EVENTS
- 565 – The first reported sighting of the Loch Ness Monster.
- 1485 – The Wars of the Roses ends with the Battle of Bosworth Field.
- 1779 – James Cook Lands on Possession Island. British explorer James Cook reached the island, which is off the northern coast of Queensland Australia, 2 years after he had set sail on the HMS Endeavour from Plymouth. James Cook named the area New South Wales and claimed it for the British Crown.
- 1815 – Yacht America wins the first America’s Cup.
- 1851 – The First America’s Cup is held. The cup is awarded to the winner of a race between sailing yachts. Thought to be the oldest international sporting trophy to be still awarded today the cup’s name was changed from Hundred Guinea Cup to America’s Cup after the name of the yacht that won the first race on this day. Led by Commodore John Cox Stevens, America participated in a 53 nautical mile race around the Isle of Wight in England.
- 1901 – The auto company Cadillac is founded.
- 1902 – Theodore Roosevelt is the first President of the US to ride in a car.
- 1922 – Irish Politician Michael Collins is Assassinated. A member and leader of Sinn Fein, a political party that advocated complete Irish independence from Britain, Collins was shot dead in an ambush. This was only a few months after he had been appointed as the Finance Minister of the Irish Free State.
- 1962 – France’s President Charles De Gaulle Survives an Assasination Attempt. The Organisation de l’armée secrète (OAS), a French far-right organization tried to machine gun Charles De Gaulle while he was riding to the airport with his wife. The assassination attempt was led by Jean-Marie Bastien-Thiry, an officer in the French Air Force. Bastien-Thiry and the OAS were unhappy about De Gaulle’s role in allowing Algeria’s independence. It is thought that the car De Gaulle was riding in, a Citroen DS 19, was partially responsible for saving his and his wife’s life. After being caught, Bastien-Thiry was the last person in France to be executed by a firing squad.
- 1963 – First Person to Enter Space Twice. The record was set by Joseph A. Walker, a United States Air Force Captain, and a fighter pilot while flying the X-15, an experimental hypersonic rocket-powered aircraft. The X-15 was a joint venture between the US Air Force and the NASA. Not only did Walker became the first person to enter space twice, he also was the first person to take a spaceflight to an altitude of 67 miles (108 kilometers) in the 12-minute long flight.
- 1986 – Deadly fumes from a volcanic eruption under Lake Nios in Cameroon killed more than 1,500 persons.
- 1989 – Nolan Ryan gets his 5,000th strike out.
BIRTHDAYS
- 1862 – Claude DeBussy (Composer)
- 1880 – George Herriman (American cartoonist)
- 1893 – Dorothy Parker (American poet, writer)
- 1904 – Deng Xiaoping (Chinese politician, diplomat)
- 1920 – Ray Bradbury (Author)
- 1928 – Karlheinz Stockhausen (German composer)
- 1934 – Norman Schwarzkopf (US General in Gulf War)
- 1939 – Carl Yastrzemski (Baseball player)
- 1939 – Valerie Harper (Actress)
- 1941 – Bill Parcells (Football Coach)
- 1963 – Tori Amos (Singer)
- 1964 – Mats Wilander (Tennis Player)
DEATHS
- 1241 – Pope Gregory IX
- 1358 – Isabella of France
- 1485 – Richard III of England
- 1553 – John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland (English Admiral, politician)
- 2011 – Jack Layton (Canadian politician)