Edward Oak were gifted to the city by William ‘Cabbage’ Wilson, a nurseryman who also served Christchurch as its first Mayor in 1868.
Prior to 1863, the gardens were mainly wetlands and sand dunes, believe it or not. I can’t imagine what it took to give us the gardens that were to “be reserved forever as a public park, and to be open for the recreation and enjoyment of the public” – as written in 1855.
The Albert Edward Oak can be found south west of the Archery Lawn, close to the Avon
1863 – American Civil War: The Siege of Port Hudson ends in a Union victory and, along with the fall of Vicksburg five days earlier, gives the Union complete control of the Mississippi River.[9]
1868 – The 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution is ratified, guaranteeing African Americans full citizenship and all persons in the United States due process of law.
1875 – The Herzegovina Uprising against Ottoman rule begins, which would last until 1878 and have far-reaching implications throughout the Balkans.
1877 – The inaugural Wimbledon Championships begins.
1893 – Daniel Hale Williams, American heart surgeon, performs the first successful open-heart surgery in United States without anesthesia.
1896 – William Jennings Bryan delivers his Cross of Gold speech advocating bimetallism at the 1896 Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
1900 – The Federation of Australia is given royal assent.
1900 – The Governor of Shanxi province in North China orders the execution of 45 foreign Christian missionaries and local church members, including children
Music History
2019-After years of animosity that kept Ann and Nancy Wilson apart, Heart regroup for their Love Alive tour, which kicks off with a show in St. Louis. Support acts are all women: Joan Jett, Sheryl Crow, Brandi Carlile and Elle King.
2017-The radio station Mansfield 103.2 in England is hijacked by a transmitter hacker who engages in some monkeyshines, saying, "I'm a w--ker, I'm a w--ker" in a Nottinghamshire accent before playing the "The Winker's Song (Misprint)" by Ivor Biggun, a paean to self-pleasure that repeats the phrase over and over.More
2012-Soul singer Linda "Kay Kay" Greenwade (of Kay Kay and the Rays) dies at age 56 after a long period of ill health, including diabetes and a brain tumor.
2011-Matt Bellamy of Muse and his fiancé Kate Hudson welcome a baby boy named Bingham. Hudson had a boy with Black Crowes frontman Chris Robinson seven years earlier; she and Bellamy call off their engagement in 2014.
2006-Milan B. Williams (keyboardist for The Commodores) dies of cancer at age 58.
2003-Buzzcocks play Madison Square Garden for the first time ever in their career, opening for Pearl Jam.
2001-During an appearance on MTV's TRL, four of the Backstreet Boys announce their Black & Blue tour will be put on hold so their fifth member, AJ McLean, can enter rehab to treat alcoholism and depression.
1999-Avoiding a legal battle over whether or not they were ever legally married (they had a ceremony in Bali in 1991), Mick Jagger and Jerry Hall reach a settlement, calling their split an annulment.
LeAnn Rimes Debuts With Blue
1996-Thirteen-year-old LeAnn Rimes releases her debut album, Blue, and wows critics with the hits "Blue" and "One Way Ticket (Because I Can)."More
1995-Hootie & the Blowfish play the first-ever concert at the Meadows Music Theater in Hartford, Connecticut, drawing a crowd of 17,000.
1981-The ABC News show 20/20 runs a story called "Rappin' To The Beat," becoming the first national TV news magazine to cover rap music. "You never miss the fact there's no melody," Hugh Downs says in his introduction. "It's all beat and talk." The coverage suggests rap may be more than just a passing fad.
1978-Andy Gibb and his brothers, the Bee Gees, perform together for the first time when Barry, Robin and Maurice join him at his concert in Miami to sing his hit "Shadow Dancing," which they wrote together.
1977-Alan O'Day's "Undercover Angel" hits #1. It will hold the position for one week.
1977-Elvis Costello quits his job at cosmetics factory to pursue a music career.
1974-Rush sign a deal with Mercury Records, who are impressed by their debut album, a self-titled independent release with the track "Working Man."
1974-In Seattle, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young play a four-hour show to kick off their reunion tour (they haven't toured together since 1970). It's the first rock stadium tour - not a great fit for the band, who aren't loud or flamboyant. After the tour, they start recording an album but part ways before it's finished.
1971-Grand Funk Railroad play to a sold-out crowd of 55,000 at Shea Stadium in New York City. They have no hit singles, but are well known in the area thanks to a block-long billboard that ran in Times Square for much of the previous year.
1970-In Bloomington, Indiana, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young wrap up their tour. The group members drift apart and don't hit the road again until 1974.
1969-John Lennon makes his solo debut on the UK charts with "Give Peace A Chance."
1964-Courtney Love is born Courtney Michelle Harrison in San Francisco, California. After a tumultuous childhood, she travels the world and forms the band Hole. In 1992, she marries Kurt Cobain of Nirvana.
1962-Bob Dylan, not yet famous, records "Blowin' In The Wind" at Columbia Records' studios in New York City but doesn't release it until May 27, 1963, when it appears on his second album, The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan. It eventually becomes one of Dylan's most famous songs, but the first version most listeners hear is the hit cover by Peter, Paul and Mary, which goes to #2 in the US in August 1963.
1959-Jim Kerr (lead singer for Simple Minds) is born in Toryglen, Glasgow, Scotland.
1957-Elvis Presley's second film, Loving You, has its US premiere (Elvis does not attend since he got a special showing the night before).
1957-Marc Almond (lead vocalist for Soft Cell) is born Peter Mark Sinclair Almond in Southport, Lancashire, England.
1954-Debbie Sledge (of Sister Sledge) is born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
1946-John "Mitch" Mitchell (drummer for the Jimi Hendrix Experience) is born in Greenwich, London, England. Before becoming a musician, he'll start his entertainment career as an actor, appearing on the children's program Jennings and Derbyshire and starring in the 1960 film Bottom's Up.
1946-Bon Scott is born Ronald Belford Scott in Kirriemuir, Scotland. He is raised in Australia, where he meets Angus and Malcolm Young and eventually becomes lead singer of their band AC/DC.
1941-Don McPherson (of The Main Ingredient) is born in Indianapolis, Indiana.
1929-Singer-songwriter Lee Hazlewood, known for his collaborations with Duane Eddy and Nancy Sinatra, is born Barton Lee Hazlewood in Mannford, Oklahoma.
1929-Bluegrass mandolinist Jesse McReynolds (of Jim & Jesse) is born in Carfax, Virginia.
1927-Sixties pop singer Ed Ames ("My Cup Runneth Over") is born Edmund Dantes Urick in Malden, Massachusetts.
1925-Fifties pop singer Alan Dale ("(The Gang that Sang) Heart of My Heart") is born Aldo Sigismondi in Brooklyn, New York City.
Bikkie
10th July 2025, 13:03
1962 Telstar, first active communications satellite developed by American Telephone and Telegraph Company (AT&T), is launched [1]
1962 -US performs atmospheric nuclear test at Christmas Island
1964 -Jesús Alou is the first San Francisco Giant in 40 years to get six hits in a game in a 10-3 win over the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field
1964 -Moïse Tshombé, leader of the Confederation of Tribal Associations of Katanga, becomes Prime Minister of the Congo
1964 The Beatles release "A Hard Day's Night", their third studio album
1965 -Beatles' "VI" album goes to number 1 and stays at number 1 for 6 weeks
1965 -Rolling Stones score their first US number 1 single "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction"
1967- Bobbie Gentry records "Ode to Billie Joe," which goes on to win four Grammy awards
1967 -Uruguay becomes a member of the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works
1968 -US Major League Baseball announces it will be split into two divisions for 1969
1969- Chilean Association of Librarians created
1985-Rainbow Warrior sunk by French secret agents
A crew member died when French secret agents mined the Greenpeace vessel Rainbow Warrior in WaitematÄ Harbour, Auckland.
Music History
2024-Cypress Hill team up with the London Symphony Orchestra for a concert at Royal Albert Hall. This odd pairing first happened in the 1996 "Homerpalooza" episode of The Simpsons when the Cypress Hill and LSO avatars played "Insane In The Brain" together.
2018-Cardi B and Offset have their first child together, a daughter named Kulture. Two weeks later, Cardi pulls out of a planned tour with Bruno Mars so she can spend more time with her.
2017-With nearly 2.9 billion views, "See You Again" by Wiz Khalifa and Charlie Puth breaks the record for most-viewed video on YouTube, overtaking "Gangnam Style" by PSY. In August, it is overtaken by "Despacito."
2016-Aerosmith lead guitarist Joe Perry suffers a cardiac arrest while performing with Alice Cooper and Johnny Depp, fellow members of the supergroup The Hollywood Vampires, in Coney Island in Brooklyn, New York. The 65 year old is rushed to Coney Island hospital, where's he's listed in stable condition.
2015-The documentary Amy is released. The film, directed by Asif Kapadia, chronicles the short life of British singer Amy Winehouse. Hard-living Winehouse won five Grammy awards for her
2008-Shazam Can Name That Tune,By simply tapping an app button on an iPhone, music fans can finally get an answer to the timeless question, "What's that song?" Shazam's free smartphone app is the first music recognition service of its kind - using a phone's microphone to listen to any song being played publicly - like in a restaurant, at a friend's house, or on TV - and identify it. And it actually works.
2006- album Back To Black. She died at the age of 27 from alcohol poisoning in 2011.
2013-Randy Travis suffers a stroke after being hospitalized days earlier with a heart condition. He lives, but loses most of his speech and singing ability. His girlfriend, Mary Davis, sticks by him and helps with his recovery. They get married in 2015.
2012-Frank Ocean releases his highly acclaimed debut album, Channel Orange, which goes on to win the Grammy for Best Urban Contemporary Album. Standout tracks include "Lost" and "Thinkin About You."
2012-Slash, who left Guns N' Roses in 1996, gets his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Charlie Sheen, who is master of ceremonies at the event, comments, "It seems quite fitting that Slash is getting a star on the very street Axl Rose will one day be sleeping on."
2010-Roger Waters makes a surprise appearance at a benefit concert in Oxfordshire, England when he joins his onetime Pink Floyd bandmate David Gilmour for a four-song set, marking the first time since Live 8 in 2005 that they have shared the stage. Gilmour reciprocates by joining Waters for a performance of The Wall on May 12, 2011 in London.
2009-Robert Plant is officially a Commander of the British Empire after being bestowed with the title by Prince Charles at Buckingham Palace.
2009-Shakira releases the electro-pop album She Wolf. The singer was in a bad mood when the disco-influenced title track roared out of her consciousness: "The image of the she wolf just came to my head, and when I least expected it I was howling and panting."
2008-VH1's Rock Honors pays tribute to The Who.
2007-Bad Religion release their fourteenth full-length studio album, New Maps of Hell.
2004-American Idol winner Fantasia's "I Believe" debuts at #1 but drops out of the Top 10 two weeks later. She shows staying power, though, with a million-selling debut album and a lead role in the Broadway production of The Color Purple.
2000-Coldplay release their debut album, Parachutes, in their native UK (it isn't issued in America until November 7). Featuring the singles "Yellow" and "Trouble," it becomes a global smash.
2000-A much-ballyhooed Supremes "reunion" tour, "Return To Love," which features only Diana Ross from the original group, is canceled after initial ticket sales don't match expectations.e time with her.
2016-Aerosmith lead guitarist Joe Perry suffers a cardiac arrest while performing with Alice Cooper and Johnny Depp, fellow members of the supergroup The Hollywood Vampires, in Coney Island in Brooklyn, New York. The 65 year old is rushed to Coney Island hospital, where's he's listed in stable condition.
2015-The documentary Amy is released. The film, directed by Asif Kapadia, chronicles the short life of British singer Amy Winehouse. Hard-living Winehouse won five Grammy awards for her 2006 album Back To Black. She died at the age of 27 from alcohol poisoning in 2011.
2013-Randy Travis suffers a stroke after being hospitalized days earlier with a heart condition. He lives, but loses most of his speech and singing ability. His girlfriend, Mary Davis, sticks by him and helps with his recovery. They get married in 2015.
2012-Frank Ocean releases his highly acclaimed debut album, Channel Orange, which goes on to win the Grammy for Best Urban Contemporary Album. Standout tracks include "Lost" and "Thinkin About You."
2012-Slash, who left Guns N' Roses in 1996, gets his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Charlie Sheen, who is master of ceremonies at the event, comments, "It seems quite fitting that Slash is getting a star on the very street Axl Rose will one day be sleeping on."
2010-Roger Waters makes a surprise appearance at a benefit concert in Oxfordshire, England when he joins his onetime Pink Floyd bandmate David Gilmour for a four-song set, marking the first time since Live 8 in 2005 that they have shared the stage. Gilmour reciprocates by joining Waters for a performance of The Wall on May 12, 2011 in London.
2009-Robert Plant is officially a Commander of the British Empire after being bestowed with the title by Prince Charles at Buckingham Palace.
2009-Shakira releases the electro-pop album She Wolf. The singer was in a bad mood when the disco-influenced title track roared out of her consciousness: "The image of the she wolf just came to my head, and when I least expected it I was howling and panting."
2008-VH1's Rock Honors pays tribute to The Who.
2007-Bad Religion release their fourteenth full-length studio album, New Maps of Hell.
2004-American Idol winner Fantasia's "I Believe" debuts at #1 but drops out of the Top 10 two weeks later. She shows staying power, though, with a million-selling debut album and a lead role in the Broadway production of The Color Purple.
2000-Coldplay release their debut album, Parachutes, in their native UK (it isn't issued in America until November 7). Featuring the singles "Yellow" and "Trouble," it becomes a global smash.
2000-A much-ballyhooed Supremes "reunion" tour, "Return To Love," which features only Diana Ross from the original group, is canceled after initial ticket sales don't match expectations.
1999-Significant Other by Limp Bizkit supplants Millennium by Backstreet Boys at #1 on the US albums chart. The nu metal vs. boy band battles continue unabated on MTV's Total Request Live, as videos from the albums battle it out on the countdown.
1998-Bauhaus, who broke up in 1983, begin their Resurrection tour with a show at The Palladium in Los Angeles.
1997-Wanda Day, drummer for 4 Non Blondes, dies of a drug overdose.
1993-Bob Seger marries his third wife, Juanita Dorricott.
1989-The Monkees get a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. At the ceremony, all four Monkees reunite for the first time - Mike Nesmith was a holdout on their reunion tour.
1987-John Hammond, who signed both Bob Dylan (in 1961) and Bruce Springsteen (in 1972) to Columbia Records, dies at 76 after suffering from a number of strokes.
1986-Grateful Dead leader Jerry Garcia goes into a diabetic coma, forcing the band to cancel the rest of their tour. He's in the coma for five days, and when he comes to, he has to learn how to walk and talk again. After months of rehab, he gets his faculties back and in December, and is once again on stage with his band.
1985-Playboy publishes nude photos of Madonna taken before she was famous.
1985-Tina Turner stars opposite Mel Gibson in the post-apocalyptic action flick Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome. Turner sings two hit songs for the movie: "One Of The Living" and "We Don't Need Another Hero.
1980-Jessica Simpson is born in Abilene, Texas. She's first known as a singer, releasing her debut single, "I Wanna Love You Forever," in 1999. She becomes a reality TV star in 2002 with the MTV series Newlyweds: Nick & Jessica, and in 2005 she enters the world of film, playing Daisy Duke in The Dukes Of Hazzard.
1979-Chuck Berry is sentenced to jail for tax evasion. He would serve four months.
1977-Queen release their "We Are The Champions"/"We Will Rock You" single in the UK, providing stadium anthems for sporting events the world over.
1977-Cher gives birth to Elijah Blue Allman, her first and only child with Gregg Allman of The Allman Brothers.
1976-The Starland Vocal Band's "Afternoon Delight" hits #1 in America, where it stays for two weeks. The song is not about the US bicentennial (July 4, 1976), but about daytime lovemaking.
1976-England Dan and John Ford Coley's "I'd Really Love To See You Tonight" enters the charts.
1975-Gregg Allman and Cher's famously rocky marriage almost ends in divorce after only 10 days, but Cher changes her mind three weeks later and the couple tough it out for a few more years, officially divorcing in 1979.
1975-Gladys Knight & the Pips debut their own summer variety music show on NBC TV.
1972-Nilsson releases Son of Schmilsson.
1970-Three Dog Night releases "Liar."
1970-Rascal Flatts lead singer Gary LeVox is born Gary Wayne Vernon Jr. in Powell, Ohio. His stage name comes from a Vox amplifier that was labelled "L" for "lead singer."
1969-The funeral is held for The Rolling Stones founding member Brian Jones, who was found dead in his swimming pool on July 3rd. His bandmates Charlie Watts and Bill Wyman attend, but Mick Jagger and Keith Richards do not.
1969-The Temptations Show, a Motown special featuring the group, airs in syndication. They perform, among other hits, "Get Ready," "Cloud Nine," and "Runaway Child, Running Wild."
1968-Early prog-rockers The Nice are banned from London's Royal Albert Hall after burning an American flag on stage as an antiwar protest.
1968-Eric Clapton announces the breakup of the supergroup Cream, currently finishing up its last tour.
1967-Bobbie Gentry's first single, "Ode To Billie Joe," is released. It would go on to top the Hot 100 for four weeks.
1967-Kenny Rogers leaves the The New Christy Minstrels and forms The First Edition, who have a hit the next year with "Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In)."
1965-The Rolling Stones "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" hits #1 in America. It stays for four weeks, becoming the biggest hit of 1965.
1965-Wilson Pickett releases "In The Midnight Hour."
1965-Peter DiStefano (guitarist for Porno For Pyros) is born in Santa Monica, California.
1965-The Kinks play the Seattle Center Coliseum in what turns out to be their last show on American soil until December 1969, as the powerful American Federation of Musicians union bans them. The group fell afoul of the union with petulant behavior, canceled concerts, and an indifference toward their audiences - at a Sacramento show on June 26 they filled their set with an extended jam of "You Really Got Me." Poor ticket sales and disputes with their management set the stage for their ill-fated American trek.
1964-Manfred Mann release a little ditty called "Do Wah Diddy Diddy," which shoots to #1 in America three months later.
1964-The Beatles return to their hometown of Liverpool for a showing of their first movie, A Hard Day's Night. They get a warm welcome, with thousands of fans turning up to see them.
1963-Martha and the Vandellas release "(Love Is Like a) Heat Wave.
1962-NASA launches the Telstar 1 satellite, the first active communications satellite, inspiring the Tornadoes' instrumental hit "Telstar" later that year.
1962-Christopher "Play" Martin (of Kid 'N Play) is born in Queens, New York City.
1961-Bobby Lewis's "Tossin' And Turnin'" hits #1 for the first of seven weeks.
1959-Sandy West is born Sandy Pesavento in Long Beach, California. Together with Joan Jett, she is a founding member of the teenage all-female rock band The Runaways, playing drums. After the band splits she leaves the music industry, and dies at the age of 47 from lung cancer.
1954-Neil Tennant (lead vocalist, keyboardist for Pet Shop Boys) is born in North Shields, Tyneside, England.
1950-The nation's favorite popular music countdown, "Your Hit Parade," gets its own home on NBC TV to match its longtime radio counterpart.
1950-The Victor Talking Machine Company trademarks the phrase "His Master's Voice," which refers to the dog in their logo (Nipper) listening to a record player because he thinks it is his owner. The company later becomes the record label RCA Victor.
1949-Greg Kihn, known for his '80s hits "The Breakup Song (They Don't Write 'Em)" and "Jeopardy," is born in Baltimore, Maryland.
1949-Dave Smalley (lead singer, guitarist of Down By Law) is born in Oil City, Pennsylvania.
1947-Arlo Guthrie is born in Coney Island, New York.
1944J-ohn "Beaky" Dymond (of Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Tich) is born in Salisbury, Wiltshire, England.
1943-Jerry Miller (songwriter, guitarist for Moby Grape) is born in Tacoma, Washington.
1942-Sixto DÃaz RodrÃguez (better known simply as "RodrÃguez") is born in Detroit, Michigan. He is the subject of the 2012 film Searching for Sugar Man.
1942-Heavy metal singer Ronnie James Dio (of Black Sabbath, Rainbow) is born Ronald James Padavona in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
1941-Jazz icon Jelly Roll Morton, whose "Jelly Roll Blues" was the first published jazz composition, dies at age 50.
1941I-an Whitcomb, known for the 1965 hit "You Turn Me On," is born in Woking, Surrey, England.
1936-Billie Holiday becomes the first major artist to record the classic song "Summertime," which was featured in the musical Porgy and Bess a year earlier.
1937-Singer and TV personality Sandy Stewart, known for the 1963 hit "My Coloring Book," is born Sandra Galitz in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
1937-Rockabilly singer Jumpin' Gene Simmons is born in Mississippi. He begins his music career at Sun Records as an opening act for Elvis Presley.
1895-German composer Carl Orff, known for the 1937 cantata Carmina Burana, is born in Munich.
Bikkie
11th July 2025, 12:36
1767 - John Quincy Adams Is Born
John Quincy Adams, the sixth U.S. president, was born on July 11, 1767, in Braintree, Massachusetts.
He was the son of John Adams, the second U.S. president.
Known for his diplomacy, he served as Secretary of State and negotiated the Treaty of Ghent.
Adams returned to politics as a congressman and fought against slavery until his death.
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1782 – British Evacuate Savannah, Georgia
On July 11, 1782, British forces evacuated Savannah, Georgia, during the final years of the American Revolution.
Royal Governor James Wright fled to Charleston, South Carolina.
The withdrawal marked the collapse of British control in the region of Georgia.
It was a significant victory for the Continental Army.
1861- Â Union Victory at the Battle of Rich Mountain
On July 11, 1861, Union troops led by General George B. McClellan defeated Confederate forces in western Virginia.
The win secured federal control over the region.
It helped pave the way for West Virginia to separate from Virginia and join the Union.
1848-The Acheron arrives to survey New Zealand waters
Captained by John Lort Stokes, the paddle steamer Acheron spent four years charting the New Zealand coastline.
1804 -– Burr Fatally Wounds Hamilton in Duel
On July 11, 1804, U.S. Vice President Aaron Burr faced former Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton in a duel in Weehawken, New Jersey.
Hamilton deliberately missed his shot; Burr did not.
Burr's bullet struck Hamilton in the abdomen, damaging organs and lodging near his spine.
Hamilton died the following day.
The duel destroyed Burr's political career and legacy.
1st Individual Female Olympic Champion
1900 -Charlotte Cooper beats Hélène Prévost to become the first female Olympic tennis champion and the first individual female Olympic champion in any sport
1905 -Â Niagara Movement Holds First Meeting
On July 11, 1905, a group of African American activists, led by W.E.B. Du Bois, met near Niagara Falls, Ontario.
They formed the Niagara Movement to fight for civil rights and oppose racial segregation.
Though short-lived, it laid the groundwork for the NAACP.
1914 - Babe Ruth Makes Major League Baseball Debut
On July 11, 1914, Babe Ruth pitched in his first MLB game with the Boston Red Sox.
He allowed three runs in seven innings and got the win against the Cleveland Naps.
It marked the start of one of the most legendary baseball careers of all time
1944- Â Assassination Plot Against Hitler
On July 11, 1944, German officer Claus von Stauffenberg met Adolf Hitler with a bomb in his briefcase.
The meeting took place at Hitler's headquarters in Bavaria.
The attempt failed as the bomb was not detonated that day.
A second attempt on July 20 came closer but also failed.
1960 - "To Kill a Mockingbird" Is Published
On July 11, 1960, Harper Lee's novel To Kill a Mockingbird was released.
The book tackled racial injustice in the American South.
It became a bestseller and won the Pulitzer Prize in 1961.
Today, it remains one of the most widely read books in U.S. schools.
1970-Last unclimbed face of Aoraki/Mt Cook conquered
Long-haired Christchurch mountaineers John Glasgow and Peter Gough became the first people known to have scaled the 2000-m Caroline Face of Aoraki/Mt Cook. They declared it a ‘triumph for the hippies’.
1972 - Honda Launches the Civic
On July 11, 1972, Honda released the first Civic model.
It was a compact, fuel-efficient car.
Its launch came just before the 1973 oil crisis, making it very popular.
The Civic became one of the world's best-selling vehicles.
1978- Â Gas Tanker Explosion Kills Over 200 in Spain
On July 11, 1978, a propane tanker exploded at a campsite in San Carlos de la Rápita, Spain.
The crash and explosion killed over 200 people and injured hundreds.
It was one of the worst camping disasters in European history.
1979 - Skylab Falls to Earth
On July 11, 1979, NASA's Skylab space station re-entered Earth's atmosphere.
Debris was scattered over Western Australia and the Indian Ocean.
No injuries were reported.
Skylab had been launched in 1973 as America's first space station.
1995 -Â Srebrenica Massacre Begins
On July 11, 1995, Bosnian Serb forces captured the town of Srebrenica.
In the following days, more than 8,000 Bosniak Muslim men and boys were killed.
It became Europe's worst massacre since World War II.
The event was later ruled a genocide by international courts'
1995 - U.S. Restores Relations With Vietnam
On July 11, 1995, President Bill Clinton announced the establishment of full diplomatic ties with Vietnam.
The decision came 20 years after the Vietnam War ended.
It followed Vietnam's cooperation in locating missing American soldiers.
It marked a significant step in U.S.–Vietnam reconciliation.
Music History
2022-On just the second date on their Public Service Announcement tour, their first in 11 years, Rage Against The Machine frontman Zack de la Rocha tears his Achilles tendon jumping on stage. They finish the North American portion of the tour but are forced to cancel the rest of it, which is planned for 2023.
2016-Country singer Craig Morgan mourns the death of his son Jerry Greer after the 19-year-old's body is discovered the day after he goes missing while tubing on the Tennessee River. Jerry is one of four sons born to Morgan and his wife, Karen.
2014-Tommy Ramone (drummer for Ramones) dies of bile duct cancer at age 65.
2013-Charles Pope (of The Tams) dies of complications from AlzheimerÂ’s disease at age 76 in Jonesboro, Georgia.
2012-Florence Welch, lead woman for Florence + the Machine, faces ill health and a failing voice, causing the group to cancel two European concerts. She's forced to cancel on doctor's orders to avoid permanent damage to her famous contralto voice.
2011-Jewel and her rodeo star husband Ty Murray welcome their first child: Kase Townes Murray.
2011-Rob Grill of The Grass Roots dies at 67.
2009-"Boom Boom Pow," after spending 12 weeks at #1, is replaced by another Black Eyed Peas song, "I Gotta Feelin'."
2008-Barenaked Ladies' co-lead singer Steven Page is busted for cocaine possession while visiting his girlfriend's apartment in Fayetteville, New York. The charges will eventually be dropped, but the incident is a point of contention with his clean-cut bandmates and leads to his departure the following year.
2007-Rod Lauren jumps to his death from a Tracy, California hotel room. The actor-turned-singer was accused of murdering his wife, Filipino actress Nida Blanca, six years earlier but successfully fought extradition to face a murder trial in the Philippines, where the crime took place.
2005-Robin Thicke ties the knot with high-school sweetheart and Precious star Paula Patton. Their first son is born Julian Fuego Thicke on April 6, 2010, just shy of their fifth wedding anniversary.
2002-Blues singer Rosco Gordon dies at 74.
2002-Over 200 people attend the funeral for Who bassist John Entwistle in St. Edward's Church in Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, England. Entwistle was found dead in his Las Vegas hotel room on June 27th.
2001-Facing a flurry of lawsuits, the file-sharing service Napster shuts down, but not before transforming the music industry away from physical product like CDs and toward digital downloads, which eventually leads to streaming.
2000-The free Back 2 Basics Tour, sponsored by Napster, kicks off with a show in Detroit. The tour runs for 24 dates and features Limp Bizkit, Cypress Hill, and Cold. The bands take some heat within the industry for working with Napster, a file sharing service that allows users to download songs for free.
2000-Metallica's battle against the peer-to-peer file sharing company Napster reaches the Senate Judiciary Committee, where the band's drummer Lars Ulrich testifies, claiming copyright infringement.
1999-Singer Helen Forrest dies of heart failure
1996-The night before a show at Madison Square Garden in New York City, Smashing Pumpkins touring keyboard player Jonathan Melvoin dies at age 34 after shooting heroin with drummer Jimmy Chamberlin, who is fired from the band a few days later (he returns to the fold in 1999). The Sarah McLachlan song "Angel" is inspired by Melvoin's death.
1996-Louis Gottlieb of The Limeliters dies at age 72.
1995-George Michael signs a two-album deal split among two labels: Virgin in the UK and Dreamworks SKG in America. As part of the deal, Sony Records is paid $40 million to release Michael from his contract; after releasing his 1990 album Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1, he refused to record for the label and filed a lawsuit seeking release from his contract, which he lost.
1995-Richard Ashcroft of The Verve marries Kate Radley of Spiritualized. They keep it quiet for two years, as Radley's bandmate, Jason Pierce, is also her ex-boyfriend.
1994-The Rolling Stones release Voodoo Lounge, with the tracks "Love Is Strong" and "You Got Me Rocking."
1994-At the Kansas City stop of Lollapalooza, where The Verve are the only British act on the bill, their frontman Richard Ashcroft collapses into convulsions and taken away in an ambulance after getting drunk with members of The Breeders and The Bad Seeds. That night, Verve drummer Pete Salisbury is arrested for destroying his hotel room. Says Ashcroft, "America nearly killed us."
1992-Jerry Garcia, who has a passion for painting and studied at the San Francisco Art Institute, introduces a line of neckties he designed
1991-Longtime songwriting team Burt Bacharach and Carole Bayer Sager get divorced.
1990-Steven Adler is fired from Guns N' Roses because of his drug use. He is replaced by Matt Sorum, who was previously with The Cult.
1989-Roger Christian, who wrote lyrics to the Beach Boys songs "Little Deuce Coupe" and "Don't Worry Baby," dies at 57.
1989-Miami Sound Machine lead singer Gloria Estefan releases her first solo album, Cuts Both Ways, with the hits "Don't Wanna Lose You" and "Get on Your Feet."
1981-Hubert Johnson of The Contours dies by suicide at age 40.
1979-The space station Skylab crashes to Earth after six years in space. Leading up to the event, Electric Light Orchestra take out ads in trade magazines dedicating their new single, "Don't Bring Me Down," to Skylab.
1976-Frank Sinatra marries for the fourth time, this time to Barbara Marx, former wife of the Marx Brothers' Zeppo Marx.
1976-Andy Gibb marries his girlfriend Kim Reeder in Australia.
1975-Lil' Kim is born Kimberly Denise Jones in New York City. In 1995 she joins The Notorious B.I.G. in the group Junior M.A.F.I.A., establishing herself as a hard-core rapper who can go toe-to-toe with the guys. Her debut album, Hard Core, is released in 1996 on Atlantic Records; in 2001 she becomes the first female rapper to appear on a #1 hit when "Lady Marmalade" tops the chart.
1971-The first stage performance of Jesus Christ, Superstar takes place in Pittsburgh.
1970-The soundtrack to the film Woodstock hits #1 in America, helping recoup massive losses from the festival.
1970-Three Dog Night's "Mama Told Me Not To Come" hits #1 in America.
1969-David Bowie's "Space Oddity" single is rush-released to beat the moon landing, which happens nine days later.
1969-The Rolling Stones release "Honky Tonk Women."
1966-Elvis Presley begins filming his 24th motion picture, Double Trouble.
1965-Weezer bass player Scott Shriner is born in Toledo, Ohio.
1962-The Marvelettes release "Beechwood 4-5789."
1960-The Hollywood Argyles' "Alley Oop" hits #1 in America.
1959-Guitarist Richie Sambora is born in Perth Amboy, New Jersey. He joins Bon Jovi soon after the band form and becomes a primary songwriter along with lead singer Jon Bon Jovi. Sambora says with the band until 2013, when he leaves in the middle of a tour for personal reasons.
1959-Suzanne Vega, known for her songs "Tom's Diner" and "Luka," is born in Santa Monica, California.
1957-Bauhaus lead singer Peter Murphy is born near Northampton, England.
1953-Singer Peter Brown ("Do Ya Wanna Get Funky with Me") is born in Blue Island, Illinois.
1951-On WJW in Cleveland, Alan Freed broadcasts his first "Moondog House Rock and Roll Party," marking the first radio show with the phrase "Rock and Roll" and giving Freed a claim on the origin of the term. More importantly, Freed plays R&B music, which introducing the sound to a new (and mostly white) audience.
1950-Film producer/record executive B.G. "Buddy" DeSylva dies in Los Angeles at age 55. He also co-wrote the Al Jolson hit "April Showers," among many others.
1950-Bonnie Pointer of The Pointer Sisters is born in Oakland, California.
1947-Jeff Hanna of Nitty Gritty Dirt Band is born in Detroit, Michigan.
1946-Dean Martin begins his recording career mere weeks before teaming up with nightclub comic Jerry Lewis.
1946J-ohn Lawton, lead vocalist for Uriah Heep from 1976 to 1979, is born in Halifax, England.
1944-Country singer Bobby G. Rice is born in Boscobel, Wisconsin.
1937-Composer George Gershwin dies at 37 following surgery to remove a brain tumor.
1931-Singer-songwriter Thurston Harris is born in Pomona, California.
1931-Tab Hunter is born in New York City. He's best known as an actor, but has a huge hit in 1957 with "Young Love."
Bikkie
12th July 2025, 10:13
July 12 is a day that celebrates the Glorious Revolution (1688) and victory of Protestant King William of Orange over Catholic King James II at the Battle of the Boyne (1690), which ensured a Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland. The celebration began in the late 18th century in Ulster.
1630- New Amsterdam's governor buys Gull Island from Indians for cargo, renames it Oyster Island, later known as Ellis Island
1673- Second Battle of the James River: Dutch fleet led by admirals Cornelis Evertsen the Youngest and Jacob Binckes wins a tactical victory against an improvised English squadron led by Thomas Gardiner and captures four English ships
1679- Britain's King Charles II ratifies Habeas Corpus Act allowing prisoners' right to a court review of the justification for their imprisonment
1691 -Antonio Pignatelli elected as Pope Innocentius XII
1691- Battle of Aughrim (Aghrim) Ireland, William III beats James II
1704- Stanislaw Leszcynski becomes king of part of Poland
1705- Ottoman army officer Al-Ḥusayn ibn ʿAlī proclaims himself Bey of Tunis, founding the Husainid Dynasty (dynasty rules till 1957)
1730- Lorenzo Corsini chosen as Pope Clement XII
1771- HMS Endeavour captained by James Cook, with Joseph Banks aboard, returns from its first voyage to the Pacific after two years
1774- Citizens of Carlisle, Pennsylvania, pass a symbolic declaration of independence
1774 -Cossack leader Emilian Pugachevs army occupies Kazan
1776- Captain James Cook departs Plymouth, England helming HMS Resolution, beginning his 3rd and final trip to the Pacific
1785- First manned flight in Netherlands: Frenchman Jean-Pierre Blanchard lifts off in his gas balloon from Noordeinde Palace in The Hague
1790- French Revolution: The Civil Constitution of the Clergy is adopted, putting the Catholic Church in France under the control of the state
1801- Second Battle of Algeciras: British fleet beats French and Spanish (six days after losing the 1st Battle of Algeciras)
1863-British forces invade Waikato
British troops invaded Waikato by crossing the Mangatawhiri Stream, which the Kingitanga (Māori King movement) had declared an aukati (a line not to be crossed).
1889-First women's trade union formed
The first women’s trade union in New Zealand emerged in the late 19th century in response to poor working conditions in the clothing industry.
2001-New Zealander wins Tour de France stage
The first stage win by a New Zealander in the Tour de France came in a team time trial. Although Chris Jenner didn't finish with the core of his Credit Agricole team, he shared in the stage win and got to stand on the podium.
Music History
2023-Sheila E. becomes the first female solo percussionist to get a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Ringo Starr and H.E.R. join her at the ceremony.
2020-Megan Thee Stallion is shot in the foot after a party at Kylie Jenner's house. She later identifies the shooter as rapper Tory Lanez, who is convicted and sentenced to 10 years in prison.
2010-Jewel puts on a disguise and, posing as a shy, nervous businesswoman named Karen, sings her own songs at a karaoke bar to a stunned crowd. Billed as "Undercover Karaoke," the video quickly goes viral.
2007-Rod Stewart is awarded the CBE Order of the British Empire by Prince Charles in a ceremony at Buckingham Palace.
2004-Sugarland's debut single, "Baby Girl," is released. It goes to #2 on the Country chart and stays on the tally for a remarkable 46 weeks.
2001-Moisant Airport in New Orleans is renamed Armstrong International in honor of native son Louis Armstrong.
2000-London's Trafalgar Square unveils a sculpture of John Lennon, created by Swedish artist Carl Fredrik Reutersward, which also features a handgun twisted into an unusable shape.
1998-"Battle of New Orleans" songwriter Jimmy Driftwood dies of a heart attack at age 91.
1997-The French magazine Le Figaro publishes an interview with George Harrison where he blasts modern music, taking aim at U2 and the Spice Girls.More
1992-After a European tour, Axl Rose is arrested at JFK airport in New York, charged with inciting a riot at a Guns N' Roses show in St. Louis the previous year. He gets two years' probation and a $50,000 fine.
1988-Playgirl magazine publishes their list of the 10 sexiest rockers. They are:
George Michael
LL Cool J
Bryan Ferry
Michael Hutchence of INXS
Richard Marx
John Cougar Mellencamp
Bret Michaels of Poison
Larry Mullen Jr. of U2
Robert Plant
Terence Trent D'Arby
1983-Chris Wood (flute and sax player for Traffic) dies of pneumonia at age 39.
1983-U2 guitarist The Edge marries his high school girlfriend Aislinn O'Sullivan. They welcome three daughters before separating in 1990.
1979-It's "Disco Demolition Night" at Comiskey Park, where the White Sox and Tigers are playing a doubleheader. The plan is to blow up a bunch of disco albums between games, but it goes horribly wrong when fans become unruly and rush the field, forcing the White Sox to forfeit the second game.
1979-Soul singer Minnie Riperton, known for her hit "Lovin' You," dies of breast cancer at age 31. Her daughter, Maya Rudolph, is 6 years old.
1976-R&B singer-songwriter Tracie Spencer is born in Waterloo, Iowa. Shortly after signing to Capitol Records in 1988, at age 12, she releases the hit singles "Hide and Seek" and "Symptoms of True Love."
1971-Radio stations start running a Coke commercial called "I'd Like To Buy The World A Coke," sung by The New Seekers. It is later used a TV commercial showing young people from around the world singing on a hillside. The New Seekers later record a full version of the song as "I'd Like To Teach The World To Sing," which becomes a huge hit.
1970-The local band Fritz opens for Janis Joplin at the Santa Clara County Fairgrounds in California. The lead singer in Fritz is Stevie Nicks, who is awestruck watching Joplin perform. Nicks credits Joplin for showing her how to connect with an audience from the stage.
1969-Blind Faith, a supergroup with Eric Clapton and Steve Winwood, begin their US tour with a show at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Their album isn't released yet, but the show is still a sellout thanks to Clapton's star power
1969-A week before the moon landing, "In The Year 2525" by Zager and Evans, a bleak sci-fi song where humankind gradually destroys itself, hits #1 in the US. It stays at #1 for six weeks.
1968-Micky Dolenz of The Monkees marries the model Samantha Juste, who is the "disc girl" on the BBC show Top Of The Pops. Dolenz, who met her on the show, wrote some of The Monkees song "Randy Scouse Git" about her. They divorce in 1975.
1967-John Petrucci, guitarist for the progressive metal band Dream Theater, is born in Long Island, New York.
1965-The Beach Boys release "California Girls." Musically, it's one of group leader Brian Wilson's favorite compositions, with an introduction that combines country and classical influences.
1963-Alan Duval of UB40 is born.
1962-The Rolling Stones make their live debut at the Marquee Club in London subbing for Long John Baldry's Blues Incorporated. The band members are Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Brian Jones, Dick Taylor, Ian Stewart and future Kink Mick Avory.
1962-Dan Murphy (former lead guitarist for Soul Asylum) is born in Duluth, Minnesota.
1960-Floyd Cramer releases "Last Date."
1956-Christian singer Sandi Patti is born in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
1952-Philip Taylor Kramer (bass guitarist for Iron Butterfly) is born in Youngstown, Ohio.
1952-Vera Lynn's "Auf Wiederseh'n Sweetheart" hits #1 on the Best Sellers chart in America, making her the first foreign artist to top a major chart in that country.
1952-Liz Mitchell (lead singer of Boney M.) is born in Clarendon, Jamaica.
1950-Eric Carr (drummer for KISS) is born in Brooklyn, New York.
1948-Walter Egan ("Magnet And Steel") is born in Queens, New York.
1946-Jeff Christie (vocalist, bassist for Christie) is born in Leeds, Yorkshire, England.
1943-Christine McVie of Fleetwood Mac is born Christine Anne Perfect in Bouth, Lancashire, England.
1939-Pop singer Kenny Dino is born in Astoria, Queens, New York. Known for the 1961 hit "Your Ma Said You Cried in Your Sleep Last Night."
1937-Bill Cosby is born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He makes the Music History Calendar for his 1967 hit "Little Ole Man."
1934-Pianist Van Cliburn is born in Shreveport, Louisiana. He rises to prominence when he wins the inaugural quadrennial International Tchaikovsky Piano Competition in Moscow.
1928-Barbara Cowsill (mother of the family act The Cowsills) is born Barbara Russell in in Cranston, Rhode Island.
1927-Jazz trumpeter Conte Candoli is born in Mishawaka, Indiana.
1895-Oscar Hammerstein II is born in New York City. The musical composer and theater director becomes known for his collaborations with Richard Rodgers, including The King and I and The Sound of Music.
Bikkie
13th July 2025, 12:02
1174- William I of Scotland, key rebel in Revolt of 1173-1174, captured at Alnwick by forces loyal to Henry II of Englan
1522- Hunger appeal by women of Utrecht
1558 -Battle of Gravelines: In France, Spanish forces led by Count Lamoral of Egmont defeat the French forces of Marshal Paul des Thermes at Gravelines
1568 -Dean of St. Paul's London, Alexander Nowell, perfects a way to bottle beer
1573- Haarlem surrenders after 7 months to Spanish army
1643- Battle at Roundway Down: Royalists beat parliamentary armies
1645- Aleksei Romanov succeeds his father Michael as Tsar of Russia
1657 -Oliver Cromwell constrains English army leader John Lambert
1668- Van Marco Cesti's opera "Il Pomo d'Oro" (the Golden Apple or Tomato) premieres in Vienna
1700 -Treaty of Constantinople establishes peace after Russo-Turkish war
1772 Captain James Cook begins his second voyage to the South Seas aboard HMS Resolution to search for Terra Australis (Southern Continent)
1787- US Congress adopts Ordinance of 1787 (Northwest Ordinance), establishes first organized US territory, sets requirements for statehood - guaranteeing equal status with original 13 states, outlawing slavery, and protecting civil liberties [1]
1787-the United States Congress enacted the Northwest Ordinance, establishing the Northwest Territory.
1794 -Battle of the Vosges between French forces and those of Prussia and Austria
1832- Source of Mississippi River discovered by American geographer Henry Schoolcraft
1835 -Swedish-American inventor John Ericsson files for a patent for his screw propeller design
1836 -US Patent #1 is granted for locomotive wheels after 9,957 unnumbered patents
1837- Queen Victoria is first monarch to live in present Buckingham Palace
1851 -John Loudon discovers tin on East Indian Island of Billiton
1854 -In the Battle of Guaymas, Mexico, General Jose Maria Yanez stops the French invasion led by Count Gaston de Raousset Boulbon
1854- US forces shell and burn San Juan del Norte, Nicaragua
1861- Battle of Corrick's Ford, Virginia (Carrick's Ford) - Union army takes total control of western Virginia
1862- Battle of Murfreesboro, fought in Rutherford County, Tennessee begins (Forrest's Raid), Confederate victory (US Civil War)
1863- Battle of Bayou La Fourche, Louisiana
1863- Battle of Tupelo, Mississippi (Harrisburg) [->JUL 15]
1863- New York City Draft Riot: Anti-draft protests turn violent, over 100 killed, including lynching of Blacks, 2,000 injured and 50 buildings burned; riots last for 3 days
1863 Rebellion at Morgan's, Ohio [->JUL 26]
1864- Early retreats from Washington City back to Shenandoah Valley
1865- Horace Greeley, founder and editor of the "New-York Tribune," reputedly advises his readers to "Go west, young man"
In 1930, the first FIFA World Cup kicked off in Uruguay.
In 1923, the iconic Hollywood Sign was officially dedicated in Los Angeles, California.
Music History
2011-Songwriter Jerry Ragovoy dies of a stroke at age 80. Under the pseudonym Norman Meade, he co-wrote "Time Is On My Side," made famous by the Rolling Stones.
Jimmy Buffett Releases First #1 Album
2004-Jimmy Buffett releases License To Chill, his 21st studio album. It's mostly a collection of duets with fellow country stars, including Martina McBride, Kenny Chesney, and George Strait. It's also his first album to go to #1 in the US.More
2004Arthur Kane of the New York Dolls dies of leukemia at age 55.
2003--Broadway singer Eileen Rodgers dies of lung cancer at age 73.
2000-James Brown is formally charged with assaulting Russell Eubanks, an employee of South Carolina Electric and Gas, with a steak knife after Eubanks visited Brown's Beech Island estate to check on reports that he was without electricity.
1999-In support of their acclaimed synth-infused album The Soft Bulletin, The Flaming Lips embark on a "headphones tour" that combines pre-recorded material, provided to the audience through customized headsets, with the live stage show.More
1992-Jett Williams, illegitimate daughter of country legend Hank Williams, is granted partial royalties of his songs by a New York appeals court, adding to a ruling reached on July 5 that she should receive half of his estate.
1991-INXS play to a crowd of 72,000 at Wembley Stadium in London, six years to the day Live Aid was held there. It is later released as the live album and video Live Baby Live.
1989-Leon Bridges is born Todd Michael Bridges in Atlanta, Georgia, but grows up in Fort Worth, Texas. He releases his debut album, Coming Home, in 2015 and is hailed as "the second coming of Sam Cooke."
1985-The Live Aid concerts take place in Philadelphia and London to raise money for the hungry in Africa. The Beach Boys, The Four Tops, Paul McCartney, Tina Turner, Elton John, David Bowie, The Who, Queen, Eric Clapton and Bob Dylan all take part.
1985-Tears for Fears bow out of performing at Live Aid, Bob Geldof's star-studded charity concert for famine relief in Africa, after two members of their band quit. The group donates concert funds to the cause, but feels the weight of Geldof's disapproval. TFF's Roland Orzabal says, "He made us feel very guilty. All those millions of people dying, it was all our fault. I felt terrible. I tell you, I know how Hitler must have felt."
1985-Piggybacking on Live Aid, top Australian acts play a benefit concert in Sydney called Oz For Africa. INXS, Little River Band and Men At Work are all on the bill.
1985-Howard Jones performs at London's Wembley Stadium as part of Live Aid. Jones sings his hit single "Hide and Seek" on Freddie Mercury's piano.
1985-David Bowie and Mick Jagger debut their video for "Dancing in the Street" at Live Aid. Bowie also performs "Heroes" at Wembley Stadium.
1984-Philippé Wynne, who was with The Spinners from 1972 to 1977, has a heart attack while performing at a nightclub in Oakland, California. Wynne, 43, dies the next day.
1984-At The Jacksons' Victory tour stop at Texas Stadium, Eddie Van Halen joins Michael Jackson on stage to play his guitar solo from "Beat It."
1974-Eric Clapton invites Todd Rundgren to play guitar during the encore of Clapton's concert at Madison Square Garden. Todd's guitar rig isn't working, so Clapton takes off his guitar, hands it to Todd, and steps aside to listen.
1974-George McRae's "Rock Your Baby" hits #1 for the first of two weeks.
1974-R&B singer Deborah Cox is born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, but grows up in Scarborough. She breaks into the music industry as a backup singer for Celine Dion in the early '90s.
1973-Bob Dylan releases Pat Garrett & Billy The Kid, the soundtrack album for the Sam Peckinpah-directed movie of the same name.
1966-Ike & Tina Turner's "River Deep - Mountain High," which peaked at #88 in America, climbs to #3 in the UK, earning them a gig opening for The Rolling Stones. Their success has tragic consequences, as Ike gets more an more violent toward Tina, who endures years of abuse.
1964The Beatles release "A Hard Day's Night" in the US. The title comes from a phrase Ringo Starr came up with.
1959-Paul Anka's "Lonely Boy" hits #1 for the first of four weeks.
1959-The Shirelles release "Dedicated To The One I Love."
1959-The movie Hound Dog Man, starring Fabian and Dodie Stevens, goes into production.
1956-Elvis Presley releases "Hound Dog" and "Don't Be Cruel" as a double-A-side single. It sells four million copies to become the top-selling single of 1956, and makes Elvis a superstar. He's soon booked on every major variety show and launches a movie career.
1954-Country singer Louise Mandrell is born Thelma Louise Mandrell in Corpus Christi, Texas. She is the younger sister of fellow singer Barbara Mandrell.
1951-Austrian composer Arnold Schoenberg dies at age 76.
1942-Doo wop singer Jay Uzzell (of The Corsairs) is born in La Grange, North Carolina.
1942-Stephen Bladd (drummer for The J. Geils Band) is born in Boston, Massachusetts.
1935-Latin jazz percussionist Pete Escovedo (of Santana) is born in Pittsburg, California.
2013-Glee star Cory Monteith is found dead in a Vancouver hotel room after accidentally ingesting a toxic combination of heroin and alcohol. The 31-year-old actor played Finn Hudson on the popular FOX musical series.
2008-Joan Jett plays a murder victim on the "Reunion" episode of Law & Order: Criminal Intent. Her character hosts a show called Rock 'n Talk before she meets her demise.
1996-At Riverfront Park in Nashville, Chet Atkins, Steve Earle and the Goo Goo Dolls join about 1000 other guitarists to jam on "Heartbreak Hotel" for nearly 80 minutes. They come up short in their bid to break the record for largest jam session, set in 1994 when 1,320 guitarists played "Takin' Care Of Business" in Vancouver.
1942-Roger McGuinn of The Byrds is born in Chicago, Illinois.
1897-A US patent is granted to inventor Guglielmo Marconi for transmitting electrical signals, leading to the invention of radio.
Bikkie
14th July 2025, 11:30
1789 – French Revolutionaries Storm the Bastille
On July 14, 1789, French revolutionaries stormed the Bastille prison in Paris.
Only seven prisoners were held there, but the prison symbolised royal tyranny.
This event marked the beginning of the French Revolution.
It is now celebrated every year as Bastille Day, France's national holiday.
1790 – France Celebrates the Fête de la Fédération
Exactly one year after the Bastille was stormed, France held a massive celebration.
Known as the Fête de la Fédération, it marked national unity.
It was a peaceful event attended by thousands, including King Louis XVI.
1798 – Sedition Act Becomes U.S. Federal Law
On July 14, 1798, the U.S. government passed the Sedition Act.
It made it illegal to publish "false or malicious" content against the government.
The act became known as one of the worst constitutional violations in U.S. history.
1881 – Billy the Kid Is Shot Dead
On this day, Sheriff Pat Garrett shot and killed Billy the Kid at Maxwell Ranch.
Billy the Kid's real name was Henry McCarty.
His death ended the life of one of the Wild West's most famous outlaws.
1882 – Gunfighter John Ringo Found Dead
On July 14, 1882, John Ringo, a legendary gunman, was found dead in Arizona.
He was discovered in Turkey Creek Canyon with a bullet wound to the head.
Ringo was known for his intelligence and was called a gentleman gunslinger.
His death remains mysterious, with theories of suicide and murder.
1913 – Future President Gerald R. Ford Is Born
Gerald R. Ford was born Leslie Lynch King Jr. in Omaha, Nebraska.
His father left early, and his stepfather adopted him, giving him the name Ford.
He would go on to become the 38th President of the United States
1918 – Quentin Roosevelt Killed in World War I
On this day, Quentin Roosevelt, son of Theodore Roosevelt, was shot down.
He was a U.S. pilot fighting over the Marne River in France.
He was engaged to Flora Payne Whitney and was only 20 years old.
His plane was brought down by a German Fokker aircraft.
1931 – South Dakota Faces a Grasshopper Plague
On July 14, 1931, South Dakota's governor begged the president for help.
Grasshoppers had destroyed crops across 11,000 square miles.
The infestation created one of the worst agricultural crises of the Great Depression.
1946 – Dr. Spock Publishes Landmark Childcare Book
Dr. Benjamin Spock released The Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care.
It transformed parenting and sold over 50 million copies.
It became one of the most influential books in American homes.
1963 – Tensions Between USSR and China Intensify
On this day, relations between China and the Soviet Union worsened.
They clashed ideologically over communism's future.
The U.S. welcomed the split between the two communist powers.
1968 – Hank Aaron Hits His 500th Home Run
Baseball legend Hank Aaron hit his 500th career home run.
He achieved the milestone in a game against the San Francisco Giants.
Aaron would go on to break Babe Ruth's record with 755 home runs.
1957 – First Arab Woman Elected to Parliament
Rawya Ateya became the first female member of parliament in the Arab world.
She was elected in Egypt and paved the way for other Arab women in politics
1953 – George Washington Carver Monument Dedicated
The George Washington Carver National Monument was dedicated in Missouri.
It became the first U.S. national monument honouring a Black American.
It stands where Carver, a famous scientist and inventor, was born and raised.
2016 – Truck Attack on Bastille Day in Nice, France
A terrorist drove a truck through crowds celebrating Bastille Day in Nice.
86 people were killed, and over 400 were injured.
It was one of the deadliest attacks in modern French history.
2018-Drake breaks his own record for most entries on the Hot 100 at once when he places 27 songs on the tally following the release of his album Scorpion.
2014-Johnny Winter plays the Cahors Blues Festival in France. It's his last performance, as he dies two days later.
2013-In Switzerland, 73-year-old Tina Turner marries her longtime boyfriend, the record producer Erwin Bach. A few years later, he gives her one of his kidneys when she needs a transplant.
Vampire Weekend Cover Model Sues Band
2010-Ann Kirsten Kennis, whose Polaroid photo is on the cover of Vampire Weekend's #1 album Contra, files a $2 million lawsuit against the band, their label, and the photographer, claiming she never granted permission to use it. She later settles with the band.More
2009-The debut album by The Dead Weather, Horehound, is released, and spawns the singles "Hang You from the Heavens," "Treat Me Like Your Mother," and "I Cut Like A Buffalo."
2008-Rock Band 2 reveals that the new Guns N' Roses song "Shackler's Revenge" is to appear in the game.
2007-The album Hannah Montana 2: Meet Miley Cyrus goes to #1, as did the first soundtrack from the Disney show Hannah Montana the previous year. Miley Cyrus, who plays Hannah on the show, is now being promoted as a singer under her real name, not just her character.
2005-Joe Harnell, a pianist and composer who worked as an accompanist and arranger for Peggy Lee and others, dies of heart failure at age 80.
2002-The Australian rock band The Vines release their debut album, Highly Evolved, earning raves from both NME and Rolling Stone, which put them on their covers and compare them to Nirvana.
1995-At what was previously a forsaken patch of land to the north of Hartford, Connecticut, Michael Bolton plays the grand opening concert at the Meadows Music Theater. Bolton, who grew up in New Haven, is good friends with the venue's promoter Jim Koplik. 90 degree heat stifles the ceremony a bit, as soon-to-be disgraced governor John Rowland has to take off his tuxedo coat when greeting Bolton onstage.
1993-The US Postal Service introduces four new stamps honoring classic Broadway musicals: My Fair Lady, Porgy and Bess, Show Boat, and Oklahoma!
1992-Aretha Franklin opens the 1992 Democratic National Convention in New York by singing the US national anthem.
1992-Olivia Newton-John makes public her bout with breast cancer, which she will eventually beat.
1989-New York Family Court judge Judy Sheindlin, soon to become TV star "Judge Judy," orders Tom Jones to pay child support to model Katherine Berkery after making the singer take a paternity test. Their child, Jonathan Jones Berkery, becomes a singer.
1988-At the height of "Elvis is Alive" mania, Nashville radio station WYHY offers a million dollars to anyone who shows up at the studios with the King.
1988-Michael Jackson begins his first-ever UK tour at Wembley Stadium in London.
1987-Imagine Dragons lead singer Dan Reynolds is born in Las Vegas, Nevada. Raised Mormon, he attends BYU, where he forms the band with fellow student Wayne Sermon in 2008.
1981-In France, Roxy Music's Bryan Ferry contracts a kidney infection and is flown to London after collapsing in his hotel room.
1980-Former Beatles and Rolling Stones manager Allen Klein begins a two-month jail term for income tax evasion.
1980-The combustible couple Glen Campbell and Tanya Tucker open the Republican National Convention in Detroit with a duet of the National Anthem. Campbell later admits they were "higher than the notes we were singing."
Other performers at the convention include Vicki Lawrence, Donny & Marie Osmond, and Pat Boone.
1980-Malcolm Owen (original singer for Ruts) dies of a heroin overdose at age 26.
1979-Donna Summer's "Bad Girls," a song about prostitutes, hits #1 in America.
Barry Manilow Is "Ready To Take A Chance Again" In Foul Play
1978-Foul Play, a quirky comedy thriller starring Goldie Hawn and Chevy Chase, debuts in theaters. The soundtrack boasts the Barry Manilow tune "Ready To Take A Chance Again," which is nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song.More
1977-The BBC lifts their ban on The Sex Pistols, who appear on Top Of The Pops in a video clip performing their song "Pretty Vacant," which has become a surprise hit in the UK.
1975-R&B singer Tameka "Tiny" Cottle (of Xscape) is born in Jonesboro, Georgia. She receives a Grammy Award as a co-writer on TLC's hit "No Scrubs."
1975-Rapper Taboo (of Black Eyed Peas) is born Jaime Luis Gomez in Boyle Heights, Los Angeles, California.
1973-Glam-rocker Gary Glitter makes his live stage debut in Mecksham, England.
1973-The Everly Brothers break up in very public fashion, fracturing in the middle of a concert at Knott's Berry Farm in Buena Park, California.More
1973-Bluegrass/country guitarist Clarence White (of The Byrds) dies at 29 after being hit by a drunk driver. He was loading equipment into his car after a gig in Palmdale, California, when he was struck.
1969-Bob Dylan with The Band make a surprise appearance at Mississippi River Rock Festival.
1969-The movie Easy Rider, which opens with the heavy metal thunder of "Born To Be Wild," opens in theaters. The film stars Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper as motorcycle-riding free spirits. The soundtrack sells over 500,000 copies.
1967-The Who launch their first large-scale American tour, playing the first of 55 dates with... Herman's Hermits
1966-Tanya Donelly is born in Newport, Rhode Island. She forms Throwing Muses with her stepsister Kristin Hersh when both are 14; Donelly later forms Belly and The Breeders.
1966-Ellen Reid (keyboardist/accordionist for Crash Test Dummies) is born in Selkirk, Manitoba, Canada.
1965-Igor Khoroshev (keyboardist for Yes) is born in Moscow, Russia (then part of the Soviet Union).
1964-The Rolling Stones score their first #1 hit in the UK with their cover of Bobby Womack's "It's All Over Now."
1962-Bobby Vinton's "Roses Are Red (My Love)" hits #1 for the first of four weeks.
1953-Bebe Buell is born in Portsmouth, Virginia. Though she later rejects the description, she becomes one of the most famous "groupies" of all time, hooking up with a host of stars including Todd Rundgren, to whom she is married from
1972- to 1979. Rundgren brings up her daughter Liv - later revealed to be the biological child of Aerosmith's Steven Tyler.
1953-Maurice Starr, creator of the boy bands New Edition and New Kids On The Block, is born Larry Johnson in Florida. Starr also produces both groups and writes many of their songs.
1952-Chris Cross (bass guitarist for Ultravox) is born in Tottenham, London, England.
1949-Music executive Tommy Mottola is born in The Bronx, New York City. Before landing a 15-year gig as head of Sony Music, Mottola starts out as a talent manager helping acts like Hall & Oates and Carly Simon secure record deals. He's also known for marrying - and divorcing - Mariah Carey.
1939-Jimmy Dorsey releases "Brazil."
1932-Country singer Del Reeves, known for the 1965 novelty hit "Girl On The Billboard" and the 1968 trucker's anthem "Looking At The World Through A Windshield," is born Franklin Delano Reeves in Sparta, North Carolina.
1926-Lowman "Pete" Pauling (songwriter, guitarist for The 5 Royales) is born in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
1912-Woody Guthrie is born in Okemah, Oklahoma. He writes thousands of songs, many that remain unrecorded as lyric sheets in the Guthrie Archives.
1908-Boston-born composer William Mason dies at age 79.
Bikkie
15th July 2025, 11:32
971- According to legend, English saint Swithun is reburied inside Winchester Cathedral against his wishes, and a terrible storm proceeds to rain for 40 days and 40 nights
1099 -City of Jerusalem is captured and plundered by Christian forces during the First Crusade
1205 -Pope Innocent III states Jews are doomed to perpetual servitudea and subjugation due to crucifixion of Jesus
1207- King John of England expels Canterbury monks for supporting Pope's choice of Archbishop of Canterbury, Stephen Langton
1240 -A Novgorodian army led by Alexander Nevsky defeats the Swedes in the Battle of the Neva
1381- John Ball, a leader in the Peasants' Revolt, is hanged, drawn and quartered in the presence of Richard II of England
1410- Battle of Grunwald (First Battle of Tannenburg, Battle of Žalgiris), one of Medieval Europe's largest battles during Poland-Lithuanian Teutonic War. Polish King Władysław Jagiełło and Lithuanian Grand Duke Vytautas defeat Teutonic Ulrich von Jungingen
1500 -Albert III, Duke of Saxony defeats the Friesian rebellion
1500- Baglione family massacre at the "Blood Wedding" of Astorre Baglione and Lavinia Colonna in Perugia
1501 -Portuguese explorer Pedro Cabral arrives back in Lisbon from his voyage to India, having lost six ships, during which he accidently discovered Brazil
1524 -Emperor Charles I bans German national synode
1741 -Alexei Chirikov sights land in Southeast Alaska. He sends men ashore in a longboat, making them the first Europeans to visit Alaska
1755 -French ambassador recalled from London
1779 -American troops under General A Wayne conquer Fort Stony Point, NY
1783- World's first steamboat the Pyroscaphe, built by Claude-François-Dorothée, marquis de Jouffroy d'Abbans, makes its first voyage on the river Saône in France
1787 -Parliament of Paris banished to Troyes
1789- Gilbert du Motier, marquis de La Fayette, is named by acclamation colonel-general of the new National Guard of Paris
1799- The Rosetta Stone is found in the Egyptian village of Rosetta by French Captain Pierre-François Bouchard during Napoleon's Egyptian Campaign
1808- French marshal Joachim Murat becomes King of Naples
1815- First flat horse race held at English race track Cheltenham on Nottingham Hill
1815 -Napoleon surrenders to Captain Frederick Maitland of HMS Bellerophon at Rochefort after his earlier defeat at the Battle of Waterloo
1823 A fire destroys the ancient Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls in Rome
1830 -Indian tribes, Sioux, Sauk & Fox, sign fourth Treaty of Prairie du Chien giving the US most of Minnesota, Iowa and Missouri
1840- Great Britain, Russia, Austria and Prussia sign Quadruple Alliance
1850 -John Wisden bowls all 10 South batsmen, North v South at Lord's
1856 -Natal forms as a British colony separate from Cape Colony
1862- CSS Arkansas vs USS Carondelet & Queen of the West engage at Yazoo River
1863 -President Davis orders service duty for confederate army
1864- Troop train loaded with Confederate prisoners collided with a coal train killing 65 and injuring 109 of 955 aboard
1867- San Francisco Merchants' Exchange opens
1869 -Margarine is patented by Hippolye Mège-Mouriès for use by the French Navy
1870 -Manitoba becomes the 5th Canadian province and the Northwest Territories are created and transferred to Canada by the Hudson's Bay Company
1870 -The last confederate state, Georgia is readmitted to the United States
1876- Baseball's first official no-hitter: George Bradley of the St Louis Brown Stockings no-hits the Hartford Dark Blues, 2-0
1888 -Bandai volcano (Japan) erupts for 1st time in 1,000 years
1898 -Camillo Golgi discovers the Golgi Apparatus (a delicate network inside cells essential for the transmission and reception of information between cells)
1900 -President Steyn/General De Law escape Brandwater Basin
1901- NY Giant Christy Mathewson no-hits St Louis, 5-0
1904 -1st Buddhist temple in US forms, in Los Angeles, California
1906 -Republic museum opens Rembrandt hall in Amsterdam
1909 -Detroit's future Baseball Hall of Fame center-fielder Ty Cobb smashes 2 inside-the-park homers to lead the Tigers to a sweep of the Washington Senators, 9-5 and 7-0
1912 -American athlete Jim Thorpe is placed in top 4 in all 10 events, for an Olympic record 8,413 points to win the Decathlon gold medal at the Stockholm Olympics, medal stripped 1913 (played pro baseball), reinstated 1982
1914 -Mexican President Victoriano Huerta flees with 2 million pesos to Europe
1915-First Gallipoli wounded arrive home
The first large group of Gallipoli wounded to return to New Zealand arrived in Wellington on the troopship Willochra as part of a draft of around 300 men.
1915 -The Austro-German forces launch an offensive along the Eastern Front
1915 -The head of German propaganda in the US, Dr Heinrich Albert, loses his briefcase on a New York City subway; an examination of its content reveals extensive network of German espionage and subversion across the US
1916 -22.22" (56.4 cm) of rain falls in Altapass NC (state record)
1916 -Boeing Company (Pacific Aero) formed by William Boeing in Seattle, Washington
1918 -World War I: Second Battle of Marne begins
1920 -Ruth ties his record of 29 HRs in a season
1921 -NY Yankees slugger Babe Ruth ties MLB record of 138 career home runs (held by Roger Connor since 1895) in 7-2 win over St. Louis Browns at Sportsman's Park, St. Louis
1922 -First duck-billed platypus publicly exhibited in the US at Bronx Zoological Park in New York City
1923 -Italian parliament accepts new constitution
1926- VPRO (Free thinking Protestant Radio Broadcast) forms
1927- Massacre in Vienna: 89 protesters are killed by the Austrian police
1929 -1st airport hotel opens at Oakland, California
Hoover Cuts Own Salary
1932 -US President Herbert Hoover cuts own salary 15%
1933-Lovelock smashes world mile record
Jack Lovelock's run at Princeton University broke Jules Ladoumegue’s record for the mile by 1.6 seconds. The race was dubbed the 'greatest mile of all time' by Time Magazine.
1933 -Wiley Post begins the first solo flight around the world, completing the journey in 7 days and 19 hours
1934 -Continental Airlines commences operations.
1936 -Dutch 2nd Chamber agree to temporarily increase defense budget
1937 -Buchenwald Concentration Camp opens
1937 -Japanese attack Marco Polo Bridge, invade China
1938- Arthur Fagg becomes the first batsman in first-class cricket history to score double centuries in both innings of a match, with 244 and 202 for Kent against Essex in Colchester, England
1939 -Clara Adams is the first woman to complete a commercial round-the-world flight from New York, lasting 16 days and 19 hours
1940- Nazi occupiers seize library of IISG Amsterdam
1940- Physicist Donald Kerst becomes the first person to accelerate electrons using electromagnetic induction, reaching energies of 2.3 MeV, when his betatron device (for particle acceleration) becomes operational in Urbana, Illinois
1941- Britain's MAUD Report edited by physicist James Chadwick approved, concludes an atomic bomb is feasible
Penicillin Development
1941 Howard Florey and Norman Heatley present freeze-dried mold cultures of penicillin
Music History
2018-"November Rain" by Guns N' Roses becomes the first '90s video to pass a billion views on YouTube. The next closest '90s video is "Zombie" by The Cranberries, at 739 million.
2017-Aaron Carter is arrested for drunken driving and marijuana possession when he is pulled over in Cornelia, Georgia, outside of Atlanta. He is scheduled to play a show in Kansas City that evening, which he cancels, citing "transportation issues."
2016-As he's done since 1972, Alice Cooper announces he's running for president, this time with the campaign slogan "A Troubled Man for Troubled Times." His platform includes "Adding Lemmy to Mount Rushmore" and "Getting Brian Johnson back in AC/DC." He loses to Donald Trump, but gains more exposure for his song "Elected."More
2016-In what they famously describe as a "conscious uncoupling," Chris Martin (of Coldplay) and Gwyneth Paltrow officially divorce after 13 years of marriage.
Gangnam Style Shows Up On YouTube
2012-The "Gangnam Style" video is posted to YouTube; we are powerless to resist.More
2011-To celebrate the 50th anniversary of their Adult Contemporary chart, which had various names over the years, including Easy Listening, Billboard publishes its list of the top 100 Adult Contemporary songs of all time, with Savage Garden's "Truly Madly Deeply" at #1, followed by "Lead Me On" by Maxine Nightingale and "Drift Away" by Uncle Kracker.
2010-Robbie Williams officially returns to Take That, ending a longstanding feud with Gary Barlow.
2009-45 years after he played at the Ed Sullivan Theater with The Beatles, Paul McCartney returns to the venue to appear on The Late Show With David Letterman. Earlier in the day, McCartney plays a few songs from the theater's marquee, surprising the onlookers in Manhattan.
2009-According to Billboard, since Michael Jackson's death, which occurred on June 25, 2009, American consumers have purchased more than 2.3 million of his albums.
2007-After getting favorable ratings for their unruly reality series Flavor of Love, featuring hip-hop legend Flavor Flav, VH1 decides to cash in on a bygone era of rock n' roll with a similar spectacle called Rock of Love, starring one the biggest names in hair metal: Bret Michaels of Poison.
2007-Prince gives away free copies of his latest album Planet Earth with the UK newspaper Mail On Sunday. The unconventional distribution rankles record retailers, but helps promote his run of 21 shows at the O2 Arena in London, which sell out.
2006-Sum 41 front man Deryck Whibley ties the knot with Avril Lavigne in Montecito, California. The marriage will last just over three years.
2001-Vanilla Ice opens for Insane Clown Posse at the second annual Gathering Of The Juggalos, this time in Toledo, Ohio (they aren't welcome back in Novi, Michigan, site of the first one). Once again, ICP's headline set is cut short when fans rush the stage.
2000-Paul Young, frontman with Sad Café and lead singer on the Mike + the Mechanics hit "All I Need Is A Miracle," dies of a heart attack at age 53.
1997-Sarah McLachlan releases her fourth album, Surfacing, 10 days after starting the Lilith Fair, where she's a featured performer along with other musical ladies like Sheryl Crow and Jewel. It's a slow build: By the time the hit single "Adia" is on the charts, the second Lilith Fair is under way. The album eventually sells over 8 million copies in America and another million in her native Canada.
1997-Missy Elliott releases her debut album, Supa Dupa Fly, with lead single "The Rain (Supa Dupa Fly)," a reworking of the Ann Peebles song "I Can't Stand The Rain." Guests on the album include Ginuwine, Busta Rhymes and Aaliyah, all artists Elliott has produced.
1996-Nickelodeon premieres the teen sitcom Kenan & Kel, with the theme song "Aw, Here It Goes" from Coolio.
1991-Warrant lead singer Jani Lane marries Bobbie Brown, the girl from the "Cherry Pie" video. They divorce two years later.
1991-Bert Convy (of The Cheers) dies of a brain tumor at age 57. The actor and singer had gone on to become a popular game show host of Super Password and Win, Lose, or Draw.
1989-Atlantic Records executive Nesuhi Ertegun, who worked with The Drifters and Bobby Darin, dies following a cancer surgery at age 71.
1989-200,000 people turn out for a free Pink Floyd concert in Venice, Italy.
1986-Columbia Records, Johnny Cash's home for 28 years, drops the singer from its roster of artists. He signs with Mercury but continues his career decline until 1994, when he releases the first of six acclaimed albums on Rick Rubin's record label.
1986-Run-DMC's Raising Hell becomes the first rap album certified Platinum.
1986-The city of El Cerrito, California, declares this day to be John Fogerty Day in honor of one of their hometown heroes.
John Travolta Wants To Strut In Saturday Night Fever Sequel
1983-The Saturday Night Fever sequel Staying Alive debuts in theaters, starring John Travolta. The Bee Gees also return for the soundtrack, introducing five new songs, including "The Woman In You."More
1982-Bill Justis of "Raunchy" fame dies of cancer at age 55.
1980-Linda Ronstadt makes a well-received dramatic debut in Joseph Papp's production of Gilbert and Sullivan's Pirates of Penzance in New York's Central Park, setting off a "Pirates" fad that lasts for the next three years.
1979-Punk rocker Rick Garberson (drummer for Bizarros) dies of a presumed suicide via carbon-monoxide poisoning.
1978-Bob Dylan performs at the biggest open-air concert in history for a solo artist, playing for over 200,000 at "The Picnic at Blackbushe" at Blackbushe Airport in Hampshire, England.
1978-The Rolling Stones' Some Girls album hits #1 in America.
1973-At a festival concert in White City, London, a visibly distraught Ray Davies, newly separated from his wife, announces on stage that he's retiring from show business, leaves the concert, and checks into a local hospital for exhaustion. (A week later, he will return to the band.)
1972-Elton John lands his first #1 album in America as Honky Chateau blasts to the top thanks to the hit "Rocket Man." His next five albums also enter that orbit, going to #1.
1968-The Beatles' new enterprise, Apple, enters its new corporate headquarters on 3 Savile Row, London, later the site of their famous "rooftop concert."
1962-Héctor Angulo, a Cuban student attending the Manhattan School of Music, plays the song "Guantanamera" for Pete Seeger during the Folk Festival of the Catskills at Camp Woodland in Phoenicia, New York, where Angulo is working as a counselor for the summer. Seeger learns the song and adds it to his repertoire, introducing it to American audiences.
1959-Perry Como re-records his hit Christmas song "(There's No Place Like) Home For The Holidays" for his album Season's Greetings from Perry Como. This version features the Mitchell Ayres Orchestra and the Ray Charles Singers.
1958-John Lennon's mother, Julia, is killed when she's hit by a car driven by an off-duty police officer. Lennon, 17 at the time, later writes the songs "Julia" and "Mother" about her.
1956-Ian Curtis is born in Macclesfield, England. In 1976 he joins Joy Division, one of the most influential and critically acclaimed UK alternative bands. Following the singer's death in May 1980, the remaining members of the band continue to write and perform as New Order.
1956-Joe Satriani is born in Westbury, New York.
1956-Marky Ramone (drummer for The Ramones) is born Marc Steven Bell in Brooklyn, New York.
1953-Alicia Bridges is born in Lawndale, North Carolina. Known for the disco hit "I Love The Nightlife (Disco 'Round)."
1952-Eight-year-old prodigy Gladys Knight appears on the TV show Ted Mack's Amateur Hour, a precursor to shows like Star Search and American Idol. She wins the top prize of $2,000 for her performance of Nat King Cole's "Too Young."
1952-David Pack (frontman for Ambrosia) is born in Huntington Park, California.
1952-13-year-old Jimmy Boyd records "I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus."
1952-Johnny Thunders (of New York Dolls) is born John Anthony Genzale Jr. in Queens, New York.
1952-Jeff Carlisi (guitarist for .38 Special) is born in Boston, Massachusetts.
1952-Popular singer Patti Page begins her summer replacement series on CBS, attempting to hold the audience in Perry Como's usual timeslot three times a week for 15 minutes.
1950-Nat "King" Cole's "Mona Lisa" hits #1 in America. Written for the film Captain Carey, U.S.A., it goes on to win the Oscar for Best Song.
1948-Thomas Delmer Pyle is born in Louisville, Kentucky. In 1974, under the name Artimus Pyle, he joins the band Lynyrd Skynyrd. His musical career with Skynyrd earns him induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2006.
1947-Roger Kynard "Roky" Erickson, founder of the 13th Floor Elevators and pioneer of psychedelic music, is born.
1947-Guitarist Peter Banks, a founding member of Yes who is with the band until 1970, is born Peter William Brockbanks in Chipping Barnet, North London, England.
1946-Linda Ronstadt is born in Tucson, Arizona. Her music career starts as lead singer of the folk trio the Stone Poneys.
1945-Peter Lewis (rhythm guitarist for Moby Grape) is born in Los Angeles, California, to actress Loretta Young and writer-producer Tom Lewis.
1944-Soul singer-songwriter Millie Jackson is born in Thomson, Georgia.
1936-Country singer Tommy Dee is born in Vicker, Virginia. In 1959, he writes the hit "Three Stars" in honor of Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and J.P. "The Big Bopper" Richardson, who tragically died in a plane crash earlier that year.
1936-H. B. Barnum is born in Houston, Texas. A child star, he makes his foray into music as "Pee Wee Barnum" and later becomes a sought-after arranger for the likes of Frank Sinatra, Aretha Franklin, and The Supremes.
this Event
1913-Country singer Cowboy Copas is born Lloyd Estel Copas in Blue Creek, Ohio.
1905-Dorothy Fields, co-writer of "The Way You Look Tonight," is born in Allenhurst, New Jersey.
Bikkie
16th July 2025, 10:47
463- Start of the Lunar Cycle of Hilarius
622 -Islamic Era begins: Muhammad and his followers begin migration from Mecca to Medina (Hijra)
1054 -The Great Schism between Western and Eastern churches begins when Roman Cardinal Humbert issues a bull of excommunication against Cerularius, Patriarch of Constantinople, on the altar of the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople
1099- Crusaders herd Jews of Jerusalem into a synagogue & set it afire
1212 -Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa [Battle of Al-Uqab]: combined Christian army defeats Almohad Muslim force in a turning point for Muslim power on Iberian peninsula
1251- The Virgin Mary gives Simon Stock a Brown Scapular (legend)
1338- The six Electors of the Holy Roman Empire signed the Agreement of Rhense confirming Emperor Louis IV.
1377 -Richard II aged 10 crowned King of England at Westminster Abbey, succeeding his grandfather Edward III
1429 -Joan of Arc and the French army enter the city of Rheim
1439- Kissing is banned in England to stop the spread of the Black Death
1465- Battle at Montlhéry between Louis XI and the League of the Public Weal
1519 -Public debate between Martin Luther and theologian Johann Eck at Pleissenburg Castle in Liepzig, during which Luther denies the divine right of the Pope
1548- La Paz, Bolivia, is founded
1573- Alva demands submission of Zealand/Holland
1615- Night time naval battle off the coast of Peru between Dutch fleet led by Joris Spilbergen and Spanish fleet carrying silver, two Spanish ships sunk [1]
1618 -Captain John Gilbert patents first dredger in Britain
1661 -First banknotes in Europe are issued by the Bank of Stockholm
1672- William III becomes stadholder of Zeeland
1683 -Manchu/Chinese Qing Dynasty naval forces under commander Shi Lang defeat the Kingdom of Tungning in the Battle of Penghu near the Pescadores Islands.
1683 -Turkish troops under Kara Mustafa reach Vienna
1755- John Adams graduates Harvard
1769 -Father Junipero Serra founds Mission San Diego the 1st mission in California
1782- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's opera "Die Entführung aus dem Serail (The Abduction from the Seraglio)" premieres in Vienna with Mozart conducting
1941- Joe Dimaggio goes 3 for 4, hitting in his 56th straight game
161 Battery sign at Bien Hoa base
1965-New Zealand artillery opens fire in Vietnam
Gunners of 161 Field Battery fired New Zealand’s first shots of the Vietnam War from their base at Bien Hoa, near Saigon.
Music History
2023-French fashion icon Jane Birkin, who sang with Serge Gainsbourg on the racy number "Je T'aime... Moi Non Plus," dies at 76. She's the namesake of the Birkin Bag, a symbol of luxury mentioned in many rap songs, most famously "'03 Bonnie And Clyde" by Jay-Z.
2022-Two songs from the '80s land in the US Top 40: "Master Of Puppets" by Metallica (#40) and "Running Up That Hill" by Kate Bush (#4). Both songs were revived by season 4 of Stranger Things, where they're used in battle against the evil Vecna
2022-Jennifer Lopez marries Ben Affleck at a quickie wedding in Las Vegas. The couple were engaged in 2002 and had a lavish ceremony planned, but they called it off. They started dating again in 2021 after Lopez' marriage to Marc Anthony and Affleck's marriage to Jennifer Garner ended.
2021-Biz Markie, the "clown prince of hip-hop," dies at 57. He's best known for his 1989 hit "Just a Friend."
2014-Blues rocker Johnny Winter dies at age 70.
2012-Jon Lord, a founding member of Deep Purple, dies at age 71 of a pulmonary embolism while suffering from pancreatic cancer.
2011-"Party Rock Anthem" by LMFAO hits #1 after first appearing on the Hot 100 on February 12 at #78. Thanks to a captivating video, the song starts the "shufflin'" dance craze and spends a staggering 68 weeks on the chart (six at #1), which is longer than any other chart-topper.
2009-At the Latitude Festival, held every year in Henham Park in Suffolk, England, Noah and the Whale debut their feature-length film The First Days of Spring. The film accompanies their new record of the same name due out in August. Written and directed by lead singer Charlie Fink, the film stars model Daisy Lowe, the daughter of fashion designer Pearl Lowe and Gavin Rossdale, lead singer for the alt-rock band Bush.
2008-Billy Joel bids goodbye to Flushing, New York's iconic Shea Stadium with the first of two star-studded concerts. Sadly, this is the highlight of the Mets' season.
2008-Jo Stafford, whose "You Belong To Me" made her the first female artist to hit #1 on the UK Chart, dies of congestive heart failure at age 90.
2003-Cuban singer Celia Cruz dies of brain cancer at age 77.
Dave Matthews Band Release Busted Stuff
2002-After unfinished tracks from their shelved project The Lillywhite Sessions are leaked on the internet, Dave Matthews Band reworks the songs and release them as Busted Stuff.More
2001-Kid Rock's album Devil Without A Cause goes Diamond, selling over 10 million albums in America. His previous three albums sold maybe 50,000 copies combined, mostly in the Detroit area.
1996-The Sultan of Brunei, the world's richest man, marks his 50th birthday with a Michael Jackson concert on the Borneo Island. Jackson earns about $15 million for the performance, which is free to the 60,000 in attendance.
1996-Styx drummer John Panozzo dies at age 47 when his liver fails after years of drinking.
1995-At North Carolina's Duke University Medical Center, Wayne Osmond of The Osmonds undergoes an operation to remove a brain tumor.
1990-Trial begins for Judas Priest after they are accused of implanting subliminal messages in their song "Better By You, Better Than Me." The suit alleges that the messages caused two teenage boys to enter a suicide pact (one of the boys killed himself instantly; the other died three years later from complications related to the suicide attempt). The case is dismissed August 24 after the judge determines that the supposed subliminal message is just an accidental recording oddity.
1984-Billy Williams dies of a heart attack at age 74. His group the Billy Williams Quartet was a fixture on Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca's "Your Show of Shows" in the '50s.
1983-Twenty of the songs in the US Top 40 are by British acts, the most since 1965. The Police are at #1 with "Every Breath You Take," followed by Eddy Grant's "Electric Avenue."
1982-Peter Gabriel launches the 3-day WOMAD (World of Music, Arts and Dance) festival at the Royal Bath and West showground in Somerset, England, with acts including the Drummers Of Burundi, Echo & the Bunnymen, and the Tian Jin dancers from China. It's a financial disaster but artistic success; Gabriel revives it the next year and the festival carries on, branching out to many countries over the next several years.
1981-Harry Chapin dies in a car crash at age 38.
1980-Donna Summer marries Bruce Sudano, former member of Brooklyn Dreams, who appeared on her 1979 hit "Heaven Knows." Within the next two years, they welcome two daughters: Brooklyn and Amanda Sudano.
1977-Shaun Cassidy's "Da Doo Ron Ron" hits #1 in the US. The song was first recorded by the girl group The Crystals in 1963. Cassidy's version changes the line "Someboy told me that his name was Bill" to "Someboy told me that her name was Jill."
1977-Barry Manilow's Barry Manilow Live hits #1 in America.
1976-After six years, Kenny Loggins and Jim Messina decide to split up their partnership, which had three big hits in "Thinking Of You," "My Music," and "Your Mama Don't Dance."
1976-Driven by discord after Gregg Allman testified against the band's road manager, The Allman Brothers announce their breakup. Gregg records and album with his wife, Cher, and Dickey Betts forms Great Southern. The band reunites in 1978.
1972-Smokey Robinson performs his final show with The Miracles at the Carter Barron Amphitheater in Washington, DC. At the end of the show, Smokey introduces his replacement, 20-year-old Billy Griffin.
1971-Live lead singer Ed Kowalczyk is born in York, Pennsylvania.
1967-Arlo Guthrie debuts "Alice's Restaurant Massacree" at the 1967 Newport Folk Festival. The song runs 18 minutes long and tells a true (but greatly exaggerated) story about how he was arrested one Thanksgiving morning for illegal dumping. The ticket later made him ineligible for the draft, keeping him out of the Vietnam War.
Joni Mitchell, Leonard Cohen, Judy Collins, Janis Ian, and Tom Paxton also play the festival this day.
1966-Tommy James and the Shondells' "Hanky Panky" hits #1 for the first of two weeks.
1964-Country singer Connie Smith records her debut single, "Once A Day," at RCA's Studio B in Nashville.
1962-The Beach Boys sign to Capitol Records, which has already released the group's single "Surfin' Safari."
1959-The Coasters record "Poison Ivy."
1955-Elvis Presley makes his first appearance on the national charts as "Baby, Let's Play House" enters the Cash Box country charts at #15.
1952-Stewart Copeland is born in Alexandria, Virginia. He spends his youth in Lebanon and then England. After moving back to the States to attend college, he returns to the UK to play drums for Curved Air and then The Police.
1944-Thomas Boggs (drummer for The Box Tops) is born in Wynne, Arkansas, but is raised mostly in Memphis, Tennessee.
1941-Desmond Dekker (leader of The Aces) is born in Saint Andrew Parish, Jamaica.
1939-Blues/R&B singer Denise LaSalle is born in Mississippi. Her first hit is "Trapped By A Thing Called Love," which tops the R&B chart and lands at #13 on the Hot 100 in 1971.
1938-Tony Jackson (bass guitarist for The Searchers) is born in Dingle, Liverpool, England.
1927-'40s and '50s pop vocalist Mindy Carson is born in New York City. She catches her big break when she wins an audition to the radio program Stairway to the Stars, landing her an eight-month gig with Paul Whiteman's orchestra.
1925-Nat Pierce, pianist and arranger for the Woody Herman band in the '50s, is born Somerville, Massachusetts.
1925-Latin jazz musician Cal Tjader is born in St. Louis, Missouri. His parents are Swedish American vaudevillians who eventually settle in San Mateo, California, when Cal is 2 years old. At 16, he wins a Gene Krupa drum solo contest with "Drum Boogie."
1911-Ginger Rogers is born Virginia Katherine McMath in Independence, Missouri. She begins her partnership with Fred Astaire in the 1933 RKO musical Flying Down to Rio.
Bikkie
17th July 2025, 17:05
1453 -Battle of Castillon: French army beats English force under John Talbot, turning point of the Hundred Years' War
1505 -Martin Luther enters a Augustinian monastery at Erfur
1585- English secret service discovers Anthony Babington's plot to murder plot Queen Elizabeth I
1603- English explorer Walter Raleigh is arrested by forces of King James I of England
1717- George Frideric Handel's "Water Music" premieres repeatedly on a barge cruising the River Thames in London
1774- Captain James Cook arrives in the New Hebrides (Vanuatu)
1791 -Members of the French National Guard under command of General Lafayette open fire on crowd of radical Jacobins at Champ de Mars, Paris, during the French Revolution, killing up to 50 people
The Raft of the Medusa
1816- "L'Argus" accidentally discovers raft holding survivors from wrecked French frigate "Méduse." After 13 days at sea only 15 of 151 remain, the rest having been cannibalised, murdered, or committed suicide. This event was made famous by Théodore Géricault’s painting "The Raft of the Medusa"
1841 -British humorous and satirical magazine "Punch" is first published; it closes in 2002
1850- Harvard Observatory takes 1st photograph of a star (Vega)
1856- The Great Train Wreck of 1856 between Camp Hill and Fort Washington, Pennsylvania kills over 60 people
1858- Recovery of the bell of HMS Lutine from ship's wreck, hung from rostrum in Lloyd's of London's Underwriting Room
1861- At Manassas, Virginia General Beauregard requests reinforcements for his 22,000 men, General Johnston is ordered to Manassas
1861- US Congress authorizes paper money
Morgan's Raid
1862 -John Hunt Morgan's confederate cavalry raid reaches Cynthiana, Kentucky
1897- 1st ship arrives in Seattle carrying gold from Yukon
1918 -Longest errorless game, Cubs beat Phillies 2-1 in 21 innings
1922 -Ty Cobb gets 5 hits in a game for record 4th time in a year
1933 After successfully crossing the Atlantic Ocean, the Lithuanian research aircraft Lituanica crashes in Germany under mysterious circumstances
1934- Babe Ruth draws his 2,000th base on balls at Cleveland
1936- NY Giants future Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher Carl Hubbell begins MLB record 24 game winning streak, beating Pittsburgh Pirates, 6-0 at Forbes Field in Pittsburgh
1941- NY Yankee Joe DiMaggio's 56-game hitting streak ends in Cleveland
1945 -Leaders Harry Truman, Joseph Stalin and Winston Churchill hold their first post World War II meeting at the Potsdam Conference
1948 -US Air Force pilot Gail Halvorsen encounters children in at Templehof Airport in Berlin during the Berlin Blockade, giving him the idea to drop candy in 'Operation Little Vittles'
1955 -Disneyland televises its grand opening in Anaheim, California
1959 -Paleoanthropologist Mary Leakey discovers the partial skull of a new species of early human ancestor, Zinjanthropus boisei or "Zinj" (now called Paranthropus boisei), which lived in Africa almost 2 million years ago
1963- Dave DeBusschere hits a single off Bennie Daniels, his 1st and only MLB hit
1964- Don Campbell sets a record for a turbine vehicle at 690.91 kph (429.31 mph)
1964 -Great Britain performs nuclear Test at Nevada Test Site
1967 -Jimi Hendrix quits as opening act of the Monkees' tour, after playing 7 of a planned 29 shows
1968 -The Beatles' animated film "Yellow Submarine" premieres in London
1972 -First two women begin training as FBI agents at Quantico
1974- John Lennon is again ordered to leave the US in 60 days due to a 1968 marijuana charge in the UK (he doesn't)
1974 -The Moody Blues open 1st quadrophonic recording studio in UK
1975 -Four British soldiers are killed by a Provisional Irish Republican Army remote-controlled bomb near Forkill, County Armagh; attack the first major breach of a February truce
Historic Handshake in Space
1975 -NASA's Apollo 18 and Soviet Soyuz 19 make 1st US/USSR linkup in space
Reggie Jackson and Billy Martin Clash
1978- NY Yankee manager Billy Martin and Reggie Jackson fight in dug out after Jackson refuses to bunt, causing Martin to suspend him
Sebastian Coe's Record Mile
1979- Sebastian Coe runs world record 3:49 mile in Oslo
1987- 10 teens die in Guadalupe River flood (Comfort, Tx)
1987 -Dow Jones Industrial Average closes above 2,500 (2,510.04) for 1st time
Sports History
1988 -Florence Griffith Joyner of the USA sets 100 m woman's record (10.49)
1988 -Four billion TV viewers watch Mandela's 70th Birthday Tribute
1988 -Highest temperature ever recorded in San Francisco, 103°F (39°C)
1989- 1st test flight of US stealth bomber
1989- Paul McCartney releases single "This One", from his album "Flowers In The Dirt
1990 -Minnesota Twins become 1st team to turn 2 triple plays in a game but lose to Boston Red Sox 1-0
1994 -Hulk Hogan beats Ric Flair to win WCW wrestling championship
1995- Forbes Magazine announces Bill Gates is the richest man in world with a net worth of $12.9 billion dollars
2013- 58 people are killed in floods in Sichuan Province, China
2013- 7 people are killed by a car bomb in Damascus, Syria
Bono Honored
2013 -U2 singer Bono is made a Commandeur of the French Ordre des Arts et des Lettres
2014 Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 is shot down over Eastern Ukraine by a Buk surface-to-air missile launched from pro-Russian separatist-controlled territory, killing all 283 passengers and 15 crew on board
Paddy the Wanderer, 1935
1939-Death of Paddy the Wanderer
Paddy, a ginger and brown Airedale terrier, became a national celebrity because of his exploits on the Wellington waterfront and beyond during the 1930s
Music History
2023-CMT pulls Jason Aldean's video for "Try That in a Small Town," which shows footage of urban violence and protests. A swirl of controversy follows, sending the song to #1 on August 5.
2016-Kim Kardashian posts a video on her Snapchat account of a phone call between Kanye West and Taylor Swift where Kanye recites the line, "I feel like me and Taylor might still have sex," from his song "Famous," and she seems OK with it. Swift responds on Instagram by posting, "Where is the video of Kanye telling me he was going to call me 'that bitch' in his song? It doesn't exist because it never happened."More
2014-The short-lived reality show LeAnn & Eddie debuts on VH1. It stars celebrity couple LeAnn Rimes and Eddie Cibrian, who made tabloid headlines after they had an affair while married to other people.
2012-The soundtrack album to the film The Dark Knight Rises is released, destined to debut at #8 on the Billboard 200 albums chart. It also scores #10 on the Canadian albums chart. Composer Hans Zimmer becomes an overnight sensation, frequently compared with former golden soundtrack star John Williams.
2011-Wolfmother frontman Andrew Stockdale gets wasted at the Archive Bar in Brisbane, where a local Beatles tribute band is performing. After crashing the stage and drunkenly screeching along to "Let It Be," he refuses to leave and is arrested when police arrive. He spends a night in jail and is fined $350.
2009-Gordon Waller of Peter and Gordon ("A World Without Love") dies of a heart attack at age 64.
2006-Bill Miller (Frank Sinatra's longtime pianist) dies from complications following a heart attack in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
2004-At the end of her show at the Aladdin Hotel in Vegas, Linda Ronstadt dedicates her encore, a cover of the Eagles' "Desperado," to filmmaker Michael Moore, urging fans to go see his current movie, Fahrenheit 9/11. A shocked audience reacts mostly with boos; approximately half walk out on the spot.
1996-Chas Chandler (bassist for The Animals, Jimi Hendrix Experience) dies of an aortic aneurysm at age 57.
1996-The song "Key To My Heart" by the R&B trio Choice appears in the movie Kazaam, starring Shaquille O'Neal as a 5,000-year-old genie. Choice quickly disbands but its stand-out singer, Alecia Moore, goes on to greatness as Pink.
1995-Carole King's Tapestry album is certified Diamond for sales of 10 million in the US.
1993-After two-and-a-half years, the Guns N' Roses Use Your Illusion tour comes to an end at a show in Buenos Aires. It is the last time Axl and Slash share a stage until the 2016 GnR reconciliation.
1991-Fourteen years after the deadly crash of Lynyrd Skynyrd's Baton Rouge-bound aircraft, the surviving members of the band, reunited under the name "Lynyrd Skynyrd 1991," return to the Louisiana city to kick off a new tour. Shirts sold for the event read, "Baton Rouge! After 14 years! We're finally here..."
1987-Keith Richards signs a solo deal with Virgin Records.
1981-Universal Pictures releases the romantic drama Endless Love, starring Brooke Shields. The film is quickly forgotten, but the theme song, a duet by Lionel Richie and Diana Ross, spends nine weeks at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and earns Richie an Academy Award nomination for Best Song.
1979-Gary Moore leaves Thin Lizzy in mid-tour; Midge Ure replaces him as lead guitarist.
1976-Luke Bryan is born Thomas Luther Bryan in Leesburg, Georgia. After attending Georgia Southern University and working on his family's peanut farm, he moves to Nashville in 2001 and releases his first album, I'll Stay Me, in 2007.
1975-Bob Marley and the Wailers play a historic concert at London's Lyceum Theater that features the acclaimed Legend version of "No Woman No Cry."
1975-The divorce between Ringo Starr and Maureen Cox is finalized in London. Starr marries Barbara Bach in 1981
1974-In West Hampstead, London, The Moody Blues open the world's first Quadrophonic recording studio.
1971-Jarrett Cordes (aka DJ Minutemix of PM Dawn) is born in Jersey City, New Jersey. His stepfather is George Brown of Kool & the Gang.
1970-The Guess Who perform at the White House for President Richard Nixon and his royal guests, Prince Charles and Princess Anne. They do not play their hit "American Woman," as they are asked to refrain from performing it "as a matter of taste."
1968-The Beatles' fourth film, the animated fantasy Yellow Submarine, premieres in London. Although the four band members in the picture are voiced by professional actors, the band itself makes a cameo in the finale, leading movie audiences through the song "All Together Now."
1967-Jazz saxophonist John Coltrane dies of liver cancer at age 40.
1967-Jimi Hendrix plays his eighth and final show as the opening act for The Monkees, which understandably does not go well as Monkees fans want nothing to do with Hendrix.
1967-In America, The Beatles release "All You Need Is Love," John Lennon's maxim. It becomes their 14th #1 hit in that country.
1965-James Brown releases "Papa's Got A Brand New Bag." It would become Brown's first song to reach the Billboard Hot 100 Top Ten.
1963-Regina Belle is born in Englewood, New Jersey.
1963-The Muffs lead singer Kim Shattuck is born in Los Angeles.
1962-Elvis Presley releases "She's Not You."
1959-While under arrest for illegal possession of narcotics, Billie Holiday dies at age 44 at Metropolitan Hospital in New York City, where she has been since June 12. Years of drug and alcohol abuse took their toll on the singer, who suffered from cirrhosis of the liver.
1955-Disneyland opens in Anaheim, California with a parade broadcast live on ABC. Walt Disney introduces their new group of young performers, the Mouseketeers, who star in the upcoming series The Mickey Mouse Club. Annette Funicello is the breakout star
1954-The Newport Jazz Festival, the world's first such event, debuts on the tennis courts of the Newport Casino in Rhode Island.
1952-Chet McCracken (drummer for The Doobie Brothers) is born in Seattle, Washington.
1952-Pop-turned-country singer Nicolette Larson is born in Helena, Montana.
1950-Phoebe Snow is born in New York City.
1949-Mike Vale (bassist for Tommy James & the Shondells) is born.
1949-Terence "Geezer" Butler (bassist, lyricist for Black Sabbath) is born in Aston, Birmingham, England.
1948-Ron Asheton (guitarist, bassist for The Stooges) is born in Washington, D.C.
1947-Wolfgang Flur (of Kraftwerk) is born in Frankfurt, Germany.
1947-Mick Tucker (drummer for Sweet) is born in Harlesden, North West London, England.
1942-Gale Garnett, known for the 1964 folk hit "We'll Sing In The Sunshine," is born in Auckland, New Zealand, but will relocate to Canada by age 11.
1939-Charlie Barnet records "Cherokee."
1939-Spencer Davis (of The Spencer Davis Group) is born in Swansea, Wales.
1933-Mimi Hines, Broadway performer and comedienne (Funny Girl, The Prisoner of Second Avenue), is born in Vancouver, Canada.
1928-Jazz pianist Vince Guaraldi, noted composer of music for Charles Schulz's Peanuts, is born Vincent Anthony Dellaglio in San Francisco, California.
1912-20-year-old Dorothy Goetz, the first wife of Irving Berlin, dies of typhoid fever in New York. They had been married less than 6 months. Berlin writes his first ballad: "When I Lost You."
Bikkie
18th July 2025, 12:15
447 BC Battle of Cremera: Etruscan city Veii ambushes and defeats the Roman Republican army in one of the most unexpected and dramatic defeats in Roman history
390 BC Roman-Gaulish Wars: Battle of the Allia - Roman army is defeated by raiding Gauls, leads to subsequent sacking of Rome
Great Fire of Rome
64 Great Fire of Rome begins under the Emperor Nero
1290 King Edward I orders expulsion of Jews from England, this edict will remain in place for 350 years
1334 Bishop of Florence blesses the first foundation stone for the new campanile (bell tower) of the Florence Cathedral, designed by artist Giotto di Bondone
1743 First half-page newspaper ad is published, in the NY Weekly Journal
1855-New Zealand's first postage stamps go on sale
These adhesive, non-perforated stamps for prepaid postage were the famous ‘Chalon Head’ design, showing Queen Victoria in her coronation robes.
1801 HMS Investigator sets off on a voyage to determine if New Holland (Australia) is one island or two, under command of Matthew Flinders, with botanist Robert Brown and artists Ferdinand Bauer and William Westall aboard
1861 -Battle of Blackburn's Ford, Virginia
1862 -Battle of Newburgh, Indiana - captured by Union forces
1863- Battle of Fort Wagner, South Carolina - Second assault
Lincoln Calls for Volunteers
1864 -US President Abraham Lincoln asks for 500,000 volunteers for military service
1855-New Zealand's first postage stamps go on sale
These adhesive, non-perforated stamps for prepaid postage were the famous ‘Chalon Head’ design, showing Queen Victoria in her coronation robe.
1896 -Indian-born K S Ranjitsinhji completes an unbeaten 154 on Test cricket debut for England in second Test against Australia at Old Trafford
Babe Ruth's becomes All Time HR Leader
1921 Babe Ruth achieves 139 home runs with a MLB record 575 feet hit to become the all-time home run leader in Major League Baseball, taking the title from Roger Connor
1921 Black Sox trial begins in Chicago
1924-Flock House youth training farm opens
The governor-general, Viscount Jellicoe, officially opened Flock House station, near Bulls. This training farm was established using surplus profits from wool sales during the First World War.
Ty Cobb's 4,000th Hit
1927 Ty Cobb's 4,000th MLB career hit
Oops, Wrong Way!
1938 Douglas "Wrong Way" Corrigan arrives in Ireland after a 28-hour flight, supposedly leaving New York flying for California
Elvis Records First Demo
1953 Elvis Presley pays $3.98 to make his first demo at Sun Studio in Memphis, recording "My Happiness" and "That's When Your Heartaches Begin" and reportedly gives the record to his mother as a belated birthday present.
Music History
2020-Five months after his murder, the rapper Pop Smoke goes to #1 in the US with his debut album, Shoot For The Stars, Aim For The Moon. 50 Cent, a mentor to Pop Smoke, helped complete the album.
2018-Billy Joel plays his 100th concert at Madison Square Garden, becoming the first musician to hit that mark at the storied venue. New York State declares "Billy Joel Day" in his honor.
2014-Shakira becomes the first person to accumulate 100 million likes on Facebook.
2013-Jay-Z drops his hyphen, becoming Jay Z. Like his "retirement" in 2003, it doesn't stick - the hyphen returns with his next album, 4:44, in 2017.
2012-The Who announce of a tour to revive their rock opera Quadrophenia. The original run of the film of Quadrophenia debuted in 1979; the album in 1973. Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey, as the surviving members of the group, are also tapped to perform the ending song for the 2012 Olympic games in London.
2011-The romantic comedy Friends With Benefits, starring Justin Timberlake and Mila Kunis, premieres in New York City. The soundtrack includes the Semisonic tune "Closing Time," which Timberlake sings in the movie.
2001-Weezer release "Hash Pipe," the first single from Weezer (aka The Green Album). Described by frontman Rivers Cuomo as a "totally insane" song, it still gets plenty of airplay, although the title is a little too druggy for MTV, who display it as "H*** Pipe."
1998-'N Sync get a big boost in America when their "In Concert" special airs on the Disney Channel. They got the gig when their boy band rivals Backstreet Boys backed out.
1993-Rage Against The Machine protest music censorship by appearing at their Lollapalooza set in Philadelphia completely nude except for duct tape over their mouths. They refuse to play any music, and simply stand for 25 minutes with the letters PMRC written on their chests, a reference to the Parents Music Resource Center.
1992-The second edition of Lollapalooza is launched at Shoreline Amphitheatre at Mountain View, California. The traveling festival features such main stage attractions as the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Soundgarden and Pearl Jam.
1992-"Achy Breaky Heart," a #1 country hit from Billy Ray Cyrus, peaks at #4 on the Billboard Hot 100.
1991-The very first Lollapalooza music festival is held in select locations throughout North America. Bands and artists include Jane's Addiction, Siouxsie and the Banshees, Nine Inch Nails, Living Colour, Ice-T, Butthole Surfers, Rollins Band, Violent Femmes and Fishbone.More
1988-Ike Turner is sentenced to one year in a Santa Monica, California, jail for six grams of crack found in his car during a traffic stop in August 1987.
1988-Christa Päffgen aka Nico (of The Velvet Underground) dies at age 49 while vacationing in Ibiza, Spain. While riding a bicycle, the German singer-songwriter suffers a heart attack and falls and hits her head, causing a severe cerebral hemorrhage.
1983-Following up on momentum from their free Central Park reunion concert, Simon and Garfunkel start a 19-city tour in Akron, Ohio.
1982-Ryan Cabrera is born in Dallas, Texas.
1980-Closer, the second and final album from Joy Division, is released just two months after the suicide of founding member and singer Ian Curtis. Its claustrophobic, synth-laden sound, combined with Curtis's nihilistic lyrics make it a defining moment in England's post-punk scene.
1978-Tony Fagenson (drummer for Eve 6) is born. His dad is record producer and bass player Don Was (of Was (Not Was)).
1978=Tony Fagenson (drummer for Eve 6) is born. His dad is record producer and bass player Don Was (of Was (Not Was)).
1975-Daron Malakian (guitarist, vocalist for System Of A Down) is born in Los Angeles, California.
1974-Reinforcing his anti-establishment beliefs, the US denies renewal of John Lennon's visa based on a drug possession conviction in England four years earlier. The matter is sorted out and an international incident averted.
1972-All six members of Sly & the Family Stone are arrested in Hollywood after police search their tour bus and find two pounds of marijuana and two vials of cocaine.
1968Gary Puckett & the Union Gap's "Lady Willpower" is certified Gold.
1968-Hugh Masekela's "Grazing In The Grass" is certified Gold.
1966-Bobby Fuller (of The Bobby Fuller Four) is found dead, soaked in gasoline, in his automobile outside of his apartment in Hollywood, California. The details of the 23-year-old singer's death are murky - it's unclear whether it was a murder, suicide, or accident - but the official cause of death is reported as asphyxia due to inhalation of gasoline.
1966-The Beach Boys release "Wouldn't It Be Nice" with "God Only Knows" on the flip side.
1964-The Rolling Stones score their first American hit when their cover of Buddy Holly's "Not Fade Away" peaks at #48 on the Hot 100.
1964-The Four Seasons' "Rag Doll" hits #1 for the first of two weeks.
1962-Rock drummer Jack Irons (of Pearl Jam, Red Hot Chili Peppers) is born in Los Angeles, California.
1960-Brenda Lee's "I'm Sorry," recorded when she was just 15, hits #1 for the first of three weeks. It's the first of her two chart-toppers; her next single, "I Want To Be Wanted," also goes to #1.
1958-Nigel Twist (drummer for The Alarm) is born Nigel Buckle in Manchester, England.
1957-Keith Levene (of The Clash) is born Julian Keith Levene in Muswell Hill, London, England.
1955-Terry Chambers (drummer for XTC) is born in Swindon, Wiltshire, England.
1954-Country/bluegrass singer Ricky Skaggs is born in Cordell, Kentucky.
1953-18-year-old Elvis Presley, a truck driver by trade, stops into Memphis Recording Service (later renamed Sun Studios), and pays $3.98 to record two songs: "My Happiness" and "That's When Your Heartaches Begin."
1950-Glenn Hughes (leather guy in The Village People) is born in New York City.
1949-Wally Bryson (guitarist, vocalist for The Raspberries) is born in Manhattan, New York City.
1948-Phil Harris (guitarist, vocalist for Ace) is born in Muswell Hill, London, England.
1948-Cesar Zuiderwijk (drummer for Golden Earring) is born in The Hague, Netherlands.
1946-Tim Lynch (guitarist, harmonica player for Flamin' Groovies) is born in San Francisco, California.
1945-Danny McCulloch (bassist for The Animals) is born in Shepherd's Bush, West London, England.
1943-Robin McDonald (rhythm guitarist, bassist for Billy J. Kramer & the Dakotas) is born in Nairn, Scotland.
1941-Country rocker Lonnie Mack is born Lonnie McIntosh in West Harrison, Indiana.
1941-Martha Reeves of Martha & the Vandellas is born in Eufaula, Alabama.
1941-Producer Frank Farian is born in Kirn, Germany. In the '70s he masterminds the dance act Boney M., with his vocals mimed by lead lip-syncher Bobby Farrell. He follows a similar formula in the '80s with Milli Vanilli, who get embroiled in scandal when it's revealed they didn't sing on their albums.
1940-Jim Kweskin, founder of Jim Kweskin Jug Band, is born in Stamford, Connecticut.
1939-Dion DiMucci, better known as Dion, is born in The Bronx, New York
1939-Brian Auger (keyboardist for Steampacket) is born in Hammersmith, London, England.
1938-Ian Stewart, an original member of The Rolling Stones who becomes an unofficial member in 1963, is born in Pittenweem, Fife, Scotland.
1935-Johnny Funches (of The Dells) is born in Chicago, Illinois.
1931-Thomas "Papa Dee" Allen (percussionist, vocalist for War) is born in Wilmington, Delaware.
1929-Shock rocker Screamin' Jay Hawkins is born Jalacy Hawkins in Cleveland, Ohio.
1910-Jazz pianist Joe "Fingers" Carr is born Louis Ferdinand Busch in Louisville, Kentucky. He will eventually become an A&R man and studio pianist for Capitol Records, playing on tracks from Peggy Lee, Jo Stafford, and Tennessee Ernie Ford.
1909-Harriet Nelson is born Peggy Lou Snyder in Des Moines, Iowa. Before starring on the long-running sitcom The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, alongside husband Ozzie Nelson, Harriet works as a singe and actress under contract with RKO Studios.
2008-illy Joel plays the "Last Play at Shea" concert - the final show before Shea Stadium is closed down. Joel is joined on stage by Paul McCartney, Garth Brooks, Steven Tyler of Aerosmith, and The Who's Roger Daltrey.
2014-Shakira becomes the first person to accumulate 100 million likes on Facebook.
F5 Dave
18th July 2025, 20:49
Have you ever posted something motorcycle related? Why just this generic Internet stuff radio stations (remember them grandad?) would report on shitty morning shows instead of playing music or likely just more adds.
Good riddance.
Bikkie
19th July 2025, 10:01
Have you ever posted something motorcycle related? Why just this generic Internet stuff radio stations (remember them grandad?) would report on shitty morning shows instead of playing music or likely just more adds.
Good riddance.
Yip there goes the moaner again, he sounds like a bit of a Grandad!
And yes I have posted two related motorcycle materials.
You either have not read them, or you weren't paying attention??
Bikkie
19th July 2025, 10:08
1333 - The Scots are routed in the Battle of Halidon Hill, a significant setback in their fight for independence from England.
1545 - Henry VIII's flagship Mary Rose sinks at Portsmouth; 73 people die.
1553 - Lady Jane Grey is deposed after nine days as English monarch and later executed.
1843 - Steamship SS Great Britain, designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel, is launched, the first ocean- going craft with an iron hull.
1870 - France declares war on Prussia.
1903 - French cyclist Maurice Garin wins the first Tour de France.
Music History
2017-Performing barefoot as usual, singer-songwriter Barbara Weldens is electrocuted on stage at Gourdon, France and dies from cardiac arrest.
2014-Nine Inch Nails and Soundgarden launch a co-headlining tour at Planet Hollywood in Las Vegas, Nevada.
2013-Pearl Jam play a sold-out show at Wrigley Field in Chicago, the first American stop touring behind their 10th studio album, Lightning Bolt. Seven songs in, the show is delayed by... lightning. After midnight, the band returns to the stage and plays a rousing set, as the place is still packed.
2011-Rebecca Black, the world's most ironic celebrity, cashes in on her worldwide viral Internet fame by launching her own record label, RB Records, and her first single on the label, "My Moment." The song fails to get the same attention as her breakout hit, "Friday."
2004-James Lowe and Mark Tulin of the Electric Prunes, famous for their 1967 garage-psych hit "I Had Too Much To Dream Last Night," sue their former label and publishing company for over one million dollars in unpaid royalties.
2002-Movin' Out, a stage musical dedicated to the songs of Billy Joel, premieres in Chicago.
2002-It's "Solomon Burke Day" in Philadelphia in honor of their native singer.
2001-Mariah Carey makes a surprise appearance on MTV's Total Request Live where she comes off as rather unhinged, rambling aimlessly and doing a striptease for the host, Carson Daly.More
2001-Soul singer Judy Clay dies at age 62 from injuries sustained in a car accident.
2000-Shel Talmy, who produced the first Who album, My Generation, puts the master tapes up for auction on eBay for $500,000. As intended, it gets the attention of the band, who buy them (for significantly less) and in 2002 release the My Generation: Deluxe Edition CD using the tapes.
1999-Lou Bega releases his debut album, A Little Bit of Mambo.
1997-Performing as Nimrod (the name of their upcoming album), Green Day play a secret show at The Viper Room in Los Angeles, where they premiere their song "Hitchin' A Ride."
1997-The Fat Of The Land by The Prodigy becomes the first album by an electronic group to hit #1 in America.
Clueless Hits Theaters
1995-Clueless debuts in theaters, reviving the teen movie genre and boosting the film career of Alicia Silverstone, who appeared in the music video for Aerosmith's "Cryin'." The accompanying soundtrack gives retro hits a modern makeover, with the pop-punk act The Muffs covering Kim Wilde's "Kids In America."More
1993-Producer Fred again is born Frederick Gibson in South London. After being mentored by Brian Eno, he produces tracks for Ed Sheeran, Rita Ora, and many other popular artists. In 2019, four of his productions hit #1 on the UK Singles chart.
1990-Singer Vicki Carr helps dedicate the Nixon Presidential Library, singing in front of all four living presidents (Nixon, Carter, Reagan, and George H.W. Bush), all of which she had performed for at the White House during their terms.
1989-After finding over $40,000 in cash and checks in his cell at the Stevenson Correctional Institute in South Carolina, officials move James Brown to a cell with tighter security.
1986-Genesis have their first (and only) #1 Hot 100 hit as "Invisible Touch" tops the chart.
1985-Joan Jett calls up-and-coming heavyweight boxer Mike Tyson before his fight with Larry Sims, which Tyson wins handily. The superstitious Tyson insists on getting a call from Jett before every fight, which he does until breaking tradition for his bout against Buster Douglas on February 11, 1990 - Tyson's first loss.More
1985-The Legend of Billie Jean, starring Helen Slater and Christian Slater as teens who become accidental outlaws, debuts in theaters, boasting the hit theme song "Invincible" by Pat Benatar. The teen flick receives mixed reviews but goes on to become a cult classic, despite Benatar calling it "one of the worst movies ever made."More
1981-The mayor of Odessa, Texas, declares today Roy Orbison Day in honor of the singer. (Orbison was actually from Wink, a microscopic town about 35 miles west.)
1980-Laguna Beach, California's Vorpal Gallery opens a new exhibit featuring paintings by Joni Mitchell, John Mayall, Klaus Voorman, and Ron Wood.
1980-"It's Still Rock and Roll To Me" hits #1 in the US, giving Billy Joel his first chart-topper on the Hot 100.
1980-David Bowie begins his run as The Elephant Man in Denver. The show does well, and Bowie takes the lead in the Broadway production later that year.
1977-Steve Martin appears on The Muppet Show, where he performs "Dueling Banjos" and makes balloon animals.
1975-Country singer Lefty Frizzell dies at age 47 after years of alcohol abuse.
1975-Paul McCartney & Wings' "Listen To What The Man Said" hits #1.
1975-Orleans release "Dance With Me."
1969-Jimmy Buffett marries beauty queen Margie Washichek, who was crowned Miss USS Alabama of 1967. They divorce two years later.
1969-The Spencer Davis Group breaks up. Steve and Muff Winwood left the band in 1967, but the band continued on with less success without them before calling it quits.
1966-The theme song to The Monkees TV series is recorded at RCA studios in Hollywood. The only Monkee to participate is Micky Dolenz, who does the vocal - the rest of the musicians are session performers.
1966-Doing it his way, the 50-year-old Frank Sinatra marries the 20-year-old actress Mia Farrow in New York, causing a predictable media event. The marriage lasts just two years.
1966-Johnny Rivers records "Poor Side Of Town."
1965-The Beatles release "Help!" in the US, backed with "I'm Down." It becomes their ninth #1 hit.
1960-Kevin Haskins (drummer for Bauhaus, Love and Rockets) is born in Northampton, England.
1958-The Drifters manager George Treadwell, who owns the name, fires the group and replaces them with members of The Five Crowns. When Ben E. King joins the group a short time later, The Drifters become consistent hitmakers, scoring with "There Goes My Baby," "This Magic Moment" and "Save The Last Dance For Me."
1954-Elvis Presley releases his first single: "That's All Right" backed with "Blue Moon Of Kentucky."
1952-Allen Collins (guitarist for Lynyrd Skynyrd) is born Larkin Allen Collins Jr. in Jacksonville, Florida.
1948-Keith Godchaux (keyboardist for Grateful Dead throughout the '70s) is born in Seattle, Washington, but will grow up in Concord, California.
1947-Queen guitarist (and astrophysicist) Brian May is born in Hampton, Middlesex, England.
1947-Bernie Leadon (guitarist, vocalist for Eagles) is born in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
1946-Alan Gorrie (guitarist/vocalist/bassist for The Average White Band) is born in Perth, Scotland.
1944-Commander Cody (of Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen) is born George Frayne IV in Boise, Idaho.
1941-R&B guitarist/bassist Phil Upchurch is born in Chicago, Illinois. In addition to recording with Curtis Mayfield, Dee Clark, B.B. King, Michael Jackson, and others, he's known for the 1961 instrumental hit "You Can't Sit Down."
1941-Pop singer Vicki Carr is born Florencia Bisenta de Casillas-Martinez Cardona in El Paso, Texas. Her first hit is a cover of The Crystals' "He's A Rebel" in 1962.
1937-Country singer George Hamilton IV, known for the 1963 chart-topper "Abilene," is born in North Carolina.
1932-Buster Benton, guitarist for Willie Dixon's Blues All-Stars, is born Arley Benton in Texarkana, Arkansas.
1925-Sue Thompson is born Eva Sue McKee in Nevada, Missouri. Known for the '60s pop hits "Sad Movies (Make Me Cry)" and "Norman.
F5 Dave
19th July 2025, 10:33
Yip there goes the moaner again, he sounds like a bit of a Grandad!
I used that slight on you. You can't just repeat the same thing. Try something original.
Oh. Right.
jellywrestler
19th July 2025, 13:35
Have you ever posted something motorcycle related? Why just this generic Internet stuff radio stations (remember them grandad?) would report on shitty morning shows instead of playing music or likely just more adds.
Good riddance.
at least the radio stations would pick out something interesting, not just read a list of forty things of and make you fall asleep....
Bikkie
20th July 2025, 10:28
at least the radio stations would pick out something interesting, not just read a list of forty things of and make you fall asleep....
Ah, you go to sleep reading? ( you must be a Grandad )
And if you don't like them, don't read them then!!
Bikkie
20th July 2025, 10:30
[QUOTE=F5 Dave;1131238392]I used that slight on you. You can't just repeat the same thing. Try something original.
Oh. Right.[/QU
Bikkie
20th July 2025, 10:38
An armed offenders’ squad officer watches the riot
1965
Riots rock Mt Eden prison
The disturbance followed a botched escape attempt and lasted into the next day. Prisoners took several warders hostage and fire gutted part of the prison.
World's Oldest Treaty
1654 -Anglo-Portuguese treaty is reinforced, England guarantees Portugal’s independence and receives trade concessions
1712- The Riot Act takes effect in Great Britain
1738- North America: French explorer Pierre Gaultier de Varennes, sieur de La Vérendrye reaches the western shore of Lake Michigan
1749- Earl of Chesterfield says "Idleness is only refuge of weak minds"
1773 -Scottish settlers arrive at Pictou, Nova Scotia (Canada)
1st East-West Crossing of North America
1793- Scottish explorer Alexander Mackenzie completes the first European east-to-west crossing of America north of Mexico
1807- Napoleon Bonaparte grants a patent for a Pyréolophore, an early combustion engine for a boat, to brothers Nicéphore and Claude Niépce
Jews to Adopt Family Name
1808- Napoleon decrees all French Jews must adopt a fixed family name
Opening of Euston Station
1837 -Euston railway station opens in London as the terminus of the London and Birmingham Railway (L&BR), the city's first intercity railway station
1892-Steam locomotive sets world speed record
The Wellington and Manawatu Railway (WMR) Company’s locomotive No. 10 established a world speed record for the narrow 3 foot 6 inch (1067 mm) gauge, averaging 68 km per hour on a two-hour run and hitting a top speed of 103 kph
1917- WW I draft lottery held; #258 is 1st drawn
1920- Dutch soccer club Sportclub Heerenveen is formed; initially known as Athleta; KNVB Cup Champions 2008–09
The Babe meets The Don
1932 -An injured Babe Ruth entertains the touring Australian cricketers in his private box at Yankee Stadium as his NY Yankees beat the Chicago White Sox 7-2; 'The Babe' meets 'The Don' (Don Bradman)
The Guinea Pig Club
1941 -The Guinea Pig Club forms, made of severely injured airmen treated by Archibald McIndoe at Queen Victoria Hospital, East Grinstead, England
A football player in black uniform runs away from goal with a clenched fist after scoring a goal.
2023
Football Ferns achieve historic win at FIFA World Cup
The Football Ferns’ 1–0 victory over Norway at Eden Park, Auckland was the first win by a senior New Zealand team at a World Cup finals tournament.
Music History
2023-Before his show in Toronto, Post Malone meets with fan Brook Trafton, who found the one-of-a-kind "One Ring" Magic: The Gathering card, and agrees to buy it for $2 million.
2017-Chester Bennington of Linkin Park, 41, is found dead, a suicide by hanging. Bennington was close friends with Chris Cornell, who died in similar fashion two months earlier.
2016-Weed-loving rappers Wiz Khalifa and Snoop Dogg begin their "High Road" tour with a show in West Palm Beach, Florida. Says Khalifa, "It's a joint performance."
1986-Sid and Nancy, the biopic about The Sex Pistols' Sid Vicious, premieres. Gary Oldman stars as Vicious.
1986-Santana celebrate their 20th anniversary with a massive group reunion, as all 17 current and former members play a concert in San Francisco.
1984-The NeverEnding Story debuts in US theaters, featuring a theme song by former Kajagoogoo lead singer Limahl.
1983-Duran Duran headline a charity concert at Dominion Theatre in London attended by Prince Charles and Princess Diana. At the event, they meet Diana, who has proclaimed them her favorite band, for the first time.
1981-Journey release Escape, their most popular album. The ballad "Open Arms" is the highest charting single, but "Don't Stop Believin'" is the one that endures, becoming one of the biggest songs of all time.
1978-Elliott Yamin is born Efraym Elliott Yamin in Los Angeles, California.
1976-Wolfmother lead singer Andrew Stockdale is born in Brisbane, Australia.
1975-Steven Van Zandt makes his first appearance in concert with Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band.
1972-Vitamin C is born Colleen Ann Fitzpatrick in Old Bridge Township, New Jersey.
1970-The Carpenters appear The Dating Game, where they perform "(They Long To Be) Close To You" and each select from three suitors. They never actually go on their dates.
1969-R&B singer Roy Hamilton, who sang a popular cover of "Unchained Melody" in 1955, dies shortly after suffering a stroke at age 40.
1968-Paul McCartney's fiancee, Jane Asher, goes on the BBC TV show Dee Time and announces that she and Paul have broken off their engagement.
1968-Hugh Masekela's trumpet composition "Grazing In The Grass" hits #1 in America, knocking off trumpet player Herb Alpert's "This Guy's In Love With You."
1966-Stone Gossard (rhythm guitarist for Pearl Jam) is born in Seattle, Washington.
1965-Bob Dylan releases "Like A Rolling Stone." At 6:13, it's twice as long as the average pop song, but it nonetheless becomes Dylan's first big hit and his most popular song.
1965-The Lovin' Spoonful release "Do You Believe In Magic?" Lead singer John Sebastian wrote it after seeing a beautiful girl dancing at one of their shows.
1965-Frank Sinatra appears at the famous Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, where he leaves his handprints in the cement outside.
1964-Chris Cornell (lead singer of Soundgarden, Audioslave) is born Christopher John Boyle in Seattle, Washington.
1963-Jan and Dean's "Surf City" hits #1 in America. The song is co-written by Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys, who doesn't surf but can sure craft a melody.
1963-Ray Conniff's Concert In Rhythm and Memories Are Made Of This are certified gold.
1963-Lesley Gore releases "Judy's Turn To Cry."
1961-The Leslie Bricusse - Anthony Newley musical Stop The World - I Want To Get Off premieres in London.
1961-The Beatles, known as The Beat Brothers, get some press in the British paper Mersey Beat, which announces their first record deal.
1958-Mick MacNeil (keyboardist for Simple Minds) is born on the Isle of Barra, Scotland.
1956-Paul Cook (drummer for The Sex Pistols) is born in Hammersmith, London.
1947-Carlos Santana (of Santana) is born in Autlán de Navarro, Jalisco, Mexico.
1946-John Almond (of The Johnny Almond Music Machine, Mark-Almond) is born in Enfield, Middlesex, England.
1945-Tony Thorpe (guitarist, vocalist for The Rubettes) is born in Smithfield, London, England.
1945-Kim Carnes is born in Los Angeles, California.
1944-T.G. Sheppard is born William Neal Browder in Humboldt, Tennessee.
1943-John Lodge (bass guitarist for The Moody Blues) in Erdington, Birmingham, England.
1940-The industry publication Billboard combines their sales charts for the first time, including all major labels. The first #1 is Tommy Dorsey's "I'll Never Smile Again," with vocals by Frank Sinatra.
1933-"Party Doll" singer Buddy Knox is born in Happy, Texas.
Bikkie
20th July 2025, 10:54
I used that slight on you. You can't just repeat the same thing. Try something original.
Oh. Right.
Well, if you don't like them, don't read them then!!
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