June 9th
1986: Report on Challenger disaster is released
The Challenger commission told President Reagan today in a 250 page report that seven astronauts died from "an accident that didn't have to happen." "The report will say the explosion of the Challenger, 73 seconds after liftoff on Jan. 28, was triggered by a flame that found a path between segments of the right booster rocket and that such a catastrophic failure was foreshadowed by a long history of known but unsolved problems," reported The Daily Intelligencer on June 9, 1986. NOTE: When preparing the report, the commission conducted 160 interviews and studied 122,000 pages of related documents.
1909: Woman begins auto trip across U.S.
Alice Ramsey, the president of the Women's Motoring Club of New York, set off on an automobile trip from New York to San Francisco today along with three other women. "From the start to the end, Mrs. Ramsey will do the driving and, furthermore, will have to make alone all tire repairs, tire changes and such for, while she will not be alone in the car she will be unaccompanied by man. It is this that makes the trip all the more interesting for it will be the first time that a woman has ever attempted the long journey between the two cities under these conditions. Unassisted she will have to pick the route, guide the car across the Rocky mountains, and in fact, will travel over roads and routes that would tax an expert male driver," The Atlanta Constitution reported on June 6, 1909. NOTE: She made it just fine.
1899: Jeffries wins heavyweight title
James Jeffries, born in Carroll, Ohio, was named heavyweight champion "in a contest for supremacy in pugilism of the world" when he won the Jeffries-Fitzsimmons fight at Coney Island today. "The idea of Fitzsimmons, the conqueror, being put to sleep by a man who had hitherto been regarded as a second-rater, was too much for the sports. Fitzsimmons soon got up on his feet and doggedly walked out of the ring," informed The Fort Wayne News on June 10, 1899.
1870: Charles Dickens dies
British author Charles Dickens was mourned today as "death struck him with sudden power, and in the midst of another work of genius, took him away," according to The Daily Gazette on June 11, 1870. On June 25 of the same year, the St. Joseph Herald reprinted comments made in the The London Times about Charles Dickens: "The ordinary expressions of regret are not cold and conventional. Millions of people feel it as a personal bereavement. Statesmen, savants and benefactors of the race, when they die, can leave no such void. They cannot, like this great novelist, have been an inmate of every house."
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