Misplaced Pages of History

Peace Dove by Cigal

Before you begin looking at the list below, close your eyes and think of all of the peace events you can.  What about events that represented a break through for peace and justice?  The list below represents such events.  When you glance at it you realize that it represents the first day of each of the months.  It can be overwhelming when you think how extensive this list can be.  It is equally overwhelming to realize that our history books don’t seem to give equal time to issues of peace, equality and struggles for justice as they do with war and violence.  Why is that? 

Here are some ideas on how to work with the list below and to expand it further.  The class can work with your teacher to determine projects related to the list.  Here are some suggestions:

 

  1. Create a Peace and Justice Historical Timeline.  You can start from as early as your research begins, or you can narrow it down to the last century, or any time frame you prefer.  Use the resource listed at the end of the list to help you with the research.  Timelines can be illustrated.  You can even think of unique ways to display them.
  2. Divide your class into teams that research months or time periods. 
  3. Consider creating Peace and Justice Thematic Timelines—country oriented or issue oriented (civil rights, animal rights, treaties, etc.).
  4. Work with the local newspaper to help them create a small section in the paper that lists one or more events each day that relate to peace and justice.
  5. Sponsor a Peace and Justice Day in your school and offer presentations on some of the highlights of your research.

 

Date

Event

1-Jan

World Peace Day

1-Jan

A law making slave importation into the U.S. illegal becomes effective. (1808)

1-Jan

William Lloyd Garrison publishes The Liberator, the leading abolitionist paper in the United States. (1831)

1-Jan

Michigan becomes the first state to abolish capital punishment. (1847)

1-Jan

President Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation (1863)

1-Jan

Arrest of 10 anti-nuclear activists for trespassing at Nevada Test Site culminates a 54-day encampment at the main Test Site gate. The camp establishes momentum for what became a movement of over 10,000 arrests in numerous Test Site protests over the following years. (1986)

1-Jan

Czechoslovakia peacefully split into two new countries, the Czech Republic and Slovakia. (1993)

1-Feb

Four African American students sit in at Woolworth's, Greensboro, NC (1960)

1-Feb

7,000 march to protest KKK in Greensboro, North Carolina. (1980)

1-Feb

President George Bush & Russian President Boris Yeltsin declare an official end to Cold War (1992)

1-Feb

Two Native American activists, Eddie Hatcher & Tim Jacobs, occupy a newspaper office in Lumberton, North Carolina, to highlight racism issues. (1988)

1-Feb

Two-month campaign of Citizens Against War begins, Belgrade, Serbia. (1992)

1-Mar

Pennsylvania abolishes slavery. (1780)

1-Mar

First U.S. Census count includes slave & free Negroes. Indians were not included. (1790)

1-Mar

President Kennedy established the Peace Corps. (1961)

1-Mar

Nuclear Free Pacific Day to commemorate 2nd U.S. hydrogen bomb dropped on Bikini Atoll. (1954)

1-Mar

Civil Rights Act enacted in U.S. (1875)

1-Mar

International Day of the Seal to promote awareness of the seal's peril. (since 1983)

1-Mar

Chicana Welfare Rights Organization is formed, with Alicia Escalante as director. (1968)

1-Mar

Women for Peace protest against militarism, Belgrade & Ljubljana, Yugoslavia. (1991)

1-Mar

15,000 demonstrate in Lunesburg against shipment of French nuclear waste to site in Gorleben. (1997)

1-Apr

Diggers occupy Saint George's Hill, seizing land to hold in common & to plant. (1649)

1-Apr

Brook Farm, history's most famous utopian community, is founded near West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Its primary appeal was to young Bostonians who shrink from the materialism of American life. (1841)

1-Apr

Michigan becomes first state to abolish the death penalty. (1847)

1-Apr

U.S. Congress overrides President Andrew Johnson's veto of Civil Rights Bill, gives equal rights to all men born in the U.S. except Indians. (1866)

1-Apr

Gandhi ends salt march by illegally collecting salt from the sea. (1930)

1-Apr

500 school children, most with haggard faces & in tattered clothes, paraded through Chicago's downtown section to the Board of Education offices to demand that the school system provide them with food. (1932)

1-Apr

Protesters at Greenham Common form a human chain 14 miles long to oppose missiles. (1983)

1-Apr

South Africa: boycott of segregated schools begins. (1955)

1-Apr

The Pilgrim-Wampanoag Peace Treaty is signed. (1621)

1-Apr

Environmental Protection Agency orders end to dumping of sludge off the New Jersey coast. (1985)

1-May

Mother Jones (born Mary Harris), Irish-American anti-war activist & labor radical, born in Cork, Ireland. (1830)

1-May

International Workers Day (since 1886)

1-May

Catholic Worker newspaper founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin. (1933)

1-May

Glenn Taylor, Idaho Senator, arrested in Birmingham, Alabama for trying to enter a meeting through a door marked "for Negroe.” (1948)

1-May

"Educational television Act", P.L. 87-447, is signed into law. (1962)

1-May

Second Factory for Peace opens, Onllwyn, Dulais Valley, Wales. (1965)

1-May

500,000 Vietnamese march for end of war. (1966)

1-May

Soviet youths openly defy police and dance the twist in Moscow's Red Square during May Day celebrations. (1967)

1-May

Beginning of five days of anti-war May Day protests in Washington, D.C., resulting in over 14,000 arrests—the largest mass civil disobedience in U.S. history. (1971)

1-May

24-hour occupation of Seabrook (NH) nuclear power site results in 1,415 arrests. The action, sponsored by Clamshell Alliance, becomes a model for anti-nuclear direct actions across the country. (1971)

1-May

Day of resistance & protest against Falklands War. (1982)

1-May

One million South Africans strike against apartheid in COSATU strike. (1986)

1-May

Marchers in Quito protest "disappeared people.” (1993)

1-May

Rally to Save Ancient Forests in Eugene, Oregon as logging season begins. (1999)

1-Jun

Mary Dyer hanged for nonviolent resistance to suppression of Quakers, Boston (1660)

1-Jun

Sojourner Truth set out from New York on an historic journey across America, preaching about the evils of slavery and promoting women's rights. (1845)

1-Jun

A Warsaw underground newspaper, the Liberty Brigade, makes public the news of the gassing of tens of thousands of Jews at Chelmno, a death camp in Poland-almost seven months after extermination of prisoners began.(1942)

1-Jun

Sen. Margaret Chase Smith denounces Joseph McCarthy and his "red-baiting" tactics on the floor of the U.S. Senate, in a speech called "A Declaration of Conscience.” (1950)

1-Jun

700 protest at White House against nuclear testing. (1958)

1-Jun

First Buddhist monk, Quang Duc (73) immolates self in Vietnam. (1963)

1-Jun

Vietnam Veterans Against War (VVAW) is formed. (1967)

1-Jun

U.S. and USSR signed an agreement to stop producing chemical weapons (1990)

1-Jul

First Quakers arrive in America, having come to what will be Boston. (1656)

1-Jul

8000 anti-war marchers demonstrate in Boston. (1917)

1-Jul

Guatemala's dictator of 14 years deposed by massive general strike. (1945)

1-Jul

700 protest at White House against nuclear testing. (1958)

1-Jul

61 nations, including the United States and the Soviet Union, sign the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.(1968)

1-Jul

Women Against Daddy Warbucks destroy 1-A files in eight New York City draft boards. (1970)

1-Jul

Publication of first issue of Ms. Magazine. (1972)

1-Aug

As World War I begins, Harry Hodgkin, a British Quaker and Friedrich Siegmund-Schulte, a German Lutheran pastor, attending a conference in Germany, pledged to continue sowing the "seeds of peace and love, no matter what the future might bring," germinating the idea of the Fellowship of Reconciliation. (1914)

1-Aug

Gandhi begins movement of non-cooperation, India. (1920)

1-Aug

Britain bans cigarette advertising from commercial television. (1965)

1-Aug

Helsinki Accords on human rights & East-West relations formed. (1975)

1-Aug

First occupation of Seabrook, New Hampshire nuclear reactor site. (1976)

1-Aug

Blockade of nuclear missile site begins, Grossenstringen, West Germany. (1982)

1-Aug

U.S. resumes making chemical weapons after 14 year's suspension. (1983)

1-Sep

Traditional date of the destruction of Jerusalem. (69)

1-Sep

Carl von Ossietzky founds Nie Wieder Krieg in Berlin, Germany (1920)

1-Sep

Charles Liteky & George Mizo begin Fast For Life against U.S. support of Nicaraguan contras, Washington D.C. (1986)

1-Sep

Kurdish & British activists blockade an arms trade exhibition outside London. 89 arrested. (1997)

1-Sep

International Day of War Tax Resistance

1-Oct

Thomas Paine publishes Common Sense. (1776)

1-Oct

Anti-Krieg Museum, first museum for peace, opened in Berlin (1920)

1-Oct

Army kills and injures hundreds during student protest of university policies, Mexico City. (1968)

1-Oct

World Vegetarian Day, sponsored by the North American Vegetarian Society

1-Oct

Five Plowshares activists pour blood on submarines at General Dynamics. (1984)

1-Nov

Australia abolishes peace-time compulsory military training. (1929)

1-Nov

A London organization sent a delegation of women to Geneva to lobby representatives at a test ban conference to push for an end to nuclear testing. (1958)

1-Nov

McDonald's, under pressure from environmental groups, said it would replace plastic food containers with paper. (1990)

1-Dec

International Peace Bureau launched, Berne, Switzerland. (1891)

1-Dec

Costa Rica disbands its army. (1948)

1-Dec

Rosa Parks, NAACP staff member, arrested for not giving up her bus seat (1955)

1-Dec

12 nations sign treaty for scientific peaceful use of Antarctica. (1959)

1-Dec

World AIDS Day, sponsored by the American Association of World Health. (since 1980s)

1-Dec

A silent march of women, protesting conscription, is met by a police attack & the arrest of 37 women. Khartoum, Sudan. (1997)

Reference site to help facilitate this lesson: http://salsa.net/peace/ is a website dedicated to peace and justice issues.  It is part of Salsa.Net San Antonio, Texas.  After reviewing what is offered by the site click on the peaceCenter.  The Center is committed to “breaking the cycle of violence and creating circles of peace.”  You will find some excellent resource at the site Peace Tools for Teachers.  Here you will find a listing for “This day in peace and justice history.”  This will direct you to an amazing list of peace and justice events in the history of the globe.