On a summer night meant to settle a grudge and crown a champion, the world of boxing witnessed instead one of the most shocking meltdowns in sports history. In just three rounds inside the MGM Grand Garden Arena, Mike Tyson didn’t just lose a…
Read MoreOn June 27, 1974, President Richard M. Nixon arrived in Moscow for what would be his final summit with Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev—a visit overshadowed by scandal at home and a shifting geopolitical order abroad. Though the meeting marked a continuation of the historic…
Read MoreHungry sailors are not to be trifled with. That’s what happened aboard the Russian battleship the Potemkin on June 27, 1905. Spoiled meat sparked a storm of rebellion that echoed across revolutionary-minded Russia. The US Naval Institute helps contextualize things: “For a century before 1905, Imperial Russia was…
Read More“The Lottery,” a short story by Shirley Jackson, was published in The New Yorker magazine on June 26, 1948. Its publication marked a pivotal moment in American literature due to its controversial nature and the profound impact it had on readers and critics alike.…
Read MoreOn June 25, 1947, The Diary of a Young Girl—commonly known as The Diary of Anne Frank—was first published, forever embedding itself into the collective conscience as one of the most poignant accounts of human suffering and resilience during World War II. Anne Frank,…
Read MoreThe morning of June 24, 1314, dawned on a sodden and bloodied field near the Bannock Burn, where the fate of a nation hung by a thread. By day’s end, that thread would not snap but be reforged into iron. Against impossible odds, a…
Read MoreOn June 24, 1497, John Cabot, an Italian navigator commissioned by King Henry VII of England, became the first European to lead an expedition to North America since the Norse explorations of Vinland. His historic landing stood as a pivotal moment in the era…
Read MoreOn June 23, 1280—amid the smoldering tension of Iberia’s long spiritual war—a Castilian host rode into the mountains west of Granada, bearing the cross upon their banners and the weight of Christendom on their shoulders. These were not mere soldiers of a temporal crown.…
Read MoreThe Scholastic Aptitude Test, or SAT, was first administered on June 23, 1926, and has since evolved to become a central component of the college admissions process in the United States. The origin of the SAT can goes back to the early 20th century,…
Read MoreOn the afternoon of June 22, 1807, off the coast of Norfolk, Virginia, a violent encounter between the British warship HMS Leopard and the American frigate USS Chesapeake ignited a firestorm of national outrage and set the United States on a slow march toward…
Read More