If you want to understand today, you have to search yesterday. ~Pearl Buck

1885 – The roller coaster was patented by La Marcus Thompson of, where else, Coney Island, NY. His coaster was 450 feet long with the highest drop being 30 feet.

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1936 – Following the death of King George V, his son, Edward VIII became King of the United Kingdom. Only months into his reign, he caused a constitutional crisis by proposing marriage to American socialite Wallis Simpson, who had divorced her first husband and was seeking a divorce from her second. The prime ministers of the United Kingdom and the Dominions opposed the marriage, arguing that the people would never accept a divorced woman with two living ex-husbands as queen consort.
Choosing not to end his relationship with Simpson, Edward abdicated on Dec. 11, 1936. With a reign of 326 days, Edward was one of the shortest-reigning monarchs in British history.

1937 – Franklin D. Roosevelt was inaugurated for his second term as President. It was the first time the date of January 20th was used. Prior to that, the date had been March 4, the day of the year on which the Constitution of the United States first took effect in 1789.

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1942 – Nazi officials arrived at a “final solution” that called for exterminating Europe’s Jews, during a conference at Lake Wannsee in Berlin. Herman Goering, writing under instructions from Adolf Hitler, had ordered Reinhard Heydrich, SS general and Heinrich Himmler’s number-two man, to submit “as soon as possible a general plan of the administrative, material, and financial measures necessary for carrying out the desired final solution of the Jewish question.”
Heydrich met with Adolf Eichmann, chief of the Central Office of Jewish Emigration, and 15 other officials from various Nazi ministries and organizations at Wannsee, a suburb of Berlin. The agenda was simple and focused: to devise a plan that would render a “final solution to the Jewish question” in Europe. Various gruesome proposals were discussed, including mass sterilization and deportation to the island of Madagascar. Heydrich proposed simply transporting Jews from every corner Europe to concentration camps in Poland and working them to death.
Although the word “extermination” was never uttered during the meeting, the implication was clear. “In large, single-sex labor columns, Jews fit to work will work their way eastwards constructing roads. Doubtless the large majority will be eliminated by natural causes. Any final remnant that survives will doubtless consist of the most resistant elements. They will have to be dealt with appropriately, because otherwise, by natural selection, they would form the germ cell of a new Jewish revival.”
One copy of the Wannsee Protocol, the minutes of the meeting which had been personally edited by Heydrich, survived the war to be found by Robert Kempner, lead U.S. prosecutor before the Nuremberg trials, in files that had been seized from the German Foreign Office. Those minutes later provided key evidence during the Nuremberg war crimes trials.

1945 – Franklin D. Roosevelt was inaugurated to his fourth term as President of the United States. Three months after his inauguration, he died. Roosevelt’s unparalleled 13 years as president led to the 1947 passing of the 22nd Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, limiting future presidents to a maximum of two elected terms in office, or one elected term if the president already served more than two years of another president’s elected term.

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1961 – John F. Kennedy was inaugurated as the 35th President of the United States. Kennedy, the youngest candidate ever elected to the presidency and the country’s first Catholic president, declared that “the torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans” and appealed to Americans to “ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.”

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1966 – Ted Williams was the sole eligible candidate elected the Baseball Hall of Fame by the elected to the Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America. The Veterans Committee elected former Yankees manager Casey Stengel. Williams, one of the greatest hitters in baseball history (and the last player to hit over .400 in a season when he hit .406 in 1941), was a two-time American League Most Valuable Player, six-time batting champion, 17-time All-Star and a two-time Triple Crown winner. He did all of that despite missing most of five seasons due to military service. He finished his career with a .344 batting average, 521 home runs, and a .482 on-base percentage, the highest of all time.
Oddly (or maybe not, considering the strange ways of the BBWAA), 20 writers left Williams off their ballot.

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1969 – Eight years after losing a bid for the presidency to John F. Kennedy – and six years after losing a race for California governor, which seemed to indicate his political career was over – Richard M. Nixon was inaugurated as the 37th President of the United States.

1980 – Bleachers at a bullring in Sincelejo, Colombia, collapsed, resulting in the deaths of 222 people. The collapse at Sincelejo, the deadliest tragedy at a sporting event in Colombia’s history, was the result of overcrowding and poor construction. In addition to the 222 spectators killed, hundreds more were injured.

1980 – In a letter to the United States Olympic Committee, President Jimmy Carter proposed that the 1980 Summer Olympics be moved from the planned host city, Moscow, if the Soviet Union failed to withdraw its troops from Afghanistan within a month.
Lord Killanin, president of the International Olympic Committee, reacted quickly to Carter’s statement, saying it was impossible to move the games from Moscow.
After the IOC denied Carter’s request, the USOC voted to boycott the Moscow games, a decision that Carter announced on March 21, 1980. The boycott devastated the hopes of many U.S. athletes, especially after Carter promised to revoke the passports of American athletes who traveled to the games in violation of the boycott. For his part, Killanin called the U.S. boycott a violation of the Olympic charter, pointing out that Moscow had been awarded the games in the mid-1970s as part of a binding contract.

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1980 – The Pittsburgh Steelers defeated the Los Angeles Rams, 31-19, at Super Bowl XIV. The Rams led 13-10 at the half and 19-17 at the end of the third quarter, but a 73-yard pass from Steelers quarterback Terry Bradshaw to John Stallworth and a Franco Harris 1-yard run changed that in the fourth quarter.

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1981 – Iran released 52 Americans held hostage for 444 days, just minutes after the presidency had passed from Jimmy Carter to Ronald Reagan.

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1984 – Actor Johnny Weissmuller (winner of five Olympic gold medals for swimming but best known for playing Tarzan in films of the 1930s and 1940s) died from pulmonary edema at the age of 79.

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1985 – The San Francisco 49es defeated the Miami Dolphins, 38-16, at Super Bowl XIX. The outcome wasn’t a big surprise. The 49ers were the first team to win 15 games in a regular season (15-1), and had ten players voted to the Pro Bowl.

1987 – British negotiator Terry Waite disappeared while attempting to win freedom for Western hostages held in Lebanon. Waite, special envoy of the archbishop of Canterbury, secured the release of missionaries detained in Iran after the Islamic revolution. He also extracted British hostages from Libya and even succeeded in releasing American hostages from Lebanon in 1986. A total of 10 captives had been released through Waite’s efforts before Shiite Muslims seized him during a return mission to Beirut. He was finally released more than four years later.

Barbara-Stanwyck
1990 – Actress Barbara Stanwyck (nominated four times for an Academy Award for Best Actress: Stella Dallas, Ball Of Fire, Double Indemnity, and Sorry, Wrong Number, and well known for her role in television’s The Big Valley) died of congestive heart failure at the age of 82.

1992 – Air Inter Flight 148 crashed into a mountain near Strasbourg, France, killing 87 of the 96 people on board. A design flaw in the computer mode selection system resulted in the crew selecting the wrong rate of descent.

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1993 – Actress Audrey Hepburn (Breakfast At Tiffany’s, Roman Holiday, My Fair Lady, A Nuns Story, Sabrina, Funny Face and so many more) died of colon cancer at the age of 63.

1996 – Yasser Arafat was elected president of the Palestinian National Council with 88.1 percent of the popular vote, becoming the first democratically elected leader of the Palestinian people in history.

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2009 – Barack Obama became the first African-American to be sworn in as President of the United States.

Compiled by Ray Lemire ©2016 RayLemire.com. All Rights Reserved.