This Day in History: Cuban
Missile Crisis
On October 14, 1962, an
American U-2 spy plane photographed a Soviet ballistic missile being assembled
for installation in Cuba. Thus began one
of the biggest encounters of the Cold War between the United States and the
Soviet Union—the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Following a naval blockade, nuclear war was avoided when President
Kennedy agreed to not invade Cuba in exchange for the Soviet removal of all
missiles in Cuba.
The Ball State University
Libraries’ GIS Research and Map Collection (GRMC) created a map of some of the
most significant events of the Cold War.
The map (above, click to enlarge) shows the locations of events
beginning with Winston Churchill’s “Iron Curtain” speech in Fulton, Missouri,
in 1946 to the World Chess Championship in Reykjavik, Iceland, in 1972, and the
Soviet intervention in Afghanistan.
The Cold War map, Capitalism vs. Communism: Events of the Cold War, is
available for use in education, research, and learning for teachers, students,
and others from the Libraries’ Cardinal Scholar repository. A large-format copy of the map may be printed
in the GRMC. A worksheet requiring students to map the events of the Cold War is also available for teachers to use in the geography or history classroom.
The Atlas Collection on the
second floor of Bracken Library also includes resources for studying the Cold
War. The
Palgrave Concise Historical Atlas of the Cold War, The Canadian Military Atlas,
and The Times Atlas of European History
all include maps and other cartographic sources.
For more information about
using maps from the GRMC or Cardinal Scholar, please call 765-285-1097.
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