Congress sets January 7, 1789 as the date by which states are
required to choose electors for the country’s first presidential
election. A month later, on February 4, George Washington was
elected president by state electors and sworn into office on
April 30, 1789.
Archive for January, 2021
ELECTORS CHOSEN ON THIS DAY IN 1789
HISTORY WAS MADE ON THIS DAY
BIRTH OF A BRIDGE BEGAN ON THIS DAY IN 1933
On January 5, 1933, construction began on the Golden Gate Bridge,
as workers began excavating 3.25 million cubic feet of dirt for the structure’s
huge anchorages.
Following the Gold Rush boom that began in 1849, speculators
realized the land north of San Francisco Bay would increase in
value in direct proportion to its accessibility to the city. Soon, a
plan was hatched to build a bridge that would span the Golden
Gate, a narrow, 400-foot deep strait that serves as the mouth of
the San Francisco Bay, connecting the San Francisco Peninsula
with the southern end of Marin County.
Construction underway on a pylon on the south shore of the Golden
Gate Bridge project.
Members of the Halfway to Hell Club bridge construction crew
became celebrities in the Bay Area.
Fact: The US Navy originally planned to paint the
bridge with black and yellow stripes to ensure
visibility for passing ships.
LEAD SINGER OF BRITISH GROUP, DEAD AT 78
Gerard Marsden (September 24, 1942 – January 3, 2021)
LONDON (AP) — Gerry Marsden, lead singer of the 1960s British
group Gerry and the Pacemakers that had such hits as “Ferry
Cross the Mersey” and the song that became the anthem of
Liverpool Football Club, “You’ll Never Walk Alone,” has died.
His family said that Marsden died Sunday “after a short illness
in no way connected with COVID-19”.
FOUNDATION FOUNDED ON THIS DAY IN 1938
Franklin D. Roosevelt (left) and lifelong friend and political advisor,
Basil O’Connor counting dimes sent in to the White House for the
March of Dimes, 1944. O’Connor helped establish the foundation.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, an adult victim of polio, established the
National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, which he later renamed
the March of Dimes Foundation, on January 3, 1938. A predominantly childhood disease in the early 20th century, polio wreaked havoc
among American children every summer. The virus, which affects
the central nervous system, flourished in contaminated food and
water and was easily transmitted. Those who survived the disease usually suffered from debilitating paralysis into their adult lives. In
1921, at the relatively advanced age of 39, Roosevelt contracted
polio and lost the use of his legs. With the help of the media, his
Secret Service and careful event planning, Roosevelt managed to
keep his disease out of the public eye, yet his personal experience inspired in him an empathy with the handicapped and prompted him
to the found the March of Dimes.
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