|
Click on date for list of events
|
About the EdGate Calendar
The EdGate Calendar contains not only thematic ideas and daily lesson starter ideas, but is also intended to be a tool for cultural literacy. We hope you use and enjoy this tool.
The EdGate team verifies dates and information in our calendar. Should you find an error of omission (an event date that you feel needs to be included) or an error of fact (a date we have incorrectly identified), please take the time to contact us at customercare@edgate.com so we can improve our tools for you, the teacher.
Thank you again for visiting the EdGate Calendar.
|
|
Pop-up ad. EdGate staff has reviewed the content for this site. There are some external links that have ads but contain excellent content. These sites will have the pop-up ad symbol after the description.
|
|
|
|
December is:
Identity Theft Prevention and
Awareness Month
National Drunk and Drugged
Driving Prevention Month
National
Stress Free Family Holiday Month 
Safe Toys and
Gifts Month
Universal Human Rights Month
|
1 |
- National
Aplastic Anemia and MDS Awareness Week December 1 – 7, 2007
- World AIDS
Day
- Rosa Parks
Day honors Mrs. Rosa Parks, an African American woman who was
arrested for refusing to give up her bus seat to a white patron. (1955)
- Martin Heinrich
Klaproth, chemist and discoverer of uranium, was born. (1743)
- Sherlock
Holmes first appeared in print in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's novel A
Study in Scarlet. (1887)
- Basketball was
first played. (1891)
- World's
Fair at
St. Louis
closed. (1904)
- Boys Town was opened by Father Edward Flanagan close to
Omaha,
Nebraska,
as a farm village for wayward boys. (1917) Girls have attended since 1971.
Back to Top |
2 |
- National
Handwashing Awareness Week December
2 – 8, 2007
- Special Education Day
- Monroe
Doctrine address was given by President James Monroe to protect the
United States
against colonization by other countries. (1823)
- George Seurat,
pointillist painter, was born in
Paris.
(1859)
- First nuclear reactor was developed by Enrico Fermi and scientists at the
University of
Chicago.
It caused the controlled release of nuclear energy and marked the beginning of
the atomic age. (1942)
- Eight National Parks Established in
Alaska
(1980)
- In a move to save fuel, 99% of
U.S.
gas stations closed voluntarily. (1973)
- Barney B. Clark became the first artificial heart recipient.
Clark survived with the artificial
heart for over three months. (1982)
- Aaron Copland,
U.S.
composer, died. (1990)
Back to Top |
3 |
- United
Nations International Day of Disabled Persons
- Illinois became the 21st state. (1818)
- Heart of Darkness author Joseph Conrad was born. (1857)
- Opera singer Maria Callas, internationally famous soprano, was born. (1923)
- First female
officer in the regular army, Colonel Mary Agnes Hallaren, was sworn
in. (1948)
Back to Top |
4 |
- Hanukkah,
December 4 - 12, 2007
- National Inclusive
Schools Week,
December
3 - 7, 2007
- James Monroe was elected fifth President of the
United States
. (1816)
- The Grange,
a farmer's fraternal organization, was founded. (1867)
- "Boss"
Tweed, notorious leader of
New York City's
Democratic political machine, escaped from prison and fled to
Europe.
(1875)
- Suriname was admitted to the United Nations.
(1975)
- NASA’s first Mars rover launched at
Cape Canaveral. (1996)
Back to Top |
5 |
- International
Volunteer Day
- Discovery
Day celebrates
Haiti
's discovery by Christopher Columbus.
- Martin Van Buren, eighth U.S. President, was born. He was the first President born a citizen of
the
United States
.
(1782)
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart died. (1791)
- Walt Disney was born. (1901)
- Davy Crockett TV series aired its first episode. (1954)
- The labor organization AFL-CIO was founded. (1955)
Back to Top |
6 |
- St. Nicholas
Day marks the beginning of Christmas season for the several European
countries.
- 13th Amendment of the Constitution was ratified, abolishing slavery in the
United States
. (1865)
- Harriet Tubman,
a
Maryland
slave, escaped from her owners. She went to
Pennsylvania and began her work on the
Underground Railroad. (1849)
- On the Washington Monument,
workers placed the 3,300-pound marble capstone. (1884)
Back to Top |
7 |
- International Civil
Aviation Day
- Delaware became the first state of the
United
States
. (1787)
- James Madison was elected fourth U.S. President. (1808)
- The New York Philharmonic
Society gave its first public concert. (1842)
- Willa Cather,
author of many novels and short story collections, was born. (1873)
- The gas absorption refrigerator,
with no moving parts, was patented by Electrolux Servel Corporation. (1926)
- Pearl Harbor
Day, a "date which will live in infamy," brought about
immediate
U.S.
entry into WWII. (1941)
- Jupiter probe from the spacecraft Galileo successfully entered the planet’s
atmosphere. (1995)
Back to Top |
8 |
- Eli Whitney,
inventor of the cotton gin, was born. (1765)
- Diego Rivera,
Mexican painter and muralist, was born. (1886)
-
Britain
and the
United States declared war on
Japan
following the attack on
Pearl
Harbor the previous day. (1941)
- Chiang Kai-Shek's government moved to
Formosa
(
Taiwan
) after being
driven out of mainland
China
by the Communists led by Mao Zedong. (1949)
- Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics ceased to exist. The Commonwealth of
Independent States was created. (1991)
Back to Top |
9 |
- John Milton,
British poet, best known for Paradise Lost, was born. (1608)
-
New York's
first daily newspaper,
"The American Minerva," established by Noah Webster. (1793)
- Ball bearing roller skate was patented by Levant Richardson of Chicago, Illinois. (1884)
- The Cold War’s John Birch Society was founded in the
United States
, vowing to fight
communism. (1958)
Back to Top |
10 |
- Human Rights Day
- Massachusetts
colony bills of credit for soldiers were the first official currency
in
America
.
(1690)
- T. H.
Gallaudet, teacher of hearing impaired, was born. (1787)
- Mississippi became the 20th
U.S.
state. (1817)
- Emily Dickinson,
American poet, was born. (1830)
- Melvil
Dewey, American librarian and inventor of the Dewey decimal system,
was born. (1851)
- Spanish American
War ended by the Treaty of Paris. (1898)
- First Nobel Prize was awarded. (1901)
- Reverend
Martin Luther King received the Nobel Peace Prize. He was the
youngest person to receive this award. (1964)
Back to Top |
11 |
- Hector Berlioz,
the French composer of "Symphonie Fantastique" and "Romeo et
Juliette," was born. (1803)
- Indiana became
the 19th
U.S.
state. (1816)
- Annie Jump
Cannon, astronomer, was born. (1863)
- Aleksandr
I. Solzhenitsyn, Russian-American author of One Day in the Life
of Ivan Denisovich, was born. (1918)
- Boll Weevil
Monument was dedicated by the citizens of
Enterprise,
Alabama.
(1919)
- UNICEF, the United
Nations International Children's Emergency Fund, was established. (1946)
Back to Top |
12 |
- Poinsettia
Day. The poinsettia was named after Joel Roberts Poinsett, who died
on
December 12, 1851.
- First transatlantic wireless
message was sent by Guglielmo Marconi, who used a wired kite as a
receiving antenna. (1901)
- The Mona Lisa was recovered after being stolen two years earlier. (1913)
- Frank Sinatra, Italian-American singer, actor, and entertainer with a career spanning more
than 50 years, was born. (1915)
- Japanese aircraft sank the USS Panay in
Yangtze River near
Nanking,
China
. (1937)
Back to Top |
13 |
- Sir Francis
Drake sets out from
Plymouth,
England
, on
his round-the-world voyage (1577)
- Mary Todd Lincoln,
First Lady of the
United States
, was born. (1818)
- The Susan B.
Anthony coin, the first coin with the likeness of an American woman,
was issued. (1978)
- Al Gore concedes Presidential Election to George Bush (2000)
Back to Top |
14 |
- The Geminid meteor
shower will peak around
December 14, 2007.
- Danish astronomer Tycho
Brahe was born. (1546)
- George Washington,
first U.S. President, died. (1799)
- Alabama became the
22nd
U.S.
state. (1819)
- South Pole was finally reached by Roald Amundsen. (1911)
Back to Top |
15 |
- International
Language Week,
December
14-20, 2007
- Bill of Rights
Day celebrates the adoption of the Bill of Rights in 1791.
- Alexandre
Gustave Eiffel, French engineer famous for his tower, was born.
(1832)
- Gone With the
Wind premiered in
Atlanta,
Georgia
. (1939)
Back to Top |
16 |
- Posadas begins. Posadas is an annual Mexican celebration in which processions of "pilgrims"
knock at doors asking for posada, or shelter.
- Ludwig von
Beethoven, composer, was born in
Germany
. (1770)
- Boston Tea
Party occurred, in which Americans expressed their dislike for a new
tea tax by dumping tea into
Boston
Harbor. (1773)
- Jane Austen,
English novelist of Emma, Pride and Prejudice, and Sense and
Sensibility, was born. (1775)
- Chief Sitting
Bull of the Oglala Sioux was killed. (1890)
- WWII’s Battle of
the Bulge began. (1944)
Back to Top |
17 |
- Deborah Sampson,
who fought in the Revolutionary War disguised as a man, was born. (1760)
- Ludwig Van
Beethoven, world-famous composer, was baptized. (1770)
- A Christmas
Carol by Charles Dickens was published in
London. (1843)
- Orchestra conductor Arthur Fiedler was born. (1894)
- The Wright brothers completed the first successful powered flight. (1903)
- Radiocarbon
dating inventor Willard Frank Libby was born. (1908)
Back to Top |
18 |
- Greatest clown in history,
Joseph Grimaldi, was born. (1778)
- New Jersey became the third
U.S.
state. (1787)
- Tyrus Raymond
(Ty) Cobb, the famed American baseball player, was born. (1886)
- The first giant panda to
come to the
U.S.
from
China
, Su-Lin, arrived in
San Francisco. (1936)
- Japan was admitted
to the United Nations. (1956)
- Alaska Native
Claims Act returned 40 million acres of land and $1 billion to
native Alaskan tribes. (1971)
Back to Top |
19 |
- Sir William
Edward Parry, Arctic explorer, was born. (1790)
- Corrugated paper was
patented. (1871)
- The Williamsburg Bridge,
America’s first major suspension bridge, opened in
New York City. (1903)
- The National Hockey League
played its first games. (1917)
- Richard Leakey,
anthropologist from a famous family, was born. (1944)
- First radio broadcast from
space was transmitted from the
U.S.
satellite Atlas. It was
a recorded message from President Dwight D. Eisenhower: "I convey to you
and to all mankind
America
's wish for peace on Earth and good will toward men everywhere." (1958)
- First personal computer, the Altair 8800,
became available for sale. (1974)
Back to Top |
20 |
- Three small ships left
England
and eventually colonized what is now Jamestown,
Virginia. (1606)
- Russian calendar was reorganized by Peter the Great, decreeing that the new year would
begin on January 1 and not September 1. (1699)
- Louisiana
Purchase became final as representatives from the
United States
and
France
signed the original documents.
(1803)
- Sacagawea, Native
American guide and interpreter for Lewis and Clark on their trip west to the
Pacific Ocean, died. (1812)
- South Carolina became
the first state to secede from the
Union.
(1860)
- First
incandescent light bulb, although perfected in October, was
demonstrated by Thomas Alva Edison. (1879)
- U.S. Poet
Laureate established. (1985)
- Astronomer,
educator, and Pulitzer Prize-winning author Carl Sagan died. (1996)
Back to Top |
21 |
- Forefathers’ Day celebrates
the anniversary of the Pilgrims landing in
America
in 1620.
- Medal of Honor,
the nation's highest award for valor, authorized by Congress, originally for
only naval accomplishments. (1861)
- Joseph Stalin,
totalitarian
Soviet Union ruler, was born.
(1879)
- The first junior high
schools in the
United States
, McKinley and
Washington
Schools in
Berkeley,
California, were established.
(1909)
- The first crossword puzzle was published in the New York World. (1913)
- Apollo 8 was launched. The astronauts were the first men to orbit the moon and see the
side facing away from Earth. (1968)
Back to Top |
22 |
- Winter
Solstice in the Northern Hemisphere. It is the shortest day of the
year and the beginning of winter. (2007)
- Frank Kellogg,
U.S.
Secretary of State who
tried to outlaw war, was born. (1856)
- Giacomo
Puccini, romantic opera composer, was born. (1858)
- Connie Mack,
major league baseball player, was born. (1862)
- Claudia "Lady Bird"
Johnson, wife of President Lyndon Baines Johnson, was born. (1912)
- Beatrix
Potter, English author of children’s books, died. (1943)
Back to Top |
23 |
- "Account of
a Visit from St. Nicholas" (the poem now known as "The
Night Before Christmas") was published anonymously in the
Troy,
New York, Sentinel. (1823)
- Vincent van Gogh,
Dutch painter, removed part of his own ear. (1888)
- The Federal Reserve
System was established with the responsibility for execution of
monetary policy for the
United
States
. (1913)
- The transistor was invented. (1947)
- Metric Conversion
Act was passed by the U.S. Congress. It declared that "SI
(International System of Units) will be the basic system of measurement."
(1975)
Back to Top |
24 |
- Kit Carson, one of
the most famous mountain men and scouts in the West, was born. (1809)
- Treaty of
Ghent ended the War of 1812. (1814)
- "Silent Night"
was performed for the first time in
Oberndorf,
Austria
, by
Gruber and Mohr. (1818)
Back to Top |
25 |
- Christmas is observed by many as a celebration of the birth of Jesus. The holiday has
roots in pagan celebrations such as Yule and the Roman festival of Saturnalia,
which was also a time of gift-giving and merry-making. Today Kris Kringle, Santa
Claus, and Father Winter are said to visit children around the world with
gifts.
- Clara
Barton, American nurse, philanthropist, founder, and president of
the American Red Cross, was born. (1881)
Back to Top |
26 |
- Kwanzaa begins on this date, and the African American celebration continues until
January 1. It's based on the East African harvest festival Kwanzaa, meaning
"first fruits" in Swahili.
- Boxing Day was
originally a day when gifts (boxes) were given to servants and tradespeople. In
Canada
,
England
, and certain other
English-speaking countries, this day is set aside to thank people who provide
services.
- Washington crossed
the Delaware River. (1776)
- Charles Babbage,
British inventor and mathematician who pioneered modern computers, was born.
(1792)
- Commodore
George Dewey, naval hero of the Spanish-American War, was born in
Montpelier,
Vermont.
(1837)
- Mao Zedong,
first leader of the People's Republic of
China
, was born. (1893)
- Radium discovery announced by scientists Pierre and Marie Curie. (1898)
-
Indian Ocean Earthquake
and Tsunami (2004)
Back to Top |
27 |
- Johannes
Kepler, the father of modern astronomy, was born in
Wurttemberg
,
Germany
. (1571)
- Louis Pasteur,
French chemist-bacteriologist, was born. His experiments disproved the theory
of spontaneous generation, showing that life only comes from life, and
developed the technique of pasteurization for food safety. (1822)
- Charles
Darwin began his voyage aboard the HMS Beagle. (1831)
Back to Top |
28 |
- Iowa became the 29th
U.S.
state. (1846)
- Thomas
Woodrow Wilson, 28th U.S. President, was born. (1856)
Back to Top |
29 |
- Andrew Johnson,
17th U.S. President, was born. (1808)
- Texas became the 28th
U.S.
state. (1845)
- The Wounded
Knee massacre occurred, in which unarmed Sioux, including women and
children, were killed by the U.S. Seventh Cavalry at the Pine Ridge reservation
in
South Dakota.
(1890)
Back to Top |
30 |
- Robert Boyle,
Irish chemist and physicist, died. Boyle’s Law states that the pressure and
volume of gas are inversely proportional. (1691)
- Gadsden Purchase,
defining the Mexico-U.S. border, was signed. (1853)
- Rudyard Kipling,
English poet and novelist famous for The Jungle Book and Captains
Courageous, was born. (1865)
- The Pirates of Penzance,
Gilbert and Sullivan’s comic operetta, had its first performance. (1879)
Back to Top |
|
31 |
- Henri Matisse,
the painter, was born. (1869)
- "Auld Lang
Syne" was played by Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians as a
New Year’s Eve song for the first time. (1929)
- WWII was proclaimed over by President Truman. (1946)
Back to Top |
|
|
|
|
|