The Great Debate occurred during the Constitutional Convention. Outcomes included the establishment of a four-year term of office for the President, granting Congress the right to regulate foreign trade and interstate commerce, and the appointment of a committee to prepare a final draft of the Constitution.
Daily Archives: 08/08/2025
The Black Explorer Erased From History
In memory of Explorer Mr. Matthew A Henson and the Inughuit Tribes
Matthew Henson
1866 – 1955
An African American explorer who co-discovered the North Pole with Robert Peary in 1909.
August 6-10, 1787 ~ Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia begins debate on the first draft ~ never forget
The Constitutional Convention
Woman (to Benjamin Franklin): “Well, Doctor, what have we got – a Republic or a Monarchy?”
Benjamin Franklin: “A Republic, if you can keep it.”
-McHenry, The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787

Scene at the Signing of the Constitution of the United States, Oil on Canvas, Howard Chandler Christy
The Great Debate occurred during the Constitutional Convention. Outcomes included the establishment of a four-year term of office for the President, granting Congress the right to regulate foreign trade and interstate commerce, and the appointment of a committee to prepare a final draft of the Constitution.
historyplace.com
on this day 8/8 1945 – The United Nations Charter was signed by U.S. President Truman.
1356 – Edward “the Black Prince” began a raid north from Aquitaine.
1815 – Napoleon Bonaparte set sail for St. Helena, in the South Atlantic. The remainder of his life was spent there in exile.
1844 – After the killing of Joseph Smith on June 27, Bringham Young was chosen to lead the Mormons.
1876 – Thomas Edison received a patent for the mimeograph. The mimeograph was a “method of preparing autographic stencils for printing.”
1899 – The refrigerator was patented by A.T. Marshall.
1900 – In Boston, the first Davis Cup series began. The U.S. team defeated Great Britain three matches to zero.
1911 – The number of representatives in the U.S. House of Representatives was established at 435. There was one member of Congress for every 211,877 residents.
1940 – The German Luftwaffe began a series of daylight air raids on Great Britain.
1945 – The United Nations Charter was signed by U.S. President Truman.
1945 – During World War II, the Soviet Union declared war on Japan.
.
1953 – The U.S. and South Korea initiated a mutual security pact.
1956 – Japan launched an oil tanker that was 780 feet long and weighed 84,730 tons. It was the largest oil tanker in the world.
1966 – Michael DeBakey became the first surgeon to install an artificial heart pump in a patient.
1974 – U.S. President Nixon announced that he would resign the following day.
1978 – The U.S. launched Pioneer Venus II, which carried scientific probes to study the atmosphere of Venus.
1988 – It was announced that a cease-fire between Iraq and Iran had begun.
1989 – The space shuttle Columbia took off from Cape Canaveral, FL. The trip was said to be a secret five-day military mission.
1990 – American forces began positioning in Saudia Arabia.
1991 – John McCarthy, a British TV producer, was released by his Lebanese kidnappers. He had been held captive for more than five years. A rival group abducted Jerome Leyraud in retaliation and threatened to kill him if any more hostages were released.
1991 – The U.N. Security Council approved North and South Korea for membership.
1992 – The “Dream Team” clinched the gold medal at the Barcelona Summer Olympics. The U.S. basketball team beat Croatia 117-85.
1994 – The first road link between Israel and Jordan opened.
1994 – Representatives from China and Taiwan signed a cooperation agreement.
1995 – Saddam Hussein’s two eldest daughters, their husbands, and several senior army officers defected.
1999 – Wade Boggs (Tampa Bay Devil Rays) got his 3,000th hit of his major league baseball career.
2000 – The submarine H.L. Hunley was raised from ocean bottom after 136 years. The sub had been lost during an attack on the U.S.S. Housatonic in 1864. The Hunley was the first submarine in history to sink a warship.
1879 ~ Emiliano Zapata Salazar was a Mexican revolutionary.
Emiliano Zapata, a leader of peasants and Indigenous people during the Mexican Revolution, is born in Anenecuilco, Mexico.
Born a peasant, Zapata was forced into the Mexican army in 1908 following his attempt to recover village lands taken over by a rancher. After the revolution began in 1910, he raised an army of peasants in the southern state of Morelos under the slogan “Land and Liberty.” Demanding simple agrarian reforms, Zapata and his guerrilla farmers opposed the central Mexican government under Francisco Madero, later under Victoriano Huerta, and finally under Venustiano Carranza. Zapata and his followers never gained control of the central Mexican government, but they redistributed land and aided poor farmers within the territory under their control. On April 10, 1919, Zapata was ambushed and shot to death in Morelos by government forces.
Zapata’s influence has endured long after his death, and his agrarian reform movement, known as zapatismo, remains important to many Mexicans today. In 1994, a guerrilla group calling itself the Zapata Army of National Liberation launched a peasant uprising in the southern state of Chiapas.
Source: history.com

You must be logged in to post a comment.