1969
Apollo 11 lands on the Moon
After a four-day flight in a craft with less computing power than a microwave, two Americans set their spider-legged lander down in the Sea of Tranquility. Neil Armstrong stepped onto another world and an estimated six hundred million people watched live. Then they came home. The Space Race was over. America had won it.
Gaddafi seizes Libya
A twenty-seven-year-old army captain named Muammar Gaddafi led a bloodless coup against the aging King Idris of Libya while the king was in Turkey for medical treatment. Gaddafi would rule for forty-two years, nationalize the oil, fund terrorism, write a Green Book, and eventually be dragged from a drain pipe and killed by a mob in 2011.
ARPANET sends first message
From a UCLA lab, a student tried to log into a computer at Stanford Research Institute. He typed L, then O, and the system crashed. The first word transmitted on what would become the Internet was therefore lo. Few present thought of the moment as historic. Within thirty years it would have quietly rewritten civilization.
Stonewall riots
When police raided the Stonewall Inn, a Greenwich Village gay bar, the patrons fought back. Drag queens threw bricks; crowds gathered for three nights. The event was not the first act of gay resistance, but it was the one that gave the movement its symbol and a date for its parades. A new kind of liberation had its Bastille.
Woodstock
Half a million young people descended on a dairy farm in upstate New York for three days of music and mud. Hendrix played the Star-Spangled Banner at dawn to whoever was still conscious. It was chaotic, generous, and soggy. Within a year the counterculture would curdle at Altamont and Kent State, but the image of Woodstock held.
Jumbo jet era begins
Boeing rolled out the first 747, a wide-body airliner with a distinctive hump and the capacity to carry four hundred passengers across oceans. Air travel, which had been a middle-class luxury, became genuinely mass. Within a decade, ordinary families from Milwaukee were vacationing in Spain. The Jumbo had shrunk the world another step.
Manson Family murders
Members of Charles Manson's cult broke into the Los Angeles home of director Roman Polanski and brutally murdered five people, including Polanski's pregnant wife Sharon Tate. The next night they killed two more. The crimes ended the 1960s counterculture's sunny self-image and became a permanent image of the dark side of the Summer of Love.