December 8, 1660: A Woman Takes The Stage

A Woman Takes the English Public Stage: Margaret Hughes or Anne Marshall as Desdemona in Othello On December 8, 1660, the English public stage witnessed a groundbreaking moment when a woman performed professionally for the first time, breaking with centuries of tradition. Historians continue…

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December 5, 1766: Christie’s Holds A Sale

London in the 1760s was a city in the midst of profound commercial and cultural transformation. The Seven Years’ War had recently concluded, redirecting wealth and attention back toward domestic pursuits; aristocratic collections, gentlemanly libraries, and cabinets of curiosity were flourishing; and the city’s…

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December 3, 1775: Americans Fly Their Own Flag

On December 3, 1775—six months after Lexington and Concord, and amid the halting, improvisational birth of a Continental Navy—the newly commissioned USS Alfred unfurled a banner no American warship had ever carried. It was not yet the “Stars and Stripes,” nor anything immediately recognizable…

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December 3, 1800: Congress Breaks A Tie

The United States presidential election of 1800 remains one of the most dramatic and pivotal in the nation’s history. At its core was the Electoral College, the mechanism by which the president and vice president are formally elected. On December 3, the electors cast…

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