Thursday, September 30, 2021

September 30

Birthdays:

 

1975 ~ Ta-Nehisi Coates (né Ta-Nehisi Paul Coats), African-American journalist, author and comic book writer.  He was born in Baltimore, Maryland.

 

1971 ~ Jenna Elfman (née Jennifer Mary Butala), American actress.  She was born in Los Angeles, California.

 

1970 ~ Tony Hale (né Anthony Russell Hale), American actor, best known for his role as Buster Bluth on the television sit-com Arrested Development.  He was born in West Point, New York.

 

1961 ~ Eric Stoltz (né Eric Cameron Stoltz), American actor.  He was born in Whittier, California.

 

1957 ~ Fran Drescher (née Francine Joy Drescher), American actress and comedian.  She is best known for her nasal voice.  She was born in New York, New York.

 

1951 ~ Barry Marshall (né Barry James Marshall), Austrian physician and recipient of the 2005 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for showing that the bacterium Helicobacter pylori is the cause of most peptic ulcers.  This reversed the common medical theory that most ulcers were caused by stress, spicy foods and too much acid.

 

1950 ~ Laura Esquivel, Mexican author, best known for her novel, Like Water for Chocolate.  She was born in Mexico City, Mexico.

 

1945 ~ Ehud Olmert, 12th Israeli Prime Minister.  He served as Prime Minister from 2006 to 2009.

 

1943 ~ Jody Powell (né Joseph Lester Powell, Jr.; d. Sept. 14, 2009), American White House Press Secretary to President Jimmy Carter.  He was born in Cordele, Georgia.  He died in Cambridge, Maryland of a heart attack 16 days before his 66th birthday.

 

1943 ~ Johann Deisenhofer, German chemist and recipient of the 1988 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his determination of the first crystal structure of an integral membrane protein, a membrane-bound complex of proteins and co-factors that is essential to photosynthesis.  He was born in Zusamaltheim, Germany.

 

1943 ~ Marilyn McCoo, American singer and member of The 5th Dimension.  She was born in Jersey City, New Jersey.

 

1939 ~ Jean-Marie Lehn, French chemist and recipient of the 1987 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his synthesis of cryptands.  He was born in Rosheim, France.

 

1931 ~ Angie Dickinson (née Angeline Brown), American actress.  She was born in Kulm, North Dakota.

 

1930 ~ T.J. Moran (né Thomas J. Moran; d. May 18, 2015), American businessman and restauranteur.  He bought the first franchise of Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse.  He owned and ran TJ Ribs, where LSU sports memorabilia was on display.  He was born in Evanston, Illinois.  He died in Baton Rouge at age 84.

 

1928 ~ Elie Wiesel (né Eliezer Wiesel; d. July 2, 2016), Romanian-born Jewish-American writer and Holocaust survivor who refused to let the world forget.  His book, Night, was based on his experience in the Auschwitz, Buna and Buchenwald concentration camps during the Holocaust.  He was the recipient of the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize.  He was born in Sighet, Kingdom of Romania.  He died at age 87 in New York, New York.

 

1927 ~ W.S. Merwin (né William Stanley Merwin; d. Mar. 15, 2019), American poet.  He was born in New York, New York.  He died at age 91 in Haiku, Hawaii.

 

1924 ~ Truman Capote (né Truman Streckfus Persons; d. Aug. 25, 1984), American author best known for his true crime novel, In Cold Blood, which recounted the 1959 murder of a Kansas family by two drifters.  Capote was born in New Orleans, Louisiana and much of his work is set in the South.  He died of liver disease at age 59 in Los Angeles, California.

 

1921 ~ Deborah Kerr (née Deborah Jane Kerr-Trimmer; d. Oct. 16, 2007), Scottish actress who was a proper leading lady.  She is best remembered for the kiss scene with Burt Lancaster in From Here to Eternity.  She died 17 days after her 86th birthday.

 

1917 ~ Buddy Rich (né Bernard Rich; d. Apr. 2, 1987), American jazz drummer and bandleader.  He was born in New York, New York.  He died of a brain tumor at age 69 in Los Angeles, California.

 

1915 ~ Lester Maddox, Sr. (né Lester Garfield Maddox; d. June 25, 2003), American politician and 75th Governor of Georgia.  He served as Governor of Georgia from January 1967 until January 1971.  He was a staunch segregationist.  He was born and died in Atlanta, Georgia.  He died at age 87.

 

1905 ~ Sir Nevill Mott (né Nevill Francis Mottt; d. Aug. 8, 1996), English physicist and recipient of the 1977 Nobel Prize in physics for his work on the electronic structure of magnetic and disordered systems, especially amorphous semiconductors.  He died at age 90.

 

1883 ~ Nora Stanton Blatch Barney (née Nora Stanton Blatch; d. Jan. 18, 1971), American civil engineer, architect and women’s rights activist.  She was one of the first American women to earn a degree in engineering.  She was the first woman to earn an engineering degree from Cornell University.  She was the granddaughter of Elizabeth Cady Stanton.  She was born in England.  She died in Greenwich, Connecticut at age 87.

 

1882 ~ Hans Geiger (né Johannes Wilhelm Geiger; d. Sept. 24, 1945), German physicist best known as being the co-inventor of the Geiger Counter.  Unfortunately, the name of his co-inventor, Walther Muller (1905 ~ 1979), who was Geiger’s student, has been lost to history.  Geiger died 6 days before his 63rd birthday.

 

1870 ~ Jean Perrin (né Jean Baptiste Perrin, d. Apr. 17, 1942), French physicist and recipient of the 1926 Nobel Prize in Physics.  He was born in Lille, France.  He died at age 71 in New York, New York.

 

1861 ~ William Wrigley, Jr. (né William Mills Wrigley, Jr.; d. Jan. 26, 1932), American chewing gum industrialist and founder of the Wrigley Company.  He was also the owner of the Chicago Cubs, hence the name of the Cubs home field, Wrigley’s field.  He was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  He died at age 70 in Phoenix, Arizona.

 

1836 ~ Remigio Morales Bermúdez (d. Apr. 1, 1894), President of Peru.  He served from August 1890 until his death at age 57 on April 1, 1894.

 

1832 ~ Ann Jarvis (née Ann Maria Reeves; d. May 9, 1905), American social activist and community organizer during the American Civil War.  She inspiration for the creation of Mother’s Day.  It was her daughter, Anna Marie Jarvis (1864 ~ 1948) who is recognized as the founder of Mother’s Day.  She was born in Culpeper, Virginia.  She died at age 72 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

 

1827 ~ Ellis H. Roberts (né Ellis Henry Roberts; d. Jan. 8, 1918), 20th Treasurer of the United States.  He served under Presidents William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt from July 1897 until June 1905.  He had previously served as a United States Representative from New York.  He was born and died in Utica, New York.  He died at age 90.

 

1814 ~ Lucinda Hinsdale Stone (née Lucinda Hinsdale; d. Mar. 14, 1900), American education, women’s rights activist and philanthropist.  She was born in Hinesburg, Vermont.  She died at age 85.

 

1550 ~ Michael Maestlin (d. Oct 20, 1631), German mathematician.  He died 3 weeks after his 81st birthday.

 

1227 ~ Pope Nicholas IV (né Girolamo Masci, d. Apr. 4, 1292).  He was Pope from February 1288 until his death 4 years later.  He was 64 at the time of his death.

 

1207 ~ Rumi (d. Dec. 17, 1273), Turkish poet and Islamic Sufi mystic.  His poetry is some of the most widely read in the world today.  Rumi is also known as the founder of the sect of Whirling Dervishes.  He is buried in Konya, Turkey, which is a major pilgrimage site.  The exact date of his birth is unknown, but he is believed to have been about 65 or 66 at the time of his death.

 

Events that Changed the World:

 

2017 ~ Yom Kippur.

 

2016 ~ Hurricane Matthew, which formed in the Caribbean Sea, became a Category 5 hurricane.  The storm, which formed on September 28, 2016, dissipated on October 10, 2016.

 

2009 ~ A 7.6 magnitude earthquake hit Sumatra, killing over 1100 people.

 

1993 ~ A 6.2 magnitude earthquake in India killed thousands of people.

 

1972 ~ Roberto Clemente (1934 ~ 1972), records his 3,000th and final hit of his baseball career.  He would be killed in a plane crash 3 months later.

 

1962 ~ James Meredith (b. 1933) enrolled at the University of Mississippi, the first African-American to be a student at this institution.

 

1962 ~ César Chávez (1927 ~ 1993) founded the National Farm Workers Association.  It later became known as the United Farm Workers.

 

1954 ~ The United States Navy submarine the USS Nautilus was commissioned.  It was the first nuclear reactor powered vessel.  It was decommissioned in March 1980.

 

1949 ~ The Berlin Airlift ended.

 

1947 ~ The Baseball World Series was televised for the first time.  The series was between the New York Yankees and the Brooklyn Dodgers.  The New York Yankees beat the Dodgers.

 

1935 ~ The Hoover Dam was dedicated.  During its construction during the Roosevelt administration, the dam was known as the Boulder Dam.  The name Hoover Dam was restored by Congress in 1947.

 

1927 ~ Babe Ruth (1895 ~ 1948) became the first baseball player to hit 60 home runs in a season.

 

1901 ~ Hubert Cecil Booth (1871 ~ 1955) received a patent for the powered vacuum cleaner.

 

1889 ~ Ten months before becoming a State, lawmakers in Wyoming drafted its constitution that granted women the right to vote.

 

1882 ~ Thomas Edison’s first commercial hydroelectric power plant began operating on the Fox River in Appleton, Wisconsin.  The plant later became known as the Appleton Edison Light Company.

 

1868 ~ The first volume of the serialized novel Little Women by Louisa May Alcott (1832 ~ 1888) was published.

 

1813 ~ At the Battle of Bárbula, Simón Bolíva (1783 ~ 1827) defeated Santiago Bobadilla (1783 ~ 1830).

 

1791 ~ The Magic Flute, Mozart’s last opera, made its debut in Vienna, Austria.

 

1520 ~ Suleiman the Magnificent (1494 ~ 1566) was proclaimed the sultan of the Ottoman Empire.

 

1399 ~ Henry IV (1367 ~ 1413) was proclaimed as King of England.  He was King from September 1399 until his death 14 years later.

 

Good-Byes:

 

2017 ~ Monty Hall (né Monte Halparin; b. Aug. 25, 1921), Canadian game show host.  He died at age 96.

 

2014 ~ Martin Lewis Perl (b. June 24, 1927), American physicist and recipient of the 1995 Nobel Prize in physics for his discovery of the Tau Lepton.  He died of a heart attack at age 87.

 

2014 ~ Jerrie Mock (née Geraldine Fredritz; b. Nov. 22, 1925), American housewife who flew around the world.  In 1960, she became the first woman to fly solo around the world.  The journey took her 29 days, 11 hours and 59 minutes.  She was born in Newark, Ohio.  She died at age 88 in Quincy, Florida.

 

2012 ~ Barry Commoner (b. May 28, 1917), American cellular biologist and political activist.  He died at age 95.

 

2011 ~ Ralph Steinman (né Ralph Marvin Steinman; b. Jan. 14, 1943), Canadian biologist and recipient of the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his discovery of the dendritic cell and its role in adaptive immunity.  He died of pancreatic cancer 3 days before the Nobel Prize committee announced the 2011 recipients so was awarded the Nobel Prize posthumously.  He was 68 years old at the time of his death.

 

2011 ~ Roger G. Kennedy (né Roger George Kennedy; b. Aug. 3, 1926), American polymath and preservationist with a broad view of America’s past.  He served as the Director of the Smithsonian Institute’s Museum of American History from 1979 to 1992 before heading the National Park Service in 1993.  He was responsible for putting Dorothy’s ruby slippers from The Wizard of Oz in display.  He was born in Saint Paul, Minnesota.  He died at age 85 in Rockville, Maryland.

 

2010 ~ Stephen J. Cannell (né Stephen Joseph Cannell; b. Feb. 5, 1941), American scriptwriter and movie producer.  He died at age 69 of cancer.

 

2003 ~ Robert Kardashian (né Robert George Kardashian; b. Feb. 22, 1944), Armenian-American lawyer, best known for being on the defense team during the 1995 O.J. Simpson trial.  He died at age 59 of esophageal cancer.

 

1994 ~ André Michel Lwoff (b. May 8, 1902), French microbiologist and recipient of the 1965 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for the discovery of the mechanism by which some viruses can infect bacteria.  He died at age 92.

 

1994 ~ Roberto Eduardo Viola (b. Oct. 13, 1924), Argentine general, President of Argentina and military dictator.  He served in the Office of President from March 1981 until December 1981.  He was born and died in Buenos Aires, Argentina.  He died 14 days before his 70th birthday.

 

1990 ~ Patrick White (né Patrick Victor Martindale White; b. May 28, 1912), Australian writer and recipient of the 1973 Nobel Prize in Literature.  He died at age 78.

 

1990 ~ Ruth Cheney Streeter (née Ruth Cheney; b. Oct. 2, 1895), first director of the United States Marine Corps Women’s Reserve.  In 1943, she became the first woman to reach the rank of Major in the United States Marine Corps.  She was born in Brookline, Massachusetts.  She died in Morristown, New Jersey 2 days before her 95thbirthday.  She is buried in Peterboro, New Hampshire.

 

1985 ~ Charles Francis Richter (b. Apr. 26, 1900), American geophysicist and creator of the Richter magnitude scale that measures the strength of earthquakes.  He died at age 85.

 

1978 ~ Edgar Bergen (né Edgar John Berggren; b. Feb. 16, 1903), American actor and ventriloquist.  He was the father of actress Candice Bergen.  He died at age 75.

 

1955 ~ James Dean (né James Bryon Dean; b. Feb. 8, 1931), American actor, best known for his role in Rebel Without a Cause.  He was killed in an automobile accident.  He died at age 24.

 

1948 ~ Edith Roosevelt (née Edith Kermit Carow; b. Aug. 6, 1861), First Lady of the United States and second wife of President Theodore Roosevelt.  She was born in Norwich, Connecticut.  She died at age 87 in Cove Neck, New York.

 

1931 ~ Jane Meade Welch (b. Mar. 11, 1854), American journalist and historian.  She was born in Buffalo, New York.  She died at age 77.

 

1910 ~ Maurice Lévy (b. Feb. 28, 1838), French mathematician.  He died at age 72.

 

1837 ~ 10th Dalai Lama (né Tsultrum Gyatso; b. Mar. 29, 1816).  He died at age 21.

 

1632 ~ Thomas Allen (b. Dec. 21, 1542), English mathematician and astrologer.  He died at age 89.

 

1627 ~ Tianqi Emperor (d. Dec. 23, 1605), 16th Chinese Emperor of the Ming Dynasty.  He ruled from October 1620 until his death 7 years later.  He died at age 21.

 

1626 ~ Nurhaci (b. Apr. 8, 1559), Chinese Emperor of the Later Jin Dynasty.  He died at age 67.

 

420 ~ St. Jerome (b. Mar. 347), Roman Catholic priest and theologian.  The exact date of his birth is not known.  He died at about age 73.

 

Wednesday, September 29, 2021

September 29

Birthdays:

 

1989 ~ Ben Luderer (d. Mar. 30, 2020), American special education teacher and high school baseball coach.  He died of Covid-19 at age 30.

 

1956 ~ Sebastian Coe, Baron Coe (né Sebastian Newbold Coe), British athlete.  He was the model for the runner in the movie, Chariots of Fire.

 

1955 ~ Gwen Ifill (née Gwendolyn Ifill, d. Nov. 14, 2016), African-American journalist and newscaster.  She was born in New York, New York.  She died of endometrial cancer at age 61 in Washington, D.C.

 

1951 ~ Michelle Bachelet, Chilean politician and President of Chile.  She served two terms as President.  The first term ran from March 2006 until March 2010.  Her second term ran from March 2014 to March 2018.  She was born in Santiago, Chile.

 

1943 ~ Lech Wałęsa, Polish politician, trade-union organizer and human-rights activist.  He served as the 2ndPresident of Poland and was the recipient of the 1983 Nobel Peace Prize.

 

1942 ~ Madeline Kahn (née Madeline Gail Wolfson; d. Dec. 3, 1999), American actress.  She was born in Boston, Massachusetts.  She died at age 57 of ovarian cancer in New York, New York.

 

1936 ~ Silvio Berlusconi, Italian politician and former Prime Minister of Italy.

 

1935 ~ Jerry Lee Lewis, American musician.  He is known as Killer.  He was born in Ferriday, Louisiana.

 

1932 ~ Rai Weiss (né Rainer Weiss), German-born, American physicist.  He was awarded the 2017 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work to the LIGO detection and observation of gravitational waves.  He is a professor emeritus at MIT and an adjunct professor at LSU.  He was born in Berlin, Germany.

 

1931 ~ Anita Ekberg (née Kerstin Anita Marianne Ekberg; d. Jan. 11, 2015), Swedish bombshell who lit up La Dolce Vita.  She was a former Miss Sweden.  She died at age 83.

 

1931 ~ James Cronin (né James Watson Cronin; d. Aug. 25, 2016), American particle physicist and recipient of the 1980 Nobel Prize in Physics.  He was born in Chicago, Illinois.  He died at age 84 in St. Paul, Minnesota.

 

1927 ~ Pete McCloskey (né Peter Norton McCloskey, Jr.), American politician.  He served as a Democrat in the United States House of Representatives from California from December 1967 until January 1983.  He was born in Loma Linda, California.

 

1923 ~ Stanley Berenstain (né Stanley Melvin Berenstain; d. Nov. 26, 2005), American author and illustration.  He, along with his wife, Janice (1922 ~ 2012), created the Berenstain Bears.  He was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  He died at age 82 in Solebury Township, Pennsylvania.

 

1923 ~ Bum Phillips (né Oail Andrew Phillips; d. Oct. 18, 2013), American cowboy who coached the Houston Oilers.  He was born in Orange, Texas.  He died 19 days after his 90th birthday in Goliad, Texas.

 

1922 ~ Lizabeth Scott (née Emma Matzo; d. Jan. 31, 2015), American actress known for her smoky voice.  She played the femme fatale in many 1940s and 1950s film noir.  She was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania.  She died at age 92 in Los Angeles, California.

 

1920 ~ Peter Mitchell (né Peter Dennis Mitchell; d. Apr. 10, 1992), English biochemist and recipient of the 1878 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for his discovery of the chemiosmotic mechanism of the ATP synthesis.  He died at age 71.

 

1907 ~ George Jenkins (né George Washington Jenkins, Jr.; d. Apr. 8, 1996), American businessman and founder of the Publix grocery store chain.  He was born in Warm Springs, Georgia.  He died at age 88 in Lakeland, Florida.

 

1907 ~ Gene Autry (né Orvon Grover Autry; d. Oct. 2, 1998), American actor and cowboy singer.  He was known as the Singing Cowboy.  He was born in Tioga, Texas.  He died 3 days after his 91st birthday in Studio City, California.

 

1904 ~ Greer Garson (née Eileen Evelyn Greer Garson; d. Apr. 6, 1996), British actress.  She died in Dallas, Texas at age 91.

 

1903 ~ Diana Vreeland (née Diana Dalziel; d. Aug. 22, 1989), French-American journalist and columnist.  She was best known for working in the fashion magazine industry.  She was the Editor-in-Chief of Vogue for many years.  She was born in Paris, France.  She died about a month before her 86th birthday in New York, New York.

 

1901 ~ Enrico Fermi (d. Nov. 28, 1954), Italian American nuclear physicist and recipient of the 1938 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on nuclear processes.  He is best known for the development of the first nuclear reactor. Fermium, a synthetic element created in 1952, was named after Fermi.  He was born in Rome, Italy.  He died at age 53 of stomach cancer in Chicago, Illinois.

 

1900 ~ Miguel Alemán Valdés (d. May 14, 1983), President of Mexico.  He served as President from December 1946 until November 1952.  He died at age 82 in Mexico City, Mexico.

 

1899 ~ László Bíró (né László József Schweiger; d. Oct. 24, 1985), Hungarian inventor who invented the ballpoint pen.  He was born in Budapest, Austria-Hungary.  He died 25 days after his 86th birthday in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

 

1881 ~ Ludwig von Mises (d. Oct. 10, 1973), Austrian economist.  He died 11 days after his 92nd birthday in New York, New York.

 

1864 ~ Miguel de Umanumo y Jugo (d. Dec. 31, 1936), Spanish Basque essayist, novelist and philosopher.  He died at age 72.

 

1838 ~ Henry Hobson Richardson (d. Apr. 27, 1886), American architect.  He designed Trinity Church in Copley Square in Boston.  He was born in St. James Parish, Louisiana.  He died in Brookline, Massachusetts at age 47 of Bright’s disease.

 

1831 ~ John McAllister Schofield (d. Mar. 4, 1906), 28th United States Secretary of War.  He served under Presidents Andrew Johnson and Ulysses S. Grant from June 1868 until March 1869.  He was born in Gerry, New York.  He died at age 74 in St. Augustine, Florida.

 

1803 ~ Jacques Charles François Sturm (d. Dec. 15, 1855), French mathematician.  His name is one of 72 engraved at the Eiffel Tower.  He was born in Geneva, Switzerland.  He died in Paris, France at age 52 after a long illness.

 

1786 ~ Guadalupe Victoria (né José Miguel Ramón Adaucto Fernández y Félix, d. Mar. 21, 1843), 1st President of the United Mexican States.  He was President from October 1824 through March 1829.  He died of epilepsy at age 56.

 

1758 ~ Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson (d. Oct. 21, 1805), British admiral.  He defeated the French and Spanish fleets at Trafalgar in Britain’s greatest naval victory in 1805.  He died in battle at less than a month after his 47thbirthday.

 

1703 ~ François Boucher (d. May 30, 1770), French painter.  He is best known for his pastoral scenes.  He was born and died in Paris, France.  He died at age 66.

 

1561 ~ Adriaan van Roomen (d. May 4, 1615), Flemish mathematician.  He died at age 53.

 

1547 ~ Miguel de Cervantes (d. Apr. 23, 1616), Spanish author best known for writing Don Quixote.  The exact date of his birth is unknown, but he is believed to have been born on September 29, 1547.  He is believed to have died at age 68.

 

1518 ~ Tintoretto (né Jacopo Comin; d. May 31, 1594), Renaissance painter and artist.  The exact date of his birth is unknown, but it is generally ascribed to late September or early October.  He died at about age 75.

 

1276 ~ Christopher II, King of Denmark (d. Aug. 2, 1332).  His rule is connected with a national disaster because his rule ended with the almost dissolution of Denmark.  He died at age 55.

 

1240 ~ Margaret of England (d. Feb. 26, 1275).  She was the Queen consort of Scots and wife of King Alexander III of Scotland.  She was of the House of Plantagenet.  She was the second child of King Henry III of England and Eleanor of Provence.  She died at age 34.

 

926 ~ Qian Chu (d. Oct. 7, 988), last Chinese king of the Wuyue.  He surrendered his kingdom to the Song Dynasty.  He died 8 days after his 59th birthday.

 

106 B.C.E. ~ Pompey (d. 48 B.C.E.), the date the Roman General was considered to have been born.  He is believed to have been assassinated 1 day before his 58th birthday.

 

Events that Changed the World:

 

2019 ~ Rosh HaShanah began at sunset.

 

2017 ~ Yom Kippur began at sunset.

 

2009 ~ An 8.0 magnitude earthquake near the Samoan Islands caused a tsunami.  Over 1,115 people would be killed in this event.

 

2005 ~ John Roberts (b. 1955) was confirmed as the Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court.

 

1990 ~ The construction of the Washington National Cathedral was completed.  Work had begun on this Episcopal Church on September 29, 1907.

 

1982 ~ The Tylenol murders began when the first of 7 individuals died in Chicago after taking cyanide-laced Tylenol.  The first victim was a 12-year old girl.  The individual or individuals who poisoned the Tylenol was never caught, however, this event led to the industry using a new, tamper-proof way of labeling over-the-counter medicines and other consumable products.

 

1960 ~ Nikita Khrushchev (1894 ~ 1971), leader of the Soviet Union, disrupted a meeting at the United Nations General Assembly with many angry outbursts, including banging his shoe against the desk.

 

1954 ~ The convention establishing CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research) was signed.

 

1951 ~ The college football game between Duke University and the University of Pittsburgh was televised on NBC.  It was the first live sporting event that was seen nationwide.  Duke defeated Pittsburgh in a score of 19-14.

 

1941 ~ The Babi Yar Massacre began in in Kyiv when Nazi German forces ordered the murder of Jews during World War II.  Nearly 34,000 Jews were murdered in massacre, which lasted 2 days.

 

1923 ~ The British Mandate for Palestine took effect, which created Mandatory Palestine.

 

1911 ~ Italy declared war on the Ottoman Empire.

 

1907 ~ The cornerstone to the Washington National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., was laid.  Construction would not be complete until September 23, 1990!

 

1829 ~ The Metropolitan Police of London was founded.

 

1789 ~ The United States Department of War established a regular army.

 

1789 ~ The 1st United States Congress adjourned.

 

1227 ~ Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor (1194 ~ 1250), was excommunicated by Pope Gregory IX for his failure to participate in the Crusades.

 

Goodbyes:

 

2014 ~ Shotgun Shuba (né George Thomas Shuba; b. Dec. 13, 1924), American baseball player who shook hands with history.  He is remembered for his role in breaking down the color barrier when, while playing for a farm team in the 1940s, he offered a congratulatory handshake to teammate Jackie Robinson.  He died at age 89.

 

2013 ~ Marcella Hazan (né Marcella Polini; b. Apr. 15, 1924), Italian-born Sephardic cookbook author who redefined Italian cooking.  She was 89 years old.

 

2012 ~ Michael Henry Heim (b. Jan. 21, 1943), American translator who gave his all to world literature.  He was a professor of Slavic languages and translated many works of literature in Czech, Russian, Dutch, French, Italian, and Serbo-Croatian.  He died of complications from melanoma at age 69.

 

2012 ~ Arthur Ochs Sulzberger (b. Feb. 5, 1926), American newspaper chief who published the Pentagon Papers the New York Times.  He was known as Punch.  He was born in New York City.  He died in Southampton, New York at age 86.

 

2011 ~ Sylvia Robinson (née Sylvia Vanterpool, b. Mar. 6, 1935), American singer known as the godmother of hip-hip.  She died of congestive heart failure at age 76.

 

2010 ~ Tony Curtis (né Bernard Schwartz; b. June 3, 1925), American actor and singer.  He died at age 85.

 

2010 ~ Georges Charpak (né Jerzy Charpak, b. Mar. 8, 1924), Ukrainain-born physicist and recipient of the 1992 Nobel Prize in Physics.  He died at age 86.

 

2007 ~ Katsuko Saruhashi (b. Mar. 22, 1920), Japanese geochemist who turned radioactive fallout into a scientific legacy.  She made some of the first measurements of carbon dioxide levels in seawater and subsequently showed the evidence in seawater and the atmosphere of the dangers of radioactive fallout.  She died of pneumonia at age 87.

 

1998 ~ Tom Bradley (né Thomas J. Bradley; b. Dec. 29, 1917), African-American politician and 38th Mayor of Los Angeles.  He served as Mayor from July 1973 until July 1993.  He died at age 80.

 

1997 ~ Roy Lichtenstein (né Roy Fox Lichtenstein; b. Oct. 27, 1923), American artist.  He died of pneumonia at 28 days before his 74th birthday.

 

1995 ~ Madalyn Murray O’Hair (née Madalyn Mays; b. Apr. 13, 1919), American atheist activist.  She was in August 1995 kidnapped and murdered.  She was 76 at the time of her kidnapping.  The exact date of her death is not known, but September 29, 1995 is often given as the date of her death.  Her body has never been found.

 

1989 ~ Gussie Anheuser Busch (né August Anheuser Busch, b. Mar. 28, 1899), American brewer and grandson of the founder of the Anheuser-Busch brewing company.  He died at age 90.

 

1988 ~ Charles Addams (né Charles Samuel Addams; b. Jan. 7, 1912), American cartoonist who became famous for his dark humor.  His cartoons were published in The New Yorker.  His characters inspired The Addams family, which was a TV series in the 1960s, and later became a Broadway musical.  He died at age 76.

 

1983 ~ Sir Roy George Douglas Allen (b. June 3, 1906), British economist and mathematician.  He died at age 77.

 

1975 ~ Casey Stengel (né Charles Dillon Stengel; b. July 30, 1890), American baseball player and manager.  He died at age 85.

 

1973 ~ W.H. Auden (né Wystan Hugh Auden; b. Feb. 21, 1907), Anglo-American poet.  He was born in York, England.  He died at age 66 in Vienna, Austria shortly after giving a reading of his poems.

 

1967 ~ Carson McCullers (née Lula Carson Smith; b. Feb. 19, 1917), American author, best known for her novel, The Heart is a Lonely Hunter.  She died at age 50 of a brain hemorrhage.

 

1937 ~ Marie Zdeňka Baborová-Čiháková (b. Jan. 17, 1877), Czech botanist and zoologist.  She was the first Czech woman to earn a Ph.D. in this field of science.  She was born in Prague.  At the time, the city was under the Austria-Hungary regime.  She died at age 60.

 

1927 ~ Willem Einthovern (b. May 21, 1860), Dutch physician and inventor.  He was the recipient of the 1924 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for inventing the first practical electrocardiogram (ECG).  He died at age 67.

 

1925 ~ Léon Bourgeois (né Léon Victor August Bourgeois; b. May 21, 1851), French politician and recipient of the 1920 Nobel Peace Prize for his work with the United Nations.  He was the Prime Minister of France, serving from November 1895 until April 1896.  He died at age 74.

 

1913 ~ Rudolf Diesel (né Rudolf Christian Karl Diesel; b. Mar. 18, 1858), German mechanical engineer and inventor of the diesel engine.  He developed the first internal-combustion engine in which fuel was ignited without a spark, now known at the diesel.  He died at age 55 under mysterious circumstances.  He had boarded a steamer ship and after dinner retired to his cabin.  He was never seen again and his bed had not been slept in.  His clothing, however, was neatly folded beneath an after deck railing, leading to believe he had committed suicide.

 

1910 ~ Winslow Homer (b. Feb. 24, 1836), American illustrator and painter.  He was born in Boston, Massachusetts and died in Prouts Neck, Maine.  He was 74 years old at the time of his death.

 

1902 ~ Émile Zola (né Émile Édouard Charles Antoine Zola; b. Apr. 2, 1840), French novelist and critic.  He is best known for his article, J’Accuse, which was instrumental in the exoneration of Alfred Dreyfus, an army officer who had been convicted of a crime simply because he was Jewish.  The article brought to light the false accusations against Dreyfus.  Zola died at age 62 of carbon monoxide poisoning, which some believe was murder.

 

1833 ~ Ferdinand VII, King of Spain (b. Oct. 14, 1784).  He reigned in Spain from March 1808 until May 1808 and again from December 1813 until his death in September 1833.  He was of the House of Bourbon.  He was the son of Charles IV, King of Spain and Maria Luisa of Parma.  He died 15 days before his 49th birthday.

 

1804 ~ Michael Hillegas (b. Apr. 22, 1728), American politician and 1st Treasurer of the United States.  He served in that office from July 1775 until September 1789.  He died at age 75.

 

1560 ~ Gustav I of Sweden (né Gustav Eriksson, b. May 12, 1496).  The exact date of his birth is unknown.  He ruled from June 1523 until his death in September 1560.  He is believed to have been about 64 years old at the time of his death.


Tuesday, September 28, 2021

September 28

Birthdays:

 

1967 ~ Mira Sorvino (née Mira Katherine Sorvino), American actress.  She was born in Manhattan, New York.

 

1964 ~ Janeane Garofalo (née Ganeane Marie Garafalo), American actress and comedian.  She was born in Newton, New Jersey.

 

1957 ~ Bill Cassidy (né William Morgan Cassidy), United States Republican Senator from Louisiana.  He assumed the Office in January 2015.  He is also a physician.  He was born in Highland Park, Illinois.

 

1956 ~ Martha Isabel Fandiño Pinilla, Colombian-Italian mathematician.  She was born in Pacho, Columbia.

 

1950 ~ John Sayles (né John Thomas Sayles), American movie director.  He was born in Schenectady, New York.

 

1947 ~ Rhonda Hughes (née Rhonda Jo Weisberg), American mathematician.

 

1943 ~ J.T. Walsh (né James Thomas Patrick Walsh, d. Feb. 27, 1998), American actor.  He was born in San Francisco, California.  He died of a heart attack at age 54 in Lemon Grove, California.

 

1938 ~ Ben E. King (né Benjamin Earl Nelson; d. Apr. 30, 2015), American soul legend who sang Stand by Me.  He was born in Henderson, North Carolina.  He died at age 76 in Hackensack, New Jersey.

 

1934 ~ Brigitte Bardot (née Brigitte Anne-Marie Bardot), French actress.  She was born in Paris, France.

 

1925 ~ Martin Kruskal (né Martin David Kruskal; d. Dec. 26, 2006), American physicist and mathematician.  He was born in New York, New York.  He died at age 81 in Princeton, New Jersey.

 

1924 ~ Marcello Mastroianni (né Marcello Vincenzo Domenico Mastroianni; d. Dec. 19, 1996), Italian actor.  He died of pancreatic cancer at age 72 in Paris, France.

 

1916 ~ Peter Finch (né Frederick George Peter Ingle Finch; d. Jan. 14, 1977), English actor.  He is best known for his role as television anchorman Howard Beale in the movie Network.  He was born in London, England.  He died at age 60 of a heart attack in Beverly Hills, California.

 

1915 ~ Ethel Rosenberg (d. June 19, 1953), American who was executed along with her husband, Julius (1918 ~ 1953), for allegedly spying for the Soviet Union.  She was born in Manhattan, New York.  She was 37 years old at the time of her execution.

 

1914 ~ Maria Agatha Franziska Gobertina von Trapp (d. Feb. 18, 2014), the singer whose life inspired The Sound of Music.  She was the second oldest daughter of Captain von Trapp.  She was born in Saltzburg, Austria-Hungary.  She died at age 99 in Stowe, Vermont.

 

1909 ~ Al Capp (né Alfred Gerald Caplin; d. Nov. 5, 1979), American cartoonist.  His is best known for his comic strip Li’l Abner.  He was born in New Haven, Connecticut.  He died of emphysema in South Hampton, New Hampshire at age 70.

 

1905 ~ Max Schmeling (né Maximillian Adolph Otto Siegfried Schmeling; d. Feb. 2, 2005), German boxer who defeated, then lost to, Joe Louis.  He died at age 99.

 

1901 ~ Ed Sullivan (né Edward Vincent Sullivan; d. Oct. 13, 1974), American television show host.  He was born and died in Manhattan, New York.  He died of esophageal cancer 15 days after his 73rd birthday.

 

1901 ~ William S. Paley (né William Samuel Paley; d. Oct. 26, 1990), American radio and television executive.  He was born in Chicago, Illinois.  He died a month after his 89th birthday in New York, New York.

 

1900 ~ Isabel Pell (née Isabel Townsend Pell; d. June 5, 1951), American socialite and fighter in the French Resistance during World War II.  She was born in Babylon, New York.  She died at age 50 in New York, New York.

 

1899 ~ Boris Yefimov (d. Oct. 1, 2008), Soviet political cartoonist who was a favorite of Joseph Stalin.  He was known for his critical political caricatures of Adolf Hitler and other Nazis.  He was born in Kyiv, Ukraine.  He died 3 days after his 109th birthday in Moscow, Russia.

 

1893 ~ Hilda Geiringer (d. Mar. 22, 1973), Austrian mathematician.  In the early 1930, she and her then fiancé moved to Turkey to escape the Nazis.  She later moved to the United States.  She died at age 79.

 

1887 ~ Avery Brundage (d. May 8, 1975), American businessman and 5th President of the International Olympic Committee.  He served in that office from August 1952 until September 1972.  He died at age 87.

 

1863 ~ King Carlos I (d. Feb. 1, 1908), King of Portugal.  He was King of Portugal from October 19, 1889 until his assassination 19 years later.  He was of the House of Bragaza.  He was killed, along with his son, Luis Filipe, Prince Royal (1887 ~ 1908).  The King was 44 years old; his son 20 years old.  His wife, Amélie of Orléans, was born on the same day 2 years later.

 

1860 ~ Paul Ulrich Vallard (d. Jan. 13, 1934), French chemist and physicist.  He discovered gamma rays.  He died at age 73.

 

1856 ~ Kate Douglas Wiggin (née Kate Douglas Smith; d. Aug. 24, 1923), American author.  She is best known for her children’s novel, Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm.  She died of pneumonia at age 66.

 

1852 ~ Henri Moissan (né Ferdinand Frederick Henri Moissan; d. Feb. 20, 1907), French chemist and recipient of the 1906 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work in isolating fluorine from its compounds.  He died at age 54 from an acute case of appendicitis.

 

1852 ~ Isis Pogson (née Elizabeth Isis Pogson; d. May 14, 1945), British astronomer and meteorologist.  She died at age 92.

 

1841 ~ Georges Clemenceau (né Georges Benjamin Clemenceau; d. Nov. 24, 1929), Prime Minister of France.  He was Prime Minister during World War I, from November 1917 until January 1920.  He died at age 88.

 

1836 ~ Thomas Crapper (d. Jan. 27, 1910), English plumber and inventor of the ballcock in the modern toilet.  The exact date of his birth is unknown, but he was baptized on September 28, 1836.  He died at age 73.

 

1735 ~ Augustus FitzRoy, 3rd Duke of Grafton (b. Mar. 14, 1811), Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.  He was Prime Minister from October 1768 until January 1770 during the reign of King George III.  He died at age 75.

 

1605 ~ Ismaël Bullialdus (d. Nov. 25, 1694), French mathematician and astronomer.  He died at age 89.

 

1571 ~ Caravaggio (né Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, d. July 18, 1610), Italian artist.  He died under mysterious circumstances at age 38.

 

551 BCE ~ The traditional date ascribed to the birth of Confucius (d. 479 BCE).  He is believed to have died at about age 71 or 72.

 

Events that Changed the World:

 

2020 ~ Yom Kippur.

 

2015 ~ Sukkot began at sunset.

 

2000 ~ Ariel Sharon (1928 ~ 2014) visited the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, a site generally off-limits to Jews, and known as the Al Aqsa Mosque to the Muslims.

 

1995 ~ Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin (1922 ~ 1995) and PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat (1929 ~ 2004) signed the Interim Agreement on the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

 

1971 ~ The Misuse of Drugs Act of 1971 was passed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom banning the medical use of cannabis.

 

1961 ~ A military coup in Damascus, Syria ended the United Arab Republic, which had been the union between Egypt and Syria.

 

1951 ~ CBS made the first color televisions available for sale to the public.  Unfortunately, the product was short-lived and was discontinued less than a month later.

 

1950 ~ Indonesia was admitted to the United Nations.

 

1939 ~ Warsaw, Poland surrendered to Nazi Germany in World War II.

 

1928 ~ Sir Alexander Fleming (1881 ~ 1955), discovered that the penicillin mold could kill bacteria.  In 1945, he would be the recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for this discovery.

 

1885 ~ Riots broke out in Montreal, Canada in protest of the government’s mandatory smallpox vaccinations.

 

1867 ~ Toronto was named the capital of Ontario.

 

1844 ~ Oscar I of Sweden-Norway (1799 ~ 1859) was crowned King of Sweden.

 

1791 ~ France became the first European country to emancipate its Jewish population.

 

1787 ~ The newly completed United States Constitution was voted on by the United States Congress to be sent to the individual state legislatures for approval.

 

1779 ~ Samuel Huntington (1731 ~ 1796) was elected President of the Continental Congress.  He succeeded John Jay (1745 ~ 1829).

 

1066 ~ William the Conqueror (1028 ~ 1087) landed in England and began the Norman Conquest of England.  At the time of the invasion of England, he was known as William the Bastard.

 

Good-Byes:

 

2020 ~ Lod Cook (né Lodwrick Monroe Cook; b. June 17, 1928), American businessman from Castor, Louisiana.  He earned his bachelor’s degree in mathematics from the Louisiana State University.  The hotel on the campus of LSU is named for him.  He was born in Castor, Louisiana.  He died at age 92 in Sherman Oaks, California.

 

2016 ~ Gloria Naylor (b. Jan. 25, 1950), African-American novelist.  She is best known for her novel The Women of Brewster Place.  She was born in New York, New York.  She died of a heart attack while visiting in Christiansted, U.S. Virgin Island at age 66.

 

2016 ~ Agnes Nixon (née Agnes Eckhardt; b. Dec. 10, 1922), American soap opera writer who put taboo subjects on television.  She died of Parkinson’s disease at age 93.

 

2016 ~ Shimon Peres (né Szymon Perski; b. Aug. 2, 1923), Israeli politician.  He served as Prime Minister of Israel from November 1995 until June 18, 1996.  He served as the President of Israel from July 2007 until July 2014.  He died at age 93.

 

2004 ~ Geoffrey Beene (né Samuel Albert Bozeman, Jr.; b. Aug. 30, 1927), American fashion designer.  He was from Hayesville, Louisiana.  He died of cancer 29 days after his 77th birthday.

 

2003 ~ Althea Gibson (b. Aug. 25, 1927), African-American tennis player and golfer.  She was the first Black to cross the color line of international tennis.  In 1956, she was the first African-American to win a Grand Slam in tennis.  She died about a month after her 76th birthday.

 

2003 ~ Elia Kazan (né Elias Kazantzoglou, b. Sept. 7, 1909), Greek-American actor and movie director.  He died 3 weeks after his 94th birthday.

 

2000 ~ Pierre Trudeau (Joseph Philippe Pierre Yves Elliott Trudeau, b. Oct. 18, 1919), 15th Prime Minister of Canada.  In 2015, his son, Justin (b. 1971) became the 23rd Prime Minister of Canada.  Pierre died 20 days before his 81st birthday.

 

1993 ~ Peter de Vries (b. Feb. 27, 1910), American novelist.  He died at age 83.

 

1991 ~ Miles Davis (né Miles Dewey Davis, III; b. May 26, 1926), African-American Jazz trumpeter, bandleader and composer.  He died at age 65.

 

1990 ~ Larry O’Brien (né Lawrence Francis O’Brien; b. July 7, 1917), 57th United States Postmaster General.  He served under President Lyndon Johnson from November 1965 until April 1968.  He subsequently served as the 3rdCommissioner of the NBA from 1975 until 1984.  He was born in Springfield, Massachusetts.  He died at age 73.

 

1989 ~ Ferdinand Marcos (né Ferdinand Emmanuel Edralin Marcos; b. Sept. 11, 1917), Filipino politician and 10thPresident and dictator of the Philippines.  He died 16 days after his 72nd birthday.

 

1978 ~ Pope John Paul I (né Albino Luciani; b. Oct. 17, 1912).  He served as Pope for only 33 days, from August 26 until September 28, 1978.  He died 19 days before his 66th birthday.

 

1976 ~ Margherita Piazzola Beloch (b. July 12, 1879), Italian mathematician.  She is best known for her contribution to mathematical paper folding.  She was born in Frascati, Italy.  She died at age 97 in Rome, Italy.

 

1970 ~ Gamal Abdel Nasser (b. Jan. 15, 1918), second president of Egypt.  He died of a heart attack at age 52 while still in office.  Anwar Sadat was named his successor.

 

1970 ~ John Dos Passos (né John Roderigo Dos Passos; b. Jan. 14, 1896), American novelist.  He is best known for his trilogy U.S.A.  He died at age 74.

 

1964 ~ Harpo Marx (né Adolph Marx; b. Nov. 23, 1888), second-oldest of the Marx brothers, American comedian and actor.  He died at age 75.

 

1956 ~ William E. Boeing (né Wilhelm Böing; b. Oct. 1, 1881), American aviation pioneer and founder of the Boeing Company.  He died just 3 days before 75th birthday.

 

1953 ~ Edwin Hubble (né Edwin Powell Hubble; b. Nov. 20, 1889), American astronomer.  The Hubble telescope is named in his honor.  He died of cerebral thrombosis at age 63.

 

1938 ~ Charles Duryea (né Charles Edgar Duryea; b. Dec. 15, 1861), American automobile pioneer.  He died at age 76.

 

1914 ~ Richard Sears (né Richard Warren Sears; b. Dec. 7, 1863), American businessman and co-founder of the department store, Sears and Roebuck.  He died at age 50 of Bright’s disease.

 

1898 ~ Thomas F. Bayard (né Thomas Francis Bayard; b. Oct. 29, 1828), 30th United States Secretary of State.  He served from March 1885 until March 1889 during the administrations of Grover Cleveland and Benjamin Harrison.  He was born in Wilmington, Delaware.  He died in Dedham, Massachusetts about a month before his 70th birthday.

 

1895 ~ Louis Pasteur (b. Dec. 27, 1822), French microbiologist who made major contributions to medicine.  He is best known for developing a process of using heat to kill germs, which is used today to preserve milk.  This process is known as pasteurization.  He died at age 78.

 

1891 ~ Herman Melville (b. Aug. 1, 1819), American novelist best known for his novel Moby Dick.  He was heavily influenced by Richard Henry Dana’s novel, Two Years Before the Mast, when he wrote Moby Dick.  Interestingly, they were both born on the same day, just 4 years apart.  He died at age 72.

 

1869 ~ Gugleilmo Libri Carucci dalla Sommaja (b. Jan. 1, 1803), Italian mathematician.  He is best known for his love and theft of ancient and precious manuscripts.  He was born in Florence, Italy.  He died at age 66 in Fiesole, Italy.

 

1694 ~ Gabriel Mouton (b. 1618), French mathematician.  The exact date of his birth is not known.

 

1330 ~ Elizabeth of Bohemia (b. Jan. 20, 1292), Queen consort of Bohemia and first wife of John of Luxembourg.  She died of tuberculosis at age 38.

 

1197 ~ Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor (b. Nov. 1165).  He was 31 years old.  The exact date of his birth is not known.

 

935 ~ King Wenceslas I (b. 907), also known as Saint Wenceslas, was murdered by his brother, Boleslaus I of Bohemia.  He was about 28 years old at the time of his death.  The exact date of is birth is not known.

 

48 B.C.E. ~ Pompey (b. Sept. 29, 106 B.C.E.), the date the Roman General was believed to have been assassinated.  He is believed to have died 1 day before his 58th birthday.