Terms and ConditionsDo Not Sell or Share My Personal InformationPrivacy PolicyPrivacy NoticeAccessibility NoticeUnsubscribe
Copyright © 2026 Day In History
May 5: A Patent That Broke Barriers, Freedom 7 Clears the Atmosphere, Two Scoops and a Dream

Today, May 5th

May 5: A Patent That Broke Barriers, Freedom 7 Clears the Atmosphere, Two Scoops and a Dream

Invention requires two things in equal measure: the idea itself and the conviction that you have the right to pursue it. May 5 belongs to three people who had both, in very different circumstances: a Black woman in Reconstruction-era Virginia who submitted a patent application in a country that had only recently recognized her full humanity; an astronaut from New Hampshire who strapped himself into a metal capsule on top of a rocket fifteen days after the Soviets had beaten America to space and went anyway; and two childhood friends in Vermont who took a correspondence course in ice cream making, leased a gas station, and built a brand that the world eventually came to associate not just with flavor, but with the idea that a business could have a conscience. Three inventions — agricultural, aeronautical, and frozen — and the same stubborn human insistence on making something new.
May 5: A Patent That Broke Barriers, Freedom 7 Clears the Atmosphere, Two Scoops and a Dream

04 May

May 4: Ella Makes History, Riding Into the Fire, Four Dead in Ohio

May 4: Ella Makes History, Riding Into the Fire, Four Dead in Ohio A date that measures America's distance from its own ideals — in the glow of an overdue award, on the highways of the South, and on a college campus where the argument turned lethal May 4 traces the arc of a single, stubborn American argument across three very different settings. In a Los Angeles hotel ballroom in 1959, a Black woman whose voice had redefined jazz received awards that an industry built partly on the theft of Black music had taken too long to give her. On the highways and in the terminals of the Deep South in 1961, a group of integrated riders tested whether the Supreme Court's rulings meant anything when the men with billy clubs disagreed. And on a university campus in Ohio in 1970, the argument about what Americans were allowed to say out loud about their government ended, for thirteen seconds, in gunfire. Three different decades, three different expressions of the same national tension — and the persistent, costly work of a country trying to close the gap between what it promises and what it delivers. The First Time On May 4, 1959, at the inaugural Grammy Awards ceremony held at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Los Angeles, Ella Fitzgerald won Best Jazz Performance, Individual, for her album Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Duke Ellington Song Book and Best Female Pop Vocal Performance for Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Irving Berlin Song Book — becoming the first Black woman to win a Grammy Award in the process. The Grammys were themselves new, created by the Recording Academy that year as a response to the music industry's alarm at the rise of rock and roll and the payola scandal that had engulfed its promotion machinery. The awards were, in their first iteration, oriented toward the established, adult-oriented pop and jazz that the industry's old guard preferred — which meant that Fitzgerald, already a towering figure in American music, was positioned to win. That she was the first Black woman to do so was a reflection of both her extraordinary talent and the industry's long, systematic underrecognition of the artists, overwhelmingly Black, on whose creativity it had been built. We have already met Ella Fitzgerald in this series — her birthday on April 25 introduced her three-octave range, her pioneering scat singing, and the Apollo Theater amateur contest that launched her career. The Grammy wins of May 4, 1959, represent a different chapter of the same story: the moment that the music industry's formal recognition structures, however belatedly, acknowledged what audiences had understood for two decades. Fitzgerald would go on to win thirteen Grammys in total, a record for a female jazz artist that stood for years. But the first two — awarded on this date, at the first ceremony the Recording Academy ever held — carry a particular weight, both as personal milestones and as a small, significant marker of what was changing, and what still needed to change, in American cultural life at the end of the 1950s.   The first Grammy Awards ceremony, 1959 — the night the recording industry began, slowly and imperfectly, to honor what it had always owed. The Freedom Riders On May 4, 1961, thirteen civil rights activists — seven Black, six white — boarded Greyhound and Trailways buses in Washington, D.C., and headed south into Alabama, Georgia, and Mississippi. They were Freedom Riders, organized by the Congress of Racial Equality under the leadership of James Farmer, and their purpose was to directly test the Supreme Court's rulings in Boynton v. Virginia (1960) and Morgan v. Virginia (1946), which had declared segregation in interstate bus terminals and on interstate buses unconstitutional. Those rulings existed on paper. In the terminals of the Deep South, they did not exist at all — the waiting rooms, lunch counters, and restrooms remained rigidly segregated, and local law enforcement had no intention of enforcing federal court orders that the white political establishment regarded as an imposition. The Freedom Riders intended to sit where the law said they had the right to sit, and to keep sitting there until the law meant something. What met them in Alabama was organized violence. In Anniston, a Greyhound bus was firebombed by a white mob and the riders who escaped the burning vehicle were beaten. In Birmingham, a mob attacked riders at the terminal while local police, tipped off in advance, deliberately absented themselves for fifteen minutes. In Montgomery, the violence continued. Attorney General Robert Kennedy negotiated a compromise that allowed the rides to continue with a degree of federal protection, but the riders who arrived in Jackson, Mississippi, were arrested for using "white" facilities and sentenced to sixty days in Parchman Farm, the state penitentiary. More than four hundred people ultimately participated in Freedom Rides that summer. The Interstate Commerce Commission issued regulations in September 1961 mandating the desegregation of interstate travel facilities — regulations that, this time, were enforced. The Freedom Riders had boarded their buses on May 4 knowing that the law was on their side and that the people who disagreed with the law would meet them with fists and fire. They boarded anyway. Freedom Riders boarding in Washington, May 4, 1961 — headed south to sit where the law said they had the right to sit, knowing what was waiting. ❦ May 4, 1970 On May 4, 1970, at approximately 12:24 p.m., members of the Ohio National Guard opened fire on a crowd of students at Kent State University, killing four and wounding nine others. The shooting lasted thirteen seconds. The students who died — Allison Krause, Jeffrey Miller, Sandra Scheuer, and William Knox Schroeder — ranged in age from nineteen to twenty. Two of the four, Scheuer and Schroeder, had not been participating in the protest; they were students walking between classes. The nearest victim fell sixty feet from the Guard line; the farthest was nearly three hundred feet away. The protests that had preceded the shooting had been triggered by President Nixon's announcement four days earlier that American forces had entered Cambodia — an expansion of the Vietnam War that had sent campuses across the country into eruption. At Kent State, the ROTC building had been burned on May 2, and the governor of Ohio had called in the National Guard. The photograph taken by student John Filo of fourteen-year-old Mary Ann Vecchio kneeling over the body of Jeffrey Miller became one of the most reproduced images of the Vietnam era, winning the Pulitzer Prize and crystallizing, in a single frame, the horror of that afternoon. A student strike involving more than four million participants shut down hundreds of universities and colleges across the country in the days that followed — the largest student strike in American history. A federal grand jury declined to indict any of the guardsmen. A civil lawsuit was eventually settled in 1979, with the state of Ohio paying $675,000 to the wounded students and the families of those killed. No one was ever held criminally responsible for the deaths of Allison Krause, Jeffrey Miller, Sandra Scheuer, and William Knox Schroeder. Their names belong to the permanent record of what happens when a government turns its weapons on the citizens whose rights it exists to protect.   The commons at Kent State — where four students died on a May afternoon in 1970 and no one was ever held to account.

04 May

May 4: The Run That Rewrote History

The Run That Rewrote History In 152 runnings of the Kentucky Derby, no woman had ever trained the winner. On Saturday, a 23-1 longshot came from dead last to change that — and gave the sport one of its most unforgettable finishes in decades. With three-quarters of a mile run and the field bunched at the final turns, Golden Tempo was nowhere. Not near the back — at the back, dead last in an 18-horse field, so far behind the leaders that, as trainer Cherie DeVaux put it afterward, "he was so far out of it." Then jockey Jose Ortiz asked him to run. What happened next — a last-to-first charge through traffic and down the Churchill Downs stretch that ended in a neck victory over the 5-1 favorite Renegade — was one of the most astonishing finishes in Kentucky Derby history. It also made DeVaux, 44, of Saratoga Springs, New York, the first woman in 152 years of the Run for the Roses to train the winner. "I'm just glad I don't have to answer that question anymore," she said in the winner's circle, to cheers from her team. Then she added: "I'm glad that I could be a representative of all women everywhere that we can do anything we set our minds to." A Woman, Two Brothers, and 152 Years of History The story of Cherie DeVaux is one of patient, stubborn accumulation. She grew up in Saratoga Springs — one of horse racing's great centers — one of nine siblings, seven of them brothers, a childhood she credits for the toughness that her sport demands. She began at Churchill Downs 22 years ago as an exercise rider, learned the craft under trainers Chuck Simon and Chad Brown, and took out her own training license in 2018 after deciding she needed to go solo or risk burning out as an assistant. Her first win came in 2019, on her 29th start. In the eight years since, she built a record of more than 300 victories — professional, methodical, and until Saturday morning, still carrying the weight of that one question she couldn't yet answer. Only 17 women had ever trained a horse that reached the Derby starting gate. None had won. The previous best finish by a female trainer was Shelley Riley's runner-up in 1992, a record that had stood for 34 years. DeVaux did not mention it before the race. She did not need to. The subplot that the sport will tell for years is the Ortiz brothers. Jose Ortiz, 32, had already won the Kentucky Oaks on Friday — the filly equivalent of the Derby — making him the rare jockey to claim both races in the same weekend. On Saturday, threading Golden Tempo through the outside and finding a lane that seemed to close before it opened, he out-rode his brother Irad Ortiz Jr., who was aboard Renegade and ran a strong second. In the aftermath, Jose Ortiz was characteristically direct: "I want him to win the Derby, of course. I know it's his dream as well. But it happened that way. Today's my day and Golden Tempo's day." The two brothers, born in Puerto Rico, have been among the best jockeys in North America for the better part of a decade. Saturday was the first time they finished first and second in the Kentucky Derby. It will not be the last time anyone tells this story.   Cherie DeVaux celebrates in the Churchill Downs winner's circle on May 2, 2026 — the first woman in 152 years of the Kentucky Derby to train the winning horse. The Kentucky Derby has been producing its particular brand of the impossible since Aristides won the inaugural race in 1875. Rich Strike at 80-1 in 2022. Secretariat's 1973 time that no horse has beaten in 53 years. The 2020 running before empty grandstands in a pandemic September. Each one adds a chapter to a race that has had enough history for several sports. Saturday's chapter belongs to Cherie DeVaux — who started her career at Churchill Downs as an exercise rider 22 years ago, "bright-eyed and bushy-tailed," as she put it, and walked out of it on Saturday evening as the first woman in the history of the Run for the Roses to saddle its winner. Golden Tempo will make his own decision about the Preakness. DeVaux has already made hers about history.

Get Daily Historical Facts!