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May Anniversaries

Momentous or Merely Memorable

  • Smithsonian magazine, May 2008, Subscribe
 

 
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    60 Years Ago
    Statehood
    On May 14, 1948, the eve of the expiration of British rule in Palestine, Israel declares its independence—becoming the first Jewish state in the Holy Land since Roman times. David Ben-Gurion, the first prime minister, asserts the "right of the Jewish people to be a nation." The Arab League, opposed to partitioning the territory, responds that only a unified Palestine will make the area secure. Within hours, Egypt, Iraq, Transjordan, Lebanon and Syria invade. The war, but not the conflict, ends in 1949.

    70 Years Ago
    Tick, Tick, Tick
    Oklahoma lawyer and newspaper publisher Carl Magee patents the parking meter on May 24, 1938. First deployed three years earlier in Oklahoma City to deter people from parking all day in front of shops, Magee's nickel-eating meters overcome protests—What's next? A sidewalk tax?—and spread quickly; 140,000 are in use by 1941. Today parking meters have joined the digital age: in some cities you can feed your meter with a call from your cellphone.

    100 Years Ago
    Home Run
    "Take Me Out to the Ball Game," by Albert Von Tilzer and Jack Norworth, is registered for copyright May 2, 1908. The song about a girl who'd rather go to a ballgame than a show gets more play that summer in theaters—illustrated by glass lantern slides—than in ballparks. But when the fall Cubs/Giants pennant race gives the nation baseball fever, three recordings of the song hit the top ten. Now a staple of the seventh-inning stretch, "Ball Game" will be the first song featured on a postage stamp, in June 2008.

    110 Years Ago
    Ready, Aim, Fire!
    Commodore George Dewey leads the U.S. Asiatic Squadron against the Spanish fleet in Manila Bay in the Philippines, May 1, 1898, in the decisive battle of the Spanish-American War. "You may fire when you are ready, Gridley," Dewey orders at 5:40 a.m. By noon the Spanish forces are devastated. Dewey gets an admiralty and President McKinley opts to take over the Philippines, a U.S. possession until 1946.

    140 Years Ago
    Civil War D-Day
    The first national observance of Decoration Day honors Civil War dead on May 30, 1868. By order of Gen. John Logan of the Grand Army of the Republic, a Union veterans group, graves are strewn with flowers (by orphans at Arlington Cemetery, right). After World War I, all American war dead are remembered. Later renamed Memorial Day, the holiday moves to the last Monday in May in 1971.

    510 Years Ago
    Sailing into History
    Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama lands in Calicut, India, on May 20, 1498, the first European to find a sea route to the East. Though his gifts—cloth, scarlet hoods, strings of coral, wash basins, sugar, oil and honey—are scorned by the local ruler's agents, who prefer gold, his discovery enables Portugal to dominate the valuable spice trade.


    60 Years Ago
    Statehood
    On May 14, 1948, the eve of the expiration of British rule in Palestine, Israel declares its independence—becoming the first Jewish state in the Holy Land since Roman times. David Ben-Gurion, the first prime minister, asserts the "right of the Jewish people to be a nation." The Arab League, opposed to partitioning the territory, responds that only a unified Palestine will make the area secure. Within hours, Egypt, Iraq, Transjordan, Lebanon and Syria invade. The war, but not the conflict, ends in 1949.

    70 Years Ago
    Tick, Tick, Tick
    Oklahoma lawyer and newspaper publisher Carl Magee patents the parking meter on May 24, 1938. First deployed three years earlier in Oklahoma City to deter people from parking all day in front of shops, Magee's nickel-eating meters overcome protests—What's next? A sidewalk tax?—and spread quickly; 140,000 are in use by 1941. Today parking meters have joined the digital age: in some cities you can feed your meter with a call from your cellphone.

    100 Years Ago
    Home Run
    "Take Me Out to the Ball Game," by Albert Von Tilzer and Jack Norworth, is registered for copyright May 2, 1908. The song about a girl who'd rather go to a ballgame than a show gets more play that summer in theaters—illustrated by glass lantern slides—than in ballparks. But when the fall Cubs/Giants pennant race gives the nation baseball fever, three recordings of the song hit the top ten. Now a staple of the seventh-inning stretch, "Ball Game" will be the first song featured on a postage stamp, in June 2008.

    110 Years Ago
    Ready, Aim, Fire!
    Commodore George Dewey leads the U.S. Asiatic Squadron against the Spanish fleet in Manila Bay in the Philippines, May 1, 1898, in the decisive battle of the Spanish-American War. "You may fire when you are ready, Gridley," Dewey orders at 5:40 a.m. By noon the Spanish forces are devastated. Dewey gets an admiralty and President McKinley opts to take over the Philippines, a U.S. possession until 1946.

    140 Years Ago
    Civil War D-Day
    The first national observance of Decoration Day honors Civil War dead on May 30, 1868. By order of Gen. John Logan of the Grand Army of the Republic, a Union veterans group, graves are strewn with flowers (by orphans at Arlington Cemetery, right). After World War I, all American war dead are remembered. Later renamed Memorial Day, the holiday moves to the last Monday in May in 1971.

    510 Years Ago
    Sailing into History
    Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama lands in Calicut, India, on May 20, 1498, the first European to find a sea route to the East. Though his gifts—cloth, scarlet hoods, strings of coral, wash basins, sugar, oil and honey—are scorned by the local ruler's agents, who prefer gold, his discovery enables Portugal to dominate the valuable spice trade.

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    Comments

    Ref: "100 years ago: Home Run The sheet music depicted is one that I have in my possession, with the exception of the female depicted and noted as "Marion Wilder". I am noticing in researching this item that there have been many depictions of male and female on the covers of this particular graphic of the sheet music. The one I have is dated as MCMVIII (1908). Can you give me any information as to it's "originality" and also some clarification as to the variations with regards to the people depicted in the "square on the right side of the sheet music cover?. Thank you for any help you can give me. Much appreciation! Love this magazine!

    Posted by Roobert N. Atkinson on May 10,2008 | 07:48 PM

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    In The Magazine

    February 2012

    • Gold Fever
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    • Mad for Dickens
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