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July 14 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Matthew Fox, Rosey Grier, and Ante Pavelić.

Bastille Falls: French Revolution Begins in Blood
The Bastille held just seven prisoners on July 14, 1789: four forgers, two lunatics, and a dissolute count. The Parisian crowd that stormed it wasn't after prisoners. They wanted the fortress's enormous stockpile of gunpowder and ammunition, which they needed to arm themselves against royal troops gathering outside the city. Governor de Launay initially negotiated, then his garrison opened fire, killing nearly 100 attackers. When the crowd breached the inner courtyard, de Launay was dragged outside and decapitated, his head paraded through the streets on a pike. The Bastille was demolished stone by stone over the following months. The date became France's national holiday.
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Ante Pavelić
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1602–1661
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1974–1710
Javier Solana
b. 1942
Joel Silver
b. 1952
Woody Guthrie
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Anna Bligh
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Fred Baur
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Historical Events
The Bastille held just seven prisoners on July 14, 1789: four forgers, two lunatics, and a dissolute count. The Parisian crowd that stormed it wasn't after prisoners. They wanted the fortress's enormous stockpile of gunpowder and ammunition, which they needed to arm themselves against royal troops gathering outside the city. Governor de Launay initially negotiated, then his garrison opened fire, killing nearly 100 attackers. When the crowd breached the inner courtyard, de Launay was dragged outside and decapitated, his head paraded through the streets on a pike. The Bastille was demolished stone by stone over the following months. The date became France's national holiday.
The Sedition Act criminalized writing or publishing false statements against the U.S. government, instantly silencing political opponents and provoking fierce debates over free speech. This law sparked a backlash that helped doom the Federalist Party in the 1800 election and set a lasting precedent for how Americans defend dissenting voices against state power.
Pat Garrett shoots dead the notorious outlaw Billy the Kid outside Fort Sumner, ending a reign of terror that had kept New Mexico's frontier in constant chaos. This decisive act finally allows local authorities to assert control over the region, effectively closing the book on one of the Wild West's most infamous gunfights.
Hitler's regime passed the Law Against the Establishment of Parties on July 14, 1933, making the Nazi Party the only legal political organization in Germany. This came just five months after Hitler became chancellor. The Social Democrats had already been banned, the Communists arrested after the Reichstag fire, and the remaining parties pressured into dissolving themselves. The Catholic Centre Party, the last holdout, disbanded on July 5 after the Vatican signed a concordat with Berlin. With opposition parties eliminated, Hitler controlled the Reichstag entirely. Voting became a formality. The law turned Germany from a flawed democracy into a totalitarian state in under six months.
Mariner 4 flew past Mars on July 14, 1965, and its 22 grainy photographs destroyed a century of romantic speculation. Instead of the canals and vegetation that astronomers like Percival Lowell had imagined, the images showed a barren, cratered landscape resembling the Moon. The spacecraft's instruments detected no magnetic field and an atmosphere less than 1% as dense as Earth's. The temperature readings suggested conditions too cold and too dry for liquid water. The scientific community had to abandon decades of theories about Martian life. Mariner 4's data was transmitted at 8.33 bits per second, meaning each photograph took hours to arrive. Those 22 pictures permanently changed planetary science.
Pat Garrett had been tracking Billy the Kid for months when he got a tip that the outlaw was hiding at Pete Maxwell's ranch in Fort Sumner, New Mexico. On July 14, 1881, Garrett entered Maxwell's darkened bedroom to ask about Billy's whereabouts. The Kid walked in moments later, saw a figure in the shadows, and asked "Quien es?" Garrett fired twice. One bullet struck Billy in the chest, killing him instantly at age 21. William Henry McCarty, alias William Bonney, alias Billy the Kid, had killed at least four men, escaped from custody twice, including a double murder during a jailbreak, and become the most wanted man in the American Southwest. The legend grew far larger than the man.
The emperor who'd ruled for forty-four years abandoned 1.2 million people in Chang'an with just hours' warning. Xuanzong fled west on July 14th, 756, as An Lushan's rebel army closed in—taking his favorite concubine Yang Guifei, his guards, and his legitimacy. His own troops mutinied twenty miles out, strangling Yang and leaving her body roadside. They blamed her family for the war. The Tang Dynasty survived another 150 years, but China's golden age ended the moment that convoy left the capital gates.
Jan Zizka was a one-eyed military genius who had never lost a battle when Crusader forces descended on Prague in 1420. Emperor Sigismund had called the crusade to crush the Hussite religious movement in Bohemia, sending a massive army against the reformist followers of the executed priest Jan Hus. On July 14, Zizka's forces, largely composed of peasants armed with farm implements and fighting from fortified wagon circles called tabors, crushed the Crusader assault on Vitkov Hill overlooking Prague. The victory saved the Hussite revolution and proved that disciplined infantry with innovative tactics could defeat armored knights, foreshadowing the end of feudal cavalry warfare across Europe.
The Burgundians hand Joan of Arc to Bishop Pierre Cauchon, transferring her from military captors to an ecclesiastical court eager for a conviction. This transaction seals her fate, leading directly to the trial that ends in her execution by fire on May 30, 1431.
Scotland gambled a quarter of its entire liquid capital—roughly £400,000—on five ships heading to Panama's fever coast. The Caledonia, St. Andrew, Unicorn, Dolphin, and Endeavour carried 1,200 colonists from Leith in July 1698, convinced they'd build a trading empire at Darién. Within eight months, 400 were dead from disease and starvation. The survivors abandoned New Edinburgh before year's end. The financial catastrophe bankrupted Scottish nobles and merchants alike, making union with England seven years later not just politically convenient but economically necessary. Sometimes an empire dies before it's born.
Sixty-four men marched 650 miles up the California coast searching for a harbor their orders described as "sheltered and magnificent." They walked right past it. Twice. Gaspar de Portolà's expedition spent months hunting for Monterey Bay in 1769, but Sebastián Vizcaíno's 1602 description had been so exaggerated that when Portolà found the actual crescent-shaped inlet, he didn't recognize it. Too small, too exposed. They kept walking north and accidentally discovered San Francisco Bay instead. The Spanish empire's first permanent settlements in Alta California began because explorers couldn't match reality to a 167-year-old travel brochure.
Junípero Serra sang the Salve Regina while hanging bells from an oak tree, hoping the sound would attract Salinan people to his third California mission. July 14, 1771. The nearest Spanish settlement sat 25 miles away—he wanted isolation. Within months, 158 Salinans arrived for baptism, trading their seasonal migration patterns for fixed agricultural labor. The mission eventually claimed 165,000 acres of their ancestral land. By 1834, when Mexico secularized the missions, disease had reduced the Salinan population by 95 percent. Serra called it conversion. The Salinans had no written language to record what they called it.
Parisian revolutionaries stormed the Bastille, shattering royal authority and transforming local unrest into a full-scale national uprising. This violent seizure of the fortress ignited the French Revolution and established July 14 as an enduring symbol of liberty that France celebrates every year.
The mob burned fourteen buildings in three days, targeting homes and meeting houses of anyone who'd toasted the French Revolution's second anniversary. Joseph Priestley—discoverer of oxygen, inventor, theologian—watched his laboratory, library, and life's work turn to ash on July 14th. He'd written pamphlets defending the revolutionaries. Birmingham's establishment had noticed. The rioters carried lists of addresses. Priestley fled to London, then America, never returning to England. His friends stayed quiet. The scientist who'd isolated eight gases couldn't breathe free in his own country for supporting liberty across the Channel.
Mobs stormed Joseph Priestley's home and laboratory, destroying his library and scientific instruments while he fled for safety. This violence shattered Birmingham's reputation as a tolerant hub of Enlightenment thought, driving radical thinkers to flee or retreat from public life in Britain.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Cancer
Jun 21 -- Jul 22
Water sign. Loyal, emotional, and nurturing.
Birthstone
Ruby
Red
Symbolizes passion, vitality, and prosperity.
Next Birthday
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days until July 14
Quote of the Day
“The rare few, who, early in life have rid themselves of the friendship of the many.”
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