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User:Crunchydillpickle/List of unusual anniversaries

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This is a list of anniversaries that was initially compiled by Crunchydillpickle and hopefully will be lovingly nurtured by Wikipedians who enjoy calendar-driven trivia and oddities. It's as if WP:UNUSUAL and WP:OTD had a baby! I would love if you added to it, but please be aware that I'll remove any additions that I don't consider sufficiently unusual (sorry). If you were thinking "Hm, this is cool, but I wish it were less goofy and more focused on classical music!" then boy oh boy are you going to love Gerda Arent's page!

Notices!

  • I need to add some entries from the list of unusual deaths and list of last words.
  • Some of my summaries are almost certainly a little wrong. I copied some of these over from a document that a friend and I have slowly, sloppily maintained for months. Imagine a phantom [citation needed] tag next to everything.

January

[edit]

Misc: Cadaver Synod (date unknown)

Date
January 0
January 1
  • Hatsuyume, the first dream of the new year in Japanese culture. For good luck, dream of eggplant, hawks, and Mount Fuji.
January 2
  • On approximately this day in 1962, the Candy Desk began providing US senators with mis-session candy.
  • Bean dad fallout occurred on Twitter in 2021.
January 3
  • In 2005, FOX launched the reality show Who's Your Daddy? in which an orphan girl had to figure out which of eight men was her biological father.
January 4
January 5
  • In 2002, a Florida teen stole a small airplane and crashed it into the Bank of America tower in downtown Tampa. Other than him, no one died.
January 6
January 7
January 8
  • George H. W. Bush vomiting incident occurred in 1992.
  • Emperor Norton died in 1880. San Francisco Chronicle led its article on Norton's funeral with the headline "Le Roi Est Mort." ("The King is dead"). People discovered that his tall tales about being rich were, as suspected, not true. His funeral had a rumored 2 mile cortege and 10,000 people came to view his body.
  • In 1999, Disney recalled copies of its animated movie The Rescuers because a scene showed a topless woman in the background.
January 9
  • In 1493, Christopher Columbus saw three mermaids and described them as "not half as beautiful as they are painted". They were almost certainly manatees.
  • Fred Ott's Sneeze was released in 1894, the US's oldest surviving copyrighted film. It is a 5-second reel of a man (one of Thomas Edison's assistants) with a weird sneeze.
January 10
  • Jack Lew was nominated to be Secretary of the Treasury in 2013. He almost didn't get the job because his extremely loopy signature would have looked weird on the US currency (he changed his signature).
January 11
  • Kagami biraki, a Japanese holiday in honor of the odd numbers in the 1/11 date (odd numbers are good luck). Perhaps you, like me, are not Japanese but will take advantage of any excuse to drink sake.
January 12
  • 1992 Troy State vs. DeVry men's basketball game finished with a score of 141-258, making it the highest-scoring NCAA game in history.
  • In 2007, a Sacramento radio station's "Hold Your Wee for a Wii" contest ended in death by water intoxication.
  • In 2004, an 84-year-old Kenyan man named Kimani Maruge became the oldest person to begin elementary school.
  • 1942, Lytle S. Adams proposed sending bat bombs to Japan. "Think of thousands of fires breaking out simultaneously over a circle of forty miles in diameter for every bomb dropped. Japan could have been devastated, yet with small loss of life."
  • In 1996, Georgia State Representative Doug Teper unsuccessfully sponsored a bill to replace that state's electric chair with the guillotine.
  • 2016 Pannenkoek2012
January 13
  • Bush choked on pretzel in 2001.
  • 2018 Hawaii false missile alert .
  • In 1920, a New York Times editorial said rockets could never work in space because in a vacuum there was nothing for them to push against. It later issued a correction and said it regretted the error.
January 14
  • Feast of the Ass
  • In 1872 Greyfriars Bobby died, a Skye Terrier who became famous in Edinburgh for spending fourteen years guarding the grave of his owner.
  • There's an NHL rule which says that players need to referee the game themselves if no officials can attend the game. It was enforced one time at a Hartford Whalers vs. New Jersey Devils game during a snowstorm on January 15, 1983.
January 15
  • Great Molasses Flood happened in Boston in 1919.
  • A small online encyclopedia project called "Wikipedia" started in 2001.
  • Toronto hobby tunnel was discovered near the Pan Am Games venue. It was not, as some feared terrorism, but the passion project of a young construction worker who really liked digging.
January 16
  • First flower grown in space in 2016! The picture in the article is very cute and oddly emotional. We are all little flowers hurtling through the universe.
  • Wikipedia's incredible Boops boops article was created in 2011.
January 17
January 18
January 19
January 20
January 21
January 22
January 23
  • In 1978, Terry Kath, guitarist and vocalist of the band Chicago, dies shooting himself in the head while cleaning his gun. His last words were allegedly "Don't worry, guys; it isn't loaded."
  • In 1996, a man suffocated after sleeping with tampons in his nose in an attempt to stop snoring.
  • In 1882 in Victorian London, a rogue writer inserted the phrase "The speaker then said he felt inclined for a bit of fucking" in a news article. It was called the "Harcourt interpolation."
January 24
  • Bong Hits 4 Jesus banner unfurled in 2002, which eventually led to a Supreme Court case.
  • An Air Force B-52 nearly nukes Greensboro, North Carolina in 1961.
January 25
  • Ship launched using 7,000 pounds of ripe bananas instead of traditional launching grease in 1941.
January 26
  • 1979 Nelson Rockefeller dies, prompting New York Magazine to write "Nelson thought he was coming, but he was going."
  • Atlanta Nights science fiction book published (outing PublishAmerica as a vanity press)
  • Bill Clinton "I did not have sexual relations with that woman" in 1998 (this is not remotely obscure but I'm keeping it for now)
  • There's an annual Australian cockroach racing event
  • In 1972, Vesna Vulović survived the highest fall without a parachute: 6.31 miles She was the sole survivor after a briefcase bomb tore through the baggage compartment of JAT Flight 367.
January 27
  • One of my favorite Bushisms: Bush implores an audience to imagine themselves as a single mother "working hard to put food on your family" in 2000.
  • Barbados vs Grenada soccer match. Both teams had to try to score goals against themselves. tk more
January 28
January 29
January 30
  • The Noid Hostage Crisis in 1989.
  • German cannibal Armin Meiwes arrested in 2002 after murdering and eating a guy (what's unusual is that the victim had previously consented to getting his penis severed and eaten).
January 31

February

[edit]
Date
February 1
  • Mathematicians Cox and Zucker published the obscene-sounding algorithm called the "Cox Zucker machine" in 1979.
February 2
  • In 1942, war clouds blacked out the groundhog shadow.
  • NYC mayor Bill DeBlasio dropped the groundhog in 2014.
February 3
February 4
  • Franz Reichelt died jumping off Eiffel with homemade parachute in 1912.
  • George HW Bush sent a letter around the White House saying his dog was getting fat.
February 5
February 6
February 7
February 8
February 9
  • An attorney who is now known as the Zoom Cat lawyer struggled to disable a cat filter during a Zoom civil forfeiture case in 2021.
  • George Dashnau died in 2001. He was "an advertising executive in Philadelphia who started the first mail order delivery service that supplied human skulls" when he was 55, using the name "The Skull Man". They cost $100 and he didn't reveal where they came from, supposedly to discourage competition. Good quote: "He started the business because he wanted to become rich, a dream that he had had for many years."
February 10
February 11
  • "The wrong type of snow" phrase, which came to denote pointless excuses, was coined by the British media in 1991.
  • Vice President Dick Cheney shot a man in 2006.
February 12
February 13
  • Floor of the National Corvette Museum collapsed 2014 due to a sinkhole, damaging eight rare and one-of-a-kind Corvettes that were together worth a million dollars.
February 14
February 15
February 16
  • Fuddle Duddle incident, where PM Pierre Trudeau uttered unparliamentary language in Canada's House of Commons in 1971.
February 17
February 18
  • In 1982, Ozzy Osbourne drunkenly urinated on a cenotaph that memorialized the Alamo. He was banned from the city of San Antonio for a decade.
  • In 1930, Pluto was discovered. Since it takes 248 years to orbit the sun, it had only completed less than half of an orbit as an official planet before it was demoted in 2006.
  • Bernard C. Webber singlehandedly saved 32 of 33 men when a ship broke in half during a 1952 storm.
February 19
February 20
February 21
February 22
February 23
February 24
February 25
February 26
  • The Dress went viral in 2015.
  • Spanish Wikipedia split from the rest of the Wikimedia projects in an event memorialized as The Spanish Fork, back in 2002 (it has since re-joined!).
  • Mariko Aoki phenomenon Wikipedia article was created in 2012.
  • Senator Jim Inhofe displays a snowball to disprove global warming in 2015.
February 27
  • Barbados 4-2 Grenada football game, in which bizarre rule introduced perverse incentives, happened in 1994.
February 28
February 29
  • Buenos Aires "Wobbly Rock" fell over in 1912.
  • La Bougie Sapeur, a satirical French newspaper only published on leap day, launched in 1980.

March

[edit]
Date
March 1
March 2
  • On March 2, 2005, congresswoman Ellen Tauscher used the Sedan nuclear test as an example of a test which produced a considerable amount of radioactive fallout. The name "Sedan" was incorrectly transcribed as "Sudan" in the Congressional Record, which sparked international outrage about supposed nukes in Sudan
March 3
March 4
March 5
March 6
  • Moving sofa problem was published. (note to self: check later. had this in my notes)
March 7
March 8
March 9
March 10
March 11
March 12
March 13
March 14
March 15
  • In 1995, the defunct computer manufacturer Symbolics registered the first .com domain, symbolics.com.
  • According to 1920s custom, straw hats could be worn in New York City from March 15 to September 15. (Violations of this rule led to the Straw Hat Riot in 1922).
March 16
  • Tsutomu Yamaguchi, one of the few people to survive both Nagasaki and Hiroshima, was born in 1916
  • Jeopardy had a three-way tie in 2007. I am including this because I really like Jeopardy.
  • Saint Urho — Minnesota invented its own St. Patrick equivalent
March 17
  • Salmon chaos, where tons of Taiwanese people legally changed their names to Salmon to take advantage of a restaurant promo, occured in 2021
March 18
  • Guy was suspended from school for wearing Pepsi shirt on National Coke Day in 1998. Sadly, there is no Wikipedia article about this. But I have nothing else for March 18, so here you go.
March 19
March 20
  • Shinzo Kanakuri finally finished his 1912 Olympic marathon with a time of 54 years and 8 months 6 days 5 hours 32 minutes 20 seconds. He commented "It was a long trip. Along the way, I got married, had six children and 10 grandchildren. It was 1967.
March 21
March 22
March 23
March 24
  • Baseball pitcher Randy Johnson hit a bird in 2001. The bird exploded.
  • In 1924, a Bronx Zoo orangutan indicated to a chess player that he should open with b4. He did and the opening is now sometimes called The Orangutan. The game ended in a draw.
March 25
  • Jonah Hill's performance in 21 Jump Street ended Kanye West's antisemitism in 2023
  • Ward Cunningham started the first wiki website in 1995. This is not particularly "weird" or "wacky" but I like wiki history.
March 26
March 27
March 28
March 29
  • Hyphen War ended in 1990. Not sure if this is particularly weird, but like many Wikipedians, I enjoy punctuation-related debates.
  • Clinton said "I didn’t inhale" referring to marijuana.
  • Release of the trailer for GTA IV leads to an incident in 2007.
March 30
March 31

April

[edit]
  • Unknown date: Roy Sullivan got struck by lightening for the first time in 1942. He survived six more strikes in his life.
  • Mrs. Miller's deliberately bad cover of "Downtown" peaked at #82 on the Billboard charts in 1966
Date
April 1
April 2
April 3
April 4
April 5
April 6
April 7
  • Disney delayed the release of A Goofy Movie from Thanksgiving 1994 to April 7, 1995 because three-quarters of the animated film had to be refilmed all because of a single dead pixel on a faulty monitor.
  • National Beer Day in the United States honors the end of Prohibition in 1933 (technically, the 21st Amendment didn't pass until December 5).
April 8
  • A bear named Wojtek joined the Polish military in 1942.
  • John Phillips, thought to be the longest serving prisoner in the United States, was locked up on April 8, 1952.
April 9
  • Ulysses S. Grant is arrested for speeding in 1866
  • In 1942, fifty elephants performed in pink tutus at Madison Square Garden as part of the Circus Polka by Stravinsky.
  • In 1984, a mysterious mushroom cloud appeared and was witnessed by more than one aircraft crew about 200 miles east of Japan. No radiation was ever detected. (NYTimes)
  • In 2013, when Margaret Thatcher died, some people misinterpreted the Twitter hashtag "#nowthatchersdead" to mean "Now that Cher's dead"
April 10
  • Dalai Lama "suck my tongue" incident 2023?
  • In 1877, the first "Human Cannonball" stunt was performed by 14-year old Rossa Matilda Richter at the Royal Aquarium in London.
April 11
April 12
April 13
  • New York Sun published a story in 1844 about a man crossing the Atlantic in three days, but it turned out to be The Balloon-Hoax orchestrated by Edgar Allan Poe.
April 14
April 15
  • Euthenasia Coaster concept was unveiled in 2011
  • Seattle mayor asked President Eisenhower for help with a "windshield epidemic" (which was actually a mass delusion) in 1954
  • British comedian Tommy Cooper suffered a fatal heart attack on live television in 1984.
April 16
  • The birthday of Grape-kun, the penguin who fell in love with an anime cutout character.
  • In 2003, the CNN.com premature obituary incident, pre-written draft obituaries for many public figured came to light. Because The Queen Mother's obituary was used as a template and the drafts were not finished, Dick Cheney was described as the "UK's favorite grandmother."
April 17
  • Piss Christ was vandalized by Christian protesters in 2011
  • on April 17, 1980, Winnie the Pooh took the stand in court because parents accused him (the actor) of hitting their daughter at Disneyland. To comply with Disney’s rule to always stay in character, he “could only use head nods, foot stomps and big swings of his tummy to indicate answers. At one point the defense attorney called Pooh a “she,” which prompted one of the “great legal clarifications in history, per SF Gate: “Are you testifying about Winnie the Pooh’s gender?” the judge asked. Since it was clear that Pooh’s arms “were not battering rams,” the jury only took 21 minutes deliberation to find him not guilty. Via SF Gate. The actor recently retold his court story on a podcast. "Mr. Chartrand’s attorney, Jeffrey Kaufman (who himself worked for Disney as a costumed character)" In 2004, after a Tigger actor was accused of inappropriate touching, the actor appeared in court with an attorney who himself had worked as a Disney character, and who wore the Tigger costume in court to demonstrate.
April 18
  • 1930, the BBC reported "there is no news" and instead played piano music (mentioned on the April 18 Wikipedia article)
April 19
  • Some guy in Pompeii made bread. We know this because a graffito that reads "XIII K. Maias panem feci" (On April 19, I made bread) survived the eruption.
April 20
April 21
  • Mark Twain was born on the day when Halley’s Comet flew by Earth and said once, "I came in with Halley’s Comet in 1835. It is coming again next year, and I expect to go out with it." He died the day of Halley's Comet's next appearance, April 21, 1910.
April 22
April 23
April 24
  • The first ever Josh Fight took place at Air Park in Lincoln, Nebraska in 2021.
April 25
  • Pepsi fruit juice flood happed in Russia in 2017
  • Lisztomania, the term for the mass love epidemic directed toward strapping young piano player Franz Liszt, was coined in 1844
April 26
April 27
  • First pirates were elected to national legislature (in Iceland)
  • Bus Uncle video was released in 2006
April 28
April 29
  • In 1945, one day before his death, Hitler order Dr. Werner Haase to test his cyanide capsules on his dog Blondi. Blondi died, and Hitler died the next day.
  • Televangelist Pat Robertson predicted the world would be destroyed on this day in 2007.
  • In 2015, a Chicago White Sox vs Baltimore Orioles game had (at the time) the lowest attendance for a Major League Baseball game. Due to security concerns regarding the civil unrest in Baltimore following the death of Freddie Gray, no fans were allowed.
  • Happy birthday to Tama, the calico cat who worked as a train station master in Japan.
April 30

May

[edit]
Date
May 1
May 2
  • Comcast accidentally replaced a Handy Manny broadcast with hard-core pornography for viewers in Lincroft, New Jersey in 2007.
May 3
  • Liberian general election 1927, most fraudulent election in recorded history with a 1,119% voter turnout rate.
  • In 1991, a warehouse in Milwaukee caught on fires and sent a river of liquid butter through the streets of Milwaukee. The Wisconsin Butter Fire continued to burn for a days.
May 4
May 5
  • In 1880, Adrian Carton de Wiart was born. He was shot in the face, head, stomach, ankle, leg, hip, and ear; was blinded in his left eye; survived two plane crashes; tunnelled out of a prisoner-of-war camp; and tore off his own fingers when a doctor declined to amputate them. Describing his experiences in the First World War, he wrote, "Frankly, I had enjoyed the war."
May 6
  • At the Battle of Prague in 1757,
  • In 2006, Devin Gaines attracted media attention for graduating with five degrees. Months later, he died because he didn't know how to swim.
May 7
May 8
  • In 2006, a man named Guy Goma who went to the BBC for a job interview was instead interviewed on live TV about a technology lawsuit.
May 9
  • In an operation called Orbiting Frog Otolith, NASA launched bullfrogs into orbit to see if they could balance in 1971.
May 10
  • In the 1893 case Nix v. Hedden, the US Supreme Court ruled that tomatoes were, for fiscal purposes, vegetables.
  • The app Send Me To Heaven, which encouraged people to throw their phones in the air, was released in 2013.
May 11
  • Cello Scrotum letter was printed in the British Medical Journal in 1974
May 12
May 13
May 14
  • Olympic Tug of War made its debut at the Paris Olympics in 1900.
  • On May 14, 1945, California house painter Albert Stevens was injected with 131 kBq of plutonium, becoming the "most radioactive human ever." He went to the hospital with an ulcer that was misdiagnosed as terminal cancer, and doctors chose him for the experiment because they thought "he was doomed" to die. He lived another two decades, setting out urine and stool samples in the garage for researchers to pick up weekly.
May 15
May 16
  • Bliefield conspiracy, a bizarre joke where Germans pretend the city of Bliefield doesn't exist, started in 1994
  • In 2001, British deputy prime minister John Prescott punched a protestor who threw an egg at him. History (and Wikipedia) remembers the incident as the Prescott punch.
May 17
May 18
May 19
  • On May 19th, 1999 when Star Wars: The Phantom Menace released into theaters, an estimated 2.2 million full time employees missed work to watch the film costing the US an estimated $293 million dollars from lose of productivity.
May 20
  • World Metrology Day, the anniversary of the 1875 Metre Convention! Perhaps you can celebrate by reading the list of unusual units of measurement.
  • In 1989, Soviet pilot Aleksandr Zuyev baked a cake with sleeping pills, fed it to his squadron, and while they were sleeping he wrestled the guard on duty, took control of a Mig-29 and flew it to Turkey, and defected from the USSR to USA. All because he wasn't selected to be promoted to test pilot! He eventually became a test pilot for the US.
May 21
  • The corpse of a migrating stork nicknamed "Pfeilstorch" was found in 1822 which served as evidence for bird migration. Previously, people weren't sure where all the birds went in the winter.
  • Christian radio host Harold Camping predicted the world would end on May 21, 2011.
May 22
  • At the 2013 Webby Awards, the inventor of the GIF says that "It's pronounced 'jif' not 'gif'".
  • In 2020, Saturn (alligator) in the Moscow Zoo died at the age of 83. He was born in Mississippi and gifted to the Berlin Zoo in 1936 (bad timing!), where he was nicknamed "Hitler". He escaped during the allied bombing in 1943. British soldiers found him three years later and gifted him to the Soviet Union. The paragraph about his narrow escapes with death is a thrilling read. What a life!
May 23
May 24
May 25
  • In 2003 an Angola 727 airplane was stolen with two people aboard and never found
  • Pepsi Number Fever, a 1992 sales promotion in the Philippines in which Pepsi accidentally made thousands of people winners. When people learned it was a mistake, and that they wouldn't each get prizes worth $40,000, they rioted in the streets and five people died.
May 26
  • Moondog was born 1916. Not sure if this is obscure enough but putting it in anyway.
May 27
  • Start of the Centralia mine fire in 1962. The fire is still burning beneath a Pennsylvania town.
May 28
  • Mathias Rust, a teenage amateur pilot, flew across the Soviet border and through the air-defense system to land in the middle of Moscow
  • Harambe was shot in 2016
  • Crypt of Civilization, a time capsule, was sealed in 1940. It isn't supposed to be opened until the year 8113. Guinness Book of Records declared the Crypt to be the first genuine attempt to permanently preserve a record of 20th century culture for people of thousands of years into the future.
  • 1990, Pepsi Cool Cans debut. People later became convinced the word "SEX" was hidden on the can.
May 29
  • The My Way killings peaked in 2007 when a Filipino karaoke singer was shot and killed because his My Way rendition was so off-key.
May 30
May 31
  • Trump tweeted covfefe
  • The southern United States converted all 11,500+ miles of its railroads from broad gauge (5 ft/1.524 m) to nearly-standard gauge (4 ft 9 in/ 1.448 m) in just 36 hours starting on May 31, 1886

June

[edit]
Date
June 1
  • In 2019, a scientific paper that found a Skrillex song to be an effective mosquito repellant was published.
June 2
June 3
June 4
  • Marvin Heemeyer went on a "killdozer" rampage through Granby, Colorado in 2004
  • In 1923, jockey Frank Hayes won a race despite dying on the horse
  • Shanghai Fugu Agreement, prank legislation providing special regulations for "certified fugu chefs", was officially agreed upon in 1984. It didn't actually make any sense, since fugu is poisonous.
  • 10 cent beer night promotion for baseball fans in Cleveland led to utter chaos in 1974
  • A chicken nugget shaped like Among Us sold for nearly $100k in 2021
  • Taylor Swift Wikipedia article created
June 5
June 6
  • From January 20 to June 6, 2001, 98-year-old Strom Thurmond was third in line to the U.S. presidency (president pro tempore of the Senate). But his main legacy is basically waging war against civil rights legislation.
  • In 1991 AIDS patient Haoui Montaug hosted a death party with 20 family members and friends, plus Madonna who joined over the phone, where he swallowed poison in hopes of dying peacefully. He fell asleep but "kept breathing, to the dismay of the guests. His guests remained the next morning when he awoke in a fury. Montaug swallowed 20 more pills and died within half an hour."
June 7
June 8
  • In 1959, the USPS sent mail using missiles for the first time.
  • In 2017, Pirate Joes, an operation that simply re-sold bought Trader Joes products in the US and sold them in Canada, closed amidst a lawsuit.
  • On June 8 1911, 17-year-old Tommy Manville married his first wife. He was an heir to an asbestos fortune and since his trust fund guaranteed him $250,000 when he got married, he quickly left her and began a series of 13 quickie marriages and quickie divorces (his excuse for his first divorce was "I love the chickens and I have to run around with them.")By the end of his life spent more than $1.25 million on divorce settlements.
  • Jim.henderson uploaded the image "Hamlets_dad_on_stick"
June 9
June 10
  • Andrew Jackson's parrot reportedly shouts profanities at his funeral in 1845.
  • Videogame Duke Nukem Forever was released, after 14 years of development, to poor reviews. It has the Guiness World Record for longest video game development.
June 11
  • In 1997, technologist Philippe Kahn jerryrigged a cell phone and a camera and took the first cell phone photo! It was of his baby daughter — who is now a young adult.
June 12
  • In 2015 researchers Limb, Limb, Limb and Limb published a study that found that people named "Limb" were more likely to become orthopaedic surgeons than other medical specializations. In addition people named Burns, Cox, and Ball were more likely to join urology.
June 13
  • US Senators did their first Seersucker Thursday in 1996.
  • In 2010, American construction worker and landlord Gary Brooks Faulkner was arrested in 2010 in Pakistan carrying a katana, pistol, night vision goggles, a map, and a Bible on his one-man hunt to capture Osama bin Laden.
June 14
June 15
  • In 1859, the Pig War erupted over a dead pig
  • Dan Quayle spells "potato" as "potatoe" in 1992
June 16
June 17
  • In 1871, lawyer Clement Vallandigham accidentally died while demonstrating how defendant could have shot themselves
  • Best Friend of Charleston became the first locomotive in the US to suffer a boiler explosion, which was (rumored to have been) caused by the fireman’s big dumpy on the steam pressure release valve (1831)
  • Serial killer Eugen Weidmann was killed by guillotine in 1939, the last public execution in France.
June 18
  • Dublin whiskey fire happened in 1875. It led to the deaths of 13 people—not from the fire, but from alcohol poisoning as they drank free, undiluted whiskey from the streets.
June 19
June 20
June 21
  • Garfield-themed restaurant GarfieldEats openned in 2019 with a bizarre menu of Garfield-shaped pizza, "Garficcinos", smoothies, and Garfield-shaped dark chocolate bars.
June 22
June 23
June 24
June 25
June 26
June 27
June 28
June 29
June 30

July

[edit]

No date:

Date
July 1
July 2
July 3
July 4
  • US President Zachary Taylor ate too much iced milk and cherries at a 4th of July party in 1850 and died five days later.
July 5
July 6
  • A stash of hidden gold and jewels called the Fenn Treasure were found in 2020 after being hidden in the Rocky Mountains for a decade.
July 7
July 8
July 9
  • British Prime Minister Tony Blair visited Kosovo and met some of his namesakes, named Tonibler, in 2010 (date approximate)
  • Garry Hoy fell to his death while attempting to demonstrate the strength of the windows
  • Monkey selfie was uploaded to Wikipedia in 2011 as public domain (as "the work of a non-human animal"). A massive copyright battle ensued.
July 10
July 11
July 12
  • Disco Demolition Night in 1979. What could go wrong with encouraging people to bring unwanted disco albums to a baseball doubleheader and blowing up the records between games?
July 13
July 14
July 15
July 16
July 17
  • Hyatt Regency walkway collapse happened in 1981, suspiciously right while the cameraman was changing tapes.
  • hitchBOT began its attempt to hitchhike across the United States in 2015. Two weeks later, it is murdered in Philadelphia.
July 18
  • Cat named Stubbs was elected mayor of Talkeetna, Alaska in 1997.
  • In 1998, a livestream called Our First Time began. Eighteen-year-olds "Mike" and "Diane" made a public announcement declaring their intention to lose their virginity. The event would be broadcast live on ourfirsttime.com, but it was a hoax.
July 19
July 20
  • In 1969, during the moon landing, there was a baseball game with an audience of four. Max Patkin the baseball clown performed at it.
July 21
  • For the first time in 55 years, BBC Radio 1 went off air in 2023 during its Giant DJ Hunt after Greg James failed to find the last DJ in time. Its Wikipedia article was briefly edited to say that it "used to be" a radio station. 
July 22
July 23
July 24
  • A Saskatchewan gas station attendant named Dick Assman was introduced on Letterman in 1995. Assman the Gasman was a huge hit and he came back on the show almost every night for a month.
July 25
July 26
July 27
July 28
  • In 1945, an Air Force B-25 Mitchel bomber crashed into the Empire State Building and started a fire. Elevator operator Betty Lou Oliver, who was working on the 80th story where the plane crashed, suffered severe burns. "First aid workers placed her on another elevator car to transport her to the ground floor, but the cables supporting that elevator had been damaged in the incident, and it fell 75 stories, ending up in the basement." She broke her pelvis, back and neck. It was the longest survived elevator fall.
  • The Rolex murder in 1996, when an unidentified body that washed up was identified using only his 25-year-old Rolex Oyster (since Rolex keeps such detailed service records)
July 29
  • Juan Pujol Garcia, a Spanish double agent against Nazi Germany, was awarded an Iron Cross in 1944. The Nazis had no idea they’d been fooled.
July 30
  • In 1931, Merriam Webster's chemistry editor sent a slip reading "D or d" for density which led to the word "Dord" entering the dictionary as an alternate name for density.
  • In 2008, Tim McLean man was brutally murdered on a bus and Greyhound Canada pulled a series of nationwide advertisements which included the slogan, "There's a reason you've never heard of bus rage."

August

[edit]
Date
August 1
  • In 1958, Jean Berko Gleason published the Wug Test
  • The beloved Tombili, a street cat from Istanbul, died in 2016.
  • Pep (dog)
  • In Athens, Tennessee in 1946, battle-hardened WWII veterans and local officials became so divided over the deputies altering ballots and holding people in jail inappropriately that the veterans held a shootout, the "Battle of Athens" (NBC article)
August 2
August 3
  • Happy birthday Creme Puff, the world's oldest cat on record! She was born in 1967 and lived to 2005.
August 4
  • A fish called Benson, who was known for having been caught 63 times, died in 2009. She was known as "Britain's biggest and best-loved" carp and "the people's fish."
  • In 1997, Jeanne Calment died at age 122. She had signed a life estate contract on her apartment at age 90, and her landlord lost thousands of dollars. Calment commented on the situation by saying, "in life, one sometimes makes bad deals".
  • In 1922, Alexander Graham Bell's funeral was held and the entire United States and Canada suspended phone service for a minute to honor him (imagine how much chaos this would cause today!)
  • In 1962, researchers injected a massive dose of LSD (nearly 300mg, 1000x a human recreational dose) into an elephant at the Oklahoma City Zoo named Tusko. He died about two hours later.
August 5
  • A $999.99 app called I Am Rich was released in 2008.
  • Engineers programmed the Curiosity rover to sing "Happy Birthday" to itself on Mars every year.
August 6
  • In 1863, Abraham Lincoln held the United States's first official Thanksgiving (festivities had been intermittent since Washington and Jefferson did not celebrate). The date was changed to the last Thursday in November for future occurrences. In 1939 FDR moved it a week earlier to extend Christmas shopping but then moved it back in 1942 after controversy.
  • Yoshinori Sakai was born in Hiroshima August 6, 1945, the day the United States dropped the atomic bomb. When he was 19, he was selected as the torch bearer at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics to symbolize Japan's postwar reconstruction and peace.
August 7
  • World Sauna Championships ended in disaster in 2010 when two people died after six minutes in 110 C heat (hotter than boiling water!!!)
August 8
  • Dave Matthews Band Chicago River Incident happened in 2004.
  • Casper, a Mayan ruler with a very cute signature, was born in the year 422.
  • Warsaw radio mast collapsed in 1991. It had been the world's tallest structure since 1974.
  • Eighty Eight, Kentucky:“The community's biggest claim to fame was the celebration of August 8, 1988 (08/08/88). People with an affinity for the number 8 descended upon the town from various parts of the nation and world, and the celebration was televised on national television.” “The biggest thing ever was when the village reported 88 votes for Dewey and 88 for Truman in the 1948 election and the fact was included in ''Ripley's Believe It or Not.’’” 8 couples got married, including one from Wyoming that did it at 8:08. The grand marshal was an 88-year-old – NYT
August 9
August 10
  • Sky King incident of 2018, in which a ground service agent with no piloting experience stole a plane from the Sea-Tac airport and flew it for more than an hour.
  • Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko became the first person to get married in space in 2003
  • Amou Haji, Iranian man known for refusing to bathe for more than 60 years, was born in 1928.
August 11
August 12
August 13
August 14
  • The Beaver drop program began in 1948. Dozens of beavers parachuted out of airplanes and landed in Idaho.
August 15
  • penguin Nils Olav was knighted in 2008
  • Wow! signal, which bore the expected hallmarks of extraterrestrial origin, was spotted by a radio telescope in 1977.
  • In a August 15, 1877 letter, Thomas Edison proposed "hello" as the word to say when answering the telephone.
August 16
August 17
  • When a tree fell on her house in 1960, an Arizona woman named Betty Pemrose brought about a lawsuit against God.
  • Toyohiro Akiyama was selected for spaceflight in 1989. "Akiyama was not a trained astronaut, scientist nor engineer. He was described as the first antihero in space as a result. During training, he quit smoking cigarettes, having previously smoked four packs a day. Before liftoff, when asked what he looked forward to most upon his return to Earth, he said "I can't wait to have a smoke"."
August 18
  • In 2020, Ben Shapiro reacted to WAP.
  • Korean Axe Murder incident of 1976. Soldiers from the US and South Korea chopped down a tree and North Korea retaliated by chopping up the soldiers.
August 19
August 20
August 21
August 22
  • Bubba the fish, a Chicago grouper who was the first fish to undergo chemotherapy, died in 2006.
August 23
August 24
  • In the Egyptian Graffito of Esmet-Akhom from the year 394, a man expressed home that his inscription will last "for all time and eternity"
  • In 1919, Cleveland Indians pitcher Ray Caldwell was struck by lightning during his ninth inning in the game. He finished the inning and the team beat the Athletics.
  • On August 24, 2001, Air Transat Flight 236 lost all of its fuel in mid flight with more than 300 passengers. The pilot was a glider pilot and he glided for 19 minutes without any power to an air base, where the plane safely landed.
August 25
  • Great Moon Hoax. In 1835, a New York newspaper launched a series of made-up articles about the supposed discovery of civilization on the Moon
  • Reddit exposé on Scots Wikipedia in 2020.
  • In 2010 Filair Let L-410 crash, a passenger smuggled a crocodile aboard and it escaped mid-flight causing panicked passengers to unbalance the plane.
August 26
August 27
  • Pascal-B nuclear test of 1956, the one that was 50,000 times more powerful than expected and shot the manhole cover in the air.
  • In 1896, the Anglo-Zanzibar war started and ended on this day. It was the shortest war ever.
  • Mars hoax, an email chain lie that spread in 2003 and said that Mars would look as large as the full Moon to the naked eye on August 27, 2003
August 28
August 29
  • Following the hurricane on this day in 2005, Katrina refrigerators were turned into public art.
  • Tom Scott's emoji-only social media "Emojli" launched in 2014.
August 30
August 31
  • In 2009, a guy got a DUI from drunk-driving a motorized recliner.
  • In 1924, the Pennsylvania governor's dog Pep had his mugshot and pawprints taken at the Eastern State Penitentiary after he was falsely accused of murdering a cat.
  • In 1997 The National Enquirer issued a correction: "We apologise for the Princess Diana page one headline DI GOES SEX MAD, which is still on the stands at some locations. It is currently being replaced with a special 72-page tribute issue: A FAREWELL TO THE PRINCESS WE ALL LOVED."
  • In 2004 "Benjaman Kyle" (later discovered to be William Powell) was discovered naked and injured, without any possessions or identification, next to a dumpster behind a Burger King restaurant in Richmond Hill, Georgia. He was listed in hospital records as "Burger King Doe."

September

[edit]

No date: "When campaigning for a second term in office, U.S. President Richard Nixon announced that the rate of increase of inflation was decreasing, which has been noted as "the first time a sitting president used the third derivative to advance his case for reelection." - Third derivative article

Date
September 1
  • On September 1, 1878 Emma Nutt became the world's first female telephone operator. Previously males were preferred, but there were problems with them insulting and pranking customers.
  • 1859 Carrington Event
September 2
September 3
  • In 1967 on the day known as Dagen H, Sweden changed its traffic direction
  • In 2015, the website Pudim.br, which only contained a photo of pudding, was hacked by the Islamic State.
  • In 1928, Scottish biologist Alexander Fleming, who was studying staph, returned to his lab after an August break and noticed an unusual fungus had killed the bacteria on a culture he had left there. Penicillin!
  • September 3, 1752 never existed (and the 4th to 13th didn't either). This happened due to the adopted the Gregorian calendar and making up for a 11 minute per year miscalculation for the previous 1300 years.
September 4
September 5
  • The organ concert As Slow as Possible began in 2001. If all goes as planned, it'll continue until 2640.
September 6
  • Piggly Wiggly was founded September 6, 1916 as the first self-service grocery store, allowing customers to shop the aisles themeselves rather than giving a list of items for a clerk to gather.
September 7
September 8
  • Jerome of Sandy Cove, an unidentified man with both legs amputated above the knees, washed up on the shore of Nova Scotia on September 8 1863. He could not (or refused to) understand French, Latin, Italian, or Spanish, and he died 49 years later without publicly revealing where he came from.
September 9
  • In 1981, the Reagan administration recommended school lunch administrators stretch their interpretation of the word "vegetable" to include things like relish and ketchup as vegetable.
  • September 9th is the most common birthday in the United States
  • the peak of TV attention can be assigned an exact date: Sunday, September 9, 1956, when Elvis Presley made his first appearance on television, on CBS’s Ed Sullivan Show. Its 82.6 percent share of US viewers has never been equaled or bettered.
  • The first use of OMG was in a September 9, 1917 letter to Winston Churchill.
September 10
  • Abebe Bikila won the 1960 Summer Olympics marathon barefoot
  • George Carlin recorded "I Kinda Like it When A Lot of People Die" in 2001 (set includes reference to Osama bin Laden and an exploding airplane)
  • In 1969, Yoko Ono held the first and only showing of the film "Self Portrait", a 42-minute shot of John Lennon’s penis
  • In 1977, France held its last execution by guillotine killing Hamida Djandoubi
September 11
September 12
September 13
September 14
September 15
  • In New York City in 1922, people started an eight-day riot all because men were wearing straw hats later than the acceptable date of September 15. Straw Hat Riot
  • In 1896, a bunch of people went to Texas to watch the Crash at Crush, two trains crashing head-on.
September 16
September 17
September 18
September 19
  • International Talk Like a Pirate Day
  • Modern emoticons were invented in 1982
  • Storm Area 51 meme protest happened in 2019.
  • Eric Moussambani from Equatorial Guinea swam the 100m freestyle at the Sydney Olympics with an unprecedentedly slow time of 1:52:72, the slowest time in Olympic history by far, but since two competitors were disqualified for false starts, he won his heat. The media dubbed him "Eric the Eel." He later trained in swimming, halved his time, and became the coach of the national swimming squad.
September 20
September 21
September 22
September 23
September 24
September 25
  • Meow the Jewels album was released in 2015, identical to the original recordings except for all instrumentals being replaced with sounds of cats.
  • 9/26 is the 269th day of year. Is this a fun fact? I don't know.
September 26
September 27
  • In Balloonfest 86, 1.5 million balloons were released in Cleveland to set a world record. But the plan backfired horribly.
September 28
  • An 88-year old died in a hospital in Rio de Janeiro, allegedly as a result of nursing technicians injecting soup through her intravenous drip instead of her feeding tube.
September 29
September 30
  • FogCam, the longest-running webcam, is launched.

October

[edit]
Date
October 1
  • In 2016, a researcher published a paper that found that 70% of Big Thunder Mountain riders passed their kidney stones.
October 2
  • In 1766, the Nottingham cheese riot started. Protesters rolled cheese through the streets to protest food prices.
  • The first arrest for Marijuana possession and selling occurred in Denver, Colorado on October 2, 1937, the year after Reefer Madness. The judge said: "I consider marijuana the worst of all narcotics, far worse than the use of morphine or cocaine. Under its influence men become beasts. Marijuana destroys life itself. I have no sympathy with those who sell this weed. The government is going to enforce this new law to the letter."
  • In high five history: possibly first high five performed in 1977? Between Dusty Baker and Glenn Burke of the Los Angeles Dodgers baseball team.
October 3
  • In 1900, a woman named Margaret Abbott who didn't know she was competing won the Olympic golf tournament.
  • that the oldest known graffiti in Pompeii says; ‘Gaius Pumidius Diphilus was here’, along with the date of October 3, 78 BC.
October 4
  • In 2007, an Ig Nobel prize was awarded to The Air Force Wright Laboratory for instigating research into a chemical weapon called the "Gay Bomb" to make enemy soldiers become sexually irresistible to each other
  • Smoot Celebration Day
  • First baby Snoopy appeared in 1950.
  • In 2001, a drunk gunman shot at a weld on the Trans-Alaska Pipeline, causing the second-largest mainline oil spill in the pipeline's history. It happened near near Livengood, Alaska but I cannot imagine they were Livengood!
October 5
October 6
  • On its first day in 1909, the brand-new Vancouver ambulance ran over a pedestrian. Its first job was taking that person to the hospital.
October 7
October 8
October 9
  • In 1992, a Peekskill meteorite landed directly on the parked 1980 Chevy Malibu of a 17 year old in New York.
  • In 1903, Flying Machines Which Do Not Fly appears in The New York Times saying humanity would not invent a flying machine for one to three million years.
October 10
October 11
October 12
  • In 2020, a paleontology conference's word filtering system banned the word "bone", an instance of the Scunthorpe problem.
  • In 1960, Nikita Krushchev banged his shoe on his desk at the United Nations, a moment remembered as the shoe-banging incident)
October 13
  • In 2013, a write-in candidate named Santa Claus won a seat on the city council in North Pole, Alaska. During his term, he advocated for marijuana dispensaries.
October 14
October 15
October 16
October 17
October 18
October 19
October 20
  • In 1986, Aeroflot Flight 6502 crashed after a pilot bet that he could land it blind (he couldn’t).
October 21
  • In 1988, a poodle named Cachy fell 13 floors and hit 75-year-old Marta Espina, killing both instantly. A woman who came to see the incident was fatally hit by a bus. An unidentified man who witnessed her death had a heart attack and died on his way to the hospital
October 22
October 23
October 24
  • In 1968, the FDA banned LSD
  • In 1852, Charles Darwin, who is six years into an exhaustive eight-year study of barnacles, writes to a friend that "I hate a barnacle as no man ever did before."[4]
October 25
  • Microwave was first commercially sold in 1955 for $1295, weighing 750 pounds, requiring plumbing since it needed to be water cooled
  • In 1999, Kasparov took on the world in chess and won
  • In 1964, Jim "Wrong Way" Marshall, the defensive end of Minnesota Vikings picked up a fumbled ball and ran 66 yards the wrong way to his own end zone.
  • The world wonders incident of 1944, where a pilot interpreted the cryptography padding as a sarcastic remark and locked himself in a closet. "I was stunned as if I had been struck in the face... I snatched off my cap, threw it on the deck, and shouted something I am ashamed to remember", letting out an anguished sob.
October 26
October 27
October 28
  • In 1982, the Cow Tools cartoon ran in syndicated newspapers.
  • Rahul Ligma, ficitonal ex-employee of Twitter, made headlines in 2022.
October 29
October 30
October 31
  • In 2013, Cards against Humanity purchased Hawaii 2
  • Wadsworth hid the charter of the Connecticut Colony inside an oak tree to prevent his enemy from seizing it and consolidating Connecticut into the Dominion of New England
  • Charles Vance Millar died in 1926 and left an insane will.

November

[edit]

In 1999, Kevin Smith attended a protest against his own movie, Dogma, with a sign that said "Dogma is dogshit" and was featured on the local news being interviewed by a reporter who did not know who he was. When asked his thoughts on the movie he said "I don't know, but I've been told, not good."

Date
November 1
November 2
  • Emu War began in 1932
  • Thomas Midgley, Jr., the guy who invented CFCs and leaded gasoline, died in 1955 of his own invention — but not the either of the ones that were known for killing people.
  • The Dakotas became states in 1889 and no one knows which one was first.
  • In 1993, San Francisco narrowly voted for a ballot initiative allowing Bob Geary (police officer) to bring his ventriloquy dummy with him on patrol
November 3
November 4
  • In 2017, the nonexistant Shed at Dulwich took the number one spot on the London TripAdvisor restaurant list.
  • "The Most Mysterious Song on the Internet" was identified as Subways of Your Mind in 2024.
November 5
November 6
  • In 2012 Barack Obama announced plans to perform Gangnam Style privately for his wife. We have no updates on how it went.
November 7
November 8
  • In 1973, the dead Tree of Ténéré was moved to museum. Previously it was hit by a car despite being the only tree for 400 km.
  • For a decade, Jennifer Pan deceived her parents into believing that she was a successful pharmacist, but she had not graduated high school. When her lies unraveled, she arranged for her parents' murder on this date in 2010.
  • In 2016, Turkish MP Tuncay Özkan announced the statue of Tombili had been stolen: "They stole the Tombili statue. They are enemies of everything beautiful. All they know is hate, tears and war."
November 9
November 10
  • In 2010, a Garfield controversy ensued when the comic mocked veterans on Veterans Day
  • In 2007, King Juan Carlos I of Spain said "why don't you shut up?" to the Venezuelan president, Hugo Chávez (¿Por qué no te callas?)
November 11
November 12
November 13
November 14
  • The 2005 Domino Day sparrow flew into a building in the Netherlands and toppled over 23,000 of dominos. The bird was shot and killed, which inspired huge backlash.
November 15
  • The first Mothman sighting occurred in 1966
November 16
November 17
  • Emperor Charles the Fat was deposed by the Frankish magnates in an assembly at Frankfurt, 887
  • In 1994, an NFL game (now known as the Heidi Game) switched to a movie called Heidi during the final moments of the game, enraging the nation.
November 18
  • When the sun sets on this day in Utqiagvik, Alaska, it doesn't come back until January 23, a polar night of 66 days.
November 19
November 20
  • November 20 2011, South Korea enacted the Shutdown law that forbade children under sixteen from playing video games between midnight and 6am. The law was abolished in August 2021.
  • On November 20, 1969, Apollo 12 deliberately crashed the Ascent Stage of its Lunar Module onto the Moon's surface; NASA reported that the Moon rang 'like a bell' for almost an hour, leading to arguments that it must be hollow like a bell. (Via Hollow Moon).
November 21
November 22
  • The Max Headroom Intrusion of a Chicago TV channel in 1987.
  • The infamous Butt Fumble happened in a 2012 NFL game.
  • Both C.S. Lewis and Aldous Huxley died on November 22nd, 1963 but their deaths were overshadowed by news of JFK's assassination
November 23
  • George Dashnau newspaper interview in 1978. He was "an advertising executive in Philadelphia who started the first mail order delivery service that supplied human skulls" when he was 55, using the name "The Skull Man". They cost $100 and he didn't reveal where they came from, supposedly to discourage competition. Good quote: "He started the business because he wanted to become rich, a dream that he had had for many years."
November 24
November 25
November 26
  • In the Southern Television broadcast interruption in 1977, a voice claiming to represent the 'Ashtar Galactic Command', delivering a message instructing humanity to abandon its weapons so it could participate in a 'future awakening' and 'achieve a higher state of evolution'.
  • In 1965, artist Joseph Beuys explained pictures to a dead hare
  • Ah, the good old day! On November 26, 2012, there were no reports of violent crime in all of New York City. It was the first time this ever happened. (BBC article)
November 27
  • During the Berners Street hoax in 1810, young troublemakers requested hundreds of deliveries to one random house in London.
  • In 2020, far-right Hungarian politician József Szájer was arrested while fleeing from a 25-man orgy.
November 28
November 29
November 30
  • In 1954, a meteor struck a woman who was napping. She walked away with only bruises.

December

[edit]

Misc:

Date
December 1
December 2
December 3
  • In 1992, a 22-year-old British programmer named Neil Papworth sent the first text message, which said "Merry Christmas."
December 4
December 5
December 6
  • The TV show Mythbusters accidentally shot a cannonball into someone's house in 2011.
December 7
December 8
  • Amanda McKittrick Ros, a writer and poet infamous for her horribly ornate prose and poetry, was born in Ireland in 1860.
December 9
December 10
December 11
  • Dash for Cash, bizarre media event which teachers grabbed bills, occurred in 2021.
December 12
  • In 2006, Greta was born! Her dad, a Wikipedia editor, tried to let fellow Wikipedians name her (User:Ravedave/babyname)
December 13
  • Scientists discover that snakes have a hemiclitoris in 2022.
December 14
December 15
December 16
  • The Flag of Nepal, complete with bizarre mathematical dimensions, was adopted in 1962
  • Pokemon episode aired for the first and only time in Japan in 1997. It caused seizures hundreds of children.
  • In 1983, Kary Mullis invented the PCR technique. He said in his Nobel Prize lecture that the breakthrough did not make up for his girlfriend breaking up with him: "I was sagging as I walked out to my little silver Honda Civic. Neither [assistant] Fred, empty Beck's bottles, nor the sweet smell of the dawn of the age of PCR could replace Jenny. I was lonesome."
December 17
December 18
  • Teruo Nakamura, a soldier of imperial Japan, is arrested in an Indonesian forest in 1974, after hiding without surrendering for 29 years after World War II ended
December 19
December 20
December 21
December 22
December 23
  • Cocaine bear was discovered in 1985 with a stomach "literally packed to the brim with cocaine"
  • Non-commercial Christmas alternative Festivus
December 24
  • NORAD Tracks Santa program begins in 1955 as the result of a clerical mistake.
  • On 24 December 2009, Hungarian National Gallery researcher and art historian Gergely Barki recognised Sleeping Lady with Black Vase, which had been considered lost since WWII, while watching Stuart Little with his three-year-old daughter.
December 25
December 26
  • Soviet Union dissolved while Russian cosmonot Sergei Krikalev was in orbit in 1991
December 27
December 28
  • The Tay Bridge disaster occurred in Dundee in 1879, inspiring one of the worst poems the world has ever seen.
December 29
December 30
December 31
  • 1924 almanacs included a "December 31.5" date.
  • In 2010, reports of a thousand blackbirds falling from the sky in Beebe, Arkansas sparked international reports of falling birds, possibly because of greater attention. "It is common for birds to become disoriented, for example, because of bad weather or fireworks, and collide with objects such as trees or buildings, killing them or stunning them into falling to their death" (via rain of animals).
  1. ^ "Longest marriage | Guinness World Records". web.archive.org. 2019-07-14. Retrieved 2024-04-26.
  2. ^ "In 'Disguise'..." The Record. 2 September 2001. p. 68. Retrieved 10 January 2024.
  3. ^ Feldman, Brian (9 September 2021). "At The Turtle Club In The Shadow Of 9/11 | Defector". Defector.com. Retrieved 10 January 2024.
  4. ^ Darwin, Charles (24 October 1852). "To W. D. Fox 24 [October 1852]". Darwin Correspondence Project. Retrieved 2024-02-24.