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December 7 in History

Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Catharina-Amalia, Dan Bilzerian, and Susan Collins.

Pearl Harbor Attack: US Enters World War II
1941Event

Pearl Harbor Attack: US Enters World War II

Japanese aircraft struck the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, in two waves beginning at 7:48 a.m. on December 7, 1941. Three hundred and fifty-three planes launched from six carriers achieved complete tactical surprise. Eight battleships were sunk or damaged, 188 aircraft were destroyed on the ground, and 2,403 Americans were killed. The attack was designed to cripple the Pacific Fleet and prevent American interference with Japanese conquests in Southeast Asia. It succeeded tactically but failed strategically: the fleet's three aircraft carriers were at sea and survived, the fuel storage tanks were untouched, and the submarine base was undamaged. Roosevelt addressed Congress the next day, calling it 'a date which will live in infamy.' The vote to declare war was 82-0 in the Senate and 388-1 in the House. Domestic isolationism died overnight.

Famous Birthdays

Catharina-Amalia

Catharina-Amalia

b. 2003

Dan Bilzerian

Dan Bilzerian

b. 1980

Susan Collins

Susan Collins

b. 1952

Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi

Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi

903–986

Damien Rice

Damien Rice

b. 1973

Dominic Howard

Dominic Howard

b. 1977

Mário Soares

Mário Soares

d. 2017

Richard Warren Sears

Richard Warren Sears

1863–1914

Robert Kubica

Robert Kubica

b. 1984

Historical Events

Ureli Corelli Hill, an American violinist, founded the Philharmonic Society of New York on December 7, 1842, along with a group of musicians who wanted a cooperative orchestra run by its players. The inaugural concert at the Apollo Rooms featured Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. The musicians governed themselves democratically: they elected conductors, voted on repertoire, and divided profits equally. This cooperative model was unique among orchestras and lasted until 1909, when the New York Philharmonic merged with the National Symphony Orchestra and adopted a traditional management structure. The orchestra has been led by conductors including Gustav Mahler, Arturo Toscanini, Leonard Bernstein, and Zubin Mehta. It is the oldest continuous symphony orchestra in the United States and performs roughly 120 concerts per season at David Geffen Hall in Lincoln Center.
1842

Ureli Corelli Hill, an American violinist, founded the Philharmonic Society of New York on December 7, 1842, along with a group of musicians who wanted a cooperative orchestra run by its players. The inaugural concert at the Apollo Rooms featured Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. The musicians governed themselves democratically: they elected conductors, voted on repertoire, and divided profits equally. This cooperative model was unique among orchestras and lasted until 1909, when the New York Philharmonic merged with the National Symphony Orchestra and adopted a traditional management structure. The orchestra has been led by conductors including Gustav Mahler, Arturo Toscanini, Leonard Bernstein, and Zubin Mehta. It is the oldest continuous symphony orchestra in the United States and performs roughly 120 concerts per season at David Geffen Hall in Lincoln Center.

Experimental television station W1XAV in Boston broadcast what is considered the first American television commercial on December 7, 1930, a spot for I.J. Fox Furriers that aired alongside the CBS radio orchestra program The Fox Trappers. The broadcast reached a tiny audience; there were only a few dozen experimental television sets in the Boston area capable of receiving it. The image was a crude, flickering 48-line scan. Commercial television wouldn't become viable for another decade: NBC launched regular commercial broadcasting in 1941, and the FCC authorized commercial television on July 1, 1941. The first legal TV commercial was a Bulova watch ad that aired on WNBT before a Brooklyn Dodgers game. That ad cost $9. Today, a 30-second Super Bowl spot costs over $7 million. The advertising-funded model born in these early experiments still drives the television industry.
1930

Experimental television station W1XAV in Boston broadcast what is considered the first American television commercial on December 7, 1930, a spot for I.J. Fox Furriers that aired alongside the CBS radio orchestra program The Fox Trappers. The broadcast reached a tiny audience; there were only a few dozen experimental television sets in the Boston area capable of receiving it. The image was a crude, flickering 48-line scan. Commercial television wouldn't become viable for another decade: NBC launched regular commercial broadcasting in 1941, and the FCC authorized commercial television on July 1, 1941. The first legal TV commercial was a Bulova watch ad that aired on WNBT before a Brooklyn Dodgers game. That ad cost $9. Today, a 30-second Super Bowl spot costs over $7 million. The advertising-funded model born in these early experiments still drives the television industry.

Japanese aircraft struck the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, in two waves beginning at 7:48 a.m. on December 7, 1941. Three hundred and fifty-three planes launched from six carriers achieved complete tactical surprise. Eight battleships were sunk or damaged, 188 aircraft were destroyed on the ground, and 2,403 Americans were killed. The attack was designed to cripple the Pacific Fleet and prevent American interference with Japanese conquests in Southeast Asia. It succeeded tactically but failed strategically: the fleet's three aircraft carriers were at sea and survived, the fuel storage tanks were untouched, and the submarine base was undamaged. Roosevelt addressed Congress the next day, calling it 'a date which will live in infamy.' The vote to declare war was 82-0 in the Senate and 388-1 in the House. Domestic isolationism died overnight.
1941

Japanese aircraft struck the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, in two waves beginning at 7:48 a.m. on December 7, 1941. Three hundred and fifty-three planes launched from six carriers achieved complete tactical surprise. Eight battleships were sunk or damaged, 188 aircraft were destroyed on the ground, and 2,403 Americans were killed. The attack was designed to cripple the Pacific Fleet and prevent American interference with Japanese conquests in Southeast Asia. It succeeded tactically but failed strategically: the fleet's three aircraft carriers were at sea and survived, the fuel storage tanks were untouched, and the submarine base was undamaged. Roosevelt addressed Congress the next day, calling it 'a date which will live in infamy.' The vote to declare war was 82-0 in the Senate and 388-1 in the House. Domestic isolationism died overnight.

Instant replay debuted during the 1963 Army-Navy football game, transforming how viewers perceived athletic competition by allowing officials to review contentious calls in real time. This innovation fundamentally shifted sports broadcasting from passive observation to interactive analysis, setting the standard for modern officiating and fan engagement across all major leagues.
1963

Instant replay debuted during the 1963 Army-Navy football game, transforming how viewers perceived athletic competition by allowing officials to review contentious calls in real time. This innovation fundamentally shifted sports broadcasting from passive observation to interactive analysis, setting the standard for modern officiating and fan engagement across all major leagues.

Max Planck presented his derivation of the black-body radiation law to the German Physical Society in Berlin on December 14, 1900, introducing the concept that energy is emitted in discrete packets proportional to frequency. The equation E=hv, where h is Planck's constant (6.626 x 10^-34 joule-seconds), was the first quantization of a physical property. Planck himself was deeply conservative and called the quantum hypothesis 'an act of desperation' forced by the failure of classical physics to explain the ultraviolet catastrophe. He spent years trying to reconcile quanta with Newtonian mechanics. It was Einstein, not Planck, who took the idea seriously enough to apply it to the photoelectric effect in 1905. That work earned Einstein the Nobel Prize and launched quantum mechanics as a full theory. Planck received his own Nobel in 1918.
1900

Max Planck presented his derivation of the black-body radiation law to the German Physical Society in Berlin on December 14, 1900, introducing the concept that energy is emitted in discrete packets proportional to frequency. The equation E=hv, where h is Planck's constant (6.626 x 10^-34 joule-seconds), was the first quantization of a physical property. Planck himself was deeply conservative and called the quantum hypothesis 'an act of desperation' forced by the failure of classical physics to explain the ultraviolet catastrophe. He spent years trying to reconcile quanta with Newtonian mechanics. It was Einstein, not Planck, who took the idea seriously enough to apply it to the photoelectric effect in 1905. That work earned Einstein the Nobel Prize and launched quantum mechanics as a full theory. Planck received his own Nobel in 1918.

574

Byzantine Emperor Justin II, wracked by recurring seizures of insanity, adopted his general Tiberius and proclaimed him Caesar on this day in 574 AD. This sudden elevation secured the empire's immediate stability, allowing Tiberius to eventually assume full power as emperor and prevent a potential succession crisis during Justin's debilitating illness.

574

Justin II's mind shattered in waves. The seizures came without warning — violent fits where the Byzantine emperor would thrash, scream, rage at phantoms only he could see. His attendants tried everything: organ music played constantly through the palace halls, even wheeling him around in a mobile throne to different rooms, hoping scenery changes might calm the storms in his skull. Nothing worked. On December 7, 574, during a rare lucid moment, Justin understood what he had to become: the first Byzantine emperor to voluntarily step down while still breathing. He summoned his general Tiberius and placed the purple on his shoulders. The empire needed a mind that worked. Within four years, Justin was dead — but Tiberius ruled for another decade, proving the mad emperor's final decision was his sanest.

927

Qarmatian forces crush the Sajid emir Yusuf ibn Abi'l-Saj near Kufa, dragging him into captivity after a decisive defeat. This victory shatters Sajid control over Adharbayjan and redirects regional power toward the Qarmatians, destabilizing the Abbasid frontier for years to come.

1724

The mayor's head fell first. Then eight more Protestants followed him to the scaffold in Toruń — punishment for a street fight that started when a drunk student allegedly knocked a cap off a Jesuit's head during a religious procession. What began as shoving in the street ended with Saxon troops occupying the city, King Augustus II bowing to pressure from the Pope, and nine men dead. The executions shocked Protestant Europe. Frederick William I of Prussia expelled hundreds of Jesuits in retaliation. Swedish diplomats protested. The Holy Roman Empire lodged formal complaints. But the men stayed dead, and the message was clear: in 1724 Poland, religious tolerance had sharp limits.

1776

The nineteen-year-old Marquis de Lafayette arranged his commission as a major general in the Continental Army, volunteering to serve without pay. His military skills and aristocratic connections proved invaluable in securing French financial and military support that would prove decisive at Yorktown five years later.

1837

Rebels storm Montgomery's Tavern hoping to seize Toronto, but government forces crush their assault within hours. This swift defeat ends the Upper Canada Rebellion and forces William Lyon Mackenzie into exile, ensuring British control over the colony for another decade.

1904

HMS Spiteful and HMS Peterel launched comparative fuel trials on December 7, 1904, proving that oil outperformed coal for naval propulsion. This victory prompted the Royal Navy to abandon coal-fired engines entirely, modernizing its fleet and redefining global maritime logistics.

1922

The Parliament of Northern Ireland votes to remain a part of the United Kingdom rather than unify with Southern Ireland. This decision solidified the island's partition, creating a border that would define political tensions and daily life for decades to come.

1936

Jack Fingleton walked to the crease in Durban needing 112 runs to do something no one had done in 59 years of Test cricket. He got there with a cut shot to the boundary. Four straight centuries. Four different Test matches. The Australian batsman had turned himself into a statistical impossibility—except he wasn't finished. His 118 that day meant he'd scored 503 runs in four innings without failing once. The sequence ended in the next Test when he made only 40. But the record held for 70 years until Kumar Sangakkara matched it in 2014. Fingleton later became a journalist and never stopped writing about the game that made him untouchable for one perfect month.

1941

The first wave hit at 7:48 a.m. on a Sunday morning. 353 aircraft. Six carriers that had sailed in radio silence for 3,000 miles. Japan gambled everything on shock — destroy America's Pacific Fleet in one blow, buy six months to fortify the Pacific, force a negotiated peace. They sank four battleships and damaged four more. Killed 2,403 Americans, most before breakfast. But the US carriers weren't in port. And they'd misread America completely. The attack meant to prevent a war guaranteed one instead. Admiral Yamamoto, who'd studied at Harvard and warned against this plan, supposedly said afterward he'd "awakened a sleeping giant." He was right. Japan had eighteen months before the US war machine overwhelmed them.

Fun Facts

Zodiac Sign

Sagittarius

Nov 22 -- Dec 21

Fire sign. Optimistic, adventurous, and philosophical.

Birthstone

Tanzanite

Violet blue

Symbolizes transformation, intuition, and spiritual growth.

Next Birthday

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days until December 7

Quote of the Day

“We shouldn't be looking for heroes, we should be looking for good ideas.”

Noam Chomsky

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