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June 27 in History

Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Bianca Del Rio, Tony Leung Chiu-Wai, and Bruce Johnston.

Stonewall Rises: Gay Liberation Movement Ignites
1969Event

Stonewall Rises: Gay Liberation Movement Ignites

Patrons of the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in Greenwich Village, New York, fought back against a police raid on June 28, 1969, sparking six nights of protests that launched the modern LGBTQ+ rights movement. Police raids on gay bars were routine, but on this night, patrons refused to comply. The first resistance came from a transgender woman (possibly Marsha P. Johnson or Stormie DeLarverie) who struck a police officer after being hit with a baton. The crowd threw bottles, coins, and bricks. Police barricaded themselves inside the bar. The following nights saw thousands of protestors gathering in the Village. The Stonewall uprising transformed a community accustomed to hiding into one demanding visibility. The first Gay Pride marches were held on the anniversary in June 1970, establishing the tradition of annual Pride celebrations worldwide.

Famous Birthdays

Bianca Del Rio

Bianca Del Rio

b. 1975

Tony Leung Chiu-Wai

Tony Leung Chiu-Wai

b. 1962

Bruce Johnston

Bruce Johnston

b. 1942

Hans Spemann

Hans Spemann

d. 1941

Raúl

Raúl

b. 1977

Historical Events

A mob of approximately 200 men stormed the Carthage Jail in Carthage, Illinois, on June 27, 1844, killing Joseph Smith Jr. and his brother Hyrum. Smith, the founder of the Latter Day Saint movement, had surrendered to authorities on charges of inciting a riot after ordering the destruction of a critical newspaper, the Nauvoo Expositor. His brother Hyrum was shot multiple times and died instantly. Joseph was shot in the chest and fell from a second-floor window, where he was shot again. Five men were tried for the murders and acquitted. Smith was 38 years old and had founded a new religion, built a city of 12,000 people (Nauvoo was briefly the largest city in Illinois), and established a theocratic government. His death triggered a succession crisis that split the movement; Brigham Young led the largest group west to Utah in 1847.
1844

A mob of approximately 200 men stormed the Carthage Jail in Carthage, Illinois, on June 27, 1844, killing Joseph Smith Jr. and his brother Hyrum. Smith, the founder of the Latter Day Saint movement, had surrendered to authorities on charges of inciting a riot after ordering the destruction of a critical newspaper, the Nauvoo Expositor. His brother Hyrum was shot multiple times and died instantly. Joseph was shot in the chest and fell from a second-floor window, where he was shot again. Five men were tried for the murders and acquitted. Smith was 38 years old and had founded a new religion, built a city of 12,000 people (Nauvoo was briefly the largest city in Illinois), and established a theocratic government. His death triggered a succession crisis that split the movement; Brigham Young led the largest group west to Utah in 1847.

Joshua Slocum completed the first solo circumnavigation of the globe on June 27, 1898, sailing into Fairhaven, Massachusetts, after a voyage of 46,000 miles that had taken three years, two months, and two days. His vessel, the Spray, was a 37-foot oyster sloop he had rebuilt from a derelict hull. Slocum was 54 when he departed Boston in April 1895. He navigated using dead reckoning and a tin clock, having declined to carry a chronometer. In the Strait of Magellan, he scattered carpet tacks on the deck to deter barefoot Fuegian Indians attempting to board at night. His book, Sailing Alone Around the World (1900), became a classic of adventure literature. Slocum disappeared at sea in November 1909 while sailing to South America. Neither he nor the Spray were ever found.
1898

Joshua Slocum completed the first solo circumnavigation of the globe on June 27, 1898, sailing into Fairhaven, Massachusetts, after a voyage of 46,000 miles that had taken three years, two months, and two days. His vessel, the Spray, was a 37-foot oyster sloop he had rebuilt from a derelict hull. Slocum was 54 when he departed Boston in April 1895. He navigated using dead reckoning and a tin clock, having declined to carry a chronometer. In the Strait of Magellan, he scattered carpet tacks on the deck to deter barefoot Fuegian Indians attempting to board at night. His book, Sailing Alone Around the World (1900), became a classic of adventure literature. Slocum disappeared at sea in November 1909 while sailing to South America. Neither he nor the Spray were ever found.

The Soviet Union's Obninsk Nuclear Power Plant began generating electricity on June 27, 1954, becoming the world's first nuclear power plant connected to an electrical grid. The reactor produced only 5 megawatts of electricity, enough to power a small town, but it proved the concept of peaceful nuclear energy. The plant used a graphite-moderated, water-cooled design that would later evolve into the RBMK reactor type used at Chernobyl. Obninsk operated for 48 years before being shut down in 2002. The Soviet achievement spurred the United States, United Kingdom, and France to accelerate their own civilian nuclear programs. Britain's Calder Hall, which opened in 1956, became the first commercial-scale nuclear power station. Today, over 440 nuclear reactors in 32 countries generate approximately 10% of the world's electricity.
1954

The Soviet Union's Obninsk Nuclear Power Plant began generating electricity on June 27, 1954, becoming the world's first nuclear power plant connected to an electrical grid. The reactor produced only 5 megawatts of electricity, enough to power a small town, but it proved the concept of peaceful nuclear energy. The plant used a graphite-moderated, water-cooled design that would later evolve into the RBMK reactor type used at Chernobyl. Obninsk operated for 48 years before being shut down in 2002. The Soviet achievement spurred the United States, United Kingdom, and France to accelerate their own civilian nuclear programs. Britain's Calder Hall, which opened in 1956, became the first commercial-scale nuclear power station. Today, over 440 nuclear reactors in 32 countries generate approximately 10% of the world's electricity.

North Korea's sudden invasion forced the Truman administration into a desperate gamble, as the US had excluded Korea from its Asian defense perimeter and feared a wider war with China or the Soviets. The Soviet boycott of the UN Security Council allowed Resolution 83 to pass unanimously, authorizing member states to send military aid to South Korea. President Truman immediately deployed air and sea forces, transforming a regional conflict into the first major international intervention against communist expansion in Asia.
1950

North Korea's sudden invasion forced the Truman administration into a desperate gamble, as the US had excluded Korea from its Asian defense perimeter and feared a wider war with China or the Soviets. The Soviet boycott of the UN Security Council allowed Resolution 83 to pass unanimously, authorizing member states to send military aid to South Korea. President Truman immediately deployed air and sea forces, transforming a regional conflict into the first major international intervention against communist expansion in Asia.

Patrons of the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in Greenwich Village, New York, fought back against a police raid on June 28, 1969, sparking six nights of protests that launched the modern LGBTQ+ rights movement. Police raids on gay bars were routine, but on this night, patrons refused to comply. The first resistance came from a transgender woman (possibly Marsha P. Johnson or Stormie DeLarverie) who struck a police officer after being hit with a baton. The crowd threw bottles, coins, and bricks. Police barricaded themselves inside the bar. The following nights saw thousands of protestors gathering in the Village. The Stonewall uprising transformed a community accustomed to hiding into one demanding visibility. The first Gay Pride marches were held on the anniversary in June 1970, establishing the tradition of annual Pride celebrations worldwide.
1969

Patrons of the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in Greenwich Village, New York, fought back against a police raid on June 28, 1969, sparking six nights of protests that launched the modern LGBTQ+ rights movement. Police raids on gay bars were routine, but on this night, patrons refused to comply. The first resistance came from a transgender woman (possibly Marsha P. Johnson or Stormie DeLarverie) who struck a police officer after being hit with a baton. The crowd threw bottles, coins, and bricks. Police barricaded themselves inside the bar. The following nights saw thousands of protestors gathering in the Village. The Stonewall uprising transformed a community accustomed to hiding into one demanding visibility. The first Gay Pride marches were held on the anniversary in June 1970, establishing the tradition of annual Pride celebrations worldwide.

King George II personally led his British and allied Hanoverian troops to victory over a French army at the Battle of Dettingen in Bavaria on June 27, 1743, during the War of the Austrian Succession. At 60 years old, George commanded from horseback despite the confusion of a battle he had stumbled into by accident, his army being trapped in a narrow defile between the Main River and hills. When his horse bolted, George dismounted and led his infantry on foot, reportedly shouting "Now, boys, now for the honour of England, fire and behave brave and the French will soon run." The French withdrew after several hours of fighting. George II remains the last British monarch to personally lead troops in battle, ending a tradition stretching back to William the Conqueror.
1743

King George II personally led his British and allied Hanoverian troops to victory over a French army at the Battle of Dettingen in Bavaria on June 27, 1743, during the War of the Austrian Succession. At 60 years old, George commanded from horseback despite the confusion of a battle he had stumbled into by accident, his army being trapped in a narrow defile between the Main River and hills. When his horse bolted, George dismounted and led his infantry on foot, reportedly shouting "Now, boys, now for the honour of England, fire and behave brave and the French will soon run." The French withdrew after several hours of fighting. George II remains the last British monarch to personally lead troops in battle, ending a tradition stretching back to William the Conqueror.

1760

The British walked straight into it. Colonel Archibald Montgomery led 1,600 redcoats through a narrow mountain pass near Echoee in June 1760, convinced the Cherokee were retreating. They weren't. Attakullakulla's warriors had chosen the ground carefully — dense forest, high ridges, nowhere to run. The ambush shredded Montgomery's advance. He pulled back to Charleston and never returned. Britain's Cherokee allies became Britain's Cherokee enemies. And the frontier war that followed helped fracture colonial confidence in British military protection long before anyone said the word independence.

1864

Sherman thought a frontal assault would crack them. It didn't. On June 27, 1864, he threw 16,000 Union soldiers straight at Confederate positions dug into Kennesaw Mountain's rocky slopes — and lost nearly 3,000 men in under three hours. Johnston's Confederates, entrenched and patient, barely moved. But Sherman learned almost nothing from it. He went right back to flanking maneuvers, forced Johnston to abandon the mountain anyway, and took Atlanta two months later. The assault that looked like Sherman's worst mistake barely slowed him down.

1895

The locomotive that pulled the Royal Blue out of Washington that day wasn't steam. It was electric — and that shocked almost everyone watching. The B&O had quietly wired the Baltimore tunnel, a stretch too smoky and dangerous for conventional engines, and on February 27, 1895, the Royal Blue glided through it without a cough. Engineer after engineer had dreaded that tunnel. Now it was just a tunnel. But steam still dominated for decades after. The electric moment everyone expected to spread? It barely did. Progress rarely arrives on schedule.

1905

Sailors aboard the battleship Potemkin mutinied against their officers in Odessa harbor, protesting rotten food, brutal discipline, and the Russo-Japanese War. The uprising became the most famous episode of Russia's 1905 Revolution and was later immortalized in Eisenstein's silent film, which turned the mutiny into an enduring symbol of working-class revolt against autocratic oppression.

1914

Cheatham Hill was a slaughterhouse. On June 27, 1864, Union General William T. Sherman sent roughly 8,000 men straight into Confederate entrenchments there — a frontal assault so costly it became known as the "Dead Angle." Nearly 3,000 Union casualties in a single morning. Sherman called it a mistake almost immediately. The Illinois Monument, dedicated in 1914 by survivors who'd actually been there, marks the spot where Illinois regiments bled hardest. But here's the thing: Sherman lost the battle and still took Atlanta ninety days later.

1923

Two biplanes circled over Rockwell Field, California, passing a rubber hose between them at 80 miles per hour. One wrong move and both crews died. Smith held the DH-4B steady while Richter managed the hose — 9 hours, 4 minutes aloft on a single flight, shattering every endurance record they had. The whole operation used 75 gallons of fuel and looked, by all accounts, completely insane. But it worked. And every long-range bomber, every transoceanic flight, every modern air force on earth traces its reach back to that hose.

1924

Five years of dredging, pouring, and hauling produced a 1,056-meter concrete causeway connecting two worlds. The Johor–Singapore Causeway wasn't just an engineering project — it was a political bet. British colonial planners needed rubber and tin moving faster from Malayan plantations to Singapore's port. Workers from India and China built it with their hands. Trains crossed first. Then cars. Then everything. Today it's one of the busiest border crossings on earth. But here's the reframe: they built it to serve an empire that would collapse within thirty years.

1927

The document that nearly started a war was probably fake. Tanaka Giichi held his Eastern Conference in 1927, mapping out Japan's ambitions in Manchuria and China. Then a supposed secret memo surfaced — the "Tanaka Memorial" — outlining a brutal blueprint for Asian conquest, attributed directly to him. China used it as proof of Japanese aggression. Western powers cited it. Historians repeated it for decades. But most scholars now believe it was fabricated, possibly by Chinese nationalists. The real plans were aggressive enough. Japan didn't need anyone to invent worse ones.

1927

Tanaka Giichi spent eleven days in 1927 mapping Japan's ambitions in China. But the conference's strangest legacy wasn't the strategy — it was a document nobody can prove existed. The Tanaka Memorial, allegedly a secret blueprint for world domination, surfaced afterward claiming to reveal Japan's true imperial master plan. Problem: historians now believe it was forged. Didn't matter. China and the West cited it for decades as proof of Japanese intent. A fabricated document shaped real foreign policy. The lie outlasted the truth.

Fun Facts

Zodiac Sign

Cancer

Jun 21 -- Jul 22

Water sign. Loyal, emotional, and nurturing.

Birthstone

Pearl

White / Cream

Symbolizes purity, innocence, and wisdom.

Next Birthday

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days until June 27

Quote of the Day

“Methods and means cannot be separated from the ultimate aim.”

Emma Goldman

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