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What Happened on July 6


Did You Know?

Pokémon Go, the real-world mobile game by Niantic, is first released

July 6, 2016


Fun Fact About July 6

Largest recorded hailstone at the time, weighing 1.5 lbs and measuring 7 inches in diameter, falls in Potter, Nebraska

July 6, 1928

Famous Weddings

  • 1893 British Prince George Duke of York (later George V) marries Princess Victoria of Teck (Queen Mary) at St James’s Palace
  • 1953 English “James Bond” actor Roger Moore (25) weds second wife Welsh singer Dorothy Squires (38) in Jersey City, New Jersey; divorce in 1968
  • 1956 Journalist Ben Bradlee (34) weds Antoinette Pinchot

Famous Divorces

  • 1960 Actress Bette Davis (52) divorces actor Gary Merrill (46) after almost 10 years of marriage
  • 2009 Actress Rachael Bella (25) divorces “Terminator 2” actor Eddie Furlong (31) due to irreconcilable differences after 3 years of marriage
  • 2023 Singer Ricky Martin and Syrian-Swedish painter Jwan Yose announce their decision to divorce after six years of marriage [1]

More July 6 Weddings

Articles, Photos and Quiz

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Scientists Stunned As Tomatoes “De-Evolve” in the Galapagos



Tomatoes on VineNew research uncovers reversal of evolution in island plants. On the younger, volcanic islands of the Galápagos, wild tomato plants are exhibiting an unusual behavior. They appear to be discarding millions of years of evolutionary changes and reverting to a more ancestral genetic form, one that reactivates long-dormant chemical defenses. These tomatoes, descended from South […]



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Eyes on Venus: Earth’s Weather Satellites Unlock Secrets of the Hottest Planet



Venus RotationThe outlook is promising for future long-term monitoring of planets across multiple wavelengths. Infrared imaging data from Japan’s Himawari-8 and Himawari-9 meteorological satellites have been successfully applied to track changes in the temperature of Venus’ cloud tops over time. Led by researchers at the University of Tokyo, the team analyzed satellite images taken between 2015 […]



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Researchers Spot Alien Gas Streams Entering Nearby Galaxy



An Optical Image of M83Unusually fast-moving gas clouds near a nearby galaxy suggest they may have come from outside the galaxy. Scientists have identified high-velocity gas clouds in the nearby spiral galaxy M83, moving at speeds that differ markedly from the galaxy’s normal rotational motion. These unusual velocities suggest that the clouds may have originated from beyond the galaxy […]



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How Ancient Farmers Engineered the Avocados We Eat Today



AvocadosAvocado remains from El Gigante illustrate how ancient farmers domesticated crops to adapt to changing environments. The global avocado industry, now worth billions of dollars, is heavily dependent on a single variety: the Hass avocado. This reliance on a monoculture system introduces major vulnerabilities, as genetically uniform crops are less resistant to diseases and shifting […]



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Hidden Brain Signals Reveal Why Parkinson’s Drugs Don’t Always Work – And How We Can Fix It



Human Brain Activity Neural Signal PathsResearchers at Simon Fraser University are using advanced brain imaging to uncover why Parkinson’s drug levodopa doesn’t help all patients equally. By using MEG (magnetoencephalography), they tracked real-time brain activity and discovered that the drug can sometimes activate the wrong brain regions—dampening its helpful effects. This insight could lead to personalized treatments tailored to each […]



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Iron Age settlement, Roman villa found at sword find site – The History Blog


A follow-up excavation at a site near Willersey in Gloucestershire where a pair of rare Roman cavalry swords from the 2nd/3rd century A.D. were discovered by a metal detectorist two years ago has uncovered the remains of an Iron Age settlement and what appears to be a grand Roman villa built over it. This opens up the possibility that the swords were deliberately buried in the courtyard or garden of the villa to keep them out of the hands of raiders.

Excavations have found evidence of settlements spanning several centuries, including three, possibly four, Iron Age ring ditches measuring up to 18.5 metres (60ft) in diameter, a spokesperson from Historic England said.

A substantial rectangular enclosure measuring five metres wide (16ft) and remains of Roman limestone buildings – perhaps representing a winged villa – were also discovered.

Following months of meticulous digging by archaeologists in the area, Roman building materials including ceramic roofing and box flue tiles, and painted wall plaster were dug up.

The work was funded by Historic England and undertaken in partnership with Cotswold Archaeology.

Mr Barnes added: “This new evidence will help us to understand more about what happened around the period of the Roman Conquest, which must have been a tumultuous time.”

Found less than an inch under the surface by Glenn Manning in March 2023, the spathae (Roman long swords) were buried still inside their wooden scabbards. Only traces of the scabbards remain, but the chapes — decorated bronze fittings from the bottom of the scabbard — survive. This was an unprecedented find in Britain. Only four spathae are known to have been found in the UK, and the only other time two of them have been found together was in a double burial in Canterbury. The swords were thrown with their owners into a pit inside the city walls, almost certainly the hastily-concealed corpora delicti of a double murder.

The swords were X-rayed by archaeological conservators at the Historic England lab in Fort Cumberland in Portsmouth. One of them was discovered to have the zig-zag design typical of pattern welding on the blade, marking it as an extremely expensive import owned by someone of high status. This patterning was completely invisible to the naked eye due to the thick corrosion layer on the sword, and even after conservation it cannot be seen. The other sword is plain.

While the spathae were cavalry weapons, it doesn’t mean they belonged to soldiers when they were buried. They did not have the shoulder belts that Roman cavalry wore to carry the swords, and it was legal for any citizen to own such weapons. People with the wealth to acquire these swords would also have need to defend it against brigands and marauders.

The conserved swords will go on public display at the Corinium Museum in Cirencester on August 2nd.



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Famous Deaths on July 5


  • 967 Murakami, 62nd Emperor of Japan (946-67) who fathered 19 Imperial sons and daughters, dies at 42 [1] [2]
  • 1316 Infante Ferdinand of Majorca (b. 1278)
  • 1375 Charles III of Alençon, French archbishop (b. 1337)
  • 1472 Charles of Artois, Count of Eu, French military leader (b. 1394)
  • 1539 Antonio Maria Zaccaria, Italian saint and physician, founded the Barnabites religious order, dies at about 37
  • 1626 Stephan Fadinger, Austrian boer leader, dies in battle
  • 1666 Albert VI, Duke of Bavaria, dies at 82
  • 1676 Carl Gustaf Wrangel, Swedish soldier, commander-in-chief of Swedish forces during the Thirty Years’ War, dies at 62
  • 1681 Fjodor Aleksejevitsj, tsar of Russia, dies
  • 1715 Charles Ancillon, French Huguenot pastor and jurist in Germany, dies at 55
  • 1719 Meinhardt Schomberg, 3rd Duke of Schomberg, Irish general, dies at 78
  • 1773 Francisco José Freire, Portuguese historian and philologist, dies at 54
  • 1803 William Jackson [Jackson of Exeter], English composer and organist, dies at 73
  • 1816 Dorothea Jordan (née Bland), Irish-English actress, courtesan, mistress of Prince William, Duke of Clarence (future King William IV), 1790-1811, dies of a ruptured blood vessel at 65

British statesman and founder of Singapore, dies of apoplexy on his 45th birthday

French inventor and pioneer of photography, dies at 68

  • 1851 Juanita, Mexican, lynched by California gold diggers
  • 1852 Johann Baptist Weigl, German composer and clergyman, dies at 69
  • 1859 Charles Cagniard de la Tour, French engineer and physicist (inventor of the disk siren), dies at 82
  • 1862 Heinrich Georg Bronn, German geologist and paleontologist, dies at 62
  • 1863 Lewis Armistead, Confederate brigadier general at Gettysburg (Pickett’s Charge), dies of his injuries from the battle of Gettysburg at 46
  • 1864 Dimitris Plapoutas, Greek general and revolutionary figure in the Greek War of Independence against the Ottoman Empire, dies at 78
  • 1871 Cristina Trivulzio di Belgioioso, Italian princess and politician, dies at 63
  • 1873 John Robertson, American politician, dies at 87
  • 1883 Frederick Scotson Clark, English organist and composer, dies at 42
  • 1884 Victor Massé, French composer(Les Noces de Jeannette), dies at 62
  • 1886 Hendrik Gerhard, Dutch tailor, workers’ rights activist (founder – Dutch Chapter of International Workingmen’s Association), and “father of socialism in the Netherland ” (Chairman of Dutch Social-Democratic (SDB) political party), dies at 57
  • 1887 August Pott, German philological (Etymology Forschungen), dies at 84
  • 1894 Austen Henry Layard, British archaeologist and diplomat (work in Mesopotamia including rediscovery of Nineveh), dies at 77
  • 1894 Betty Paoli, writer, dies
  • 1904 Abai Kunanbaiuli, Kazakh poet (b. 1845)
  • 1905 Carel Victor Gerritsen, Dutch politician and free thinker (husband of suffragette Aletta Jacobs), dies at 55
  • 1906 Paul Karl Ludwig Drude, German physicist (optics), committed suicide at 42
  • 1907 Maria Anna Mahler, Gustav Mahler’s eldest daughter, dies of scarlet fever at 5
  • 1908 Jonas Lie, Norwegian author (The Family at Gilje: A Domestic Story of the Forties), dies at 74
  • 1909 Emil Bohn, German organist, choral director, composer, and musicologist, dies at 70
  • 1909 Frank Selee, American Baseball HOF manager (5 x NL C’ship Boston Beaneaters; Chicago Orphans/Cubs), dies of tuberculosis at 49
  • 1911 George J Stoney, Irish physicist, dies at 85
  • 1911 Maria Pia of Savoy, Queen of Portugal (1862-89), dies at 63
  • 1913 Alfred Lyttelton, English politician and sportsman, 1st to represent England at cricket and football, dies of a stomach abscess at 56
  • 1920 John Shuter, cricketer (scored 28 in only Test for England 1888), dies
  • 1920 Max Klinger, German graphic artist, painter and sculptor (Paraphrase on the Finding of a Glove), dies at 63
  • 1925 Hjalmar Borgstrom, composer, dies at 61
  • 1927 Albrecht Kossel, German physician (Nobel 1910), dies at 73
  • 1932 Sasha Chorny [Alexander Mikhailovich Glikberg], Russian poet, dies at 51
  • 1933 Charles Haskell, American lawyer, politician (1st Governor of Oklahoma, 1907-11), and oilman, dies of pneumonia after suffering a stroke at 73
  • 1935 Daniel Plooy, Dutch new testament expert, dies at 58
  • 1938 John McIlwraith, cricketer (Tests for Australia), dies
  • 1941 Oskar Fried, German-Russian composer, dies at 69
  • 1944 William Gillies Whittaker, English composer, dies at 67
  • 1948 Carole Landis [Frances Ridste], American actress (I Wake Up Screaming; One Million BC; Topper Returns), allegedly commits suicide at 29
  • 1948 Georges Bernanos, French writer (The Diary of the Country Priest), dies at 60
  • 1948 Piet Aalberse, Dutch minister of Labor (1918-25), dies at 77
  • 1950 Private Kenneth Shadrick becomes the first identified American soldier killed in the Korean War
  • 1950 Salvatore Giuliano, Sicilian bandit, shot by police
  • 1957 Charles Sherwood Noble, American-born inventor
  • 1958 Frank Burge, Australian rugby league forward (13 Tests, 26 games NSW; Glebe, St. George; RL “Immortal”) and coach (St. George, North Sydney, Western Suburbs, Newtown), dies of a heart attack at 63
  • 1963 Daniel Ruyneman, Dutch composer and pianist, dies at 76
  • 1965 Porfirio Rubirosa, Dominican diplomat, race car driver, and international playboy, dies when he crashes his Ferrari into a tree at 56
  • 1966 George de Hevesy, Hungarian radiochemist (Nobel Prize in Chemistry -1943), dies at 80 [1]
  • 1969 Ben Alexander, American actor (Dragnet, All Quiet on the Western Front), dies of natural causes at 58
  • 1969 Leo McCarey, American film director (The Awful Truth), dies at 70
  • 1969 Tom Mboya, Kenyian economics minister, assassinated in Narobi at 65
  • 1969 Walter Gropius, architect/found (Bauhaus school of design), dies at 86
  • 1969 Wilhelm Backhaus, German pianist (Rubinstein-1905), dies at 85
  • 1975 Gilda dalla Rizza, Italian soprano, dies at 82

American tennis player (26 Grand Slam doubles titles), dies at 87

  • 1979 Judson Laire, American stage and screen actor (I Remember Mama – “Papa”; Advise and Consent), dies at 76
  • 1980 Archibald James Potter, Irish composer, dies at 61
  • 1981 Jorge Urrutia Blondel, Chilean composer, dies at 75
  • 1983 Arie Querido, psychiatrist (social psychiatry), dies
  • 1983 Harry James, American swing-era bandleader, trumpeter and husband to Betty Grable, dies from lymphatic cancer at 67
  • 1983 Václav Trojan, Czech composer, dies at 76
  • 1984 Don Elliott [Helfman], American jazz trumpeter, vibraphonist, mellophone player, and vocalist, dies of cancer at 57
  • 1984 Gaston Vandermeulen, Flemish actor (Heilig Experiment, The Arrival of Joachim Stiller), dies at 79
  • 1985 Ger Schmook, Flemish librarian (ADB, Antwerp City Library), dies at 86
  • 1985 Marion Byron, actress (Steamboat Bill Jr), dies at 73
  • 1989 Ernesto Halffter, Spanish classical and film score composer (Rapsodia portuguesa; is Don Quixote de la Mancha), and conductor, dies at 84
  • 1990 Mitch Snyder, homeless advocate, commits suicide by hanging at 46
  • 1991 Howard Nemerow, American poet laureate (Pulitzer), dies
  • 1991 Mildred Dunnock, dies at 87
  • 1992 Georgia Brown [Lilian Klot], British cabaret stage, and screen singer and actress (Oliver!; Shoulder To Shoulder), dies from complications of emergency intestinal surgery at 59
  • 1993 Harrison Salisbury, American journalist and author (NY Times correspondent in Moscow), dies at 84
  • 1993 Tom Maguire, Irish revolutionary and commandant-general of the Irish Republican Army, dies at 101
  • 1994 Ad Gang, Dutch Liberal Party Asst Secretary of State, dies at 67
  • 1995 Foster Furcolo, American politician, 60th Governor of Massachusetts (1957-61), dies at 83
  • 1996 Anne Hummert, American radio pioneer and producer of daytime radio serials during the 1930s and 1940s (Just Plain Bill, The Romance of Helen Trent), dies at 91
  • 1996 Clyde Wiegand, American physicist ( co-discovered the antiproton), dies at 81
  • 1996 Erik Wickberg, 9th Salvation Army general, dies at 91
  • 1996 Lorna Young, Scottish promoter of Fairtrade products, dies at 44
  • 1997 Mrs. Miller, American singer (A Lover’s Missouri), dies at 89
  • 1998 Sid Luckman, American College-Pro Football HOF quarterback (Columbia University; 4 × NFL C’ship 1940, 41, 43, 46; NFL MVP 1943; 5 × First-team All-Pro; 3 × Pro Bowl; Chicago Bears), dies at 81
  • 2001 Ernie K-Doe [Ernest Kador Jr.], American R&B singer (“Mother-in-Law”), dies of kidney failure and cirrhosis of the liver at 68
  • 2002 Grant Beglarian, Armenian-American composer (Of Fables, Foibles, and Fancies), educator (University of Southern California, 1969-86), and arts administrator, dies at 74
  • 2002 Harold “Duke” Dejan, Creole-American jazz alto saxophonist and bandleader (Olympia Brass Band), dies at 93
  • 2002 Katy Jurado, Mexican actress, 1st Latin actress to win a Golden Globe (High Noon, Broken Lance), dies at 78

American Baseball HOF outfielder (last player to bat over .400 in single season; 19 x MLB All Star; AL MVP 1946, 49; Triple Crown 1942, 47 Boston Red Sox), dies at 84

  • 2003 N!xau [ǂToma], Namibian farmer and actor (The Gods Must Be Crazy), dies of tuberculosis at 58
  • 2003 Roman Lyashenko, Russian ice hockey player, dies at 24
  • 2004 Hugh Shearer, Prime Minister of Jamaica (b. 1923)
  • 2004 Rodger Ward, American auto racer (Indianapolis 500 & USAC National C’ship 1959, 62; International Motorsports HOF), dies at 83
  • 2005 Baloo Gupte, Indian cricket leg spin bowler (3 Tests, 3 wickets; Bombay, Bengal, Railways), dies at 70
  • 2005 James Stockdale, U.S. Navy vice admiral (b. 1923)
  • 2005 Shirley Goodman, American R&B and disco singer (Shirley & Lee – “Feels So Good”; Shirley & Company – “Shame, Shame, Shame”), dies at 69

Swedish canoeist (6 Olympic gold 1948, 52, 56, 60), dies at 86

  • 2006 Kenneth Lay, American businessman (CEO and Chairman of Enron, 1985-2001), dies at 64
  • 2007 George Melly, British jazz & blues singer, journalist, and art critic, dies of lung cancer and emphysema at 80
  • 2007 Kerwin Mathews, American actor (b. 1926)
  • 2007 Régine Crespin, French operatic mezzo-soprano (Metropolitan Opera, 1962-87; Sheherazade, Les Nuits D’ete), dies of liver cancer at 80
  • 2008 Hasan Doğan, 37th president of the Turkish Football Federation (b. 1956)
  • 2009 Jack Ellory, British orchestral and session alto and bass flute player (Philharmonia Orchestra; The Beatles – “The Fool on the Hill”), dies at 89
  • 2009 Lou Creekmur, American football player (Detroit Lions) and hall of famer, dies at 82
  • 2010 Bob Probert, Canadian NHL right wing, 1985-2002 (Chicago Blackhawks, Detroit Red Wings), dies of a heart attack while boating at 45
  • 2010 David Fanshawe, British composer and ethnomusicologist (African Sanctus; Pacific Odyssey; Dona Nobis Pacem – A Hymn for World Peace), dies of a stroke at 68
  • 2011 Armon Gilliam, American NBA forward, 1987-2000 (Phoenix Suns, Milwaukee Bucks, NJ Nets, and 3 other teams), and college coach, 2001-05 (Penn State), dies of a heart attack at 47
  • 2011 Cy Twombly, American artist (b. 1928)
  • 2011 Malcolm Forsyth, South African-Canadian trombonist and composer (Atayoskewin), dies of pancreatic cancer at 74
  • 2012 Gerrit Komrij, Dutch poet, novelist, journalist and playwright (anthologies of Dutch poetry), dies at 68 [1]
  • 2014 Hans-Ulrich Wehler, German historian, dies at 82
  • 2014 Rosemary Murphy, American actress (Margaret-Lucas Tanner), dies from esophageal cancer at 89
  • 2015 Hemus Kriel, South African politician, 1st Premier of the Western Cape, dies at 73
  • 2015 Yoichiro Nambu, Japanese-born American Physicist (Nobel Prize 2008), dies at 94
  • 2016 Alirio Díaz, Venezuelan guitarist, composer, and musicologist, dies at 92
  • 2016 Beatrice de Cardi, British archaeologist, dies at 102
  • 2017 Irina Ratushinskaya, Soviet dissident poet (Beyond the Limit), dies of cancer at 63
  • 2017 Pierre Henry, French composer (considered pioneer of musique concrète), dies at 89
  • 2018 Saman Kunan, former Thai Navy SEAL, asphyxiates after delivering oxygen to 13 trapped people in Tham Luang Nang Non cave, Thailand at 38
  • 2019 Harvey Kagan, American musician and bassist (Sir Douglas Quintet), dies at 73
  • 2019 JN Reddy, South African politician (Solidarity party leader), dies at 93
  • 2019 John McCririck, English horse racing broadcaster, dies at 79
  • 2019 Ugo Gregoretti, Italian director and actor (Rogopag, Common Sense of Modesty), dies at 88
  • 2020 Bob Reade, American College Football Hall of Fame coach (NCAA Div III C’ship 1983-86; AFCA Div III Coach of the Year 1983–86; Augustana Vikings), dies at 87
  • 2020 Nick Cordero, Canadian Broadway actor (Bullets Over Broadway), dies of COVID-19 complications at 41
  • 2020 Ragaa al-Gedawy, Egyptian actress (The Stranger), dies of COVID-19 at 81
  • 2020 Volodymyr Troshkin, Ukrainian soccer defender (31 caps, USSR; Dynamo Kiev 205 games), dies at 72
  • 2020 Willi Holdorf, German athlete (Olympic gold, United Team of Germany, decathlon 1964), dies at 80
  • 2021 Gillian Sheen, British fencer (Olympic gold individual foil 1956), dies at 92
  • 2021 Raffaella Carrà [Pelloni], Italian singer (“Forte forte forte”), actress, and television presenter, dies of lung cancer at 78
  • 2021 Richard Donner [Schwartzberg], American television and film director (Twilight Zone; The Omen, Superman; Lethal Weapon; Scrooged), and producer (X-Men; Tales From The Crypt), dies at 91
  • 2021 William Smith, American actor (Rich Man Poor Man; Any Which Way You Can; Hawaii 5-0), dies at 88
  • 2022 Alfred Koerppen, German organist, composer, and educator (Hannover Hochschule für Musik und Theater, 1948-91). dies at 95
  • 2023 Andrés Oliva, Spanish road cyclist (Mountains Classification Giro d’Italia
    1975, 76; Vuelta a España 1975, 76, 78), dies at 74
  • 2023 Anthony Gilbert, British composer (Treatment of Silence; Moonfaring), and academic, dies at 88 [1]
  • 2023 Coco Lee, Chinese-American pop singer (“A Love Before Time”; “Tragic”), takes her own life at 48
  • 2023 George Tickner, American guitarist and songwriter (Journey, 1973-75 – “I’m Gonna Leave You”), dies at 76
  • 2023 Roly Meates, Irish rugby union coach (Ireland 1975-77; Dublin University RFC, Leinster RFC), dies at 85
  • 2024 Bengt I. Samuelsson, Swedish biochemist, (1982 Nobel laureate for Medicine or Physiology for prostaglandins), dies at 90 [1]
  • 2024 Jon Landau, American Academy Award-winning film producer (Titanic; Avatar; Avatar: The Way of Water), dies of cancer at 63
  • 2024 Nikolay Korolkov, Russian equestrian (Olympic gold USSR team jumping, silver individual jumping 1980), dies at 77

American tennis player (Wimbledon 1953, US Nat C’ship 1954; 5 x Grand Slam doubles titles), dies at 100

  • 2024 Yvonne Furneaux [Scatcherd], British actress (La Dolce Vita; Repulsion), dies at 98

July 5 Highlights

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Famous Birthdays on July 5


  • 1321 Joan of The Tower, Queen consort of Scotland, born in Tower of London, London (d. 1362)
  • 1522 Margaret of Austria, Duchess of Parma, illegitimate daughter of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, born in Oudenaarde, Holy Roman Empire (d. 1586)
  • 1546 Johann Steuerlein, German composer, born in Schmalkalden, County of Hennenberg (d. 1613)
  • 1554 Elisabeth of Austria, Queen consort of France (1570-74), born in Vienna, Austria (d. 1592)
  • 1586 Thomas Hooker, American colonial clergyman (known as “the father of Connecticut”), born in Marefield, Leicestershire, England (d. 1647)
  • 1653 Thomas Pitt, British merchant and Governor of Madras, born in Blandford St. Mary, Dorset, England (d. 1726)
  • 1654 Antonio Maria Pacchioni, Baroque composer, baptized in Modena, Duchy of Modena and Reggio (d. 1738)
  • 1675 Mary Walcott, American accuser at the Salem witch trials, born in Salem, Massachusetts Bay Colony (d. 1720)
  • 1704 Jack Broughton, English bare knuckle boxer (Champion of England 1736-50; published first boxing code), born in Cirencester, England (d. 1789)
  • 1717 Pedro III, King of Portugal and the Algarves (1777-86) and consort of Queen Maria I of Portugal, born in Lisbon, Portugal (d. 1786)
  • 1718 Francis Seymour-Conway, 1st Marquess of Hertford, Viceroy of Ireland, born in Chelsea, London (d. 1794)
  • 1755 Sarah Kemble Siddons, English tragic actress (Fatal Marriage), born in Brecon, Wales (d. 1831)
  • 1764 János Lavotta, Hungarian violinist and composer, born in Pusté Úľany, Slovakia, Habsburg Empire (d. 1820)
  • 1775 William Crotch, English composer, born in Norwich, Norfolk, England (d. 1847)
  • 1793 Pavel Ivanovich Pestel, Russian officer, born in Moscow, Russia (d. 1826)
  • 1794 Sylvester Graham, Minister and noted vegetarian (developed Graham cracker), born in Suffield, Connecticut (d. 1851)

American admiral (“Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead!”), born in Campbell’s Station, Tennessee

  • 1805 Robert FitzRoy, British naval officer and scientist, born in Ampton, Suffolk, England (d. 1865)

American circus promoter and showman (Barnum & Bailey), born in Bethel, Connecticut

  • 1820 William John Macquorn Rankine, Scottish mechanical engineer and physicist, born in Edinburgh (d. 1872)
  • 1828 Paul Gabriël, Dutch water colors painter and etcher, born in Amsterdam (d. 1903)
  • 1829 Ignacio Mariscal, Mexican lawyer and diplomat (Secretary of Foreign Affairs), born in Oaxaca, Mexico (d. 1910)
  • 1841 William C. Whitney, American financier and 31st United States Secretary of the Navy, born in Conway, Massachusetts (d. 1904)
  • 1843 Mandell Creighton, British historian and a bishop of the Church of England, born in Carlisle, Cumbria, England (d. 1901)
  • 1847 Agnes Zimmermann, German composer, born in Cologne, Kingdom of Prussia (d. 1925)
  • 1849 William T. Stead, British newspaper editor (The Pall Mall Gazette – exposed child prostitution), born in Embleton, England (d. 1912)
  • 1852 Stefano Gobatti, Italian composer, born in Bergantino, Italy (d. 1913)

British businessman, diamond merchant and imperialist politician who was Prime Minister of the Cape Colony (1890-96), born in Bishop’s Stortford, Hertfordshire, England

  • 1857 Clara Zetkin, German feminist, Socialist, and Communist leader, born in Wiederau, Saxony (d. 1933)
  • 1860 Robert Bacon, American politician (39th United States Secretary of State), born in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts (d. 1919)

American astronomer and inventor of dendrochronology (tree-ring dating), born in Windsor, Vermont

  • 1868 William Henry Singer, American painter and collector (Singer Museum, Laren), born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (d. 1943)

French politician (served 3 times as Prime Minister of France), born in Troyes, France

Nazi physician (Kaiser Wilhelm Institute), born in Karlsruhe, Grand Duchy of Baden, Germany

  • 1874 Gerhard von Keussler, German composer, born in Gulbene, Latvia (d. 1949)
  • 1878 Joseph Holbrooke, English pianist, conductor and composer (3 Blind Mice), born in Croydon, Surrey, England (d. 1958)
  • 1879 Dwight F. Davis, American politician (49th United States Secretary of War) and founder of Davis Cup, born in St. Louis, Missouri (d. 1945)
  • 1879 Volkmar Andreae, Swiss conductor (Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich 1906-49), educator (Conservatory of Zürich, 1914-39), and composer (Schutzgeister; Li-Tai-Pe), born in Bern, Switzerland (d. 1962)
  • 1879 Wanda Landowska, Polish-French harpsichordist (Musique Ancienne), born in Warsaw, Poland (d. 1959)
  • 1880 Jan Kubelik, Czech composer and violinist, born in Michle, Kingdom of Bohemia (d. 1940)
  • 1881 August Hlond, Polish cardinal of the Roman Catholic church, born in Brzęczkowice, German Empire (d. 1948)
  • 1882 Inayat Khan, Indian singer, musicologist, and philosopher (founder of Sufi Order – London, 1914), born in Vadodra, Bombay State, British India (d. 1927)
  • 1885 André Lhote, French painter and art historian (Traité du paysage), born in Bordeaux, France (d. 1962)
  • 1886 Felix Timmermans, Flemish painter and illustrator (Pallieter), born in Lier, Belgium (d. 1947)

American tennis player (US Open mixed doubles 1908; US Open men’s singles 1917 runner-up) and figure skater (US C’ship gold singles 1918, 25, 27), born in Boston, Massachusetts

  • 1886 Willem Drees, Dutch politician (co-founder of the Labour Party (PvdA); Prime Minister, 1948-58), known as “Daddy Drees”, born in Amsterdam, Netherlands (d. 1988)
  • 1890 Frederick Lewis Allen, American social historian and editor of Harper’s Magazine, born in Boston, Massachusetts (d. 1954)
  • 1891 John H. Northrop, American biochemist (crystallized enzymes (Nobel 1946)), born in Yonkers, New York (d. 1987)
  • 1891 Tin Ujević, Croatian poet (Žedan kamen na studencu), born in Vrgorac, Austro-Hungarian Empire (d. 1955)
  • 1895 Gordon Jacob, English composer, born in London (d. 1984)
  • 1897 Paul Ben-Haim [Frankenburger], Israeli composer, born in Munich, Germany (d. 1984)
  • 1899 Anna Arnold Hedgeman, African-American social activist (NYC cabinet), born in Marshalltown, Iowa (d. 1990)
  • 1899 Domingo Santa Cruz Wilson, Chilean composer, born in La Cruz, Chile (d. 1987)
  • 1899 Marcel Achard, French playwright (Jean de la Lune), born in Sainte-Foy-lès-Lyon, France (d. 1974)
  • 1900 Bernardus Johannes Alfrink, Dutch cardinal of Utrecht Netherlands, born in Nijkerk, Netherlands (d. 1987)
  • 1901 Erling Kjellsby, Norwegian organist, educator and composer, born in Christiana, Norway (d. 1976)
  • 1901 Sergey Vladimirovich Obraztsov, Soviet puppet master, born in Moscow, Russia (d. 1992)
  • 1902 Frank Waters, American writer, born in Colorado Springs (d. 1995)
  • 1902 Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., American politician (Sen-R) and ambassador (West Germany, Vietnam & UN), born in Nahant, Massachusetts (d. 1985)
  • 1903 Irwin Fischer, American organist (Chicago Symphony Orchestra), composer, and pedagogue (American Conservatory of Music), born in Iowa City (d. 1977)
  • 1904 Don Goddard, American news anchor (ABC Evening News 1958-59), born in Binghamton, New York (d. 1994)
  • 1904 Ernst Mayr, German-American biologist (evolutionary theory), born in Kempten, Bavaria, Germany (d. 2005)
  • 1904 Franz Syberg, Danish organist and composer, born in Kerteminde, Funen, Denmark (d. 1955)
  • 1904 Harold Acton, English-Italian historian and art collector, born in Villa La Pietra, Florence, Italy (d. 1994)
  • 1904 Josephine Wilson, British actress (The Lady Vanishes, We Dive at Dawn), born in Bromley, England (d. 1990)
  • 1904 Milburn Stone, American actor (Gunsmoke, Pickup on South Street), born in Burrton, Kansas (d. 1980)
  • 1905 Isa Miranda [Ines Sampietro], Italian model and actress (La Ronde), born in Bergamo, Kingdom of Italy (d. 1982)
  • 1905 Jock “Herbie” Cameron, South African cricket wicketkeeper and captain (26 Tests; 51 dismissals, 10 x 50; Eastern Province, Transvaal, Western Province), born in Port Elizabeth, South Africa (d. 1935)
  • 1909 Andrei Gromyko, Soviet politician (Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, 1985-88), and diplomat (Minister of Foreign Affairs, 1957–85), born in Staryya Hramyki, Mogilev Governorate, Russian Empire (d. 1989) [NS 7/18]
  • 1910 Robert K. Meston, American sociologist (functionalism), born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (d. 2003)
  • 1913 Smiley Lewis [Overton Amos Lemons], American R&B singer, and guitarist (“The Bells Are Ringing”; “One Night (Of Sin)”; “I Hear You Knocking”), born in New Orleans, Louisiana (d. 1966)
  • 1915 John Woodruff, American athlete (Olympic gold 800m 1936), born in Connellsville, Pennsylvania (d. 2007)
  • 1918 George Rochberg, American composer (Concord Quartet), born in Paterson, New Jersey (d. 2005)
  • 1920 Issachar Miron, Israeli composer, born in Kutno, Poland (d. 2015)
  • 1920 Mary Louise Hancock, American politician and activist, born in Franklin, New Hampshire (d. 2017)
  • 1923 Arno Motulsky, German-born founder of medical genetics, known as the “father of pharmacogenomics”, born in Fischhausen, East Prussia, Weimar Germany (d. 2018)
  • 1923 George Moore, Australian jockey (Epsom Derby 1967, Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe 1959, Prix du Jockey Club 1960, Irish 1000 Guineas 1959, 5 x Doomben 10,000, 3 x Sydney Cup), born in Mackay, Australia (d. 2008)
  • 1923 John McKay, American College Football HOF coach (4 x NCAA C’ship 1962, 67, 72, 74 ; 5 x Rose Bowl USC; NFL: Tampa Bay Buccaneers 1976-84), born in Everettville, West Virginia (d. 2001)
  • 1924 János Starker, Hungarian-American cellist, born in Budapest, Hungary (d. 2013)
  • 1924 Niels Jannasch, Canadian historian and museum curator, born in Holzminden, Germany (d. 2001)
  • 1926 Diana Lynn [Dolores Eartha Loehr], American actress (Annapolis Story, Easy Come Easy Go), born in Los Angeles, California (d. 1971)
  • 1926 Kenneth Gaburo, American composer, born in Somerville, New Jersey (d. 1993)
  • 1927 Beverly Tyler, American singer and actress (Fireball, The Youngest Profession, Big Town), born in Scranton, Pennsylvania (d. 2005)
  • 1927 W. M. Diggelmann, Swiss writer (appeared in The self-destruction of W. M. Diggelmann), born in Zurich, Switzerland (d. 1979)
  • 1928 Pierre Mauroy, Prime Minister of France (1981-84), born in Cartignies, Nord, France (d. 2013)
  • 1928 Warren Oates, American actor (Dillinger, East of Eden, Stoney Burke), born in Depoy, Muhlenberg County (d. 1982)
  • 1929 Katherine Helmond, American actress and director (Soap, Mona-Who’s the Boss), born in Galveston, Texas (d. 2019)
  • 1929 Mary Maxwell Gates, American businesswoman, philanthropist/mother of Bill Gates, born in Seattle, Washington (d. 1994)
  • 1929 Tony Lock, English cricket spin bowler (49 Tests, 174 wickets, BB 7/35, 2 x 50; Surrey CCC, Western Australia, Leicestershire CCC), born in Limpsfield, England (d. 1995)
  • 1930 Tommy Cook, American radio and screen actor, film producer, and screenwriter (Missile to the Moon; Rollercoaster), born in Duluth, Minnesota
  • 1930 Yutaka Makino, Japanese composer, born in Tokyo, Japan (d. 2005)
  • 1931 Ismail Mahomed, South African and Namibian Chief Justice, 1st permanent black judge on South African Supreme Court, born in Pretoria, South Africa (d. 2000)
  • 1931 James “Jimmy the Gent” Burke, Irish American gangster (inspiration for Jimmy Conway character in Goodfellas), born in New York City (d. 1996)
  • 1932 Billy Laughlin, American child actor (Froggy- Our Gang), born in San Gabriel, California (d. 1948)
  • 1932 Gyula Horn, Hungarian prime minister (1994-8), born in Budapest, Hungary (d. 2013)
  • 1932 Kevin Prendergast, Irish thoroughbred race horse trainer (British Champion Trainer 1963; 8 x Irish Classics; 2,000 Guineas Stakes 1977), born in Melbourne, Australia (d. 2025)
  • 1932 Teddy Millington-Drake, English painter, born in London (d. 1994)
  • 1933 Terence Cooper, British actor (Casino Royale), born in Carnmoney, County Antrim, Northern Ireland (d. 1997)
  • 1934 Diane Andersen, Danish-Belgian concert pianist, born in Copenhagen, Denmark
  • 1934 Philip Madoc, Welsh actor (The Life and Times of David Lloyd George), born in Merthyr Tydfil, Wales (d. 2012)
  • 1935 Dave Shriver, American rock bassist (Eddie Cochran, Trini Lopez), and music director, born in Elkhart, Indiana (d. 2012)
  • 1935 Edward McInnes, German scholar, born in Maybole, Ayrshire (d. 1996)
  • 1935 John Gilmore, American true crime author (Severed: The True Story of the Black Dahlia Murder), born in Los Angeles, California (d. 2016)
  • 1936 James Mirrlees, Scottish economist (Nobel Prize for Economic Science, 1996), born in Minnigaff, Scotland ( d. 2018)
  • 1936 Shirley Knight, American actress (Endless Love, Desperate Housewives), born in Goessel, Kansas (d. 2020)
  • 1936 Tommy LiPuma, American Grammy Award-winning jazz record producer (George Benson; Natalie Cole; Diana Krall), and record label executive (A&M, Verve, GRP), born in Cleveland, Ohio (d. 2017)
  • 1937 Brooke Hayward, American author (Haywire), born in Los Angeles, California
  • 1937 Nita Lowey, American politician and representative of New York (Democratic: 1988-2020) who was the first woman to chair the House Appropriations Committee, born in New York City (d. 2025)
  • 1938 Stanley Silverman, American composer, arranger, and guitarist, born in New York City
  • 1939 Booker Edgerson, American football player, born in Baxter County, Arkansas
  • 1939 Brian O’Brien, Irish rugby union centre (3 Tests; Munster RFC) and selector (Ireland, British & Irish Lions), born in Limerick, Ireland (d. 2023)
  • 1940 Arthur Blythe, American jazz saxophonist, born in Los Angeles, California (d. 2017)
  • 1940 Chuck Close, American painter and photographer, born in Monroe, Washington (d. 2021)
  • 1940 Karen Shepherd, American politician (Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Utah), born in Silver City, New Mexico
  • 1941 Barbara Frischmuth, Austrian writer, born in Altaussee, Salzkammergut, Austria
  • 1942 Hannes Löhr, German footballer and manager, born in Eitorf, Rhine Province, Germany
  • 1943 (Jaime Royal) “Robbie” Robertson, Canadian-Mohawk singer-songwriter and rock guitarist (The Band – “The Weight”; “Up On Cripple Creek”), and soundtrack composer (Martin Scorsese films), born in Toronto, Ontario (d. 2023) [1] [2]
  • 1943 Curt Blefary [Le Roy], American baseball player (1965 AL rookie of year, The Sporting News Rookie of the Year), born in Brooklyn, New York
  • 1945 Dick Scoppettone, American rocker (Harpers Bizarre), born in Santa Cruz, California
  • 1945 Ebbe Skovdahl, Danish soccer manager (Brøndby IF, Benfica, Aberdeen), born in Copenhagen, Denmark (d. 2020)
  • 1945 Humberto Benítez Treviño, Mexican politician and Attorney General of the Republic of Mexico, born in Zacualpan, Mexico
  • 1945 Jeffrey Kramer, American actor (Ted Stein-Struck by Lightning), born in New York City
  • 1945 Jim Fuller, American college football coach and athletics administrator (coach 1977-83; AD 2003-08 Jacksonville State University), born in Birmingham, Alabama (d. 2021)
  • 1946 Gerard ‘t Hooft, Dutch physicist (1999 Nobel Prize for Physics -for elucidating the quantum structure of electroweak interactions), born in Den Helder, Netherlands
  • 1946 Gwyneth Powell, British actress (Grange Hill – “Mrs McClusky”, born in Levenshulme, Manchester, England (d. 2022)
  • 1946 Paul Smith, British fashion designer (Paul Smith), born in Beeston, Nottinghamshire, England
  • 1946 Pierre-Marc Johnson, Québéc lawyer, physician and politician (24th Premier of Quebec), born in Montreal, Quebec
  • 1947 Atanas Golomeev, Bulgarian basketball center (FIBA EuroBasket Top Scorer 1973 Academic Sofia, 1975 Levski Sofia; FIBA European Selection 1971, 73, 75, 77), born in Sofia, Bulgaria (d. 2023)
  • 1948 Julie Nixon Eisenhower, American author and the youngest daughter of Richard Nixon, born in Washington, D.C.
  • 1948 William Hootkins, American actor, born in Dallas, Texas (d. 2005)
  • 1949 Marilyn Cole, English Playmate model (Jan, 1972, Playmate of the Year 1973), born in Portsmouth, England
  • 1949 Tommy Eyre, British touring and session keyboardist, and musical director (Joe Cocker, Gerry Rafferty, Wham!), born in Sheffield, England (d. 2001)
  • 1950 Gary Matthews, American baseball player (1973 NL rookie of year), born in San Fernando, California

1950 American rock singer-songwriter (Huey Lewis and the News – “If This Is It”, “The Power of Love”), born in New York City

  • 1950 Luís Jardim, Portuguese session and touring percussionist (Asia; Annie Lennox; Seal), born on the island of Madeira (d. 2025)
  • 1950 Michael Monarch, American rock guitarist (Steppenwolf), 1967-69 – “Born to Be Wild”, “Magic Carpet Ride”), born in Los Angeles, California
  • 1951 Geert Jan Hessing, Dutch rock drummer (Catapult), born in the Netherlands
  • 1951 Gilbert Van Binst, Belgian soccer defender (15 caps; SC Anderlecht 262 games), born in Machelen, Belgium (d. 2025)
  • 1951 Johnny Rodgers, American College Football Hall of Fame wide receiver (Heisman Trophy 1972, U of Nebraska–Lincoln; Grey Cup C’ship 1974, Montreal Alouettes), born in Omaha, Nebraska
  • 1951 Keiko Fuji, Japanese enka singer and actress, born in Ichinoseki, Iwate, Japan (d. 2013)
  • 1951 Rich “Goose” Gossage, American Baseball Hall of Fame relief pitcher (World Series 1978 NY Yankees; 9 x MLB All Star; 3 × AL saves leader), born in Colorado Springs
  • 1951 Roger Wicker, American politician (Senator-R-Mississippi 2007-), born in Pontotoc, Mississippi
  • 1952 David Dreier, American entrepreneur and politician (Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from California), born in Kansas City, Missouri
  • 1952 Michael McNabb, American contemporary instrumental and electroacoustic composer (Dreamsong; Invisible Cities), born in Salinas, California
  • 1952 Terence T. Henricks, USAF colonel and NASA astronaut (STS 44, 55, 70, 78), born in Bryan, Ohio
  • 1952 Timothy Drury, American session and touring keyboardist (Don Henley; Whitesnake; The Eagles), born in Los Angeles, California
  • 1953 David Morrow, Australian Rugby League HOF broadcaster (ABC, 2GB), born in Sydney, Australia (d. 2024)
  • 1954 Jimmy Crespo, American guitarist (Aerosmith), born in Brooklyn, New York City
  • 1954 John Wright, New Zealand cricketer (opening batsman 1978-92), born in Darfield, New Zealand
  • 1954 Leni Björklund, Swedish politician (Minister for Defence, 2002-06), born in Örebro, Sweden
  • 1955 Michael Gismondi, American rock bassist (Michael Stanley Band, 1979-87), born in Youngstown, Ohio
  • 1955 Peter McNamara, Australian tennis player (Australian Open doubles 1979, Wimbledon doubles 1980, 82), born in Melbourne, Victoria (d. 2019)
  • 1956 James Lofton, American Pro Football HOF wide receiver (First-team All-Pro 1981; 8 × Pro Bowl; Buffalo Bills, GB Packers, LA Raiders), born in Fort Ord, California
  • 1956 Patricia “Patsy” Pease, American actress (Kimberly-Days of Our Lives), born in Charlotte, North Carolina
  • 1957 David Hanson, British Labour politician, born in Liverpool
  • 1957 David Pinkney, British Touring car racer, born in Bridlington, England
  • 1957 Doug Wilson, Canadian ice hockey player, born in Ottaw, Ontario, Canada
  • 1958 Meredith Ann Pierce, American sci-fi author (Darkangel), born in Seattle, Washington
  • 1958 Paul Daniel, British opera and symphony conductor, born in Birmingham, England
  • 1958 Peter Tolan, American television writer and producer (Rescue Me, The Larry Sanders Show), born in Scituate, Massachusetts
  • 1958 William “Bill” Watterson, American cartoonist known for being author of the comic strip Calvin and Hobbes (1985-95), born in Washington, D.C.
  • 1959 Gary Callander, Scottish rugby union hooker (6 caps; South of Scotland RFC), born in Kelso, Scotland (d. 2021)
  • 1959 Marc Cohn, American folk-rock singer-songwriter (“Walking in Memphis”), born in Cleveland, Ohio
  • 1959 Theo Verbey, Dutch composer (Fractal Symphony; After the Great War), and educator (Royal Conservatory of The Hague, 1984-2019), born in Delft, Netherlands (d. 2019)
  • 1959 Tim Shaw, South African cricketer (South African ODI slow lefty 1991), born in Empangeni, South Africa
  • 1959 Veronica Guerin, Irish crime journalist, born in Dublin (d. 1996)
  • 1960 Brad Loree, Canadian actor and stunt performer, born in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada
  • 1960 James M. Kelly, American politician (Maryland), born in Baltimore County, Maryland
  • 1961 Isabelle Poulenard, French contemporary soprano, born in Paris
  • 1961 Zlatko Saračević, Croatian handball player (145 caps Yugoslavia, 75 Croatia; Olympic gold 1996 Croatia), born in Banja Luka, Bosnia & Herzegovina (d. 2021)

1963 American actress (Carmela Soprano-The Sopranos), born in New York City

  • 1963 Russ Lorenson, American singer and actor, born in Upland, Pennsylvania
  • 1964 Toni Halliday, British rock singer and lyricist (Curve; Chatelaine), born in Parsons Green, London
  • 1965 Eyran Katsenelenbogen, Israeli jazz pianist (88 Fingers), born in Israel
  • 1965 Kathryn Erbe, American actress (Detective Alexandra Eames-Law & Order: Criminal Intent), born in Newton, Massachusetts
  • 1966 Gianfranco Zola, Italian footballer and coach (Chelsea), born in Oliena, Italy
  • 1966 Jim Himes, American banker, businessman, and politician (US Rep-D-Connecticut 2009-), born in Lima, Peru
  • 1966 Susannah Doyle, British actress (Drop the Dead Donkey – “Joy”), and playwright, born in Kingston upon Thames, Surrey, England
  • 1967 Silvia Ziche, Italian comics artist (Italian Donald Duck comics), born in Thiene, Italy
  • 1968 Alex Zülle, Swiss road racing cyclist, born in Wil, Switzerland
  • 1968 John Ruskin a.k.a. Nardwuar the Human Serviette, Canadian journalist, born in Vancouver, British Columbia
  • 1968 Ken Akamatsu, Japanese Manga artist, born in Tokyo
  • 1968 Kenji Ito, Japanese video game composer, born in Tokyo, Japan
  • 1968 Michael Stuhlbarg, American stage and screen character actor (Boardwalk Empire), born in Long Beach, California
  • 1968 Nate Singleton, American NFL wide receiver (SF 49ers), born in New Orleans, Louisiana
  • 1968 Shahid Anwar, Pakistani cricketer (Pakistani all-rounder 1996 England tour), born in Multan, Pakistan

American businesswoman (CEO of YouTube, 2014-23; Google executive, 1999-2014), considered “the most important person in advertising”, born in Santa Clara County, California

  • 1969 Jenji Kohan, American television writer and producer (Orange is the New Black), born in Los Angeles
  • 1969 John LeClair, American NHL left wing (first American-born player to score 50 goals in 3 straight NHL seasons; Philadelphia Flyers), born in St Albans, Vermont
  • 1969 RZA [Robert Fitzgerald Diggs], American rapper (Wu-Tang Clan), born in New York City
  • 1970 Doug Bochtler, American baseball pitcher (San Diego Padres), born in West Palm Beach, Florida
  • 1970 Mac Dre [Andre Louis Hicks], American rapper and hip hop pioneer, born in Oakland, California (d. 2004)
  • 1971 Derek McInnes, Scottish soccer midfielder (2 caps; Rangers, WBA, Dundee United) and manager (Bristol City, Aberdeen, Kilmarnock), born in Paisley, Scotland
  • 1972 Michael Bays, American actor (Bronx Zoo; Days of Our Live), born in Enrico, California
  • 1972 Robert Esmie, Canadian 4X100m runner (Olympic gold 1996), born in Kingston, Jamaica
  • 1972 Tatsuhito Takaiwa, Zainichi-Korean wrestler (NJPW), born in Kyoto, Japan
  • 1973 Bengt Lagerberg, Swedish drummer (The Cardigans – “Lovefool”), born in Jönköping, Sweden
  • 1973 Marcus Allbäck, Swedish soccer striker (74 caps; Örgryte IS, Heerenveen, Aston Villa, FC Copenhagen), born in Gothenburg, Sweden

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Historical Events on July 5


  • 649 St Martin I begins his reign as Catholic Pope
  • 767 Duke Toto of Nepi stages a coup d’état in Rome and names his brother Constantine, Pope Constantine II. Today considered an antipope.
  • 1166 Austrian town of Bad Kleinkirchheim is first mentioned, in an ecclesiastical document
  • 1294 Pietro del Murrone elected as Pope Celestine V
  • 1295 Scotland and France form an alliance, the beginnings of the Auld Alliance, against England
  • 1436 German emperor Sigismund signs peace with Hussieten
  • 1450 Pope Nicolas V names Walram of Moers Bishop of the rich German city of Münster (voided 1452 during the conflict to control the city)
  • 1596 English fleet under Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, captures Cadiz

1601 Siege of Ostend begins when a Spanish force under Archduke Albert VII of Austria, with 12,000 men and 50 siege guns, lays siege to a small garrison of fewer than 2,000 Dutch at the strategically important fortress of Ostend, Flanders

  • 1610 John Guy sets sail from Bristol with 39 other colonists for Newfoundland
  • 1626 Battle at Lenz: Rebel Austrian Boers defeated
  • 1628 English settlers establish town of St Michael (later Bridgetown) on Barbados
  • 1643 1st recorded tornado in US (Essex County, Massachusetts)

Principia Published

1687 Isaac Newton‘s great work, “Principia,” is published by the Royal Society in England, outlining his laws of motion and universal gravitation

Siege of Corinth

1715 Ottoman troops storm citadel of Acrocorinth in the Peloponnese, massacring a large part of the population and selling the rest into slavery. Inspires Lord Byron‘s poem “The Siege of Corinth”

  • 1750 Slave revolt on Curacao
  • 1770 First day of three day naval Battle of Chesma between the Russian and Ottoman Empires off the coast of Anatolia won by the Russians

Olive Branch Petition

1775 Second Continental Congress drafts the Olive Branch Petition to King George III

  • 1803 The convention of Artlenburg leads to the French occupation of Hanover (which had been ruled by the British king)
  • 1807 Second Battle of Buenos Aires lost by invading British forces

1811 Venezuelan Declaration of Independence: Seven provinces declare independence from Spain

  • 1813 War of 1812: Three weeks of British raids on Fort Schlosser, Black Rock and Plattsburgh, New York begin
  • 1814 Americans defeat British and Canadians at Chippewa, Ontario
  • 1830 France invades Algeria, begins a 40 year conquest
  • 1834 Provisional government forms in Oregon Country
  • 1841 Thomas Cook opens first travel agency
  • 1843 Committee of 9 appointed to establish civil government in Oregon Country

What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?

1852 Fugitive slave Frederick Douglass delivers his ‘What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?’ speech to the Ladies’ Anti-Slavery Society in Rochester, condemning the celebration as a hypocritical sham

  • 1859 American sealing ship Captain N. C. Brooks discovers the uninhabited Midway Islands in the North Pacific Ocean and claims for the US
  • 1861 Battle of Carthage, Missouri – US General Sigel attacks pro-secessionist
  • 1863 Battle of Jackson, Mississippi and Battle of Birdsong Ferry, Mississippi
  • 1864 Battle at Chattahoochee River, Georgia (Skirmish at Pace’s Ferry) fought during the Atlanta Campaign of the American Civil War
  • 1864 Battle of Smith’s Expedition, Mississippi (Tupelo, Harrisburg)
  • 1865 United Kingdom creates the world’s first speed limit law
  • 1865 US Secret Service begins operating under the Treasury Department
  • 1871 Trial against Kiowa chief Satanta (White Bear) and Big Tree, begins
  • 1878 The coat of arms of the Baku governorate was established
  • 1884 German consul-general Gustav Nachtigal takes possession of Cameroon
  • 1884 US Congress accept 2nd Chinese Exclusion Act
  • 1887 Columbia University 4’s crew becomes first American boat to win at London’s Henley Regatta (Visitors Challenge Cup)
  • 1891 Hail kills 16 horses in Rapid City, South Dakota
  • 1898 Lizzie Arlington becomes first woman to play professional men’s baseball when she pitches 9th inning for the Reading Coal Heavers against the Allentown Peanuts; allows 2 hits and walks a batter but preserves 5-0 win
  • 1900 Compulsory education law passes Dutch 1st Chamber
  • 1902 All-rounder Monty Noble takes 6 for 52 as Australia wins the one and only cricket Test played at Sheffield’s Bramall Lane, England
  • 1904 NY Giants 18-game winning streak ends as Phillies win 6-5 in 10 innings at Huntington Park
  • 1908 Niazi Bey, a chief organizer of the revolutionary movement in Turkey, raises the standard of revolt at Resna, Macedonia
  • 1914 Germany offers Austria war aid to fight against Russia in Serbia
  • 1922 1st general election in Netherlands
  • 1922 Uprising of social righteousness in Rio de Janeiro
  • 1922 Women 1st vote in Dutch elections, Christian parties win
  • 1924 Military revolt in Sao Paulo, Brazil
  • 1929 WOWO-AM, Indiana returns to air, 1 day after transmitter burns down

Estado Novo Regime

1932 António de Oliveira Salazar becomes the premier and dictator of Portugal (1932-1968), founding the authoritarian Estado Novo (New State) regime

  • 1933 Austria signs a concordat (pact) with the Vatican, guaranteeing the rights and privileges of the Catholic Church in Austria
  • 1933 German party Catholic Center disbands
  • 1934 “Bloody Thursday” – Police open fire on striking longshoremen in San Francisco

Gehrig’s Record Grand Slam

1934 Lou Gehrig hits record 17th career grand slam in Yankees 8-3 win v Washington, passes Babe Ruth‘s total

  • 1935 1st “Hawaii Calls” radio program is broadcast

National Labor Relations Act

1935 FDR signs US National Labor Relations Act, effective the next day

  • 1935 Tony Cuccinello (Brooklyn Dodgers) and Al Cuccinello (New York Giants) become first brothers to both hit a MLB homer in the same game; Dodgers win 14-4
  • 1936 120°F (49°C), Gannvalley, South Dakota (state record)
  • 1937 117°F (47°C), Medicine Lake, Montana (state record)

DiMaggio Hits 1st Grand Slam

1937 NY Yankees outfielder Joe DiMaggio hits 20th HR of the season but 1st career grand slam in 8-4 win vs Boston Red Sox

  • 1937 Republican offensive by Brunete in Spain
  • 1937 Spam, the luncheon meat is first introduced into the market by the Hormel Foods Corporation
  • 1938 Herb Caen’s 1st column in San Francisco Chronicle
  • 1939 Flash floods kill 79 in Northeast Kentucky
  • 1940 Diplomatic relations broken between Britain and Vichy government in France
  • 1941 German occupiers disband political parties
  • 1942 Ian Fleming graduates from a training school for spies in Canada
  • 1943 Battle of Gulf of Kula
  • 1943 Battle of Kursk, USSR: Operation Citadel: Nazi German Panzer Division assault begins what becomes the largest tank in history
  • 1943 Liberator bombers sink U-535 in Gulf of Biskaye
  • 1943 US invasion fleet (96 ships) sails to Sicily
  • 1944 Harry Crosby takes 1st rocket airplane, MX-324, for maiden flight

Labour Wins British Election

1945 Labour Party under Clement Attlee wins British parliamentary elections (results not declared until 26 July)

  • 1945 World War II: Liberation of the Philippines declared
  • 1946 Louis Réard’s design for a bikini swimsuit debuts at a Paris fashion show

Doby First Black Player

1947 Cleveland Indians rookie Larry Doby becomes 1st black player in AL when he strikes out in 6-5 loss vs Chicago White Sox

  • 1948 National Health Service established in the UK; Minister of Health Aneurin Bevan attends ceremony at Park Hospital in Davyhulme, Trafford
  • 1950 Law of Return passes, guarantees all Jews right to live in Israel
  • 1950 US forces enter combat in the Korean War for the first time, in the Battle of Osan
  • 1953 Phillies pitcher Robin Roberts hurls his 28th consecutive MLB complete game in a 2-0 win over Pittsburgh
  • 1953 WANC TV channel 21 in Asheville, NC (IND) begins broadcasting
  • 1954 B-52A bomber makes its maiden flight

Elvis’ 1st Recording Session

1954 Singer Elvis Presley‘s 1st professional recording session (with guitarist Scotty Moore & bass player Bill Black) takes place at Sam Phillips’ Memphis Recording Service in Memphis, Tennessee. The trio record four songs including their historic cover of Arthur “Big Boy” Crudup’s song “That’s All Right”. [1]

  • 1954 The BBC broadcasts its first television news bulletin
  • 1955 Six week old British dock strike ends as London dockers return to work
  • 1956 France raises tobacco tax 20% due to war in Algeria
  • 1957 England cricket batsman Tom Graveney scores a brilliant 258 in the drawn 3rd Test v West Indies at Trent Bridge
  • 1958 First ascent of Gasherbrum I (Pakistani–Chinese border), 11th highest peak on earth
  • 1958 J Pengel forms government/Emanuels premier of Suriname

Israeli Government Resigns

1959 Ben-Gurion‘s Israeli government resigns

  • 1959 Indonesia restores constitution
  • 1959 Jack Gelber’s “Connection” premieres in NYC
  • 1960 Mongolia adopts constitution
  • 1961 80 die in collisions in Algiers
  • 1961 KUSD TV channel 2 in Vermillion, SD (PBS) begins broadcasting
  • 1961 St Louis Cardinals first baseman Bill White smashes 3 HRs & a double in 9-1 rout of LA Dodgers
  • 1962 Algeria gains independence after 132 years of French rule
  • 1962 Massacre in Oran, Algeria: members of Algerian National Liberation Army kill Pied-Noir (Algerians of European descent) and European expatriates in ethnic genocide upon Algerian independence from France killing an estimated 95 to 400 people over 3 days
  • 1963 First Beatles’ tune to hit US charts, Del Shannon’s cover of “From Me to You” at no. 87

Maria Callas’ Last Appearance

1965 Greek-American soprano Maria Callas makes her final opera stage appearance in the title role of Giacomo Puccini‘s “Tosca” at Convent Garden, London, England

  • 1966 NASA launches Saturn IB rocket from Cape Canaveral, Florida
  • 1966 National Guard mobilizes in Omaha, Nebraska, after 3rd night of rioting
  • 1966 NYC Transit Authority raises basic bus and subway fare from 15 cents to 20 cents
  • 1967 Congo uprising under Belgian mercenary Jean Schramme
  • 1968 “Manifest of 1000 words” published in Prague
  • 1969 Rolling Stones play a free concert in London’s Hyde Park
  • 1970 Air Canada DC-8 crashes 7 miles from Toronto’s airport killing 109
  • 1971 26th amendment to the US constitution certified (reduces voting age to 18)
  • 1971 Simon Gray’s “Butley” premieres in London
  • 1972 Pierre Messmer appointed French premier
  • 1972 Two Protestant brothers are found shot dead outside of Belfast (speculation that they were killed by Loyalists because they had Catholic girlfriends)
  • 1973 Isle of Man begins issuing its own postage stamps
  • 1973 Test cricket debut of English umpire Harold “Dickie” Bird v NZ at Leeds (66 Tests, 69 ODI)

Pink Floyd Debut Album

1975 At Knebworth Festival in England, Pink Floyd debut their album “Wish You Were Here” with pyrotechnics and an exploding plane that flies into the stage

  • 1975 Cape Verde Islands gain independence after 500 years of Portuguese rule
  • 1977 Pakistani army, led by General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, seizes power
  • 1978 Soyuz 30 spacecraft touches down in Soviet Kazakhstan
  • 1978 USSR performs nuclear test at the Semipalatinsk Test Site in northeast Kazakhstan
  • 1981 Premier Begin’s Likud party wins Israeli elections
  • 1981 Rajan Mahadevan recites 31,811 digits of π (Pi) from memory
  • 1981 USSR performs nuclear test at the Semipalatinsk Test Site in northeast Kazakhstan
  • 1982 Challenger flies to Kennedy Space Center via Ellington AFB, Texas
  • 1983 France invades Algeria
  • 1983 Woman gives birth to baby 84 days after brain death (Roanoke, Virginia)
  • 1984 Supreme Court weakens 70-year-old “exclusionary rule”-evidence seized with defective court warrants can now be used in criminal trials
  • 1985 Nicholas Mark Sanders (England) begins circumnavigation of globe, covering 13,035 road miles in 78 days, 3 hr, 30 min

Mugabe Wins 2nd Term

1985 Robert Mugabe‘s Zimbabwe African National Union – Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) party wins re-election in Zimbabwe for a second term

  • 1986 Inaugural edition of Goodwill Games open in Moscow, USSR

1986 Nancy Reagan cuts a red, white and blue ribbon to reopen Statue of Liberty after refurbishment

  • 1988 Wist Indies cricket paceman Malcolm Marshall takes career best 7-22, beat England by an innings & 156 at Old Trafford

Father-son HR Record

1989 Barry Bonds homers in Pittsburgh’s 6-4 loss vs SF Giants, joining father Bobby Bonds as MLB father-son HR record holders (408)

Rod Stewart Knocked Out

1989 British singer Rod Stewart hits his head on a lighting fixture while on stage and knocks himself out in Pine Knob, Michigan [1]

  • 1991 American jockey Ray Sibille wins his 3,000th career race, aboard Sporting Surf at Pleasanton, California
  • 1991 France performs nuclear test at Mururoa Atoll
  • 1991 MLB owners approve Colorado Rockies and Florida Marlins as new NL franchises to start play in 1993
  • 1992 Sixto Durán Ballén elected president of Ecuador

Björk’s Debut

1993 Icelandic musician Björk releases her 1st solo album “Debut”

  • 1993 Kurd guerrillas murder 32 villager in East Turkey

Rickey Henderson

1993 MLB Oakland A’s outfielder Rickey Henderson leads off both games of Oakland’s doubleheader vs Cleveland with homers (first time since 1913)

  • 1993 Richard Chelimo run world record 10 km (27:07.91)
  • 1994 “Cracked Rear View” debut album by Hootie & the Blowfish is released

Amazon Founded

1994 Amazon.com is founded by Jeff Bezos in Bellevue, Washington

  • 1994 The United States announces it will no longer accept unrestricted immigration from Haiti
  • 1996 Angels score 3 top 1st, Oakland A’s respond with 13 bottom 1st, highest-scoring 1st inning by 2 teams in MLB history, A’s win 16-8
  • 1998 NY Yankees beat Baltimore Orioles 1-0 to improve record to 61-20, equalling best 81-game start in MLB history

Baseball Record

1998 Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Roger Clemens collects his 3,000th career strikeout in 2-1 win vs Tampa Bay (11th to achieve milestone)

  • 2001 Australia and East Timor sign an agreement to share royalties from oil and natural gas production in the Timor Sea, which separates the two countries
  • 2003 French driver Sébastien Bourdais wins first-ever night road-course event in Champ Car history on Cleveland’s Burke Lakefront Airport layout

2003 SARS is declared “contained” by the WHO after affecting 26 countries and resulting in 774 deaths

  • 2004 First direct presidential election held in Indonesia, eventually won by Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
  • 2006 Emergency United Nations Security Council meeting at the U.N in New York City because of North Korean missile tests that day
  • 2006 North Korea tests at least two short-range Nodong-2 missiles, one SCUD missile and one long-range Taepodong-2 missile
  • 2009 Ethnic rioting breaks out in Ürümqi, Xinjiang, People’s Republic of China
  • 2011 “Somebody That I Used to Know” single released by Gotye ft. Kimbra (Grammy Award Best Pop Duo/Group Performance, Record of the Year 2013)

Enrique Pena Nieto President

2012 Enrique Pena Nieto of the Institutional Revolutionary Party is elected President of Mexico after a recount following irregularities

Videla Sentenced

2012 Former Argentine president and dictator Jorge Rafael Videla is sentenced to 50 years imprisonment for the abduction of about 400 babies born to political prisoners

  • 2012 Harness racing trainer/driver Dave Palone sets a new North American record for wins when he drives Herculotte Hanover to the winner’s circle for his 15,181st career victory
  • 2012 South Korea announce plans to begin “scientific’ whaling of minke whales
  • 2012 The Shard, the tallest building in Europe, is opened in London, at 309.6 metres (1,016 ft)
  • 2013 15 people are killed by a bomb attack on a Shia mosque in Baghdad, Iraq

2015 FIFA Women‘s World Cup Final: Carli Lloyd scores a hat-trick as US beats Japan 5-2, in Vancouver

Report on Hillary Clinton Emails

2016 FBI releases report stating Hillary Clinton was “extremely careless” handling classified emails but doesn’t recommend prosecution

  • 2017 101 people reported shot, 15 killed in Chicago, Illinois over 4th July weekend
  • 2017 Arsenal FC breaks club transfer record, paying about €53m for Lyon striker Alexandre Lacazette
  • 2017 Followers of Indian spiritual leader Ashutosh Maharaj win a court case three years after his death to keep his body in a freezer in case he returns to life
  • 2017 Shootout between drug cartels in Las Varas, Northern Mexico kills 14
  • 2017 Volvo Cars announces that all new models by 2019 will be either hybrids or battery-powered, the first automaker to do so
  • 2018 At least 24 killed in explosions at pyrotechnics workshops in Tultepec, Mexico
  • 2018 English rapper Stormzy announces partnership with Penguin Books, an imprint called #Merky Books
  • 2018 Heatwave in southern Quebec, Canada, kills 33
  • 2018 Saleswomen in Kerala, India, win right to sit down and take toilet breaks in new amendment to law
  • 2018 US Environmental Protection Agency head Scott Pruitt resigns amid allegations of misconduct
  • 2019 Ancient Iraqi city of Babylon is declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site
  • 2019 Former governor of Rio de Janeiro, Sérgio Cabral says he paid a $2 million bribe to secure votes for his city to be granted 2016 Olympics
  • 2019 Second stronger earthquake in Southern California at 7.1 magnitude centered near Ridgecrest
  • 2020 Florida reports a record 11,458 daily COVID-19 cases
  • 2020 Mexico’s COVID-19 death toll passes 30,000 as it becomes the world’s 5th worst-affected country
  • 2021 One of world’s oldest pieces of art, 51,000-year-old deer bone carved by Neanderthals, announced discovered in Harz Mountains, Germany [1]

2021 Prime Minister Boris Johnson says he will scrap all COVID-19 restrictions in England from 19 July, to become most unrestricted country in Europe

  • 2022 Amid Greater Sydney’s fourth major flood in 18 months, the Australian government declares a natural disaster as 45,000 people threatened with evacuation orders [1]
  • 2022 In possibly largest-ever Chinese security breach, hacker offers to sell Shanghai police a database with information on one billion Chinese [1]

Carlos Santana Collapses

2022 Legendary rock guitarist Carlos Santana collapses on stage from dehydration and heat exhaustion in Pine Knob, Michigan

  • 2022 Mathematics Fields Medal (presented every four years to mathematicians under 40) awarded to James Maynard, June Huh, Maryna Viazovska and Hugo Duminil-Copin in Helsinki [1]
  • 2022 Mike Grier becomes the first Black manager in the NHL – of the San Jose Sharks [1]
  • 2023 A wave of shootings across American during Fourth of July celebrations leaves a dozen people dead and more than 60 injured [1]
  • 2023 Hottest global temperature ever recorded – for third consecutive day – as average global temperature tops 17.18 degrees Celsius, tying with July 4, 2023 [1]
  • 2023 Meta launches Threads – Instagram’s new public conversations app – a day later it becomes the most rapidly downloaded app ever with 30 million downloads [1]

Landside Labour Victory

2024 Keir Starmer succeeds Rishi Sunak as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in a landside victory for the Labour Party

  • 2024 Rachel Reeves becomes the UK’s first female Chancellor of the Exchequer, appointed by Labour PM Kier Starmer [1]
  • 2024 Reformist Masoud Pezeshkian elected President of Iran, defeating his conservative rival Saeed Jalili in a run-off election [1]

Stephanopoulos Interviews Biden

2024 US President Joe Biden gives an interview to quell fears about his stamina and cognitive abilities with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos [1]

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