25 Non-Christmas Things That Have Happened on December 25

The birth of Jesus Christ has nothing to do with the date.
December 25 was a big day for Jimmy Buffett and William the Conqueror.
December 25 was a big day for Jimmy Buffett and William the Conqueror. | Amanda Edwards/Getty Images Entertainment (Jimmy Buffett); Heritage Images/GettyImages (William the Conqueror); Justin Dodd/Mental Floss (background)

Over the years, a lot of amazing things have happened on December 25. The birth of Jesus Christ, however, was not one of them. J.C.’s arrival—the precise timing of which remains unknown—wasn’t pegged to December 25 until 336 CE. While it’s certainly come to dominate its calendar square, Christmas isn’t the only reason to remember the date. What follows are 25 other incidents and milestones that make December 25 a day worth commemorating with silly songs and colored lights.

  1. 597 // The Julian Calendar Reintroduced to England
  2. 800 // Charlemagne Crowned Holy Roman Emperor
  3. 1066 // William the Conqueror is Crowned King of England
  4. 1492 // Christopher Columbus’s Santa Maria Sinks on Hispanola
  5. 1741 // Astronomer Anders Celsius Introduces the Centigrade Scale
  6. 1758 // Return of Halley’s Comet First Sighted
  7. 1776 // George Washington Crosses the Delaware River and Defeats 1400 Hessians
  8. 1809 // Physician Ephraim McDowell Performs the First Abdominal Surgery in the U.S.
  9. 1843 // First-Ever Theater Matinee Presented at The Olympic in New York City
  10. 1868 // President Andrew Johnson Grants Unconditional Pardon to Confederate Veterans of the Civil War
  11. 1873 // Thomas Edison Marries His First Wife
  12. 1896 // John Philip Sousa Composes “Stars and Stripes Forever”
  13. 1930 // The Mt. Van Hoevenberg Bobsled Run at Lake Placid, New York, Opens to the Public
  14. 1931 // The Metropolitan Opera Broadcasts its First Full Opera Over the Radio
  15. 15. 1946 // Jimmy Buffett was born in Pascagoula, Mississippi
  16. 1959 // Ringo Starr Gets His First Drum Kit
  17. 1962 // The Film Version of To Kill a Mockingbird is Released
  18. 1967 // Paul McCartney and Jane Asher Announce Their Engagement
  19. 1968 // Apollo 8 Finished its Successful Moon Orbit
  20. 1977 // Charlie Chaplin Dies
  21. 1985 // Longest-Ever Battery-Powered Car Trip Ends
  22. 1989 // Scientists in Japan Achieve -271.8° C, the Coldest Temperature Ever Recorded
  23. 1991 // Gorbachev Resigns as President of the USSR
  24. 1997 // Jerry Seinfeld Announces his Namesake Sitcom Will End in the Spring
  25. 2002 // Katie Hnida Becomes the First Woman to Play in a Division I College Football Game

597 // The Julian Calendar Reintroduced to England

Statue of Julius Caesar in Rome
Gary Yeowell/GettyImages

Originally taking effect in 45 BCE and traditionally considered reintroduced to England in 597, it took a little over 200 years for England to fully commit to Julius Caesar’s preferred means of measuring time (and they were nearly another 200 years behind the rest of Europe in switching over to the Gregorian calendar in the 1750s). At least Caesar’s hairstyle, on the other hand, never goes out of style.

800 // Charlemagne Crowned Holy Roman Emperor

A 15th-century representation of Charlemagne from the Cathedral of Moulins, France.
Vassil, Wikimedia Commons // Public Domain

In his role, the man also known as Charles the Great and “the father of Europe” helped to foster the Carolingian Renaissance—a glorious explosion of culture and intellect nobody has ever heard of.

1066 // William the Conqueror is Crowned King of England

William The Conqueror or William I
Culture Club/GettyImages

He invaded England and became the country’s first Norman king. Fun fact: His corpse later exploded at his funeral.

1492 // Christopher Columbus’s Santa Maria Sinks on Hispanola

Columbuss Santa Maria 1
Print Collector/GettyImages

Ol’ Chris turned lemons to lemonade, using timber from the ship to build a fort near the modern Haitian town of Limonade.


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1741 // Astronomer Anders Celsius Introduces the Centigrade Scale

Illustration of Anders Celsius, portrait
Dorling Kindersley/GettyImages

Some 270 years later, Americans still don’t know what the hell those numbers mean.

1758 // Return of Halley’s Comet First Sighted

Halley's comet in 1066
Culture Club/GettyImages

German farmer and amateur astronomer Johann Georg Palitzsch spotted the fireball, confirming Edmond Halley’s theory of 76-year cycles. Before that, everyone had figured it was driven by willy-nilly by demons or elves or something.

1776 // George Washington Crosses the Delaware River and Defeats 1400 Hessians

Washington Crossing the Delaware by Emanuel Leutze, 1851.
Metropolitan Museum of Art, Wikimedia Commons // Public Domain

His initial plan included three river crossings, but just one was successful.

1809 // Physician Ephraim McDowell Performs the First Abdominal Surgery in the U.S.

Surgical instruments. Creator: Unknown
Heritage Images/GettyImages

He removed a 22.5-pound ovarian tumor, but the hardest part was probably getting insurance approval.

1843 // First-Ever Theater Matinee Presented at The Olympic in New York City

New York City, Broadway, The Olympic Theatre, 1875
clu/GettyImages

This would’ve been a good day to get on the waitlist for Hamilton tickets.

1868 // President Andrew Johnson Grants Unconditional Pardon to Confederate Veterans of the Civil War

Andrew Johnson
traveler1116/GettyImages

And then, a few days later, he celebrated his 60th birthday by throwing a party for 300 of his grandchildren’s closest friends.

1873 // Thomas Edison Marries His First Wife

Thomas Edison
Hulton Archive/GettyImages

Mary Stillwell was just 16 when she wed the inventor, who apparently neglected his family in favor of his work.

1896 // John Philip Sousa Composes “Stars and Stripes Forever”

Conductor and sheet music
SEAN GLADWELL/GettyImages

The magnum opus of the “March King” was declared the official march of the United States in 1987.

1930 // The Mt. Van Hoevenberg Bobsled Run at Lake Placid, New York, Opens to the Public

First Bobsled Radio Broadcast
Schenectady Museum Association/GettyImages

America’s first bobsled track built to international standards is on the National Register of Historic Places. Sadly, the gift shop doesn’t sell “I’m a Luger, Baby” T-shirts.

1931 // The Metropolitan Opera Broadcasts its First Full Opera Over the Radio

GRANDMOTHER WITH GRANDDAUGHTER, 1933
Archive Holdings Inc./GettyImages

The show was Engelbert Humperdinck’s Hänsel und Gretel, and a critic/color commentator talked through most of it.

15. 1946 // Jimmy Buffett was born in Pascagoula, Mississippi

Jimmy Buffett
Hulton Archive/GettyImages

He was promptly swaddled in Hawaiian shirts, baptized in tequila, and well on his way to becoming “Mayor of Margaritaville.” 

1959 // Ringo Starr Gets His First Drum Kit

Ringo Starr in 2015.
Mike Coppola/Getty Images

If Pete Best ever gets a time machine, he’s making sure Richard Starkey gets a tuba instead.

1962 // The Film Version of To Kill a Mockingbird is Released

Gregory Peck
Harry Todd/GettyImages

The trial portion of the film takes up twice as much time as in the book because star Gregory Peck demanded more screen time.

1967 // Paul McCartney and Jane Asher Announce Their Engagement

Paul McCartney and Jane Asher in 1968.
Central Press/Getty Images

The pair never wed, but Asher can say she inspired such Beatles classics as “And I Love Her” and “Here, There and Everywhere.” Plus, she avoided being in Wings.

1968 // Apollo 8 Finished its Successful Moon Orbit

Apollo 8 - Nasa
Heritage Images/GettyImages

Nothing terrible happened, which is why you’ve never seen a movie about it.

1977 // Charlie Chaplin Dies

Charlie Chaplin in his trademark top hat.
Topical Press Agency/Getty Images

Thanks to his iconic “Tramp” character, the silent film star remains a hero to well-meaning bumblers with funny mustaches.

1985 // Longest-Ever Battery-Powered Car Trip Ends

The British Isles And Northern Europe At Noon In Spring Or Autumn
Print Collector/GettyImages

Two blokes in a Freight Rover Leyland Sherpa drove Great Britain from bottom (Land’s End) to top (John o’ Groat’s, Scotland) in four days, likely singing Wham! all the way.

1989 // Scientists in Japan Achieve -271.8° C, the Coldest Temperature Ever Recorded

Ice covered thermometer, close-up
Erik Von Weber/GettyImages

This was a full 10 degrees colder than a brass toilet seat in the Yukon.

1991 // Gorbachev Resigns as President of the USSR

Mikhail Gorbachev
Wojtek Laski/GettyImages

Six years later, he starred in a Pizza Hut commercial.

1997 // Jerry Seinfeld Announces his Namesake Sitcom Will End in the Spring

Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Jerry Seinfeld, Michael Richards, Jason Alexander
David Hume Kennerly/GettyImages

Seinfeld taught us we’re all terrible people living meaningless lives. We miss it still.

2002 // Katie Hnida Becomes the First Woman to Play in a Division I College Football Game

Overhead view of American football ball in field
Winslow Productions/Tetra Images/GettyImages

The New Mexico University placekicker attempted an extra point against UCLA in the Las Vegas Bowl, but it was blocked. There’s probably a metaphor in there somewhere.

A version of this story ran in 2018; it has been updated for 2025.

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