A Focus on History: May 19-25

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May 19

Explosion in Coal Creek, Tenn. kills 184 miners. – 1902.

Thirty-one dockworkers are killed, 350 workers and others are injured, when four barges carrying 467 tons of ammunition blow up at South Amboy, N.J.. They were transporting mines that had been deemed unsafe by the Army and were being shipped to the Asian market for sale. – 1950.

May 20

The U.S. Congress passes the Homestead Act which allows adults over the age of 21, male and female, to claim 160 acres of land from the public domain. Eligible persons had to cultivate the land and improve it by building a barn or house, and live on the claim for five years, at which time the land became theirs with a $10. filing fee. – 1862.

San Francisco businessman Levi Strauss and Reno, Nev., tailor Jacob Davis are given a patent to create work pants reinforced with metal rivets, which marks the birth of one of the world’s most famous garments: Blue jeans. – 1873.

The Railway Labor Act took effect today. It was the first federal legislation protecting workers’ rights to form unions. – 1926.

May 21

American pilot Charles A. Lindbergh lands at Le Bourget Field in Paris, to successfully complete the first solo, nonstop transatlantic flight and the first nonstop flight between New York to Paris, which took 33½ hours. – 1927.

May 22

A massive wagon train, made up of 1,000 settlers and 1,000 head of cattle, sets off down the Oregon Trail from Independence, Mo., known as the “Great Emigration.” -1843.

Civil Service Retirement Act of 1920 gives federal workers a pension. – 1920.

May 23

An estimated 100,000 textile workers, including more than 10,000 children, strike in the Philadelphia area. Among the issues: 60-hour work weeks, including night hours, for the children. – 1903.

Famed fugitives, Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker, are killed in a police ambush near Sailes, La.. A contingent of officers from Texas and Louisiana set up along the highway, waiting for Bonnie and Clyde to appear, and then unload a two-minute fusillade of 167 bullets at their car, to kill the criminal couple. – 1934.

Ten thousand strikers at Toledo, Ohio’s Auto-Lite plant repel police who have come to break up their strike for union recognition. The next day, two strikers are killed and 15 wounded when National Guard machine gun units open fire. Two weeks later the company recognized the union and agreed to a five percent raise. – 1934.

May 24

After 14 years of construction and the deaths of 27 workers, the Brooklyn Bridge over New York’s East River opens. Newspapers call it “the eighth wonder of the world.” – 1883.

A referee’s call disallowed an apparent goal for Peru in a soccer match between Peru and Argentina, a qualifying game for the 1964 Olympics. The stadium crowd went wild and the resulting panic and crowd-control measures taken causes a stampede in which more than 300 fans were killed and another 500 were injured in the violent melee that followed at National Stadium in Lima, Peru. – 1964.

May 25

With George Washington presiding, the Constitutional Convention formally convenes on this day in 1787. The convention faced a daunting task: The peaceful overthrow of the new American government as it had been defined by the Articles of Confederation. – 1787.

Thousands of unemployed WWI veterans arrive in Washington, D.C. to demand a bonus they had been promised, but never received. They built a shantytown near the U.S. Capitol, but were burned out by U.S. troops after two months. – 1932.

American Airlines Flight 191, with 271 aboard, raises its nose during the initial stage of the takeoff and an engine under the left wing breaks off with its pylon assembly and falls to the runway at Chicago’s O’Hare Airport. Moments later, the aircraft crashes into an open field about a half-mile from its takeoff point, and kills all 271 aboard and two employees at a nearby repair garage. It was the worst domestic air crash in U.S. history. – 1979.

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