Birthdays:
1978 ~ Louise Brown (née Louise Joy Brown), the world’s first “test tube baby.” She was the first person to have been born after conception by in vitro fertilization, or IVF. She was born in Lancashire, England.
1965 ~ Illeana Douglas (née Illeana Hesselberg), American actress. She was born in Quincy, Massachusetts.
1955 ~ Iman (née Zara Mohamed Abdulmajid), Somalian model. Musician David Bowie was her 3rd husband. She was born in Mogadishu, Somalia.
1946 ~ Edward Diener (né Edward Francis Diener; d. Apr. 27, 2021), American psychologist who joyfully measured happiness. He was known as Dr. Happiness. He was born in Glendale, California. He died at age 74 in Salt Lake City, Utah.
1941 ~ Emmett Till (né Emmitt Louis Till; d. Aug. 28, 1955), African-American teenager who was lynched and murdered in Money, Mississippi, thereby galvanizing the American Civil Rights Movement. He was born in Chicago, Illinois. He was 14 years old at the time of his murder.
1930 ~ Mitzi Shore (née Lillian Saidel; d. Apr. 11, 2018), American stand-up matriarch who ruled Los Angeles comedy. She co-founded The Comedy Store in 1972. She was born in Marinette, Wisconsin. She died at age 87 in West Hollywood, California.
1924 ~ Frank Church (né Frank Forrester Church, III; d. Apr. 7, 1984), American politician and United States Senator from Idaho. He served as Senator from January 1957 until January 1981. He was born in Boise, Idaho. He died at age 59 from a pancreatic tumor in Bethesda, Maryland.
1923 ~ Estelle Getty (née Estelle Scher; d. July 22, 2008), American sharp-tongued actress who brightened The Golden Girls. She was born in New York, New York. She died 3 days of Lewy body dementia before her 85th birthday in Los Angeles, California.
1923 ~ Edgar Gilbert (né Edgar Nelson Gilbert; d. June 15, 2013), American mathematician. He was born in Woodhaven, New York. He died at age 89 following a fall in Basking Ridge, New Jersey.
1921 ~ Murray Handwerker (d. May 14, 2011), American businessman who expanded the Nathan’s Famous Hot Dogs, the company his father had founded. He was born in New York, New York. He died at age 89 in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.
1920 ~ Rosalind Franklin (née Rosalind Elsie Franklin; d. Apr. 16, 1958), British chemist whose research made it possible for Watson and Crick to discover the molecular structure of DNA. She was born and died in London, England. She died of ovarian cancer at age 37.
1918 ~ Jane Frank (née Jane Babette Schenthal; d. May 31, 1986), American artist. She was known for her mix-media works. She was born and died in Baltimore, Maryland. She died at age 67.
1915 ~ Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. (né Joseph Patrick Kennedy, Jr.; d. Aug. 12, 1944), the oldest son of Joseph and Rose Kennedy. He was a pilot during World War II. He was born in Hull, Massachusetts. He was shot down and was killed 18 days after his 29th birthday.
1905 ~ Elias Canetti (d. Aug. 14, 1994), Bulgarian-born novelist and playwright. He was the recipient of the 1981 Nobel Prize in Literature. He was born in Ruse, Bulgaria. He died 20 days after his 89th birthday in Zurich, Switzerland.
1902 ~ Eric Hoffer (d. May 21, 1983), American social and moral philosopher. Shortly before his death, he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom. He was born in The Bronx, New York. He died at age 89 in San Francisco, California.
1901 ~ Mohammed Helmy (d. Jan. 10, 1982), Egyptian physician. He saved several Jews from the Nazis during World War II and has been recognized as Righteous Among Nations by Yad Vashem. He died at age 80 in Berlin, West Germany.
1900 ~ Zinaïda Aksentieve (d. Apr. 8, 1969), Ukrainian astronomer. She was born in Odessa, Russian Empire. A crater on Venus is named in her honor. She died at age 68.
1896 ~ Josephine Tey (née Elizabeth MacKintosh; b. Feb. 13, 1952), Scottish author of mystery novels. She was born in Inverness, Scotland. She died of liver cancer at age 55 in London, England.
1894 ~ Walter Brennan (né Walter Andrew Brennan; d. Sept. 21, 1974), American actor. He is best known for his role as Amos McCoy on the TV sit-com, The Real McCoys. He was born in Lynn, Massachusetts. He died of emphysema at age 80 in Oxnard, California.
1870 ~ Maxfield Parrish (né Frederick Parrish, d. Mar. 30, 1966), American artist. Je was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He died in Plainfield, New Hampshire at age 95.
1848 ~ Arthur Balfour, 1st Earl of Balfour (né Arthur James Balfour; b. Mar. 19, 1930), Scottish-English politician and Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. He served as Prime Minister from July 1902 until December 1905. Edward VII, King of the United Kingdom was monarch during his term as Prime Minister. He is best known for the Balfour Declaration, drafted in 1917, which was a letter recognizing the need for a Jewish state in the Middle East. He was born in Scotland. He died at age 81 in Surry, England.
1847 ~ Paul Langerhans (d. July 20, 1888), German pathologist. He studied the pancreas. The Isle of Landerhans in the pancreas is named after him. He was born in Berlin, Germany. He died of renal failure 5 days before his 41st birthday.
1844 ~ Thomas Eakins (né Thomas Cowperthwait Eakins; d. June 25, 1916), American artist. He was born and died in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He died a month before his 72nd birthday.
1775 ~ Anna Harrison (née Anna Elizabeth Tuthill Symmes; d. Feb. 25, 1864), First Lady of the United States and wife of President William Henry Harrison. Because her husband died a month after his inauguration, she never lived in the White House. She was born in Morristown, New Jersey. She died at age 88 in North Bend, Ohio.
1750 ~ Henry Knox (d. Oct. 25, 1806), American general and politician. He served as the 1st United States Secretary of War from September 1789 until December 1794. This position was established under President George Washington. He had previously served in that position under the Congress of the Confederation. He was married to Lucy Flucker (1756 ~ 1824). Fort Knox in Maine is named in his honor. He was born in Boston, Massachusetts. He died in Thomaston, Massachusetts at age 56 from an infection after having swallowed a chicken bone.
1642 ~ Louis I, Prince of Monaco (d. Jan. 3, 1701). He was Prince of Monaco from January 1662 until his death 9 years later. In 1660, he married Catherine Charlotte de Gramont (1639 ~ 1678). They had 7 children, 6 of whom lived to adulthood. He was of the House of Grimaldi. He was the son of Prince Hercule, Marquis of Baux and Maria Aurelia Spinola. He died at age 58.
1394 ~ James I, King of Scotland (d. Feb. 21, 1437). He reigned from April 4, 1406 until his death in February 1437. In 1424, he married to Joan Beaufort (d. 1445). They had 8 children, 7 of whom lived to adulthood. He was of the House of Stewart. He was the son of Robert III, King of Scotland and Annabella Drummond. The exact date of his birth is not known, but it is often considered to have been July 25, 1394. He was assassinated at age 42 in a failed coup attempt.
1109 ~ Afonso I, King of Portugal (d. Dec. 6, 1185). He ruled from July 1139 until his death in December 1185. He was known as The Conqueror. He was married to Mafalda of Savoy. He was of the Portuguese House of Burgundy. He was the son of Henry, Count of Portugal and Teresa, Countess of Portugal. The exact date of his birth is not known, but he generally considered to have been born on July 25, 1109.
Events that Changed the World:
2016 ~ A gunman opened fire at a crowd gathered outside Club Blu in Fort Myers, Florida, leaving two teenagers killed and at least 18 others wounded.
2000 ~ Air France Flight 4590 bound for New York, New York, crashed upon takeoff in Paris, killing all crew and passengers, as well as four people on the ground.
1994 ~ Israel and Jordan signed the Washington Declaration, formally ending the state of war that had existed since 1948.
1992 ~ The 1992 Summer Olympics opened in Barcelona, Spain. The games ran through August 9, 1992.
1984 ~ Cosmonaut Svetlana Savitskaya (b. 1948) became the first woman to walk in space.
1979 ~ Israel peacefully returned a section of the Sinai Peninsula to Egypt.
1978 ~ Louise Brown (b. July 25, 1978) was the first “test tube” baby was born in England. She was conceived via in vitro fertilization.
1956 ~ The Italian ocean liner, the SS Andrea Doria, collided with the MS Stockholm off of Nantucket Island, and sank. 51 people were killed.
1952 ~ Puerto Rico became a United States Commonwealth, although the island had come under control of the United States following the Spanish-American War in 1898.
1946 ~ In Operation Crossroads, an atomic bomb was detonated underwater in the lagoon of Bikini Atoll.
1945 ~ During the Cold War, the United States Army secretly admitted 88 German scientists and engineers to help develop rocket technology in what was called Operation Paperclip. The name is derived from the fact that paperclips were used on the more troublesome files.
1868 ~ Wyoming became a United States territory.
1866 ~ The United States Congress passed legislation authorizing the rank of Five-Star General. Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant (1822 ~ 1885) became the first 5-Star General.
1832 ~ Four people were thrown off a railroad train in Quincy, Massachusetts in what is the first recorded rail accident in the United States. One man was killed and the others were seriously injured.
1755 ~ The British governor, Charles Lawrence (1709 ~ 1760), and the Nova Scotia Council ordered the deportation of the Catholic Acadians. Many of the Acadians settled in southern Louisiana and are now known as Cajuns.
1722 ~ Dummer’s War began along the Maine-Massachusetts border.
1603 ~ James VI, King of Scotland (1566 ~ 1625) of Scotland was crowned James I, King of England, thereby bringing the Kingdoms of England and Scotland into a personal union. The political unification, however, would not take place until 1707.
1593 ~ Henry IV, King of France (1553 ~ 1610) converted from Protestantism to Roman Catholicism.
1554 ~ Mary I, Queen of England, also known as Bloody Mary (1516 ~ 1558), married Philip II, King of Spain.
1547 ~ Henry II (1519 ~ 1559) was crowned King of France.
1137 ~ Eleanor of Aquitaine (1122 ~ 1204) married Prince Louis (1120 ~ 1180), the eldest son of King Louis VI of France. Prince Louis later became Louis VII, King of France. After his death, she married Henry II, King of England.
Good-Byes:
2021 ~ Bob Moses (né Robert Parris Moses; b. Jan. 23, 1935), African-American civil rights leader who turned to math education. He faced brutal violence as he registered thousands of Black voters in 1960s Mississippi. He later advocated math literacy as a road to a more equal society. In 1982, he received a McArthur Fellowship and began the Algebra Project. He was born in Harlem, New York. He died in Hollywood, Florida at age 86.
2020 ~ Helen Jones Woods (b. 1923), African-American trombonist in the International Sweethearts of Rhythm ~ a pioneering all-women, multiracial jazz band that toured the United States in the 1930s and 40s. The band dissolved after the Omaha Symphony realized that Woods was black. The actual date of her birth is in question. She was born in Meridan, Mississippi. She died of Covid-19 at age 96 in Sarasota, Florida.
2020 ~ Steven dePyssler (né Steven Leroy dePyssler; b. July 21, 1919), American Air Force colonel who served in World War II, the Korean War, the French Indochina War, the Bay of Pigs Invasion, the Vietnam War and the Dominican Civil War. He is the only American who participated in six military engagements. He became a tireless volunteer after retiring. He was born in Chicago, Illinois. He died in Bossier City, Louisiana of Covid-19 just 4 days after his 101stbirthday.
2017 ~ Gretel Bergmann (née Margarethe Bergmann; b. Apr. 12, 1914), German-born Jewish field and track athlete who was banned by the Nazis from participating in the 1936 Summer Olympics. At the June 1936 Olympic trials, she beat her rivals with a jump of 5 feet 3 inches; but was forbidden to compete in the Olympics and her jump was scrubbed from the record books. She was born in Laupheim, Germany. She died at age 103 in Queens, New York.
2016 ~ Tim LaHaye (né Timothy Francis LaHaye; b. Apr. 27, 1926), American evangelic leader who co-authored an apocalyptic smash. He is best known for co-writing the 16-volume Left Behind series of apocalyptic fiction. He was born in Detroit, Michigan. He died at age 90 in San Diego, California.
2014 ~ Bel Kaufman (née Bella Kaufman; b. May 10, 1911), German-born American author who skewered school bureaucracy. She is best known for book, Up the Down Staircase. She was born in Berlin, Germany. She died at age 103 in Manhattan, New York.
2013 ~ Billy Guste (né William Joseph Guste, Jr.; b. May 26, 1922), Louisiana Attorney General. He served as the Attorney General from May 1972 until January 1992. He was born and died in New Orleans, Louisiana. He died at age 91.
2009 ~ Harry Patch (né Henry John Patch; b. June 17, 1898), the British soldier who was the Great War’s last “Tommy.” He died at age 111 years, 38 days.
2008 ~ Randy Pausch (né Randolph Frederick Pausch; b. Oct. 23, 1960), American professor whose last lecture inspired millions. He was a professor of computer science at Carnegie Mellon University. When he learned he had cancer, he gave a lecture, and authored a book entitled The Last Lecture. He was born in Baltimore, Maryland. He died at age 47 of pancreatic cancer in Chesapeake, Virginia.
1997 ~ Ben Hogan (né William Ben Hogan; b. Aug. 13, 1912), American professional golfer. He is considered one of the greatest golfers in the sport. He was born in Stephenville, Texas. He died in Fort Worth, Texas 19 days before his 85thbirthday.
1995 ~ Toru Kumon (b. Mar. 26, 1914), Japanese mathematician. He was born in Kochi, Japan. He died of pneumonia at age 81 in Osaka, Japan.
1987 ~ Malcolm Baldridge, Jr. (né Howard Malcolm Baldridge, Jr.; b. Oct. 4, 1922), American businessman and 26thUnited States Secretary of Commerce. He served under President Ronald Reagan. He served as the Secretary of Commerce from January 1981 until his death at age 64 in July 1987. He was born in Omaha, Nebraska. He died following injuries sustained in a rodeo accident in Walnut Creek, California.
1986 ~ Vincente Minnelli (né Lester Anthony Minnelli, b. Feb. 28, 1903), American film director, husband of Judy Garland and father of Liza Minnelli. He was born in Chicago, Illinois. He died of emphysema and pneumonia at age 83 in Beverly Hills, California.
1966 ~ Frank O’Hara (Francis Russell O’Hara; b. Mar. 27, 1926), American author. He was born in Baltimore, Maryland. He died at age 40 from injuries sustained after having been hit by a motor vehicle in Mastic Beach, New York.
1959 ~ Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog (b. Dec. 3, 1888), Polish-born rabbi. He was the Chief Rabbi of Ireland from 1919 through 1936. He also served as the Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi of the British Mandate of Palestine from 1936 until 1948. He died at age 70 in Jerusalem, Israel.
1958 ~ Harry Warner (né Hirsz Mojżwa Wonsal; b. Dec. 12, 1881), Polish-born American movie studio executive. He, along with his brothers, Albert (né Abraham Wonsal; 1884 ~ 1967), Sam (né Szmuel Wonsal; 1887 ~ 1927) and Jack (né Jacob Wonsal; 1892 ~ 1978), founded Warner Brothers. Harry Warner died in Los Angeles, California at age 76.
1934 ~ François Coty (né Joseph Marie François Spoturno; b. May 3, 1874), French businessman, perfumer and founder of Coty, Inc. He died at age 60 of pneumonia.
1881 ~ Nathan Clifford (d. Aug. 18, 1803), Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court. He was nominated to the High Court by President James Buchanan. He served on the Court from January 1858 until his death on this date 23 years later. He replaced Benjamin Curtis and was succeeded by Horace Gray. Prior to his appointment to the High Court, he served as the 19th United States Attorney General. He served as Attorney General during the James Polk administration. He was born in Rumney, New Hampshire and died in Cornish, Maine. He died 24 days before his 78thbirthday.
1843 ~ Charles Macintosh (b. Dec. 29, 1766), Scottish chemist and inventor of waterproof fabric, hence the reason raincoats are sometimes referred to as Macintoshes. He was born and died in Glasgow, Scotland. He died at age 76.
1834 ~ Samuel Taylor Coleridge (b. Oct. 21, 1772), English poet. He is best known for The Rime of the Ancient Mariner. He died at age 61.
1790 ~ William Livingston (b. Nov. 30, 1723), 1st Governor of New Jersey. He was Governor from August 1776 until his death on this date 4 years later. He was also one of the signers of the United States Constitution. He was born in Albany, Province of New York, British America. He died at age 66 in Elizabeth, New York.
1572 ~ Isaac Luria (né Isaac ben Solomon Luria Ashkenazi; b. 1534), Rabbi and Jewish mystic. He was born in Jerusalem and died in Safed. The exact date of his birth is unknown.
1564 ~ Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor (b. Mar. 10, 1503). He reigned as Holy Roman Emperor from February 1558 until his death 6 years later. He was married to Anne of Bohemia and Hungary. He was of the House of Habsburg. He was the son of Philip I, King of Castile and Joanna, Queen of Castile. He died at age 61.
1492 ~ Pope Innocent VIII (né Giovanni Battista Cybo; b. 1432). He was Pope from August 1484 until his death on this date 8 years later. The exact date of his birth is unknown.
1409 ~ Martin I, King of Sicily (b. 1370s). He ruled Sicily from 1390 until his death in 1409. He was married twice. His first wife was Maria, Queen of Sicily. After her death, he married Blanche of Navarre. He was of the House of Barcelona. He was the son of Martin, King of Aragon and Maria de Luna. The exact date of his birth is not known. He died in his 30s.
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