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December 22 in History

Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Guru Gobind Singh, Maurice Gibb, and Frank B. Kellogg.

Sherman Marches to Sea: Confederacy's Heart Destroyed
1864Event

Sherman Marches to Sea: Confederacy's Heart Destroyed

William Tecumseh Sherman marched his Union troops from Atlanta to Savannah, systematically destroying Confederate infrastructure and civilian property to shatter the South's economic backbone. This ruthless campaign severed vital supply lines and forced a surrender that hastened the end of the Civil War.

Famous Birthdays

Maurice Gibb
Maurice Gibb

1949–2003

Frank B. Kellogg

Frank B. Kellogg

d. 1937

Connie Mack

Connie Mack

d. 1956

Jordin Sparks

Jordin Sparks

b. 1989

Lady Bird Johnson

Lady Bird Johnson

1912–2007

Paul Wolfowitz

Paul Wolfowitz

b. 1943

Richey Edwards

Richey Edwards

1967–1995

Thomas C. Südhof

Thomas C. Südhof

b. 1955

Historical Events

Beethoven conducted and performed his own works at the Theater an der Wien, premiering both the Fifth and Sixth Symphonies alongside the Fourth Piano Concerto and Choral Fantasy. This marathon concert established a new benchmark for public performance length and cemented his reputation as a composer who demanded total artistic control over his music's presentation.
1808

Beethoven conducted and performed his own works at the Theater an der Wien, premiering both the Fifth and Sixth Symphonies alongside the Fourth Piano Concerto and Choral Fantasy. This marathon concert established a new benchmark for public performance length and cemented his reputation as a composer who demanded total artistic control over his music's presentation.

William Tecumseh Sherman marched his Union troops from Atlanta to Savannah, systematically destroying Confederate infrastructure and civilian property to shatter the South's economic backbone. This ruthless campaign severed vital supply lines and forced a surrender that hastened the end of the Civil War.
1864

William Tecumseh Sherman marched his Union troops from Atlanta to Savannah, systematically destroying Confederate infrastructure and civilian property to shatter the South's economic backbone. This ruthless campaign severed vital supply lines and forced a surrender that hastened the end of the Civil War.

A flawed court-martial falsely convicts French officer Alfred Dreyfus of treason, igniting global outrage over rampant anti-Semitism within the military and society. This injustice forces a decade-long legal battle that ultimately exposes deep-seated prejudice and compels France to finally vindicate the wrongfully accused man.
1894

A flawed court-martial falsely convicts French officer Alfred Dreyfus of treason, igniting global outrage over rampant anti-Semitism within the military and society. This injustice forces a decade-long legal battle that ultimately exposes deep-seated prejudice and compels France to finally vindicate the wrongfully accused man.

Adolf Hitler signed the order to develop the V-2 rocket as a weapon, launching the world's first long-range guided ballistic missile program. This decision forced Allied engineers to scramble for countermeasures and ultimately birthed the space age when captured German scientists applied the technology to launch satellites decades later.
1942

Adolf Hitler signed the order to develop the V-2 rocket as a weapon, launching the world's first long-range guided ballistic missile program. This decision forced Allied engineers to scramble for countermeasures and ultimately birthed the space age when captured German scientists applied the technology to launch satellites decades later.

1956

Colo, the first gorilla ever bred in captivity, arrived at the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium in Ohio, shattering the belief that these primates could not survive outside their wild habitat. This breakthrough launched decades of successful captive breeding programs that now safeguard endangered mountain gorillas from extinction.

1975

President Ford signed legislation creating the Strategic Petroleum Reserve in response to the Arab oil embargo that had paralyzed the American economy. The reserve, stored in massive salt caverns along the Gulf Coast, gave the United States an emergency buffer of up to 700 million barrels that has been tapped during every major supply disruption since.

69

Vespasian's proclamation as emperor ended the chaotic Year of the Four Emperors, while the brutal execution of Vitellius on the Gemonian stairs signaled a decisive end to civil war. This violent transition stabilized Roman governance, allowing Vespasian to launch the Flavian dynasty and begin reconstructing the city after the fire of 64 AD.

880

Huang Chao's rebel army walked into Luoyang without a fight. The eastern capital — home to half a million people, palaces that had stood for centuries — simply opened its gates. Emperor Xizong had already fled west to Chengdu, taking the imperial court with him. The city's wealthy families scattered into the mountains with whatever gold they could carry. Huang Chao, a failed merchant who'd flunked the civil service exams twice, now sat in the same throne room where emperors had received foreign ambassadors for two hundred years. He held Luoyang for three years. But the Tang never forgot that their own capital guards had run before the rebels even arrived.

1135

Stephen of Blois seizes the English throne just three weeks after King Henry I's death, sparking a civil war that fractures the kingdom for nearly two decades. This power vacuum plunges the nation into chaos as rival factions fight for control, destroying royal authority and leaving the countryside ravaged by unchecked warfare.

1216

A group of Spanish preachers wanted to combat heresy with learning instead of swords. Pope Honorius III said yes—but only after hesitating. The Dominicans weren't monks locked away praying. They'd wander cities, own nothing, and argue theology in universities. Within decades they ran the Inquisition, the very institution that would torture heretics their founder hoped to convert through reason. Thomas Aquinas was a Dominican. So were the men who interrogated Galileo. Religiosam vitam launched an order that would define medieval intellectual life and, ironically, become synonymous with the brutality it was created to replace.

1489

Ferdinand and Isabella's forces seize Almería from Nasrid ruler Muhammad XIII, stripping Granada of its final coastal stronghold. This victory isolates the emirate completely, compelling Muhammad XIII to surrender just weeks later and ending nearly eight centuries of Muslim rule in Iberia.

1807

Jefferson's own party controlled Congress, yet even they balked. The Embargo Act didn't just restrict trade — it killed it entirely. No American ship could leave for any foreign port. The president who'd championed limited government now deployed the Navy to blockade his own coastline. New England merchants watched fortunes evaporate overnight. Smuggling exploded along the Canadian border. Fourteen months later, with the economy in ruins and his popularity shattered, Congress repealed it three days before Jefferson left office. The man who'd purchased Louisiana couldn't sell the idea that isolation would force Britain and France to respect American neutrality.

1809

Jefferson's Embargo Act had strangled American ports for fifteen months. Ships rotted at dock. Merchants went bankrupt. Smugglers thrived along the Canadian border, moving more goods illegally than ever crossed legally before the embargo began. Congress replaced total isolation with calculated punishment: trade with everyone except Britain and France, the two powers actually seizing American ships. The law promised to lift restrictions the moment either nation respected U.S. neutrality. Neither budged. Britain kept impressing American sailors. France kept confiscating cargoes. The Non-Intercourse Act gave American merchants access to everywhere that didn't matter while blocking the two markets they needed most. It failed within a year, replaced by Macon's Bill No. 2. But the spiral was already set: three years later, America declared war on Britain anyway.

1864

General William Tecumseh Sherman hands Savannah to the Union Army of the Tennessee, delivering the captured city as a Christmas gift to President Lincoln. This strategic victory severs Confederate supply lines along the Atlantic coast and proves that total war can dismantle the rebellion's logistical backbone.

1921

Rabindranath Tagore opened Visva-Bharati College in Santiniketan to fuse Indian traditions with global learning, creating a unique educational model that rejected rigid colonial classrooms. This institution became a living laboratory for his philosophy of universal harmony, directly shaping modern Indian higher education and inspiring international dialogue on cross-cultural understanding.

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 22

Quote of the Day

“Become so wrapped up in something that you forget to be afraid.”

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