President George Washington appointed Samuel Osgood as the nation’s first Postmaster General under the newly organized Post Office Department. His leadership helped transform scattered colonial mail routes into a unified federal system, laying the foundation for a national communications network that would support commerce, governance, and westward expansion.
1861 — Confederate Congress Adopts Its Constitution
Meeting in Montgomery, Alabama, delegates of the seceded Southern states approved the permanent Constitution of the Confederate States of America. Modeled closely on the U.S. Constitution but explicitly protecting slavery, it formalized the political structure of the Confederacy just weeks before the Civil War erupted at Fort Sumter.
1941 — Roosevelt Signs the Lend‑Lease Act
President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Lend‑Lease Act, authorizing the United States to supply military aid to nations resisting Axis aggression. The program dramatically expanded American involvement in World War II before formal entry, strengthening Britain and other allies while signaling the United States’ growing role as the “arsenal of democracy.”
2011 — Great East Japan Earthquake Prompts U.S. Humanitarian Response
Following the devastating earthquake, tsunami, and Fukushima nuclear crisis in Japan, the United States launched Operation Tomodachi, a major humanitarian and disaster‑relief effort. The operation showcased deep U.S.–Japan cooperation, mobilizing military and civilian resources to support rescue operations, stabilize infrastructure, and assist communities affected by one of the century’s worst natural disasters



