After over 100 hours in production, Simon and Garfunkel completed the recording of their hit song, The Boxer on this day.
Today was the day Jan Berry (of the surf-rock duo, Jan and Dean) slammed his Corvette Stingray into the back of a parked truck in Beverly Hills.
He was the first catcher inducted into the Hall of Fame.
He was the original bass player for The Beatles, but he left the band in July of 1961 to pursue a career in art.
He was a former preacher turned comedian who rose to fame with an intense, often sacrilegious routine that was punctuated with his trademark screams.
The 10-second snippet of a man singing Au Clair de la Lune is the oldest known recorded sound of a human voice.
The story goes that Sir Francis Bacon was traveling through a blizzard in a carriage when he was suddenly struck with the idea of preserving meat with snow.
A drill instructor ordered 74 Marine Corps recruits on a disciplinary march through a swamp. Some of the men could not swim and 6 of them drowned.
In 1934 Christiansen formed a stand alone toy company called Lego. It got its name from the Danish phrase "leg godt" which translates to "play well."
In their first year, Swanson & Sons sold over 10 million TV dinners.
When Canada blew up an underwater mountain, it was one of the largest planned non-nuclear explosions of all time.
It's now estimated that one in every three homes in America has a Scrabble game.
He was the first American president to die in office.
The Church of St. John on the Greek island of Rhodes was blown to smithereens.
A one-legged Canadian broke the world record with a high jump of 6 feet and 8.25 inches.
A tragic loss inspired him to pioneer a method of sharing news instantaneously.
The BBC aired remarkable footage of a unique colony of flying penguins.
This was the day the BBC pulled off one of the greatest April Fools' hoaxes of all time.