29 years ago today, Cal Ripken Jr. broke Lou Gehrig’s baseball record when he played in his 2,131st consecutive game. Once considered a near-impossible feat, “the streak,” which continued for 2,632 games, earned Cal the nickname, Iron Man. The televised game, between the Orioles and the California Angels, still ranks as one of the most watched baseball events, with Cal’s kids throwing out the first pitch. In the fifth inning, as it was tallied a full game, the crowds in the stands, the opposing players, and the four umpires gave Ripken a standing ovation lasting more than 22 minutes, one of the longest ovations for any athlete. WATCH a series of interviews throughout this long streak… (1995)nn
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- The first ship to circumnavigate the world, the Victoria, of Ferdinand Magellan’s expedition, returned to Spain (1522)
- Saint Petersburg‘s name was restored to Russia’s second-largest city, which had been renamed Leningrad in 1924 (1991)
- Musician Sir Bob Geldof was awarded the freedom of his native Dublin after the City Council voted in favor of giving him the accolade in honor of his campaign against world poverty and alleviating debt in Africa (2005)
- The California Legislature became the first legislative body in the nation to approve same-sex marriages (2005)
- The Turkish president attended an association football match in Armenia after Armenian President Serzh Sarkisyan invited him to become the first Turkish head of state to visit the country since the war (2008)
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n62 years ago, Archaeologist James Marsden unearthed the first of the Blackfriar shipwrecks. Dating back to the 2nd century CE. The wreck is dated to a period of great Roman expansion and construction in Great Britain, as emphasized by its cargo of building stones. Blackfriars I was 52–55 feet (16–17 m) long, and 6 meters (20 ft) broad in the beam. The ship was quite flat-bottomed. There was no keel, but evidence of marine parasites in the wood suggests it was seaworthy despite this.nn

nnHis 2017-18 world tour, Us + Them, featuring songs from Pink Floyd’s greatest LPs—The Dark Side of The Moon, The Wall, Animals, and Wish You Were Here, plus new songs from his album Is This the Life We Really Want?—has garnered rave reviews with its legendary visual production, typical of any Waters concert. (1943)nn nnAnd, on this day 154 years ago, the first woman ever to vote legally in the U.S. marked her ballot in Laramie, Wyoming. Louisa Swain made history by casting an electoral ballot under a new law giving women full civil and political equality with men.nn
nnWhen the Wyoming territory guaranteed women the right to vote, hold public office, and serve on a jury, it was a full 50 years before the 19th Amendment would give everyone the same rights.nnDescribed as “a gentle white-haired housewife” of 69 years old, she arose early that day and arrived early to the poll, where election workers invited her inside to mark a ballot.nnTwenty years after the 1869 law passed, Wyoming sought statehood and it famously refused to enter the Union if women’s suffrage was not upheld. And in 1890, Wyoming officially entered the Union as the 44th state and the first state to guarantee women these rights. (1870)nnOn this day in 1997, Elton John debuted a new version of ‘Candle In The Wind’ at the funeral of Diana Princess of Wales. Two billion people worldwide watched Elton, who was able to keep his composure while singing the special lyrics for his friend. The track went on to become the biggest-selling single of all time, according to This Day in Music. WATCH the moment…nn[raw][/raw]nn nnHappy 57th Birthday to Macy Gray, the raspy-voiced R&B singer known for her international hit single I Try. From her multi-platinum debut album On How Life Is, the song won her a Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocalist after peaking at No. 5 on the Billboard chart, and hitting No. 1 in Australia, New Zealand, and Ireland.nn

