Today in History
Historical Events
Jesse Owens posthumously receives the Congressional Gold Medal. The African American athlete dominated the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, which were held during the reign of Adolf Hitler's racist nazi regime.
Three Mile Island nuclear power plant experiences a partial meltdown and radioactive leak. The coolant leak was the worst commercial nuclear accident in the United States. A continuous string of nuclear disasters, such as Three Mile Island (1979), Chernobyl (1986), and Fukushima (2011) continue to raise doubts about the security and environmental benefit of nuclear power.
Greek poet Giorgos Seferis speaks out against the military junta. The Nobel Prize laureate issued his now famous statement against Greece's repressive right-wing Regime of the Colonels on the BBC World Service.
Alfred Hitchcock's movie The Birds is released. The film about a swarm of birds wreaking havoc in Bodega Bay, California has become a classic of the horror movie genre.
The first seaplane in history takes off. French inventor Henri Fabre's Canard (Fabre Hydravion) was the first floatplane to take off from water under its own power. The first flight measured 457 meters.
Famous Births
Born on this day

Lady Gaga
1986
American singer-songwriter, producer, actress

Reba Mc
1955
EntireAmerican singer-songwriter, producer, actress

Alejandro Toledo
1946
Peruvian politician, 48th President of Peru

Mario Vargas Llosa
1936
Peruvian/Spanish journalist, author, Nobel Prize laureate

Raphael
1483
Italian painter, architect
Famous Deaths
Died on this day

Peter Ustinov
2004
English actor, director, producer, screenwriter

Dwight D. Eisenhower
1969
American general, politician, 34th President of the United States

Sergei Rachmaninoff
1943
Russian pianist, composer, conductor

Virginia Woolf
1941
English author, critic

Ivan the Terrible
1584
Russian Tsar