Today In History
June 7 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Prince, Mike Pence, and John Turner.

Lee Resolution Passed: America Declares Independence
Richard Henry Lee of Virginia introduced a resolution to the Second Continental Congress on June 7, 1776, declaring "that these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States." The vote was delayed until July 1 to allow reluctant delegates to receive new instructions from their colonial legislatures. In the meantime, Congress appointed a committee of five (Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Roger Sherman, and Robert Livingston) to draft a formal declaration. Jefferson wrote the initial draft in 17 days. Congress voted for independence on July 2 (the date John Adams predicted would be celebrated) and approved the final text of the Declaration of Independence on July 4. The Declaration was not signed by most delegates until August 2.
Famous Birthdays
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John Turner
1929–2020
Orhan Pamuk
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Virginia Apgar
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Brooks Stevens
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Charles Glover Barkla
1877–1944
Dave Navarro
b. 1967
Federico da Montefeltro
d. 1482
Henri Coandă
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John Rennie the Elder
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Historical Events
Richard Henry Lee of Virginia introduced a resolution to the Second Continental Congress on June 7, 1776, declaring "that these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States." The vote was delayed until July 1 to allow reluctant delegates to receive new instructions from their colonial legislatures. In the meantime, Congress appointed a committee of five (Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Roger Sherman, and Robert Livingston) to draft a formal declaration. Jefferson wrote the initial draft in 17 days. Congress voted for independence on July 2 (the date John Adams predicted would be celebrated) and approved the final text of the Declaration of Independence on July 4. The Declaration was not signed by most delegates until August 2.
Crusader forces besieged Jerusalem despite being outnumbered and starving, with barely 1,500 knights remaining from the original 5,000 who left Europe. Genoese supply ships arriving at Jaffa provided just enough timber and provisions for siege engines, giving the besiegers a narrow window before a Fatimid relief army could arrive from Egypt.
The concept of nonviolent civil disobedience as a political tool emerged independently in several traditions but achieved its most dramatic successes in the 20th century. Henry David Thoreau coined the term in his 1849 essay, but it was Gandhi who transformed it into a mass political weapon during the Indian independence movement, beginning with the Non-Cooperation Movement in 1920. The American civil rights movement, led by Martin Luther King Jr., adapted Gandhi's methods for the desegregation struggle of the 1950s and 1960s. The Velvet Revolution of 1989 in Czechoslovakia demonstrated that nonviolent resistance could topple a communist government. Research by Erica Chenoweth has shown that nonviolent resistance campaigns succeed twice as often as violent ones, because they attract broader participation.
American codebreakers at Station Hypo in Hawaii, led by Lieutenant Commander Joseph Rochefort, cracked enough of the Japanese JN-25 naval code to determine that Japan's next target was Midway Atoll. Admiral Chester Nimitz set an ambush. On June 4, 1942, American dive bombers from the carriers Enterprise, Yorktown, and Hornet caught four Japanese carriers (Akagi, Kaga, Soryu, and Hiryu) with their flight decks loaded with armed and fueled aircraft. In five devastating minutes, three carriers were turned into infernos. Hiryu struck back, fatally damaging Yorktown, before being sunk herself. The destruction of four fleet carriers and 292 aircraft in a single day eliminated Japan's offensive naval capability. Midway is considered the turning point of the Pacific War.
She was a pagan poet's daughter from Athens — and she almost didn't make it to Constantinople at all. Theodosius II's sister Pulcheria, who effectively ran the empire, handpicked Eudocia after a beauty contest of eligible brides. Eudocia converted to Christianity, married the emperor in 421, and seemed to fit the mold perfectly. But Pulcheria never fully trusted her. Decades of court intrigue followed, ending in Eudocia's exile to Jerusalem. The woman chosen to be controlled became the one who wouldn't be.
Friuli had outlasted Rome's collapse, survived barbarian migrations, and held itself together for centuries under the Patriarch of Aquileia. Then Venice sent troops, and it was over in days. The Patriarchal State — one of medieval Europe's oldest ecclesiastical territories — simply ceased to exist. Venice didn't want the land for faith. It wanted the road. Udine controlled the Alpine passes into central Europe. And that access reshaped Venetian trade dominance for generations. A thousand years of independence, ended over a trade route.
Two Catholic kings split a planet they hadn't finished mapping yet. Pope Alexander VI drew a line down the Atlantic in 1493 — 370 leagues west of the Cape Verde Islands — and Spain got everything west, Portugal got everything east. Simple. Except nobody asked the people already living there. And nobody told England, France, or the Netherlands, who ignored the whole arrangement entirely. The line accidentally handed Brazil to Portugal, a fact discovered six years later when Cabral landed there. Two countries divided the world. The world disagreed.
Charles I signed a document limiting his own power — then spent the next 21 years pretending he hadn't. The Petition of Right, 1628, forced him to stop imprisoning subjects without cause, stop levying taxes without Parliament's consent. He agreed. Reluctantly. Then dissolved Parliament entirely the following year and ruled alone for eleven years. But that document didn't disappear. Parliament waved it at him during the Civil War. He lost his head in 1649. A king who signed away his authority thinking it meant nothing — it meant everything.
Farm workers killed the Viceroy of Catalonia with their harvesting tools. Not soldiers — reapers. Men who'd spent the morning cutting wheat turned on Dalmau de Queralt in the streets of Barcelona, June 7, 1640, and tore him apart. The Spanish Crown had been billeting troops in Catalan homes for years, forcing locals to feed and house soldiers they despised. The reapers snapped first. But here's the thing: Catalonia's rebellion that followed lasted twelve years and ended with Spain keeping the region anyway.
Louis XIV was 15 years old and already king — but nobody let him act like one. Cardinal Mazarin ran France while the boy-king watched from the sidelines. Then Mazarin died in 1661, and Louis made a decision that stunned his court: he named no new chief minister. He'd do it himself. He moved the entire French government to Versailles, forcing 10,000 nobles to beg for his attention rather than plot against him. And it worked. The king who started powerless built the template every absolute monarch copied for a century.
A massive earthquake struck Port Royal, Jamaica, at 11:43 AM on June 7, 1692, liquefying the sand on which the city was built. Two-thirds of the town slid into the Caribbean Sea within minutes. An estimated 1,600 to 3,000 people died immediately, with an additional 3,000 dying from injuries and disease in the aftermath. Port Royal had been the wealthiest city in the Caribbean, home to pirates like Henry Morgan who spent their plunder in its notorious taverns and brothels. Contemporary accounts describe buildings sinking into the ground while people were swallowed by cracks that opened and closed, crushing them. The earthquake was widely interpreted as divine punishment for the city's wickedness. Submerged portions of Port Royal remain one of the most important underwater archaeological sites in the Western Hemisphere.
Three words started a nation: "Free and independent." Richard Henry Lee stood before the Continental Congress in Philadelphia and moved that the colonies weren't just protesting anymore — they were done. John Adams seconded it immediately. But Congress wasn't ready. They tabled the vote for three weeks, scrambling to write something that could justify the break. That scrambling produced Jefferson's draft. And here's the reframe: the Declaration of Independence wasn't the idea. It was the paperwork for an idea Lee already forced through.
Roof tiles. That's what started it. In June 1788, soldiers marched into Grenoble to enforce a royal crackdown on the local parliament, and residents climbed to their rooftops and hurled tiles down on them. Not weapons — just tiles. But the troops bled, retreated, and the crowd held the streets. It was the first time ordinary French citizens physically drove back the king's men. A year later, the Bastille fell. The Day of the Tiles wasn't a footnote — it was the rehearsal.
He'd already mapped more of North America than anyone alive — over 3.9 million square kilometers — and most people couldn't pick his name out of a lineup. Thompson reached the Saskatchewan's mouth in 1800 not as a celebrated explorer but as a fur trade employee, charting land so the North West Company could move beaver pelts faster. No fanfare. No ceremony. And when he died in 1857, he was broke, nearly blind, and largely forgotten. The man who drew Canada into existence never saw himself in the history books.
Six thousand dead in a single summer. Cholera crossed the Atlantic inside the bodies of Irish immigrants fleeing famine, packed into ships so overcrowded that doctors called them "floating coffins." Quebec City's Grosse Île quarantine station was completely overwhelmed — inspectors couldn't keep up. The disease tore through Lower Canada in weeks. But here's the reframe: the Irish weren't bringing death. They were running from it. They were victims twice over, and history blamed them for both.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Gemini
May 21 -- Jun 20
Air sign. Adaptable, curious, and communicative.
Birthstone
Pearl
White / Cream
Symbolizes purity, innocence, and wisdom.
Next Birthday
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days until June 7
Quote of the Day
“Art requires philosophy, just as philosophy requires art. Otherwise, what would become of beauty?”
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