Today’s Motto: ‘It is better to be hated for what you are, than to be loved for what you are not’
‘Work hard in silence. Let your success be your noise’
As Every Day makes a new beginning in life, it brings new opportunities, opens new avenues, to perform and make a mark, to write a Page in History Book.
This is Your Day-TODAY: Take a Determined Step Forward and Make History!
On this day, 06 May….
1529 – Babur defeated the Afghan Chiefs in the Battle of Ghagra.
1840 – The adhesive postage stamp was first sold in Great Britain (pic credit-Britannica).
1851 – A U.S. patent was issued to John Gorrie for his invention of an “Improved Process for the Artificial Production of Ice”. This was the first U.S. patent issued for a mechanical refrigerator. His British patent, was granted earlier on 22 Aug 1850.
1857 – The British East India Company disbands the 34th Regiment of Bengal Native Infantry whose Sepoy Mangal Pandey had earlier revolted against the British and is considered to be the First Martyr in the War of Indian Independence.
1889 – The Eiffel Tower is officially opened to the public at the Universal Exposition in Paris.
1891 – U.S. President Benjamin Harrison had the first electric lights installed in the White House. Irwin H. “Ike”, the electrician who came to do the work, was retained as the White House electrician to operate the lights because the President’s family was afraid of getting shocked. The large lanterns on the great white pillars of the front portico remained unchanged, lit by gas. Each night, a man used a ladder to light each lamp. The society page of the 13 Dec 1891 New York Times declared “Long may it be before the vandal march of progress reaches these quaint old lanterns to destroy their picturesqueness by the introduction of electricity.”
1896 – The Aerodrome No. 5 made the first successful flight of an unpiloted, engine-driven, heavier-than-air craft of substantial size. Its first flight travelled 3,300-ft. (pic credit-www.cradleofaviation.org)
1916 – The first U.S. radio telephone ship-to-shore conversation was made. The Secretary of the Navy gave orders for the next day’s movement to the captain of the battleship. These orders were the first occasion that a ship of the Navy was ever operated direct from the department by wireless telephone. The result of these tests was so satisfactory that the department arranged for continuous direct long-distance service by telephone and telegraph circuits between the department and the principal navy yards.
1948 – India rejected the Security Council’s plan for UN supervision over plebiscite in Kashmir.
1953 – A heart-lung machine designed by Dr. John Heysham Gibbon was used to successfully complete the first open-heart surgery, on patient Cecelia Bavolek, demonstrating that an artificial device can temporarily mimic the functions of the heart. He was awarded Alma Mater award by his Unversity of Princeton (pic credit-ThoughtCo.)
1967 –Dr. Zakir Hussain elected 1st Muslim President of India. He was 3rd Vice President from 1962-67 and became President from May 13, 1967 to May 03, 1969 (till his death). He was an educationist, a Gandhian and political activist. He co-founded Jamia Milia Islamia in India. He was awarded Bharat Ratna in 1963.
2002 – Entrepreneur Elon Musk founds SpaceX in California (USA).

Born….
1856 – Sigmund Freud, Austrian father of psychoanalysis. He wrote theories on physiology and neurology. He wrote books like Interpretation pof Dreams, Psychopathology of Everyday Life, Totem & Taboo, Civilisation and it Discontents etc. He convinced his friend physician Max Schur to give him a heavy dose of morphine, as he was suffering from acute pain due to mouth cancer. (pic credit-alcandelabrcr.wordpress.com)
1861 – Motilal Gangadhar Nehru, lawyer and politician, President of the Indian National Congress. He was father of first Prime Minister Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru.
1983 – Gagan Narang, Indian shooter who got Air Rifle event Bronze in Olympic 2012. (pic credit-Sportsmatik).
RIP…. 1589 – Mian Tansen, legendary singer of Akbar’s court. He could cause Rail, Fire and Basant with his classical music.
1922 – Chhatrapati Rajarshi Shahu, great revolutionary, freedom fighter and social reformer of Kolhapur (pic credit-India.com).
1952 – Maria Montessori, pioneer in modern education, who spent almost 10 years in India, died in Noordwijk aan Zee. The principles and techniques advocated by her are also applied to the education of handicapped children and adult education (pic credit-Wikipedia).
You may have known….
1. From 1907 to 1940 American women could lose their citizenship for marrying non-American men.
2. Each year 2,500 Cr worth of human hair is bought and sold in India. {Compiled by Lt. Gen. (R) Raj Kadyan}
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