According to Mary Holland the month of August in New England is a month of dispersal. Most of the baby birds have left their nests, some shore birds have already started South, and baby turtles and snakes are making their way out of eggs laid in the Spring. Tadpoles have turned into full fledged frogs and while there are less songbirds singing, cicadas, crickets, grasshoppers and katydids are making a holy ruckus. Fruit is growing on the trees and bushes, and many plants are beginning to drop their seeds. Beneath the long hot summer sun, nature has done its work and we are privy to its abundance. Increasingly, we worry/reflect about forest fires out of control, tornadoes popping up in unexpected places, increasing temperatures, food and water shortages, health issues, and the other cumulative effects of global warming and climate change. In any case it is a good time to find the water near you whether it be a river, lake, pond or ocean to play in, and use the tree canopy of a nearby forest to cool things off.
August 1st
National Convention of Marcus Garvey’’s Universal Negro Improvement Association opens in Harlem, 1920
Stinkhorn mushrooms are fruiting
Herman Melville, author of Moby Dick, b. 1819
MTV or Music Television is launched in 1981
Pierre Bourdieu, French sociologist and educational theorist b. 1930
Britain passes slavery abolition act in 1834
August 2nd
Holling C. Holling author of many beautiful children’s books especially about journeys, water and the sea, b. 1900
Frederic Bartholdi French sculptor who designed the Statue of Liberty, b. 1834
James Baldwin, writer, public intellectual, polemicist, b.1919
The first subway was opened beneath the Thames River in London, 1870
August 3rd
Jesse Owens, African-American athlete, wins the 100m dash Gold Medal in Nazi Germany, and leaves with a total of 4 gold medals
Hermit Thrushes are singing
National Watermelon Day
August 4th
White-Tailed Deer fawns are still nursing
National Conference in Rimini, Italy, gives birth to the Anarchistic Federation of Italy
Louis Armstrong , jazz pioneer, trumpeter, singer, 1901
Barack Obama 44th President of the United States, 1st African American president, b. 1961
August 5th
Goldenrod, a crucial late summer pollinator plant for bees, flowering
Partial nuclear test ban treaty signed by England, the Soviet Union and the United States in 1963
John Huston, movie director of of such wonderful movies as Night of the Iguana, Maltese Falcon, The Treasure of Sierra Madre, The Misfits among many others, b. 1901
August 6th
US drops atomic bomb on Hiroshima killing 130,000, 1945
Barbara Cooney, author of such classics as Miss Rumphius, Roxaboxen and the Chanticleer and the Fox, deep respect for children, b. 1917
Great Blue Herons and Cormorants are cooling off by the avian strategy of panting or gular fluttering, where they open their mouths and flutter their neck muscles
Andy Warhol, inventor of Pop Art and the doyen of the Factory, a cultural powerhouse in Manhattan in the 60s, 70s, and 80s, b. 1928
Scott Nearing, radical economist, educator, writer, political activist, pacifist and advocate of simple living, b. 1883
Voting Rights Act becomes law in the United States, 1965
Lucille Ball, American actress and comedian, b. 1911
August 7th
Wild Turkeys specially adapted for explosive, short distant flight to escape predators. They squat and use their powerful hind legs to jump, and then their cupped wings and strong breast muscles allow it to fly up to 55 miles an hour for short distances
Louis Leakey, famous anthropologist, b. 1903
Love Canal in upper New York State declared toxic disaster area,1977
Phillipe Petit walks between Twin Towers of the World Trade Center, eight times, in 45 minutes, 1974
August 8th
Juvenile Eastern Newts emerge from ponds and transform into Red Efts
Emiliano Zapata, Mexican revolutionary, leading figure in the Mexican Revolution, b. 1879
Freedom Schools Convention held in Mississippi in 1964
International Moon Bear Day
August 9th
Henry David Thoreau publishes Walden in 1854
Seymour Simon, prodigious children’s author of captivating non-fiction books, including Pets in a Jar, The Solar System, Animals Nobody Loves, b. 1931
Unarmed Michael Brown shot by police officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson, Missouri. The people’s response began the Black Lives Matter movement, 2014
Pamela Travers, author of the Mary Poppins books, b. 1899
Jean Piaget, developmental child psychologist, play theorist, b. 1896
US drops second atomic bomb on Nagasaki killing around 74,000 people, 1945
Whitney Houston, singer, b. 1963
International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples
August 10th
Sundews are carnivorous plants that live in acidic bogs and cedar forests that eat insects
Pueblo Independence Day, Pueblo Indians in “New Mexico” revolt against Spanish in 1680
World Lion Day
August 11th
Full Sturgeon Moon
Joanna Cole, author of the Magic School Bus books that take children on a myriad of adventures in the natural and human world, and finds magic doors to exploration and discovery everywhere, b. 1944
Alex Haley author of Roots and The Autobiography of Malcolm X, b. 1921
Don Freeman, author of Corduroy the story of a beloved bear that gets lost, and is found, b. 1908
Mall of America, largest mall in the United States opens its doors to shoppers in 1992
Hip Hop is “born” when Dj Kool Herc uses two turntables to create a break beat at a dance party in the Bronx, in 1973
August 12th
Peak of the Perseid Meteor shower
The last Quagga, a kind of Zebra with stripes only on in the front of their bodies, dies in captivity at the Amsterdam Zoo, 1883
Heather Heyer run over and killed by James Alex Fields at a protest against white nationalists, Charlottesville, VA, 2017
Ruth Stiles Gannett, author of the My Father’s Dragon Books, b. 1923
Walter Dean Myers, pioneer in young adult children’s fiction and nonfiction who explicitly addresses the young person’s need to understand their relationships with the world, each other and adults, b. 1937
Female dragonflies have a sharp tipped egg or ovipositor that they use to slit cattails and lay their eggs
World Elephant Day
August 13th
Opha May Johnson, first woman to enlist in the United States Marines, promptly assigned to desk duty, 1918
India becomes independent from Britain in 1947
Baby beavers are out and about, learning how to fend for themselves as they move out of the orbit of the family lodge they were born in
Fidel Castro, Cuban revolutionary leader and longtime president of Cuba, b. 1926
Lucy Stone, abolitionist, suffragette, orator, b. 1918
International Wolf Day
August 14th
India becomes independent from Britain in 1947
Alice Provenson, along with her partner, created, wrote and crafted gorgeous, enchanting children’s picture books including The Book of Seasons, A Year at Maple Farm, Our Animal Friends, and The Glorious Flight, b. 1918
Stanford prison experiments begin to explore the effects of authority on decision making in a prison setting, begin only to be shut down six days later because of the adverse effects on the subjects, 1971
Magic Johnson, transformative basketball player, b. 1959
The Social Security Act passes as one of the results of the strength of organized labor and other mass movements in 1930
August 15th
Katydids clean their antennae so they can maintain their acute olfactory reception
US official involvement in Vietnam ends in 1973
Karl Korsch, Marxist-anarchist philosopher, laid the groundwork for Western Marxism with Lukacs, and wrote Marxism and Philosophy, b. 1886
Edith Nesbitt, writer of amazing 8-12 old children’s novels such as Five Children and It, in danger of being forgotten, political activist, founder of the socialist Fabian Society, b. 1858
The Woodstock Music and Art Fair, considered a key moment in the counterculture movement, opens its doors to over 400,000 people in 1969
Food Not Bombs Volunteers arrested for sharing food and literature in 1988
National Honey Bee Day
August 16th
Dianna Wynne Jones, unique fantasy writer for tweeners, author of Castle in the Air and Howls Moving Castle b. 1934
Waterfowl, unlike most other birds that molt their flight feathers one at one at time and are able to to continue flying, molt all their flight feathers at once, so they are unable to fly and are vulnerable to predators
First day of of harmonic convergence involved the world’s first synchronized global peace meditation event which occurred at 200 sites around the United States and the world in 1987
Patent for the loop-the-loop roller coaster is awarded in 1858 and first installed in Coney Island
August 17th
Marcus Garvey Black Nationalist, Pan Africanist, b. 1887
Emmett Till murdered for “talking with a white woman”, 1955
August 18th
Brian Pinkney, amazing illustrator author of transformative children’s books including, Max Found Two Sticks, Martin and Mahalia: His Words, Her Songs, Thumbelina, and many, many others, b.1961
Caddisflies lay their eggs at the bottom of cattail plants just above the water
August 19th
Mary Ellen Pleasant,19th-century entrepreneur, financier, real estate magnate, underground rail-road supporter, abolitionist, and “the mother” of the California Civil Rights Movement, b. 1814
Double-crested Cormorants begin to migrate south
Douglas Crimp, art theorist, Act-Up activist, b. 1944
Race riots break out in Crown Heights Brooklyn between African Americans and Orthodox Jewish residents after two children were accidentally run over by the motorcade of Menachem Mendel Schneerson in 1991
U.S. and Britain topple democratically elected government of Iran in 1953
International Orangutan Day
August 20th
First group of 20 African slaves land at Jamestown, Virginia, in 1619
Jeff Brown, author of the Flat Stanley series, b. 1926
Philo Farnsworth patented the television in 1930
H.P. Lovecraft, fantasist, horror writer, b. 1890
August 21st
Nat Turner leads slave revolt in Virginia, 1831
Arthur Yorinks, playwright, choreographer, author of unique, bizarre children’s books like Hi Al and Louis the Fish, collaborator with some of the great illustrators in children’s literature, currently working on a “theatre of sound,” and is currently opening an opera, Fall of the House of Usher, with Phillip Glass at the Lincoln theatre 8/25, 27, 28th, b. 1953
Aubrey Beardsley, illustrator, used black ink drawings to explore the grotesque, decadent and the erotic, and illustrated and was a leading figure in the Art Nouveau movement, b. 1872
Melvin Van Peebles, Black iconoclast filmmaker, b. 1932
Limnic eruption ( underwater volcanic eruption) in Lake Nyos in Cameroon kills about 1700 people when a large amount of carbon dioxide is released into the air in 1986
Joe Strummer, singer-songwriter guitarist for The Clash who transformed punk music sonically and with acerbic political criticism, b. 1952
August 22nd
Revolt of enslaved people begins Haitian revolution, 1791
Spiders molt their exoskeletons as their bodies grow bigger
August 23rd
Timber Rattlesnakes giving birth to 5-17 live young
Clifford Geertz, famous anthropologist and ethnographer who described culture as a system of symbols and practices that convey meaning which required “thick descriptions” to ever get a sense of the inferiority and exteriority of a culture, b. 1926
Sacco and Vanzetti executed in Boston, in the midst of great protests, in 1927
International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition
Snow chains patent awarded to Harry Weed in 1904
August 24th
Eisenhower signs the Communist Control Act, outlawing Communist Party in US, 1954
Green Herons are hunting and are one of the few birds known to drop bits of feather, insects, twigs or earthworms to attract to fish which it eats
Howard Zinn, American radical historian, author of A People’s History of the United States, b. 1922
Ukraine gains its independence from the Soviet Union in 1991
Cornelius Swartwout of Troy, New York awarded a patent for the waffle iron in 1869
British burn down Washington in 1814
August 25th
Lane Smith, unique children’s illustrator of such stand out books, The Stinky Cheese Man, The Math Curse, James and the Giant Peach, and Lulu and the Brontosaurus, b. 1959
Coyotes howl both to call the family group back together or to warn other packs against crossing territorial boundaries
Jorge-Louis Borges , Argentinian metaphysical poet and labyrinth writer extraordinaire,b. 1899
August 26th
Quarterback Colin Kaepernick kneels in protest to bring attention to police brutality and structural racism, 2016
World African Wild Dog Day
The Amistad, led by African slaves who had revolted and taken control of the ship, captured off Long Island—Supreme Court eventually freed them, 1839
Antoine Lavoisier, French scientist who invented the term oxygen, b. 1743
Mud Dauber Wasps make nests that they stuff with spiders as the food for the larvae that will eventually emerge from their eggs and eat the dead spiders
Women’s Equality Day, 19th Amendment guaranteeing a woman’s right to vote, passed in 1920
Daphne Galicia, investigative journalist based in Malta, released the Panama Papers revealing the corruption of a vast web of politicians and business owners, assassinated with a car bomb, b. 1964
August 27th
New Moon
Suzy Cline, long time teacher, author of the Horrible Harry books, b. 1943
Sarah Stewart writes remarkably contemplative, meditative books that are full of decisive choices and action, such as The Gardner, The Quiet Place, the Library, and The Friend, b. 1938
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, philosopher, writer of the Phenomenology of the Spirit, leading figure in German Idealism, b. 1770
Joel Kovel, American early eco-socialist activist, b. 1936
August 28th
Martin Luther King JR. leads 250,000 in Civil Rights March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom DC ( I have a dream speech), 1963
Robert Duvoisin, Swiss transplant to the US, children’s author of delightful, charming books like Veronica the Conspicuous Hippopotamus, and Petunia the Silly Goose, b. 1904
Allen Say, artist and children’s author who works in ink and is famous for his tender, heart breaking and opening, love giving stories like, The Boy of the Three Year Nap, Lost Lake, El Chino, Allison, and Grandfather’s Journey, b. 1937
Tasha Tudor, a throwback to another era and a harbinger of environmental consciousness, wrote exquisitely illustrated children’s books such as Pumpkin Moonshine, A is for Annabelle, A Doll’s Alphabet, and The Great Corgiville Kidnapping, b. 1915
Jack Kirby, cartoonist who co-invented the X-Men, Incredible Hulk, Captain America, Fantastic Four, and Thor, b. 1917
Johann Goethe, polymath, writer, humanist, author of Faust, A Theory of Colors, Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship, Elective Affinities, The Sorrows of Young Werther, The Metamorphosis of Plants among many others b. 1749
First issue of Scientific American published in 1845
August 29th
International Day Against Nuclear Tests
Beginning of Shays Rebellion—armed uprising of Massachusetts farmers vs. debt and taxes, 1786
Ladybugs, walking sticks, paper wasps, bald-faced hornets, yellow jackets, crickets, katydids, grasshoppers and praying mantises are all mating
First Indian reservation established in New Jersey in 1758 ( several smaller, less formal reservations had already been established in Massachusetts, New York and Connecticut)
Michael Faraday demonstrates that changing the magnetic field can a voltage in a conductor thus discovering electromagnetic induction in 1831
August 30th
Thurgood Marshall ( 1st African-American) confirmed to the United States Supreme Court, 1967
Virginia Lee Burton, wrote such classics as Mike Mulligan and the Steam Shovel, Katy and the Big Snow, Life Story, and The Little House, b. 1909
Mary Shelley, author of Frankenstein, b. 1797
August 31st
Eldridge Cleaver, writer of Soul on Ice, Minster of Information for Black Panther Party, b. 1935
Kenneth Oppel, writer who opens up vast fields of the imagination in his young adult fantasy novels like Airborn, The Nest, This Dark Endeavor among many others, b. 1967
Black Swallowtail larvae, with a green, yellow and black pattern feed off parsley, dill, carrot and Queen Anne’s lace where they are overwinter as a chrysalis and emerge as adult butterflies the following spring
Eat Outside Day
Maria Montessori, Italian educator, inventor of the Montessori Method, educational theorist, conceptualized the notion “earth children,” b. 1870