March 22:
1765: The British Parliament passed the Stamp Act. It was the first tax designed explicitly for revenue as opposed to mercantilist regulation (which the colonists often found easy to ignore). The colonists hated this "taxation without representation" and organized protests and boycotts to fight it. They succeeded but the British Parliament kept trying.
1820: Stephen Decatur, American naval hero from the Barbary Wars and the War of 1812, was mortally wounded in a duel. He died hours later.
1933: Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt signed into law the Beer and Wine Revenue Act to tax the sell of alcoholic beverages for the first time in years. Prohibition had been repealed.
1945: Representatives of Egypt, Syria, Transjordan, Lebanon, Saudi Arabi, Iraq, and Yemen met in Cairo to form the Arab League to promote economic growth.
1947: Pres. Harry S. Truman ordered loyalty checks on federal employees due to fears that many of them might be communists or communist sympathizers. This inspired politicians of both parties and both houses of Congress to exploit the issue for their own advantage, including Sen. Joseph McCarthy and Rep. Richard M. Nixon.
1972: Congress passed the Equal Rights Amendment. It was never ratified by enough states. Although the deadline has expired, some are still seeking ratification of this broad, open-ended amendment.
1765: The British Parliament passed the Stamp Act. It was the first tax designed explicitly for revenue as opposed to mercantilist regulation (which the colonists often found easy to ignore). The colonists hated this "taxation without representation" and organized protests and boycotts to fight it. They succeeded but the British Parliament kept trying.
1820: Stephen Decatur, American naval hero from the Barbary Wars and the War of 1812, was mortally wounded in a duel. He died hours later.
1933: Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt signed into law the Beer and Wine Revenue Act to tax the sell of alcoholic beverages for the first time in years. Prohibition had been repealed.
1945: Representatives of Egypt, Syria, Transjordan, Lebanon, Saudi Arabi, Iraq, and Yemen met in Cairo to form the Arab League to promote economic growth.
1947: Pres. Harry S. Truman ordered loyalty checks on federal employees due to fears that many of them might be communists or communist sympathizers. This inspired politicians of both parties and both houses of Congress to exploit the issue for their own advantage, including Sen. Joseph McCarthy and Rep. Richard M. Nixon.
1972: Congress passed the Equal Rights Amendment. It was never ratified by enough states. Although the deadline has expired, some are still seeking ratification of this broad, open-ended amendment.