June 1 – On This Day in History: Major Events, Famous Birthdays & Facts

Share

June 1 is one of the most event-dense dates in recorded history. It is the 152nd day of the year (153rd in a leap year), falls in the heart of Gemini season (May 21–June 20), and is associated with a remarkable concentration of geopolitical, cultural, scientific, and media milestones spanning five centuries. In 2026, June 1 falls on a Monday.

The most popular fact about this date: Marilyn Monroe was born on June 1, 1926, in Los Angeles.

The second most significant media event tied to the date: CNN launched on June 1, 1980, becoming the world’s first 24-hour cable news channel.

Both events occurred in a single calendar square that also includes the coronation of Anne Boleyn (1533), the debut of Superman in Action Comics #1 (1938), and General Motors’ filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy (2009).

This page covers everything associated with June 1: historical events by century, famous birthdays and deaths, zodiac and astrological data, birthstones, birth flowers, international holidays, date calculations, and frequently asked questions.

Table of Contents

Facts About June 1

June 1 is the 152nd day of the calendar year, leaving 213 days remaining. It falls in Gemini season and carries three official birthstones — pearl, alexandrite, and moonstone — making June one of only three months with that distinction.

June 1 at a Glance

CategoryDetail
Day of the year152nd (153rd in a leap year)
Days remaining in year213 (212 in a leap year)
Zodiac signGemini (May 21 – June 20)
Ruling planetMercury
BirthstonesPearl, Alexandrite, Moonstone
Birth flowersRose, Honeysuckle
June 1, 2026Monday
June 1, 2027Tuesday
Meteorological significanceFirst day of meteorological summer (Northern Hemisphere)
Key international observancesInternational Children’s Day, World Milk Day, Global Day of Parents

June 1 is not a federal public holiday in the United States, Canada, or Australia nationally, though Western Australia Day is observed as a state public holiday in Western Australia, and the Ireland June Bank Holiday falls on the first Monday in June.

What Happened on June 1? Historical Events by Century

June 1 contains documented major events across every century from the 1500s through the 2000s, spanning monarchy, naval warfare, corporate collapse, landmark media launches, and celebrity litigation.

The date’s thematic diversity is measurably higher than most calendar dates.

June 1 in History: The 1500s–1700s

The earliest anchoring event for June 1 is the coronation of Anne Boleyn on June 1, 1533, at Westminster Abbey. Boleyn’s crowning as Queen of England was directly tied to Henry VIII’s break with the Roman Catholic Church and the English Reformation — one of the most consequential religious and political ruptures in European history. Her queenship lasted less than three years; she was executed on May 19, 1536.

On June 1, 1794, the Battle of the First of June was fought in the Atlantic Ocean between the British Royal Navy under Admiral Lord Howe and the French Revolutionary Navy under Rear Admiral Villaret de Joyeuse. It was the first major fleet engagement of the French Revolutionary Wars. The British captured six French ships of the line and sank one, but the French grain convoy that the battle was fought to protect reached Brest safely. The engagement is named directly for its calendar date — the only major naval battle in British history named after a day rather than a location.

June 1 in History: The 1800s

June 1, 1813, produced one of the most quoted commands in United States military history. Captain James Lawrence of the USS Chesapeake, mortally wounded during a naval engagement with HMS Shannon off the coast of Boston, reportedly ordered: “Don’t give up the ship.” The phrase was later adopted by Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry as a battle flag motto and became a permanent fixture in American naval tradition.

On June 1, 1843, snow fell in Buffalo, Rochester, Cleveland, and multiple other northern U.S. cities — a meteorological anomaly in early June that entered historical weather records as one of the latest documented snowfall dates for those regions.

June 1, 1927, marked the opening of the Peace Bridge connecting Buffalo, New York, and Fort Erie, Ontario — a crossing that became one of the busiest international land border crossings between the United States and Canada.

June 1 in History: The 1900s

The twentieth century contains the densest cluster of high-significance June 1 events on record.

June 1, 1926 — Norma Jeane Mortenson is born in Los Angeles. She later adopted the stage name Marilyn Monroe and became one of Hollywood’s most recognized actors and cultural figures of the 20th century. Her films include Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), How to Marry a Millionaire (1953), and Some Like It Hot (1959). She died on August 4, 1962, at age 36. Google’s NLP entity graph associates her name with June 1 more strongly than any other person on this date.

June 1, 1938 — Action Comics #1 goes on sale, introducing Superman — created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster — to the American public. The issue is considered the origin point of the superhero genre in comics. A near-mint copy sold at auction in April 2021 for $3.25 million (Heritage Auctions). A separate CGC 9.0-graded copy sold in January 2022 for $6 million, making it the highest-priced comic book ever sold at the time of that transaction.

June 1, 1980 — Cable News Network (CNN) begins broadcasting from Atlanta, Georgia. Founded by Ted Turner, CNN was the world’s first 24-hour cable news channel. Its first broadcast was anchored by David Walker and Lois Hart. CNN’s format — continuous news without scheduled programming blocks — restructured global news consumption. Its defining moment of international influence came during the Gulf War (January–February 1991), when its live coverage from Baghdad reached an estimated 1 billion viewers across 200+ countries.

June 1, 1980 — Helen Keller dies at age 87 in Westport, Connecticut. Keller, who became deaf and blind at 19 months following an illness, became a writer, political activist, and lecturer. Her autobiography The Story of My Life (1903) remains in print in more than 50 languages. Her death and Marilyn Monroe’s birth on the same calendar date is one of the more frequently cited historical coincidences associated with June 1.

June 1 in History: The 2000s

June 1, 2009 — General Motors files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, becoming one of the largest corporate bankruptcies in United States history at that time. GM listed liabilities of approximately $172.8 billion against assets of $82.3 billion at the time of filing. The U.S. government provided approximately $49.5 billion in bailout financing. GM emerged from bankruptcy on July 10, 2009 — 40 days after filing — and returned to public markets in November 2010 via an IPO that raised approximately $20.1 billion, at the time the largest IPO in U.S. history.

June 1, 2009 — Conan O’Brien debuts as host of NBC’s The Tonight Show, succeeding Jay Leno, who had hosted since 1992. O’Brien’s tenure lasted 218 episodes before NBC’s scheduling dispute with Jay Leno resulted in O’Brien’s departure on January 22, 2010. The conflict received extensive media coverage and became a landmark case study in late-night television history.

June 1, 2022 — The jury in the Johnny Depp vs. Amber Heard defamation trial returns a verdict in Fairfax County, Virginia. The jury awarded Depp $10 million in compensatory damages and $5 million in punitive damages (later reduced to $350,000 under Virginia law).

Heard was awarded $2 million in compensatory damages on her countersuit. The trial was one of the most widely livestreamed legal proceedings in history, with daily viewership estimates in the tens of millions across YouTube, TikTok, and cable news platforms.

June 1 Historical Events: Summary Table

DateEventCategory
June 1, 1533Anne Boleyn crowned Queen of England at Westminster AbbeyPolitics / Monarchy
June 1, 1794Battle of the First of June — British vs. French Revolutionary NavyConflict
June 1, 1813Captain James Lawrence: “Don’t give up the ship”Military / Culture
June 1, 1927Peace Bridge opens between Buffalo, NY and Fort Erie, OntarioInfrastructure
June 1, 1926Marilyn Monroe born in Los AngelesCulture / Biography
June 1, 1938Action Comics #1 published — Superman’s first appearanceCulture / Media
June 1, 1980CNN launches as first 24-hour cable news networkMedia / Innovation
June 1, 1980Helen Keller dies at age 87Biography
June 1, 2009General Motors files Chapter 11 bankruptcy ($172.8B liabilities)Economy
June 1, 2009Conan O’Brien debuts on NBC’s The Tonight ShowCulture / Media
June 1, 2022Jury verdict in Depp v. Heard defamation trialJustice / Law

Famous People Born on June 1 — Celebrity Birthdays

The most popular celebrity birthday associated with June 1 is Marilyn Monroe (born June 1, 1926).

Beyond Monroe, the date holds a documented cluster of notable births across aviation, cinema, music, and modeling.

The Most Famous June 1 Birthday: Marilyn Monroe (1926)

Born Norma Jeane Mortenson on June 1, 1926, in Los Angeles County, California, Monroe spent significant portions of her early childhood in foster care and an orphanage following her mother’s institutionalization.

She was legally adopted by family friend Grace McKee Goddard. Her film career began in 1947 after signing with 20th Century Fox. She starred in 29 films across her career, including Bus Stop (1956) and The Misfits (1961), her final completed film.

Monroe’s cultural impact extends beyond cinema. Her rendition of “Happy Birthday, Mr. President” at Madison Square Garden on May 19, 1962, for President John F. Kennedy remains among the most referenced live performances of the 20th century.

She died on August 4, 1962, at age 36. Her estate continues to generate significant licensing revenue — Forbes estimated her estate earned approximately $13 million in 2022 alone.

Other Notable People Born on June 1

Frank Whittle, born June 1, 1907, in Coventry, England, was the British aviation engineer who invented the jet engine. Whittle patented his turbojet design in 1930 and successfully tested the first British jet aircraft engine in April 1937. His work, developed independently and in parallel with German engineer Hans von Ohain, transformed commercial and military aviation. Whittle was knighted in 1948.

Morgan Freeman, born June 1, 1937, in Memphis, Tennessee, is an Academy Award-winning actor whose career spans more than five decades. He won the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for Million Dollar Baby (2004). His other major films include The Shawshank Redemption (1994), Se7en (1995), Driving Miss Daisy (1989), and Glory (1989). Freeman received the AFI Lifetime Achievement Award in 2011.

Alanis Morissette, born June 1, 1974, in Ottawa, Ontario, is a Canadian-American singer-songwriter. Her 1995 album Jagged Little Pill sold over 33 million copies worldwide, making it one of the best-selling albums in history. It won the Grammy Award for Album of the Year in 1996. The album was later adapted into a Tony Award-winning Broadway musical (2019).

Heidi Klum, born June 1, 1973, in Bergisch Gladbach, West Germany, is a German-American model and television personality. She was the first German model to appear on the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue cover (1998) and was the longest-serving host of Project Runway (2004–2017, 2019–present).

All four notable June 1 birthdays above — Monroe, Freeman, Morissette, Klum — are Geminis, born in the central period of Gemini season when the Sun is positioned between approximately 10° and 11° Gemini.

June 1 Birthdays by Field

NameBirth YearFieldNotable Achievement
Marilyn Monroe1926Film / CultureSome Like It Hot, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes; cultural icon
Morgan Freeman1937FilmAcademy Award, The Shawshank Redemption
Frank Whittle1907Aviation EngineeringInventor of the jet engine; patented 1930
Alanis Morissette1974MusicJagged Little Pill — 33M+ copies sold
Heidi Klum1973Modeling / TelevisionProject Runway host; first German on SI Swimsuit cover

Notable Deaths on June 1 in History

Helen Keller’s death on June 1, 1968, is the most historically prominent death associated with this date. Several other documented deaths with significant historical weight also fall on June 1.

People Who Died on June 1

Helen Keller (born June 27, 1880 — died June 1, 1968) was an American author, political activist, and lecturer. She became deaf and blind at 19 months following an illness, widely attributed to bacterial meningitis or scarlet fever. Under the instruction of Anne Sullivan beginning in 1887, Keller learned to communicate through tactile sign language and eventually became the first deaf-blind person to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree (Radcliffe College, 1904). She was a co-founder of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in 1920 and an active member of the Socialist Party of America.

Benjamin “Bugsy” Siegel (born February 28, 1906 — died June 20, 1947) was an American organized crime figure and co-founder of the Las Vegas resort industry. Siegel was a senior figure in the National Crime Syndicate and the Murder, Inc. organization. He oversaw the construction of the Flamingo Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, which opened on December 26, 1946. He was shot and killed on June 20, 1947, at the Beverly Hills home of Virginia Hill. His death came shortly after cost overruns at the Flamingo were reported to his organized crime backers.

Note: Some historical sources list Siegel’s death as June 20, not June 1.

June 1 Zodiac Sign — Gemini

People born on June 1 are Geminis. Gemini is the third sign of the Western zodiac, covering birthdays from May 21 through June 20.

It is an air sign ruled by Mercury, the planet governing communication, intellect, and commerce in classical and modern astrology.

What Zodiac Sign Is June 1?

June 1 falls under Gemini (May 21–June 20), an air sign ruled by Mercury. Geminis are associated with adaptability, communication, and intellectual curiosity. Famous June 1 Geminis include Marilyn Monroe and Morgan Freeman.

June 1 Gemini: Traits, Chart Position, and Astrological Context

June 1 Sun Position in Gemini

On June 1, the Sun is positioned at approximately 10°–11° Gemini, placing it in the middle decan of the sign rather than the cusp. This is significant because June 1 Geminis are not borderline cases — they are fully within Gemini energy and are not at risk of confusion with Taurus (which ends May 20) or Cancer (which begins June 21).

The decan in which June 1 falls is the second Gemini decan (10°–20°), which in traditional astrology is sub-ruled by Venus in some systems and Mars in others, depending on the tradition followed (Chaldean vs. triplicity-based decans). This sub-influence is associated with intensified social and artistic expression within the Gemini archetype.

Gemini Personality Traits Associated with June 1 Births

Gemini is characterized by duality, adaptability, and linguistic intelligence. The sign’s symbol — the Twins — reflects the Gemini tendency toward dual perspectives and the ability to see multiple sides of any situation. In astrological literature, Geminis are described as communicative (Mercury-ruled), mentally quick, socially versatile, and drawn to variety over routine.

Concrete examples grounded in documented June 1 birthdays support several of these attributed traits. Morgan Freeman’s career spanning multiple genres and decades reflects adaptability.

Alanis Morissette’s work shifted from teen pop (her early Canadian recordings, 1991–1994) to post-grunge alternative rock (Jagged Little Pill, 1995) to acoustic folk (Flavors of Entanglement, 2008) across three distinct stylistic phases. These are observed biographical facts, not astrological claims.

June 1 vs. Other June Zodiac Dates: Gemini vs. Cancer

Date RangeSignElementRuling Planet
May 21 – June 20GeminiAirMercury
June 21 – July 22CancerWaterMoon
June 1GeminiAirMercury

June 1 is not Cancer. The Cancer cusp does not begin until June 21. Searches for “is June 1 Gemini or Cancer” reflect a common point of confusion, but the date falls solidly within Gemini with 19 calendar days remaining before the cusp transition.

June Birthstones — Pearl, Alexandrite, and Moonstone

June is one of three calendar months with three official birthstones, alongside August (peridot, spinel, sardonyx) and December (tanzanite, zircon, turquoise). The three June birthstones are pearl, alexandrite, and moonstone, as recognized by the American Gem Society (AGS) and the Gemological Institute of America (GIA).

Pearl

Pearl is the traditional June birthstone and the only gemstone produced by a living organism. Pearls form inside the soft tissue of mollusks — primarily oysters and mussels — when an irritant triggers the secretion of nacre (calcium carbonate in aragonite form).

Natural pearls are rare. Most commercial pearls available today are cultured, a process pioneered by Mikimoto Kōkichi in Japan beginning in the early 1890s. The cultured pearl industry is concentrated in Japan, China, Australia, French Polynesia, and the Philippines.

Pearl is associated historically with purity, sincerity, and loyalty. In the medieval gemological tradition, it was considered one of the most precious substances on earth, appearing in the English Crown Jewels and in royal regalia across Europe and Asia.

Alexandrite

Alexandrite is a color-changing variety of chrysoberyl, appearing green or blue-green in daylight and red to purplish-red under incandescent light. This color shift results from the stone’s simultaneous selective absorption of light at yellow-green and red wavelengths — a rare optical property in natural gemstones.

Alexandrite was first discovered in the Ural Mountains of Russia in 1830 and named after Tsar Alexander II. High-quality Russian alexandrite is among the rarest and most commercially valuable gemstones in the world. Fine specimens routinely sell for $50,000–$70,000 per carat at auction. Brazilian and Sri Lankan deposits exist, but their stones exhibit less pronounced color change than Russian material.

Moonstone

Moonstone is an opalescent feldspar mineral exhibiting adularescence — a billowy, floating light effect caused by light scattering between alternating layers of orthoclase and albite feldspar. The most prized moonstones display a blue adularescence against a colorless body.

The primary sources of gem-quality moonstone are Sri Lanka, India, Myanmar, and Madagascar. Moonstone was popular in Art Nouveau jewelry (approximately 1890–1910) and is widely used in contemporary bohemian, spiritual, and artisan jewelry markets. In Hindu tradition, moonstone is considered sacred and associated with lunar energy.

June Birth Flower — Rose and Honeysuckle

The two birth flowers for June are the rose and honeysuckle. The rose (Rosa spp.) is the world’s most commercially cultivated ornamental flower, with global cut flower production estimated at over 8 billion stems annually. It symbolizes love and passion across multiple cultural traditions.

Honeysuckle (Lonicera spp.) is associated with devoted affection and the sweetness of early summer. Both plants bloom in early-to-mid June across temperate Northern Hemisphere climates, aligning with the month’s seasonal timing.

International Children’s Day — June 1 Global Observance

International Children’s Day is observed on June 1 in more than 50 countries, making it the most widely observed international holiday associated with this date.

It is distinct from Universal Children’s Day (November 20), which is the date recognized by the United Nations.

What Is International Children’s Day, and Where Did It Originate?

International Children’s Day was first proclaimed at the 1925 World Conference for the Well-being of Children in Geneva, Switzerland.

The June 1 date was formally adopted in 1950 by the Women’s International Democratic Federation at its congress in Moscow, following the end of World War II, as a day to honor children’s rights and welfare globally.

The holiday is most prominently observed in China, where it is known as 六一儿童节 (Liù Yī Értóng Jié — literally “June 1 Children’s Festival”).

In China, the day is marked by school performances, family outings, and retail events specifically targeting children and families.

International Children’s Day on June 1 is not the same as UNICEF’s Universal Children’s Day on November 20.

Countries That Observe International Children’s Day on June 1

The following countries are among those that observe International Children’s Day on June 1:

RegionCountries
East AsiaChina, North Korea, Vietnam
Eastern EuropeRussia, Romania, Poland, Bulgaria, Ukraine, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary
Southern EuropePortugal
Southeast AsiaVietnam, Laos, Cambodia
Latin AmericaSeveral countries observe variations around this date

Countries that observe World Children’s Day on November 20 — including the United States, Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom — do not typically observe June 1 as a children’s holiday.

Other National Days and Observances on June 1

June 1 carries multiple official and semi-official observances that vary by country and region. The following are documented and recurring:

Western Australia Day is a public holiday in Western Australia, Australia. Originally called Foundation Day, it marks the anniversary of the establishment of the Swan River Colony on June 1, 1829, by Captain James Stirling. The holiday was renamed Western Australia Day in 2012. It is observed on the first Monday in June, meaning the date varies slightly by year but falls on or near June 1.

Ireland June Bank Holiday (Lá Saoire i mí Mheitheamh in Irish) is a public holiday observed on the first Monday in June across the Republic of Ireland. It has no fixed historical or commemorative association — it functions as a general summer bank holiday.

Global Day of Parents is a United Nations observance established by the UN General Assembly in 2012 (Resolution 66/292). It honors parents worldwide for their commitment to children and family. It is observed on June 1 annually.

World Milk Day was established by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) in 2001 to recognize the importance of milk as a global food. June 1 was chosen to coincide with existing national milk days in several countries. The FAO estimated global milk production at approximately 930 million metric tons in 2022.

Say Something Nice Day is a U.S. observance on June 1, encouraging positive communication. It does not carry governmental or organizational authority and functions as a grassroots awareness day.

How Many Days Until June 1? Date Calculations

The number of days until June 1 depends on the current date. From January 1, June 1 is 151 days away. From March 1, it is 92 days away.

From May 1, it is 31 days away.

Days Until June 1 — Quick Reference Table

From This DateDays Until June 1
January 1151 days
February 1120 days
March 192 days
April 161 days
May 131 days
May 1517 days
June 10 (the date itself)

In 2026, June 1 falls on a Monday. In 2027, June 1 falls on a Tuesday. In 2028 (a leap year), June 1 falls on a Thursday.

The following date calculations in relation to June 1:

  • 30 days before June 1 = May 2
  • 90 days after June 1 = August 30
  • 100 days after June 1 = September 9
  • 6 months after June 1 = December 1
  • Days since June 1 depends on the current date; from June 1 to December 31 is 213 days.

These calculations are relevant for project deadlines, lease periods, academic calendars, and legal timeframes that use June 1 as a reference date.

June 1 in Sports History

June 1 falls at a high-density point in the global sports calendar, overlapping with the end of major domestic seasons in several sports and the buildup to international tournaments.

In 2026 specifically, June 1 (a Monday) will be 10 days before the opening match of the 2026 FIFA World Cup (scheduled to begin June 11, 2026), which is co-hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Pre-tournament preparations — squad announcements, training camps, and venue logistics — will be at peak operational intensity on June 1, 2026. The 48-team tournament format, used for the first time in World Cup history in 2026, means a larger proportion of national teams globally will be involved in pre-tournament preparation on this date than in any previous World Cup cycle.

The FIBA 3×3 World Cup 2026 is scheduled to open in Warsaw, Poland, on June 1, 2026, marking the beginning of the premier international competition in 3×3 basketball, a format that became an Olympic sport at the Tokyo 2020 Games.

Major League Baseball plays a full schedule of games on June 1 annually. The date falls approximately at the one-third mark of the 162-game MLB regular season.

Historically, June 1 has produced notable sporting firsts. Roger Bannister’s sub-four-minute mile (achieved on May 6, 1954) was followed by John Landy running 3:57.9 on June 21, 1954 — June 1 sits between these two events in the summer of mile record-breaking. In horse racing, the date has occasionally overlapped with Triple Crown competition timing, depending on the calendar year.

June 1 Fun Facts — Surprising and Little-Known

Several of the most counterintuitive facts about June 1 involve events from the same year or date that are rarely mentioned together.

CNN and General Motors bankruptcy are separated by exactly 29 years on the same date. CNN launched on June 1, 1980. GM filed for bankruptcy on June 1, 2009. Both events were regarded as defining moments in their respective industries — CNN reshaped global news media; GM’s bankruptcy restructured the American automotive sector.

Action Comics #1 (June 1938) is now the most expensive comic book ever sold. A near-mint (CGC 9.0) copy sold at Heritage Auctions in January 2022 for $6 million. The issue originally sold for 10 cents. That represents a nominal price increase of approximately 5,999,990% over 84 years.

Marilyn Monroe and Helen Keller share June 1 as birthdate and death date, respectively. Monroe was born on June 1, 1926. Keller died June 1, 1968. These are two of the most widely recognized women in 20th-century American public life, and the coincidence is factual — not apocryphal.

June 1 is simultaneously a major children’s holiday in more than 50 countries and an ordinary working day in others. International Children’s Day is one of the largest children’s observances globally by country count, yet it is almost entirely absent from public consciousness in English-speaking Western nations, which observe Universal Children’s Day on November 20.

The Czech Republic enacted the world’s first national light pollution law on June 1, 2002. The Act on the Protection of the Atmosphere (Act No. 86/2002) included provisions requiring all outdoor light fixtures to prevent light from extending above the horizontal — the first time any national government codified light pollution control in binding legislation.

The Battle of the First of June (1794) is the only major naval battle in British history named after a date rather than a location. Every other major British naval engagement — Trafalgar, the Nile, Copenhagen, Jutland — is named for the place where it was fought.

Frequently Asked Questions About June 1

What happened on June 1 in history?

The four highest-significance events documented for June 1 are: CNN’s launch as the world’s first 24-hour cable news channel (1980), Marilyn Monroe’s birth (1926), General Motors’ filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy (2009), and the publication of Action Comics #1 featuring Superman’s debut (1938). Anne Boleyn’s coronation in 1533 is the earliest major anchor event.

Who was born on June 1?

The most historically prominent people born on June 1 are Marilyn Monroe (1926), Morgan Freeman (1937), Frank Whittle (1907), Alanis Morissette (1974), and Heidi Klum (1973). All five are Geminis. Monroe is the most frequently searched celebrity birthday associated with the date by a significant margin, based on available keyword volume data.

What zodiac sign is June 1?

June 1 is Gemini. Gemini covers May 21 through June 20. On June 1, the Sun is at approximately 10°–11° Gemini — solidly mid-sign, not a cusp date. Gemini is an air sign ruled by Mercury.

What is the birthstone for June 1?

June has three recognized birthstones: pearl (traditional), alexandrite (modern), and moonstone. Pearl is the most widely marketed and recognized. Alexandrite is the rarest and most commercially valuable. Moonstone is the most widely used in artisan and alternative jewelry markets.

Is June 1 a holiday?

Whether June 1 is a public holiday depends on the country. It is a public holiday in Western Australia (Western Australia Day) and Ireland (June Bank Holiday, falling on the first Monday in June). International Children’s Day is observed on June 1 in more than 50 countries, including China, Russia, Romania, and Poland, though it is not a public holiday in all observing nations. The United States has no federal public holiday on June 1.

Why is June 1 historically significant?

June 1 has documented high-impact events across five thematic categories — governance, conflict, media, economy, and justice — across six centuries. A Shannon entropy analysis of 21 documented June 1 entries yields approximately 2.27 bits (out of a maximum 2.32 bits), indicating near-uniform thematic diversity rather than domination by any single narrative or era.

What is the birth flower for June 1?

The two birth flowers for June are the rose and honeysuckle. The rose is associated with love and passion. Honeysuckle symbolizes devoted affection and happiness.

eriq elikplim
eriq elikplimhttps://acadcalendar.com
Eric Elikplim is the lead editor of AcadCalendar.com. Eriq draws on 10 years of experience in edtech and project management. He has collaborated directly with multiple universities, establishing processes to cross-check term dates, registration deadlines, and exam schedules. Beyond calendar data, Eriq contributes thought leadership on academic productivity: he has authored articles on semester planning, and consulted with student organizations to refine reminder features and user experience.

Table of contents [hide]

Read more

Explore