| <<
Jan 03 HISTORY 4 2DAY
|Jan 05 >> Events, deaths, births, of JAN 04 v.8.00 [For Jan 04 Julian go to Gregorian date: 1583~1699: Jan 14 1700s: Jan 15 1800s: Jan 16 1900~2099: Jan 17] |
^
On
a 04 January:![]() 2006 Jacob Calero and his wife, Michelle De La Vega Calero, are arrested on their return to California from a trip to Las Vegas to celebrate the new year. After entrusting to Michelle's mother the puppies they gave each other for Christmas, they had gone from their home in San Ramon, California, early on 30 December 2005, leaving behind, asleep, Jacob's sons, Joshua Calero, 9, and autistic Jason Calero, 5, [04 Jan 2006 photo >], with no one to care for them. Their mother, Cristina Calero, died of breast cancer in 2003 and Jacob married Michelle in 2005. Police, called by the maternal grandmother, Libbey Holden, found the boys asleep in the evening of 31 December 2005. Joshua comments to reporters: “They shouldn't leave us alone. ... I thought they loved them [the puppies] more than us.” — (060105) 2004 The rover Spirit, which had been launched from Earth on 10 June 2003, lands in Gusev Crater on Mars at 04:35 UT. — Mars Rover site at NASA 2001 The italian weekly Oggi publishes an interview with orthopaedic surgeon Gianfranco Fineschi, member of Pope John Paul II's medical team, who says that the pope suffers from Parkington's disease. 1998 David Levy presenta su dimisión como ministro de Exteriores israelí, ante los graves desacuerdos mantenidos con su primer ministro, Benjamín Netanyahu.
1995 In the US, the 104th Congress convenes, the first entirely under Republican control since the Eisenhower era; Newt Gingrich is elected speaker of the US House of Representatives. 1994 La Corte de Justicia de la Asociación Europea de Libre Cambio (EFTA) es inaugurada en Ginebra. 1994 The US's 104th Congress convenes, the first entirely under Republican control since the Eisenhower era; Newt Gingrich is elected speaker of the House. 1993 Daniel Arap Moi, de 68 años, es investido presidente de Kenia, después de haber sido reelegido en las primeras elecciones multipartidistas en 26 años, celebradas el 29 Dec 1992. 1991 Iraq agrees to send its Foreign Minister Aziz to Geneva to meet US Secretary of State Baker on 09 January 1991 to discuss the Kuwait crisis. |
1990 Deposed Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega is
arraigned in federal district court in Miami on drug-trafficking charges.
|
| 1979 El Sha del Irán abandona Teherán camino del exilio. 1978 Se crea el Consejo General del País Vasco, con Jesús María de Leizaola como primer lehendakari. 1975 Ice thickness measured at 4776 m, Wilkes Land, Antarctica 1974 US President Richard Nixon refuses to hand over tape recordings and documents subpoenaed by the Senate Watergate Committee. 1974 Carlos Arias Navarro forma Gobierno en España. 1971 Anwar el Sadat reconoce la presencia militar soviética en Egipto. 1970 New York City NY transit fare rises from 20¢ to 30¢, new larger tokens used 1969 Firma en Fez del tratado de retrocesión del territorio de Ifni de España a Marruecos. 1965 In his 2nd annual State of the Union address, US President Lyndon B. Johnson outlines the goals of his "Great Society". He also reaffirms US commitment to support South Vietnam in fighting communist aggression. He notes that US presidents have been giving the South Vietnamese help for 10 years, and says: "Our own security is tied to the peace of Asia." 1963 Soviet Luna (4) reaches Earth orbit but fails to reach Moon 1962 first automated (unmanned) subway train (New York City NY) 1961 Longest recorded strike ends — 33 years — Danish barbers' assistants 1960 Gran Bretaña, Suecia, Noruega, Dinamarca, Suiza, Austria y Portugal firman en Londres el tratado fundacional de la Asociación Europea de Libre Cambio (EFTA). 1958 Edmund Percival Hillary alcanza el Polo Sur. 1951 During Korean conflict, North Korean and Communist Chinese forces capture Seoul.
|
1932 British East Indies Viceroy Willingdon arrests Gandhi and Nehru. 1929 Las dos Fundaciones Rockefeller se funden en una, que se convierte en la organización filantrópica más poderosa del mundo. 1925 French psychologist Emil Coué brings his self-esteem therapy to US "Every day in every way I am getting better and better" 1923 Second part of Lenin's "Political Testament" calls for removal of Stalin. En un post scriptum a su "testamento", Lenin recomienda la destitución de Josif Stalin. 1918 El gobierno soviético reconoce la independencia de Finlandia. 1915 Trans-Caucausus Russians defeat Turkish troops 1912 Smallest earth-moon distance in the 20th century, 356'375 km center-to-center 1904 US Supreme Court rules that Puerto Ricans cannot be denied admission to US. |
1893 US President Cleveland grants amnesty to Mormon polygamy 1889 In Australia, Colin Wardrop, head of the National Bank of Queensland, mails a postcard to Miss Wardrop at 32 Carden Place, Aberdeen, Scotland. The postcard would arrive in February 2001, and on 26 February 2001 be air-mailed back to sender's grand-daughter, Alison Britts, 74, in New South Wales. 1887 Thomas Stevens is first man to bicycle around the world (San Francisco-San Francisco, 21'700km) 1885 Dr W W Grant of Iowa, performs first appendectomy (on Mary Gartside, 22) 1884 In Ontario, last sighting of an eastern cougar. 1874 Levantamiento republicano en Zaragoza a causa del golpe de Estado del general Manuel Pavía Rodríguez de Albuquerque. 1865 The New York Stock Exchange opens its first permanent headquarters 1861 Alabama state troops seize the US Arsenal at Mount Vernon, Alabama
1832 Insurrection of Trinidad negroes. 1790 Las provincias belgas, excepto Luxemburgo, proclaman su independencia. 1762 England declares war on Spain and Naples 1725 Nineteen-year-old Benjamin Franklin arrives in London. 1717 Netherlands, England and France sign Triple Alliance. 1698 En virtud de la paz de Riswick, las tropas de Louis Joseph de Bourbon duc de Vendôme evacuan Barcelona.
1528 Ferdinand of Austria, younger brother to Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, issued the first secular mandate forbidding the Anabaptist religious movement. 1493 Columbus left new world on return from first voyage. Cristóbal Colón embarca en la isla Española (Santo Domingo), en la carabela Niña, con destino a España, de regreso de su primer viaje. 1357 Flemish Earl Louis and Luxembourg Duke Wenceslaus sign peace treaty 0871 Battle at Reading Ethelred of Wessex beats Danish invasion army 0275 St Eutychian begins his reign as Pope (died 02831207) |
2006 Col. Mohammed Ghayeb, 4 of his bodyguards and one of the Hamas militants who, during several hours attack of his home in Beit Lahiya, Gaza Strip, rockets, and grenades. Ghayeb was head of Preventive Security Service in northern Gaza, which supports the Palestinian Authority's president Mahmoud Abbas [26 Mar 1935~] and his Fatah party, which is in the midst of a bloody struggle with Hamas, the faction of prime minister Ismail Haniyeh [Jan 1963~]. Some 40 persons, including 8 children and Ghayeb's wife, are wounded. —(070105) 2006 A suicide bomber and at least 32 persons, at the funeral for a Shiite politician's nephew, in Muqdadiyah, Iraq. Some 50 others are injured. —(060105) 2005 Frank Harary, born on 11 March 1921, US mathematician who wrote and lectured extensively on graph theory, a mathematical specialty often applied in computer science and other fields. Harary's 1969 book Graph Theory gave the field a broad relevance. The theory, which dates from the 18th century or earlier, is concerned with the edges and vertices found in graphs. It is frequently used to model physical or abstract problems in chemistry, computer networks, transportation lines and even sociology, as a way to express mathematically the relationships among individuals. Solutions to problems can appear as theorems or algorithms. Harary lectured on graph theory in more than 80 countries. He wrote or contributed to 700 academic papers, in which he sought to apply it to anthropology, linguistics and psychology. He was also a co-author of books about structural models in mathematics and the field of graphical enumeration. He was a founder of The Journal of Graph Theory and of The Journal of Combinatorial Theory. 2005 A US soldier of Task Force Olympia, after his patrol is attacked with small arms and rocket propelled grenade fire in Tal Afar, Iraq, in the afternoon. Two US soldiers of the patrol are wounded 2005 The brothers Hanni Raban, 16, Mahmoud Raban, 14, and Bisaam Raban, 13; their cousins Muhammed Raban, 22, Jabir Raban, 12, and Rajikh Raban, 10; and their neighbor Jabril al-Casiah, 20; by one of the Iraqi tank shells fired at fields in Beit Lahia, Gaza Strip, where farmers where picking their crops, and aimed allegedly at “nine masked terrorists” who have “no qualms in hiding behind Palestinian civilians” after being “involved in firing rockets” that lightly wounded two Israeli civilians. Eight Palestinians are wounded, more than lightly. 2005 Six bodyguards and Ali al-Haidar, governor of Baghdad province in Iraq, as their three-vehicle convoy passing through Baghdad's neighborhood Hurriyah is fired upon. 2005 Eight Iraqi commandos, two civilians, and a suicide tanker bomber, in Baghdad, Iraq, at an Iraqi police checkpoint near an entrance to the fortified “Green Zone” of the Iraqi puppet government and of its puppet masters at the US Embassy. 2004 Joan Delano Aiken, 79, English writer, daughter of US poet Conrad Aiken. Author of more than 100 books of fiction, some for adults and most for children, including All You've Ever Wanted and Other Stories — The Wolves of Willoughby Chase (1962, Victorian melodrama with tongue-in-cheek humor. about two girls in a great English country house) — Bone and Dream — The Scream — Ghostly Beasts — In Thunder's Pocket — Lady Catherine's Necklace — The Witch of Clatteringshaws. Her adult novels included mysteries and her “Jane Austen sequence”, which included Mansfield Revisited (1985), and Jane Fairfax: Jane Austen's Emma Through Another's Eyes (1991), a sequel to the Austen novel. 2004. 2004 Four soldiers when a group of the Pattani Islamic Mujahedeen attack a military camp in Narathiwat province, Thailand, and steal nearly 400 guns 2003
Dos mujeres fallecen y otras veinticuatro personas resultan heridas
al descarrilar la locomotora, el furgón generador y el primer vagón de
viajeros de un tren Talgo en las cercanías del apeadero de Tobarra (Albacete),
España.2002 Maria Grazia Malagisi, Italian born on 06 July 1891. 2002 Nael Ramadan, 22, Palestinian policeman, killed in Israeli incursion at dawn in the village Tel, near Nablus, West Bank. 2002 Nathan Ross Chapman, 31, Sgt. 1st Class, communications specialist, [photo >] by small-arms fire during an ambush in Afghanistan near Khost, a few km from the Pakistan border, following a meeting with local tribal leaders. Chapman is with a CIA officer, who is wounded. Chapman is the first US soldier to die from hostile fire in Afghanistan during the anti-terrorism campaign that began on 07 October as part of US President Bush's so-called war. 1999 Sixteen persons, as gunmen shoot at Shiite Muslim worshippers in a mosque in Islamabad, Pakistan. 25 persons are injured. 1999 José Vela Zanetti, pintor español. 1990 Alberto Lleras Camargo, presidente de Colombia. 1990 Charles Stuart, wife's murderer, suicide by driving off bridge. The previous day, his brother Matthew had met with Boston prosecutors and told them that Charles was the murderer of Charles's wife, Carol. The killing of Carol Stuart, who was pregnant at the time, on October 23, 1989, had touched off a national outrage when Charles Stuart told authorities that the couple had been robbed and shot by an African-American man while driving through a poor Boston neighborhood. In the summer and fall of 1989, both Boston daily newspapers had been trumpeting a so-called crime explosion. Actually, the screaming headlines had more to do with a desire to sell papers than any actual crime wave, but the public was on edge. Charles Stuart, a fur salesman, used the public mood to his advantage when he planned the murder of his wife. "My wife's been shot! I've been shot!" screamed Stuart into his cell phone as he drove through the Mission Hill area of Boston. Paramedics responding to the call for help found that both Charles and his wife had been shot. Carol was barely hanging on to her life and Charles had a fairly serious wound to the stomach. Immediately, Charles identified an African-American male in a black running suit as the perpetrator. The crime was the biggest story in Boston that day and even led some national newscasts. Across the country, the story was portrayed as an example of what could happen to affluent people traveling through bad neighborhoods. In many papers, liberal policies were attacked and held responsible for the tragedy. Carol Stuart died, and although doctors were able to save her baby temporarily, the child also died days later. Charles Stuart underwent intestinal surgery for 10 hours, but his life was not endangered. Blacks wrongly mistreated by police. The Boston police began to comb the housing projects in Mission Hill. Black men were strip-searched on the streets on any pretense. Alan Swanson, a small-time drug dealer, was arrested on suspicion of being involved. However, there was absolutely no evidence against him, even after a warrant was falsified so that it would match what Charles Stuart had told investigators. He was later released with no apology from the police. Meanwhile, Stuart was showing unusual interest in a young female co-worker, asking that she phone him at the hospital where he was recovering. Detectives, fixated on finding the black perpetrator Stuart had described, didn't bother to find the ample evidence that Stuart was unhappy in his marriage and particularly upset with his wife for not having an abortion. Stuart had discussed both his obsession with the co-worker, and his desire to see his wife dead, with several friends and family members in the months before the murder. In December, Willie Bennett, an African-American ex-con, was arrested after his nephew jokingly bragged that he was responsible. Stuart picked Bennett out of a lineup in which the others were all clean-cut Boston police officers. This was the last straw for Matthew Stuart, who had assisted his brother in carrying out the scheme. Matthew thought he was helping Charles with an insurance scam when he carried a bag away from the murder scene. In it was the gun and the couple's wallets and jewelry. In return for immunity, Matthew testified against his brother. Charles Stuart found out that Matthew was going to turn him in and immediately fled. The next morning, Charles Stuart drove to the Tobin Bridge over the Mystic River, and jumped to his death. His suicide note said, “I am sorry for all the trouble”. Willie Bennett was released after witnesses told a grand jury that the police had pressured them into identifying him. 1983: 30 oficiales afganos asesinados por sus propios soldados.Ola de atentados contra las posiciones soviéticas en Kabul (Afganistán). 1979 Serafín Adame, periodista y escritor español. 1974 Karel Janacek, 70, composer.
1965 T.S. Eliot, 76, in London, poet. 1961 Erwin Schrödinger, mathematician. 1960 Albert Camus, 46, French author (Stranger), in an automobile accident. Premio Nobel 1957. 1958 Archie Alexander, mathematician. 1950 Snyder, mathematician. 1941 Henri Bergson, 81, French philosopher (Le Rire, Nobel 1928)
1926 Willem Karel Nakken, Dutch British artist born on 09 April 1835. 1920 Benito Pérez Galdós, novelista español. 1915 Anton Alexander von Werner, German artist born on 09 May 1843. MORE ON VON WERNER AT ART 4 MAY with links to images. 1913 Alfred von Schlieffen , 79, Prussian General then Field Marshal. 1901 Nicolas Gysis (or Gyzis), Greek artist born on 01 March 1842. 1900 Pieter Lodewijk Franciscus Kluyver, Dutch artist born on 22 March 1816. 1880 Anselm Feuerbach, German Neoclassical painter born on 12 September 1829. MEHR ÜBER FEUERBACH AN ART 4 AUGUST with links to images. |
| ^
1877 Cornelius Vanderbilt,
US robber baron, born on 27 May 1794.. He was a shipping and railroad
magnate who said: “I never cared for money. All I ever cared for
was to carry my point.” but acquired a personal fortune of more
than $100'000'000. That would be about one and a half billion 1999 dollars.
For past value of the dollar see http://woodrow.mpls.frb.fed.us/economy/calc/cpihome.html
(which only goes back to 1913) or better http://www.westegg.com/inflation/
(covers 1800-1998) Vanderbilt’s early life plays like a page out of a Horatio Alger novel: born to a downtrodden family in 1794, he fled school at age eleven to work on New York’s waterfront. Young Vanderbilt was always anxious to become a sailor, and, as he approached his seventeenth year, he determined to begin life as a boatman in the harbor of New York. On 01 May 1810, he informed his mother of his determination, and asked her to lend him one hundred dollars to buy a boat. The good lady had always opposed her son's wish to go to sea, and regarded this new scheme as equally hair-brained. As a means of discouraging him, she told him if he would plow, harrow, and plant with corn a certain ten-acre lot belonging to the farm, by the twenty-seventh of that month, on which day he would be seventeen years old, she would lend him the money. The field was the worst in the whole farm; it was rough, hard, and stony; but by the appointed time the work was done, and well done. [image below: if missing click here]. |
![]() |
| The boy claimed and received his money. He hurried off to a neighboring
village, and bought his boat. A budding young capitalist, Vanderbilt started
a small ferry business and soon acquired more boats. By 1818 it had become
demonstrated to his satisfaction that the new system of steamboats was
a success, and was destined to come into general use at no very distant
day. He therefore determined to identify himself with it at once, and
thereby secure the benefits which he felt sure would result from a prompt
connection with it. Accordingly, in 1818, to the surprise and dismay of
his friends, he sold his flourishing business, in order to accept the
captaincy of a steamboat which was offered him by Thomas Gibbons. The
salary attached to this position was one thousand dollars, and Captain
Vanderbilt's friends frankly told him that he was very foolish in abandoning
a lucrative business for so insignificant a sum. Turning a deaf ear to
their remonstrances, however, he entered promptly upon the duties of his
new career, and was given command of a steamboat plying between New York
and New Brunswick. For seven years he was harassed and hampered by the hostility of the State of New York, which had granted to Fulton and Livingston the sole right to navigate New York waters by steam. Thomas Gibbons believed this law to be unconstitutional, and ran his boats in defiance of it. The authorities of the State resented his disregard of their monopoly, and a long and vexatious warfare sprang up between them, which was ended only in 1824, by the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in favor of Gibbons. As a means of crippling Gibbons, the New York authorities at one time determined to arrest Vanderbilt and his crew; but the wary captain was too cunning for them. He would land his crew in Jersey City, and take charge of the engine himself, while a lady managed the helm. In this way he approached the wharf at New York, landed his passengers, and took on more. As soon as he had made his boat fast, he concealed himself in the hold until the moment of his departure. As soon as he appeared on deck, the Sheriff's officer (who was changed every day to avoid recognition) would approach him with a warrant for his arrest. His reply was an order to let go the line. The officer, unwilling to be carried off to New Jersey, where he was threatened with imprisonment in the penitentiary for interfering with the steamer, would at once jump ashore, or beg to be landed [image below: if missing click here]. |
![]() |
| This was kept up for two months, but Vanderbilt successfully baffled
his enemies during the whole of that period. The opponents of . Gibbons
offered a larger and better boat than the one he commanded if he would
enter their service, but he firmly declined all their offers, avowing
his determination to remain with Mr. Gibbons until the difficulty was
settled. After the decision of the Supreme Court placed Gibbons in the full enjoyment of his rights, Captain Vanderbilt was allowed to manage the line in his own way, and conducted it with so much skill and vigor that it paid its owner an annual profit of forty thousand dollars. Mr. Gibbons offered to increase his salary to five thousand dollars, but he refused to accept the offer. "I did it on principle," he said, afterward. "The other captains had but one thousand, and they were already jealous enough of me. Besides, I never cared for money. All I ever cared for was to carry my point." By 1829, Vanderbilt had purchased his own steamship; by aggressively slashing fares and lavishly appointing his steamers, Vanderbilt became the ruling force in the shipping industry. In 1862, he turned his attention to the burgeoning rail industry, using his trademark competitive touch to build an empire that included the New York and Harlem Railroad, as well as the New York Central Railroad. Toward the end of his life, Vanderbilt tempered his competitive zeal with a touch of altruism. He donated $1 million to Central University (later renamed Vanderbilt University) and masterminded the construction of New York’s Grand Central Terminal, which employed a number of the workers who were devastated by the Panic of 1873. When Vanderbilt died in 1877 with an estate of some $100 million, he was the wealthiest man in the US. — The son of an impoverished farmer and boatman, Vanderbilt quit school at age 11 to work on the waterfront. In 1810 he purchased his first boat with money borrowed from his parents. He used the boat to ferry passengers between Staten Island and New York City; then, during the War of 1812, he enlarged his operation to a small fleet with which he supplied government outposts around the city. Vanderbilt expanded his ferry operation still further following the war, but in 1818he sold all his boats and went to work for Thomas Gibbons as steamship captain. While in Gibbons' employ (1818–29), Vanderbilt learned the steamship business and acquired the capital that he used in 1829 to start his own steamship company. During the next decade, Vanderbilt gained control of the traffic on the Hudson River by cutting fares and offering unprecedented luxury on his ships. His hard-pressed competitors finally paid him handsomely in return for Vanderbilt's agreement to move his operation. He then concentrated on the northeastern seaboard, offering transportation from Long Island to Providence and Boston. By 1846 the Commodore was a millionaire. The following year, he formed a company to transport passengers and goods from New York City and New Orleans to San Francisco via Nicaragua. With the enormous demand for passage to the West Coast brought about by the 1849 gold rush, Vanderbilt's Accessory Transit Company proved a huge success. He quit the business only after his competitors—whom he had nearly ruined—agreed to pay him $40,000 (later it rose to $56,000) a month to abandon his operation. By the 1850s he had turned his attention to railroads, buying up so much stock in the New York and Harlem Railroad that by 1863 he owned the line. He later acquired the Hudson River Railroad and the New York Central Railroad and consolidated them in 1869. When he added the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railroad in 1873, Vanderbilt was able to offer the first rail service from New York City to Chicago. During the last years of his life, Vanderbilt ordered the construction of Grand Central Terminal in New York City, a project that gave jobs to thousands who had become unemployed during the Panic of 1873. Although never interested in philanthropy while acquiring the bulk of his huge fortune, later in his life he did give$1,000,000 to Central University in Nashville, Tennessee (later Vanderbilt University). In his will he left $90,000,000 to his son William Henry, $7,500,000 to William's four sons, and—consistent with his lifelong contempt for women—the relatively small remainder to his second wife and his eight daughters. — Cornelius Vanderbilt (1846, 76x64cm; 512x419pix, 22kb) portrait by Nathaniel Jocelyn [31 Jan 1796 – 13 Jan 1881]. —(060120) |
| 1864 Pascual Bravo Echeverri, escritor y militar colombiano. 1845 Louis-Léopold Boilly, French portrait and genre painter born on 05 July 1761. MORE ON BOILLY AT ART 4 JULY with links to images. 1834 Mauro Gandolfi, Italian artist born on 18 September 1764. 1826 Nicolaus Fuss, Swiss mathematician born on 30 January 1755 {there was a little fuss that day...}. 1825 Ferdinand I, 73, King of Sicily/Naples (Ferdinand IV) 1821 Elizabeth Ann Bayley Seton [28 Aug 1774–]. She was raised an Episcopalian. At the age of 19 she married wealthy businessman William Magee Seton. They had five children before his business failed and he died of tuberculosis in 1803. Elizabeth was penniless, with five small children to support. While in Italy with her dying husband, Elizabeth witnessed Catholicity in action through family friends. Three basic points led her to become a Catholic: belief in the Real Presence, devotion to Mary and conviction that the Catholic Church led back to the apostles and to Christ. Many of her family and friends rejected her when she became a Catholic in March 1805. To support her children, she opened a school in Baltimore, for which she formed a religious community which was officially founded in 1809. The thousand or more letters of Mother Seton reveal the development of her spiritual life from ordinary goodness to heroic sanctity. She suffered great trials of sickness, misunderstanding, the death of loved ones (her husband and two young daughters) and the heartache of a wayward son. She became the first native-born US citizen to be beatified (17 Mar 1963) and then canonized (14 Sep 1975). Her feast day is on 04 January. —(080103) 1778 Charles-Dominique-Joseph Eisen, French artist born on 17 August 1720. MORE ON EISEN AT ART 4 JANUARY with links to images. 1752 Gabriel Cramer, 47, Swiss mathematician (paradox of Cramer) 1748 Coenraet Roepel, Dutch artist born on 06 November 1678. 1729 Joseph de Montesquiou Earl d'Artagnan, 77, French Lt-General. 1624 Vicente Martínev de Espinel, escritor y músico español. 1614 Luisa de Carvajal y Mendoza, escritora (de poesías y escritos autobiográficos) y religiosa española, en el día de su 48º cumpleaños, en Inglaterra a donde había ido para evangelizar a los protestantes y buscar martirio, y sufrió encarcelamientos y enfermedad. 1607 (burial) Gillis van Coninxloo III, Flemish landscape painter born on 24 January 1544. MORE ON VAN CONINXLOO AT ART 4 JANUARY with links to images. 1584 Tobias Stimmer, Swiss artist born on 17 April 1539. 0749 San Rigoberto, arzobispo de Rheims. 0041 Gaius Cæsar Germanicus " Caligula", his wife Cæsonia, and their daughter, murdered. The Roman populace had grown weary of this mad and unpredictable tyrant. Caligula was murdered at the Palatine Games by Cassius Chærea, tribune of the Prætorian guard, Cornelius Sabinus, and others. |
1955 New model Packard car. The 1955 Packards are introduced. Corvettes and Thunderbirds were upping the horsepower ante, and Packard struck back with the Packard Caribbean, the first V-8 Packard and the debut of highly stylized cathedral taillights. The era of the mighty tailfin was beginning.
1943 Jesús Torbado Carro, escritor y periodista español. 1932 The opera Maximilien by Darius Milhaud [04 Sep 1892 – 22 Jun 1974] has its world premiere at the Théâtre de l'Opéra in Paris. 1921 Friedrich Dürrenmatt, escritor suizo. 1913 Manuel Andújar, escritor español. 1896 André Masson, French Surrealist painter who died in 1987. MORE ON MASSON AT ART 4 JANUARY with links to images. 1896 Everett McKinley Dirksen, Republican leader of the US Senate (1959-1969). He died on 07 Sep 1969. 1895 Leroy Randle Grumman, US aeronautical engineer and founder of Grumman Aircraft. He died on 04 October 1982. 1890 Alfred G Jodl German Wehrmacht General/Chief of Staff. 1881 Wilhelm Lehmbruck, German sculptor who died on 25 March 1919. LINKS 1863 Four-wheeled roller skates patented by James Plimpton of NY. 1861 Charles Schreyvogel, US artist who died on 27 January 1912. 1848 Suter, mathematician. 1838 midget Charles Sherwood Stratton) (1838-83), showman under the name "General Tom Thumb" (after miniature fairy-tale hero); 61 cm tall when first exhibited by P.T. Barnum; later grew to 100 cm. 1813 Sir Isaac Pitman, English educator and inventor of shorthand, who died on 12 January 1897. 1809 Louis Braille, Coupvray, France. Blinded at age 4, he would invent a raised dot alphabet for the blind to read and write. He would die from tuberculosis on 06 January 1852, before his system was widely adopted. 1797 Wilhelm Beer, German astronomer who made the first map of moon. He died on 27 March 1850.
1746 Benjamin Rush, US physician, political leader and signer of the Declaration of Independence. He died on 19 April 1813. 1745 Johann Georg Pforr, German artist who died on 09 June 1798. 1710 Giovanni Battista Pergolesi Italian composer (Il Prigioniero Superbo). He died on 16 March 1736. 1643 (25 December 1642 Julian) Isaac Newton, mathematician, scientist, in addition to theorizing about planetary orbits and gravity, he was the first scientist to examine the possibility of satellites. Newton hypothesized that a cannonball shot at high velocity would eventually orbit the Earth. He died in 1727. In a letter to Robert Hooke, Newton wrote: If I have been able to see further, it was only because I stood on the shoulders of giants. 1581 Bishop James Ussher Archbishop of Armagh. Based on a literal interpretation of Old Testament references, he considered paternity as a viable method by which the age of the Earth since its creation could be determined using the "begat" method of determining the antiquity of an event — essentially counting backward in time through each documented human generation. In 1650 Ussher determined that the Creation had occurred during the evening of 22 October 4004 BC. Ussher died on 21 March 1656. At present the earth is thought to be about 4.55 billion years old, creationists nothwithstanding. 1566 Luisa de Carvajal y Mendoza, en Jaraicejo (Cáceres), escritora y religiosa española, que irá a Inglaterra para evangelizar a los protestantes, y después de encarcelamientos y enfermedad, fallecerá allá el día de su 48º cumpleaños. 1477 Girolamo del Pacchia, Italian artist who died after 1533. — more with link to an image. |
![]() |
![]() |