1777 - Stars and Stripes adopted by Congress as the Flag of the United States. [1] (http://www.army.mil/birthday/228/default.htm)
1789 - Mutiny on the Bounty: HMAV Bounty mutiny survivors including Captain William Bligh and 18 others reach Timor after a nearly 4,000 mile journey in an open boat.[2] (http://library.puc.edu/pitcairn/bounty/wmbligh.shtml)
1822 - Charles Babbage proposes a Difference engine in a paper to the Royal Astronomical Society entitled "Note on the application of machinery to the computation of astronomical and mathematical tables."[3] (http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Babbage.html)
1872 - Trade unions legalised in Canada.[5] (http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=ArchivedFeatures&Params=A218)
1900 - Hawaii becomes a United States territory.[6] (http://www.publicbookshelf.com/public_html/The_Great_Republic_By_the_Master_Historians_Vol_IV/hawaiiann_ch.html)
1900 - The Reichstag approves a second law that allows the expansion of the German navy.
1940 - World War II: U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs the Naval Expansion Act into law which aims to increase the United States Navy's tonnage by 11 %. [8] (http://www.history.navy.mil/faqs/faq59-20.htm)
1989 - Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor is arrested in Beverly Hills, California after slapping a motorcycle police officer. [11] (http://www.mugshots.net/zsa_zsa_gabor/); she later complains that the handling she received "was like Nazi Germany". Ultimately, Gabor is sentenced to 72 hours in jail.
1993 - A weeklong product tampering scare, later proven to be a hoax [12] (http://www.snopes.com/horrors/food/syringe.asp), occurs as customers throughout the USA discover syringes in unopened cans of Diet Pepsi Cola.
BJ Cigrand, a schoolteacher, arranged for the pupils in the Fredonia, Wisconsin Public School, District 6, to observe June14 (the 108th anniversary of the official adoption of The Stars and Stripes) as 'Flag Birthday'.
On June14, 1889, George Balch, a kindergarten teacher in New York City, planned appropriate ceremonies for the children of his school, and his idea of observing Flag Day was later adopted by the State Board of Education of New York.
On June 14th, 1894, under the auspices of this association, the first general public school children's celebration of Flag Day in Chicago was held in Douglas, Garfield, Humboldt, Lincoln, and Washington Parks, with more than 300,000 children participating.