Birthdays:
1974 ~
Christian Bale, English actor.
1962 ~ King Abdullah II of Jordan.
1955 ~ John Elias Baldacci, 73rd Governor of
Maine. He served as Governor from
January 2003 until January 2011.
1949 ~ Peter Agre, American physician and
biologist. He was the recipient of the
2003 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
1948 ~ Miles Anthony Reid, English mathematician.
1945 ~ Meir Dagan (d. Mar. 17, 2016), Israeli military
officer and Director of Mossad from 2002 until 2011. He died at age 71.
1941 ~ Richard “Dick” Bruce Chaney, 46th Vice
President of the United States. He
served under President George W. Bush from January 2001 until January 2009.
1937 ~ Vanessa Redgrave, English actress.
1937 ~ Boris Spassky, Russian chess master.
1931 ~ Shirley Hazzard (d. Dec. 12, 2016), Australian
writer best known for her book The
Transit of Venus. She died at age
85.
1930 ~ Gene Hackman (né Eugene Allen Hackman), American actor.
1928 ~ Harold Smith Prince, American stage producer and
director.
1927 ~
Olof Palme (né Sven Olaf Joachim
Palme, d. Feb. 28, 1986), Prime Minister of Sweden. He was assassinated about a month after his
59th birthday.
1925 ~ Douglas Engelbart (d. July 2, 2013), American
computer scientist and inventor of the computer mouse. He was also responsible for laying out the
principles of computer networking. He
died at age 88.
1924 ~ Margaret Yorke (née Margaret Larminie, d. Nov.
17, 2012), British crime fiction author.
She died at age 88.
1922 ~ Dick Martin (né Thomas Richard Martin, d. May
24, 2008), American comedian and goofy co-host of Laugh-In. He died at age 86.
1915 ~ John Profumo (d. Mar. 9, 2006), English
politician who was caught in a sex scandal.
He died at age 91.
1914 ~
David Wayne (d. Feb. 9, 1995), American actor.
He died of lung cancer 10 days after his 81st birthday.
1912 ~
Barbara Wertheim Tuchman (d. Feb. 6, 1989), American historian. She is best known for her book The Guns of
August, which is about the first month of World War I. She died 7 days after her 77th
birthday.
1899 ~ Max Theiler (d. Aug. 11, 1972), South African
virologist and recipient of the 1951 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for
his work in developing a vaccine against yellow fever. He died at age 73 in New Haven, Connecticut.
1894 ~ Boris III of Bulgaria (d. Aug. 28, 1943), Tsar
of Bulgaria from October 1918 until his death on this date 25 years later. He is best known for taking steps to protect
the Jews of Bulgaria during World War II. He died of a heart attack at age 49.
1882 ~ Franklin D. Roosevelt (d. Apr. 12, 1945), 32nd
United States President. He served in
Office from March 1933 until his death on this date in 1945. He is the only President to have been elected
for 3 terms. He died at age 63.
1841 ~ Félix Faure (d. Feb. 16, 1899), President of
France. He served as President from
January 1895 until his death in February 1899.
He died in Office of apoplexy just 17 days after his 58th
birthday.
1816 ~
Nathaniel Prentiss Banks (d. Sept. 1, 1894), 24th Governor of
Massachusetts. He served as Governor
from January 1858 until January 1861. He
was born and died in Waltham, Massachusetts.
He was 78 at the time of his death.
1736 ~ James Watt (d. Aug. 25, 1819), Scottish inventor
and mechanical engineer best know for the creation of the modern steam
engine. He died at age 83.
1615 ~ Thomas Rolfe (d. 1675), American son of
Pocahontas. The exact date of his death
is not known.
Events
that Changed the World:
2003 ~ The Kingdom of Belgium officially recognized
same-sex marriages.
1972 ~
British Paratroopers killed 14 unarmed civil rights marchers in Northern
Ireland in this date, which became known as Bloody Sunday.
1971 ~ Carol King’s Tapestry album was released.
1969 ~ The
Beatles’ last public performance occurred on the roof of Apple Records in
London. The police later broke up this
impromptu concert.
1948 ~ Mahatma Gandhi (1869 ~ 1948) was assassinated by
Hindu extremist Nathuram Godse.
1933 ~
Adolf Hitler (1889 ~ 1945) was sworn in as Chancellor of Germany.
1862 ~ The
first American ironclad warship, the USS Monitor, was launched.
1847 ~
Yerba Buena, California was renamed San Francisco.
1835 ~
Richard Lawrence (1800 ~ 1861) attempted an assassination attempt on President
Andrew Jackson (1767 ~ 1845) in the first known assassination attempt against
an American president. Lawrence spent
the rest of his life in an insane asylum.
1826 ~ The
first modern suspension bridge, the Menai Suspension Bridge, connecting the
Isle of Anglesey to the north west coast of Wales, opened.
1820 ~ Irish
sailor Edward Bransfield (1785 ~ 1852) claimed the discovery of Antarctica with
the sighting of its Trinity Peninsula.
1815 ~ The United States Congress authorized the
purchase of Thomas Jefferson's library, which became the nucleus of the Library
of Congress.
1661 ~
Oliver Cromwell (1599 ~ 1658), Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England
was ritually executed 2 years after his death, on the anniversary of the
execution of King Charles I of England (1600 ~ 1649), the monarch he had
deposed in 1649.
516 BCE ~ The traditional date ascribed to the completion
of the Second Temple of Jerusalem.
Good-byes:
2017 ~ Harold Rosen (b. Mar. 20, 1926), American
satellite pioneer who got the world talking.
He was known as the Father of the Communication Satellite. He was born in New Orleans, Louisiana. He died at age 90 of complications of a
stroke.
2015 ~ Zhelyu Mitev Zhelev (b. Mar. 3, 1935), President
of Bulgaria from January 1992 until January 1997. He died at age 79.
2015 ~ Carl Djerassi (b. Oct. 29, 1923), Austrian-born
chemist who helped develop the birth control pill. He was 91.
2013 ~
Patty Andrews (b. Feb. 16, 1918), last surviving member of the Andrews Sisters
vocal trio. She died 17 days before her
95th birthday.
2009 ~ Ingemar Johansson (b. Sept. 22, 1932), Swedish
world heavyweight champion who beat Floyd Patterson. He died at age 76.
2009 ~ Milton Parker (b. Jan. 10, 1919), American
businessman, restaurateur and co-founder of the Carnegie Deli. He made the Carnegie Deli famous. He died 20 days after his 90th
birthday,
2007 ~
Sidney Sheldon (b. Feb. 11, 1917), American author. He died 12 days before his 90th
birthday.
2006 ~ Wendy Wasserstein (b. Oct. 18, 1950), American
playwright. She died of lymphoma at age
55.
2006 ~ Coretta Scott King (b. Apr. 27, 1927), American
civil rights activist and wife of Martin Luther King, Jr. She died of ovarian cancer at age 78 years
old.
1995 ~ Gerald Durrell (b. Jan. 7, 1925), British
naturalist and author. He wrote The
Whispering Lands, which is about Patagonia.
He died 23 days after his 70th birthday.
1991 ~ John Bardeen (b. May 23, 1908), American
physicist and recipient of the 1956 and 1972 Nobel Prizes in Physics. To date, he is the only individual to have
won two Nobel Prizes in Physics. He died
at age 82.
1980 ~ Professor Longhair (né Henry Roeland Byrd, b.
Dec. 19, 1918), American New Orleans Blues singer-songwriter and pianist. He was born in Bogalusa, Louisiana and died
in New Orleans. He died of a heart
attack at age 61.
1969 ~
Dominique Pire (né George Charles Clement
Ghislain Pire, b. Feb. 10, 1910), Belgian monk and recipient of the 1958 Nobel
Peace Prize for his work in assisting refugees following World War II. He died of complications following surgery 11
days before his 59th birthday.
1958 ~
Ernst Hienkel (b. Jan. 24, 1888), German aviation engineer. He died 6 days after his 70th
birthday.
1951 ~ Ferdinand Porsche (b. Sept. 3, 1875),
Austrian-German engineer and businessman.
He founded the Porsche automobile company. He was a member of the Nazi party. He died of a stroke at age 75.
1948 ~ Orville Wright (b. Aug. 19, 1871), American
aviation pioneer, who along with his brother, Wilber (1867 ~ 1912), invented
the airplane. Orville died at age 76.
1948 ~
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (b. Oct. 2, 1869), Indian pacifist and leader. He was assassinated by a Hindu extremist. He was 78 at the time of his death.
1934 ~ Frank Nelson Doubleday (b. Jan. 8, 1862),
American publisher and founder of the Doubleday Publishing Company. He died 22 days after his 72nd
birthday.
1928 ~ Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger (b. Apr. 23,
1867), Danish physician and recipient of the 1926 Nobel Prize in Physiology or
Medicine. He died of colon cancer at age
60.
1888 ~ Asa Gray (b. Nov. 18, 1810), American
botanist. He died at age 77.
1836 ~ Betsy Ross (née Elizabeth Griscom Ross, b. Jan. 1, 1752),
American seamstress who is credited with making the first American Flag,
although there is no evidence to support this legend. She died 29 days after her 84th
birthday.
1730 ~ Tzar Peter II of Russia (b. Oct. 23, 1715). He was Emperor from May 1727 until his death
in January 3 years later. He died of
smallpox at age 14.
1649 ~ King Charles I of England (b. Nov. 19,
1600). He was king from March 1625 until
his execution in January 1649. He was
tried and convicted of high treason and was beheaded at age 48.
970 ~
Peter I of Bulgaria. He was Tsar from
927 until 969. He then became a monk and
died of a stroke in January 970. The
date of his birth is not known.
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