Birthdays:
1970 ~ Chris Kattan (né Christopher Lee Kattan), American actor. He was born in Los Angeles, California.
1969 ~ Trey Parker (né Randolph Severn Parker, III), American animator and co-creator of South Park. He was born in Conifer, Colorado.
1962 ~ Tracy Chevalier (née Tracy Rose Chavalier), American author. She is best known for her historical novel, Girl with a Pearl Earring. She was born in Washington, D.C.
1959 ~ Nir Barkat, Mayor of Jerusalem. He served as Mayor from November 2008 to December 2018. He was born in Jerusalem, Israel.
1951 ~ Demetrios Christodoulou, Greek mathematician. He was born in Athens, Greece.
1945 ~ Divine (né Harris Glenn Milstead; d. Mar. 7, 1988), American actor, singer and drag queen. He appeared in many films directed by John Waters. He died of an enlarged heart at age 42.
1945 ~ Sir Angus Deaton (né Angus Stewart Deaton), Scottish economist. He was the recipient of the 2015 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Science. He was born in Edinburgh, Scotland.
1945 ~ John Lithgow (né John Arthur Lithgow), American actor. He was born in Rochester, New York.
1937 ~ Peter Max (né Peter Max Finkelstein), German-American illustrator and graphic artist. His work was very popular in the 1960s. He and his family fled to Shanghai, China in 1938 to escape from Nazi Germany. He was born in Berlin, Germany.
1936 ~ Sylvia Browne (née Sylvia Celeste Shoemaker; d. Nov. 20, 2013), American television psychic who often got the future wrong. She was born in Kansas City, Missouri. She died a month after her 77th birthday in San Jose, California.
1932 ~ Robert Reed (né John Robert Rietz, Jr.; d. May 12, 1992), American actor best known for his role as Mike Brady from the television sit-com The Brady Bunch. He died of cancer at age 59.
1931 ~ John le Carré (né David John Moore Cornwell), English intelligence officer and author of espionage novels. He was born in Poole, Dorset, England.
1926 ~ Marjorie Tallchief (née Marjorie Louise Tall Chief), Native American ballerina. She is of the Osage Nation. She is the sister of ballerina Maria Tallchief. She was born in Denver, Colorado.
1923 ~ Ruth Carter Stevenson (née Ruth Carter; d. Jan. 6, 2013), American art collector and founder of the Amon Carter Museum of American Art in Fort Worth, Texas. She died at age 89.
1922 ~ Jack Anderson (né Jack Northman Anderson; d. Dec. 17, 2005), American journalist. He died of Parkinson’s disease at age 83.
1922 ~ Elsa Joubert (née Elsabé Antoinette Murray Joubert; d. June 14, 2020), South African award-winning author who wrote the 1978 novel The Long Journey of Poppie Nongena ~ translated from Afrikaans into 13 languages ~ that helped arouse white opinion against the racist apartheid system. She died in Cape Town, South Africa at age 97 of complications of Covid-19.
1917 ~ Subaradchandra Shrikhande (né Subaradchandra Shankar Shrikhande), Indian mathematician.
1916 ~ Jean Dausset (d. June 6, 2009), French immunologist and recipient of the 1980 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. He died at age 92.
1910 ~ Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar (d. Aug. 21, 1995), Indian-born astrophysicist and mathematician. He was the recipient of the 1983 Nobel Prize in Physics. He died at age 84.
1909 ~ Marguerite Perey (née Marguerite Catherine Perey; d. May 13, 1975); French physicist. She was a student of Marie Curie. She is best known for her discovery of Francium. She died of cancer at age 65.
1899 ~ Miguel Ángel Asturias (d. June 9, 1974), Guatemalan writer and recipient of the 1967 Nobel Prize in Literature. He died at age 74.
1885 ~ Charles Merrill (né Charles Edward Merrill; d. Oct 6, 1956), American banker and co-founder of Merrill Lynch Wealth Management. He died 2 weeks before his 71st birthday.
1882 ~ Umberto Boccioni (d. Aug. 17, 1916), Italian sculptor and painter. He died at age 33 after being thrown from a horse during military training.
1868 ~ Bertha Knight Landes (née Bertha Ethel Knight; d. Nov. 29, 1943), Mayor of Seattle from 1926-1928. She was the first female mayor of a major United States city. She was born in Ware, Massachusetts. She died at age 75.
1862 ~ Auguste Lumière (né Auguste Marie Louis Nicolas Lumière, d. Apr. 10, 1954), French movie director. He, along with his brother, Louis Jean Lumière (1864 ~ 1948), were considered to be the first filmmakesrs in history. They patented the cinematograph. Louis Jean died at age 83; Auguste was 91 at the time of his death.
1850 ~ Annie Smith Peck (d. July 18, 1935), American mountaineer. She wrote several books encouraging Americans to travel and explore. She was born in Providence, Rhode Island. She died of bronchial pneumonia at age 84.
Events that Changed the World:
2005 ~ Hurricane Wilma became the most intense Atlantic hurricane on record with a minimum pressure of 882 mb. The storm formed on October 2005 and dissipated on October 27, 2005.
2005 ~ Saddam Hussein’s trial for crimes against humanity and genocide began. He was tried under the provisional Iraqi government. He would be found guilty and executed by hanging in December 2006.
1960 ~ The United States government imposed a near-total trade embargo against Cuba.
1943 ~ Streptomycin was isolated by researchers at Rutgers University. This antibiotic was the first known remedy for tuberculosis.
1917 ~ Love Field in Dallas, Texas opened as a training site for the army. It opened as a public airport in 1927. It was named in honor of Army Lieutenant Moss Lee Love (1880 ~ 1913), who had been killed in an airplane crash.
1900 ~ Max Planck (1858 ~ 1947) discovered the law of black body emission, now known as Planck’s Law.
1864 ~ During the American Civil War, Confederate troops launched a raid on St. Albans, Vermont, coming onto the town from Canada.
1789 ~ John Jay (1745 ~ 1829) was sworn in as the first Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court. He served as Chief Justice until June 1795.
1781 ~ At Yorktown, Virginia, representatives of British commander Lord Cornwallis (1738 ~ 1805) formally surrendered to General George Washington (1732 ~ 1799) at the end of the American Revolutionary War.
1864 ~ During the American Civil War, Confederate troops launched a raid on St. Albans, Vermont, coming onto the town from Canada. This was the northernmost land action during the War and ended as a Confederate victory.
1789 ~ John Jay (1745 ~ 1829) was formally sworn in as the first Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court.
1781 ~ At Yorktown, Virginia, representatives of British commander Lord Cornwallis (1738 ~ 1805) formally surrendered to General George Washington (1732 ~ 1799) at the end of the American Revolutionary War.
1512 ~ Martin Luther (1483 ~ 1546) received his doctorate of theology.
1469 ~ Ferdinand II of Aragon (1452 ~ 1516) married Isabella I of Castile (1451 ~ 1504). The marriage opened the door to the unification of Spain by uniting Aragon and Castile.
1386 ~ The first lectures were held at the Universität Heidelberg, Germany’s oldest university.
Good-Byes:
2010 ~ Tom Bosley (né Thomas Edward Bosley, b. Oct 1, 1927), American actor. He is best known for portraying Howard Cunningham on Happy Days. He died 18 days after his 83rd birthday.
2008 ~ Richard Blackwell (né Richard Sylvan Selzer; b. Aug. 29, 1922), American fashion designer known as Mr. Blackwell, who skewered the worst-dressed celebrities. He is best known for creating the “10 Worst Dress Women List.” He died at age 86.
2007 ~ Winifred Asprey (né Winnifred Alice Asprey; b. Apr. 8, 1917), American mathematician and computer scientist. She was one of a very small group of women to earn a Ph.D. in mathematics in the 1940s. She died at age 90.
2004 ~ Paul Nitze (né Paul Henry Nitze; b. Jan. 16, 1907), 10th United States Secretary of the Navy. He served under President Lyndon Johnson from November 1963 until June 1967. He helped shape the Cold War defense policy. He was born in Amherst, Massachusetts. He died at age 97 in Washington, D.C.
2003 ~ Margaret Murie (née Margaret Thomas; b. Aug. 18, 1902), American environmentalist and author. She is known as the Grandmother of the Conservation Movement. She died at age 101.
1994 ~ Martha Raye (née Margy Reed, b. Aug. 27, 1916), American actress and singer. She died at age 78.
1972 ~ Marie-Louise Dubriel-Jacotin (b. July 7, 1905), French mathematician. She was only the second woman to earn a doctorate in France in pure mathematics. She was born and died in Paris, France. She died at age 67.
1970 ~ Lázaro Cárdenas (b. May 21, 1895), President of Mexico. He served as President from December 1934 until November 1940. He died at age 75.
1955 ~ Carlos Dávila (b. Sept. 15, 1887), Chilean journalist and President of Chile. He died at age 68.
1950 ~ Edna St. Vincent Millay (b. Feb. 22, 1892), American poet. She was born in Rockland, Maine. She died at 58 after suffering injuries from falling down a flight of stairs.
1945 ~ N.C. Wyeth (né Newell Convers Wyeth, b. Oct. 22, 1882), American artist and illustrator. He was born in Needham, Massachusetts. He was killed in a car accident when the vehicle he was in was struck by a freight train. The accident occurred 3 days before his 63rd birthday.
1944 ~ Dénes Kőnig (b. Sept. 21, 1884), Hungarian mathematician. He wrote the first textbook on graph theory. He committed suicide less than a month after his 60th birthday to evade persecution from the Nazis for being a Hungarian Jew.
1943 ~ Camille Claudel (b. Dec. 8, 1877), French sculptor and illustrator. She died at age 78.
1937 ~ Ernest Rutherford, 1st Baron Rutherford of Nelson (b. Aug. 30, 1871), British physicist and recipient of the 1908 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. He is known as the Father of Nuclear Physics. He died at age 66.
1936 ~ Lu Xun (b. Sept. 25, 1881), Chinese writer. He was a leading figure in modern Chinese literature. He died 24 days after his 55th birthday.
1932 ~ Lindley Garrison (né Lindley Miller Garrison;b. Nov. 28, 1864), 46th United States Secretary of War. He served under President Woodrow Wilson from March 1913 until February 1916. He was born in Camden, New Jersey. He died at age 67 in Sea Bright, New Jersey.
1923 ~ Eleanor Norcross (née Ella Augusta Norcross, b. June 24, 1854), American painter. She was born and died in Fitchburg, Massachusetts. She died at age 69.
1905 ~ Virgil Earp (né Virgil Walter Earp; b. July 18, 1853), United States lawman in the American Wild West. He died at age 62.
1897 ~ George Pullman (né George Mortimer Pullman; b. Mar. 3, 1831), American businessman and inventor. He founded the Pullman Company, which built railroad sleeping cars. He died of a heart attack at age 66.
1856 ~ William Sprague, III (b. Nov. 3, 1799), Governor of Rhode Island. He served as Governor from May 1838 until May 1839. He died 2 weeks before his 57th birthday.
1851 ~ Marie Thérèse of France (b. Dec. 19, 1778). She was the oldest child of King Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. She died at age 72.
1745 ~ Jonathan Swift (b. Nov. 30, 1667), English author and satirist, best known for his novel, Gulliver’s Travels. He died at age 77.
1587 ~ Francesco I de’Medici (b. Mar. 25, 1541), Grand Duke of Tuscany. He died at age 46.
1216 ~ King John I of England (b. Dec. 24, 1166). He was also known as John Lackland. He was the youngest of five sons of King Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine. He was never expected to become king, however, his brothers all died, so he ascended to the throne. He is best known for his association with the Magna Carta. He was married to Isabella, Countess of Gloucester, but their marriage was annulled before he ascended to the throne. He then married Isabella, Countess of Angoulême. He was succeeded by his 9-year-old son, Henry, who would become King Henry III. King John died at age 49.
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