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Sunday, June 21, 2026

United States History On This Date: June 21st

1788 —
New Hampshire Ratifies the U.S. Constitution
New Hampshire’s ratification provided the decisive ninth vote needed to activate the new Constitution, transforming a debated proposal into the nation’s governing framework. The decision reflected growing public frustration with the Articles of Confederation, whose weaknesses had become impossible to ignore. Merchants, farmers, and political leaders alike sought stability, stronger national authority, and a unified commercial system. With this vote, the United States formally stepped into a new political era, setting the stage for the first federal elections and the creation of the government we recognize today.

1861 — Union Forces Advance Toward Manassas Junction
General Irvin McDowell’s army tightened its lines near Fairfax Court House as scouts reported intensified Confederate drilling around Manassas. President Lincoln monitored the day’s movements closely, aware that Congress was pressing for a swift offensive. Yet the army remained green, its officers untested and its logistics still forming. The day’s cautious advances revealed both sides inching toward the first major clash of the Civil War. Soldiers sensed the moment’s gravity, writing home about long drills, heavy heat, and the feeling that history was gathering just beyond the horizon.

1877 — Great Railroad Strike Begins in Martinsburg, West Virginia
The Great Railroad Strike erupted when workers in Martinsburg refused to accept another wage cut, halting freight traffic and igniting unrest that spread rapidly along major rail lines. The walkout exposed deep tensions between labor and industrial capital in the post‑Reconstruction economy, where falling wages collided with rising corporate power. Crowds gathered in rail yards, local authorities hesitated, and violence simmered at the edges. Federal troops would soon intervene, marking one of the earliest large‑scale confrontations between American workers and the national government over economic justice and industrial authority.

1942 — Japanese Submarine Shells Fort Stevens, Oregon
A Japanese submarine surfaced off the Oregon coast and fired shells at Fort Stevens, causing little physical damage but jolting public confidence. The attack underscored the vulnerability of America’s Pacific coastline during World War II and shattered assumptions that the mainland was beyond reach. Military planners rushed to strengthen coastal defenses, while civilians participated in blackout drills and air‑raid preparations. Though the bombardment was brief, it left a lasting psychological mark, reminding Americans that the global conflict could intrude suddenly and unexpectedly on their own shores.

1964 — Freedom Summer Volunteers Arrive in Mississippi
Hundreds of civil‑rights volunteers arrived in Mississippi to register Black voters, establish Freedom Schools, and challenge the state’s entrenched segregation. Their presence marked a bold escalation in the national struggle for equality. Within days, three workers disappeared near Philadelphia, Mississippi — a tragedy that shocked the nation and drew intense federal scrutiny. The volunteers faced intimidation, violence, and constant surveillance, yet their determination helped expose the depth of racial injustice. Their courage accelerated momentum toward the Voting Rights Act and reshaped the moral landscape of the civil‑rights movement.

1982 — Equal Rights Amendment Fails to Meet Ratification Deadline
The Equal Rights Amendment expired without securing the required state ratifications, ending a decade‑long national campaign for constitutional gender equality. Supporters mourned the setback but vowed to continue the fight through legislation, litigation, and renewed organizing. The debate revealed deep cultural divisions over gender roles, family structures, and the pace of social change. Although the amendment failed, it energized a new generation of activists and reshaped public expectations about women’s rights. The ERA’s legacy endures as both a cautionary tale and an ongoing rallying point for equality advocates.

Freedom Summer Bus, 1964, by Steve Schapiro

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