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July 26 in History

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CIA Born: Truman Signs the National Security Act
1947Event

CIA Born: Truman Signs the National Security Act

Harry Truman signed the National Security Act on July 26, 1947, the most sweeping reorganization of American government since the Constitution. The law created the Central Intelligence Agency from the wartime Office of Strategic Services, established the Department of Defense by merging the War and Navy departments, made the Air Force an independent branch, formalized the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and established the National Security Council. The Act was a direct response to Pearl Harbor: the intelligence failures that allowed the attack proved that the Army and Navy couldn't continue operating as independent fiefdoms. The CIA received a mandate so broadly worded that it would justify covert operations, regime changes, and surveillance programs for the next eight decades.

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Historical Events

Harry Truman signed the National Security Act on July 26, 1947, the most sweeping reorganization of American government since the Constitution. The law created the Central Intelligence Agency from the wartime Office of Strategic Services, established the Department of Defense by merging the War and Navy departments, made the Air Force an independent branch, formalized the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and established the National Security Council. The Act was a direct response to Pearl Harbor: the intelligence failures that allowed the attack proved that the Army and Navy couldn't continue operating as independent fiefdoms. The CIA received a mandate so broadly worded that it would justify covert operations, regime changes, and surveillance programs for the next eight decades.
1947

Harry Truman signed the National Security Act on July 26, 1947, the most sweeping reorganization of American government since the Constitution. The law created the Central Intelligence Agency from the wartime Office of Strategic Services, established the Department of Defense by merging the War and Navy departments, made the Air Force an independent branch, formalized the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and established the National Security Council. The Act was a direct response to Pearl Harbor: the intelligence failures that allowed the attack proved that the Army and Navy couldn't continue operating as independent fiefdoms. The CIA received a mandate so broadly worded that it would justify covert operations, regime changes, and surveillance programs for the next eight decades.

Walt Disney's animated adaptation of Alice in Wonderland premiered on July 26, 1951, and promptly flopped. Critics dismissed it as a plotless collection of bizarre vignettes. Disney himself later admitted he didn't much like the film, saying Alice had "no heart." It lost money in its initial theatrical release. But television changed everything: when the film aired on the Disneyland TV show in the 1950s and was re-released theatrically in the psychedelic 1960s, audiences discovered that its chaotic, dreamlike quality was exactly the point. The film's bold visual experimentation with color, perspective, and surreal imagery influenced generations of animators and became a cultural touchstone that Disney had nearly abandoned.
1951

Walt Disney's animated adaptation of Alice in Wonderland premiered on July 26, 1951, and promptly flopped. Critics dismissed it as a plotless collection of bizarre vignettes. Disney himself later admitted he didn't much like the film, saying Alice had "no heart." It lost money in its initial theatrical release. But television changed everything: when the film aired on the Disneyland TV show in the 1950s and was re-released theatrically in the psychedelic 1960s, audiences discovered that its chaotic, dreamlike quality was exactly the point. The film's bold visual experimentation with color, perspective, and surreal imagery influenced generations of animators and became a cultural touchstone that Disney had nearly abandoned.

Robert Tappan Morris, a 23-year-old Cornell graduate student, released a self-replicating program onto the internet on November 2, 1988, that exploited vulnerabilities in Unix sendmail, fingerd, and rsh/rexec protocols. The worm was supposed to be harmless, merely counting how many computers were connected. But a coding error caused it to copy itself far more aggressively than intended, crashing roughly 6,000 machines, about 10% of the entire internet. Morris was indicted on July 26, 1989, becoming the first person convicted under the 1986 Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. He was sentenced to three years probation and a $10,000 fine. He later became a professor at MIT and co-founded Y Combinator, the world's most influential startup accelerator.
1989

Robert Tappan Morris, a 23-year-old Cornell graduate student, released a self-replicating program onto the internet on November 2, 1988, that exploited vulnerabilities in Unix sendmail, fingerd, and rsh/rexec protocols. The worm was supposed to be harmless, merely counting how many computers were connected. But a coding error caused it to copy itself far more aggressively than intended, crashing roughly 6,000 machines, about 10% of the entire internet. Morris was indicted on July 26, 1989, becoming the first person convicted under the 1986 Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. He was sentenced to three years probation and a $10,000 fine. He later became a professor at MIT and co-founded Y Combinator, the world's most influential startup accelerator.

Benjamin Franklin was appointed the first Postmaster General by the Continental Congress on July 26, 1775, building on a colonial postal network he had already reformed as deputy postmaster for the British crown. Franklin established reliable routes between major cities and introduced dead-letter offices and home delivery. George Washington later signed the Postal Service Act of 1792, which expanded the system to deliver newspapers at subsidized rates, a decision that historians credit with creating an informed citizenry capable of self-governance. The Post Office became the federal government's largest employer and the physical thread that connected a nation spread across a vast continent before railroads and telegraphs existed.
1775

Benjamin Franklin was appointed the first Postmaster General by the Continental Congress on July 26, 1775, building on a colonial postal network he had already reformed as deputy postmaster for the British crown. Franklin established reliable routes between major cities and introduced dead-letter offices and home delivery. George Washington later signed the Postal Service Act of 1792, which expanded the system to deliver newspapers at subsidized rates, a decision that historians credit with creating an informed citizenry capable of self-governance. The Post Office became the federal government's largest employer and the physical thread that connected a nation spread across a vast continent before railroads and telegraphs existed.

1775

The Second Continental Congress established a national postal service and appointed Benjamin Franklin as the first Postmaster General, creating the communication backbone the Revolution desperately needed. Franklin's postal routes connected the thirteen colonies into a functioning information network that carried military dispatches, newspapers, and political correspondence. The system he built evolved into the United States Postal Service, the nation's oldest continuously operating federal institution.

657

Ninety thousand Muslims faced each other across the Euphrates near Siffin, cousin against cousin. Ali ibn Abu Talib, the Prophet's son-in-law and fourth caliph, commanded one army. Muawiyah, governor of Syria, led the other. They fought for three months—July to September 657—over who rightfully ruled Islam's empire. When Muawiyah's forces raised Qurans on their spears to demand arbitration, the killing stopped. But the arbitration failed. The civil war that began here would split Islam into Sunni and Shia, a division that outlasted both men by fourteen centuries.

811

Khan Krum turned Nikephoros I's skull into a drinking cup lined with silver. The Byzantine emperor had ignored warnings, pushed 80,000 troops deep into Bulgarian territory, and sacked Pliska on July 20, 811. But Krum trapped the entire army in a mountain pass during their retreat. Three days of slaughter. Nikephoros died alongside most of his men. His son Staurakios survived with a severed spine, ruled paralyzed for two months, then abdicated. Krum reportedly toasted visiting chieftains from his enemy's head for years afterward.

1139

Afonso Henriques commanded maybe 1,000 men against Ali ibn Yusuf's force—sources claim anywhere from 5,000 to 200,000 Almoravid fighters, though medieval chroniclers loved inflating enemy numbers. The prince won anyway at Ourique on July 25, 1139. He didn't wait for permission. At Lamego, he convened Portugal's first estates-general and had the Bishop of Bragança crown him king while his mother's cousin, Alfonso VII of León, still considered Portugal his vassal territory. The Pope wouldn't recognize Portuguese independence for another 40 years, but Afonso ruled regardless—sovereignty declared not by diplomacy but by battlefield and bishop's hands.

1184

A medieval banquet hall at Henry VI's Hoftag suddenly collapsed on July 26, 1184, sending dozens of gathered nobles plunging into open sewage pits below. The tragedy eliminated key regional leaders and forced a temporary halt to imperial governance in the area.

1469

William Herbert led 8,000 Welsh troops toward Banbury, convinced reinforcements would arrive. They didn't. On July 26, 1469, Warwick's forces—disguised as a peasant uprising—slaughtered Herbert's army at Edgecote Moor. Herbert was executed the next morning. His brother too. But here's what mattered: King Edward IV, Herbert's commander, wasn't even there. Warwick had just demonstrated he could destroy a king's army while the king watched from a distance, powerless. Within weeks, Edward was Warwick's prisoner. The man who made kings had just unmade one.

1533

Atahualpa filled a room 22 feet long by 17 feet wide with gold—once to the height of his raised hand—as ransom. Nine tons total. Francisco Pizarro took it anyway and strangled him with an iron collar on July 26, 1533. The emperor had ruled just five years, surviving a civil war against his half-brother only to meet 168 Spaniards in Cajamarca. His execution dissolved the largest empire in pre-Columbian America within months. Turns out you can buy a room full of gold but not a promise from men who'd crossed an ocean for exactly that.

1579

Francis Drake lands at a "fair and good" bay along the Pacific Northwest coast, likely in present-day Oregon or Washington. This landing establishes England's first tangible claim to the region, challenging Spanish dominance over the western seaboard and opening the door for future British exploration and settlement in North America.

1581

The Dutch provinces fired their king by mail. On July 26, 1581, they sent Philip II a formal letter explaining he was no longer their monarch—not a rebellion, they insisted, but a legal termination of contract. The document cited twenty-nine specific grievances. It worked: seven provinces became the Dutch Republic, surviving eighty years of war to win recognition. And it gave Thomas Jefferson a template—the Plakkaat's structure of listing royal abuses before declaring independence appeared word-for-word in another famous breakup letter 195 years later.

1703

Tyrolean peasants stormed the Pontlatzer Bridge to eject Maximilian II Emanuel, shattering his plan to march on Vienna alongside French forces. This rural victory forced the Bavarian army to retreat, directly saving the Habsburg capital from capture during the War of the Spanish Succession.

1758

The fortress cost France 30 years and 30 million livres to build—supposedly more expensive than Versailles. Gone in 49 days. British commander Jeffery Amherst accepted the surrender of Louisbourg on July 26, 1758, after his cannons fired 1,473 shells into the stone walls. 5,637 French soldiers and sailors became prisoners. The British now controlled the gateway to the St. Lawrence River and Quebec itself. France had built the most expensive fortress in North America to guard a colony it would lose within five years.

Fun Facts

Zodiac Sign

Leo

Jul 23 -- Aug 22

Fire sign. Creative, passionate, and generous.

Birthstone

Ruby

Red

Symbolizes passion, vitality, and prosperity.

Next Birthday

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days until July 26

Quote of the Day

“Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves.”

Carl Jung

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