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On this day

August 18

19th Amendment Ratified: Women Win the Vote (1920). Genghis Khan Dies: Mongol Empire Marches On (1227). Notable births include Ruth Bonner (1900), Rosalynn Carter (1927), Dennis Elliott (1950).

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19th Amendment Ratified: Women Win the Vote
1920Event

19th Amendment Ratified: Women Win the Vote

Tennessee became the 36th state to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment on August 18, 1920, providing the three-quarters majority needed to make women's suffrage the law of the land. The vote in the Tennessee legislature came down to a single legislator: 24-year-old Harry Burn, the youngest member of the body, who had been voting against ratification until he received a letter from his mother. "Dear Son," she wrote, "vote for suffrage and don't keep them in doubt." He switched his vote. The amendment doubled the eligible electorate overnight and ended a 72-year campaign that had begun at the Seneca Falls convention in 1848. Over eight million women voted in the 1920 presidential election.

Genghis Khan Dies: Mongol Empire Marches On
1227

Genghis Khan Dies: Mongol Empire Marches On

Genghis Khan died in August 1227 during the siege of the Tangut kingdom of Western Xia. The exact cause remains disputed: some sources claim he fell from his horse during a hunt, others say illness, and Mongol tradition holds that a captured Tangut princess fatally wounded him. He was roughly 65 years old and had conquered more territory than any individual in history, building an empire stretching from the Pacific Ocean to the Caspian Sea. His funeral escort reportedly killed every living thing they encountered on the journey to prevent news of his death from spreading. He was buried in an unmarked grave in Mongolia that has never been found. The Mongol Empire he built eventually encompassed one-quarter of the world's population.

Pendle Witch Trial Opens: England's Darkest Hunt
1612

Pendle Witch Trial Opens: England's Darkest Hunt

The Pendle witch trial of 1612 resulted in ten executions and became the most thoroughly documented witch trial in English history, largely because the clerk, Thomas Potts, published a detailed account. The accused were mostly members of two impoverished families, the Demdikes and the Chattoxes, living on the desolate moorlands of Lancashire. Local magistrate Roger Nowell investigated after a Halifax peddler accused Alizon Device of cursing him. Under interrogation, family members accused each other, creating a cascading chain of confessions. The trial established precedents for spectral evidence and confession-based prosecution that influenced witch trials across England and later in colonial America.

Jatho Flies: Germany Claims First Powered Flight
1903

Jatho Flies: Germany Claims First Powered Flight

Karl Jatho, a German civil servant and aviation enthusiast, made a powered flight of approximately 60 meters in his motor-driven airplane on August 18, 1903, four months before the Wright brothers' flight at Kitty Hawk. Jatho's aircraft had no reliable control system and made only brief, semi-controlled hops rather than sustained, controlled flights. The Wrights' achievement on December 17 was fundamentally different: their Flyer had a three-axis control system that allowed the pilot to bank, pitch, and yaw, making it the first practical, controllable airplane. Jatho's flights demonstrate that the history of powered aviation involved multiple inventors working simultaneously across different countries, each solving different pieces of the same puzzle.

Belgium's Red Leader Shot: Post-War Assassination
1950

Belgium's Red Leader Shot: Post-War Assassination

Far-right gunmen assassinated Julien Lahaut, chairman of the Belgian Communist Party, at his home in Seraing on August 18, 1950, just three days after he had heckled the newly installed King Baudouin at his oath-taking ceremony by shouting "Vive la republique!" The murder was almost certainly organized by members of Belgium's extreme-right networks, possibly with knowledge of elements within the Belgian security apparatus. The case remained officially unsolved for decades, though investigative journalists later identified the likely perpetrators. Lahaut's assassination exposed the raw political tensions in post-war Belgium between monarchists and anti-monarchists, and between Cold War factions competing for control of the Belgian state.

Quote of the Day

“Why had I become a writer in the first place? Because I wasn't fit for society; I didn't fit into the system.”

Brian Aldiss

Historical events

Born on August 18

Portrait of Frances Bean Cobain
Frances Bean Cobain 1992

Frances Bean Cobain emerged into the public eye as the daughter of grunge icons Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love.

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Her life as a visual artist and model reflects the complex intersection of private grief and public scrutiny, as she has spent decades navigating the intense media fascination surrounding her parents' legacy.

Portrait of G-Dragon
G-Dragon 1988

G-Dragon is the creative force behind Big Bang and one of the architects of K-pop's global expansion.

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He writes, produces, and choreographs his own material — a level of creative control that is rare in an industry built on manufactured groups. His fashion sense has made him a fixture at Paris Fashion Week, and his solo work has pushed K-pop toward more experimental territory.

Portrait of Andy Samberg
Andy Samberg 1978

He almost didn't make it to Saturday Night Live.

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Andy Samberg submitted his audition tape three times before Lorne Michaels finally said yes. Born August 18, 1978, in Berkeley, California, he'd been making absurdist videos with childhood friends Akiva Schaffer and Jorma Taccone since high school. Those same friends became The Lonely Island. Their 2006 digital short "Lazy Sunday" essentially invented the viral video era before YouTube was a year old. Samberg left SNL in 2012 and won a Golden Globe for Brooklyn Nine-Nine. The childhood friend group never actually broke up.

Portrait of Masahiro Nakai
Masahiro Nakai 1972

Masahiro Nakai was the leader and face of SMAP, the most commercially successful boy band in Japanese music history.

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SMAP dominated Japanese entertainment for over 25 years — television, film, advertising, and music — before their 2016 breakup became a national crisis. Nakai served as the group's pragmatic center, holding together five very different personalities across three decades of intense public scrutiny.

Portrait of Aphex Twin
Aphex Twin 1971

He built a synth in his bedroom before he could legally drive.

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Richard D. James — born in Limerick, Ireland, in 1971 — supposedly slept in a bank vault he'd converted into a studio, feeding himself on whatever kept him awake longest. His "Selected Ambient Works Volume II" had no track titles, just photographs. Listeners named them themselves. That decision turned a solo record into a collective experience shared by strangers who'd never met. He didn't make music for audiences. He made it for the silence between sounds.

Portrait of Everlast
Everlast 1969

Erik Schrody, known to the world as Everlast, bridged the gap between hip-hop and blues-rock with his gravelly delivery…

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and introspective songwriting. After fronting the Irish-American rap group House of Pain, he reinvented his sound on the multi-platinum album Whitey Ford Sings the Blues, proving that genre-bending could achieve massive commercial success in the late nineties.

Portrait of Felipe Calderón
Felipe Calderón 1962

Felipe Calderón reshaped Mexican security policy by launching the War on Drugs in 2006, deploying the military to…

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dismantle powerful cartels. This strategy fundamentally altered the country’s internal stability and intensified violence across several regions. He arrived in Morelia in 1962, eventually rising to serve as the 56th President of Mexico from 2006 to 2012.

Portrait of Timothy Geithner
Timothy Geithner 1961

Timothy Geithner served as the 75th Secretary of the Treasury during the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

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He had previously run the New York Federal Reserve during the 2008 collapse. His decisions — the bank bailouts, the auto industry rescue, the stimulus design — were simultaneously credited with preventing economic catastrophe and criticized for protecting Wall Street at the expense of Main Street.

Portrait of Luc Montagnier
Luc Montagnier 1932

Luc Montagnier and his team at the Pasteur Institute in Paris identified HIV as the virus causing AIDS in 1983 —…

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simultaneously with Robert Gallo's team at the NIH, which triggered a dispute over credit and patents that lasted years and involved the US and French governments. Montagnier shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2008. In his later years, he promoted the idea that DNA could transmit information through water, a claim the scientific community rejected. The Nobel Prize didn't insulate him from the consequences.

Portrait of Rosalynn Carter
Rosalynn Carter 1927

Rosalynn Carter transformed the role of First Lady from a ceremonial position into a powerhouse of mental health advocacy.

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By testifying before Congress and chairing the President’s Commission on Mental Health, she forced the federal government to overhaul insurance coverage and community care standards for those living with psychiatric disabilities.

Portrait of Caspar Weinberger
Caspar Weinberger 1917

Caspar Weinberger was Reagan's Secretary of Defense and the man most responsible for the military buildup of the 1980s.

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Defense spending nearly tripled during his tenure. Born in 1917, he argued that making the Soviet Union match American military spending would bankrupt it. The argument proved correct. He was indicted in the Iran-Contra affair in 1992 and pardoned by Bush before trial. He died in 2006.

Died on August 18

Portrait of Kofi Annan

Kofi Annan served as UN Secretary-General during some of its most contested years — the aftermath of Rwanda, the…

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bombing of Kosovo, the US invasion of Iraq, the Oil-for-Food scandal. He was the first Secretary-General to rise from within the UN system itself rather than being appointed as an outside figure. He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2001. He said later that Rwanda, where the UN failed to prevent the genocide while his office managed peacekeeping operations, was the failure he carried. He died in Bern in 2018 at 80.

Portrait of Kim Dae-jung
Kim Dae-jung 2009

Kim Dae-jung was sentenced to death by a South Korean military tribunal in 1980 for inciting rebellion during the Gwangju Uprising.

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The United States pressured the government to commute the sentence. He spent years in exile, survived multiple assassination attempts, was elected president in 1997 during a financial crisis, and negotiated the first inter-Korean summit in 2000. He won the Nobel Peace Prize that year. His Sunshine Policy toward North Korea was reversed by his successors. He died in 2009 having outlived most of the people who tried to kill him.

Portrait of Christopher McCandless
Christopher McCandless 1992

He weighed 67 pounds when they found him.

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Christopher McCandless, 24 years old, dead inside a converted Fairbanks city bus in the Alaskan wilderness — but he'd been living there for 113 days first. He'd donated his $24,000 savings to charity and burned his cash before walking in. Jon Krakauer's 1996 book sparked a debate that's never cooled: was he a romantic idealist or dangerously unprepared? The bus itself became so dangerous a pilgrimage destination that Alaska airlifted it out in 2020.

Portrait of B. F. Skinner
B. F. Skinner 1990

He finished writing a paper just ten days before he died — then leukemia took him at 86.

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B. F. Skinner spent decades teaching pigeons to play ping-pong and rats to navigate mazes, convinced that behavior was everything and inner life was nothing. His operant conditioning chamber, the "Skinner box," reshaped how we train animals, treat addiction, and design classrooms. But his own daughter, raised partly in a glass-enclosed crib he invented, spent years publicly correcting rumors that the experiment had damaged her. It hadn't. She said she'd loved it.

Portrait of Walter Chrysler

Walter Chrysler transformed the American auto industry by consolidating struggling manufacturers into a company that…

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rivaled Ford and General Motors within a decade of its founding. His death in 1940 closed a career that introduced mass-market hydraulic brakes and high-compression engines, innovations that made driving safer and more powerful for ordinary consumers.

Portrait of Wanli Emperor of China
Wanli Emperor of China 1620

The Wanli Emperor died after a 48-year reign, the longest in the Ming Dynasty, leaving behind a hollowed-out treasury…

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and a paralyzed bureaucracy. His decades of withdrawal from court duties accelerated the internal decay that allowed the Manchu forces to eventually breach the Great Wall and topple the dynasty just twenty-four years later.

Holidays & observances

Virginia Dare, born on Roanoke Island in 1587, was the first English child born in the Americas.

Virginia Dare, born on Roanoke Island in 1587, was the first English child born in the Americas. Her birthday is commemorated on the island, though the fate of the 'Lost Colony' where she was born remains one of American history's enduring mysteries.

Indonesia's Constitution Day marks the adoption of its 1945 constitution, the legal foundation of the world's fourth …

Indonesia's Constitution Day marks the adoption of its 1945 constitution, the legal foundation of the world's fourth most populous nation and a document that has been amended four times since the fall of Suharto in 1998.

Pakistan's Arbor Day encourages nationwide tree planting to combat deforestation and desertification, particularly ur…

Pakistan's Arbor Day encourages nationwide tree planting to combat deforestation and desertification, particularly urgent in a country where rising temperatures and flooding have devastated forest cover.

North Macedonia celebrates Armed Forces Day, honoring the establishment of its military and the defense of national s…

North Macedonia celebrates Armed Forces Day, honoring the establishment of its military and the defense of national sovereignty since independence from Yugoslavia in 1991.

Australia's Long Tan Day — also known as Vietnam Veterans' Day — honors the 108 Australian soldiers who fought off an…

Australia's Long Tan Day — also known as Vietnam Veterans' Day — honors the 108 Australian soldiers who fought off an estimated 2,000 Viet Cong troops at the Battle of Long Tan on August 18, 1966. Eighteen Australians died; the battle became the defining engagement of Australia's Vietnam War.

Thailand celebrates National Science Day on August 18, commemorating King Mongkut's prediction of a solar eclipse in …

Thailand celebrates National Science Day on August 18, commemorating King Mongkut's prediction of a solar eclipse in 1868. Mongkut — the real king behind The King and I — was an accomplished astronomer who calculated the eclipse's timing and location with precision. He contracted malaria during the expedition to observe it and died shortly after, but his scientific legacy established a tradition of royal scientific patronage in Thailand.

August 18 in the Christian calendar honors several saints including Agapitus of Palestrina, a young martyr, and Helen…

August 18 in the Christian calendar honors several saints including Agapitus of Palestrina, a young martyr, and Helena of Constantinople, mother of Emperor Constantine. Helena reportedly discovered the True Cross in Jerusalem. The feast day calendar knits together local martyrs, imperial saints, and modern figures — creating a devotional map that spans two millennia and every continent.

Catholics honor Saint Helena today for her fourth-century pilgrimage to Jerusalem, where she reportedly recovered the…

Catholics honor Saint Helena today for her fourth-century pilgrimage to Jerusalem, where she reportedly recovered the True Cross, fueling the growth of relic veneration across Christendom. Simultaneously, the Church celebrates Alberto Hurtado, the twentieth-century Chilean Jesuit who transformed social welfare by founding the Hogar de Cristo to provide permanent housing and dignity for the nation's impoverished youth.

Buhe is an Ethiopian Orthodox holiday celebrating the Transfiguration of Jesus, marked by children singing door-to-do…

Buhe is an Ethiopian Orthodox holiday celebrating the Transfiguration of Jesus, marked by children singing door-to-door and receiving bread. The festival falls during Ethiopia's rainy season and carries agricultural as well as religious significance.