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‘Heiresses’ by Miranda Kaufman review


Heiresses, as Miranda Kaufmann admits, is indebted to scholarship which has revealed, over many decades, the extent of the ties between the British establishment and Caribbean slavery. Founded in 2009, UCL’s Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slavery database has become an important touchstone for any researcher wishing to understand how men – and women – benefited from the £20 million paid out by the British government to compensate enslavers for loss of their ‘property’ after the abolition of slavery in 1833. In recent years, organisations including the Church of England, Bank of England, and the Guardian newspaper, and families such as the Gladstones and Trevelyans, have acknowledged their institutional and personal indebtedness to slavery. Some have taken active measures, issuing public apologies, making financial reparations, or curating exhibitions to account for the lasting harms of slavery. Attention has fallen, almost exclusively, upon men. But, as UCL’s Centre has shown, over 40 per cent of the beneficiaries of compensation were women, half of whom were resident in Britain.

Kaufmann invites us to explore the lives of nine women – the ‘heiresses’ of the title – who benefited from slavery. Born in the early decades of the 18th century, most of them lived into their sixties (and even nineties), and witnessed seismic shifts in societies on both sides of the Atlantic. But Heiresses is as much about how these women’s lives were shaped by the law and societal expectations as it is about their relationships with Caribbean slavery. Their fortunes hinged on their ability to inherit property, but this was curtailed by primogeniture and coverture and, sometimes, issues of illegitimacy. Often, it was women’s inability to inherit property (including enslaved people) that helped conceal their complicity in slavery. Kaufmann’s subjects all did inherit enslaved people in the Caribbean, and include women as different as Isabella Bell Franks (1769-1855), the daughter of an Ashkenazi Jewish ‘mercantile dynasty’, and Frances Dazell (1729-78), the mixed-heritage daughter of an enslaved mother and enslaver father.

We learn how heiresses collaborated with their husbands, children, and attorneys to ensure the continued prosperity of their Caribbean estates. Many developed (or attained through kinship) close, even intimate, ties to members of the royal family, leading politicians, and the most notable cultural figures of the day – think Elizabeth Vassall (1771-1845), who entertained Lord Byron and Charles Dickens, or Jane Cholmeley (c.1744-1836), who was Jane Austen’s aunt. They accrued material wealth, lavishly spending on works of art and property, like Mary Ramsay (1717-94), a Jamaica heiress who acquired over 100,000 acres of land in Scotland. But they also accrued political and social capital with the income generated by their Caribbean plantations. Vassall, whose great-great grandfather had first acquired land in Jamaica in 1669, used her influence to project Thomas William Plummer into Parliament in 1806 to oppose the abolition of the slave trade. She also helped launch the political career of James Scarlett, brother of one of her Jamaican attorneys, who advised the ‘West India’ lobbying group of merchants and enslavers on how to combat the Slave Trade Abolition Bill.

The wealth that some of Kaufmann’s heiresses inherited was truly staggering. Anna Susanna Taylor (1781-1853) and her husband became ‘the richest commoners in England’ (according to their contemporaries) when they were bequeathed the property of her uncle Simon Taylor, the wealthiest Jamaican of his time whose assets totalled around £1 million. An estimated £128,550 of this wealth was derived from ownership of 2,248 enslaved people. The impersonality of such numbers, and the nature of the source material, can make it difficult to breathe life into the often anonymous people who are so central to this narrative. Kaufmann attempts to correct this by focusing on some enslaved people’s tenacity and resistance, including those who journeyed from the Caribbean to Britain to seek redress. In 1795 Betsy Newton, whose grandmother Mary Hylas had received her freedom 27 years earlier in an English court ruling, arrived at the doorstep of her enslavers in London to plead ‘strongly for her liberty, with her little girl in her arms’. Her enslaver, John Lane, refused her plea for formal manumission, but conceded that by virtue of her ‘setting foot on English ground’, she was free. Betsy stayed in England and continued to seek the emancipation of her four enslaved children left behind in Barbados, to little avail.

Enslaved people were not, of course, granted complete freedom in 1833. Emancipation would be a transition, with enslaved people forced to work as apprentices without compensation until 1838. This scheme cost the British government a further £27 million on top of the £20 million paid to enslavers. As Kaufmann insists, it is only by quoting the name of the act in full – ‘An Act for the Abolition of Slavery throughout the British Colonies; for promoting the Industry of the manumitted Slaves; and for compensating the Persons hitherto entitled to the Services of such Slaves’ – that we can understand ‘the true nature of the legislation’. Following abolition, both Isabella Bell Franks and Elizabeth Vassall continued to benefit from the exploitation of unfree people, including those forced to work under apprenticeship, and those from Sierra Leone coerced into indentured labour.

The attention to women reveals new ways to understand the legacies of transatlantic slavery, but should also encourage reflection on how we think about women in the past – their willingness to exploit and dehumanise for their own gain, in a period when their own power was limited. As Kaufmann writes, the heiresses in her book never appear to have worried about the morality of their inheritance. As a Caribbean colleague reminded me last year, and as this book shows, the fight for abolition was many decades long. Calls for reparations are, by comparison, in their infancy. Heiresses is a timely contribution to this conversation.

  • Heiresses: Marriage, Inheritance and Caribbean Slavery
    Miranda Kaufmann
    Oneworld, 544pp, £30
    Buy from bookshop.org (affiliate link)

 

Misha Ewen is Assistant Professor in American History at the University of Sussex.



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The Hidden Belly Fat That Quietly Ages Your Brain



Obesity Belly Body BrainPeople with more muscle and less visceral fat tend to have brains that appear biologically younger, according to advanced MRI-AI analysis. The results point toward lifestyle and therapeutic approaches that prioritize muscle preservation and targeted visceral fat reduction for better brain health. Muscle–Fat Balance Linked to Younger Brain Age Researchers report that people with more […]



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Medieval cantor’s seal stamp found on Rhine bank in Basel – The History Blog


Repair works on the Rhine riverbank wall in Basel, Switzerland, have uncovered a seal stamp that belonged to the late 13th century cantor of Basel cathedral.

The seal was discovered last month during underwater archaeological excavations at the foot of the Pfalz, the viewing terrace overlooking the Rhine behind the Münster Cathedral. “Pfalz” is derived from the Latin word for palace and the terrace is named after the bishop’s palace which used to be next to it. The cathedral’s cloister can be accessed directly from a gateway on the Pfalz.

The pointed oval seal die is made of brass and is in excellent condition. It depicts a man in ecclesiastical robes standing at a lectern holding a large book. A cantor was a church’s choir master who selected the music, led the chants during mass and sang the solo parts. He also played an important administrative role as a manager of the liturgical library, who was in charge of updating the cathedral’s records (deaths, charters, annals, etc.).

Surrounding the image on the edges of the seal is the inscription ECCE(LESIA).BASILIEN(SIS) + S(IGILLVM) RVDOLFI.CANTORI, meaning Cathedral of Basel, Seal of Rudolph Cantor. Surviving records identify the seal owner as cathedral cantor Rudolf Kraft who lived at what is now Augustinergasse 8 in Basel between 1296 and 1305, literally a minute’s walk from the Pfalz.

Basel wasn’t even part of the Swiss Confederacy when this seal was in use. That happened 200 years later when the Canton of Basel joined the confederation in 1501. The renovation of the riverbank wall has brought to light remains from 2,000 years of the city’s history and every period from then to now.

The riverbank wall and the Münsterfährbödeli landing stage are currently being renovated to protect the historic structures on Basel’s Rhine riverbank. The muddy excavated material is being systematically examined with metal detectors by the Archaeological Soil Research team. Depending on visibility, Basel archaeologists are using underwater cameras and drones for the first time. This approach allows for the most precise possible documentation of the archaeological structures and finds, even under difficult conditions.

The archaeological discoveries at this location are no coincidence. As early as the winter of 1932/33, 580 Roman-era coins and numerous medieval objects were unearthed during periods of low water. For centuries, waste, rubble, and building materials from the Palatinate and the bishop’s residence were dumped down the slope into the Rhine. Collapses, such as the Rhine slope collapse in 1346 and the Palatinate in 1502, also contributed to the numerous objects sliding into the river.



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Famous Deaths on November 24


  • 654 Kōtoku, 36th Emperor of Japan (645-54), dies at 57 or 58 (b. 596)
  • 1072 Alp Arslan, Turkish sultan of the Seljuk Empire (1063-72) in Persia, assassinated at 43 [some sources cite date as December 15]
  • 1192 Albert of Louvain, Flemish Bishop of Liège and saint, murdered by German knights at 27
  • 1468 Jean de Dunois, the “Bastard of Orléans”, French soldier who fought with Joan of Arc, illegitimate son of the Duke of Orleans, dies at 66
  • 1531 Johannes Oecolampadius, German religious reformer (b. 1482)
  • 1555 French Vervoort, Flemish mystic (Bruylocht Cleedt), dies at about 65
  • 1571 Jan Blahoslav, Czech humanist and bishop (Bohemian brothers, translated New Testament into Czech), dies at 48
  • 1572 John Knox, Scottish preacher, dies at about 67
  • 1583 René de Birague, Italian-French lieutenant-general, chancellor and cardinal, dies at 77 [1]
  • 1615 Sethus Calvisius, German composer, dies at 59
  • 1650 Manuel Cardoso, Portuguese composer, dies at 83
  • 1674 Franciscus van Enden, Flemish Jesuit and free thinker, executed at 72
  • 1693 William Sancroft, 79th Archbishop of Canterbury, dies at 76
  • 1715 Hedwig Eleonora of Holstein-Gottorp, German-born Queen of Sweden by marriage to Charles X Gustav of Sweden (1654-60), dies at 79
  • 1722 Johann Adam Reincken, German organist and composer, dies at 99
  • 1741 Queen Ulrika Eleonora of Sweden (b. 1688)

  • 1770 Charles-Jean-François Hénault, French writer and historian (A Chronological Abridgement of the History of France), dies at 85 [1]
  • 1775 Lorenzo Ricci, Italian Jesuit leader (18th & last Superior General of the Society of Jesus), dies at 72
  • 1781 James Caldwell, American revolutionary (b. 1734)
  • 1793 Clément Charles François de Laverdy, French statesman (b. 1723)
  • 1801 Franz Moritz Graf von Lacy, Austrian field marshal, served under empress Maria Theresa, dies at 76
  • 1801 Philip Hamilton, American poet and son of Alexander Hamilton and Elizabeth Schuyler, shot in a duel with George Eacker at 19

Mohawk military and political leader who led Mohawk and colonial loyalists during the American Revolutionary War (Brant’s Volunteers), dies at 64 [exact birthday uncertain, most sources cite March of 1743] [1]

  • 1822 Karl Jacob Wagner, German composer, dies at 50
  • 1827 Herman Warner Muntinghe, Dutch lawyer, jurist (Cheif of Supreme Court of Dutch East Indies, 1908-19), and colonial director, dies at 54
  • 1838 Karl Ludwig Hellwig, German composer, dies at 65
  • 1840 Cornelis Rudolph Theodorus Krayenhoff, Dutch hydraulic engineer (began Defense Line of Amsterdam), cartographer and soldier, dies at 82
  • 1842 Pehr Frigel, Swedish composer, dies at 92
  • 1857 Henry Havelock, British soldier (War in Afghanistan 1838-39), dies at 62
  • 1863 Claudius Charles Wilson, American Brigadier General (Confederate Army), dies of fever at camp in Ringgold, Georgia at 32
  • 1866 Paul Gavarni, French caricaturist known for “The Deceit of Women”, dies at 62
  • 1870 Comte de Lautréamont, French writer (Les Chants de Maldoror), dies at 24
  • 1880 Napoléon Henri Reber, French composer (Le Diable amoureux; Le Nuit de Noël), and educator (Conservatoire de Paris), dies at 73
  • 1890 August Belmont, Prussian-American financier and diplomat (U.S. Minister to the Netherlands 1853-57), dies at 76
  • 1891 Robert Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Earl of Lytton, English statesman and Viceroy of India (1876-1880), dies at 60
  • 1898 Bartel Wilton, Dutch ship builder, dies at 70
  • 1899 Abdullah ibn Mohammed al-Ta’a’ishi, mahdi of Sudan (1883-99), dies
  • 1901 Heinrich Urban, German violinist, composer, and teacher of Wanda Landowska and Ignace Jan Paderewski, dies at 64
  • 1903 Charles Dupee Blake, American composer, dies at 56
  • 1914 Louis de Raet, Belgian economist and founder of the Flemish People Party, dies at 44
  • 1916 Hiram Maxim, American-British inventor (Maxim gun, 1st automatic machine gun), dies at 76
  • 1916 John Francis Barnett, British composer, dies at 79
  • 1923 Michel de Klerk, Dutch architect (Amsterdam School), dies at 39
  • 1929 Francis E. Warren, American politician (1st Governor of Wyoming, 1890; US Senator from Wyoming, 1890-93 & 1895-1929), and US Civil War veteran (Union), dies at 85

French Radical-Socialist Party politician (Prime Minister of France, 1906-09, 1917-20) who defended French Army officer Alfred Dreyfus, dies at 88

  • 1940 James Craig, 1st Viscount Craigavon, Irish unionist politician and the first Prime Minister of Northern Ireland (1921-1940), dies of natural causes at 69
  • 1940 Saionji Kinmochi, Japanese politician (Prime Minister of Japan 1906-1908, 1911-1912), dies at 90
  • 1943 Doris Miller, American US Navy cook and Pearl Harbor hero (Navy Cross), killed in action in Battle of the Gilbert Islands at 24 [1]
  • 1943 Martin Raschke, German author and publisher dies at 38
  • 1943 Reina Prinsen Geerligs, Dutch aspiring poet who became an anti-fascist resistance fighter, murdered in Sachsenhausen concentration camp at 22
  • 1944 EMHCH Houtappel, resistance fighter: in Neuengamme, dies
  • 1944 Václav Štěpán, Czech pianist and composer, dies at 54
  • 1946 Alfonso Broqua, Uruguayan composer, dies at 70
  • 1946 László Moholy-Nagy, Hungarian painter, photographer, and sculptor, dies of leukemia at 51
  • 1948 Raoul Armand Georg Koczalski, composer, dies at 64
  • 1953 George Alexander Russell, American organist, composer and the first Frick Professor of Music for Princeton University, dies at 73
  • 1953 Robert Lightfoot, English Anglican theologist and exegetist (St John’s Gospel), dies at 70
  • 1956 Guido Cantelli, Italian conductor, dies in a plane crash at Orly Airport, Paris at 36

Mexican painter (En el Arsenal) and husband of Frida Kahlo, dies at 70

  • 1958 Robert Cecil, 1st Viscount Cecil of Chelwood, British lawyer and politician who helps form League of Nations (Nobel 1937), dies at 94
  • 1959 Dally Messenger, Australian rugby league centre (9 Tests; NSW; Eastern Suburbs; ARL ‘Immortal’; Dally M Medal) and rugby union utility (2 caps), dies from heart failure at 76
  • 1959 Lyman Bryson, American educator (UN Casebook), dies at 71
  • 1959 Yuri Nikolayevich Libedinski, Ukrainen writer (Commissioners), dies at 60
  • 1960 Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia (b. 1882)
  • 1960 Salomon “Sam” de Wolff, Dutch zionist and socialist theorist, dies at 82
  • 1961 Ruth Chatterton, actress (Female, Dodsworth), dies after illness at 67
  • 1962 James J Kilroy, American army tank inspector (Kilroy was here), dies at 60

American marine veteran who assassinated President John F. Kennedy, shot dead two days after he killed JFK by nightclub owner Jack Ruby live on TV at 24

  • 1964 (Edwin) “Buster” Pickens. American blues pianist (Texas Alexander; Lightnin’ Hopkins), shot dead by his cousin during a barroom argument at 48
  • 1965 Abdullah III Al-Salim Al-Sabah, Emir of Kuwait (b. 1895)
  • 1967 Arnold J d’ailly, mayor of Amsterdam (1946-56), dies at 65
  • 1967 Louis Fratto, American gangster (b. 1908)
  • 1970 Evgeni Tikotsky, Polish-Belorussian composer, dies at 76
  • 1972 Alexander Smallens, Russian-born American conductor, dies at 83
  • 1972 Hall Overton, American jazz pianist, and jazz and classical composer (Enchanted Pear Tree), dies from cirrhosis of the liver at 52
  • 1973 John Neihardt, American writer (b. 1881)
  • 1980 George Raft, American actor (Scarface, Johnny Angel, Mr Ace), dies at 79
  • 1980 Herbert Agar, American journalist and historian (Pulitzer Prize, 1934 – The People’s Choice), dies at 83
  • 1984 Godfrey Ridout, Canadian composer, dies at 66
  • 1985 “Big” Joe Turner, American blues and R&B singer (“Shake, Rattle and Roll”), dies of heart failure at 74
  • 1985 Cees Buddingh’, Dutch poet/writer/interpreter/translator, dies at 67
  • 1985 Maurice Podoloff, American attorney, professional sports administrator (AHL President, 1936-52; NBA President, 1946-63), and namesake of NBA regular season MVP Award, dies at 95
  • 1987 Jehane Benoît, French Canadian culinary author (b. 1904)
  • 1988 Irmgard Seefried, German soprano, dies at 69
  • 1989 Guus Weitzel, Dutch radio personality and actor, dies at 85
  • 1990 Bülent Arel, Turkish-American contemporary classical and electronic music composer (Stereo Electronic Music No.1), educator (Yale, 1961-70; SUNY Purchase, 1971-89), and visual artist, dies of multiple myeloma at 72

English novelist and playwright (101 Dalmatians), dies at 94

  • 1990 Fred Shero, Canadian Hockey HOF coach (Stanley Cup 1974, 75 Philadelphia Flyers; NY Rangers), dies at 65
  • 1990 Juan Manuel Bordeu, Argentine racing driver (b. 1934)
  • 1990 Marion Post Wolcott, American photographer during the Great Depression, dies at 80
  • 1990 Nistani Keiji, philosopher, dies in Kyoto Japan
  • 1991 Anton Furst, American production designer (Batman), dies at 47
  • 1991 Eric Carr [Paul Charles Caravello], American drummer (Kiss, 1980-91), dies of heart cancer at 41
  • 1992 Hans de Koster, Dutch Minister of Defense (1971-73), dies at 78
  • 1992 Henriette Puig-Roget, French pianist, organist (Oratory of the Louvre, 1935-79), and music educator (Conservatoire de Paris, 1957-79), dies at 82
  • 1992 Mary Smithuysen, Dutch dancer and actress (Bridge Too Far), dies at 85
  • 1992 Theo Edison, son of Thomas Edison, dies at 94
  • 1992 Xavier Darasse, French organist and composer, dies at 58
  • 1993 Albert Collins, American blues guitarist (Ice Pickin’; Don’t Lose Your Cool; Showdown!), dies of cancer at 61
  • 1993 Imad Aqal, Palestinian Hamas leader, dies at 24
  • 1993 Jan Schrauwen, Dutch sculptor, dies at 36
  • 1993 Madame Grès [Germaine Emilie Krebs], French haute couturier (Grès), dies at 89
  • 1993 Wu Yi Shen, mayor of Shen Yang China, dies in helicopter
  • 1994 Ivo Perilli, Italian screenplay/director (Ragazzo), dies at 92
  • 1994 Paul Brunelle, Canadian country music singer-songwriter, and guitarist (“Cruel Destiny”), dies of cancer at 71
  • 1995 Jeffrey Lynn [Ragnar Godfrey Lind], American actor (Four Daughters; The Roaring Twenties; BUtterfield 8), dies from natural causes at 86
  • 1995 Leslie Kenneth O’Brien, Lord O’Brien of Lothbury, English governor of the Bank of England (1966-73), dies at 87
  • 1995 Stuart Henry, Scottish disc jockey with Radio 1 and Top of the Pops, dies of MS at 53
  • 1995 Woytec Lowski [Woiciech Wiesidlowski], Polish dancer and ballet master, dies at 56
  • 1996 Edison Vasalievich Denisov, Russian avant-garde composer (Sun of the Incas), dies at 67
  • 1996 Michael O’Hehir, Irish sports commentator and journalist, dies at 76
  • 1996 Sorley MacLean, Scottish poet (Poems to Eimhir and Other Poems), dies at 85
  • 1998 John Alexander Hopps, Canadian scientist (co-developer of the first artificial pace-maker), dies at 79
  • 1999 (Roger) Hilary Minster, British character actor (‘Allo ‘Allo!), dies of cancer at 55
  • 2001 Melanie Thornton, American pop-dance singer (La Bouche – “Be My Lover”), dies in a plane crash near Zürich, Switzerland, at 34
  • 2001 Robert Helps, American pianist, prodigy, pedagogue, and composer, dies of cancer at 73
  • 2002 John Rawls, political philosopher (b. 1921)
  • 2003 Floquet de Neu, Ecuato Guinean albino gorilla (b. 1964)
  • 2003 Hugh Kenner, Canadian literary critic known for “The Pound Era”, dies at 80
  • 2003 Sir Anthony Hollis, British High Court Judge, Family Division (1982-97), dies at 76

American Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher (17 × MLB All-Star; World Series 1957; Cy Young Award 1957; 8 × NL wins leader; Boston/Milwaukee Braves), dies at 82

  • 2004 Arthur Hailey, English novelist (Hotel, Airport), dies at 84
  • 2004 Wong Jim, Hong Kong TV theme song and Canto-pop songwriter, and actor, dies of lung cancer at 64
  • 2005 Noriyuki ‘Pat’ Morita, American actor (Happy Days, Karate Kid), dies of kidney failure at 73
  • 2006 (Juhani) “Juice” Leskinen, Finnish rock singer-songwrirter (“Musta aurinko nousee – Black Sun Rises”; “Marilyn”), and poet, dies from multiple medical issues at 56
  • 2006 George W. S. Trow, American writer (b. 1943)
  • 2006 Phyllis Fraser [Helen Brown Nichols], American actress, journalist, and co-founder of Beginner Books, dies following a fall at 90
  • 2006 Robert McFerrin, Sr., American operatic baritone (Metropolitan Opera, 1955-58; singing voice for Sidney Poitier in film “Porgy and Bess”), dies at 85 [1]
  • 2006 Zdeněk Veselovský, Czech zoologist (b. 1938)
  • 2007 Antonio Lamer, French Canadian lawyer (Chief Justice of Canada 1990-2000), dies at 74
  • 2007 William A O’Neal, American politician (Governor of Connecticut (D), 1980-91), dies of emphysema at 77
  • 2008 Cecil H. Underwood, Governor of West Virginia (b. 1922)
  • 2008 Kenny MacLean, Scottish-Canadian musician (Platinum Blonde -“Crying Over You”), dies of heart failure at 51
  • 2008 Ryōhei Hirose, Japanese composer who incorporated both traditional and western instrumentation, dies at 78
  • 2009 Abe Pollin, owner of the Washington Wizards (b. 1923)
  • 2009 Chan Hung Lit, Hong Kong actor (b. 1943)
  • 2009 Hale Smith, American composer, dies at 84
  • 2009 Kan Ishii, Japanese composer (Marimo), dies at 88
  • 2009 Samak Sundaravej, 25th Prime Minister of Thailand (2008), dies at 74
  • 2010 Huang Hua, Chinese statesman (b. 1913)
  • 2011 Fjölnir Stefánsson, Icelandic composer, dies at 81
  • 2011 Tatyana Shchelkanova, Soviet long jumper (Olympic bronze 1964), dies at 74
  • 2012 Chris Stamp, British music producer, psychodrama therapist and manager (The Who; Jimi Hendrix), dies of cancer at 70
  • 2012 Héctor Camacho, Puerto Rican boxer (WBC super featherweight 1983-84, WBC lightweight 1985-87, WBO Jr. welterweight twice 1989-1992), dies from gunshot wounds at 50
  • 2015 Oļģerts Grāvītis, Latvian-Soviet composer, dies at 89
  • 2016 Florence Henderson, American stage and screen actress (The Brady Bunch – “Carol”), and singer, dies at 82
  • 2016 Pauline Oliveros, American composer (Sound Patterns), dies at 84
  • 2017 Carol Neblett, American soprano (New York City and Metropolitan Operas, 1969-83), dies at 71
  • 2017 Mitch Margo, American rocker (The Tokens – “The Lion Sleeps Tonight”), dies of natural causes at 70
  • 2018 Amanda Sequoyah Swimmer, American potter and preserver of Cherokee culture, dies at 97
  • 2018 David Defiagbon, Nigerian-Canadian boxer (Olympic silver 1996), dies at 48
  • 2018 Harold Farberman, American percussionist, conductor, and composer (Medea), dies at 89
  • 2018 Ricky Jay [Richard Potash], American magician and actor (Deceptive Practice: The Mysteries and Mentors of Ricky Jay), dies at 72
  • 2018 Sy Kattelson, American photographer of NY street life, dies at 95
  • 2019 Anne “Biddy” Macfarlane (née Griffiths), British solicitor and 1st female appointed as Master of the Court of Protection, dies at 89
  • 2019 Clive James, Australian television presenter, poet and critic, dies at 80
  • 2019 John Simon, American author, literary and theater critic (NY Times), dies at 94
  • 2019 Juan Antonio Orrego-Salas, Chilean composer, dies at 100
  • 2020 Christophe Dominici, French rugby union winger (65 caps; Stade Français), dies from suicide at 48
  • 2021 Frank Burrows, Scottish soccer defender (Swindon Town 297 games) and manager (Portsmouth, Cardiff, Swansea), dies at 77
  • 2021 Guillermo Echevarría, Mexican swimmer (1,500m WR 16:28.1 1968), dies at 73
  • 2021 Inez van Dullemen, Dutch author (Vroeger is dood), dies at 96
  • 2021 Lisa Brown, American actress (Guiding Light, As the World Turns), dies at 67
  • 2022 André Malherbe, Belgian motocross racer (FIM 500cc Motocross World Champion 1980, 81, 84), dies at 66
  • 2022 Börje Salming, Swedish Hockey HOF defenseman (first European born & trained player to appear in 1,000 career NHL games; Toronto Maple Leafs, Detroit Red Wings; NHL All Star First Team 1977), dies of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) at 71 [1]
  • 2022 Hans Magnus Enzensberger, German writer, poet (Tumult), translator, and librettist, dies at 93
  • 2022 Moisés Fuentes, Mexican boxer (WBO minimumweight title 2011-13; WBO interim junior flyweight title 2013-14), dies from a blood clot on the brain at 37
  • 2023 Herb Klein, American businessman, lawyer, and politician (US Representative from New Jersey, 1993-95), dies at 93
  • 2024 Barbara Taylor Bradford, British novelist (A Woman of Substance, Cavendon Hall), dies at 91
  • 2024 Colin Renfrew, English archeologist known for the Anatolian hypothesis and work on radiocarbon dating, dies at 87
  • 2024 Helen Gallagher, American Emmy and Tony Award-winning singer, dancer, and actress (No, No, Nanette; Ryan’s Hope – “Maeve”), dies at 98
  • 2024 Rico Carty, Dominican baseball outfielder (MLB All-Star & NL batting champion 1970 Atlanta Braves), dies at 85
  • 2024 Siegfried Thiele, German composer, and pedagogue (University of Music and Theatre Leipzig 1964-2004), dies at 90

November 24 Highlights

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Famous Birthdays on November 24


  • 1273 Alphonso, Earl of Chester, son of Edward I of England, born in Bayonne, Gascony (d. 1284)
  • 1394 Charles, Duke of Orléans, French poet and noble who spent 25 years as a prisoner of war, born in Paris (d. 1465)
  • 1427 John Stafford, 1st Earl of Wiltshire, English nobleman who fought for the Yorkists, born in England (d. 1473)
  • 1583 Juan de Jáuregui, Spanish poet, scholar and painter of the Spanish Golden Age, born in Seville, Andalusia, Spain (d. 1641)
  • 1615 Philipp Wilhelm, German Elector of Palatine, born in Giessen (d. 1690)
  • 1630 Etienne Baluze, French scholar and historian, born in Tulle, France (d. 1718)
  • 1632 Baruch Spinoza, Dutch rationalist philosopher, born in Amsterdam, Dutch Republic (d. 1677)
  • 1642 Anne Hilarion de Cotentin, French naval commander and national hero under Louis XIV, Marshal of France, born in Paris, France (d. 1701)
  • 1655 Charles XI, King of Sweden (1660-97), born in Tre Kronor, Sweden (d. 1697)
  • 1690 Charles Theodore Pachelbel, German-American composer (son of Johann Pachelbel), one of the first European composers to emigrate to America, born in Stuttgart, Duchy of Württemberg, Holy Roman Empire (d. 1750)
  • 1712 Willem Albert Bachiene, Dutch clergyman, geographer, astronomer, and cartographer (Heilige Geographie / Holy Geography), born in Leerdam, Dutch Republic (d. 1783) [1]

Spanish missionary priest who founded the 1st missions in California, born in Petra, Majorca

  • 1713 Laurence Sterne, Anglo-Irish novelist and satirist (Tristram Shandy), born in Clonmel, Ireland (d. 1768)
  • 1724 Maria Amalia of Saxony, Queen consort of Spain (1759-60) and Naples and Italy (1738-59) as wife of Charles III, born at Dresden Castle, Dresden (d. 1760)
  • 1729 Alexander Suvorov, Russian general during the Russo-Turkish War and French Revolutionary Wars, born in Moscow (d. 1800)
  • 1740 John Bacon, English sculptor – most successful public sculptor of his time, born in London, England (d. 1799)
  • 1745 Maria Louisa of Spain, Empress consort of the Holy Roman Empire, born in Palace of San Ildefonso, Segovia, Spain (d. 1792)
  • 1747 Felice Alessandri, Italian organist, harpsichordist, pianist, and opera composer, born in Rome, Papal States (d. 1798)
  • 1766 Friedrich Weinbrenner, German architect, born in Karlsruhe (d. 1826)
  • 1773 Shadrach Bond, American politician (1st Governor of Illinois, 1818 to 1822), born in Frederick, Maryland (d. 1832)
  • 1774 Thomas Dick, Scottish scientific teacher and writer, born in Dundee, Scotland (d. 1857)
  • 1784 Johann Ludwig Burckhardt, Swiss traveller and orientalist, 1st European to discover Petra and Abu Simbel, born in Lausanne, Switzerland (d. 1817)

12th US President (1849-50) and major general in the Mexican–American War, born in Barboursville, Virginia

  • 1795 Josif Josifovich Genishta, Russian pianist, composer, and conductor, born in Moscow, Russia (d. 1853)
  • 1801 Ludwig Bechstein, German poet who collected folk fairy tales, born in Weimar (d. 1860)
  • 1806 Omar Pasha [Mihajlo Latas], Serbian-Ottoman field marshal (Crimean War) and Governor (Bosnia, Iraq), born in Janja Gora, Military Frontier, Austrian Empire (d. 1871)
  • 1806 William Webb Ellis, English clergyman and inventor of rugby football who according to legend picked up the ball and ran with it while a student at Rugby School, born in Salford, Lancashire, England (d. 1872)
  • 1811 Ditler Monrad, Danish politician and bishop (Council President of Denmark 1863-65), born in Copenhagen, Denmark (d. 1887)
  • 1811 Ulrich Ochsenbein, Swiss Federal Councillor and soldier, born in Thun, Switzerland (d. 1890)
  • 1815 Grace Darling, English lighthouse keeper’s daughter and heroine who saved shipwreck survivors, born in Bamburgh, England (d. 1842)
  • 1815 James Trapier, American soldier during American-Mexican War and general for the Confederate Army, born in Georgetown, South Carolina (d. 1865)
  • 1817 Juan de la Cruz Ignacio Moreno y Maisonave, Guatemalan-Spanish Cardinal (Archbishop of Toledo, first Cardinal born in America and of Creole parents), born in Guatemala (d. 1884)
  • 1824 Charles Verlat, Flemish painter, born in Antwerp, Belgium (d. 1890)

Italian author (The Adventures of Pinocchio), born in Florence, Grand Duchy of Tuscany (now Italy)

  • 1829 William Passmore Carlin, American Brevet Major General (Union Army), born in Greene County, Illinois (d. 1903)
  • 1833 Antoine Labelle, Quebec catholic priest, helped resettle French Canadians in northern Canada, born in Sainte-Rose, Lower Canada, (d. 1891)
  • 1848 Lilli Lehmann, German opera singer (Tristan und Isolde), born in Würzburg, Kingdom of Bavaria (d. 1929)

British-American playwright and children’s author (“The Secret Garden”; “Little Lord Fauntleroy”), born in Manchester

  • 1859 Cass Gilbert, American architect who designed US Supreme Court and the Woolworth Building, born in Zanesville, Ohio (d. 1934)
  • 1861 João da Cruz, Brazilian poet, born in Florianópolis, Santa Catarina, Brazil (d. 1898)
  • 1864 Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, French painter and printmaker (At the Moulin Rouge), born in Albi, France (d. 1901)
  • 1866 Edwin Binney, American inventor and businessman (carbon black, 1st dustless white chalk, Crayola crayon), born in Shrub Oak, New York (d. 1934) [1]

American ragtime entertainer and composer (“Maple Leaf Rag”; “The Entertainer”), born in Texarkana, Texas

  • 1869 António Óscar Carmona, 97th Prime Minister of Portugal and 11th President of Portugal, born in Lisbon (d. 1951)
  • 1873 Herbert Roper Barrett, British tennis player (Wimbledon doubles 1909, 12, 13; Wimbledon singles 1908, 11 runner-up; Olympic gold indoor doubles 1908), born in London, England (d. 1943)
  • 1873 L. Martov [Yuly Osipovich Tsederbaum], Russian revolutionary (leader of the Mensheviks), born in Constantinople, Ottoman Empire (d. 1923)
  • 1874 Charles William Miller, Brazilian sportsman (founder São Paulo Athletic Club; father of soccer & rugby union in Brazil), born in São Paulo, Brazil (d. 1953)
  • 1876 Walter Burley Griffin, American architect (L-shaped floor plan, Carport) who designed Australia’s capital Canberra and the NSW towns of Griffith and Leeton, born in Maywood, Illinois (d. 1937)
  • 1877 Alben W. Barkley, American politician (US Representative, Senator and 35th Vice Pres-D-1949-53), born in Graves County, Kentucky (d. 1956)
  • 1877 Kavasji Jamshedji Petigara, Indian CID Commissioner of Police, born in Surat, British Raj (d. 1941)
  • 1881 Al Christie, Canadian-born pioneering film director and producer (Nestor Film Company), born in London, Ontario (d. 1951)
  • 1884 Itzhak Ben-Zvi, longest-serving President of Israel (1952-63), born in Poltava, Russian Empire (d. 1963)
  • 1884 Michel de Klerk, Dutch architect (Amsterdam School), born in Amsterdam, Netherlands (d. 1823)
  • 1886 Georges Vandertongerloo, Belgium sculptor and painter (De Stijl Group, L’art et Son Avenir), born in Antwerp, Belgium (d. 1965)
  • 1886 Margaret C. Anderson, American publisher, editor and founder of art and literary magazine ‘The Little Review’, born in Indianapolis, Indiana (d. 1973)
  • 1887 Erich von Manstein, German Nazi-military commander convicted of war crimes, born in Berlin, German Empire (d. 1973)
  • 1888 Cathleen Nesbitt, British actress (The Farmer’s Daughter), born in Belfast, Ireland (d. 1982)
  • 1888 Dale Carnegie, American writer and public speaker (How to Win Friends & Influence People), born in Maryville, Missouri (d. 1955)
  • 1888 Dr. Fredrick Arthur Willius, American cardiologist and medical historian, born in Saint Paul, Minnesota (d. 1972)
  • 1888 Rudolf Klein-Rogge, German actor and prototype for silent films master criminal (Metropolis, Spies), born in Cologne, Germany (d. 1955)
  • 1889 Cissy van Marxfield [Setske Beek-de Haan], Dutch author of children’s books, born in Oranjewoud, Netherlands (d. 1948)
  • 1892 Isidor Achron, American composer, born in Warsaw, Poland (d. 1948)
  • 1893 Charles F. Hurley, American 54th Governor of Massachusetts and one of its first Irish-American governors, born in Boston, Massachusetts (d. 1946)
  • 1893 Fern Andra [Vernal Edna Andrews], German-American actress (Eyes of the World), born in Watseka, Illinois (d. 1974)
  • 1894 Herbert Sutcliffe, English cricketer (all-time great opening batsman for England), born in Summerbridge, England (d. 1978)

Italian-American gangster of the New York mafia, born in Sicily, Italy

  • 1898 Paul Faucher, French author and pioneering children’s publisher (Père Castor), born in Pougues-les-Eaux, France (d. 1967)
  • 1899 Jan Maklakiewicz, Polish composer, chiefly of choral music (Kołysanka – Lullaby; Ave Maria), conductor, and educator, born in Chojnata, Poland (d. 1954)
  • 1899 Ward Morehouse, American theater critic and newspaper columnist, born in Savannah, Georgia (d. 1966)
  • 1900 Cornelius Kee, Dutch organist and composer, born in Zaandam, Netherlands (d. 1997)
  • 1900 Jerzy Bonawentura Toeplitz, Ukrainian-Polish filmmaker and film educator (Polish Film School), born in Kharkov, Ukraine (d. 1995)
  • 1901 Andre Victor Tchelistcheff “the dean of American winemaking”, Russian-born American winemaker (Beaulieu wines, Napa Valley), born in Moscow, Russian Empire (d. 1994) [1]
  • 1905 [Irene] Ireene Wicker, American singer and actress (Singing Lady), born in Quincy, Illinois (d. 1987)
  • 1906 Andreina Pagnani, Italian actress (Il Commandante), born in Rome, Italy (d. 1981)
  • 1906 Eduard Ludwig, German architect (Air Bridge monument Berlin), born in Mühlhausen, Germany (d. 1960)
  • 1908 Harry Kemelman, American detective author (rabbi-omnibus), born in Boston, Massachusetts (d. 1996)
  • 1908 Libertad Lamarque, Agentinan actress (Madreselva, Puerta Cerrada), born in Rosario, Santa Fe, Argentina (d. 2000)
  • 1908 Ray Carter, American orchestra leader (Arthur Murray Dance Party), born in Chicago, Illinois (d. 1982)
  • 1909 Hans Melchior Brugk, German composer, born in Munich, Germany (d. 1999)
  • 1909 Hotze de Roos, Dutch children’s book author (Chameleon), born in Friesland, Netherlands (d. 1991)
  • 1911 Joe Medwick, American Baseball HOF left fielder (World Series 1934, Triple Crown & NL MVP 1937 St. Louis Cardinals; 10 x MLB All Star), born in Carteret, New Jersey (d. 1975)
  • 1911 Kirby Grant, American actor (Rustlers Round-Up, Yukon Gold, Sky King), born in Butte, Montana (d. 1985)
  • 1911 Walter Goetz, German-British illustrator, cartoonist and painter (Colonel Up and Mr. Down), born in Cologne, Germany (d. 1995)
  • 1912 Bernard Delfgaauw, Dutch philosopher (Johnson murderer!), born in Amsterdam (d. 1993)
  • 1912 Garson Kanin, American playwright, director, and producer (Double Life; Born Yesterday), born in Rochester, New York (d. 1993)
  • 1912 Geraldine Fitzgerald, Irish actress (Pawnbroker, Easy Money), born in Greystones, County Wicklow, Ireland (d. 2005)
  • 1912 Joan Sanderson, English actress (Please Sir!), born in Bristol, England (d. 1992)
  • 1912 Teddy Wilson, American jazz pianist and arranger (Billie Holiday; Benny Goodman), born in Austin, Texas (d. 1986) [1]
  • 1913 Gisela Mauermeyer, German discus thrower (Olympic gold 1936), born in Munich, Germany (d. 1995)
  • 1913 Howard Duff, American actor (Flamingo Road, Knots Landing), born in Bremerton, Washington (d. 1990)
  • 1914 Elise Hoomans, Dutch director and actress (Jane Eyre, Barocco), born in Haarlem, Noord-Holland, Netherlands (d. 1991)
  • 1916 Forrest J. Ackerman, American literary agent and writer who invented the term “sci-fi” (Famous Monsters of Filmland), born in Los Angeles, California (d. 208)
  • 1917 Richard Hervig, American classical composer (Woman with a Torch; Epitaph), and teacher, born in Story City, Iowa (d. 2010)
  • 1917 Rita Corita [Hendrika Sturm], Dutch pop singer (“Koffie, koffie, lekker bakkie koffie – Coffee, coffee, nice cup of coffee”), born in Amsterdam, Netherlands (d. 1998)
  • 1918 “Wild” Bill Davis, American jazz pianist, arranger, and electronic organ pioneer (Louis Jordan’s Tympani Five), born in Glasgow, Missouri (d. 1995)
  • 1918 Captain Stubby [Tom Fouts], American author and comedian (Captain Stubby and the Buccaneers), born in Carroll County, Indiana (d. 2004)
  • 1918 Roley Jenkins, English cricket spin bowler (9 Tests, 32 wickets), born in Worcester, England (d. 1995)
  • 1919 David Kossoff, British actor and anti-drug campaigner (The Young Lovers, The Larkins), born in Hackney, London, England (d. 2005)
  • 1919 John Silverlight, British author (The Victors’ Dilemma), and journalist (The Observer, 1959-85), born in England (d. 1995) [1] [2]
  • 1920 Anthony Griffin, British Royal Navy admiral (Controller of the Navy, 1971–75; chairman of British Shipbuilders 1977–80), born in Peshawar, British India (d. 1996)
  • 1921 John Lindsay, American politician (Mayor of New York 1966-73, Rep-D-NY 1959-65), born in New York City (d. 2000)
  • 1922 Stanford Robert Ovshinsky, American inventor and scientist (nickel-metal hydride battery), born in Akron, Ohio (d. 2012)
  • 1924 Eileen Barton, American singer (Broadway Open House; “If I Knew You Were Comin’ I’d’ve Baked a Cake”), born in Brooklyn, New York City (d. 2006)
  • 1925 Alun Owen, Welsh playwright and screenwriter (The Rise Affair, A Hard Day’s Night), born in Liverpool, England (d. 1994)
  • 1925 Simon van der Meer, Dutch physicist who won the 1984 Nobel Prize in Physics with Carlo Rubbia, born in The Hague, Netherlands (d. 2011)
  • 1925 William F. Buckley Jr, American conservative author and commentator (National Review, Firing Line), born in New York City (d. 2008)
  • 1926 Tsung-Dao Lee, Chinese-American physicist (Nobel Prize – 1957, for work on parity laws), born in Shanghai, China (d. 2024) [1]
  • 1927 Agustín Edwards, Chilean media tycoon (El Mercurio), born in Paris (d. 2017)
  • 1927 Ahmadou Kourouma, Ivorian writer, born in 1927, Boundiali, Côte d’Ivoire (d. 2003)
  • 1927 Alfredo Kraus, Spanish bel canto tenor (Massenet – “Werther”; La Scala; New York Metroplolitan Opera, 1966-94), born in Las Palmas, Canary Islands (d. 1999)
  • 1927 Emma Lou Diemer, American classical composer (Songs for the Earth; Fantasy for Carillon), and educator (University of California. 1971-91), born in Kansas City, Missouri (d. 2024) [1]
  • 1930 Bob Friend, American baseball pitcher (4 x MLB All Star; World Series 1960 Pittsburgh Pirates; MLB wins leader 1958), born in Lafayette, Indiana (d. 2019)
  • 1930 Ken Barrington, English cricket batsman (82 Tests, 20 x 100, HS 256, batting average 58.67; Surrey CCC), born in Reading, England (d. 1981)
  • 1930 Yale Lary, American NFL safety Hall of Famer (Detroit Lions), born in Fort Worth, Texas (d. 2017)
  • 1932 Bill Squires, American track & field coach (Greater Boston Track Club: Bill Rodgers, Alberto Salazar, Dick Beardsley, Greg Meyer; Boston State College 1965-78), born in Arlington, Massachusetts (d. 2022)
  • 1932 Fred Titmus, English cricket all-rounder (53 Tests, 153 wickets, 10 x 50s; Middlesex), born in London, England (d. 2011)
  • 1933 René Enriquez, Nicaraguan-American actor (Hill Street Blues – “Ray Calletano”), born in Granada, Nicaragua (d. 1990)
  • 1934 Alfred Schnittke, Russian composer (St Florian; Life With An Idiot), born in Engels, Volga-German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (d. 1998)
  • 1934 Claudio Prieto, Spanish composer (Solo a Solo; Cantata manriqueña), born in Muñeca de la Peña, Spain (d. 2015)
  • 1934 Martin Charnin, American Broadway stage singer, dancer (West Side Story), director, and lyricist (Annie), born in New York City (d. 2019)
  • 1935 Khalifa bin Salman Al Khalifa, Bahraini royal and politician, world’s longest serving Prime Minister of Bahrain (1970-2020), born in Bahrain (d. 2020)
  • 1935 Ron Dellums, American politician (D-House representative from California, 1971-1998), born in Oakland, California (d. 2018)
  • 1936 Frank Caprio, American municipal judge and social media personality (Caught in Providence), born in Providence, Rhode Island (d. 2025) [1]
  • 1936 Ken Kragen, American television producer (The Smothers Brothers), music artist manager (Lionel Richie; Kenny Rogers), and charity organizer (USA for Africa – “We Are The World”), born in
    Alameda County, California (d. 2021)
  • 1937 Brian Kan, Chinese thoroughbred horse trainer (5 x Hong Kong champion trainer; 5 x HK Derby winners), born in Sheung Shui, Hong Kong (d. 2022)
  • 1937 Jeremy Taylor, British teacher, folk singer, songwriter (“Ag Pleez Deddy”; “Piece of Ground”), born in Newbury, England
  • 1938 Charles Starkweather, American spree killer (11 victims), born in Lincoln, Nebraska (d. 1959)
  • 1938 David Newell, American (Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood – “Mr. McFeely”), born in O’Hara Township, Pennsylvania

1938 American NBA guard (Cincinnati, Milwaukee, Olympic gold 1960), born in Charlotte, Tennessee

  • 1938 Spencer Johnson, American author (Who Moved My Cheese?), born in Watertown, South Dakota (d. 2017)
  • 1938 Willy Claes, Belgian socialist politician and Secretary General of NATO (1994-95), born in Hasselt, Belgium [1] [2]
  • 1939 Jim Yester, American rock vocalist and guitarist (The Association – “Cherish”; “Windy”; “Time For Living”), born in Birmingham, Alabama
  • 1939 Yoshinobu Miyake, Japanese weightlifter (Olympic gold Featherweight 1964, 68; World C’ship gold x 6), born in Murata, Japan
  • 1940 Arthur Tress, American surrealist photographer, born in Brooklyn, New York
  • 1940 Eric Wilson, Canadian children’s author, born in Ottawa, Ontario
  • 1940 Paul Tagliabue, American lawyer and Pro Football HOF executive (NFL commissioner 1989-2006), born in Jersey City, New Jersey (d. 2025)
  • 1940 Wendell Morris Logan, American composer (Oberlin Conservatory of Music), born in Thomson, Georgia (d. 2010)
  • 1941 Donald “Duck” Dunn, American session bassist (Stax; Booker & The MG’s; The Blues Brothers), born in Memphis, Tennessee (d. 2012)
  • 1941 Gary Boyle, British rock and jazz-fusion guitarist (The Echoes; Isotope), born in Patna, British India
  • 1941 John de Andrea, American sculptor, born in Denver, Colorado

1941 British rock drummer (The Beatles, 1960-62), born in Madras, British India

  • 1941 Wayne Lamar Jackson, American soul and R&B trumpeter (Mar-Keys, The Memphis Horns), born in West Memphis, Arkansas (d. 2016)
  • 1942 Bayani Mendoza de Leon, Filipino-American musician and composer (Batong-Buhay), born in Manilla, Philippines (d. 2013)
  • 1942 Billy Connolly, Scottish comedian and actor (Blue Money), born in Anderston, Glasgow, Scotland
  • 1942 Chinary Ung, Cambodian-American composer and music educator, born in Krong Doun Kaev, Cambodia
  • 1942 Marlin Fitzwater, American journalist and press secretary to US Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush, born in Salina, Kansas
  • 1943 Barry Milburn, New Zealand cricket wicket-keeper (3 Tests, 8 dismissals; Otago CA), born in Dunedin, New Zealand
  • 1943 Dave Bing, American Basketball Hall of Fame point guard (7-time NBA All Star), born in Washington, D.C.
  • 1943 Joël Robert, Belgian motocross racer (Motocross World C’ships 250cc 1964, 68–72), born in Grandrieu, Belgium (d. 2021)
  • 1943 Richard Tee [Ten Ryk], American jazz and session pianist and arranger (Paul Simon – “Slip’ Slidin’ Away”; Peter Gabriel – “In Your Eyes”; Grover Washington, Jr – “Just The Two Of Us”), born in Brooklyn, New York (d. 1993)
  • 1943 Robin Williamson, Scottish folk-rock singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and storyteller (Incredible String Band), born in Edinburgh, Scotland
  • 1944 Candy Darling [James Slattery], American transgender actress (Flesh; Women in Revolt), born in Queens, New York City (d. 1974)
  • 1944 Claudia Dreifus, American interviewer and author (7 Stories), born in New York City
  • 1944 Dan Glickman, American politician (US Sec of Agriculture 1995-2001, Rep-D-KS, 1977-95), born in Wichita, Kansas
  • 1944 Ibrahim Gambari, Nigerian scholar, diplomat and Chief of Staff to the President of Nigeria (2020-23), born in Ilorin, British Nigeria
  • 1944 Jules Deelder, Dutch poet (T of Vondel), born in Rottterdam, Netherlands (d. 2019)
  • 1945 Lee Michaels [Olsen], American rock Hammond B-3 organist and singer (“Do You Know What I Mean”), and restaurateur (Killer Shrimp), born in Los Angeles, California
  • 1946 Jane Stanton Hitchcock, American heiress and crime novelist (Trick of the Eye, Bluff), born in Manhattan, New York (d. 2025) [1]
  • 1946 Jimmy Collins, American basketball shooting guard (Chicago Bulls) and coach (University of Illinois, Chicago 1996-2010), born in Syracuse, New York (d. 2020)
  • 1946 Penny Halsall [Penelope Jones], British romance novelist under pen names of Caroline Courtney, Melinda Wright, Lydia Hitchcock, Penny Jordan, and Annie Groves, born in Preston, Lancashire, England (d. 2011)
  • 1946 Roberto Chale, Peruvian soccer midfielder (48 caps; Universitario), born in Lima, Peru (d. 2024)

American serial killer of up to 100 women during the 1970s, born in Burlington, Vermont

  • 1946 Tony Clarkin, British rock guitarist and songwriter (Magnum -“Soldier on the Line”), born in Birmingham, England (d. 2024)
  • 1947 Dave Sinclair, British progressive rock keyboard player (Caravan – In the Land of Grey and Pink), born in Herne Bay, Kent, England
  • 1947 Dwight Schultz, American actor (A-Team – “Murdock”; Star Trek: The Next Generation – “Barclay”), born in Baltimore, Maryland
  • 1948 Rudy Tomjanovich, American NBA power forward (San Diego/Houston Rockets; 5x All-Star, No. 45 retired by Rockets) and coach (Houston Rockets; 2x championship, All-Star), born in Hamtramck, Michigan
  • 1948 Spider Robinson, American-Canadian sci-fi author (3 Hugo, Callahan’s Secret), born in New York City
  • 1948 Steve Yeager, American baseball catcher (World Series MVP 1981 LA Dodgers), born in Huntington, West Virginia
  • 1949 Anita Louis, American R&B singer (The Soul Children – “I’ll Be the Other Woman”), born in Memphis, Tennessee
  • 1949 Jim Warren, American artist whose work includes album cover art for Bob Seger and Prince, born in Long Beach, California
  • 1949 Linda Tripp, American civil servant who secretly recorded Monica Lewinsky’s phone calls about President Bill Clinton, born in Jersey City, New Jersey (d. 2020)
  • 1950 Bob Burns, American rock drummer (Lynyrd Skynyrd, 1964-74), born in Jacksonville, Florida (d. 2015)
  • 1950 Damon Evans, American actor (The Jeffersons), born in Baltimore, Maryland
  • 1950 Stanley Livingston, American actor (My Three Sons – “Chip”), born in Los Angeles, California
  • 1951 Chet Edwards, American politician (Rep-D-Texas 1991-2011), born in Corpus Christi, Texas
  • 1951 Graham Price, British rugby union prop (41 Tests Wales, 12 British & Irish Lions; Pontypool RFC, Barbarians RFC), born in Moascar, Egypt
  • 1952 Brijesh Patel, Indian cricket batsman (21 Tests, 1 x 100; Karnataka, Wellington CA), born in Baroda, India
  • 1952 Norbert Haug, German motorsport executive (Vice President Mercedes-Benz Motorsport 1990-2012), born in Engelsbrand, Germany
  • 1953 Tod Machover, American classical and electro-acoustic composer, conductor, and educator (MIT), born in Mount Vernon, NY
  • 1954 Clem Burke [Clement Bozewski], American rock drummer (Blondie – “Heart Of Glass”; The Romantics, 1990-2004), born in Bayonne, New Jersey (d. 2025)
  • 1954 Elvis Ramone [Clement Bozewski], American drummer (The Ramones, August 1987), born in Bayonne, New Jersey (d. 2025)
  • 1954 Emir Kusturica, Serbian-French filmmaker (When Father Was Away on Business; Black Cat, White Cat), and punk rock bassist (No Smoking), born in Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina

1955 England cricket captain, all-rounder (102 Tests, 5,200 runs, 383 wickets), born in Heswall, England

  • 1955 Jerry Holland, Irish rugby union lock (3 Tests; Munster RUFC) and coach (Munster RUFC 1994-97), born in Cork, Ireland (d. 2022)
  • 1955 Scott Hoch, American golfer (US Masters 1989 runner-up, Ryder Cup 1997, 2002), born in Raleigh, North Carolina
  • 1957 Chris Hayes, American rock guitarist (Huey Lewis & The News, 1980-2001 – “I Want A New Drug”), born in Sacramento, California
  • 1957 Denise Crosby, American actress and model (Tasha Yar in “Star Trek: The Next Generation”), daughter of Dennis Crosby, born in Hollywood, California
  • 1958 Alain Chabat, French actor and filmmaker (French Twist, Six Days Six Night), born in Oran, French Algeria
  • 1958 Carmel [McCourt], British rock and soul-jazz singer (Storm, More More More), born in Wrawby, England
  • 1958 Roy Aitken, Scottish soccer defender (57 caps; Celtic FC 484 games, Newcastle United, St Mirren, Aberdeen), born in Irvine, Scotland
  • 1959 Alejandro Mayorkas, American lawyer, Secretary of Homeland Security (2021-), born in Havana, Cuba
  • 1960 Edgar Meyer, American classical, jazz, and bluegrass bassist, and composer, born in Oak Ridge, Tennessee
  • 1961 Arundhati Roy, Indian activist and writer (The God of Small Things), born in Shillong, Meghalaya
  • 1961 Carlos Carnero, Spanish Member of the European Parliament (1994-present), born in Madrid, Spain
  • 1961 Matt Hayes, British TV angler (Discovery Real Time), born in Smethwick, England
  • 1962 John Squire, British rock guitarist and songwriter (Stone Roses – “She Bangs the Drums”; The Seahorses), and painter, born in Altrincham, Cheshire, England
  • 1963 Lisa Howard, Canadian actress (Days of Our Lives, Rolling Vengeance), born in London, Ontario
  • 1964 Tony Rombola, American guitarist (Godsmack), born in Norwood, Massachusetts
  • 1965 Kim Roe-ha, South Korean actor (Memories of Murder), born in Gyeonggi Province, South Korea
  • 1965 Shirley Henderson, Scottish actress (Moaning Myrtle in Harry Potter films), born in Forres, Scotland

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Historical Events on November 24


380 Theodosius I makes his adventus, or first formal entry, into Constantinople

  • 496 Anastasius II succeeds Gelasius I as Catholic Pope
  • 642 Theodore I begins his reign as Catholic Pope, rules till 649
  • 1105 Rabbi Nathan ben Yehiel of Rome completes Talmudic dictionary

Battle of the Indus

1221 Battle of the Indus: Genghis Khan‘s Mongol force defeats Shah
Jalal ad-Din’s army, last battle in Mongolian conquest of Khwarezmian Empire

  • 1434 River Thames in London freezes over

Battle of Solway Moss

1542 Battle of Solway Moss: English beat Scottish King James V

  • 1587 Battle at Auneau: Henri de Guise wins
  • 1601 Earl Mauritius ceases siege of De Bosch due to strict monarchy
  • 1628 John Ford’s “Lover’s Melancholy” premieres in London

1639 English astronomers Jeremiah Horrocks and William Crabtree make the first recorded observations of a transit of Venus by accurately predicting its path using Johannes Kepler‘s methods [1]

Van Diemen’s Land

1642 Dutch explorer Abel Tasman is the first European to discover Van Diemen’s Land (Tasmania)

  • 1643 Battle of Tuttlingen: Beiers army under Gen Mercy beats France

Churchill Meets William of Orange

1688 England’s most influential general Lord John Churchill meets and pledges allegiance to William of Orange (later William III)

  • 1703 1st Lutheran pastor ordained in America, Justus Falckner at Philadelphia
  • 1715 London’s Thames River freezes over
  • 1744 John Carteret resigns as British Secretary of State for the Northern Department
  • 1775 Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia fapproves resolution barring blacks from army

Humbodt, Bonpland Depart Caracas

1800 Naturalists Alexander von Humboldt and Aimé Bonpland depart Caracas for Cuba to meet fellow botanist John Fraser, during their five-year expedition of Spanish America

  • 1800 Weber’s opera “Das Waldmadchen” premieres in Freiburg
  • 1832 South Carolina passes Ordinance of Nullification, declaring the tariffs of 1828 and 1832 unconstitutional in and unenforceable in South Carolina, precipitating the Nullification Crisis which presaged the American Civil War
  • 1835 Texas Rangers, mounted police force authorized by Texas Provisional Government

On the Origin of Species

1859 English naturalist Charles Darwin publishes “On the Origin of Species,” radically changing the view of evolution and laying the foundation for evolutionary biology

  • 1861 Liège-Visé-Maastricht railway opens
  • 1863 Battle of Chattanooga, Columbia & Lookout Mt begins in Tennessee
  • 1869 American Woman’s Suffrage Association forms (Cleveland)
  • 1874 American inventor Joseph Glidden patents barbed wire
  • 1877 English author Anna Sewell sells her manuscript “Black Beauty” to Norwich publisher for £40; the novel is published soon after
  • 1887 Victorien Sardou’s “La Tosca” premieres in Paris
  • 1896 1st US absentee voting law enacted by Vermont
  • 1897 Canadian Intercollegiate Rugby Football Union forms in Kingston
  • 1898 The International Conference of Rome for the Social Defense Against Anarchists opens.
  • 1903 Clyde Coleman of NYC patents automobile electric starter
  • 1903 George Ade’s “County Chairman” premieres in NYC
  • 1905 Moshav Hertzlia forms in Israel

Little Galleries of the Photo-Secession

1905 Photographer Alfred Stieglitz opens the Little Galleries of the Photo-Secession in Manhattan, New York

  • 1912 Conflict in the Balkans grows into an acute international crisis with major powers supporting either Austria or Serbia
  • 1914 Dutch Overseas Trustmaatschappij (NOT) forms
  • 1915 Serbian leader flees to Albania
  • 1916 Mexican and US representatives sign a protocol at Atlantic City, under which Pershing’s troops will withdraw and each nation’s army will guard the border. President Carranza of Mexico will refuse to accept it
  • 1917 Nine police officers and one civilian are killed when a bomb explodes at the Milwaukee, Wisconsin police headquarters building.
  • 1918 Béla Can forms Hungarian Communist Party
  • 1918 Newspaper cartoon “Gasoline Alley” first appears as a weekly feature on the Chicago Tribune’s Sunday Rectangle page
  • 1922 Italian parliament gives Benito Mussolini dictatorial powers “for 1 year”
  • 1923 Radio Belgium’s 1st transmission

Fokker F.VII

1924 1st Dutch airliner, Fokker F.VII lands in Batavia (Java) after flying from Amsterdam

  • 1924 General Feng Yu-Hsiang, a warlord from the north of China, turns on his allies and seizes Peking
  • 1925 1st radio-broadcast of Dutch KRO (Catholic Radio Broadcast)
  • 1925 Eugene O’Neill Theater (Coronet, Forrest) opens at 230 W 49th St NYC
  • 1926 KVI-AM in Seattle WA begins radio transmissions
  • 1926 Sri Aurobindo retires to lead life of seclusion, hands responsibility for followers to Mirra Alfassa (founding of Sri Aurobindo ashram)
  • 1930 Ruth Nichols sets the women’s transcontinental air flight record from Mineola, New York, to California in a Lockheed Vega
  • 1932 In Washington, D.C., the FBI Scientific Crime Detection Laboratory (better known as the FBI Crime Lab) officially opens.

Pulaski Skyway

1932 Newark-Jersey City Viaduct, a 3.5 mile long highway bridge-causeway over the Passaic and Hackensack rivers, and the New Jersey Meadowlands opens; later named the General Casimir Pulaski Skyway, in honor of the Polish military leader who fought in the US Revolutionary War [1]

  • 1934 SN Behrman’s “Rain from Heaven” premieres in NYC
  • 1935 The Senegalese Socialist Party holds its second congress.
  • 1936 German pacifist Carl von Ossietzky is awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for uncovering German re-armament

Tonight at 8:30

1936 Noël Coward‘s anthology “Tonight at 8:30” premieres in NYC, runs for 118 performances

  • 1938 Clifford Odets‘ play “Rocket to the Moon” premieres in NYC
  • 1938 National Semi-Pro Basketball Congress authorizes yellow basketball

1940 The Blitz: Luftwaffe bombs Bristol city centre, killing 200 people in the first German raid on the city

  • 1941 “Life Certificates” issued to some Jews of Vilna, the rest are exterminated
  • 1941 Indian infantry attacks German tanks at Sidi Omar
  • 1941 US troops land on Suriname to protect bauxite mine
  • 1942 French collaborator Marquis de Brinon establishes “African Falanx”
  • 1942 German Fieldmarshal Erich von Manstein arrives in Starobelsk, Ukraine
  • 1944 US bombers based on Saipan begin 1st attack on Tokyo
  • 1947 House of Representatives Committee on Un-American Activities finds “Hollywood Ten” in contempt for refusing to reveal whether they are communists
  • 1948 “Bicycle Thieves”, Italian film directed by Vittorio De Sica, starring himself and Cesare Zavattini, is released (Honorary Academy Award 1950)
  • 1948 WAVE TV channel 3 in Louisville, Kentucky (NBC) begins broadcasting
  • 1949 British steel & iron industry nationalised
  • 1949 Syracuse Nationals beat Anderson Packers, 125-123 in 5 OTs

Guys & Dolls

1950 Frank Loesser‘s musical “Guys & Dolls”, starring Robert Alda, Vivian Blaine, and Sam Levene, opens at 46th St Theater, NYC; runs for 1200 performances, winning 5 Tony Awards

  • 1950 UN troops begin an assault intending to end the Korean War by Christmas
  • 1950 US infantry division conquers Chonju Korea
  • 1951 British auto manufacturers Austin and Morris Motors merge

Dodgers Sign Alston

1953 Brooklyn Dodgers sign Walter Alston to a one-year pact as manager for 1954; he signs 23 more one-year agreements until his retirement

  • 1954 First Lady Mamie Eisenhower christens the first plane to be designated Air Force One
  • 1954 France sends 20,000 soldiers to Algeria
  • 1955 1st test flight of Fokker’s F-27 Friendship
  • 1956 Americans go 1-2 in the men’s 100m final at the Melbourne Olympics; Bobby Morrow and Thane Baker both record hand-timed 10.50s but automatic timing gives gold medal to Morrow
  • 1956 Glenn Davis leads an American trifecta in the men’s 400m hurdles at the Melbourne Olympics; hurdles Olympic record equalling 50.1s to beat teammates Eddie Southern and Joshua Culbreath
  • 1957 Cleveland Browns’ fullback Jim Brown sets club record of 237 yds rushing
  • 1958 Mali becomes an autonomous state within French Community
  • 1958 Mechanisation of Thought Processes, considered the first international symposium about artificial intelligence, begins in Teddington, England

Chamberlain’s Rebounds Record

1960 Philadelphia center Wilt Chamberlain pulls down NBA record 55 rebounds in Warriors 132-129 defeat to Boston Celtics at Philadelphia Civic Center

  • 1962 Last of Dutch military leave New Guinea
  • 1964 30th Heisman Trophy Award: John Huarte, Notre Dame (QB)
  • 1964 British rock band “The Who” begins a 22-week Tuesday night residency at the influential Marquee Club in London, England
  • 1964 Cards’ third baseman Ken Boyer is voted National League MVP
  • 1964 Rebellion ends in Zaire

President Mobutu Sese Seko

1965 Marshal Mobutu Sese Seko Kuku Ngbendu becomes President of Zaire (President until 1997)

  • 1966 1st TV station in Congo, Kinshasa (Zaire)
  • 1966 400 die of respiratory failure and heart attacks in New York City smog, the smoggiest day in the city’s history
  • 1966 A Bulgarian plane with 82 people on board crashes near Bratislava, Slovakia.

1966 The Beatles began recording sessions for their album “Sgt.Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band”

One Million Years B.C.

1966 The cult classic “One Million Years B.C.” starring Raquel Welch, is released 1st in West Germany

  • 1969 Apollo 12 returns to Earth
  • 1969 US Army Lt William L Calley charged with massacre of over 100 civilians in My Lai Vietnam in March 1968, ordered to stand trial by court martial
  • 1969 West German President Heinemann visits The Netherlands
  • 1970 36th Heisman Trophy Award: Jim Plunkett, Stanford (QB)
  • 1971 A British Army bomb-disposal specialist is killed by a bomb in Lurgan, County Armagh
  • 1971 A woman is killed after members of the Irish Republican Army carry out an attack on British soldiers in Strabane, County Tyrone
  • 1971 American “Dan Cooper” hijacks a plane, extorts $200,000 in ransom, jumps out of the plane over Washington State and is never seen again
  • 1971 Braves catcher-infielder Earl Williams, wins NL Rookie of Year
  • 1971 Prison rebellion at Rahway State Prison, New Jersey

Lynch Approves Attlee Paper

1972 Taoiseach Jack Lynch meets with British PM Edward Heath in London to give Irish approval to Attlee’s paper saying new arrangements should be ‘acceptable to and accepted by the Republic of Ireland’

  • 1972 USSR performs underground nuclear test
  • 1974 2 truck hijackers freed (3/3/1974)

Vladivostok Summit

1974 Gerald Ford and Leonid Brezhnev agree to a framework for the SALT-II treaty to reduce each side’s number of nuclear weapons, at the Vladivostok Summit

  • 1974 The most complete early human skeleton (Lucy, Australopithecus) is discovered by Donald Johanson, Maurice Taieb, Yves Coppens, and Tim White in the Middle Awash of Ethiopia’s Afar Depression [1] [2]
  • 1976 NBA Atlanta Hawks end a 28 game road losing streak
  • 1977 France performs nuclear test at Mururoa Atoll
  • 1977 Miami Dolphins quarterback Bob Griese passes for 6 touchdowns in a 55-14 win over Cardinals in St. Louis
  • 1979 “Salem’s Lot”, American two-part miniseries based on the horror novel of the same name by Stephen King, concludes in the United States
  • 1979 Kings’ Charley Simmer fails on 8th penalty shot against Islanders

1979 Senate report proves US troops in Vietnam were exposed to the toxic chemical defoliant Agent Orange

  • 1981 1st air-launched cruise missile tested
  • 1982 Orioles Cal Ripken is named AL Rookie of Year

The Colour of Magic

1983 “The Colour of Magic” by Terry Pratchett published by Colin Smythe in the UK, 1st book in the Discworld series

  • 1983 PLO exchanges 6 Israeli prisoners for 4,500 Palestinians & Lebanese
  • 1983 Test Cricket debut of Richie Richardson for the West Indies vs India in Bombay
  • 1985 Egyptian commandos storm captured Boeing in Malta, 60 killed
  • 1985 NBC miniseries “Mussolini: The Untold Story” starring George C. Scott premieres in the US
  • 1986 Cards reliever Todd Worrell wins NL Rookie of Year
  • 1986 Wrestler John Tatum charged with possession of marijuana
  • 1987 “Make It Last Forever” debut album by Keith Sweat is released (Billboard Song of the Year 1988)
  • 1987 Concert performance of Heitor Villa-Lobos’ folk operetta “Magdalena” debuts at Alice Tully Hall in NYC’s Lincoln Center

Premier Li Peng

1987 Li Peng succeeds Zhao Ziyang as Premier of the People’s Republic of China

  • 1989 Communist Party resigns in Czechoslovakia
  • 1989 Elias Hrawi elected president of Lebanon
  • 1989 Sachin Tendulkar scores a Test cricket fifty at the record young age of 16 years and 214 days
  • 1991 1st international flight from Long Island’s MacArthur Airport (to Mexico)
  • 1991 After going 12-0, Washington Redskins lose to Dallas 24-21

Seles Sets Prize Money Record

1991 Monica Seles sets female tennis record, winning prize money of $2,457,758 in a year

  • 1991 Rachmon Nabijev elected president of Tajikistan
  • 1991 US 75th manned space mission “STS 44” Atlantis 10 launched
  • 1992 Boeing 734 crashes into mountain in China, kills 141
  • 1993 11-year-old Robert Thompson and Jon Venables are convicted of the murder of English 2-year-old James Bulger
  • 1993 Brady bill passes establishing 5-day waiting period for US handgun sales
  • 1993 Today marks the end of the world, according to Ukrainian sect White Brotherhood
  • 1995 Ireland votes to end 58-year-old amendment on divorce (50.28% to 49.72%)
  • 1996 Mashonaland defeat Matabeleland to win the Logan Cricket Cup
  • 1996 Mohammad Wasim scores 109 on Test Cricket debut, Pakistan v NZ Lahore

No Confidence Motion

2005 Leader of the Opposition in the Canadian Parliament Stephen Harper, introduces a motion of no confidence. The motion is passed on November 28 leading to the dissolution of the 38th Canadian Parliament.

  • 2006 Israeli rapist Benny Sela escapes from police custody while being transferred to a court hearing.

Labor Elected

2007 Australians elect the Kevin Rudd-led centre-left Australian Labor Party at the federal election, ending the eleven-year tenure of the John Howard-led centre-right Liberal/National coalition government.

Craig David’s Greatest Hits

2008 English singer-rapper-songwriter Craig David releases his first Greatest Hits album

  • 2012 Ernest Bai Koroma is re-elected President of Sierra Leone
  • 2012 Gangnam Style becomes the most viewed YouTube video, surpassing 808 million views
  • 2012 The continued NHL lockout results in all games to December 14 being cancelled

2013 German Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel wins season-ending Brazilian Grand Prix; his record 9th straight GP victory; record equalling 13th consecutive GP win; 4th straight World Drivers Championship

  • 2014 “Take Your Time” single is released by Sam Hunt (Billboard Song of the Year 2015)
  • 2015 Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke is charged with first-degree murder of 17-year-old African American Laquan McDonald in 2014
  • 2015 Tunisia declares state of emergency after an attack on a bus in Tunis carrying presidential guards kills at least 12
  • 2015 Turkey shots down a Russian fighter jet after claiming it had flown into Turkish airspace
  • 2015 Venezuelan opposition leader Luis Díaz is shot and killed days before the country’s general election
  • 2016 International research team publishes the discovery of 1,500 new viruses found in invertebrates
  • 2017 18 women accuse Jean-Claude Arnault with ties to the Nobel Prize Committee of sexual assault and harassment in Swedish Dagens Nyheter newspaper

2017 Former First Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa is sworn in as President of Zimbabwe, replacing Robert Mugabe’s 30-year tenure

  • 2017 Militant gunmen attack a Sufi mosque in Bir al-Abed on the Sinai Peninsula, Egypt, killing 305 people, government retaliates bombing the area
  • 2018 Copa Libertadores Final 2nd-leg between Buenos Aires rivals River Plate & Boca Juniors is postponed after Boca bus attacked by River fans; players suffer cuts & affects of police tear gas; River wins, 5-3 on aggregate when 2nd-leg played in Madrid, Spain (9 Dec)
  • 2018 Cruise boat sinks on Lake Victoria near Kampala, Uganda, killing at least 29
  • 2018 ICC Women’s Cricket T20 World Cup, Antigua: Ashleigh Gardner with 33 from 26 balls and 3 for 22 leads Australia (106/2) to 4th T20 WC; beat England (105)
  • 2018 Taiwanese voters vote against referendums to legalise same-sex marriage
  • 2019 Data leaked from Chinese high-security Muslim Uighur security camps, housing 1 million people, show systematic brainwashing in western Xinjiang region

Bloomberg Runs for President

2019 Former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg announces a late-bid to be the US Democratic presidential candidate

  • 2019 Hong Kong pro-democracy candidates overwhelmingly win district council elections in strong rebuke to Hong Kong leaders
  • 2019 New Zealand cricket batsman BJ Watling scores a marathon 205 off 473 balls to lead the home side to an innings and 65 run 1st Test victory over England at Mount Maunganui
  • 2020 COVID-19 surge in the US gathers further pace with death toll of 2,200 highest since May and new cases averaging 175,000 a day

Dow Jones at 30,000

2020 Dow Jones Industrial Average closes above 30,000 points for the first time, after formal transition to Joe Biden administration begins

  • 2020 Scotland’s parliament votes to become the first country to make period products free [1]
  • 2020 US General Services Administration officially begins Joe Biden‘s transition, declaring him the “apparent winner” although Donald Trump vows to continue challenging the result
  • 2021 At least 27 migrants drown after their boat capsizes in the English Channel trying to reach the UK
  • 2021 Sweden’s first female Prime Minister, Magdalena Andersson, resigns after 12 hours in the job when her coalition government falls apart
  • 2021 Three men found guilty by a jury of felony murder of black runner Ahmaud Arbery, with Travis McMichael also convicted of malice murder in Brunswick, Georgia [1]
  • 2022 Anwar Ibrahim is sworn in Prime Minister of Malaysia appointed by King Al-Sultan Abdullah at the head of a coalition government [1]
  • 2022 British-born Flossie, aged almost 27, is crowned the world’s oldest cat by Guinness World Records [1]
  • 2023 100 Nigerians abducted for ransom and one killed by armed bandits on motorcycles in northern Zamfara state, amid increasing kidnappings in the region [1]
  • 2023 A23a, the world’s biggest iceberg at 4,000 sq km (1,500 sq miles), is on the move again after being grounded in the Weddell Sea for more than 30 years [1]
  • 2023 Four-day ceasefire begins in Gaza with Hamas releasing 24 hostages and Israel 39 Palestinian prisoners, allowing more urgently needed humanitarian aid into the territory [1]
  • 2024 $300 billion climate deal agreed at COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan, to help poorer countries deal with the effects of climate change, amid criticism it isn’t enough [1]
  • 2024 A ceasefire is agreed to end sectarian violence in north-western Pakistan, after more than 80 are killed and 150 injured in attacks between Shia and Sunni Muslims [1]
  • 2024 NFL Philadelphia Eagles running back Saquon Barkley sets new franchise game record with 255 yards rushing in 37-20 victory over Los Angeles Rams at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California

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What Happened on November 24


Major Events

  • 1859 English naturalist Charles Darwin publishes “On the Origin of Species,” radically changing the view of evolution and laying the foundation for evolutionary biology
  • 1950 UN troops begin an assault intending to end the Korean War by Christmas
  • 1954 France sends 20,000 soldiers to Algeria
  • 1974 The most complete early human skeleton (Lucy, Australopithecus) is discovered by Donald Johanson, Maurice Taieb, Yves Coppens, and Tim White in the Middle Awash of Ethiopia’s Afar Depression [1] [2]

More November 24 Events

Nov 24 in Film & TV

  • 1933 Fred Astaire‘s first film, “Dancing Lady,” is released
  • 1947 House of Representatives Committee on Un-American Activities finds “Hollywood Ten” in contempt for refusing to reveal whether they are communists

Nov 24 in Music

  • 1950 Frank Loesser‘s musical “Guys & Dolls”, starring Robert Alda, Vivian Blaine, and Sam Levene, opens at 46th St Theater, NYC; runs for 1200 performances, winning 5 Tony Awards

Nov 24 in Sport

Did You Know?

400 die of respiratory failure and heart attacks in New York City smog, the smoggiest day in the city’s history

November 24, 1966


Fun Fact About November 24

American “Dan Cooper” hijacks a plane, extorts $200,000 in ransom, jumps out of the plane over Washington State and is never seen again

November 24, 1971

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Global Study Exposes Massive Fraud in Mathematics Publishing



Frustrated Man Calculator Abacus SurpriseFraud driven by flawed metrics threatens mathematics, say researchers urging change. An international group of researchers led by Ilka Agricola, a mathematics professor at the University of Marburg in Germany, has examined widespread misconduct in the publication of mathematical research. Working on behalf of the German Mathematical Society (DMV) and the International Mathematical Union (IMU), […]



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