Births | ||
|---|---|---|
| * 1977 | Orlando Bloom | British actor. |
| * 1969 | Genco Gulan | Aconceptual artist, based in Istanbul. |
| * 1969 | Stephen Hendry | Scottish professional snooker player and seven time World Champion. |
| * 1959 | Ernie Irvan | Former race car driver in NASCAR. |
| * 1940 | Edmund White | American writer. |
| * 1937 | George Reisman | American economist and political author. |
| * 1926 | Michael Bond | English writer of children's stories; his best-known creation is Paddington Bear. |
| * 1924 | Paul Karl Feyerabend | Philosopher of science, professor of philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley, who became famous for his purportedly anarchistic view of science, his bitingly critical prose on the prevailing scientific philosophies, and his rejection of the existence of universal methodological rules. |
| * 1912 | Dieter Wisliceny | Member of the Nazi SS, and a key executioner of the Final Solution of the Jewish Question, the final phase of the Holocaust. |
| * 1895 | Jan Burgers | Dutch physicist, credited to be the father of Burgers' equation, the Burgers vector in dislocation theory and the Burgers material in viscoelasticity. |
| * 1890 | Elmer Davis | Well-known news reporter, author, the Director of the United States Office of War Information during World War II, and a Peabody Award Recipient. |
| * 1872 | G. I. Gurdjieff | Greek-Armenian mystic and a spiritual teacher of what came to be called "the Work" or "The Fourth Way", in which he taught people how to increase and focus their attention and energy through various awareness exercises. |
| * 1827 | Ethel Lynn Beers | American poet best known for her patriotic and sentimental Civil War poem "All Quiet Along the Potomac Tonight". |
| * 1810 | Ernestine Rose | Atheist feminist, Individualist Feminist, and abolitionist. |
| * 1808 | Salmon P. Chase | American politician and jurist in the Civil War era who served as U S Senator from Ohio and Governor of Ohio; as Secretary of the Treasury under President Abraham Lincoln; and as Chief Justice of the United States. |
| * 1784 | Samuel Woodworth | American author, literary journalist, playwright, librettist, and most famously, poet. |
| * 1720 | Richard (bishop) Hurd | English divine and writer, and bishop of Worcester. |
Deaths | ||
| † 2009 | Nancy Bird Walton | Pioneering Australian aviatrix, and was the founder and patron of the Australian Women Pilots' Association. |
| † 2009 | Patrick McGoohan | Irish actor and director, most famous for playing the title role in the Prisoner and John Drake in Danger Man as well as playing the murderer in many Columbo films. |
| † 2004 | Tom Hurndall | British photographer, member of the International Solidarity Movement and an activist against the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories. |
| † 1982 | Sigurd Olson | Author, wilderness advocate and conservation movement leader. |
| † 1978 | Hubert Humphrey | Vice President of the United States of America from 1965 to 1969 and was the Democratic presidential candidate in 1968. |
| † 1962 | Ernie Kovacs | American comedian whose uninhibited, often ad-libbed, and visually experimental comic style came to influence numerous television comedy programs for years after his tragic, early death in an automobile accident. |
| † 1956 | Lyonel Feininger | German-American painter and caricaturist. |
| † 1954 | William H. P. Blandy | United States Navy Admiral who was most known for overseeing the atomic bomb tests at Bikini Island in the Pacific Ocean. |
| † 1941 | James Joyce | Irish novelist, short-story writer and poet. |
| † 1931 | John Burgess | Pioneering American political scientist. |
| † 1929 | Wyatt Earp | Officer of the law, gambler and saloon keeper in the Wild West. |
| † 1921 | Francis William Bourdillon | British poet and translator. |
| † 1907 | Jakob Hurt | Estonian folklorist, theologian, and linguist, one of the most important figures of Estonian national awakening. |
| † 1864 | Stephen Foster | Known as the "father of American music", was the pre-eminent songwriter in the United States of the 19th century. |
| † 1841 | Bertrand Barere de Vieuzac | French politician and journalist, one of the most notorious members of the National Convention during the French Revolution. |
| † 1838 | John Scott | Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain from 1801 to 1806 and from 1807 to 1827. |
| † 1691 | George Fox | Founder of the Society of Friends, commonly known as the Quakers. |
| † 1599 | Edmund Spenser | English poet, who wrote such pastorals as The Shepheardes Calendar, Astrophell and Colin Clouts Come Home Againe, but is most famous for the multi-layered allegorical romance The Faerie Queene. |
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