First Test-Tube Baby Born: Elizabeth Jordan Carr
Elizabeth Jordan Carr enters the world in Norfolk, Virginia as the first successful American test-tube baby, shattering biological barriers that once deemed such conception impossible. This birth immediately launches a new era of reproductive medicine, proving that in vitro fertilization could reliably result in live births and transforming infertility from a permanent sentence into a treatable condition for countless families.
December 28, 1981
45 years ago
What Else Happened on December 28
The priests picked two popes at once. Eulalius grabbed the Lateran Palace at dawn. Boniface's crew seized another church across town. Both claimed legitimate el…
The army chose him in the ruins. Majorian had been a general under Aetius — watched his mentor get assassinated, survived the purges, kept his soldiers loyal. N…
A general nobody wanted becomes the last hope. Majorian took power with Leo's blessing from Constantinople — rare unity between east and west. He wasn't born to…
Alaric II inherits a Visigothic kingdom stretching from the Loire to Gibraltar — the largest Germanic realm in the West. His father Euric had forged it through …
A massive earthquake leveled the medieval Armenian capital of Dvin, killing an estimated 30,000 residents and burying the city’s grand cathedral under rubble. T…
Edward the Confessor consecrates Westminster Abbey, establishing a royal church that becomes the permanent coronation site for English monarchs and the burial p…
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