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Rachel Carson and a Childhood Sense of Wonder ,https://www.wisconsinacademy.org/magazine/rachel-carson-and-childhood-sense-wonder)

May 2022 Childhood Nature Culture Calendar 2022

May is a month of bursting vitality in the North East and New England. It is the time to garden with children, hike, explore, run in fields and meadows, climb mountains, play in the forest, and explore the river. Birds, amphibians, reptiles, and mammals are mating and having babies. Trees are flowering and plants and shrubs are shooting up, blossoming and growing. Plants and pollinators are doing their dance. Get outside and cultivate curiosity, wonder and an enduring love of the earth and the place where you live.

Download this google version of this calendar! https://calendar.google.com/calendar/u/0/r/day/2022/5/31

May 1st

May Day: International Day of Workers Struggle

Beltane Gaelic May Day Fire Festival

Irish American labor radical Mother Jones b. 1830 

May 2

World Mental Health Day

Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, queer theory pioneer, b. 1950

Children’s March fills the jails in Birmingham, Alabama, as kids ditch class and march for justice, 1963

Elijah McCoy, African American notable for his many inventions that involved the lubrication of 

the steam engine

May 3rd

World Press Freedom day

100,000 people protest the US intervention in El Salvador in 1981

Pete Seeger, radical folksinger, ecologist, and all around good commie, b. 1903

Septima Clark, community educator  and civil rights organizer b. in 1898

James Brown, godfather of soul, b. 1933

May 4th 

Kent State Massacre Memorial Day

Keith Haring, queer graffiti artist and activist, b. 1958

Igor Sikorsky obtains a patent for helicopter controls, 1943

May 5th 

Karl Marx, German philosopher and writer of Das Kapital and The Communist Manifesto, b. 1818

John Scopes arrested for teaching evolutionary theory in 1925

Notice several errors in the marker that Scopes is standing in front of in honor of “Scopes Trial Day”

Cinco de Mayo, celebrates the Battle of Puebla, a victory of the Mexican people over Napoleon, in 1862

Mary Kies is the first woman to receive a patent for weaving straw with a thread in 1809

Soren Kierkegaard, existentialist Christian philosopher, father of negative theology, b. 1813

Leo Lionni, beloved children’s author of Frederick, Leo the Late Bloomer, Swimmy and many many others, b. 1910

May 6th

Henry David Thoreau, back to the land, anarchist, writer, b. 1862

Sigmund Freud , founder of psychoanalysis, b. 1856

Dutchmen Peter Minuit, purchased Manhattan Island from the Lenape Indians in 1626

Ted Lewin, striking illustrator of picture books for older elementary school children uses his travel adventures to create exciting stories from around the world, b. 1935

Barbara Mcclintock, tough to pigeonhole children’s illustrator and author, who reworks classics,  and writes books about ballet, nature, history or drawing and creating itself, b. 1955

Chinese Exclusion Act which prohibited Chinese immigration signed into law in 1882

May 7th

Nonny Hogrogrian, modern fabulist of the fairy folk tale, read One Fine Day for starters, b. 1932

Pontiac Rebellion: Indians revolt against British  rule and besiege Detroit for 5 months

May 8th

Mother’s  Day

My mother, Mary Sherman Cassidy Malone (b. 1943-d.2018), my daughter and my grandson Casey

 

Miguel Hidalgo, Mexican priest and revolutionary, b. In 1753

May 9th

John Brown, slavery abolitionist, b.1800

James Barrie, writer of Peter Pan, b. 1860

Ann Snitow, founded the New York Radical Feminists, wrote The Powers of Desire: the Politics of Sexuality, and was at the center of collectivist, dialogical, feminist movement as a writer, teacher and activist, b. 1921

Ann Snitow, a tireless advocate for a “feminism of uncertainty.” https://lambdaliterary.org/2019/08/ann-snitow/

 

Richard Adams, author of Watership Down, b. 1920

Barbie Doll invented by Ruth Handler cofounder of Mattel, in 1958-1959

May 10th

Migratory Bird Day

Christopher Paul Curtis, African American writer of harding hitting, historical fiction and  quirky chronicles of everyday life for teenagers, b. 1954

Ben Franklin tested his lightening rod in 1752 

May 11th

Salvador Dali, surrealist painter, b. 1904

The Metamorphosis of Narcissus by Salvador Dali

 

May 12th

Florence Nightingale, English social reformer, b.1820

Agnes Heller, Hungarian radical Marxist-Humanist philosopher, b. 1929 

Edward Lear, writer of nonsense rhymes, b. 1812

Farley Mowat, writes about animals, the environment and the Far North, b. 1921

 

The Poor People’s Campaign was a multi-racial effort to gain economic justice for poor people, began in 1968

Fannie Richards, Detroit educator, tireless fighter against segregated schools, helps Joseph Workman bring his case to the Michigan Supreme Court, in 1867, that outlawed segregated schools in Michigan

May 13th

US declares war against Mexico in 1846

Manning Marable, American professor and author of the biography of Malcolm X, b.

Philadelphia police drop bombs on MOVE houses starting a fire that killed 11 people in 1985

Stevie Wonder, soul, funk, R and B music maestro, b.1950

May 14th

David Byrne, American musician, leader of The Talking Heads, b. 1952

Eoin Colfer, author of Artemis Fowl, and other modern fantasy, techno adventures, b.1965

George Selden, author of Cricket in Times Square, b. 1929

Ben Fletcher, American IWW leader organizes  more than four thousand  Philadelphia longshoreman to go on strike, in 1913

May 15th

Bike to Work Day

L. Frank Baum, creator of The Wizard of Oz, b. 1856

Dante Alighieri, writer of The Divine Comedy, b. 1256

Louis Riel surrenders, ending the Metis Rebellion in Canada, in 1885

Jackson State killings where two college students were killed by police during an antiwar demonstration, in 1970

May 16th

Adrienne Rich, radical, lesbian , feminist poet and essayist, b. 1929

Flower Full Moon

Denmark becomes the first Western nation to outlaw slavery in 1791

Margaret Rey co-created the Curious George books with her husband H. A. Rey, b. 1906

May 17th

Pierre Clastres, French, anarchist anthropologist who theorized society against the state, b. 1934

Supreme Court outlaws segregation in the Brown v. Board Ruling in 1954

First merry-go-round introduced in Turkey, in 1620

Carousel at Lighthouse Point Park in New Haven CT

 

Gary Paulsen, writer of nature adventure stories for young people, b. 1939

May 18th

Augusto Sandino, Nicaraguan revolutionary leader, anti-colonialist guerrilla, and martyr, b.1895

Lillian Hoban, author of the delightful Francis the badger books, b. 1925

Edwin Beard Budding of England signs a licensing agreement  for the manufacture of his invention of the lawnmower in 1830. Our relationship to nature has never been the same since!

Suggestions for how we can think differently about lawns, nature and how we connect with and relate to the earth

 

Bertrand Russell, English mathematician, philosopher and peace advocate, b. 1872

May 19th

Malcolm X, Black Nationalist, political and spiritual activist, b. 1925

First annual frog jumping contest in Calaveras County, California in 1928

Lorraine Hansberry author and activist who wrote “A Raisin in the Sun.”

May 20th

World Bee Day

 

Toussaint  L’Ouverture, leader of the Haitian slave revolt, b. 1743

Mary Pope Osborne, author of the Magic Treehouse series, b. 1959

May 21st

First aerial test of the hydrogen bomb makes Bikini Atoll uninhabitable, in 1956

The Notorious B.I.G, one of the greatest rappers of all time, b. 1972

May 22nd

Gerrard de Nerval, proto-surrealist poet, walked his pet lobster on a blue ribbon through the streets of Paris “because it does not bark and knows the secrets of the sea” b. 1805

Mary Cassatt, American Impressionist painter, b. 1884

Arnold Lobel, gentle author of the Frog and Toad books, b. 1933

Jiddu Krishnamurti, Indian spiritual teacher, proponent of not-knowing, meditation, and advocated for the necessity of a total, psychic, individual change for social change to take place, b. 1895 

International Day for Biological Diversity

First bicycles, called swift walkers introduced in New York City, in 1819

Anatol Rappport, Russian mathematician and biologist, invented game theory, b. 1911

May 23rd

Brooklyn Bridge, engineering marvel opens in 1893

World Turtle Day

Painted Turtles basking, photograph, naturallycurious.com

 

Margaret Wise Brown, children’s book author of Goodnight Moon, the Runaway Bunny, The Little Island and many other wonderful picture books for very young children. She led a fascinating life which you can read about in The Green Room: The Brilliant and Bold Life of Margaret Wise Brown, b. 1910 

“Trail of Tears”  begins forced removal of the Cherokee Indians, in 1838 and 4,000 people die

May 24th 

Bob Dylan, musician, songwriter, b. 1941

What is your favorite Bob Dylan album, song, lyric, period?

 

May 25th

George Floyd killed by Minneapolis police  keeling on his neck for nearly nine minutes in 2020

Ralph Waldo Emerson, American philosopher, writer, and New England transcendentalist, b.

May 26th

Dorothea Lange, socially conscious, sentimental realist photographer, b. 1895

Lisbeth Zwerger, extraordinary illustrator of classic children’s stories and original work, b. 1954 

Hundreds of Pequot villagers were massacred by the Puritans in Mystic, Connecticut in 1637

Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center

Lauryn Hill, singer songwriter, b. 1975

May 27th

Rachel Carson, marine biologist, ecology pioneer, writer, activist, b. 1907

Rachel Carson and a Childhood Sense of Wonder  (https://www.wisconsinacademy.org/magazine/rachel-carson-and-childhood-sense-wonder)

 

James McLean was issued a patent for the piano in 1796

Christopher Lee, actor, famous for his portrayal of Dracula, b. 1922

May 28th

Indian Removal Act, “relocates”  Native Americans west of the Mississippi in 1830

Amnesty International established in 1961

Jim Thorpe, Native American poly-athlete ( football, baseball, lacrosse, swimming, basketball, swimming and hockey). One of the greatest athletes of all time, b. 1888 

Jim Thorpe: America’s Greatest Athlete of All Time?

John Muir established the Sierra Club in 1892

A group of college students and a professor held a sit-in at a Woolworth’s in Jackson Mississippi to protest segregation and racial discrimination in 1963

May 29th

Lydia Flood Jackson  starts first school for Black children in Sacramento California in 1854

May 30th

Countee Cullen, African American poet, b. 1903

Michael Bakunin, anarchist theorist, b. 1814

Pennsylvania Evening Post, first daily newspaper in the US, begins in 1783

Memorial Day

May 31st

White supremacists destroyed a thriving Black community in Oklahoma in what came to be known as the Tulsa Massacre in 1921

Walt Whitman, American poet, singer of the body electric, I am multitudes, nature, eidolons, and the people. Writer of Leaves of Grass, b. 1819

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