Oct. 1
– birthdays: 1881 – William Boeing (aviation pioneer, founder of Boeing Company) / 1910 – Bonnie Parker of Bonnie and Clyde / 1924 – Jimmy Carter (39th President 1977-81) / 1924 – William Rehnquist (Chief Justice 1986-2005) / 1935 – Julie Andrews (actress – Sound of Music, Mary Poppins) / 1969 – Zach Galifianakys (movie actor – The Hangover) / 1989 – Brie Larson (actress – Captain Marvel)
– 1811 – the first steamboat (the New Orleans) to sail down the Mississippi reaches New Orleans from Pittsburgh
– 1847 – Maria Mitchell, America’s first female astronomer. discovers a comet near the North Star
– 1880 – “The March King”, John Philip Sousa, is named conductor of the Marine Corps Band
– 1880 – Edison opens his first light bulb factory at Menlo Park, N.J.
– 1890 – Yosemite National Park is established
– 1908 – the Model T Ford goes on sale for $850
– 1932 – Babe Ruth’s “called shot”
– 1961 – Roger Maris breaks Babe Ruth’s home run record with his 61st home run of the season
– 1962 – James Meredith becomes the first African-American to attend Ole Miss University
– 1962 – Johnny Carson hosts the Tonight Show for the first time
– 1971 – Disney World opens
Quote: Force cannot change right. – Jefferson
Oct. 2
– birthdays: 1800 – Nat Turner (slave who led the most famous slave rebellion) / 1890 – Groucho Marx (leader of the Marx Brothers) / 1895 – Bud Abbott of Abbott and Costello (comedian, movie star – Abbott and Costello movies) / 1935 – Robert Henry Lawrence, Jr. (first African-American astronaut) / 1945 – Don McClean (singer – “American Pie”)
– 1780 – British officer John Andre is executed for his involvement in Benedict Arnold’s attempt to help the British get West Point
– 1835 – the Texas Revolution begins as Texans in Gonzales drive off Mexicans attempting to take a cannon
– 1919 – Pres. Wilson suffers a stroke
– 1944 – the Warsaw Uprising ends after 63 days with the Nazis victorious
– 1950 – Charles Schulz’s “Li’l Folks” debuts (later renamed “Peanuts”)
– 1959 – The Twilight Zone TV show premieres
– 1967 – Thurgood Marshall is sworn in as the first African-American on the Supreme Court
Quote: Were it left for me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate to prefer the latter. – Jefferson
Oct. 3
– birthdays: 1873 – Emily Post (etiquette expert) / 1941 – Chubby Checker (rock n’ roller – “The Twist”) / 1969 – Gwen Stefani (singer for No Doubt – biggest hit = “Underneath It All” )
– 1849 – Edgar Allen Poe is found in a gutter incoherent with no explanation
– 1913 – Pres. Wilson signs the first federal income tax law
– 1941 – The Maltese Falcon premieres
– 1945 – Elvis Presley makes his first public appearance at age 10
– 1955 – Captain Kangaroo debuts
– 1960 – The Andy Griffith Show premieres
– 1974 – Hall of Famer Jerry West (the NBA logo) retires after fourteen seasons with the Lakers
– 1976 – home run king Hank Aaron retires from baseball with 755 home runs
– 1995 – O.J. Simpson is found innocent of murder
– 2008 – O.J. Simpson found guilty of kidnapping and armed robbery
Quote: Those who bear equally the burdens of government should equally participate of its benefits. – Jefferson
Oct. 4
– birthdays: 1822 – Rutherford B. Hayes / 1861 – Frederic Remington (artist) / 1895 – Buster Keaton (silent movie star/director – The General) / 1923 – Charlton Heston (actor – Ben Hur, The Ten Commandments) / 1931 – Dick Tracy (comic book detective) / 1941 – Anne Rice (author – Interview with a Vampire) / 1946 – Susan Sarandon (actress – Dead Man Walking)
– 1777 – Gen. Washington surprises the British at Germantown, but loses the battle
– 1943 – Heinrich Himmler praises his SS troops for killing over 1 million Russian Jews
– 1957 – the Soviets launch Sputnik
– 1965 – Pope Paul VI becomes first Pope to visit America
– 1970 – Janis Joplin dies of a heroin overdose
– 2006 – Julian Assange creates Wikileaks
Quote: We must all hang together or most assuredly we shall all hang separately. – Franklin
Oct. 5
– birthdays: 1830 – Chester Arthur / 1882 – Robert Goddard (rocket pioneer) / 1902 – Ray Kroc (McDonald’s founder) / 1943 – Steve Miller (rock star – biggest hit = “Abracadabra”) / 1959 – Maya Lin (designer of the Vietnam War Memorial)
– 1813 – in the War of 1812, Americans defeat the British and their Indian allies in the Battle of the Thames; Tecumseh is killed
– 1877 – Chief Joseph and his Nez Perce tribe surrender just miles from safety in Canada after an epic journey from their reservation in Oregon; Joseph proclaims: “I will fight no more forever”
– 1930 – Laura Ingalls becomes the first woman to fly across America, from NY to California in 30 hours and 27 minutes
– 1947 – Harry Truman makes the first televised address from the White House
– 1962 – the Beatles release their first single – “Love Me Do”
– 1962 – the first James Bond movie, Dr. No, is released
– 1969 – Monty Python TV show debuts on BBC
– 1973 – Elton John releases Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
Quote: Refuse not to be informed: for that shows pride or stupidity. – William Penn
Oct. 6
– birthdays: 1846 – George Westinghouse (inventor) / 1908 – Carole Lombard (actress- married to Clark Gable; died in a plane crash when returning from a WWII bond tour) / 1917 – Fannie Lou Hamer (Civil Rights activist)
– 1781 – Americans and French start the siege of Yorktown
– 1866 – John and Simeon Reno carry out the first train robbery in American History, stealing $13,000 from the Ohio and Mississippi Railroad in Indiana
– 1882 – first World Series game – Cincinnati (AA) beats
Chicago (NL) 4-0
– 1889 – Edison shows his first motion picture
– 1927 – the first talkie, The Jazz Singer, is released
– 1949 – Iva Toguri D’Aquino (Tokyo Rose) is sentenced to ten years in prison for propaganda broadcasts in WWII aimed at demoralizing American soldiers and sailors
– 1949 – Truman signs the Mutual Defense Assistance Act creating NATO
Quote: It is an easy thing to tell a lie, but it is difficult to support the lie after it is told. – Thomas Paine
Oct. 7
– birthdays: 1896 – Elijah Muhhamad (founder of the Nation of Islam) / 1943 – Oliver North (Iran-Contra Scandal) / 1951 – John Cougar Mellencamp (rock star – biggest hit = “Jack and Diane”) / 1952 – Vladimir Putin
– 1780 – American backwoodsmen destroy a Loyalist force in the Battle of King’s Mountain
– 1913 – Henry Ford’s car factory begins to use a moving assembly line
– 1916 – Georgia Tech (coached by John Heisman) defeats Cumberland 222-0
– 1955 – Alan Ginsburg recites his poem “Howl” for the first time in San Francisco; it becomes one of the great works of the Beat Generation
– 1984 – Walter Payton breaks Jim Brown’s all-time rushing record
– 1985 – Palestinian terrorists hijack an Italian cruise ship called the Achille Lauro and kill a 69-year old wheelchair-bound American named Leon Klinghoffer
Quote: A good example is the best sermon. – Franklin
Oct. 8
– 1869 – J. Frank Duryea – (inventor of the first American car) / 1890 – Eddie Rickenbacker (America’s “ace of aces” in WWI) / 1941 – Jesse Jackson (Civil Rights activist) / 1943 – Chevy Chase (comedian – Saturday Night Live, National Lampoon’s Vacation) / 1943 – R.L. Stine (author – the Goosebumps series) 1948 – Johnny Ramone (guitarist – The Ramones – biggest hit = “Rockaway Beach”) / 1949 – Sigourney Weaver (actress – Alien franchise) / Matt Damon (actor – Good Will Hunting) / Bruno Mars (singer – biggest hit = “That’s What I Like”)
– 1777 – Gen. Horatio Gates surrounds Burgoyne at Saratoga
– 1871 – the Great Chicago Fire starts
– 1918 – Alvin York becomes the most decorated American soldier of WWI by killing 25 German machine gunners and capturing 132
– 1927 – Laurel and Hardy make their first film
– 1934 – Bruno Hauptman is indicted for the murder of the Lindbergh baby
– 1945 – the microwave oven is patented
– 1956 – Yankees pitcher Don Larson pitches the only perfect game in World Series history
– 1971 – John Lennon releases his hit single “Imagine”
– 2001 – Pres. George W. Bush establishes the Department of Homeland Security
Quote: Don’t fire until you see the whites of their eyes. – William Prescott (or Israel Putnam) at the Battle of Bunker Hill
Oct. 9
– birthdays: 1890 – Aimee Semple McPherson (evangelist and radio preacher) / 1899 – Bruce Catton (greatest Civil War historian) / 1940 – John Lennon (member of The Beatles; biggest solo hit = “Starting Over”)
– 1635 – Roger Williams is banished from Massachusetts Bay Colony for advocating separation of church and state and fair treatment of Indians
– 1888 – the Washington Monument opens to the public
– 1936 – Hoover Dam begins producing electricity
– 1941 – FDR approves a program that will become the Manhattan Project
– 1965 – Beatles’ single “Yesterday” reaches #1
– 1974 – Oskar Schindler, who saved 1,200 Jews during the Holocaust, dies and is buried in Israel
Quote: I have not yet begun to fight. – John Paul Jones when the HMS Serapis demanded he surrender his ship the Bonhomme Richard
Oct. 10
– birthdays: 1918 – Thelonious Monk (jazz pianist) / 1954 – David Lee Roth (singer – Van Halen – biggest hit = “Jump”) / 1958 – Tanya Tucker (country music singer – biggest hit = “Lizzie and the Rainman”) / 1969 – Brett Favre (Green Bay Packers quarterback) / 1974 – Dale Earnhardt, Jr. (race car driver)
– 1845 – the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland opens
– 1901 – Henry Ford wins his first and only automobile race
– 1935 – George Gershwin’s opera Porgy and Bess opens
– 1944 – 800 gypsy children are gassed at Auschwitz
– 1973 – Vice President Spiro Agnew resigns after pleading no contest to tax evasion to avoid charges of accepting bribes
– 1978 – Congress approves dollar coin honoring Susan B. Anthony
Quote: There is nothing so likely to produce peace as to be well prepared to meet an enemy. – Washington
Oct. 11
– birthdays: 1844 – H.J. Heinz (ketchup king) / 1884 – Eleanor Roosevelt / 1946 – Daryl Hall (Hall and Oates – biggest hit = “Out of Touch” ) / 1961 – Steve Young (Hall of Fame quarterback) / 1992 – Cardi B (rapper – biggest hit – “Bodak Yellow” )
– 1809 – Meriwether Lewis commits suicide at age 35
– 1865 – Pres. Andrew Johnson pardons Confederate Vice Pres. Alexander Stephens
– 1890 – Daughters of the American Revolution founded
– 1939 – Albert Einstein, via letter, informs FDR of the possibility of an atomic bomb
– 1954 – the Vietminh occupy Hanoi and take possession of North Vietnam from the French
– 1975 – Saturday Night Live premieres with George Carlin as the host
` – 1986 – Reagan and Gorbachev begin summit at Reykjavik, Iceland; they will come close to getting rid of all their nuclear weapons
– 1991 – Anita Hill testifies that Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas sexually harassed her
Quote: We have met the enemy and they are ours. – Commodore Oliver Perry after winning the Battle of Lake Erie in the War of 1812
Oct. 12
– birthdays: 1858 – Isaac Newton Lewis (inventor of the machine gun) / 1923 – Jean Nidetch (founder of Weight Watchers) / 1968 – Hugh Jackman (actor – X-Men) / 1969 – Nancy Kerrigan (figure skater who was knee-capped by an opponent’s ex-husband’s hitman)
– 1492 – Columbus discovers the New World
– 1870 – Robert E. Lee dies at age 63
– 1901 – Teddy Roosevelt officially changes the name of the “Executive Mansion” to “The White House”
– 1933 – Al Capone escapes from jail
– 1938 – production begins on The Wizard of Oz (no Munchkin will commit suicide during it)
– 1945 – Medical corpsman Desmond Doss becomes the first conscientious objector to receive the Medal of Honor for bravery rescuing wounded on the island of Okinawa (movie – Hacksaw Ridge)
– 1971 – Jesus Christ Superstar has first of 711 performances
– 1973 – Pres. Nixon nominates Gerald Ford to replace Vice President Spiro Agnew; Ford will become the first President not elected President or Vice President
– 2000 – Al Qaeda terrorists blow a hole in the USS Cole killing 17 sailors in Yemen
Quote: A penny saved is a penny earned. – Franklin
Oct. 13
– birthdays: 1754 – Mary Hays McCauley (Molly Pitcher) (Revolutionary heroine who took her wounded husband’s place at his cannon during the Battle of Monmouth) / 1925 – Lenny Bruce (stand-up comedian who was constantly in trouble for obscene language) / 1942 – Paul Simon (singer/songwriter – Simon and Garfunkel – biggest hit = “Bridge Over Troubled Water”; solo artist = “50 Ways to Leave Your Lover”) / 1947 – Sammy Hagar (rock singer – “I Can’t Drive 55”) / 1959 – Marie Osmond (singer – “Paper Roses”) / 1962 – Jerry Rice (Hall of Fame receiver) / 1989 – Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (politician)
– 1775 – the Continental Congress authorizes the creation of the US Navy
– 1792 – the cornerstone of the White House is laid
– 1982 – Jim Thorpe’s Olympic medals from 1912 are reinstated
– 2016 – Bob Dylan wins the Nobel Prize for Literature
Quote: I only regret that I have but one life to give for my country. – Nathan Hale before being hung by the British for spying
Oct. 14
– birthdays: 1644 – William Penn / 1890 – Dwight Eisenhower / 1894 – E.E. Cummings (poet) / 1910 – John Wooden (basketball coach who won 11 national championships at UCLA) / 1938 – John Dean (White House counsel who testified against Nixon in the Watergate Scandal) / 1939 – Ralph Lauren (fashion designer) / 1974 – Natalie Maines (singer – Dixie Chicks – biggest hit = Not Ready to Make Nice”) / Usher (singer – biggest hit =“You Got It Bad”)
– 1834 – Henry Blair becomes first African-American to get a patent – corn planter
– 1912 – Teddy Roosevelt is shot and then goes and makes his speech anyway during the campaign of 1912
– 1943 – 300 Jews and Russian prisoners of war escape from Sobibor concentration camp after killing some of the guards and cutting from the barbed wire
– 1943 – the 8th Air Force loses 60 bombers in a raid on Schweinfurt, Germany
– 1944 – Erwin “Desert Fox” Rommel is allowed to commit suicide to avoid trial for involvement in an assassination attempt against Hitler
– 1947 – Chuck Yeager becomes the first to break the sound barrier flying a X-1 rocket plane at more than 662 miles per hour
– 1962 – the Cuban Missile Crisis begins with the discovery by a U-2 spy plane of Soviet nuclear missiles being installed in Cuba
– 1964 – Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. is awarded the Nobel Prize for his nonviolent protesting
– 1979 – Wayne Gretzky scores his first NHL goal
– 1982 – Reagan proclaims a war on drugs
– 1986 – Elie Weisel wins the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to remember the Holocaust
Quote: Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter. – Martin Luther King, Jr.
Oct. 15
– birthdays: 1858 – John Sullivan (heavyweight boxing champ 1882-1892) / 1920 – Mario Puzo (author – The Godfather) / 1942 – Penny Marshall (actress – Lavergne and Shirley / director – A League of Their Own) /
– 1860 – 11-year old Grace Bedell writes a letter to Lincoln encouraging him to grow a beard
– 1863 – the Confederate submarine Hunley sinks on its first test run killing its inventor and seven man crew
– 1878 – Edison opens Edison Electric Company
– 1917 – exotic dancer and German spy Mata Hari is executed
– 1941 – Hideki Tojo appointed Prime Minister of Japan
– 1946 – Hermann Goering commits suicide before he can be hanged for war crime (he had cyanide hidden in his cell)
– 1951 – I Love Lucy debuts
– 1965 – David Miller becomes the first to burn his draft card to protest the Vietnam War; he gets two years in prison
– 1966 – Black Panther Party created by Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale
– 1985 – Space Shuttle Challenger carries Skylab into orbit
– 1989 – Wayne Gretzky passes Gordie Howe as all-time leading scorer in the NHL
– 1991 – Clarence Thomas confirmed as Supreme Court Justice after accusations of sexual harassment
– 2017 – “Me too” movement begins with tweet by Alyssa Milano
– 2018 – Sears files for bankruptcy
Quote: God helps them that help themselves. – Franklin
Oct. 16
– birthdays: 1758 – Noah Webster (dictionary writer) / 1888 – Eugene O’Neill (Nobel and Pulitzer Prize winning playwright – Long Day’s Journey into Night) / 1925 – Angela Lansbury (actress – Murder She Wrote, The Manchurian Candidate) / 1958 – Tim Robbins (actor – Bull Durham, The Shawshank Redemption) / 1992 – Bryce Harper (baseball player)
– 1859 – abolitionist John Brown leads a raid on Harper’s Ferry to try to start a slave rebellion; he is later hanged for treason
– 1916 – Margaret Sanger opens her first birth control clinic
– 1946 – ten high-ranking Nazi leaders are executed after being convicted in the Nuremberg Trials
– 1968 – Tommie Smith and John Carlos show the Black Power salute during the National Anthem after medaling in the 200 meter dash at the Mexico City Olympics
– 1973 – Henry Kissinger is awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for negotiating the Paris Peace Accords ending American fighting in Vietnam
Quote: Search others for their virtues, yourself for your vices. – Franklin
Oct. 17
– birthdays: Jupiter Hammon (first African-American published poet) / 1880 – Charles Kraft (co-founder of Kraft Food Company) / 1915 – Arthur Miller (Pulitzer Prize winning playwright – Death of a Salesman) / 1938 – Evel Knievel (motorcycle daredevil who would jump cars) / 1956 – Mae Jemison (first African-American female astronaut in space) / 1969 – Wyclif Jean (rapper – biggest hit = “Hips Don’t Lie”) / 1972 – Eminem (rapper – biggest hit = “Love the Way You Lie”)
– 1777 – British Gen. Burgoyne surrenders at Saratoga in the turning point in the Revolutionary War
– 1835 – the Texas Rangers are created to bring law and order to the Texas frontier
– 1917 – British bomb Germany for the first time in WWI
– 1931 – Al Capone is sentenced to eleven years in prison for income tax evasion
– 1933 – Albert Einstein arrives in the US from Germany
– 1978 – Pres. Carter signs bill restoring citizenship of Confederate President Jefferson Davis
– 1989 – 63 people are killed in a massive earthquake in San Francisco
Quote: Diligence is the mother of good luck. – Franklin
Oct. 18
– birthdays: 1922 – Little Orphan Annie (comic strip character) / 1926 – Chuck Berry (rock n’ roll guitarist/singer – “Johnny B. Goode”) / 1927 – George C. Scott (Academy Award winning actor – Patton) / 1939 – Mike Ditka (Hall of Fame football player/coach) / 1956 – Martina Navrotilva (tennis player with 18 Grand Slam titles) / 1961 – Winton Marsalis (jazz musician/composer) / 1984 – Lindsey Vonn (downhill skier)
– 1775 – African-American poet Phyllis Wheatley freed from slavery
– 1854 – the Ostend Manifesto – American diplomats recommend the seizure of Cuba
– 1867 – the US takes possession of Alaska
– 1878 – Edison makes electricity available for home use
– 1898 – American flag is raised over Puerto Rico
– 1974 – Nate Thurmond becomes first NBA player to have a quadruple double – 22 points, 14 rebounds, 13 assists, 12 blocks
– 1988 – Roseanne debuts
Quote: Give me liberty or give me death. – Patrick Henry
Oct. 19
– birthdays: 1963 – Evander Holyfield (heavyweight boxing champ)
– 1781 – British Gen. Cornwallis surrenders Yorktown to Washington, effectively ending the Revolutionary War
– 1960 – Martin Luther King, Jr. arrested in Atlanta sit-in
Quote: It is not the size of a man, but the size of his heart that matters. – Evander Holyfield
Oct. 20
– birthdays: John Dewey (psychologist/philosopher) / 1882 – Bela Lugosi (actor – Dracula) / 1928 – Frank Hardy (F-105 fighter pilot in Vietnam) / 1931 – Mickey Mantle (home run hitter) / 1950 – Tom Petty (rock musician – “Free Fallin’”) / 1971 – Snoop Dogg (rapper – biggest hit = “Drop It Like It’s Hot”)
– 1864 – Lincoln formally establishes Thanksgiving as a holiday
– 1917 – Alice Paul begins 7 months in prison for protesting for women’s suffrage in front of the White House; she goes on a hunger strike and is force-fed
– 1944 – Gen. MacArthur leads the invasion of the Philippines and says “I have returned”
– 1947 – as part of the Red Scare, the House Un-American Activities Committee begins to investigate for communists in the movie industry
– 1963 – Jim Brown sets the NFL single season rushing record at 1,863 yards
– 1968 – Jackie Kennedy marries Greek millionaire Aristotle Onassis
– 1973 – the Saturday Night Massacre – Nixon’s Attorney General and Deputy Attorney General resign rather than fire Watergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox; Solicitor General Robert Bork does the firing
– 1977 – plane crash kills four members of rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd and two others
– 1988 – Richard Pryor is awarded the first Mark Twain Prize for American Humour
Quote: Education is not preparation for life. Education is life itself. – John Dewey
Oct. 21
– birthdays: 1917 – Dizzy Gillespie (father of modern jazz) / 1928 – Whitey Ford (Hall of Fame pitcher) / 1956 – Carrie Fisher (actress – Star Wars) / 1980 – Kim Kardashian (celebrity)
– 1797 – the USS Constitution (“Old Ironsides”) is launched in Boston harbor
Old Ironsides – Library of Congress
– 1892 – the Pledge of Allegiance is recited for the first time
Quote: A house divided against itself can not stand. – Lincoln
Oct. 22
– birthdays: 1920 – Timothy Leary (promoter of LSD) / 1942 – Annette Funicello (Mouseketeer, movie actress – the Beach Blanket series) / 1952 – Jeff Goldblum (actor – Jurassic Park)
– 1836 – Sam Houston is elected first President of the Republic of Texas
– 1906 – Henry Ford becomes President of the Ford Motor Company
– 1914 – Congress passes the Revenue Act to start collecting the first federal income tax
– 1926 – J. Gordon Whitehead sucker punches Harry Houdini in the stomach causing his death one week later
– 1934 – bank robber Charles “Pretty Boy” Floyd is shot and killed by FBI agents
– 1962 – JFK reveals to the public that the Soviets are trying to install nuclear missiles in Cuba and announces a naval blockade (“quarantine”) of the island
– 1966 – hockey legend Bobby Orr scores his first goal
Quote: Speak softly and carry a big stick and you will go far. – Teddy Roosevelt
Oct. 23
– birthdays: 1869 – John Heisman (college football coach who invented the forward pass and the center snap and has the trophy name after him) / 1906 – Gertrude Ederle (first woman to swim the English Channel) / 1925 – Johnny Carson (talk show host) / 1956 – Dwight Yoakum (country music singer – biggest hit = “Honky Tonk Man”) / 1959 – Weird Al Yankovic (parody singer – biggest hit = “White and Nerdy”) / 1976 – Ryan Reynolds (actor – Dead Pool)
– 1819 – the first boat uses the Erie Canal
– 1941 – Disney releases its animated Dumbo
– 1942 – the Battle of El Alamein begins with British Gen. Montgomery attacking German Gen. Rommel in Egypt
– 1944 – the Battle of Leyte Gulf begins with American submarines sinking two Japanese heavy cruisers
– 1983 – a suicide truck bomb blows up a Marine barracks in Beirut, Lebanon, killing 240 Marines
– 1988 – Robert Bork’s Supreme Court nomination is rejected by the Senate
– 1991 – Clarence Thomas sworn in as Supreme Court Justice
– 1998 – Britney Spears releases her first single – “Baby One More Time”
– 2015 – Adele releases “Hello” which becomes the first single to sell 1 million downloads in one week
Quote: “I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.” – Martin Luther King Jr.
Oct. 24
– birthdays: 1903 – Melvin Purvis (FBI agent who pursued John Dillinger, Pretty Boy Floyd, and Machine Gun Kelly) / 1947 – Kevin Kline (actor – A Fish Called Wanda) / 1986 – Drake (rapper – biggest hit = “One Dance”)
– 1861 – Western Union completes the first transcontinental telegraph line
– 1861 – West Virginia secedes from Virginia during the Civil War
– 1901 – Annie Edson Taylor becomes the first person to go over Niagara Falls in a barrel
– 1908 – Billy Murray has a hit with “Take Me Out to the Ball Game”
– 1939 – DuPont company introduces nylon stockings to replace silk stockings
– 1948 – Bernard Baruch coins the term “Cold War”
– 1962 – Soviet ships decided not to try to break the naval blockade of Cuba during the Cuban Missile Crisis
Quote: The road to success is not easy to navigate, but with hard work, drive and passion, it’s possible to achieve the American dream. – Tommy Hilfiger
Oct. 25
– birthdays: 1869 – John Heisman (innovative college football coach and namesake of the trophy for the best college football player) / 1888 – Richard Byrd (polar explorer)
– 1760 – George III becomes King of Great Britain
– 1870 – first post cards used
– 1929 – former Secretary of the Interior Albert Fall becomes the first Presidential Cabinet member to go to prison, for bribery in the Teapot Dome Scandal
– 1940 – Benjamin Davis, Sr. becomes the first African-American general
– 1944 – kamikazes are used for the first time, during the Battle of Leyte Gulf
– 1962 – John Steinbeck wins the Nobel Prize for Literature
Quote: My fellow Americans, we are and always will be a nation of immigrants. We were strangers once, too. – Barack Obama
Oct. 26
– birthdays: 1854 – C.W. Post (founder of Post Cereals) / 1911 – Mahalia Jackson (gospel singer) / 1946 – Pat Sajak (TV host – Wheel of Fortune) / 1947 – Hillary Clinton / 1973 – Seth MacFarlane (animator – Family Guy)
– 1787 – the “Federalist Papers” are published
– 1881 – Shootout at the O.K. Corral
– 1916 – Margaret Sanger is arrested for obscenity – advocating birth control
– 1944 – the Battle of Leyte Gulf ends in a decisive American victory
– 1949 – Pres. Truman signs bill increasing the minimum wage from .40 to .75
– 1951 – Joe Louis is knocked out by Rocky Marciano
– 1955 – Ngo Dinh Diem proclaims the independence of South Vietnam with himself as President
– 1978 – Doonesbury debuts in 28 newspapers
– 1984 – The Terminator is released
Quote: It is well that war is so terrible, or we should grow too fond of it. – Robert E. Lee
Oct. 27
– birthdays: 1811 – Isaac Singer (inventor of the sewing machine) / 1858 – Teddy Roosevelt / 1872 – Emily Post (etiquette expert) / 1924 – Ruby Dee (actress – A Raisin in the Sun) / 1932 – Sylvia Plath (poet – The Bell Jar)
– 1871 – Boss Tweed is arrested for corruption
– 1873 – Joseph Glidden applies for a patent for barbed wire
– 1904 – the NYC subway opens
– 1942 – the carrier USS Hornet sinks after the Battle of Santa Cruz
– 1969 – Ralph Nader starts Nader’s Raiders to advocate for consumers
– 1975 – Bruce Springsteen makes the covers of both Newsweek and Time
– 2004 – Boston Red Sox win the World Series for the first time in 86 years
Quote: Every man, and every body of men on earth, possesses the right of self-government. They receive it with their being from the hand of nature. Individuals exercise it by their single will; collections of men by that of their majority; for the law of the majority is the natural law of every society of men.” – Jefferson
Oct. 28
– birthdays: 1793 – Eliphalet Remington (gun manufacturer) / 1897 – Edith Head (Hollywood costume designer who won 8 Oscars) / 1914 – Jonas Salk (developer of the polio vaccine) / 1936 – Charlie Daniels (country music singer – biggest hit = “The Devil Went Down to Georgia”) / 1949 – Caitlyn Jenner (1976 Olympic decathlon winner as Bruce Jenner) / 1995 – Bill Gates / 1967 – Julia Roberts (actress – Pretty Woman) / 1974 – Joaquin Phoenix (actor – Walk the Line)
– 1793 – Eli Whitney applies for patent for the cotton gin
– 1886 – Pres. Cleveland dedicates the Statue of Liberty
– 1919 – the Volstead Act begins Prohibition
– 1954 – Ernest Hemingway is awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature
Quote: And so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you – ask what you can do for your country. – Kennedy
Oct. 29
– birthdays: 1921 – Bill Maudlin (Pulitzer Prize winning cartoonist – “Willie and Joe” characters) / 1947 – Richard Dreyfuss (actor – Jaws) / 1997 – Wynona Ryder (actress – Beetlejuice, Stranger Things)
– 1682 – William Penn lands in Pennsylvania
– 1692 – the Salem Witch Trials comes to an end
– 1929 – the Stock Market Crash occurs on “Black Tuesday”
– 1945 – the first ballpoint pens go on sale
– 1960 – Cassius Clay (Muhammad Ali) has his first professional fight
– 1969 – the Supreme Court orders school desegregation immediately
– 1997 – 77 year-old John Glenn goes up in the Space Shuttle Discovery, becoming the oldest man in space
Quote: “The happiest people I have known have been those who gave themselves no concern about their own souls, but did their uttermost to mitigate the miseries of others.” – Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Oct. 30
– birthdays: 1451 – Columbus / 1735 – John Adams / 1882 – William “Bull” Halsey (WWII Admiral)
– 1873 – Barnum’s circus (‘the Greatest Show on Earth”) opens
– 1922 – Mussolini comes to power in Italy
– 1938 – Orson Welles performs “War of the World” on the radio for Halloween, causing some Americans to believe a Martian invasion was taking place
– 1940 – Abbott and Costello release their first movie – A Night in the Tropics
– 1944 – Anne Frank is transferred from Auschwitz to Belsen
– 1952 – Clarence Birdseye sells his first frozen peas
– 1953 – George Marshall wins the Nobel Peace Prize
– 1954 – the Army ends segregation
– 1957 – Sputnik II is launched with the dog Laika
– 1974 – Ali defeats George Foreman in the “Rumble in the Jungle”
Quote: “Men, their rights, and nothing more; women, their rights, and nothing less.” – Susan B. Anthony
Oct. 31
– birthdays: 1860 – Juliette Gordon Low (founder of the Girl Scouts) / 1931 – Dan Rather (TV newsman – 60 Minutes)
– 1846 – the Donner Party abandons attempt to cross the mountains and goes into winter camp; some cannibalism will ensue
– 1940 – official end of the Battle of Britain
– 1941 – Mount Rushmore is finished
Quote: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with inherent and inalienable Rights; that among these, are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness” – Thomas Jefferson, Declaration of Independence 1776