Birthdays:
1957 ~ Ethan Coen, American film
director and screenwriter.
1950 ~ Bill Murray, American actor and
comedian.
1947 ~ Stephen
King, American suspense and horror author.
He is from Maine and graduated from the University of Maine.
1945 ~ Jerry Bruckheimer, American
film and television producer.
1944 ~ Hamilton
Jordan (né William Hamilton McWhorter Jordan, d. 2008), 8th White
House Chief of Staff. He was the
political advisor who had President Jimmy Carter’s ear. He died at age 63.
1944 ~ Fanny Flagg (née Patricia
Neal), American actress, comedian and writer.
She is best known for her novel, Fried
Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café.
1941 ~ R. James Woolsey, Jr. (né
Robert James Woolsey, Jr.), 16th Director of the United States
Central Intelligence Agency. He served
in the Bill Clinton administration.
1940 ~ Bill Kurtis, American
journalist.
1936 ~ Diane Rehm, American radio
host.
1934 ~ Leonard Cohen, Canadian
songwriter.
1931 ~ Larry Hagman (d. 2012),
American actor best known for his role as J.R. Ewing on the TV series, Dallas.
His mother was the stage actress, Mary Martin. He died at age 81.
1930 ~ Romulus Linney (d.
2011), American playwright who drew on his Southern boyhood. He died at age 80.
1926 ~ Donald
Glaser (d. 2013), American physicist and recipient of the 1960 Nobel Prize for
Physics. He died at age 86.
1917 ~ Phyllis Nicholson (d, 1968),
English mathematician. She died of
cancer less than 3 weeks after her 51st birthday.
1914 ~ John Werner Kluge (d.
2010), German-born immigrant to the United States who built a media empire. He died 2 weeks before his 96th
birthday.
1903 ~
Preston Tucker (d. 1956), American automobile designer. He was the subject of the 1988 movie, Tucker: The Man and His Dreams, starring
Jeff Bridges. Preston Tucker died at age
59 of pneumonia.
1902 ~ Sir Allen
Lane (d. 1970), British publisher and founder of Penguin Books. He died at age 67.
1892 ~ Eddie Cantor
(né Isidore Itzkowitz, d. 1964), American singer and actor. He died about 3 weeks after his 72nd
birthday.
1884 ~ Dénes Kőnig (d. 1944), Hungarian
mathematician. He died less than a month
after his 60th birthday.
1874 ~ Gustav
Holst (d. 1934), English composer. He
died at age 59 of heart failure following ulcer surgery.
1867 ~ Henry L. Stimson (d. 1950), 46th
United States Secretary of State. He
served in this Office during the Herbert Hoover administration from March 1929
until March 1933. He previously served
as the 45th United States Secretary of War during the William Howard
Taft administration from May 1911 until March 1913. He served in this Office as the 54th
United States Secretary of War during the Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S
Truman administration from July 1940 until September 1945. He died at age 83.
1866 ~ H.G.
Wells (né Herbert George Wells, d. 1946), English writer. He is best known for his novels such as The Time Machine, The War of the Worlds and The
Island of Doctor Moreau. He died at
age 79.
1866 ~ Charles
Nicolle (d. 1936), French bacteriologist and recipient of the 1928 Nobel Prize
for Physiology or Medicine for his work in the identification of lice as
transmitters of typhus. He died at age
69.
1853 ~ Heike
Kamerlingh Onnes (d. 1926), Dutch physicist and recipient of the 1913 Nobel
Prize in Physics. He died at age 72.
1849 ~ Maurice
Barrymore (né Herbert Arthur Chamberlayne Blythe, d. 1905), he was patriarch of
the Barrymore family. He died at age
55. Drew Barrymore can thank her lucky
stars for him!
1788 ~ Margaret Taylor (d. 1853), First Lady of the United States and wife of President Zachary Taylor. She served as First Lady during her husband’s
Presidency from March 1849 until her husband’s death July 9, 1850. During her time in the White House, she was
in ill health and the hostessing duties of being First Lady fell heavily upon
her youngest daughter, Mary Elizabeth “Betty” Taylor (1824 ~ 1909). Margaret Taylor died at age 63.
1758 ~ Christopher Gore (d. 1827), 8th
Governor of Massachusetts. He served as
Governor from May 1898 until June 1810.
He died at age 67.
1756 ~ John
McAdam (d. 1836). Scottish engineer,
road builder and inventor. Without his
invention would we still be driving on dirt roads? He died at age 80.
1645 ~ Louis
Joliet (d. 1700), Canadian explorer. He
was last seen in May 1700 as he went out on a expedition in what is now Quebec,
Canada. He is believed to have died
shortly thereafter at about age 54 or 55.
1452 ~ Girolamo Savonarola (d. 1498),
Italian-Dominican priest and philosopher.
He tried to reform the Church and was subsequently excommunicated by
Pope Alexander VI. He was executed at
age 45.
1415 ~ Frederick III, Holy Roman
Emperor (d. 1493). He was known as
Frederick the Peaceful. He died at age
77.
Events
that Changed the World:
2005 ~ Hurricane Rita struck the Gulf
Coast.
1999 ~ A massive earthquake, called
the Chi-Chi earthquake, in Taiwan kill approximately 2500 people.
1981 ~ Sandra
Day O’Connor (b. 1930) was unanimously approved by the US Senate as the first
female Supreme Court Justice. She served
on the Court from 1981 until her retirement in 2006.
1972 ~
Ferdinand Marcos (1917 ~ 1989) placed The Philippines under martial law.
1970 ~ The New
York Times began the first modern op-ed page. Who know that was so recent!
1942 ~ This
date marked Yom Kippur. Jews throughout
Poland and the Ukraine were either sent to concentration camps or were
executed. While this was a common
practice by the Nazis, it was particularly horrific as it occurred on the
holiest day of the Jewish year.
1938 ~ The
Great New England Hurricane of 1938 made landfall in New England. Hurricanes rarely have a direct impact on the
northern States. This was the first
recorded major hurricane to strike in New York and New England. It was the costliest hurricane to hit the
northeast until Hurricane Sandy in 2012.
1937 ~ The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien (1892 ~ 1973) was first published.
1898 ~ The
Empress Dowager Cixi (1935 ~ 1908) seized power in China, becoming the de
facto ruler over the Manchu Qing Dynasty. Her actions on this date ended the Hundred
Days’ Reform in China.
1897 ~ The
famous Yes, Virginia, There is a Santa
Claus editorial was published in The
New York Sun newspaper. Virginia O’Hanlon
(1889 ~ 1971), began to question the existence of Santa Claus, so she wrote to
her newspaper. The paper responded in
the affirmative, addressing the philosophical rational for believing in St.
Nick.
1843 ~ John Williams Wilson (1798 ~
1857) took possession of the Strait of Magellan on behalf of the Chilean
government.
1792 ~ During the period of the French
Revolution, the French National Convention declared France a republic and
abolished the absolute monarchy.
1780 ~
Benedict Arnold gave the British the plans to West Point.
Good-Byes:
2012 ~ Sven
Hassel (b. 1917), Danish novelist who humanized German soldiers from the World
War II era. He died at age 95.
1998 ~
Florence Griffith Joyner (b. 1959), American athlete. She was known as Flo-Jo. She died of an epileptic seizure at age 38.
1974 ~
Jacqueline Susann (b. 1918), American novelist, best known for her book, The
Valley of the Dolls. She died of
breast cancer at age 56.
1974 ~ Walter
Brennan (b. 1894), American actor. He is
best known for his role on the TV show, The Real McCoys. He died at age 80.
1971 ~
Bernardo Houssay (b. 1887), Argentine physiologist and recipient of the 1947
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his discovery of the role of the
pituitary homes in regulating blood sugar levels. He died at age 84.
1961 ~ Hilda Doolittle (b. 1886),
American poet and novelist. She died 11
days after her 75th birthday.
1957 ~ King Haakon VII of Norway (né
Christian Frederik Carl Georg Valdemar Axel, b. 1872). He was King of Norway from November 1905
until his death at age 85 on this date 52 years later.
1939 ~ Armand Călinescu (b. 1893), 39th
Prime Minister of Romania. He served as
Prime Minister from March 1939 until his assassination on this date six months
later. He was 46 at the time of his
death.
1904 ~ Chief
Joseph (b. 1840), Nez Perce leader. He
died at age 64.
1880 ~ Manuel Montt (b. 1809), Chilean
politician and 6th President of Chile. He died less than three weeks following his
71st birthday.
1832 ~ Sir
Walter Scott, 1st Baronet (b. 1771), Scottish writer and poet. He died at age 61.
1576 ~ Gerolamo Cardano (b. 1501),
Italian mathematician. He died 3 days
before his 75th birthday.
1558 ~ Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor
(b. 1500). He died at age 58.
1327 ~ King
Edward II of England (b. 1284). He died
at age 43.
1235 ~ King Andrew II of Hungary (b.
1175). The exact date of his birth is
unknown, but he is believed to have been about 57 or 58 at the time of his
death.
687 ~ Pope Conon (b. 630). He was Pope from October 21, 686 until his
death just under a year later. He is
believed to have been 57 at the time of his death.
19 BCE ~ Virgil (b. 70 BCE), Roman poet. The traditional date ascribed to Virgil’s
death. He is believed to have been 50
when he died.
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