Births | ||
|---|---|---|
| * 1980 | Andy Hurley | Best known as the drummer for the pop-punk band Fall Out Boy. |
| * 1976 | Colin Farrell | Irish actor. |
| * 1964 | Billy Davies | Scottish football manager, former professional player and the current manager of Nottingham Forest. |
| * 1963 | Wesley Willis | Musician who did mostly solo work, but also worked with the punk rock band known as the Wesley Willis Fiasco. |
| * 1944 | Salmaan Taseer | Pakistani businessman and politician who served as the Governor of Punjab the province of Pakistan from 2008 until his assassination in 2011. |
| * 1938 | John Prescott | British Labour Party politician who was Deputy Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and First Secretary of State from 1997 to 2007. |
| * 1932 | Jay Miner | Famous microprocessor designer, known primarily for his work in multimedia chips. |
| * 1930 | Clint Eastwood | American film actor, director, producer, and composer. |
| * 1923 | Ellsworth Kelly | American painter and sculptor associated with Hard-edge painting, Color Field painting and the Minimalist school. |
| * 1919 | Huston Smith | Religious studies scholar in the United States, notable for the number of religions of which he considers or has considered himself a member. |
| * 1911 | Maurice Allais | French economist, and the 1988 laureate of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics "for his pioneering contributions to the theory of markets and efficient utilization of resources". |
| * 1898 | Norman Vincent Peale | Author of The Power of Positive Thinking and chief progenitor of the theory of positive thinking. |
| * 1894 | Fred Allen | Born John Florence Sullivan, was an American comedian and radio host. |
| * 1892 | Gregor Strasser | Politician of the German Nazi Party. |
| * 1847 | James Jeffrey Roche | Irish-American poet, journalist and diplomat, Editor of the Boston Pilot and Helped put Teddy Roosevelt in to office. |
| * 1829 | Francisco Luis Gomes | Indo-Portuguese statesman and writer from Goa. |
| * 1819 | Walt Whitman | American journalist and poet, most famous for his lifelong work on his book Leaves of Grass. |
| * 1816 | William Mountford | English Unitarian preacher and author. |
| * 1773 | Ludwig Tieck | German poet, translator, editor, novelist, critic. |
| * 1753 | Pierre Vergniaud | Leader in the French Revolution and one of its most celebrated orators. |
| * 1597 | Jean-Louis Guez de Balzac Balzac | French author, best known for his epistolary essays, which were widely circulated and read in his day. |
Deaths | ||
| † 2010 | Louise Bourgeois | French-American artist and sculptor. |
| † 2009 | George Tiller | American physician and abortion provider. |
| † 1996 | Timothy Leary | American writer, psychologist, campaigner for psychedelic drug research and use, 1960s counterculture icon and computer software designer. |
| † 1991 | Angus Wilson | English novelist, short-story writer, biographer and critic. |
| † 1986 | Dora Russell | Born Dora Black, was a British feminist, social activist and writer. |
| † 1983 | Jack Dempsey | American boxer who held the world heavyweight title between 1919 and 1926. |
| † 1976 | Martha Beall Mitchell | Wife of John Mitchell, United States Attorney General under President Richard Nixon. |
| † 1963 | Edith Hamilton | Classicist and educator who was a writer on mythology. |
| † 1962 | Henry Fountain Ashurst | U S Senator from Arizona (1912–1941). |
| † 1960 | Walther Funk | Prominent Nazi official. |
| † 1945 | Odilo Globocnik | Prominent Austrian Nazi and later an SS leader. |
| † 1889 | Horatius Bonar | Scottish churchman and poet. |
| † 1875 | Eliphas Levi | Born Alphonse Louis Constant, was a French occult author and magician. |
| † 1847 | Thomas Chalmers | Scottish mathematician and a leader of the Free Church of Scotland. |
| † 1841 | George Green | British mathematician and physicist, who wrote An Essay on the Application of Mathematical Analysis to the Theories of Electricity and Magnetism (Green, 1828). |
| † 1832 | Evariste Galois | French mathematician, who, while still in his teens, developed the well-known Galois theory. |
| † 1809 | Joseph Haydn | One of the most prominent composers of the Classical period, and is called by some the "Father of the Symphony" and "Father of the String Quartet". |
| † 1806 | George Macartney | British statesman, colonial administrator and diplomat. |
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