Wednesday, July 18, 2018

July 18

Birthdays:

1978~ Ben Sheets (né Benjamin Michael Sheets), American baseball player and coach. He was born in Baton Rogue, Louisiana and went to college at Northeast Louisiana University.

1969~ Elizabeth M. Gilbert, American writer, best known for her memoir Eat, Pray Love.

1961~ Elizabeth McGovern (née Elizabeth Lee McGovern), American actress.

1950~ Richard Branson (né Richard Charles Nicholas Branson), British businessman who founded the Virgin Group.

1948~ Hartmut Michel, German biochemist and recipient of the 1988 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

1940~ James Brolin (néCraig Kenneth Bruderlin), American actor.  He played the family patriarch on the television sit-com, Life in Pieces.

1937~ Hunter S. Thompson (né Hunter Stockton Thompson, d. Feb. 20, 2005), American journalist.  He committed suicide at age 67.

1937~ Roald Hoffmann (né Roald Safran), Polish chemist and recipient of the 1981 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

1921~ John Glenn, Jr. (né John Herschel Glenn, Jr., d. Dec. 8, 2016), American astronaut and politician.  He was the first American astronaut to circle the earth in Space.  He died at age 95.

1918~ Nelson Mandela (d. Dec. 5, 2013), 1st President of South Africa and recipient of the 1993 Nobel Peace Prize.  He was the anti-apartheid icon who forged a new South Africa.  He died at age 95.

1916~ L. Patrick Gray (né Louis Patrick Gray, III, d. July 6, 2005), Acting Director of the FBI following the death of J. Edgar Hoover.  He was appointed to head the FBI by President Richard Nixon.  He served in that office from May 1972 until April 1973.  He died 12 days before his 89th birthday.

1913~ Red Skelton (né Richard Bernard Eheart, d. Sept. 17, 1997), American actor and comedian.  He died at age 84.

1911~ Hume Cronyn (né Hume Blake Cronyn, Jr., d. June 15, 2003), Canadian actor. He died of prostate cancer about a month before his 92nd birthday.

1909~ Andrei Gromyko (d. July 2, 1989), Soviet politician.  He died two weeks before his 80th birthday.

1909~ Harriet Nelson (néePeggy Lou Snyder, d. Oct. 2, 1994), American actress. She is best known for her role in the television comedy The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet.  She died of congestive heart failure at age 85.

1908~ Beatrice Aitchison (d. Sept. 22, 1997), American mathematician.  She died at age 89.

1906~ Clifford Odets (d. Aug. 14, 1963), American playwright.  He died of stomach cancer less than a month after his 57th birthday.

1902~ Jessamyn West (née Mary Jessamyn West, d. Feb. 23, 1984), American writer.  She died at age 81.

1895~ George “Machine Gun” Kelly (d. July 18, 1954), American gangster.  He died in prison of a heart attack on his 59th birthday.

1891~ Emil Julius Gumbel (d. Sept. 10, 1966), German mathematician.  He died at age 75.

1867~ Margaret Brown (née Margaret Tobin, d. Oct. 26, 1932), American socialite and social activist.  She is best known, however, as being a Titanic survivor.  The 1960 Broadway musical The Unsinkable Molly Brown was based on her life. She died of a brain tumor at age 65.

1853~ Hendrik Lorentz (néHendrick Antoon Lorentz, d. Feb. 4, 1928), Dutch physicist and recipient of the 1902 Nobel Prize in Physics.  He died at age 74.

1818~ Baron Louis Gerhard De Geer (d. Sept. 24, 1896), 1st Prime Minister of Sweden.  He served as Prime Minister from March 1876 until April 1880.  He died at age 78.

1811~ William Makepeace Thackerary (d. Dec. 24, 1863), British author.  He is best known for his satirical novel Vanity Fair.  He died at age 52.

1552~ Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor (d. Jan. 20, 1612).  He ruled as the Holy Roman Emperor from October 1576 until his death in January 1612.  He died at age 59.

1501~ Isabella of Austria, also known as Elisabeth of Burgundy (d. Jan. 19, 1526), wife and Queen Consort of Christian II of Denmark.  She died of an illness at age 24.

1013~ Hermann of Reichenau (d. Sept. 24, 1054), German composer, astronomer and mathematician.  He died in a monastery at age 41.

Events that Changed the World:

2013~ The City of Detroit, Michigan filed for bankruptcy, claiming up to $20 billion in debt.

2012~ A bomb exploded on an Israeli tour bus at the Burgas Airport in Bulgaria, killing 7 people and injuring 32 others.

1994~ The bombing of the Asociación Mutual Israelita Argentina (Argentinean Jewish Communal Center) in Buenos Aires killed 85 people and injured over 300.  Most of the victims were Jewish.

1976~ During the Summer Olympics, Romanian gymnast Nadia Comǎneci (b. 1961) became the first person in Olympic Games history to score a perfect 10 in gymnastics.

1969~ Ted Kennedy (1932 ~ 2009) drove his vehicle off a bridge on Chappaquiddick Island, killing his passenger, Mary Jo Kopechne (1940 ~ 1969), who died just 8 days before her 29thbirthday.  This event was depicted in the 2018 film, Chappaquiddick.

1968~ Intel, a semiconductor chip manufacturer, was founded in California.

1966~ Gemini 10 was launched from Cape Kennedy on a 70-hour mission that involved docking with an orbiting Agena target vehicle.  It was the 8th manned Gemini flight.  The two astronauts were John Young (1930 ~ 2018) and Michael Collins (b. 1930).

1936~ An army uprising in Spanish Morocco initiated the Spanish Civil War.

1870~ The First Vatican Council degreed the dogma of papal infallibility.

1290~ King Edward I of England (1239 ~ 1307) issued the Edict of Expulsion banishing all Jews from England.  This event occurred on Tisha b’Av on the Hebrew calendar, which is a day that commemorates many Jewish calamities, including the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 C.E.  It was not until 1635, when Oliver Cromwell allowed Jews to return to England.

Good-Byes:

2015~ Alex Rocco (néAlessandro Federico Petricone, Jr., b. Feb. 29, 1936), American character actor who found fame with The Godfather. He was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts.  He died of pancreatic cancer at age 79.

2012~ Yosef Shalom Eliashiv (b. Apr. 10, 1910), Lithuanian-Israeli Haredi rabbi.  He died at age 102.

2005~ General William Westmoreland (né William Childs Westmoreland, b. Mar. 26, 1914), American general who was in charge of all military commands during the Vietnam War from 1964 until 1968.  He died at age 91.

1999~ Meir Ariel (b. Mar. 2, 1942), Israeli singer-songwriter.  He died of Mediterranean Spotted Fever at age 57.

1990~ Karl Menninger (néKarl Augustus Menninger, b. July 22, 1893), American psychiatrist and founder of the Menninger Clinic in Topeka, Kansas.  He died of abdominal cancer 4 days before his 97th birthday.

1989~ Rebecca Schaeffer (d. Nov. 6, 1967), American actress who was murdered by a deranged fan at age 21.

1969~ Mary Jo Kopechne (b. July 26, 1940), American secretary who was killed when the car she was riding in that was driven by Ted Kennedy went off the road into Chappaquiddick Bay.  She died 8 days before her 29th birthday.

1968~ Corneille Heymans (b. Mar. 28, 1892), Belgian physiologist and recipient of the 1938 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for showing how blood pressure and the oxygen content of blood are transmitted to the brain.  He died of a stroke at age 76.

1954~ George “Machine Gun” Kelly (b. July 18, 1895), American gangster.  He died in the Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary on his 59thbirthday.

1942~ George Sutherland (né George Alexander Sutherland, b. Mar. 25, 1862), Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court.  He was born in England, but his family moved to Utah territory when he was a year old because his father had converted to Mormonism.  He was appointed to the High Court by President Warren Harding.  He served on the court from September 1922 until January 1938.  He died in while on vacation in Stockbridge, Massachusetts at age 80.

1938~ Marie of Romania (b. Oct. 29, 1875), Queen Consort of Romania.  She was the wife of King Ferdinand I of Romania. She was the last queen of Romania. She was the granddaughter of England’s Queen Victoria.  She died at age 62.

1935~ Annie Smith Peck (b. Oct. 19, 1850), American mountaineer.  She wrote several books encouraging Americans to travel and explore.  She was born in Providence, Rhode Island.  She died at age 84.

1899~ Horatio Alger, Jr. (b. Jan. 13, 1832), American minister and author.  He was born in Chelsea, Massachusetts and died in Natick, Massachusetts at age 67.

1892~ Thomas Cook (b. Nov. 23, 1808), English travel agent and founder of the Thomas Cook Group.  He died at age 83.

1872~ Benito Juárez (b. Mar. 21, 1806), President of Mexico.  He served as President from January 1858 until his death of a heart attack in July 1872.  He was 66 years old.

1817~ Jane Austen (b. Dec. 16, 1775), English novelist.  She died at age 41.

1792~ John Paul Jones (né John Paul, b. July 6, 1747), American naval commander during the American Revolution.  He is sometimes referred to as the Father of the American Navy.  He died 12 days after his 45th birthday.

1721~ Jean-Antoine Watteau (b. Oct. 10, 1684), French painter.  He died at age 36.

1610~ Caravaggio (né Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, b. Sept. 28, 1571), Italian artist.  He died under mysterious circumstances at age 38.

912~ Zhu Wen (b. Dec. 5, 852), Chinese emperor at the end of the Tang dynasty. He died at age 59.

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