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May 6: The Four-Minute Mile, A Lawsuit That Shook a Presidency, The Last Night at Central Perk

Today, May 6th

May 6: The Four-Minute Mile, A Lawsuit That Shook a Presidency, The Last Night at Central Perk

Some limits exist only until someone decides to test them — and the moment they fall, it becomes almost impossible to remember why they seemed so permanent. May 6 offers three very different versions of that dynamic: a medical student who trained in stolen hours between hospital shifts to break a barrier that physiologists had decided was insurmountable; a lawsuit filed by a former state employee that began as an individual complaint and ended as a constitutional crisis; and a television finale that drew fifty-two million viewers to say goodbye to six characters who had, over ten seasons, quietly become part of the furniture of American life. A track in Oxford, a courthouse in Arkansas, and a coffee shop on a soundstage — three places where something that had seemed permanent turned out not to be.
May 6: The Four-Minute Mile, A Lawsuit That Shook a Presidency, The Last Night at Central Perk

05 May

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

May 5: A Patent That Broke Barriers, Freedom 7 Clears the Atmosphere, Two Scoops and a Dream Three kinds of American invention — defiant, daring, and delicious — and the people who refused to be told the idea wasn't theirs to have 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. The Patent On May 5, 1868, Martha Jones of Amelia County, Virginia, received a United States patent for an improvement to the corn husker and sheller — a practical agricultural device designed to make the labor of processing corn faster and more efficient. That a Black woman in the American South was awarded a federal patent just three years after the end of the Civil War and the formal abolition of slavery makes the achievement extraordinary on its face. The legal and social landscape of Reconstruction-era Virginia remained deeply hostile to Black advancement in nearly every domain; the fact that the patent system — a federal mechanism requiring formal application, documentation, and official recognition — yielded an award to Jones speaks both to her ingenuity and to her determination to navigate a system that had not been designed with her in mind. Her invention addressed the daily realities of agricultural life in rural Virginia with the directness of a person who understood the work from the inside. The broader history of Black inventors and patent holders in nineteenth-century America is one of systematic underdocumentation — records were inconsistently kept, racial identifications were often omitted, and the contributions of Black innovators to American agricultural and industrial life have been reconstructed largely through painstaking archival work conducted in the decades since. Martha Jones occupies a place in that history whose significance grows as more of the record is reclaimed. Her invention was practical: a corn husker and sheller that served real needs in the communities where corn was a staple crop. Her act of filing for and receiving that patent was something more. In a country that had only just, and only legally, recognized her right to own the product of her own labor, she claimed ownership of the product of her own mind. The United States Patent Office, whatever its limitations, stamped it approved.   A 19th-century patent document — the federal instrument by which a Black woman in Reconstruction Virginia claimed legal ownership of her own invention. Freedom 7 On May 5, 1961, at 9:34 a.m. Eastern time, a Redstone rocket carrying astronaut Alan Bartlett Shepard Jr. in the Mercury capsule Freedom 7 lifted off from Cape Canaveral and carried him to an altitude of 116 miles before arcing back into the Atlantic Ocean fifteen minutes and twenty-two seconds later. Shepard had waited in his capsule for more than four hours before launch due to a series of technical holds, during which he reportedly requested permission to relieve himself in his suit when the delays extended beyond his pre-launch preparation. He was the second human in space — Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin had completed a full orbital flight on April 12, 1961 — and his flight was suborbital rather than orbital, a distinction that the Soviet press was not slow to make. None of that diminished what the moment meant to the millions of Americans who watched the launch live on television. Shepard's flight was brief but consequential. It demonstrated that American rocket technology could place a human being in space and return him safely, provided an immediate answer to the national demoralization that Gagarin's flight had produced, and gave President Kennedy the confidence to stand before Congress three weeks later and commit the United States to landing a man on the Moon before the end of the decade. Shepard himself became one of the most decorated and most admired figures of the Mercury program — the test pilot's test pilot, chosen from a field of finalists who included John Glenn and Gus Grissom. He would go on to command the Apollo 14 mission in 1971, becoming the fifth person to walk on the Moon and, famously, the only person to hit a golf ball on it. The fifteen minutes he spent above the atmosphere on May 5, 1961, were enough to change the direction of the Space Race — and to establish, for the first time, that an American had gone to space and come back to say what it was like. Freedom 7 lifts off from Cape Canaveral — fifteen minutes that answered Gagarin, steadied a nation, and pointed the Space Race toward the Moon. ❦ The Gas Station on St. Paul Street On May 5, 1978, Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield opened Ben & Jerry's Homemade Ice Cream in a renovated gas station at 169 St. Paul Street in Burlington, Vermont, having completed a five-dollar correspondence course in ice cream making from Penn State University. Their startup capital was $12,000 — $4,000 of it borrowed — and their competitive advantage was a combination of unusually generous chunk sizes, flavor names that reflected their personalities, and a genuine warmth toward their Burlington neighborhood that expressed itself in free cone days, community events, and a business philosophy that treated social responsibility not as a marketing strategy but as a founding principle. Vermont was cold enough in winter that the ice cream business was seasonal; they supplemented income with crêpes. They considered franchising a bagel operation instead. They did not, by any ordinary business metric, look like the founders of a global brand. What they had, beyond the ice cream itself, was a sensibility that proved unexpectedly durable. Ben & Jerry's grew through the 1980s on the strength of flavors with personalities — Cherry Garcia, Chunky Monkey, Phish Food — and a corporate culture that donated a percentage of profits to social causes, paid its lowest-paid employees at a ratio to its highest-paid that was designed to limit inequality within the company, and took positions on political and social issues that consumer brands typically avoided. The company was sold to Unilever in 2000 for $326 million, a transaction that many of its most committed customers viewed with ambivalence and that Cohen and Greenfield themselves negotiated with the explicit aim of preserving the brand's social mission through contractual protections. Ben & Jerry's has continued to operate with a degree of independence unusual for a subsidiary of a multinational conglomerate, taking public positions on issues from racial justice to climate change that have periodically put it at odds with its corporate parent. The gas station on St. Paul Street is now a tourist destination. The five-dollar ice cream course turned out to be worth every penny.   The original Ben & Jerry's on St. Paul Street — a renovated gas station, $12,000, and a five-dollar ice cream course that became a global brand.

05 May

May 5: It's Not What You Think It Is

It's Not What You Think It Is Today, millions of Americans will celebrate Cinco de Mayo with margaritas and guacamole — and most of them will think it's Mexican Independence Day. The real story is stranger, more dramatic, and more consequential than the holiday it became. Today is Cinco de Mayo — May 5, 2026 — and somewhere in the United States, someone is wishing their Mexican American neighbor a happy Mexican Independence Day. That day is September 16th. It marks the beginning of Mexico's fight for independence from Spain, in 1810 — a watershed moment in Mexican history deeply and formally celebrated across the entire country every year. Cinco de Mayo is something else entirely: the anniversary of a single battle, fought on May 5, 1862, in the hills above the city of Puebla, in which a ragtag Mexican army of somewhere between 2,000 and 5,000 soldiers defeated a French imperial force of roughly 6,000 — considered among the finest armies in the world. The battle did not win the war. The French came back the following year, took Puebla, occupied Mexico City, and installed a Habsburg archduke as emperor. And yet the day it happened — the day the underdog stood its ground — turned into a holiday that would travel north across the border and eventually generate beer sales in the United States on par with the Super Bowl. The story of how that happened is, like the battle itself, improbable and worth knowing. The Battle That May Have Saved the Union On May 5, 1862, French troops under General Charles de Lorencez advanced on Puebla, a city about 80 miles southeast of Mexico City, expecting a quick and decisive victory. The French army had not been defeated in nearly 50 years. Against them stood General Ignacio Zaragoza — born in what is now Goliad, Texas — commanding a force that was outgunned, outequipped, and vastly outnumbered. The battle lasted from daybreak to early evening. Zaragoza fortified the hilltop forts of Loreto and Guadalupe, used guerrilla tactics to compensate for his disadvantage in firepower, and launched a well-timed cavalry attack on the French flank at a critical moment. When Lorencez finally withdrew his defeated army, it was a stunning result that reverberated far beyond Mexico. Four months later, Zaragoza died of typhoid fever. He never saw what his victory set in motion. What it set in motion, historians have argued, may have extended well beyond Mexican borders. In 1862, the American Civil War was raging simultaneously, and France under Napoleon III was weighing whether to recognize the Confederacy. The French had a plan: ship long-range artillery overland through Texas to Confederate armies in the east, potentially circumventing the Union naval blockade. The Battle of Puebla delayed the French advance for nearly a year, buying time for the Union. By the time French forces finally gained control of the Mexican border with Texas in the summer of 1863, General Ulysses S. Grant had won the Battle of Vicksburg, cutting off the Confederacy's access to weapons from the west. The French window had closed. Mexican communities in California — strong Union supporters who had followed every dispatch from Puebla in Spanish-language newspapers — understood the connection immediately. They had formed 129 patriotic organizations, raised money for Juárez's army, and begun celebrating Cinco de Mayo in 1862, the same year the battle was fought. The holiday that millions of Americans observe today was, at its origin, an act of political solidarity in the middle of the American Civil War.   The Battle of Puebla, May 5, 1862: Mexican forces under General Ignacio Zaragoza defend the hilltop forts of Loreto and Guadalupe against Napoleon III's French imperial army — one of the most surprising military upsets of the 19th century. The holiday traveled a long way from Puebla to become what it is today — reshaped by the Chicano Movement of the 1960s, commercialized by beer and spirits companies in the 1980s, and ultimately transformed into something far larger and looser than its origins. In Mexico itself, Cinco de Mayo is observed primarily in the state of Puebla; for the rest of the country, it is a minor ceremonial date. The giant, margarita-filled American version of the holiday is largely an American invention, bearing the same relationship to the Battle of Puebla that St. Patrick's Day bears to the arrival of Christianity in Ireland — a specific historical event refracted through immigrant identity, popular culture, and considerable commercial interest into something both connected to and very different from its source. None of that makes today's celebrations less joyful. It makes them more interesting. The ragtag army that held the hilltop above Puebla on May 5, 1862, had no idea their day of survival would eventually become an occasion for 400 million pounds of avocados to be consumed in the United States in a single week. History rarely goes where it intends.

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