What happened on your birthday?

What’s Your Vietnam War Draft Lottery Number?

The Vietnam War draft lottery ran from 1969 to 1972. If you were born on December 12, would your number have been called?

  • Vietnam War 1969 Lottery
    Not CalledNot drafted
    314
  • Vietnam War 1970 Lottery
    CalledDrafted
    19
  • Vietnam War 1971 Lottery
    Not CalledNot drafted
    249
  • Vietnam War 1972 Lottery
    CalledDrafted
    85

Read on to learn more about the Vietnam war draft lottery.





more events on December 12

  • 2000

    The US Supreme Court announces its decision in Bush v. Gore, effectively ending legal changes to the results of that year’s Presidential election.

  • 1995

    Willie Brown beats incumbent mayor Frank Jordon to become the first African-American mayor of San Francisco.

  • 1991

    The Russian Federation becomes independent from the USSR.

  • 1985

    Arrow Air Flight 1285 crashes after takeoff at Gander, Newfoundland; among the 256 dead are 236 members of the US Army’s 101st Airborne Division.

  • 1979

    South Korean Army Major General Chun Doo-hwan, acting without authorization from President Choi Kyu-ha, orders the arrest of Army Chief of Staff General Jeong Seung-hwa, alleging that the chief of staff was involved in the assassination of ex-President Park Chung Hee.

  • 1967

    The United States ends the airlift of 6,500 men in Vietnam.

  • 1964

    Three Buddhist leaders begin a hunger strike to protest the government in Saigon.

  • Kenya becomes a republic.

  • 1956

    The United Nations calls for immediate Soviet withdrawal from Hungary.

  • 1952

    Cathy Rigby, gymnast, actress.

  • 1943

    Grover Washington Jr, singer, songwriter, musician, producer.

  • The exiled Czech government signs a treaty with the Soviet Union for postwar cooperation.

  • The German Army launches Operation Winter Tempest, the relief of the Sixth Army trapped in Stalingrad.

  • 1940

    Dionne Warwick, singer, actress.

  • 1938

    Connie Francis, singer.

  • 1931

    Under pressure from the Communists in Canton, Chiang Kai-shek resigns as president of the Nanking Government but remains the head of the Nationalist government that holds nominal rule over most of China.

  • 1930

    The last Allied troops withdraw from the Saar region in Germany.

  • The Spanish Civil War begins as rebels take a border town.

  • 1929

    John Osbourne, playwright and film producer (Look Back in Anger).

  • 1928

    Helen Frankenthaler, abstract painter.

  • 1927

    Robert Norton Noyce, co-inventor of the integrated circuit.

  • Communists forces seize Canton, China.

  • 1915

    Frank Sinatra, American pop singer and actor.

  • 1912

    Henry Jackson Jr, boxer using the name Henry Armstrong, the only fighter to hold 3 professional boxing titles simultaneously.

  • 1901

    Italian inventor Guglielmo Marconi receives the first transatlantic radio transmission in St. John’s Newfoundland.

  • 1897

    Lillian Smith, Southern writer and civil rights activist.

  • 1893

    Edward G. Robinson, actor famous for gangster roles.

  • 1863

    Edvard Munch, Norwegian artist (The Scream).

  • Orders are given in Richmond, Virginia, that no more supplies from the Union should be received by Federal prisoners.

  • 1862

    The Union loses its first ship to a torpedo, USS Cairo, in the Yazoo River.

  • 1821

    Gustave Flaubert, French novelist (Madame Bovary, A Simple Heart).

  • 1805

    William Lloyd Garrison, American abolitionist who published The Liberator.

  • 1770

    The British soldiers responsible for the "Boston Massacre" are acquitted on murder charges.

  • 1753

    George Washington, the adjutant of Virginia, delivers an ultimatum to the French forces at Fort Le Boeuf, south of Lake Erie, reiterating Britain’s claim to the entire Ohio River valley.

  • 1745

    John Jay, first Chief Justice of the Supreme Court who negotiated treaties for the United States.