On This Day
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From: Reference.com On This Day 
To: Cynthia Groopman 
Sent: Tuesday, May 19, 2009 3:00 AM
Subject: Tuesday May 19, 2009: Reference.com On This Day


      
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      On This Day:
      Tuesday May 19, 2009
      This is the 139th day of the year, with 226 days remaining in 2009.

      Fact of the Day: Gone With the Wind
      After an ankle injury in 1926, Margaret Mitchell (1900-1949) left the 
Atlanta Journal newspaper and for the next 10 years worked slowly on a romantic 
novel about the Civil War and Reconstruction as seen from a southern point of 
view. For six years after it was finished, the novel was set aside by Mitchell. 
But in 1935, Mitchell was persuaded to submit her manuscript for publication 
and it came out the next year. Within six months 1 million copies had been 
sold; 50,000 copies were sold in one day. It has sold more copies than any 
other novel in U.S. publishing history, and was eventually translated into 25 
languages. It was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1937 and made into a movie in 
1939. Mitchell, who had trouble adjusting to her celebrity and never attempted 
another book, died after an automobile accident in 1949.


      Holidays
      Feast day of St. Dunstan, St. Pudentiana, St. Peter Celestine, Saints 
Calocerus and Parthenius, St. Ivo of Kermartin, St. Crispin of Viterbo, and St. 
Peter Morrone.
      Turkey: Youth and Sports Day.


      Events
      1535 - French explorer Jacques Cartier set sail for North America.
      1588 - The Spanish Armada set sail from Lisbon on a mission to secure 
control of the English Channel and transport a Spanish invasion army to Britain 
from the Netherlands.
      1602 - Martha's Vineyard was first sighted by Captain Bartholomew Gosnold.
      1643 - The Confederation of New England was formed by Connecticut, New 
Haven, Plymouth, and Massachusetts Bay.
      1649 - England was declared a Commonwealth.
      1749 - King George II of England granted the Ohio Company a charter of 
several hundred thousand acres of land on the Ohio River, thereby promoting 
westward settlement by colonists from Virginia; this directly challenged the 
French claim to Ohio and was a direct cause of the outbreak of the French and 
Indian War in 1754.
      1780 - Midday near-total darkness struck New England. No scientific 
explanation was ever verified.
      1846 - The first steamship arrived in Hawaii.
      1884 - The Ringling Brothers Circus first performed.
      1898 - Postcards were first authorized by the U.S. Post Office.
      1900 - The world's longest railroad tunnel, the 12-mile-long Simplon 
Tunnel linking Switzerland to Italy through the Alps, opened.
      1906 - The Federated Boys' Clubs organization, forerunner of the Boys' 
Clubs of America, was established. 
      1914 - The Greyhound Bus Company was founded.
      1935 - The National Football League adopted an annual college draft to 
begin in 1936.
      1958 - The United States and Canada formally established the North 
American Air Defense Command. 
      1967 - The Soviet Union ratified a treaty with the United States and 
Britain banning nuclear weapons from outer space. 
      1996 - A large asteroid came within 281,000 miles of the Earth.
      2005 - "Revenge of the Sith," the final chapter of the "Star Wars" 
adventure series, opened in movie theaters.


      Births
      1890 - Ho Chi Minh (Nguyen That Thanh), North Vietnamese leader, founder 
of Indochina Community Party.
      1895 - Johns Hopkins, American merchant and philanthropist.
      1925 - Malcolm X (Malcolm Little), American black nationalist and civil 
rights activist.
      1945 - Pete Townshend, English rock guitarist, singer, songwriter, and 
composer.
      1952 - Joey Ramone (born Jeffry Ross Hyman), American musician.


      Deaths
      1935 - "Lawrence of Arabia" (T.E. Lawrence) died in England from injuries 
sustained in a motorcycle crash.
      1971 - Ogden Nash, American poet best known for writing pithy light verse.
      1994 - Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, American former First Lady.
      1998 - Uno Sosuke, Japanese politician and the 75th Prime Minister of 
Japan.
     

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