September 14th is

Cream-Filled Donut Day

Eat a Hoagie Day
Galactic Space-Time Ripple Day *
Live Creative Day *
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MORE! Margaret Sanger, John Dobson and Kate Millett, click
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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS
Christianity – Exaltation of the Holy Cross/Holy Cross Day/Holy Rood Day
Bolivia – Día de Cochabamba
(Cochabamba uprising)
Mauritius – Ganesh Chathurthi
(Birth Day of Lord Ganesha)
Nicaragua – San Jacinto Day *
(defeat of Walker’s mercenaries)
United Kingdom – Bath:
Jane Austen Festival (opening day)
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On This Day in HISTORY
AD 81 – Domitian, younger son of Vespasian, is acclaimed Emperor of the Roman Empire by the Praetorian Guard upon the death of his brother Titus – bad news for the Roman Senate, as he is adept at keeping the affection of the army and the people in an era of prosperity while severely curtailing their power – when Domitian is assassinated in AD 96, the Senate condemns his memory to oblivion

326 – Helena of Constantinople discovers the ‘True Cross’ * and ‘Holy Sepulchre’ in Jerusalem
786 – “Night of the three Caliphs”: Harun al-Rashid becomes the Abbasid caliph upon the death of his brother al-Hadi, and al-Rashid’s son al-Ma’mun is born the same night
1032 – Emperor Daozong of Liao born, will reign for 46 years (1055-1101); the Sakyamuni Pagoda of Fogong Temple was completed in 1056, at the site of the Emperor’s grandmother’s home. It still stands today, a survivor of many earthquakes

photo by John Roberts
1180 – Genpeo War: Battle of Ishibashiyama is won by forces of the Taira clan led by Oba Kegechika against a much smaller force of the Minamoto clan under by Minamoto no Yoritomo, who will become Shogun less than a decade later

1607 – End of the Nine Years War and the Old Gaelic Order: ‘The Flight of the Earls’ – Hugh O’Neill, Earl of Tyrone and Rory O’Donnell, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell, with some ninety followers. leave Ulster, Ireland, for exile in Spain and Italy
1682 – Founding of Bishop Gore School, one of the oldest in Wales
1728 – Mercy Otis Warren born, American author, poet and historian, wrote one of the earliest histories of the American Revolution: History of the Rise, Progress, and Termination of the American Revolution

1741 – George Friedrich Handel completes his Messiah for an orphan’s charity concert
1752 – First day in the British Empire under the Gregorian calendar
1760 – Luigi Cherubini born in Italy, French composer of opera and sacred music
1769 – Alexander von Humboldt born, German naturalist, geographer and explorer; laid foundations for fields of biogeography and geomagnetic and meteorological monitoring; his multi-volume treatise Kosmos helped form a holistic view of the Universe as a single interacting entity; first scientist to describe effects of human-induced climate change he observed in 1800 and 1831; the Humboldt Current, numerous geographic features, flora and fauna are named in his honor

1791 – The Papal States lose Avignon to Revolutionary France
1812 –As Napoleon’s army occupies the city, Moscow blazes for four days, destroying almost 75% of the buildings. Cause is disputed, but incendiarists interrogated by the French say they were under orders to burn “everything”

1829 – The Ottoman Empire signs the Treaty of Adrianople with Russia, ending the Russo-Turkish War
1854 – Julia Magruder born, American novelist; several of her stories were serialized in the Ladies Home Journal; recipient of an award from the Académie Française
1856– At Hacienda San Jacinto *, in Managua, Nicaragua—between 160 soldiers of the Legitimist Septemtrion Army led by Colonel José Dolores Estrada defeat 300 Nicaraguan mercenaries hired by William Walker, who wanted to create a slave-holding empire in Latin America. The filibusters were defeated by Colonel Estrada’s men
1857 – Alice Stone Blackwell born, suffragist, journalist and human rights activist; daughter of suffragist Lucy Stone (who pioneered keeping maiden name after marriage) and Henry Blackwell, abolitionist, and advocate for women’s equality and suffrage

1857 – Julia Barlow Platt born, American embryologist, activist and politician; after graduating from the University of Vermont in 1887, she did research at the Harvard Annex, founded in 1879, which was the only access for women to Harvard at the time; she was one of several women challenging the university’s anti-coeducational policies. Platt had to get her doctorate at the University of Freiburg in Germany. Her work demonstrating that neural crest cells formed the jaw cartilage and tooth dentine in Necturus maculosus (mudpuppy embryos), was not believed by her contemporaries because it ran counter to their belief that only mesoderm could form bones and cartilage. Her hypothesis of the neural crest origin of the cranial skeleton gained acceptance only some 50 years later when confirmed by Sven Hörstadius and Sven Sellman. Frustrated because she was unable to secure a university position, she became a civic activist in California, working to create two small marine protected areas, which became crucial to the recovery of Monterey Bay, and the rescue of sea otters from near-extinction. In 1931, she was elected as the first woman mayor of Pacific Grove California

1866 – George K. Anderson patents the typewriter ribbon
1867 – Charles Dana Gibson born, American artist and illustrator

The Greatest Game in the World – His Move by Charles Dana Gibson
1879 – Margaret Sanger born, American birth control activist, sex educator, and nurse; popularized the term birth control, opened the first birth control clinic in the U.S.; founded organizations that evolve into Planned Parenthood Federation of America


1882 – Winnifred Mason Huck born, investigative journalist exposing abuses in the prison system; also a politician, the third woman to be elected to the U.S. Congress (R-IL 1922-1923) in a special election to take her father’s seat after his death
1887 – Karl Compton born, American physicist; president of M. I. T. (1930-48)
1897 – Margaret Rudkin born, American businesswoman, founder of Pepperidge Farm
1901 – U.S. President William McKinley dies of assassination gunshot wounds, and Vice President Theodore Roosevelt is sworn in as President
1902 – Alice Tully born, American operatic soprano, music promoter and philanthropist; on the boards for the New York Philharmonic, the Metropolitan Opera and the Juilliard School; recipient of the Handel Medallion
1910 – Rolf Lieberman born, Swiss composer, and Artistic Director of the Hamburg State Opera (1959-1973) and the Paris Opera (1973-1980)
1914 – Mae Boren Axton born, American songwriter, best known as co-writer with Tommy Durden of “Heartbreak Hotel”
1915 – Carl Muench patents the first sound-absorbing material, made from cellulose fibers, for use as wall board
1915 – John Dobson born, amateur astronomer, inventor of the Dobsonian telescope, a low-cost, more easily transported Newtonian reflector telescope which he used to popularize astronomy when he made appearances as the “Sidewalk Astronomer,” and held workshops to teach people how to make their own telescopes all over the U.S. He was a co-founder of the San Francisco Sidewalk Astronomers

Examples of Dobsonian telescopes; center, John Dobson grinding a lens
1917 – Russia is declared a republic
1918 – Cachao born as Israel López Valdés, Cuban double bassist and composer, known as co-creator of the mamba, and a master of descarga (musical improvisation)
1921 – Constance Baker Motley born, American lawyer, judge, politician and civil rights activist, first female attorney for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, wrote original complaint in Brown v. Board of Education, first African American woman to argue before the U.S. Supreme Court, first African American woman to be appointed as a federal court judge, recipient of the Presidential Citizens Medal and the Spingarn Medal from the NAACP

1929 – Larry Collins born, American journalist, historian, and author; Newsweek Paris bureau; co-author with Dominique Lapierre, Is Paris Burning?, Or I’ll Dress you in Mourning and Freedom at Midnight
1930 – Romola Constantino born, Australian pianist who gave the first solo piano recital at the Sydney Opera House in 1973; also worked as a music critic for the Sydney Morning Herald, and was a senior lecturer at the University of Sydney; appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1978
1930 – Allan D. Bloom born, American philosopher and classicist; champion of the Great Books idea of education; author of the controversial book, The Closing of the American Mind, in which he protests the ousting of the classics of literature and philosophy from the curriculum
1934 – Sarah Kofman born, French philosopher, author and educator, wrote books on Nietzsche and Freud
1934 – Kate Millett born, American author, artist and activist, wrote the influential book Sexual Politics, advocate for women’s rights and mental health reform

1938 – First flight of the VS-300, its design based on Igor Silorsky patents
1940 – Congress passes Selective Service Act, the first U.S. peacetime draft
1941 – Joan Trumpauer Mulholland born, American civil rights activist, a white woman from Virginia whose activism as a student at Duke University was regarded as some form of mental illness, and she was taken for testing after her first arrest. She dropped out of Duke, and was one of the Freedom Riders on the Illinois Central train from New Orleans to Jackson, Mississippi, where they were arrested. They were incarcerated at Parchman Penitentiary, a prison with a reputation for violence, and the disappearance of several inmates. She and the other women were strip-searched and given vaginal exams. They were housed for two months on death row, in a segregated cell with 17 women and 3 feet of floor space per prisoner. She refused to pay bail and served more than her two month sentence because each day in prison took $3 off her fine of $200. She became the first white student at Tougaloo College in Jackson, and several attempts were made by local authorities to close down the school, but its charter predated the Jim Crow laws. She was one of the activists in the May 28, 1963 Woolworth lunch counter sit-in, where they were beaten and smeared with condiments. She was called a “white nigger” and dragged out of the store by her hair

1948 – Groundbreaking ceremony in NYC for United Nations world headquarters

1951 – Arrigo Barnabé born, Brazilian experimental musician-composer
1955 – Geraldine Brooks born, Australian American journalist and novelist. Her 2005 novel March won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction; her work as a foreign correspondent for The Wall Street Journal inspired her first book, the non-fiction Nine Parts of Desire
1959 – Soviet space probe Luna II is first man-made object on the moon when it crashes
1960 – OPEC founded by agreement between core members Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela
1962 – Bonnie Jo Campbell born, American novelist and short story writer; Once Upon a River and Mothers, Tell Your Daughters
1965 – Emily Bell born, British journalist and academic; Professor of Professional Practice at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism who previously worked for The Guardian and The Observer
1969 – The first day of the U.S. military Draft Lottery
1972 – TV series The Waltons premieres on CBS
1975 – Pope Paul VI declares Mother Seton a saint, the first saint born in the U.S.
1978 – Mork and Mindy premieres on ABC-TV
1984 – Joe Kittenger completes first solo balloon flight across the Atlantic Ocean
1985 – The longest bridge in Malaysia, Penang Bridge opens, connecting the island to the mainland
1999 – Kiribati, Nauru and Tonga join the United Nations
2000 – Microsoft releases Windows ME (millennium edition)

2001 – The FBI releases the names of the nineteen hijackers who were involved in the 9-11 terrorist attacks
2004 – Algerian Minister of Justice Tayeb Belaiz announces that the Algeria will press ahead with a controversial bill to improve women’s rights despite fierce opposition from Islamic parties
2015 – Galactic Space-Time Ripple Day * – In Livingston, LA, and Hanford, WA, the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) detected gravitational waves * for the first time

2016 – The Census Bureau reports that the U.S. median household income had increased from $53, 700 in 2014 to $56, 500 in 2015, while the poverty rate went down over 1%. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump claimed that Americans were “still poorer” than they had been 15 years before
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