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On this day

August 28

I Have a Dream: King Speaks to 250,000 in Washington (1963). Emmett Till Murdered: A Crime That Ignites Civil Rights (1955). Notable births include Leo Tolstoy (1828), Satoshi Tajiri (1965), Jack Black (1969).

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I Have a Dream: King Speaks to 250,000 in Washington
1963Event

I Have a Dream: King Speaks to 250,000 in Washington

An estimated 250,000 people gathered at the Lincoln Memorial on August 28, 1963, for the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. Martin Luther King Jr., scheduled as the last speaker on a long program, departed from his prepared text when gospel singer Mahalia Jackson shouted "Tell them about the dream, Martin!" His improvised "I Have a Dream" peroration, with its vision of a nation where children "will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character," became the most famous speech of the 20th century. President Kennedy watched on television and said, "He's damn good." The march directly pressured Congress to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

Emmett Till Murdered: A Crime That Ignites Civil Rights
1955

Emmett Till Murdered: A Crime That Ignites Civil Rights

Emmett Till, a fourteen-year-old from Chicago visiting relatives in Money, Mississippi, was kidnapped from his great-uncle's home on August 28, 1955, by Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam. Three days later, his mutilated body was pulled from the Tallahatchie River with a cotton gin fan wired to his neck. His mother, Mamie Till Bradley, insisted on an open-casket funeral in Chicago, saying "I want the world to see what they did to my baby." Jet magazine published the photographs, and over 50,000 people filed past the casket. An all-white jury acquitted Bryant and Milam after 67 minutes of deliberation. Both men later confessed to the murder in a paid magazine interview, protected by double jeopardy.

Evergreen Bridge Opens: World's Longest Floating Span
1963

Evergreen Bridge Opens: World's Longest Floating Span

Janice Wylie and Emily Hoffert were found murdered in their Upper East Side apartment on August 28, 1963, in a crime that horrified New York City. Police eventually arrested George Whitmore Jr., a young Black man, who confessed after 22 hours of interrogation. His confession was later proven false. The real killer, Richard Robles, was identified through a separate tip, and Whitmore was exonerated. The case became a landmark example of coerced confession and directly influenced the Supreme Court's Miranda v. Arizona decision in 1966, which required police to inform suspects of their rights before interrogation. Every "you have the right to remain silent" warning in American law enforcement traces back partly to what happened to George Whitmore.

Manhattan Murders Lead to Miranda Rights
1963

Manhattan Murders Lead to Miranda Rights

The Evergreen Point Floating Bridge opened on August 28, 1963, spanning 7,578 feet across Lake Washington to connect Seattle and Medina on the Eastside. The bridge used concrete pontoons anchored to the lake bottom because the water was too deep for conventional piers, reaching 200 feet in places. It was the longest floating bridge in the world upon completion and carried State Route 520. The original bridge served for over 50 years before being replaced by a wider span in 2016, which reclaimed the record at 7,710 feet. The floating bridge concept, pioneered in Washington state, proved that deep freshwater lakes could be crossed without the massive expense of deep-water foundations.

Emperor Nepos Flees: Orestes Seizes Western Rome
475

Emperor Nepos Flees: Orestes Seizes Western Rome

The Roman general Orestes, himself of Germanic origin, marched on Ravenna on August 28, 475 AD, forcing Western Emperor Julius Nepos to flee across the Adriatic to Dalmatia. Orestes then placed his teenage son Romulus on the imperial throne, a boy so young that contemporaries mockingly added the diminutive "Augustulus" (little Augustus) to his name. Orestes refused to give the Germanic troops one-third of Italy's land as they demanded. Within a year, the soldiers mutinied under Odoacer, killed Orestes, and deposed Romulus on September 4, 476, a date traditionally cited as the fall of the Western Roman Empire. Romulus was spared and given a pension. The empire ended not with a dramatic collapse but with a quiet retirement.

Quote of the Day

“The intelligent man finds almost everything ridiculous, the sensible man hardly anything.”

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Historical events

Born on August 28

Portrait of Jo Kwon
Jo Kwon 1989

Jo Kwon debuted as the leader of K-pop group 2AM in 2008 and became one of South Korea's most charismatic entertainers.

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His solo work and variety show appearances showcased a fearless, genre-defying personality that pushed boundaries in Korean pop culture.

Portrait of Cassadee Pope
Cassadee Pope 1989

Cassadee Pope fronted pop-punk band Hey Monday before winning Season 3 of The Voice in 2012 under Blake Shelton's mentorship.

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She pivoted successfully to country music, scoring a No. 1 hit with "Wasting All These Tears."

Portrait of Florence Welch
Florence Welch 1986

She couldn't read music.

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Florence Welch, born in Camberwell, London in 1986, built every Florence and the Machine arrangement by feel — describing melodies to musicians in colors and emotions rather than notes. Her debut album *Lungs* hit number one in the UK in 2009 after she recorded vocals while reportedly still hungover from a party. And that raw, unpolished desperation became the signature. She'd go on to headline Glastonbury twice. The girl who couldn't read a single bar of music filled stadiums with it.

Portrait of Jack Black

Jack Black built a dual career as a comedy film star and rock musician, anchoring hits like School of Rock while…

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fronting the satirical rock duo Tenacious D. His manic energy and genuine musical talent made him one of the few actors to credibly bridge Hollywood and the music world, earning devoted fans in both arenas.

Portrait of Satoshi Tajiri

Satoshi Tajiri channeled his childhood obsession with insect collecting into Pokemon, a Game Boy title that became the…

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highest-grossing media franchise in history with over $100 billion in lifetime revenue. His concept of capturing, training, and trading creatures connected with a global audience and spawned an empire spanning games, cards, television, and films.

Portrait of Paul Allen
Paul Allen 1962

Paul Allen was born in Aveley, Essex, in 1962 and played midfielder for West Ham through the early 1980s — the youth…

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product who made the first team and stayed. He was part of the West Ham side that produced so many England internationals in that era and earned two FA Cup winners medals. He later became a journeyman through Tottenham, Millwall, and several lower-league clubs. Fourteen years in the professional game.

Portrait of Ivo Josipović
Ivo Josipović 1957

He composed classical music while serving as head of state.

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Ivo Josipović, born August 28, 1957, in Zagreb, wasn't just a lawyer and politician — he held a doctorate in music and had his compositions performed in concert halls during his presidency. He won the 2010 election with nearly 60% of the vote, defeating incumbent-backed candidates. He formally apologized to Bosnia for Croatia's wartime role. But the composer-president lost his reelection bid in 2015. The music outlasted the office.

Portrait of William Cohen
William Cohen 1940

William Cohen crossed party lines in 1996 when President Clinton tapped the Republican senator from Maine to serve as…

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the 20th Secretary of Defense. He oversaw U.S. military operations in Kosovo and the expansion of NATO into Eastern Europe.

Portrait of Godfrey Hounsfield
Godfrey Hounsfield 1919

He taught himself physics using textbooks borrowed from a farmhouse attic.

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Godfrey Hounsfield, born August 28, 1919, in Nottinghamshire, never finished a formal university degree — yet he invented the CT scanner, a machine that let doctors see inside living bodies without a single cut. EMI funded his research using Beatles royalties. Radiologists could suddenly spot tumors the size of a fingernail. He shared the 1979 Nobel Prize in Medicine. What he left behind: roughly 6,000 CT scans performed every hour worldwide today.

Portrait of Tjalling Koopmans
Tjalling Koopmans 1910

He trained as a physicist before economics ever entered the picture.

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Tjalling Koopmans spent his early career applying mathematical tools to shipping routes — specifically figuring out how to move cargo with minimum wasted miles during World War II. That work became "activity analysis," the foundation of linear programming used in logistics today. He shared the 1975 Nobel Prize in Economics with Leonid Kantorovich, a Soviet mathematician who'd solved the same problem independently, neither man knowing the other existed.

Portrait of George Whipple
George Whipple 1878

He won the Nobel Prize for feeding dogs raw liver.

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George Whipple, born in Ashland, New Hampshire in 1878, discovered that liver-rich diets could reverse severe anemia in dogs — and that clue unlocked a treatment for pernicious anemia, a disease that had been a quiet death sentence for millions. His research led directly to the isolation of Vitamin B12. And he almost chose surgery instead of research. That single fork in the road produced a cure still saving lives today.

Portrait of Edward Burne-Jones
Edward Burne-Jones 1833

Edward Burne-Jones became the leading figure of the second wave of Pre-Raphaelitism, creating tapestries, stained…

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glass, and paintings of mythological and medieval subjects that defined Victorian decorative art. His close collaboration with William Morris on the Arts and Crafts movement made their aesthetic partnership one of the most influential in 19th-century design.

Portrait of Leo Tolstoy

Leo Tolstoy produced War and Peace and Anna Karenina, two novels so vast in scope and psychological depth that they…

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permanently redefined what fiction could achieve. His later turn to radical Christian pacifism and social criticism influenced Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr., extending his impact far beyond literature into the movements that reshaped the modern world.

Died on August 28

Portrait of Phil Hill
Phil Hill 2008

Phil Hill remains the only driver to win the Formula One World Championship and the 24 Hours of Le Mans in the same career.

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His 1961 title victory for Ferrari solidified American presence in European motorsport, proving that drivers from the United States could master the most technical circuits in the world.

Portrait of Paul MacCready
Paul MacCready 2007

Paul MacCready revolutionized human-powered flight by designing the Gossamer Albatross, the first aircraft to cross the…

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English Channel using only pilot pedaling. As the founder of AeroVironment, he shifted aerospace engineering toward high-efficiency, lightweight solar-powered drones. His death in 2007 closed the career of an inventor who proved that radical efficiency could overcome the limitations of traditional aviation.

Portrait of Hilly Kristal
Hilly Kristal 2007

Hilly Kristal died in New York in August 2007.

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He opened CBGB on the Bowery in 1973, intending it to be a venue for country, bluegrass, and blues — the initials stood for all three. What he got instead was Television, Talking Heads, the Ramones, Blondie, and Patti Smith. He never changed the name. The venue closed in 2007, the same year Kristal died. The Ramones played 74 shows there. More bands played their first shows there than at any other venue in American rock history.

Portrait of John Huston
John Huston 1987

John Huston directed his last film, The Dead, from a wheelchair attached to a portable oxygen tank.

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He had emphysema and could barely breathe. The film is quiet, literary, set in a drawing room at a Dublin party in 1904 — adapted from James Joyce's masterful short story. His daughter Anjelica starred in it. Huston died three weeks after it was completed, in August 1987. The film is considered one of the most faithful literary adaptations in cinema. He made it because he knew he was dying and wanted to go out with something he loved.

Portrait of Muhammad Naguib
Muhammad Naguib 1984

He held the title for just 18 months before his own colleagues erased him.

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Naguib, the general who'd led the 1952 coup that ended Egypt's monarchy, was ousted by Nasser in 1954 and vanished into house arrest — for nearly two decades. No trial. No charges announced publicly. Just gone. He outlived Nasser by 14 years, finally freed in 1971, but never restored to any official place in Egyptian history. The man who *was* the revolution spent most of it locked in a villa outside Cairo.

Portrait of Robert Shaw
Robert Shaw 1978

He collapsed in a taxi on a country road in County Mayo, Ireland — just one day after wrapping a film.

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Shaw had ten children and was perpetually broke despite his fame, partly because he'd sunk money into that Irish estate. He wrote three novels before Jaws ever made him a household name. His Quint monologue — the Indianapolis speech — he rewrote himself the night before shooting. Directors got a better scene. Audiences got a character they couldn't forget. He was 51.

Portrait of Frederick Law Olmsted
Frederick Law Olmsted 1903

He designed Central Park while suffering debilitating migraines so severe he sometimes couldn't leave his bed.

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Olmsted never called himself an architect — he'd tried farming, journalism, and running a Staten Island nursery before landing the Central Park commission at 36. He shaped over 100,000 acres of American public space across his career, including Boston's Emerald Necklace and the 1893 World's Fair grounds in Chicago. He died in an asylum — the same one whose grounds he'd once designed.

Portrait of Jean Baptiste Point du Sable
Jean Baptiste Point du Sable 1818

Jean Baptiste Point du Sable died in St.

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Charles, Missouri, leaving behind the legacy of the first permanent settlement at the mouth of the Chicago River. His successful trading post established the strategic crossroads that allowed Chicago to evolve from a remote frontier outpost into a global hub for commerce and transportation.

Portrait of Fatimah

Fatimah bint Muhammad, the youngest daughter of the Prophet Muhammad, died just months after her father, leaving behind…

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a legacy of piety and advocacy that profoundly shaped Islamic history. Her descendants through her marriage to Ali ibn Abi Talib formed the lineage central to Shia Islam, and her life remains a model of devotion and social justice across the Muslim world.

Holidays & observances

Mexico celebrates National Grandparents Day to honor the role of grandparents in family life and cultural transmission.

Mexico celebrates National Grandparents Day to honor the role of grandparents in family life and cultural transmission. The holiday reflects the deep importance of multigenerational family bonds in Mexican society, where abuelos and abuelas often serve as the emotional and practical anchors of extended families.

In Eastern Orthodox Churches that follow the Julian calendar, the Feast of the Assumption of Mary falls thirteen days…

In Eastern Orthodox Churches that follow the Julian calendar, the Feast of the Assumption of Mary falls thirteen days later than in Western churches — on August 28 in the Gregorian calendar. This date is a public holiday in North Macedonia and Serbia, where the Orthodox calendar governs the religious year for most of the population. The Assumption, celebrated in both traditions, holds that Mary was taken bodily into heaven at the end of her earthly life. The theological substance is the same. The calendar difference reflects the schism of 1054 and the subsequent divergence of Eastern and Western Christian practice.

Augustine of Hippo died in 430 AD, during the Vandal siege of his city, having spent the previous months watching Rom…

Augustine of Hippo died in 430 AD, during the Vandal siege of his city, having spent the previous months watching Roman North Africa collapse around him. He had converted to Christianity at 32, after years of philosophical searching described in his Confessions — still one of the most read autobiographical works in any language. His theological writings shaped Western Christianity more profoundly than any other thinker after Paul. Original sin, grace, predestination, just war theory — all of these concepts in their Western forms trace back to Augustine. He spent forty years as bishop of a small city in what is now Algeria. He died in it.

The Feast of Saint Augustine of Hippo honors one of Christianity's most influential theologians, whose Confessions an…

The Feast of Saint Augustine of Hippo honors one of Christianity's most influential theologians, whose Confessions and City of God shaped Western philosophy and Catholic doctrine for 1,600 years. The day also commemorates Saint Hermes and Moses the Black.