Today In History
August 19 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Coco Chanel, Matthew Perry, and Ginger Baker.

Old Ironsides Triumphs: USS Constitution Defies Britain
The USS Constitution earned her nickname "Old Ironsides" on August 19, 1812, when she engaged the British frigate HMS Guerriere roughly 400 miles southeast of Halifax, Nova Scotia. British cannonballs bounced off the Constitution's 21-inch-thick oak hull, prompting an American sailor to shout "Huzzah! Her sides are made of iron!" Captain Isaac Hull maneuvered within close range and delivered devastating broadsides that dismasted the Guerriere in under thirty minutes. The British ship was so badly damaged she had to be sunk. The victory was a massive morale boost for the young American navy, which had been expected to lose every engagement against the Royal Navy, the most powerful fleet in the world.
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Historical Events
The USS Constitution earned her nickname "Old Ironsides" on August 19, 1812, when she engaged the British frigate HMS Guerriere roughly 400 miles southeast of Halifax, Nova Scotia. British cannonballs bounced off the Constitution's 21-inch-thick oak hull, prompting an American sailor to shout "Huzzah! Her sides are made of iron!" Captain Isaac Hull maneuvered within close range and delivered devastating broadsides that dismasted the Guerriere in under thirty minutes. The British ship was so badly damaged she had to be sunk. The victory was a massive morale boost for the young American navy, which had been expected to lose every engagement against the Royal Navy, the most powerful fleet in the world.
A Soviet court sentenced U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers to ten years imprisonment on August 19, 1960, for espionage after his reconnaissance aircraft was shot down over Sverdlovsk on May 1. The CIA had told President Eisenhower that the pilot would not survive a shootdown, so when the Soviets produced Powers alive, Eisenhower's cover story of a "weather research aircraft" collapsed embarrassingly. Premier Nikita Khrushchev cancelled the Paris Summit with Eisenhower, withdrawing his invitation for the president to visit the Soviet Union. Powers served 21 months before being exchanged for Soviet spy Rudolf Abel on the Glienicke Bridge in Berlin, the same bridge that would feature in Cold War prisoner swaps for decades.
Augustus died at Nola after a forty-year reign that transformed Rome from a fractured republic torn apart by civil war into a centralized empire spanning the Mediterranean. His political system, the Principate, inaugurated the Pax Romana and established a template for imperial governance that endured for centuries.
J.S. Bach premiered his cantata 'Lobe den Herren, den mächtigen König der Ehren' (BWV 137) in Leipzig, setting Joachim Neander's beloved hymn text without alteration across five movements. The work remains one of the most performed of Bach's 200-plus church cantatas.
The German electorate voted on August 19, 1934, to approve merging the offices of president and chancellor into the single title of Fuhrer, giving Adolf Hitler 89.9% of the vote. The plebiscite was held under conditions that made genuine opposition virtually impossible: the Nazi Party controlled all media, opposition parties had been banned for over a year, the SA and SS intimidated voters at polling stations, and ballots were not truly secret. The vote retroactively ratified what Hitler had already done: he had merged the offices on August 2, the day President Hindenburg died, and required the military to swear a personal oath to him before the ballots were even printed.
Supporters of convicted armed robber George Davis dug up and poured oil on the Headingley cricket pitch overnight, forcing the cancellation of an Ashes test match between England and Australia. The bizarre act of sabotage drew global headlines and succeeded in its aim of publicizing Davis's case, contributing to his controversial early release from prison.
Linus Pauling won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1954 for his work on chemical bonding. Then he started campaigning against nuclear weapons testing and won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1962. He is the only person to win two unshared Nobel Prizes. In his later years he became convinced that high doses of Vitamin C could cure cancer and prevent colds. The scientific consensus disagreed. He took 18,000 mg a day. He died at 93 of prostate cancer. The Vitamin C debate outlived him.
The first temple to Venus in Rome was dedicated in 295 BC during the Third Samnite War by Quintus Fabius Maximus Gurges. Venus was not yet the Romans' most important deity — that transformation came later, when Julius Caesar claimed her as his ancestral goddess. The early temple honored Venus primarily as a goddess of gardens and vegetation. Her association with love and beauty was a later Greek import.
The 19-year-old Octavian — future Emperor Augustus — forced the Roman Senate to elect him consul on August 19, 43 BC, backed by eight legions camped outside Rome. It was the beginning of the end for the Roman Republic; within 16 years, he would be sole ruler of the Mediterranean world.
Octavian leverages the threat of military force to compel the Roman Senate into electing him Consul just days after Julius Caesar's assassination. This bold maneuver grants him supreme legal authority and a platform to dismantle his rivals, ultimately setting the stage for the rise of the Roman Empire under Augustus.
Abu Yazid's defeat in the Hodna Mountains shattered the Kharijite rebellion that had terrorized North Africa for years. This victory allowed the Fatimids to consolidate their control over the region, securing the foundation for a dynasty that would soon challenge the Abbasid Caliphate and reshape the Mediterranean political landscape.
Baldwin III of Jerusalem stormed Ascalon after a six-month siege, seizing vast plunder and finally securing the kingdom's vulnerable southern frontier. This decisive victory eliminated the last major Fatimid stronghold in Palestine, allowing the Crusader states to consolidate their hold on the region for nearly two decades.
Baldwin III of Jerusalem seized power from his mother Melisende in 1153 and captured Ascalon, the last major Fatimid stronghold on the Palestinian coast. Ascalon had resisted Crusader attacks for over fifty years. Its fall gave the Kingdom of Jerusalem control of the entire coastline. The mother-son power struggle that preceded the victory nearly destroyed the kingdom from within.
The Battle of Knockdoe in 1504 was one of the largest pitched battles fought in Ireland, pitting the Hiberno-Norman Burkes against the Anglo-Norman Fitzgeralds. The English Crown had little direct control over most of Ireland — the great families governed their own territories and settled disputes by force. Knockdoe demonstrated both the scale of lordly warfare in Ireland and the Crown's inability to prevent it.
Maurice of Orange's Dutch and English forces forced the Spanish garrison at Sluis to capitulate, severing Spain's vital naval supply line to its armies in the Low Countries. This decisive blow crippled Spanish logistics and shifted the strategic balance of the Eighty Years War firmly toward the rebels.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Leo
Jul 23 -- Aug 22
Fire sign. Creative, passionate, and generous.
Birthstone
Peridot
Olive green
Symbolizes power, healing, and protection from nightmares.
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