Celebrations Today – June 24
Holidays and observances
- Christian feast day:
- Discovery Day, observed on the nearest Monday to June 24 (Newfoundland and Labrador)
- Earliest day on which Armed Forces Day can fall, while June 30 is the latest; celebrated on the last Saturday in June. (United Kingdom)
- Earliest day on which Mother’s Day can fall, while June 30 is the latest; celebrated on the last Sunday in June. (Kenya)
- Feast of Raḥmat (Bahá’í Faith) (Date is generally June 24, but this may vary from year to year)
- Army Day or Battle of Carabobo Day (Venezuela)
- Bannockburn Day (Scotland)
- Day of the Caboclo (Amazonas, Brazil)
- St John’s Day and the second day of the Midsummer celebrations (although this is not the astronomical summer solstice, see June 20) (Roman Catholic Church, Europe), and its related observances:
- Enyovden (Bulgaria)
- Jaanipäev (Estonia)
- Jāņi (Latvia)
- Jónsmessa (Iceland)
- Midsummer Day (England)
- Saint Jonas’ Festival or Joninės (Lithuania)
- Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day (Quebec)
- Sânziene (western Carpathian Mountains of Romania)
- Youth Day (Ukraine)
Celebrations Today – USA: June 24
National Pralines Day
National Celebration of the Senses Day
International Fairy Day
National Museum Comes To Life Day
National Pralines Day
National Swim a Lap Day
Today in US History: June 24
The Space Age
I will appreciate your having the Space Council undertake to make the necessary studies… for bringing into optimum use at the earliest practicable time operational communications satellites.President John F. Kennedy to Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson,
June 24, 1961.
Public Papers of the Presidents: John F. Kennedy, 1: 472.
John F. Kennedy, 1961.
By Popular Demand: Portraits of the Presidents and First Ladies, 1789-Present
On May 25, 1961, President Kennedy declared to a joint session of Congress his belief that the nation should commit itself to landing a man on the moon by the end of the decade. This mission was accomplished on July 20, 1969.
On June 24, 1961, the public learned of President John Kennedy’s letter assigning Vice President Lyndon Johnson the high priority task of unifying the U.S. satellite programs. Twenty-two years later, on the same day, astronaut Sally Kirsten Ride landed at Edwards Air Force Base aboard the 100-ton space shuttle Challenger, completing her voyage as the first American woman in space. These two events evidence the nation’s leap from an age of earth-bound methods of communication and travel into the space age.
Development during and after WWII of the appropriate technology of large, liquid-fueled rockets made the space program possible. Rockets such as those tested at the White Sands Missile Range provided the power to boost both satellites and men into orbit. The U.S. Air Force Missile Test Center began operating at Cape Canaveral in 1949; the first U.S. earth satellite, Explorer I, was launched from the center in 1958.
After the Soviet Union launched the world’s first artificial satellite in 1957, Americans riveted their attention on the U.S. space program. As chairman of the National Aeronautics Space Council, Lyndon Johnson played a significant role in developing coherent policy for a program plagued by interagency rivalries, high turnover of top personnel, and expanding costs.
Under Johnson, the Space Council recommended that the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) provide policy coordination with all government agencies involved in space flight. NASA established its command and control center, the Manned Spacecraft Center (now known as the Johnson Space Center), in Houston, in Johnson’s home state of Texas.
Aerial View Showing Sides 3 and 4 of Mobile Launcher 1 in Mobile Launcher One,
Kennedy Space Center, Titusville Vicinity, Brevard County, Florida,
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, photographer,
1983.
Built in America: Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record, 1933-Present
The Mobile Launcher (ML) was an integral part of the Apollo Program. Its use shortened the time period between launches as assembly of the launcher and launch vehicle no longer had to take place on the launch pad. Apollo 11, the first manned landing on the moon, lifted off of ML-1.
The government’s policy approach was two pronged: 1) develop a system of unmanned satellites that would orbit the earth and provide global telecommunications; and 2) pursue manned and unmanned space exploration. To serve the former purpose, the Communications Satellite Corporation (COMSAT) was founded in 1962, and the International Telecommunications Satellite Organization (INTELSAT) in 1964. In 1965, INTELSAT oversaw the launch of Early Bird, the capacity of which was sufficient to provide either 240 voice circuits or one two-way television link between the U.S. and Europe, technology which came to impact people’s everyday lives.
NASA’s Mercury Program rapidly pursued space exploration by preparing a group of seven astronauts to go into outer space. On May 5, 1961, Alan B. Shepard Jr. flew sub-orbitally, and, on February 20, 1962, John Glenn orbited the earth.
In June 1963, Soviet astronaut Valentina Tereshkova became the first woman in space, but it was another twenty years before the American astronaut Sally Ride orbited Earth. Ride, who had received her PhD. in physics from Stanford University, was accepted for astronaut training in 1978. During her six-day mission aboard the Challenger (she launched from the Kennedy Space Center on June 18, 1983), Mission Specialist Ride helped launch two communications satellites and retrieve another. An expert in use of the shuttle’s fifty-foot-long mechanical arm, the Remote Manipulator System (RMS), Ride also monitored the Challenger‘s instrument panel.
- Search the Today in History Archive on John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson for more information on these presidents.
- Many images related to the development of rocketry and the space program are in the process of being digitized for Built in America: Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record, 1933-Present. Search on the terms mobile launcher and rocket to see images currently available.
- Until the late eighteenth century, both information and people traveled by land and sea. However, ascent in hot air balloons, the inventions of the telephone and telegraph, and the flight of the first airplanes and blimps all foreshadowed communication and exploration in the space age. Search the Today in History Archive for information on all of these inventions.
- Search on terms such as trains, planes, and automobiles as well as mail and telegraph in the American Memory collections of Prints & Photos to see additional images of pre-space-age communication and transportation modes.
- View other images of Sally Ride and of space exploration at the Web site of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Search either the NASA Multimedia Gallery or the NASA Image Exchange.
- See the online exhibition Revelations from the Russian Archives which illustrates both the domestic and the foreign policy of the Soviets and is a source of primary materials which may help us better understand the history of the twentieth century. The documents presented cover Soviet history from the October Revolution of 1917 to the failed coup of August 1991.
Siam and the World Transportation Commission
Palace Court Interior,
Bangkok, Thailand,
William Henry Jackson, photographer,
1895.
Around the World in the 1890s: Photographs from the World’s Transportation Commission, 1894-1896
On June 24, 1932, during the reign of King Prajadhipok of the Chakri dynasty, a coup ended the absolute monarchy of Siam (present-day Thailand). The military-dominated constitutional monarchy that replaced it brought 700 years of absolute rule under a series of Siamese kings to an end.
The Chakri dynasty had assumed power in 1782, at which time the king, Rama I, established his capital, Bangkok, on the east bank of the Chao Phraya River. During his reign, the impressive city wall, the Grand Palace, and the Buddhist Temple, Wat Po, were constructed.
During the nineteenth century, the Thai kings became increasingly receptive to Western trade and influence, particularly under the reigns of King Mongkut (1851-68) and his son, King Chulalongkorn (1868-1910). By introducing social and political reforms recommended by their European advisers, they enabled Siam to avoid the colonial rule imposed on most of Southeast Asia.
Looking Up River or Canal,
Bangkok, Thailand,
William Henry Jackson, photographer, 1895.
Around the World in the 1890s: Photographs from the World’s Transportation Commission, 1894-1896
During King Chulalongkorn’s reign, new public construction, which included traditional temples, palaces, public buildings, and a garden city beyond the city wall, transformed Bangkok. Elegant bridges and modern roads capable of accommodating the newly invented automobile supplemented these magnificent buildings. A modern railway system and an electric tram service were built and telegraph and postal services were established. Traditional shipping and canal systems already existed.
In 1898, the World’s Transportation Commission, a delegation of U.S. businessmen, traveled to Siam to explore possibilities of promoting American trade. They found an exotic, thriving city with a modern system of transportation already in place.
William Henry Jackson, the commission’s official photographer, captured the architecture, art, modes of transportation, and people of Siam. These photographs are available in the American Memory collection Around the World in the 1890s: Photographs from the World’s Transportation Commission, 1894-1896.
- For more photographs, search on Thailand or Siam in Around the World in the 1890s: Photographs from the World’s Transportation Commission, 1894-1896, or select a country from the trip itinerary.
- To find out more about this country, search on Thailand or Siam in the Library of Congress Country Studies.
- Search across the American Memory collections on the term travel to find interesting images and texts on that subject. Read, for example, The Travellers, a 1913 comedy sketch in American Variety Stage, 1870-1920. In the collection The Northern Great Plains, 1880-1920, see, for example, an early 1900 photograph of Indians Traveling from Pembina, to Fort Totten, North Dakota: Gathering Senega Root or Snakeroot.
Two Men on Sacred White Elephant,
Bangkok, Thailand,
William Henry Jackson, photographer, 1895.
Around the World in the 1890s: Photographs from the World’s Transportation Commission, 1894-1896
The elephant is a national symbol of Thailand. White elephants, especially, are held to be sacred and a symbol of royal power.
The World’s Transportation Commission encountered elephants during several stops on its itinerary. Search the collection on the term elephant to see more images of that pachyderm.
Today in History – June 24-External Links
Today’s Weather in History
Today in Earthquake History
This Day in Naval History
Today’s Document from the National Archives
Today’s Events, Births & Deaths –Wikipedia
Today in History by AP
On this Day -1950 to 2005 – Today’s Story–BBC
On This Day: The New York Times
This Day in History –History.com
Today in Canadian History – Canada Channel
History of Britain that took place On This Day
Russia in History –Russiapedia