October 21th is
Apple Day *
Babbling Day
Back to the Future Day *
Celebration of the Mind Day *
Count Your Buttons Day
Pumpkin Cheesecake Day
Reptile Awareness Day
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MORE! Alfred Nobel, Ursula K. Le Guin and Derek Bell, click
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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS
British Virgin Islands – St. Ursula Day
Burundi – President Ndadaye’s
Death Anniversary
Egypt – Egyptian Naval Day
Honduras – Army Day
India – Bhai Dooj
(Second day of Diwali)
Netherlands – Amsterdam:
Dockyard Festival
Serbia –WWII Victims Remembrance Day
Taiwan – Overseas Chinese Day
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On This Day in HISTORY
1097 – First Crusade: The Siege of Antioch is begun by Crusaders from the Byzantine Empire against the Muslim-held city under Governor Yaghi-Siyan
1328 – Zhu Yuanzhang born, who will be the Hongwu Emperor, the founder and first ruler of China’s Ming dynasty (1368-1644)
1512 – Martin Luther joins the theological faculty of the University of Wittenberg
1520 – Ferdinand Magellan arrives at the straits now named for him, the Straits of Magellan, a route between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, separating the southern tip of mainland South America from Tierra del Fuego
1600 – Tokugawa Ieyasu defeats rivals at the Battle of Sekighara, beginning the Tokugawa shogunate, which will control Japan until 1867
1687 – Nicolaus Bernoulli born, Swiss mathematician; worked on probability theory in law, differential equations and geometry
1772 – Samuel Taylor Coleridge born, English poet and philosopher
1774 – First display of the word “Liberty” on a flag, raised by American colonists in Taunton MA in defiance of British rule
1775 – Giuseppe Baini born, Italian composer, critic and priest
1797 – U.S. Navy frigate Constitution is launched in Boston Harbor
1805 – At the Battle of Trafalgar, the British fleet led by Vice Admiral Lord Nelson defeats a combined French and Spanish fleet, ending French maritime power and making Britain the dominant naval power until the 20th century, but Admiral Nelson is killed
1808 – Samuel F. Smith born, American Baptist minister and hymn writer; “America” and “My Country ‘Tis of Thee”
1816 – Rev. Robert Sparke Hutchings founds the Penang Free School, the first and now oldest English-language school in Southeast Asia
1824 – Joseph Aspdin patents Portland cement, “an improvement in the mode of producing an artificial stone” with his Majesty King George IV’s High Court of Chancery
1830 – Georg von Dollmann born, German architect; designer of the Linderhof Palace
1833 – Alfred Nobel born, Swedish chemist and engineer; inventor of dynamite; founder the Nobel Prize
1854 – Florence Nightingale and a staff of 38 nurses leave Britain for Scurati, in the Ottoman Empire, to tend sick or wounded British soldiers during the Crimean War
1867 – The Medicine Lodge Treaty is signed in Kansas by southern Great Plains Indian leaders, requiring them to relocate to a western Oklahoma reservation
1874 – Giuseppe Giacosa born, Italian poet, playwright, and co-librettist for Puccini’s La bohème, Tosca and Madama Butterfly with Luigi Illica
1876 – Jay Norwood Darling born, American political cartoonist
1879 – Thomas Edison invents a workable electric light bulb, which is the first commercially practical light bulb, but not the first light bulb invented
1888 – The Swiss Social Democratic Party is founded, currently the only left wing political party with representatives on the Swiss Federal Council
1891 – Ted Shawn born, American Modern Dance pioneer
1894 – Edogawa Ranpo, born as Tarō Hirai, Japanese author of mystery fiction; The Boy Detectives Club, The Fiend with Twenty Faces, and others have be translated
1907 – The Merry Widow opens in New York City
1910 – HMS Niobe arrives in Halifax Harbour, and becomes the first ship in the Royal Canadian Navy
1911 – Mary Robinson Blair born, American artist and children’s author who drew concepts for the Walt Disney animated films of Alice in Wonderland, Peter Pan, Song of the South and Cinderella; also worked on designs for attractions at Disneyland
1912 – Don Byas born, American ‘Bee-bop’ saxophonist
1912 – Georg Solti born, Hungarian-English conductor and director
1917 – WWI: American soldiers first saw action on the front lines in France
1917 – Dizzy Gillespie born, American trumpet player, composer, and bandleader
1921 – President Warren G. Harding delivers the first speech by a sitting U.S. President against lynching in southern U.S. states
1921 – Malcolm Arnold born, English composer of symphonies, ballets and film scores
1928 – Eudóxia Froehlich born, Brazilian zoologist, noted for her work on land planarians (flatworms) and arachnids
1929 – Ursula K. Le Guin born, American author, poet and critic; The Left Hand of Darkness, The Earthsea series, The Dispossessed, and The Lathe of Heaven; became a Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America Grandmaster in 2003
1931 – The Sakurakai, an ultranationalist secret society within the Imperial Japanese Army, launches an abortive coup d’état attempt
1933 – Maureen Duffy born, English author, poet, and playwright of Rites, and its sequel, Washouse; activist for Gay and Animal rights
1935 – Derek Bell born, Irish harp player, pianist, and songwriter
1940 – Ernest Hemingway’s novel For Whom the Bell Tolls is published
1940 – Frances Fitzgerald born, American journalist, historian and nonfiction author; Fire in the Lake won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award
1945 – Women are allowed to vote for the first time in France
1956 – The British Army captures Kenyan Mau Mau leader Dedan Kimathi; his execution signals the end of the violent uprising against the British colonial government, disputing the right of white British colonialists to continually expropriate traditional tribal lands, which had been upheld by the British Kenya High Court in 1921
1958 – Buddy Holly’s last studio recording session, including “Raining in My Heart”
1959 – The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, opens to the public in New York City
1959 – Rose McDowall born, Scottish singer-songwriter and guitarist
1965 – Comet Ileya-Seki approaches perihelion, passing 279,617 miles (450,00 km) from the sun
1967 – More than 100,000 Vietnam War protesters hold a peaceful rally in Washington DC at the Lincoln Memorial, but their march to the Pentagon leads to clashes with soldiers and U.S. Marshalls, described by Norman Mailer in The Armies of the Night
1971 – President Nixon nominates William H. Rehnquist to the U.S. Supreme Court
1974 – Queen releases their single “Killer Queen”
1977 – The European Patent Institute is founded
1983 –The 17th General Conference on Weights and Measures defines a metre as the distance that light travels in a vacuum in 1/299,792,458 of a second
1988 – Former Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos and his wife, Imelda, are indicted in New York on charges of fraud and racketeering
1990 – The first Apple Day * held at Covent Garden in London
2003 – Invoking a hastily-passed law, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush ordered a feeding tube reinserted into Terry Schiavo, a brain-damaged woman caught between sides in bitter right-to-die battle
2005 – Images are taken which document the existence of the dwarf planet Eris
2010 – First Celebration of the Mind Day, * honoring Martin Gardner, authority on Lewis Carroll, popular math and science writer, on his birthday anniversary
2015 – First Back to the Future Day * – In the movie Back the Future, Marty McFly and the modified Delorean arrive in the future on October 21, 2015, at 4:29 pm
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