Today In History
April 29 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Hirohito, Bernie Madoff, and Dale Earnhardt.

LA Riots Erupt: Rodney King Verdict Sparks Chaos
The acquittal of four LAPD officers in the beating of Rodney King on April 29, 1992, triggered six days of rioting across Los Angeles. The violence began within hours of the verdict at the intersection of Florence and Normandie, where truck driver Reginald Denny was pulled from his cab and nearly beaten to death on live television. By the time the National Guard restored order, 63 people were dead, over 2,000 injured, 12,000 arrested, and an estimated $1 billion in property destroyed. Korean-American businesses in Koreatown suffered disproportionate damage. The riots exposed decades of tension between the LAPD and Black and Latino communities. The federal government subsequently convicted two of the four officers on civil rights charges.
Famous Birthdays
1901–1989
d. 2021
Dale Earnhardt
1974–2001
Toots Thielemans
d. 2016
Harold Urey
b. 1893
Klaus Voormann
b. 1938
Master P
b. 1967
Mike Bryan
b. 1978
Historical Events
Patrick Pearse and other Irish nationalist leaders surrendered unconditionally on April 29, 1916, ending the Easter Rising after six days of fighting in Dublin. The rebels had seized the General Post Office and several strategic buildings but were overwhelmed by 16,000 British troops with artillery support. The city center was devastated. In the weeks that followed, General John Maxwell ordered the court-martial and execution of 16 rebel leaders by firing squad. The executions, carried out over ten consecutive days at Kilmainham Gaol, transformed public opinion from hostility toward the rebels to sympathy and then support for independence. The executed leaders became martyrs whose sacrifice fueled the Irish War of Independence that began in 1919.
The acquittal of four LAPD officers in the beating of Rodney King on April 29, 1992, triggered six days of rioting across Los Angeles. The violence began within hours of the verdict at the intersection of Florence and Normandie, where truck driver Reginald Denny was pulled from his cab and nearly beaten to death on live television. By the time the National Guard restored order, 63 people were dead, over 2,000 injured, 12,000 arrested, and an estimated $1 billion in property destroyed. Korean-American businesses in Koreatown suffered disproportionate damage. The riots exposed decades of tension between the LAPD and Black and Latino communities. The federal government subsequently convicted two of the four officers on civil rights charges.
The Chemical Weapons Convention entered into force on April 29, 1997, after being signed in 1993 and ratified by 87 nations. The treaty banned the development, production, stockpiling, and use of chemical weapons, and established the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) in The Hague to verify compliance through inspections. By 2023, 193 nations had joined, making it one of the most widely adopted arms control treaties in history. Declared stockpiles from the United States and Russia, totaling over 70,000 tonnes of chemical agents, have been destroyed. However, Syria used sarin and chlorine against civilians during its civil war, and Russia used the nerve agent Novichok in assassination attempts, demonstrating the treaty's enforcement limitations.
Admiral David Farragut's fleet of 24 Union vessels ran past two Confederate forts on the lower Mississippi under heavy fire on the night of April 24, 1862, arriving at New Orleans on April 25. The city, the Confederacy's largest with 170,000 inhabitants and its most important port, surrendered without a land battle on April 29. General Benjamin Butler occupied the city with 15,000 troops and imposed harsh martial law that earned him the nickname "Beast Butler." Women who insulted Union soldiers were ordered treated as prostitutes. The capture of New Orleans severed the Confederacy's connection to international trade through the Gulf of Mexico. Combined with Grant's campaign at Vicksburg, Union control of the Mississippi would eventually split the Confederacy in two.
Joan of Arc arrived at the besieged city of Orleans on April 29, 1429, accompanied by a supply convoy and several hundred troops. The 17-year-old peasant girl had convinced the Dauphin Charles VII that she carried a divine mission to lift the siege and crown him at Reims. Her arrival electrified the demoralized French garrison. Within nine days, she led assaults on the English fortifications surrounding the city, personally scaling a ladder at Les Tourelles and continuing to fight after taking a crossbow bolt between her neck and shoulder. The English retreated on May 8. The relief of Orleans was the turning point of the Hundred Years' War and remains Joan's most celebrated military achievement. She was captured by Burgundians a year later and burned at the stake in Rouen.
Operation Frequent Wind, the helicopter evacuation of Saigon, began on the morning of April 29, 1975, and lasted approximately 19 hours. Marine CH-46 and Air Force CH-53 helicopters shuttled between the US Embassy compound, the DAO compound at Tan Son Nhut airport, and aircraft carriers offshore. Over 7,000 people were evacuated, including 1,373 Americans and 5,595 Vietnamese and third-country nationals. The iconic photograph of a helicopter on a rooftop was not taken at the embassy but at 22 Gia Long Street, a CIA building. The last helicopter departed the embassy roof at 7:53 AM on April 30. Thousands of Vietnamese who had been promised evacuation were left behind. North Vietnamese tanks crashed through the gates of the presidential palace hours later.
The sea turned silent as soldiers stepped onto coral reefs that had never known peace, planting flags on rocks where families once fished for their daily bread. By April 1975, hundreds of Vietnamese fishermen and island guards found themselves displaced from the Spratly chain, their homes swallowed by a new reality they hadn't chosen. They'd spent years guarding these tiny specks of land against storms and tides, only to watch them become chess pieces in a game of national reunification. Now the water just laps at the same stones, but the silence feels different. It's not empty; it's waiting for someone else to tell the story.
A single mountain of rock in North Africa swallowed an army and spat them out into Europe. Tariq ibn-Ziyad didn't just land; he burned his own ships to ensure his men had nowhere to run but forward. The Visigothic King Roderic, confident in his power, met this desperate force at the Guadalete River and lost everything, including his life. For seven centuries, the Iberian Peninsula became a bridge of science, art, and faith between worlds that thought they were enemies. We still walk through streets named for kings who never ruled it, speaking words borrowed from a language we barely speak anymore.
The basilica of San Paolo Fuori le Mura cracked open while Rome slept in 801, shaking the Central Apennines hard enough to rattle Spoleto too. It wasn't just stone; monks lost their homes and families huddled in the dark, wondering if God had abandoned them to the dust. But when they cleared the rubble, they didn't rebuild it as a fortress of fear. They raised it again, louder than before, proving that sometimes you have to break everything to build something unshakeable.
A Lithuanian cavalry charge at the Vikhra River crushed Smolensk's hopes in minutes. Prince Vasily's army, outnumbered and outmaneuvered by Algirdas's son, didn't just lose; they lost their freedom to sign a vassal treaty. Thousands of families faced starvation or exile as their city-state bowed to Vilnius. But the real shock? This wasn't a conquest of land, but a shift in who held the keys to the trade routes that fed Eastern Europe for centuries. Smolensk didn't fall; it just changed its boss.
The Crown's decree landed in Zaragoza with terrifying speed: every Jew had until July 31 to leave or convert. Thousands packed their meager belongings, trading silver for a single loaf of bread as families tore apart on dusty roads. They carried nothing but the clothes on their backs and the silence of a kingdom that suddenly felt too big for its own hatred. You'll tell your friends that Spain didn't just lose its Jewish population; it lost the very hands that built its wealth, leaving an empty table where a feast used to be.
Didrik Slagheck's Danish garrison held Västerås for nine long months, starving through winter while Gustav Vasa's rebels choked the castle walls. They didn't just win a battle; they forced a surrender that broke Denmark's grip on Sweden piece by piece. That stubborn defense bought time for a king to rise from a fugitive into a nation's father. And now, every Swedish flag you see is proof that one man refused to let a fortress decide his country's fate.
A British admiral spotted French supply ships and chased them hard, but he turned back when fog rolled in off Martinique. Three thousand men froze on those decks, hungry and terrified, while a single missed turn meant starvation or death for the whole fleet. That hesitation let the French escape with crucial supplies, which soon helped trap Cornwallis at Yorktown. The war didn't end there, but the British realized they couldn't fight a global enemy alone.
Mules died faster than men in that swampy mud. By April 29, 1862, General Halleck's Union army had surrounded Corinth, Mississippi, trapping Beauregard's Confederates inside a fortress of trenches and rotting supplies. The heat was brutal; dysentery spread like wildfire through the camps. Neither side fired a single shot for days while disease did its work instead. They starved, they suffered, and then the Union simply walked away without a fight when the rain finally stopped. It wasn't about winning ground; it was about who could endure the filth longer. Sometimes the biggest battles are the ones you never see coming.
In the dead of 1864, while cannons roared over Virginia, seven young men at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute decided to start a brotherhood anyway. They didn't wait for peace; they forged Theta Xi right in the middle of the Civil War's bloodiest year. These students needed more than textbooks—they craved a place where fear couldn't separate them from their friends. That choice created the only fraternity born during America's greatest conflict. You'll tell your friends tonight that courage isn't always loud, sometimes it's just showing up to meet in a cold classroom while the world burns outside.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Taurus
Apr 20 -- May 20
Earth sign. Patient, reliable, and devoted.
Birthstone
Diamond
Clear
Symbolizes eternal love, strength, and invincibility.
Next Birthday
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days until April 29
Quote of the Day
“There are two kinds of worries -- those you can do something about and those you can't. Don't spend any time on the latter.”
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