Today In History
September 21 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Liam Gallagher, Emma Watkins, and Kareena Kapoor Khan.

Arnold Betrays West Point: Symbol of Treachery Born
Benedict Arnold, once one of George Washington's most trusted generals, negotiated the sale of West Point's defensive plans to the British for 20,000 pounds while serving as the fortress's commander in September 1780. The plot was discovered when American militiamen captured British Major John Andre carrying Arnold's documents in his stockings on September 23. Arnold learned of Andre's capture just in time to flee down the Hudson River aboard the British sloop HMS Vulture. Washington arrived at West Point hours later to find both Arnold and the fortress's defense plans gone. Andre was hanged as a spy. Arnold received his payment and a British commission but was distrusted by both sides for the rest of his life. His name became the American synonym for traitor.
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Historical Events
Benedict Arnold, once one of George Washington's most trusted generals, negotiated the sale of West Point's defensive plans to the British for 20,000 pounds while serving as the fortress's commander in September 1780. The plot was discovered when American militiamen captured British Major John Andre carrying Arnold's documents in his stockings on September 23. Arnold learned of Andre's capture just in time to flee down the Hudson River aboard the British sloop HMS Vulture. Washington arrived at West Point hours later to find both Arnold and the fortress's defense plans gone. Andre was hanged as a spy. Arnold received his payment and a British commission but was distrusted by both sides for the rest of his life. His name became the American synonym for traitor.
The National Convention formally abolished the French monarchy on September 21, 1792, one day after the revolutionary army's unexpected victory at Valmy, and declared France a republic. King Louis XVI, stripped of all titles and referred to simply as "Citizen Louis Capet," was already imprisoned in the Temple with his family. The Convention put him on trial in December 1792 on charges of conspiracy and treason. He was convicted by a vote of 693 to 0 and sentenced to death by a margin of just one vote, with his cousin Philippe Egalite (the Duke of Orleans) voting for execution. Louis was guillotined on January 21, 1793, in the Place de la Revolution before a crowd that dipped handkerchiefs in his blood as souvenirs.
Ferdinand Marcos signed Proclamation No. 1081 on September 21, 1972, declaring martial law across the Philippines. He justified the declaration by citing communist insurgency and Muslim separatism, but his real purpose was to extend his power beyond the constitutional two-term limit. Marcos dissolved Congress, shut down the free press, arrested opposition leaders including Senator Benigno Aquino Jr., and ruled by decree for the next nine years. The formal martial law period ended in 1981, but Marcos retained dictatorial powers until the People Power Revolution of 1986, when millions of Filipinos filled the streets of Manila and forced him into exile. During his 21 years of authoritarian rule, thousands were killed, tortured, or disappeared.
Richard de Clare — 'Strongbow' — had been promised the Kingdom of Leinster and the hand of its king's daughter if he helped Diarmait Mac Murchada retake his throne. He delivered. Norse-Gaelic Dublin fell in September 1170 after a surprise assault that caught the defenders mid-negotiation. Ascall mac Ragnaill fled by ship. But the English king Henry II grew alarmed that Strongbow was becoming too powerful in Ireland and sailed over with an army to assert control. The private military deal that took Dublin ended up importing the English crown into Ireland. It never really left.
Lembitu was the only Estonian leader who'd managed to unite multiple Estonian tribes against the Livonian crusaders — a coalition that had held for years. Kaupo, by contrast, had converted to Christianity and fought alongside the crusaders, making him one of history's more complicated figures: a Livonian chief who took the Pope's side against his own people. Both men died in the same battle on September 21, 1217. The Estonian resistance effectively died with Lembitu. German and Danish control over the Baltic solidified within years. The two enemies who defined an era ended on the same field.
Philip the Good of Burgundy had been England's ally in the Hundred Years' War partly because Henry V's men had murdered his father John the Fearless on a bridge in 1419 — and he'd been waiting ever since for the right moment to switch sides. The Treaty of Arras in 1435 gave him that moment, along with territorial concessions from France and a formal apology. England's negotiators walked out rather than accept the terms. The English lost their most powerful continental ally and, within 18 years, lost France entirely. A two-decade grudge reshaped the map of Europe.
Jacobite highlanders under Bonnie Prince Charlie overran Sir John Cope's government army in just ten minutes at Prestonpans, routing the professional soldiers with a devastating dawn charge. The stunning victory electrified Stuart supporters across Britain and convinced Charles to launch the march south into England that would define the 1745 uprising.
British Secretary of War Lord Castlereagh and Foreign Secretary George Canning traded pistol fire on Putney Heath, leaving Canning wounded in the thigh. This violent clash between two towering political figures forced a temporary reshuffle of the British war cabinet during the Napoleonic Wars, altering how Britain coordinated its military strategy against Napoleon.
Joseph Smith was 21 years old and had reportedly been told four years earlier, by the angel Moroni, exactly where the gold plates were buried — on a hillside in Manchester, New York. On September 22, 1827, he was finally allowed to take them. He translated what he said he couldn't read, using a seer stone placed in a hat, dictating to a scribe with a curtain between them and the plates. The Book of Mormon was published three years later, in 1830. Within a generation, it had become the founding scripture of a new American religion.
British forces under Horatio Kitchener seize Dongola, crushing Mahdist resistance and securing the Nile Valley for imperial control. This victory directly led to for the 1898 Battle of Omdurman, which cemented Anglo-Egyptian rule over Sudan for decades to come.
Eight-year-old Virginia O'Hanlon wrote to the New York Sun because her father told her if it was in the paper, it was true. Editor Francis Pharcellus Church wrote the reply himself — an agnostic who'd covered Civil War battlefields and found himself, unexpectedly, defending the existence of Santa Claus. The editorial ran September 21, 1897. Church never signed it, never claimed it publicly. The Sun reprinted it every year until the paper folded in 1950. Church died in 1906 not knowing his 500-word response to a child's letter would outlast everything else he'd ever written.
Salvador Lutteroth had seen professional wrestling promoted in Texas and imported the model to Mexico City in 1933, renting the Coliseo and running the first Empresa Mexicana de Lucha Libre show on September 21. He invented nothing physical — but he built the infrastructure, the promotion, the touring circuit, and eventually the masked-wrestler culture that made Lucha Libre a distinct form. El Santo, Mil Máscaras, Blue Demon — all fought under the promotional structure Lutteroth built. A businessman who liked Texas wrestling accidentally created one of Mexico's most durable cultural exports.
J.R.R. Tolkien was grading exam papers at Oxford when he found a blank page in a student's booklet and wrote, for no reason he could ever explain, "In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit." The story grew from that spontaneous sentence into a manuscript that publisher Stanley Unwin gave to his 10-year-old son Rayner to evaluate. Rayner's review, written for a payment of one shilling, recommended publication for children between the ages of 5 and 9. The Hobbit was published on September 21, 1937, with a first print run of 1,500 copies. It sold out by Christmas. The story of Bilbo Baggins launched the modern fantasy genre and led directly to The Lord of the Rings, which has sold over 150 million copies.
J.R.R. Tolkien unleashed The Hobbit upon readers on September 21, 1937, instantly birthing a literary universe that redefined fantasy fiction. This single volume spawned an enduring global phenomenon where fans celebrate the author's birthday on September 22 as Hobbit Day to honor his creation of Middle-earth.
The Great New England Hurricane of 1938 struck Long Island and southern New England on September 21 with sustained winds of 121 mph and a storm surge that reached 25 feet in some locations. The Weather Bureau had tracked the storm but predicted it would curve out to sea, so no warnings were issued. The hurricane traveled northward at an extraordinary forward speed of 70 mph, covering the last 500 miles to New England in under eight hours. Entire coastal communities in Rhode Island and Connecticut were obliterated. Providence flooded under 13 feet of water. Between 600 and 800 people died. The disaster destroyed over 57,000 homes and 26,000 automobiles. It directly prompted the creation of a systematic hurricane warning system for the Atlantic seaboard.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Virgo
Aug 23 -- Sep 22
Earth sign. Analytical, kind, and hardworking.
Birthstone
Sapphire
Blue
Symbolizes truth, sincerity, and faithfulness.
Next Birthday
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days until September 21
Quote of the Day
“If you fell down yesterday, stand up today.”
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