Today's Trivia and What Happened on June 19

If a camel with one hump is called a Dromedary and a camel with two humps is called a Bactrian, what is a camel with no humps called?

If a camel with one hump is called a Dromedary and a camel with two humps is called a Bactrian, what is a camel with no humps called? Close Large View

Humphrey

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Quote: It ain't over till it's over. - Yogi Berra

Quote: It ain't over till it's over. - Yogi Berra Close Large View

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What Happened On

Garfield

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Garfield

June 19, 1978

Jim Davis' comic strip about a lazy, overweight, coffee drinking cat named Garfield debuts in 40 newspapers. It was eventually syndicated in over 2,500 newspapers and journals, earning the Guinness World Record for being the world's most widely syndicated comic strip.

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Monterey Pop Festival

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Monterey Pop Festival

June 19, 1967

Thousands came to hear the likes of Jimi Hendrix, The Who, Jefferson Airplane, The Mamas & the Papas, Grateful Dead, Janis Joplin, and Otis Redding at the three-day Monterey International Pop Festival, held at the Monterey County Fairgrounds in Monterey, California.
The song San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair) was written by John Phillips of The Mamas & the Papas, and sung by Scott McKenzie, released in May 1967, to promote the event.
This festival is generally regarded as marking the beginning of the 1967 "Summer of Love" and the beginning of the hippie, flower power, and flower children movements.

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Ethel and Julius after being found guilty Ethel and Julius after being found guilty

Ethel and Julius after being found guilty Ethel and Julius after being found guilty
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Julius and Ethel Rosenberg Executed

June 19, 1953

Julius and Ethel Rosenberg are executed, making them the first U.S. citizens executed for treason during peace time and the first married couple executed together in the U.S. They were convicted in a controversial trial for selling top secret information to the Soviets.

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First Televised Heavyweight Boxing Championship Fight go to Video for First Televised Heavyweight Boxing Championship Fight

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First Televised Heavyweight Boxing Championship Fight

June 19, 1946

Joe Louis successfully defends his title against Billy Conn, broadcast by WNBT of New York City.

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Pinhibition

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Pinhibition

June 19, 1939

Atlanta, Georgia becomes the first major U.S. city to ban pinball, stating that pinball led to gambling, moral decay, and crime. The law imposed a fine of $20 and 30 days of public work. Similar laws soon followed in other cities in what became known as "Pinhibition."

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Civil War - Juneteenth - Slaves in Texas are Freed

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Civil War - Juneteenth - Slaves in Texas are Freed

June 19, 1865

News of the end of the Civil War reaches Galveston, Texas with Union army general Gordon Granger's reading of federal orders. Confederate General Robert E. Lee had surrendered two months earlier.
Along with the Emancipation Proclamation, this freed the slaves. This event has been celebrated in the Texas area as Juneteenth since 1866 and as an official Texas state holiday since 1938 and became a U.S. federal holiday in 2021.

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First Modern Baseball Game

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First Modern Baseball Game

June 19, 1846

The first officially recorded baseball game using modern rules is played in Hoboken, New Jersey. The game was played using the Knickerbocker rules, which were the basis for modern baseball.
The "New York Nine" defeated the Knickerbockers, 23-1, in four innings.
Baseball style games date back to the 1700s in England, including a game in Surrey of "bass-ball" in 1749 with the Prince of Wales as a player. These games were brought to Canada by English immigrants with numerous variations played in Canada and the U.S.
The first recorded game of baseball in North America was played in Canada in 1838, but the rules were different from modern baseball, including the use of five bases.

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Largest One-Time Gift to Private Education in American History

June 19, 1993

Walter Annenberg - who made his fortune from TV Guide - announces his donation of $365 million in cash to four private schools.

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Founder of the Guardian Angels Shot in Stolen Cab

June 19, 1992

Curtis Sliwa is ambushed and shot five times while in a taxi. The taxi had been stolen two days later and had been apparently waiting for him. Sliwa was on his way to his morning radio talk show.

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World Record for Shaving

June 19, 1988

Denny Rowe shaves 1,994 men in 1 hour. Source: Guinness Book of World Records

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First FBI Agent Convicted of Espionage

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First FBI Agent Convicted of Espionage

June 19, 1986

Richard W. Miller is convicted of passing a classified document to the Soviets and given two consecutive life terms plus 50 years. This was later reduced and he was released in 1994.
Miller claimed he was working, without the approval of his superiors, to infiltrate the KGB as a double agent.

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First American Male Saint

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First American Male Saint

June 19, 1977

Roman Catholic Bishop John Neumann (1811-60) is canonized.
Neumann was a Bohemian-born American Roman Catholic who came to the United States in 1836, where he was ordained, joined the Redemptorist order, and became the fourth Bishop of Philadelphia in 1852. He also founded the first Catholic diocesan school system in the U.S.

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2000th Hit

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2000th Hit

June 19, 1973

Pete Rose and Willie Davis make their 2,000th career hits.

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FCC commissioners inspect the latest in television, 1939 FCC commissioners inspect the latest in television, 1939

FCC commissioners inspect the latest in television, 1939 FCC commissioners inspect the latest in television, 1939
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FCC Created

June 19, 1934

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is created. Its functions include regulating radio and television.

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First Running of the Belmont Stakes

June 19, 1867

Ruthless, ridden by J. Gilpatrick, wins.

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Birthdays

Lou Gehrig

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Lou Gehrig (Henry Louis Gehrig)

Born June 19, 1903 d. 1941

American Baseball Hall of Famer (1939). Record holder for the most consecutive games played (2,130 from 1925-39) and for the most major-league grand slams (23). He died of the disease which now bears his name.

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Left to right: Curly, Moe, Larry Left to right: Curly, Moe, Larry

Left to right: Curly, Moe, Larry Left to right: Curly, Moe, Larry
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Moe Howard (Moses Harry Horwitz)

Born June 19, 1897 d. 1975

American comic actor. Leader of the original Three-Stooges.

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Blaise Pascal

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Blaise Pascal

Born June 19, 1623 d. 1662

French mathematician, philosopher, physicist, one of the founders of the theory of probability, and designed a mechanical computer, although it was never built. He was one of the first inventors of mechanical calculators (1642), created Pascal's Triangle (1653), and made important contributions to the study of fluids and the concepts of pressure and vacuums.

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Paula Abdul

Born June 19, 1962

American singer, dancer. TV: American Idol (judge).

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Kathleen Turner

Born June 19, 1954

American actress. Film: Body Heat (1981), Romancing the Stone (1984), Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988), and War of the Roses (1989). TV: The Doctors (Nola Aldrich).

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Larry Dunn

Born June 19, 1953

American keyboardist, with Earth, Wind & Fire. Music: Shining Star (1975, #1, Grammy), Best of My Love (1977, #1), and After the Love has Gone (1979, #2, Grammy).

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Ann Wilson

Born June 19, 1950

American singer, with Heart. Music: Barracuda (1978) and Dog & Butterfly (1978).

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Phylicia Rashad

Born June 19, 1948

American actress, Clair Huxtable of The Cosby Show.

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Salman Rushdie

Born June 19, 1947

British author. His book The Satanic Verses prompted the Ayatollah Khomeini to place a $1,000,000 bounty on his life in 1989.

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Gena Rowlands (Virginia Cathryn Rowlands)

Born June 19, 1930

American Emmy-winning actress. Film: A Woman Under the Influence (1974) and Opening Night (1978, Berlin Film Festival Best Actress).

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Pat Buttram

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Pat Buttram (Maxwell Emmett Buttram)

Born June 19, 1915 d. 1994

American actor. He described his distinctive voice as having, "never quite made it through puberty".
TV: The Gene Autry Show (1950-55, Gene's sidekick Pat and also in over 40 films) and Green Acres (1965-71, Mr. Haney).
Buttram also wrote political quips for U.S. President Ronald Reagan's speeches.

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Lester Flatt

Born June 19, 1914 d. 1979

American bluegrass singer, with Earl Scruggs. Music: Foggy Mountain Breakdown (1948), and the theme for TV show The Beverly Hillbillies.

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Mildred Natwick

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Mildred Natwick

Born June 19, 1905 d. 1994

American Emmy-winning actress. TV: The Snoop Sisters (1973-74, Gwendolyn Snoop). Film: Barefoot in the Park (1967, Ethel Banks).

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Anna M. Rosenberg

Born June 19, 1902 d. 1983

Hungarian-born American government official. She was the first woman awarded the Medal of Freedom (1945).

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Wallis Warfield Simpson

Born June 19, 1896 d. 1986

Duchess of Windsor, American divorcee, for whom King Edward VIII in 1936 abdicated his throne to marry. Famous quote: "A woman can't be too rich or too thin."

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Jimmy Walker

Born June 19, 1881 d. 1946

American politician, New York Mayor (1925-32), nicknamed Beau James. He hosted the first regularly-scheduled daily TV broadcasts (1931). He resigned as mayor after corruption in his administration was exposed.

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Charles Coburn

Born June 19, 1877 d. 1961

American Oscar-winning actor. Film: The Devil and Miss Jones (1941) and The More the Merrier (1943, Oscar).

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Elbert Hubbard

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Elbert Hubbard

Born June 19, 1856 d. 1915

American author, artist, philosopher. Founder of the Roycroft artisan community in East Aurora, New York, an influential exponent of the Arts and Crafts Movement. He and his wife died in the sinking of the RMS Lusitania.
Quote: "Every man is a damned fool for at least five minutes every day. Wisdom consists in not exceeding the limit."
Quote: "A woman will doubt everything you say except it be compliments to herself."

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James Braid

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Father of Hypnotism

James Braid

Born June 19, 1795 d. 1860

Scottish surgeon. He coined the term "hypnotism" and is regarded as the first genuine hypnotherapist and the "Father of Modern Hypnotism." He was also a significant innovator in the treatment of club-foot and other deformities.

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James I

Born June 19, 1566 d. 1625

King of England, Scotland, and Ireland (1603-25). In 1604 he commissioned the creation of the King James Bible (completed in 1611).

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Deaths

J. M. Barrie

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Creator of Peter Pan

J. M. Barrie (James Matthew Barrie)

Died June 19, 1937 b. 1860

Scottish author. Writings: Peter Pan (1904).
Before his death, he gave the rights to the Peter Pan works to Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children in London, which continues to benefit from them.

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Jingle Bell Rock

Bobby Helms

Died June 19, 1997 b. 1933

American country singer. Music: Jingle Bell Rock (1957), Fraulein (1956, #1), and My Special Angel (1957, #1).

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Sir William Golding

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Sir William Golding

Died June 19, 1993 b. 1911

British Nobel-winning author. Writings: Lord of the Flies (1954) and Rights of Passage (1980).

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Jean Arthur (Gladys Greene)

Died June 19, 1991 b. 1900

American actress. Film: Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939). TV: The Jean Arthur Show.

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Geraldine Brooks (Geraldine Stroock)

Died June 19, 1977 b. 1925

American actress. TV: Bonanza (Adam's mother Elizabeth).

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Ed Wynn (Isaiah Edwin Leopold)

Died June 19, 1966 b. 1886

American comedian. He starred in the Ziegfeld Follies (1914), was the Texaco Fire Chief (1932-39), and won the first Most Outstanding Live Personality Emmy (1949).

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Thomas John Watson Sr.

Died June 19, 1956 b. 1874

American businessman. He took control of the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Co. (1914) and turned it into the international-giant IBM.

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Ethel and Julius after being found guilty Ethel and Julius after being found guilty

Ethel and Julius after being found guilty Ethel and Julius after being found guilty
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Julius Rosenberg

Died June 19, 1953 b. 1918

American traitor. He and his wife Ethel Rosenberg became the first U.S. citizens executed for treason during peace time. They had been convicted of selling top secret information to the Soviets.

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Ethel and Julius after being found guilty Ethel and Julius after being found guilty

Ethel and Julius after being found guilty Ethel and Julius after being found guilty
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Ethel Rosenberg

Died June 19, 1953 b. 1915

American traitor. She and her husband Julius Rosenberg became the first U.S. citizens executed for treason during peace time. They had been convicted of selling top secret information to the Soviets.

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Samuel Chase

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Samuel Chase

Died June 19, 1811 b. 1741

American Revolutionary leader. Signer of the Declaration of Independence and U.S. Supreme Court justice.

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Richard Henry Lee

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Richard Henry Lee

Died June 19, 1794 b. 1732

12th president of the Continental Congress (1784-85) and signer of both the Declaration of Independence and the Articles of Confederation.
On June 7, 1776, he declared "These United Colonies are and of right ought to be free and independent States".

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