
June 6 - Wikipedia
The mission ends in disaster when all three cosmonauts, Georgy Dobrovolsky, Vladislav Volkov, and Viktor Patsayev are suffocated by uncontrolled decompression of the capsule during re …
Historical Events on June 6 - On This Day
2012年6月6日 · Historical events for the 6th of June. See what famous, interesting and notable events happened throughout history on June 6.
What Happened on June 6 - On This Day
Jun 6 in Sport. 1901 British Open Men's Golf, Muirfield: Scotsman James Braid wins first of 5 Open titles by 3 strokes from Harry Vardon of Jersey; 1987 French Open Women's Tennis: 17 …
June 6 | Holidays, Birthdays, Events - National Today
Did you know the British could have named Queensland — "Cooksland" — after British explorer James Cook? It’s time to take a quick trip to the Eastern Hemisphere, because it's Russian …
What Happened on June 6 - HISTORY
On June 6, 1889, a fire ignites in a Seattle woodworking shop and sweeps through some 100 acres, destroying much of the city’s business district and waterfront.
On This Day - What Happened on June 6 | Britannica
Led by U.S. General Dwight D. Eisenhower, an Allied armada of ships, planes, and landing craft and some 156,000 troops began the invasion of northern France from England this day in …
June 6: Facts & Historical Events On This Day - The Fact Site
June 6th is Drive-In Movie Day and Yo-Yo Day. We’re now on the 157 th day of the year, and have 208 days left in 2025. For June 6 we have put together some of the greatest events that …
June 6, 1944: A day that changed the world - Smithsonian Institution
2024年5月16日 · On June 6, 1944, the biggest military seaborne invasion in history occurred, and it was brutal; Operation Neptune saw the landing of the troops on the beaches of Normandy. …
On this day in history - June 6 - timeanddate.com
Today in history – which major historical events happened on June 6? Who was born on this date, who died? In which year did the birth or death occur?
Today in History - June 6 | Library of Congress
2011年6月6日 · In the early morning hours of June 6, 1944, Americans received word that three years of concerted war efforts had finally culminated in D-day—military jargon for the …