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 March 02, would your number have been called?

  • Vietnam War 1969 Lottery
    CalledDrafted
    29
  • Vietnam War 1970 Lottery
    CalledDrafted
    77
  • Vietnam War 1971 Lottery
    Not CalledNot drafted
    184
  • Vietnam War 1972 Lottery
    Not CalledNot drafted
    322

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





more events on March 2

  • 1981

    The United States plans to send 20 more advisors and $25 million in military aid to El Salvador.

  • 1978

    Czech pilot Vladimir Remek becomes the first non-Russian, non-American in space.

  • 1974

    A grand jury in Washington, D.C. concludes that President Nixon was indeed involved in the Watergate cover-up.

  • 1973

    Federal forces surround Wounded Knee, South Dakota, which is occupied by members of the militant American Indian Movement who are holding at least 10 hostages.

  • 1968

    The siege of Khe Sanh ends in Vietnam, the U.S. Marines stationed there are still in control of the mountain top.

  • 1965

    More than 150 U.S. and South Vietnamese planes bomb two bases in North Vietnam in the first of the “Rolling Thunder” raids.

  • 1956

    France grants independence to Morocco.

  • 1955

    Claudette Colvin refuses to give up her seat in Montgomery, Alabama, nine months before Rosa Parks‘ famous arrest for the same offense.

  • 1951

    The U.S. Navy launches the K-1, the first modern submarine designed to hunt enemy submarines.

  • 1946

    Ho Chi Minh is elected president of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam.

  • 1945

    MacArthur raises the U.S. flag on Corregidor in the Philippines.

  • 1943

    The center of Berlin is bombed by the RAF. Some 900 tons of bombs are dropped in a half hour.

  • 1942

    John Irving, novelist (The World According to Garp).

  • 1931

    Mikhail Gorbachev, Secretary General of the Soviet Union. Responsible for restructuring the Soviet economy (perestroika) and openness and information (glasnost).

  • 1930

    Novelist D.H. Lawrence dies of tuberculosis in a sanitarium in Vence, France, at the age of 45.

  • 1923

    Doc Watson, singer and guitarist.

  • In Italy, Mussolini admits that women have a right to vote, but declares that the time is not right.

  • 1917

    Congress passes the Jones Act making Puerto Rico a territory of the United States and makes the inhabitants U.S. citizens.

  • 1908

    Gabriel Lippman introduces the new three-dimensional color photography at the Academy of Sciences.

  • An international conference on arms reduction opens in London.

  • 1904

    Theodor Seuss Geisel [Dr. Seuss], author of numerous children’s books including The Cat in the Hat and Green Eggs and Ham.

  • Henry Dreyfuss, industrial designer of everything from telephones to the interior of the Boeing 707.

  • 1901

    Congress passes the Platt amendment, which limits Cuban autonomy as a condition for withdrawal of U.S. troops.

  • 1900

    Kurt Weill, German-born composer (The Threepenny Opera).

  • 1896

    Bone Mizell, the famed cowboy of Florida, is sentenced to two years of hard labor in the state pen for cattle rustling. He would only serve a small portion of the sentence.

  • 1889

    Congress passes the Indian Appropriations Bill, proclaiming unassigned lands in the public domain; the first step toward the famous Oklahoma Land Rush.

  • 1877

    Rutherford B. Hayes is declared president by one vote the day before the inauguration.

  • 1867

    The first Reconstruction Act is passed by Congress.

  • 1865

    President Abraham Lincoln rejects Confederate General Robert E. Lee‘s plea for peace talks, demanding unconditional surrender.

  • 1853

    The Territory of Washington is organized.

  • 1836

    Texas declares independence from Mexico on Sam Houston’s 43rd birthday.

  • 1829

    Carl Schurz, Civil War general, political reformer and anti-imperialist.

  • 1815

    To put an end to robberies by the Barbary pirates, the United States declares war on Algiers.

  • 1810

    Leo XIII, 256th Roman Catholic Pope.

  • 1797

    The Directory of Great Britain authorizes vessels of war to board and seize neutral vessels, particularly if the ships are American.

  • 1793

    Sam Houston, president of Texas, later Texas senator and governor.

  • 1781

    Maryland ratifies the Articles of Confederation. She is the last state to sign.

  • 1776

    Americans begin shelling British troops in Boston.