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The Problem with Britain’s Pensions


In May 2025 Keir Starmer, a prime minister with one of the largest majorities in history, backtracked on proposals to means-test the winter fuel allowance which has been paid to pensioners every year since 1997. There was a good case for the reform. Public finances are strained and, in the absence of rapid economic growth or tax hikes on working-age people, the government needed to make cuts somewhere. Surely some of the best-off people in society, when incomes are adjusted for housing costs, could accept the government did not need to contribute to their heating bills? Yet pensioners – almost 20 per cent of the population – as well as a majority of the general public, according to YouGov polling, would not. British politics seems incapable of confronting one of its biggest challenges. Such concerns are nothing new. Financing old age has been the most significant problem for the welfare state since its inception.

This much was clear in 1942. The economist William Beveridge, who had been commissioned to write a report that is now viewed as the blueprint for the modern welfare state, warned MPs that improving the existing state pension scheme, which provided pensions for men who had worked insured occupations and their wives after the age of 65, and for everyone over 70, was going to require some difficult choices. Beveridge recommended introducing a new universal pension scheme for over-65s, which would start at a low rate and increase gradually over the course of 20 years as workers built a surplus of contributions that would pay for their retirement. Jim Griffiths, Labour’s Minister of National Insurance, thought differently. ‘The men and women who had already retired had experienced a tough life’, he argued. ‘In their youth they had been caught by the 1914 war, in middle age they had experienced the indignities of the depression, and in 1940 had stood firm as a rock in the nation’s hour of trial. They … should not wait for twenty years.’ Full pensions were paid immediately but, given the cost implications, they were set below subsistence level.

Caught in a trap

A welfare state that included such a meagre benefit was a key feature of the decades after 1945. It was generally believed that poverty only existed in a small number of exceptional circumstances because the postwar social security system prevented it from being more widespread. Yet it was notable that politicians of all stripes were prepared to concede that pensioners were not among those who ‘had never had it so good’, as the Conservative prime minister Harold Macmillan put it in the late 1950s. The reason for pensioners’ difficulties was fairly clear. Britain was home to more old people, both relatively and absolutely, than ever before, with the proportion of men over the age of 65 and women over the age of 60 rising from 6.2 per cent to 13.5 per cent of the population during the first half of the century; 1.4 million more were expected to be claiming pensions by the end of the 1950s than when the scheme started a decade earlier. The Treasury wanted to keep costs down but the result satisfied nobody. An increasing number of pensioners were so poor that they had to go cap in hand to the National Assistance Board (NAB), the body that distributed means-tested benefits to people who fell between the cracks of the National Insurance scheme; two-thirds of the NAB’s more than 1.5 million claimants were pensioners by the late 1950s. But many also wondered if the state pension scheme was too expensive to sustain. Sir Thomas Phillips, whom the Conservatives appointed to chair the Committee on the Economic and Financial Problems of the Provision for Old Age in 1952, thought it was impossible to calculate a pension that was sufficient to live on and palatable to the Treasury. He argued that the retirement age should be put back up to 70 to bring down costs.

Politicians were trapped. Phillips’ recommendation would lead to electoral consequences no government wanted. But how to get more money into the system? An important part of Beveridge’s appeal was egalitarianism: everyone paid the same flat-rate contributions and was entitled to the same benefits. The consequence, however, was that everything was tethered to what the lowest paid workers could afford. Politicians therefore fell back on encouraging the growth of occupational pensions to compensate for the state system’s failures. Yet this would create, as Richard Titmuss, a pioneering social policy scholar, put it in the mid-1950s, ‘two nations in old age’: those with access to an occupational or private pension, who were able to live a comfortable life, and those reliant on the state pension, which everyone knew was insufficient.

Harold Wilson visiting an Retirement Home in Washington, County Durham, c.1960s. North East Museums. Public Domain.
Harold Wilson visiting a retirement home in Washington, County Durham, c.1960s. North East Museums. Public Domain.

Half pay

An influential group within Labour, now in opposition having lost power in 1951, thought their party’s fortunes, as well as the country’s, were dependent on modernisation of the welfare state. The likes of Richard Crossman, a member of the party’s ruling National Executive Committee who held a social services brief, drew on academics, many from the London School of Economics, to design radical new policies. In 1957 Labour announced ‘National Superannuation’: an earnings-related pension scheme that required contributions proportional to income and paid out benefits based on lifetime earnings. Subtle mechanisms of redistribution would make the poorest pensioners better off. Labour marketed the scheme as delivering ‘half pay on retirement’ and printed 52,000 copies of a pamphlet outlining it, which sold out within a year.

Nothing approaching this dream became a reality, though. One reason was the precedent that the policy might set. Few politicians had the stomach for a complete overhaul of social security on earnings related lines, which they thought would be called for if anything like National Superannuation were implemented. Of more importance, however, were the ideological leanings of the Conservative governments of the 1950s. Against any further expansion of the welfare state and concerned about the implications for the private pension industry, whose services they preferred, the Tories seized gleefully on a number of small errors in Labour’s calculations, such as including income raised from contributions from Northern Ireland but not pensions that would then be paid out there. Nevertheless, the electoral appeal of Labour’s proposals was obvious, leading the Tories to immediately announce their own earnings-related addition to the state pension, albeit one that was the palest of pale imitations, in which the value of extra entitlements failed to keep pace with inflation, illustrating that the intention was to raise more money, rather than improve benefits.

Labour certainly intended to address the worst elements of state provision for old age when Harold Wilson made it to Downing Street in 1964. But anything other than incremental improvements to existing benefits slipped down the agenda quickly. A very distant relative of National Superannuation, the State Earnings Related Pension Scheme was finally adopted in the late 1970s. The fact it was a heavily watered down version of proposals that had been around for 20 years only underlined that genuinely far-reaching reform was often out of reach for Labour and Conservatives alike.

Overhaul

There has never been one reason for the failure to pursue ambitious ideas in these areas; poor policy design, political expediency, and an inability to elevate goals other than cost-saving have all played their part. Perhaps the most important issue, though, is that problems have not remained static. If the five decades after the Second World War were dominated by a failure to meet pensioners’ needs, the next 20 years saw politicians fail to face up to the fact that significantly improving the generosity of state support for old age, without addressing the underlying mechanisms that paid for it, was consuming unsustainable levels of resources. The apex of this problem is the ‘triple lock’, which guarantees the state pension increases each year by the highest of inflation, average annual earnings, or 2 per cent. Pensioner poverty is still a serious problem, but when Gordon Brown, the Labour chancellor of the exchequer, introduced the winter fuel allowance in 1997, pensioners were the poorest demographic in Britain; 25 years later they are among the richest.

Does history contain any lessons for thinking about the trouble with reforming the welfare state or, indeed, implementing change elsewhere? The path dependency inherent in political decision making is clearly important. Although we are a long way from the 1940s, our current arrangements are a clear descendant of Beveridge’s plan, not least in many pensioners’ continuing reference to having ‘paid in’ during their working lives. In this respect, as Andrew Marr recently observed, the state pension is pretty much the only part of our social security system that maintains a link with the old contributory principle, meaning few politicians are prepared, or have the political capital required, to overhaul it.

We might also infer that certain conditions are required for substantial reform. Given that Beveridge’s major concern in 1942 was to enrol everyone in what were believed to be the best existing state schemes, the extent of change after the Second World War is often overstated. Yet the war did make some decisions much easier because, in the context of shared sacrifice, arguments about the importance of providing for everyone in old age were much more compelling than concerns about the cost implications of doing so. Even this observation has its limits, though. What dramatic change did the Covid-19 pandemic – an event as disruptive as war – produce? Perhaps the only hope for reformers is that it is still to come.

 

Chris Renwick is Professor of History at the University of York.



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Mayan “elderly lord” marker found in Yucatán  – The History Blog


A salvage excavation along the route of the Maya Train project have uncovered a limestone carving of an anthropomorphic face with features characteristic of an “elderly lord” dating to the Maya Preclassic period (2500 B.C.-200 A.D.) in the small community of Sierra Papacal, 25 miles from Yucatán’s capital city of Mérida.

It is approximately 45 cm (17.7 inches) high and depicts a human-like face with deep eye sockets, a flat nose, and lips marked by a cleft that emphasizes the pronounced chin. These features typically represent an elder figure. The sculpture was found outside an ovoid structure about 5.8 by 4.3 meters (19 x 14 feet) in dimension with double walls made of limestone blocks. The entrance is 80 cm (31.5 inches) wide and faces the western sun. It is flanked by large rocks acting as door jambs and the thick wall indicates there may have been an interior bench.

The sculpture was found behind the north jamb between the thick wall next to the bench area. This placement was very deliberate, a means to designate the structure as a place to be treated with respect upon entrance. The means the structure is not a domestic building. INAH archaeologists believe it was used for ritual or communal purposes — community meetings or ceremonies — and there were several phases of construction and occupation. The placement of the statue suggests it served as a marker or to welcome people to the space.

This sculptural marker of the elderly lord is not an isolated object but a key component of an architectural complex intended for specific and high-ranking community activities. Its discovery will decisively contribute to supporting comparative analyses, offering a more precise approach that will help to understand the use of space and the nature of the activities carried out in these architectural complexes, shedding new light on the socio-political and religious practices of the ancient Maya of the Preclassic period in northwestern Yucatán.



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Famous Deaths on November 20


  • 869 King Edmund of East Anglia
  • 967 Aboe al-Faradj al-Isfahani, Arabic author (Book of Liederen), dies
  • 1348 Stefano Colonna, Roman senator, dies in battle against Roman revolutionaries by Porta Tiburtina
  • 1437 Thomas Langley, bishop of Durham, cardinal and lord chancellor (b. 1363)
  • 1480 Eleonor of Scotland, daughter of James I of Scotland and consort of Sigismund Archduke of Austria, regent and translator, dies in childbirth at 46 or 47
  • 1518 Marmaduke Constable, English soldier (battle of Flodden), dies after swallowing a frog, at about 61
  • 1518 Pierre de la Rue [aka Peter van Straten], Franco-Flemish Renaissance singer and composer, dies at about 66 [birth date unconfirmed]
  • 1527 Wendelmoet “Weyntjen” Claesdochter, 1st Dutch woman burned as heretic
  • 1529 Karl von Miltitz, German papal nuncio (met with Martin Luther), drowns at about 39
  • 1591 Christopher Hatton, English politician (b. 1540)
  • 1612 John Harington, English Elizabethan courtier, writer (Orlando Furios) and inventor of the flush toilet, dies at about 52
  • 1651 Mikołaj Potocki, Polish soldier who fought Cossack rebellions, dies at about 56
  • 1662 Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria, Governor of the Spanish Netherlands (b. 1614)
  • 1669 Arnold Geulincx, Flemish philosopher (Cholera), dies at 45
  • 1675 Francisco de Moura y Cortereal, Spanish Vicroy of Sardinia and Governor of Hapsburg Netherlands (1664-68)
  • 1678 Karel Dujardin, Dutch painter and etcher (Learned Dog), dies at about 56

  • 1704 Charles Plumier, French botanist (Frangipani genus Plumeria is named after him), dies at 58
  • 1713 Thomas Tompion, English clockmaker (cylinder tunnel), dies at 74
  • 1737 Caroline of Brandenburg-Ansbach, German born Queen of Great Britain, consort to King George II, dies at 54
  • 1741 Melchior de Polignac, French diplomat, Cardinal and poet, dies at 80
  • 1750 Giuseppe Sammartini, Italian oboe virtuoso and late Baroque/early classical composer who served the court of the Prince of Wales, dies at 55 [exact date uncertain +/- 3 days]
  • 1750 Wilhelmus Schortinghuis, Dutch theologist (Profound Christianity), dies at 50
  • 1758 Johan Helmich Roman, Swedish violinist, conductor (Swedish Royal Orchestra), and composer (“Drottningholm Music”), known as the “Swedish Handel”, dies at 64
  • 1764 Christian Goldbach, German mathematician (Goldbach position), dies at 74
  • 1778 Francesco Cetti, Italian Jesuit priest and scientist, dies at 52
  • 1827 Alexey Titov, Russian composer, dies at 58
  • 1851 Wenzel Sedlak, Bohemian clarinetist and composer, dies at 75
  • 1856 Farkas Bolyai, Hungarian mathematician known for his work on the foundations of geometry and the parallel axiom (Wallace–Bolyai–Gerwien theorem), dies at 81
  • 1863 James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin & Kincardine and Governor (Jamaica), dies at 52
  • 1871 Nathan Kelley, American architect active mainly in Ohio (Ohio Statehouse), dies at 63
  • 1882 Béla Kéler, Hungarian conductor, composer (Erinnerung an Bartfeld; The Carpathians), and violinist, dies at 62

American amateur astronomer (photos of the Moon, Orion Nebula), dies of pleurisy at 45

  • 1887 Louis Gallait, Belgian historical painter (Egmont & Receiver), dies at 77
  • 1888 Nathaniel Currier, American lithographer (Currier & Ives), dies at 75
  • 1889 August Ahlqvist, Finnish poet (Suomalainen Runousoppi), dies at 63
  • 1898 John Fowler, English engineer (engineer for London Metropolitan Railway – world’s 1st underground railway), dies at 81
  • 1907 Paula Modersohn-Becker, German Expressionist painter (1st known woman to paint nude self-portraits), dies after childbirth at 31
  • 1908 Georgy Voronoy, Russian mathematician (Voronoi diagram), dies at 40
  • 1917 Alfredo Napoleão dos Santos, Portuguese pianist, and composer, dies at 65
  • 1924 Ebenezer Cobb Morley, English sportsman (drafted first FA rules), dies at 93
  • 1925 Alexandra, Danish princess and Queen of Great Britain, consort to Edward VII, dies at 80
  • 1927 (Carl) Wilhelm Stenhammar, Swedish composer considered the finest Swedish pianist of his time, dies of a stroke at 56
  • 1934 Willem de Sitter, Dutch scientist and cosmologist (developed theoretical models of the universe based on Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity), dies at 62

Spanish fascist politician and founder of Falange Española, executed for conspiracy and military rebellion at 33

  • 1938 Edwin Hall, American physicist (discovered Hall effect), dies at 83
  • 1938 Enzo Matsunaga, Japanese writer (b. 1895)
  • 1938 Maud of Wales, Queen of Norway, spouse of King Haakon VII, dies at 68
  • 1939 Désiré Pâque, Belgian organist, composer, and pedagogue, dies at 72
  • 1944 Sekio Nishina, Japanese inventor (kaiten-suicide submarine), dies at 21
  • 1945 Francis William Aston, British chemist and physicist who won a Nobel laureate for his work with isotopes and the whole number rule, dies at 68
  • 1947 Wolfgang Borchert, German writer, dies at 26
  • 1950 Francesco Cilea, Italian orchesztral and opera composer (L’arlesiana; Adriana Lecouvreur), dies at 84
  • 1951 Thomas Quinlan, English opera impresario, dies at 70
  • 1952 Benedetto Croce, Italian philosopher and politician (La Critica), dies at 86
  • 1954 Clyde Cessna, American aviator and airplane manufacturer, dies at 74
  • 1957 Mstislav Dobuzhinsky, Russian-Lithuanian artist, dies at 82
  • 1957 Weldon Hart, American composer, commits suicide at 46
  • 1959 Alfonso López Pumarejo, 16th President of Colombia (Liberal: 1934-38 and 1942-46) and statesman (President of UN security council 1948), dies at 73
  • 1960 Ya’akov Cahan, Hebrew poet and writer, dies at 79
  • 1962 Jasper McLevy, American politician (Socialist mayor of Bridgeport, Connecticut, 1933-57), dies at 84
  • 1964 John Tasker Howard, American composer and music historian, dies at 73
  • 1968 Cathy Lewis, American actress (Deidre-Hazel), dies of cancer at 50
  • 1968 Helen Gardner, American silent film actress (Sandra), dies at 84
  • 1973 Allan Sherman, American parody singer and songwriter (“Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah”), dies from emphysema at 48
  • 1976 Trofim Lysenko, Soviet biologist and agronomist, dies at 78
  • 1977 Maxie Wander, Austrian writer (Good Morning My Lovely), dies at 44
  • 1978 Giorgio De Chirico, Italian painter (founded the scuola metafisica art movement), dies at 90
  • 1978 Vasilisk Gnedov, Russian poet (b. 1890)
  • 1980 John McEwen, 18th Prime Minister of Australia (1967-68), dies at 80
  • 1981 Rolf Bongs, German writer, dies at 74
  • 1982 [Catherine] Cassie Mackin, American newswoman (NBC TV) and 1st woman to regularly anchor an evening network newscast alone, dies of cancer at 43
  • 1983 Marcel Dalio [Israel Moshe Blauschild], French actor (Sabrina, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Casablanca), dies at 83
  • 1983 Richard Loo, American actor, (China Sky), dies of cardio-pulmonary arrest at 80
  • 1984 Alexander Moyzes, Slovak composer, dies at 78
  • 1984 Faiz Ahmed Faiz, Pakistani Urdu language poet, editor and journalist, dies at 73
  • 1984 Trygve Bratteli, Norwegian Prime Minister (Labour: 1971-72, 1973-76), dies at 74
  • 1986 Arne Beurling, Swedish mathematician known for The “Beurling factorization” and for decrypting a German cipher machine during WWI, dies at 81
  • 1986 William Bradford Huie, American writer and publisher, dies at 76
  • 1989 Lynn Bari [Margaret Schuyler Fisher], American actress (Shock, Nocturne, 6 Gun Law), dies from a heart attack at 71
  • 1991 Gina Petrushka, actress (Exorcist, Sybil), dies at 82
  • 1992 John Foreman, producer (Prizzi’s Honor), dies at 67 of heart attack
  • 1993 Christopher Frank, British-French novelist (La Nuit américaine), screenwriter (That Most Important Thing: Love), and film director (L’Année des méduses), dies at 50
  • 1993 Christopher Frank, French writer, dies at 51
  • 1993 Emile Ardolino, American Emmy and Academy Award-winning director (He Makes Me Feel Like Dancin’; Dirty Dancing; Sister Act), dies of AIDS at 50
  • 1994 Ali-Akbar Sa’idi Sirjani, Iranian poet and journalist, dies at 64
  • 1994 John Lucarotti, British-Canadian screenwriter (The Avengers; The Troubleshooters; Doctor Who), dies of spinal cancer at 68
  • 1995 Ahmed Abel-Wadoud Karadawi, Sudanese academic and activist known for his lifelong commitment to African refugees, dies of lung cancer at 50 [1]
  • 1995 Robie Macauley, American editor (Houghton Mifflin) and novelist (A Secret History of Time to Come), dies of lymphoma at 76
  • 1995 Sergei Grinkov, Russian figure skater (with Ekaterina Gordeeva – Pairs World Championship, 1986-87, 1989-90; Olympic gold, 1988 & 94), dies at 28 of a heart attack on the practice rink in Lake Placid, New York,
  • 1996 Bert Geoffrey Achong, Trinidadian pathologist and inventor (electron microscopist), dies at 67
  • 1997 Dick Littlefield, American MLB pitcher, dies at 71
  • 1997 Gary Burris, American murderer (Kenneth Chambers), executed in Indiana at 40
  • 1997 Robert Palmer, American rock music critic (New York Times; Rolling Stone), record producer, and clarinetist, dies of liver disease at 52
  • 1998 Dick Sisler. American baseball utility (World Series 1946 St. Louis Cardinals; MLB All Star 1950), manager (Cincinnati Reds 1964–65) and coach (World Series 1967 St. L. Cardinals), dies at 78
  • 1998 Galina Starovoitova, Russian politician and dissident, assassinated at 52
  • 1998 Meredith Gourdine, American long jumper (Olympic silver 1952), dies at 69
  • 1999 Amintore Fanfani, Italian politician and 5 x prime minister of Italy, dies at 91
  • 2000 Kalle Päätalo, Finnish novelist (Iijoki), dies at 81
  • 2000 Mike Muuss, American computer programmer (Ping), dies in a car accident at 42
  • 2003 David Dacko, first President of the Central African Republic (b. 1930)
  • 2003 Eugene Kleiner, American entrepreneur (b. 1923)
  • 2003 James “Jim” Siedow, American actor (The Texas Chain Saw Massacre), dies from emphysema at 83
  • 2003 Kerem Yilmazer, Turkish actor (b. 1945)
  • 2003 Loris Azzaro, French fashion designer (b. 1933)
  • 2003 Robert Addie, British actor (cancer) (b. 1960)
  • 2003 Roger Short, British Consulate General (b. 1944)
  • 2004 American nutritionist and physiologist who established connection between diet and heart disease and strokes, dies at 100 [1]
  • 2004 David Grierson, Canadian radio host (b. 1955)
  • 2004 Jenny Ross, English alt-rock keyboard player and vocalist (Section 25 – “Looking from a Hilltop”), dies from cancer at 42
  • 2005 Chris Whitley, American blues-rock guitarist, singer and songwriter, dies of lung cancer at 45
  • 2005 James King, American tenor, dies at 80
  • 2005 Manouchehr Atashi, Persian poet, dies at 74
  • 2005 Sheldon Gardner, American psychologist (b. 1934)
  • 2006 Andre Waters, American football player (b. 1962)
  • 2006 Donald Hamilton, American writer of novels, short stories, and non-fiction about the outdoors (The Big Country), dies at 90 [1]

American screenwriter, producer and director (The Player, M*A*S*H, Nashville), dies of complications from leukemia at 81

  • 2006 Zoia Ceauşescu, Romanian mathematician and daughter of Communist dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu, dies of lung cancer at 57 [1] [2] [3]
  • 2007 Ian Smith, Rhodesian farmer, fighter pilot, and politician (Prime Minister of Rhodesia, 1964-79), dies at 88
  • 2008 Sven Inge, Swedish painter and modern artist (b. 1935)
  • 2009 H.C. Robbins Landon, American musicologist (Haydn: Chronicle and Works), dies at 83
  • 2009 Lino Lacedelli, Italian mountaineer (b. 1925)
  • 2009 Max Robertson, British sports commentator (BBC Radio), dies at 94
  • 2010 Chalmers Johnson, American political scholar and author (b. 1931)
  • 2010 Danny McDevitt, American baseball player (b. 1932)
  • 2010 Laurie Bembenek, American convicted murderer and fugitive (b. 1958)
  • 2010 Rob Lytle, American football player (b. 1954)
  • 2012 Michael Dunford, British guitarist and songwriter (The Nashville Teens, 1960-63; Renaissance – “Scheherazade”), dies of a cerebral hemorrhage at 68
  • 2012 William Grut, Swedish pentathlete, dies at 98
  • 2012 Wim van Gennep, Dutch dance band singer and keyboardist (De Heikrekels – “Waarom heb jij me laten staan?”), dies at 87
  • 2013 Peter Griffiths, British politician (C), controversially won his seat (1964), dies at 85
  • 2013 Sylvia Browne, American author and self-proclaimed medium dubbed “America’s most controversial psychic,” dies at 77
  • 2014 Arthur Butterworth, British classical trumpet player and composer dies at 91
  • 2015 Jim Perry, American and Canadian tv host ($ale of the Century), dies at 82
  • 2015 Keith Michell, Australian actor and theater director (6 Wives of Henry VIII), dies at 88
  • 2016 Kostis Stephanopoulos, Greek conservative politician (President of Greece, 1995-2005), dies at 90
  • 2016 William Trevor, Irish writer (Children of Dynmouth, Fools of Fortune), dies at 88
  • 2018 Aaron Klug, Lithuanian born British biochemist (Nobel prize for Chemistry 1982), dies at 92
  • 2018 Harald Heilmann, German composer, dies at 94
  • 2018 Levine Andrade, Indian-British violinist (Arditti Quartet, 1974-90), film score composer, and conductor, dies at 64
  • 2019 Bramwell Tillsley, Canadian Salvationist, 14th General of The Salvation Army, dies at 88
  • 2019 Doug Lubahn, American session psychedelic rock and jazz-fusion bassist (The Doors; Pierce Arrow; Billy Squier), dies at 71
  • 2019 Fred Cox, American football kicker (NFL C’ship 1969; Pro Bowl 1970; Minnesota Vikings all-time leading scorer), dies at 80
  • 2019 Jake Burton Carpenter, American snowboarder (founder Burton Snowboards; one of the inventors of modern day snowboard), dies of cancer at 65
  • 2019 Michael J Pollard [Pollack], American character actor (Bonnie & Clyde; Roxanne), dies from cardiac arrest at 80
  • 2019 Wataru Misaka, American basketball point guard (first non-white player, first player of Asian descent in BAA [later known NBA]; NY Knicks), dies at 95
  • 2020 Ernesto Canto, Mexican race walker (Olympic gold 20k 1984; World C’ship gold 20k 1983), dies from pancreatic and liver cancer at 61
  • 2020 Jan Morris, Welsh journalist, historian, writer and pioneering trans woman (Venice, Conundrum), dies at 94 [1]
  • 2020 Ken Schinkel, Canadian ice hockey right wing (NY Rangers, Pittsburgh Penguins 636 NHL games) and coach (Pittsburgh Penguins 1972-77), dies at 87
  • 2020 Patriarch Irinej [Miroslav Gavrilović], Head of the Serbian Orthodox Church, dies of COVID-19 at 90 [1]
  • 2021 Billy Hinsche, American pop musician, singer, and songwriter (Dino, Desi & Billy; The Beach Boys), dies of cancer at 70
  • 2021 Ray McLoughlin, Irish rugby union prop (40 caps Ireland, 3 British & Irish Lions; Barbarians RFC, London Irish RFC), dies at 82
  • 2022 (Ione) “Joyce” Bryant, American cabaret artist (Drunk With Love), missionary, schoolteacher, and opera singer, dies at 95 [1]
  • 2022 Hebe de Bonafini, Argentine human rights activist (co-founded Mothers of Plaza de Mayo), dies at 93 [1]
  • 2022 Jean-Marie Straub, French film director, with Danièle Huillet (Chronicle of Anna Magdalena Bach; Sicilia!), dies at 89
  • 2023 Mars Williams, American jazz and rock saxophonist (The Waitresses; Psychedelic Furs), dies of cancer at 68
  • 2023 Willie Hernández, Puerto Rican baseball relief pitcher (World Series, AL MVP, AL Cy Young Award 1984 Detroit Tigers; MLB All-Star 1984, 85, 86), dies at 69
  • 2024 Andy Paley, American pop session and touring musician, songwriter, and producer (Paley Brothers; Brian Wilson; Jonathan Richman), dies of cancer at 73 [1]

November 20 Highlights

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Famous Birthdays on November 20


  • 270 Maximinus II, Emperor of the Roman Empire (308-313), born in Felix Romuliana (Gamzigrad, Serbia) (d. 313)
  • 1327 Bassui Tokusho, Zen founder (Kogakuji monastery in Nakamura Japan), born in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan (d. 1387)
  • 1606 Abraham de Wicquefort, Dutch diplomat (for Brandenburg at the French court, 1626-58; for the Duchy of Braunschweig-Lüneburg at the Hague, 1660-75). and historian, born in Amsterdam, Dutch Republic (d. 1682)
  • 1620 Peregrine White, First English child born in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, born on board the Mayflower (d. 1704)
  • 1621 Avvakum, Russian Orthodox archpriest and writer, born in Grigorovo, Nizhny Novgorod (d. 1682)
  • 1625 Artus Quellinus II, Flemish sculptor, born in Sint-Truiden, Limburg, Belgium (d. 1700)
  • 1625 Paulus Potter, Dutch painter, born in Enkhuizen, Dutch Republic (d. 1654)
  • 1652 Romanus Weichlein, Austrian composer, born in Linz, Austria (d. 1706)
  • 1660 Daniel Ernst Jablonski, German Protestant theologian, born in Nassenhuben [now Mokry Dwór, Poland] (d. 1741)
  • 1726 Oliver Wolcott, American judge, signed US Declaration of Independence, born in Windsor, Connecticut (d. 1797) [NS=Dec 1]
  • 1752 Thomas Chatterton, English poet (Christabel), born in Bristol, England (d. 1770)
  • 1757 Giovanni Battista Gaiani, Italian organist and composer, born in Bologna, Papal States (d. 1819)
  • 1759 Nikolaus Zmeskall, Hungarian diplomat, cellist, and composer, baptized in Leštiny, Árva County, Kingdom of Hungary (d. 1833)
  • 1761 Pius VIII [Francesco Saverio Castiglioni], Italian 253rd Pope (1829-30), born in Cingoli, Marche, Papal States (d. 1830)
  • 1765 Friedrich Heinrich Himmel, German composer, born in Treuenbrietzen, Brandenburg, Kingdom of Prussia (d. 1814)
  • 1765 Thomas Fremantle, British naval officer, born in Aston Abbotts, Buckinghamshire, England (d. 1819)

  • 1766 John Wall Calcott, English composer, born in Kensington, London (d. 1821)
  • 1781 Karl Friedrich Eichhorn, German jurist, born in Jena, Germany (d. 1854)
  • 1802 James L. Lardner, American naval officer (American Civil War), born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (d. 1881)
  • 1827 Edmond Dédé, Creole-American violinist, composer (Quasimodo Symphony; Mephisto Masque), and conductor, born in New Orleans, Louisiana (d. 1901) [1] [2]
  • 1830 Patrick Henry Jones, Irish-American lawyer, Postmaster of New York City, and Brigadier General (Union Army), born in County Westmeath, Republic of Ireland (d. 1900)
  • 1834 Franjo Ksaver Kuhač, Croatian composer who collected and published 1,600 folk songs, born in Osijek, Croatia (d. 1911)
  • 1836 John Thomas Croxton, American attorney, diplomat, and Brevet Major General (Union Army), born in Paris, Kentucky, (d. 1874)
  • 1837 Lewis Waterman, American insurance agent and inventor of an improved fountain pen, born in Decatur, New York (d. 1901) [1]
  • 1838 William Painter, American inventor (crown cork bottle cap and opener), born in Triadelphia, Maryland (d. 1906)
  • 1839 Christian Wilberg, German painter, born in Havelberg, Germany (d. 1882)
  • 1841 Victor D’Hondt, Belgian mathematician, born in Ghent, Belgium (d. 1901)

  • 1848 James Murray Spangler, American inventor of portable vacuum cleaner (Hoover), born in Pennsylvania (d. 1915) [1]
  • 1850 Arthur Goring Thomas, English composer, born in Ratton Park, Sussex, England (d. 1892)
  • 1851 Margherita of Savoy, Queen consort of the Kingdom of Italy by marriage to Umberto I (1878-1900), born in Palazzo Chiablese, Turin, Kingdom of Sardinia (d. 1926)
  • 1855 Josiah Royce, American philosopher (Conception of Immortality), born in Grass Valley, California (d. 1916)

Swedish author and 1st woman to win Nobel Prize for Literature (The Wonderful Adventures of Nils), born in Mårbacka, Värmland

  • 1862 Willem Vliegen, Dutch journalist and chairman (SDAP), born in Gulpen, Netherlands (d. 1947)
  • 1864 Gerard Wilhelm Kernkamp, Dutch historian and editor (Groene Amsterdammer), born in Hoorn, Netherlands (d. 1943)

American federal judge (1905-22), Baseball HOF executive and 1st MLB Commissioner (1920-44), born in Millville, Ohio

  • 1867 Vicente Ripollés, Spanish composer, born in Castellón de la Plana, Spain (d. 1943)

American Baseball HOF pitcher (MLB ERA leader 1898 Chicago Colts/Orphans) and manager (Chicago WS, NY Highlanders, Cincinnati Reds, Washington Sens [owner]), born in Clear Creek, Missouri

  • 1871 William Heard Kilpatrick, American mathematician and philosopher, born in White Plains, Georgia (d. 1965)
  • 1873 Daniel Gregory Mason, American composer (Chanticker), born in Brookline, Massachusetts (d. 1953)
  • 1874 James Michael Curley, American politician (53rd Governor of Massachusetts, 1935-37), born in Boston, Massachusetts (d. 1958)
  • 1879 Franz Pfemfert, German journalist and writer, born in Lötzen, East Prussia (d. 1954)
  • 1880 George McBride, American baseball shortstop (AL fielding leader 1912-15 Washington Senators) and manager (Washington Senators 1921), born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin (d. 1973)
  • 1881 Arthur Marshall, American ragtime piano player and composer (“Swipesy Cakewalk” with Scott Joplin; “The Peach”), born in Saline County, Missouri (d. 1968)
  • 1882 Andy Coakley, American baseball pitcher (Philadelphia A’s, Cincinnati Reds) and coach (Williams College 1911–13, Columbia University 1915–18), born in Providence, Rhode Island (d. 1963)
  • 1884 Norman Thomas, American socialist, pacifist and presidential candidate (1928-48), born in Marion Ohio (d. 1968)
  • 1886 Karl von Frisch, Austrian ethologist and bee expert (Nobel 1973), born in Vienna, Austria (d. 1982)

American astronomer (discoverer of galaxies, red shift), born in Marshfield, Missouri

  • 1890 Robert Armstrong, American actor (Mighty Joe Young, King Kong), born in Saginaw, Michigan (d. 1973)
  • 1891 Julian Fuhs, German-American jazz pianist and bandleader (Follies Band), born in Berlin, Germany (d. 1975)
  • 1891 Leon Cadore, American baseball pitcher (pitched all of 26 inning game), born in Chicago, Illinois (d. 1958)
  • 1891 Reginald Denny, English actor (Rebecca, Cat Ballou, Batman), born in Richmond, Surrey, England (d. 1967)
  • 1892 James Collip, Canadian biochemist and physiologist (insulin), born in Belleville, Ontario (d. 1965)
  • 1894 Carl Mayer, Austrian-Jewish actor (Dreaming Lips, Ariane, Sunrise), born in Graz, Austria (d. 1944)
  • 1896 Yevgenia Ginzburg, Russian writer, born in Moscow, Russian Empire (d. 1977)
  • 1897 Lores Bonney, Australian aviator, 1st female solo flight Australia to UK, born in Pretoria, South Africa (d. 1994)
  • 1897 Margaret Sutherland, Australian composer (Haunted Hills; The Young Kabbarli), born in Adelaide, Australia (d. 1984)
  • 1899 Juan Vicente Lecuna, Venezuelan diplomat and composer, born in Valencia, Venezuela (d. 1954)
  • 1900 Chester Gould, American cartoonist (Dick Tracy), born in Pawnee, Oklahoma (d. 1985)
  • 1902 Wolfgang Kunkel, German lawyer and law historian, born in Fürth, Germany (d. 1981)
  • 1903 Ishtiaq Hussain Qureshi, Pakistani historian and academic, born in Patyali, near Allahabad, United Provinces of British India (d. 1981)
  • 1904 Alexandra Danilova, Russian-American ballerina (The Turning Point), born in Petergof, Russia (d. 1997)
  • 1907 Fran Allison, American actress (Kukla, Fran & Ollie), born in La Porte City, Iowa (d. 1989)
  • 1907 Henri-Georges Clouzot, French director (Le salaire de la peur), born in Niort, France (d. 1977)
  • 1908 Alistair Cooke, British-American TV host (Masterpiece Theatre), born in Manchester, England (d. 2004)
  • 1909 Alan Bible, American lawyer and politician (Sen-D-Nev, 1954-74), born in Lovelock, Nevada (d. 1988)
  • 1910 Pauli Murray, African American poet and civil rights activist, born in Baltimore, Maryland (d. 1985)
  • 1910 Willem Jacob van Stockum, Dutch physicist and mathematician, born in Hattem, Netherlands (d. 1944)
  • 1911 Jean Shiley, American high jumper (Olympic gold 1932), born in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania (d. 1998)
  • 1912 Otto von Habsburg, last crown prince of Austria-Hungary and MEP (1979-1999), born in Wartholz Castle, Reichenau an der Rax, Lower Austria, Austria-Hungary (d. 2011)
  • 1913 Irina Nijinska, Russian-Polish-American ballet dancer, and teacher, born in St Petersburg, Russia (d. 1991)
  • 1913 Judy Canova, American comedian and actress (Cannonball), born in Starke, Florida (d. 1983)
  • 1914 (Clifton) “Skeeter” Best, American jazz guitarist (Erskine Hawkins; Earl Hines; Oscar Pettiford; Ray Charles; Milt Jackson), born in Kinson, North Carolina (d. 1985)
  • 1914 Emilio Pucci, Italian fashion designer (Neiman-Marcus Award-1954), born in Naples, Kingdom of Italy (d. 1992)
  • 1915 Kon Ichikawa, Japanese director (Matatabi, Money Talks), born in Ise, Mie, Japan (d. 2008)
  • 1916 Evelyn Keyes, American actress (Adventure of Martin Eden), born in Port Arthur, Texas (d. 2008)
  • 1916 Ferdinand Alphons Marie van der Ham, Dutch WW II resistance fighter, born in Voorburg, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands (d. 1944)
  • 1916 John Elwyn, British painter, born in Adpar, Wales (d. 1997)
  • 1916 Robert A. Bruce, American cardiologist and pioneer (exercise cardiology), born in Somerville, Massachusetts (d. 2004)

South African golfer (British Open 1949-50, 52, 57), born in Germiston, South Africa

  • 1917 Max Georg Baumann, German composer (Libertas Cruciata), born in Kronbacher, Germany (d. 1999)
  • 1917 Pam Henning [Cornelia Catharina Pamela Ingenegeren], Indonesian-Dutch cabaret dancer and actress, born in Batavia, Dutch East Indies (d. 2008)
  • 1917 Ram Gopal, Indian-English dancer (Blue Peter, Purple Plain), born in Bangalore, India (d. 2003)
  • 1917 Robert Byrd, US Senator (Democrat-WV, 1959-2010), majority leader and once the longest-serving Senator in history, born in North Wilkesboro, North Carolina (d. 2010)
  • 1918 Dora Ratjen, German man who posed as a female high jumper (Olympic 4th 1936), born in Erichshof, Bremen, Germany (d. 2008)
  • 1918 Tibor Frešo, Slovak composer (Fanfares of Peace; A Beetle was Born), and conductor (Slovak National Theatre Opera), born in Spišský Štiavnik, Slovakia (d. 1987)
  • 1919 Dulcie Gray, British singer, actress, author and lepidopterist (Mine Own Executioner), born in Kuala Lumpur, Malaya (d. 2011)
  • 1919 Halka Grossman, Israeli resistance fighter and politician, born in Białystok, Second Polish Republic (d. 1996)
  • 1919 John McCarthy, British choral director and conductor, born in London (d. 2009)
  • 1920 Armin Schibler, Swiss composer (Devil in the Winter Palace), born in Kreuzlingen, Switzerland (d. 1986)
  • 1920 Douglas Dick, American actor and psychologist (Rope, Waterfront), born in Charleston, West Virginia (d. 2015)
  • 1920 Pernell Charity, American blues guitarist, singer, and songwriter, born in Waverly, Virginia (d. 1979)
  • 1921 Dan Frazer, American actor (Kojak; Take the Money and Run), born in New York City (d. 2011)
  • 1921 Jim Garrison, American district attorney, politician and judge, born in Denison, Iowa (d. 1992)
  • 1921 Phyllis Thaxter, American actress (Nora, Fort Worth), born in Portland, Maine (d. 2012)
  • 1922 Louis van Gasteren, Dutch actor and director (The House, De prijs van overleven), born in Amsterdam, Netherlands (d. 2016)
  • 1923 Beryl Sprinkel, American economist (Council of Economic Advisers), born in Richmond, Missouri (d. 2009)
  • 1923 Nadine Gordimer, South African author (July’s people, Nobel 1991), born in Springs, Transvaal, (d. 2014)
  • 1924 Benoit Mandelbrot, Polish-French-American mathematician (proved Zipf’s law, discovered the Mandelbrot set), born in Warsaw, Poland (d. 2010)
  • 1924 Serge Golovine, French ballet choreographer (Death of Narcissus), born in Monte-Carlo, Monaco (d. 1998)
  • 1925 June Christy [Shirley Luster], American jazz singer (“Tampico”; “Something Cool”), born in Springfield, Illinois (d. 1990)
  • 1925 Kaye Ballard, American stage and screen actress, comedienne, (Mothers-in-Law – “Kaye”), and singer, born in Cleveland, Ohio (d. 2019)
  • 1925 Maya Plisetskaya, Russian prima ballerina (Bolshoi Ballet), born in Moscow (d. 2015)

American lawyer and politician (D-Sen-NY, 1965-68; US Attorney General, 1961-64), born in Brookline, Massachusetts

  • 1926 (Andrzej) “Andrew” Schally, Polish-American endocrinologist (Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 1977), and cancer researcher, born in Wilno, Poland (d. 2024) [1]
  • 1926 John Gardner, British spy and thriller novelist (Boysie Oakes novels; James Bond continuation novels), born in Seaton Delaval, Northumberland, England (d. 2007)
  • 1926 Terry Hall, English ventriloquist, born in Chadderton, Lancashire, England (d. 2007)
  • 1927 Erhard Schnell, German automotive designer ‘Father of the Opel GT’, born in Frankfurt, Germany (d. 2020)
  • 1927 Estelle Parsons, American stage and screen Academy Award-winning actress (Bonnie and Clyde; Rachel, Rachel; Roseanne), born in Lynn, Massachusetts
  • 1928 Aleksey Batalov, Russian actor named a People’s Artist of the USSR (1976) and a Hero of Socialist Labour (1989), born in Vladimir, Soviet Union (d. 2017)
  • 1928 Franklin Cover, American actor (Tom-The Jeffersons), born in Cleveland, Ohio (d. 2006)
  • 1928 John Disley, Welsh athlete (Olympic bronze 3000m steeplechase 1952; co-founder London Marathon), born in Corris, Wales (d. 2016)
  • 1928 Pedro Ferrándiz, Spanish basketball coach (EuroLeague 1965, 67, 68, 74 Real Madrid; Spain 1964-65), born in Alicante, Spain (d. 2022)
  • 1928 Pete Rademacher, American boxer (Olympic gold +81kg 1956; first challenger for world heavyweight title in first pro bout; lost), born in Tieton, Washington (d. 2020)
  • 1928 Rex Reason, American actor (This Island Earth, Man Without a Gun, Roaring 20s), born in Berlin, Germany (d. 2015)
  • 1929 Don January, American golfer (PGA Championship 1967; 10 x PGA Tour wins; 22 x PGA Tour Champions wins), born in Plainview, Texas (d. 2023)
  • 1929 Gabriel Ochoa Uribe, Colombian soccer manager (record 14 x league titles; Millonarios [6], Santa Fe [1], América de Cali [7]; Columbia), born in Sopetrán, Colombia (d. 2020)
  • 1929 Kenneth Schermerhorn, American conductor (American Ballet), born in Schenectady, New York (d. 2005)
  • 1929 Lou Berberet, American MLB baseball catcher (NY Yankees, Washington Senators), born in Long Beach, California (d. 2004)
  • 1930 Johnny Whiteley, English rugby league back rower (15 Tests GB, 1 England; Hull RLFC 417 games) and coach (GB, England, Hull RLFC, Hull KR), born in Kingston upon Hull, England (d. 2022)
  • 1931 Pete D. Anderson, American jockey (Belmont Stakes 1958) and trainer, born in Southampton, Long Island, New York (d. 2013)
  • 1931 Rosita Missoni, Italian knitwear designer (Missoni), born in Golasecca, Italy (d. 2025)
  • 1932 James Hardy, Australian winemaker (Thomas Hardy & Sons Wines) and yachtsman (Australian skipper America’s Cup 1970, 74, 80; 4 x Admiral’s Cup Ocean C’ships), born in Adelaide, Australia (d. 2023)
  • 1932 John Barnes Chance, American composer, born in Beaumont, Texas (d. 1972)
  • 1932 Richard Dawson, British-American actor, comedian, and game show host (Hogan’s Heroes, Family Feud), born in Gosport, Hampshire (d. 2012)
  • 1934 Jimmy Millar, Scottish soccer centre forward (2 caps; Rangers 197 games) and manager (Raith Rovers), born in Edinburgh, Scotland (d. 2022)
  • 1934 Valentine J. Peter, American priest (Boy’s Town), born in Omaha, Nebraska (d. 2020)

1936 American author (Underworld), born in New York City

  • 1937 Jack Linkletter, American TV host (Haggis Baggis, Hootenanny), born in San Francisco, California (d. 2007)
  • 1937 Pim van de Meent, Dutch soccer manager (PEC Zwolle, NEC, VBV De Graafschap, FC Den Haag), born in Amsterdam, Netherlands (d. 2022)
  • 1937 René Kollo, German operatic tenor, born in Berlin, Germany
  • 1937 Viktoriya Tokareva, Russian playwright, born in Leningrad, Soviet Union
  • 1938 Tony White, West Indian cricketer (2 Tests WI v Australia 1965), born in Brighton, Saint Michael, Barbados
  • 1939 Dick Smothers, American comedian and folk singer (The Smothers Brothers Show), born on Governors Island, NYC, New York
  • 1940 Erwin Wilczek, Polish soccer midfielder, forward (16 caps; Górnik Zabrze), born in Wirek, Poland (d. 2021)
  • 1940 Helma Sanders-Brahms, German director and writer (Apple Trees; Germany, Pale Mother), born in Emden, Lower Saxony, Germany (d. 2014)
  • 1940 Jim Horn, American session and touring saxophonist (Duane Eddy; Wrecking Crew; George Harrison), born in Los Angeles, California

American musician (Right Place, Wrong Time), born in New Orleans, Louisiana

  • 1941 Gary Karr, American double-bassist (Oslo Philharmonic), born in Los Angeles, California (d. 2025)
  • 1941 Haseena Moin, Pakistani television drama writer and Urdu playwright, born in Kanpur, India (d. 2021)
  • 1942 Bob Einstein, American comedian (Officer Judy, Super Dave Osborne), born in Los Angeles, California (d. 2019)

1942 American Democratic politician, 46th US President (2021-25), Vice President (2009-17) and US Senator from Delaware (1973-2009), born in Scranton, Pennsylvania

  • 1942 Meredith Monk, American choreographer, composer (Atlas) and performing artist, born in New York City
  • 1942 Norman Greenbaum, American folk-rock singer (“Spirit in the Sky”), born in Malden, Massachusetts
  • 1942 Paulos Faraj Rahho, Iraqi Chaldean Catholic bishop, born in Mosul, Iraq (d. 2008)
  • 1943 Lindsay Thomas, American politician (Rep-D-GA, 1983-93), born in Patterson, Georgia
  • 1943 Veronica Hamel, American actress (Hill Street Blues – “Joyce Davenport”; 79 Park Ave), born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • 1944 Anthea Stewart, Zimbabwean field hockey coach and player (Olympic gold 1980), born in Blantyre, Nyasaland
  • 1945 Danny McBride, American rock musician (Sha Na Na, 1975-80), born in Somerville, Massachusetts (d. 2009)
  • 1945 Nanette Workman, American-Canadian singer-songwriter (“Et Maintenant”), and actress, born in Brooklyn, New York City
  • 1945 Rachid Mimouni, Algerian author, born in Boudouaou, Algeria (d. 1995)
  • 1946 Bob Murdoch, Canadian ice hockey defenceman (Stanley Cup 1971, 73 Montreal Canadiens) and coach (Chicago Blackhawks, Winnipeg Jets), born in Kirkland Lake, Ontario (d. 2023)
  • 1946 Duane Allman, American rock guitarist (The Allman Brothers Band), born in Nashville, Tennessee (d. 1971)
  • 1946 J. Blackfoot [Colbert], American soul singer (The Soul Children – “Haersay”; solo – “Taxi”), born in Greenville, Mississippi (d. 2011)
  • 1946 Judy Woodruff, American newscaster (McNeil Lehrer Report), born in Tulsa, Oklahoma
  • 1946 Patriarch Kirill [Vladimir Mikhailovich Gundyayev] Russian Orthodox church leader (2009-), born in Leningrad, Soviet Union
  • 1946 Ray Stiles, English musician (Mud, The Hollies), born in Guildford, England
  • 1947 Joe Walsh, American rock guitarist, singer, songwriter (“Life’s Been Good”; “Rocky Mountain Way”; Eagles – “In The City”), and veterans’ advocate, born in Wichita, Kansas
  • 1948 Jacqueline Hansen, American long distance athlete (world women’s marathon record 1974 2:43:54; 1975 2:38:10; Boston Marathon 1973), born in Binghamton, New York

1948 American security advisor and diplomat (US Ambassador to UN), born in Baltimore, Maryland

  • 1948 Kenjiro Shinozuka, Japanese rally driver who won the Dakar Rally 1997, born in Tokyo (d. 2024)
  • 1948 Rance Allen, American gospel singer and musician (Rance Allen Group – Miracle Worker), born in Monroe, Michigan (d. 2020)
  • 1948 Richard Masur, American actor (David-One Day at a Time), born in New York City
  • 1948 Samuel E. Wright, American stage and screen actor (Enos; Ball Four; The Little Mermaid), born in Camden, South Carolina (d. 2021)
  • 1949 Billy Jones, American rock guitarist (The Outlaws), born in Ann Arbor, Michigan (d. 1995)
  • 1949 Juha Mieto, Finnish 15KM skier (Olympic silver 1980), born in Kurikka, Finland
  • 1949 Ray Vitte, American actor (Doc, Cody-Quest), born in New York City
  • 1949 Thelma Drake, American politician, US Rep, Virginia (2005-09), born in Elyria, Ohio
  • 1950 Gary Green, British guitarist (Gentle Giant), born in London
  • 1950 Greg Gordon, American pop-country vocalist (The Boys Band), born in the USA
  • 1951 David Walters, American politician, Governor of Oklahoma (1991-95), born in Canute, Oklahoma
  • 1951 Rodger Bumpass, American television and voice actor (Squidward Tenticles), born in Little Rock, Arkansas
  • 1952 John Van Boxmeer, National Hockey League player, born in Petrolia, Ontario
  • 1953 Greg Gibson, American Greco-Roman wrestler (Olympic silver 1984), born in Stafford, Virginia
  • 1954 Berit Andnor, Swedish politician, born in Gothenburg, Sweden
  • 1954 Frank Marino, Canadian rock guitarist (Mahogany Rush), born in Montreal, Quebec
  • 1954 Steve Dahl, American radio host, Chicago’s anti-disco DJ (WLS-FM), born in Pasadena, California
  • 1954 Steve Rogers, Australian rugby league centre (24 Tests; NSW; Cronulla-Sutherland), born in Gold Coast, Australia (d. 2006)
  • 1955 Thea Vidale, American actress and comedian (Thea, Family Matters), born in Washington D. C.
  • 1956 Bo Derek [Mary Collins], American actress (10, Tarzan the Ape Man), born in Long Beach, California
  • 1956 Dan Powers, American rock guitarist (Michael Stanley Band, 1983-87), born in Cleveland, Ohio
  • 1956 Mark Gastineau, American NFL end (NY Jets, Pro Bowl 1981-85), born in Ardmore, Oklahoma
  • 1957 Jimmy Brown, British rock-reggae drummer (UB40 – “Red Red Wine”), born in Birmingham, England
  • 1958 Rickson Gracie, Brazilian Mixed Martial Artist, born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
  • 1959 James P. McGovern, American politician (Rep-D-Mass 1997-), born in Worcester, Massachusetts
  • 1959 Mario Martone, Italian film director (Leopardi, Death of a Neapolitan Mathematician), born in Naples, Italy
  • 1959 Sean Young, American actress (Dune, Blade Runner), born in Louisville, Kentucky
  • 1960 Marc Labrèche, Canadian comedian and actor (Le coeur a ses raisons, La Petite Vie), born in Montreal, Quebec
  • 1961 Dave Watson, English footballer, born in Liverpool, England
  • 1961 Larry Karaszewski, American screenwriter (Ed Wood), born in Los Angeles, California
  • 1961 Mark Bradford, American artist (2016 Venice Biennale), born in Los Angeles, California
  • 1961 Tim Harvey, British racing driver, born in Farnborough, England
  • 1962 Gail Ann Dorsey, American session and touring bassist, singer, and songwriter (David Bowie; Tears for Fears; Dar Williams), born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • 1962 Steve Alexander, Welsh pop drummer (Brother Beyond – “The Harder I Try”), born in Ystradgynlais, Penrhos, Wales

1963 Macau-born actress (Mulan, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D), born in Coloane Island, Macau

  • 1963 Timothy Gowers, British mathematician (1998 Fields Medal), born in Malborough, England
  • 1964 Doug Ford, Canadian businessman and politician, Premier of Ontario (2018-), born in Etobicoke, Ontario
  • 1964 John Maclean, Canadian NHL right wing (NJ Devils), born in Oshawa, Ontario
  • 1964 Ned Vaughn, American actor (The Rescuer), born in Huntsville, Alabama

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Historical Events on November 20


Tallest and Shortest Women Meet

2024 World’s tallest woman, Rumeysa Gelgi, at 7 ft 0.71 in (215.16 cm) from Turkey, meets the world’s shortest woman, Jyoti Amge, at 2 ft 0.7 in (62.8 cm) from India, at the Savoy Hotel in London, to celebrate Guinness World Records Day [1]



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What Happened on November 20


Major Events

  • 284 Roman General Diocletian is proclaimed emperor by the armies of the East and West after the death of Carinus at the Battle of the Margus
  • 762 Khan of the Uyghurs, Bögü Qaghan, conquers Luoyang, the capital of the Chinese Empire
  • 1695 Zumbi, the last King of the Quilombo dos Palmares in early Brazil and a former slave, is executed and decapitated, his head displayed on a pike to dispel any legends of his immortality

More November 20 Events

Nov 20 in Film & TV

  • 1983 100 million watch ABC TV movie “The Day After” about nuclear war

Nov 20 in Music

Nov 20 in Sport

Did You Know?

First successful use of a tank in battle at the Battle of Cambrai in World War I as Britain uses the new technology to break through German lines

November 20, 1917


Fun Fact About November 20

McDonald’s makes its 50 billionth hamburger

November 20, 1984

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Trapping a Single Particle to Reveal Lightning’s First Spark



Andrea Stöllner Experimental ChamberA daring new laser-based technique lets researchers trap and charge a single aerosol particle, opening a window into how tiny ice crystals in clouds might store and release electrical energy. As the team discovered, laser photons can knock electrons off these particles one by one, allowing scientists to watch them charge up, discharge, and behave […]



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These Breast Cancer Facts Could Save Your Life



Woman Pink Breast Cancer RibbonA nursing professor dispels common myths, explains the risks, and highlights promising new treatments. Breast cancer is one of the most commonly diagnosed cancers in the world and remains a major cause of cancer-related illness in the United States. A new case is identified in the U.S. roughly every two minutes, and in 2025 alone, […]



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