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On this day

July 10

Battle of Britain Begins: Luftwaffe Attacks Channel (1940). Scopes Monkey Trial: Evolution vs. Faith in Court (1925). Notable births include Emma Smith (1804), Béla Fleck (1958), George M. Dallas (1792).

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Battle of Britain Begins: Luftwaffe Attacks Channel
1940Event

Battle of Britain Begins: Luftwaffe Attacks Channel

Hermann Goring's Luftwaffe launched its first major attack against British shipping in the English Channel on July 10, 1940, beginning the Battle of Britain. The RAF was outnumbered roughly three to one in fighters, but it had two decisive advantages the Germans didn't fully appreciate: radar stations along the coast that detected incoming raids, and the Dowding system that coordinated fighter response in real time. Over the next four months, German losses mounted because pilots shot down over England became prisoners while RAF pilots who bailed out could be flying again by afternoon. This was the first major campaign fought entirely in the air, and Germany's failure to achieve air superiority forced Hitler to cancel his invasion plans.

Scopes Monkey Trial: Evolution vs. Faith in Court
1925

Scopes Monkey Trial: Evolution vs. Faith in Court

John Scopes was a 24-year-old high school teacher in Dayton, Tennessee, who agreed to test the state's Butler Act by teaching evolution from a civic biology textbook. The 1925 trial attracted legendary attorneys: William Jennings Bryan for the prosecution and Clarence Darrow for the defense. H.L. Mencken covered it for the Baltimore Sun, mocking the town mercilessly. The climax came when Darrow called Bryan himself to the stand as an expert on the Bible, forcing the aging politician to defend a literal reading of Genesis under withering cross-examination. Scopes was convicted and fined $100, later overturned on a technicality. Bryan died five days after the verdict.

Fillmore Takes Oath: Presidency After Taylor's Death
1850

Fillmore Takes Oath: Presidency After Taylor's Death

Millard Fillmore took the presidential oath on July 10, 1850, hours after Zachary Taylor's sudden death, inheriting a nation tearing itself apart over slavery's expansion into new territories. Where Taylor had opposed the Compromise of 1850, Fillmore signed all five bills within weeks, including the Fugitive Slave Act that required Northern states to return escaped slaves. The compromise temporarily averted secession but enraged abolitionists, who saw the fugitive law as a moral abomination. Harriet Beecher Stowe later cited the law as her motivation for writing Uncle Tom's Cabin. Fillmore's presidency lasted just 32 months, and his own party declined to renominate him.

250 Dead in Nigeria: Pipeline Explodes on Scavengers
2000

250 Dead in Nigeria: Pipeline Explodes on Scavengers

A pipeline operated by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation had been leaking for days near Jesse, Delta State, when roughly 250 villagers gathered with buckets and jerry cans to collect the spilled fuel on July 10, 2000. The gasoline ignited, incinerating the crowd in seconds. Many victims were children. Nigeria produced over two million barrels of oil per day at the time, yet communities along the pipeline corridors lived in extreme poverty without running water or electricity. Pipeline explosions were not rare: similar disasters had killed hundreds in previous years. The Jesse explosion highlighted how Nigeria's oil wealth bypassed the rural populations forced to live alongside its aging, poorly maintained infrastructure.

Rainbow Warrior Sunk: France Bombs Greenpeace Ship
1985

Rainbow Warrior Sunk: France Bombs Greenpeace Ship

French intelligence agents Alain Mafart and Dominique Prieur planted two limpet mines on the hull of the Rainbow Warrior in Auckland Harbour on July 10, 1985, sinking the Greenpeace flagship and killing photographer Fernando Pereira. The ship had been preparing to lead a flotilla to protest French nuclear testing at Moruroa Atoll. New Zealand police arrested the agents within days, and France initially denied involvement before the scandal forced the resignation of Defence Minister Charles Hernu. The bombing was state-sponsored terrorism by a Western democracy against an environmental organization, and the international outcry ultimately pressured France to end atmospheric nuclear testing in the South Pacific.

Quote of the Day

“Let the future tell the truth, and evaluate each one according to his work and accomplishments. The present is theirs; the future, for which I have really worked, is mine.”

Historical events

Born on July 10

Portrait of Kim Heechul
Kim Heechul 1983

Kim Heechul redefined the boundaries of K-pop stardom by balancing his role as a Super Junior vocalist with a candid,…

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unfiltered persona on South Korean variety television. His willingness to challenge industry norms regarding celebrity privacy and gender expression helped transition the idol archetype from untouchable performer to relatable, outspoken media personality.

Portrait of Béla Fleck
Béla Fleck 1958

A baby named after classical composers Bartók, Beethoven, and Brahms would grow up to win Grammys in more musical…

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categories than anyone else. Fifteen total. Béla Fleck took an instrument most people associate with Appalachian porches and bluegrass festivals and recorded it in African villages, with symphony orchestras, and alongside jazz legends. He's the only person nominated in jazz, bluegrass, pop, classical, world music, folk, spoken word, contemporary Christian, and gospel categories. The banjo, it turns out, wasn't waiting for respect—just someone who refused to see its limits.

Portrait of Ronnie James Dio
Ronnie James Dio 1942

His grandmother taught him opera at four.

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Ronnie James Padavona grew up in Cortland, New York, playing French horn in jazz bands before he ever touched an electric guitar. Born this day in 1942, he'd later replace Ozzy Osbourne in Black Sabbath—twice—and popularize heavy metal's devil horns gesture, which he'd actually borrowed from Italian grandmothers warding off the evil eye. He recorded seventeen studio albums across four bands. The gesture meant protection in his family. Millions of metalheads still throw it up, never knowing they're making the sign against curses.

Portrait of Herbert Boyer
Herbert Boyer 1936

The scientist who'd help create the first genetically engineered human insulin was born into a Pennsylvania railroad…

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family with no money for college. Herbert Boyer worked the night shift at a steel mill to pay for his biochemistry degree. In 1976, he co-founded Genentech in a San Francisco bar conversation—$500 each to start. By 1982, their lab-made insulin replaced the 23,000 pig pancreases needed annually to treat one diabetic patient for life. He'd turned bacteria into pharmaceutical factories.

Portrait of Alice Munro
Alice Munro 1931

She raised three children and ran a bookshop and wrote short stories when she had time.

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Alice Munro was born in Wingham, Ontario in 1931 and spent most of her life in small-town Canada writing about the people who lived there — their quiet cruelties, their buried lives, their secret histories. She called her stories 'open' — they don't resolve, they just stop, the way life does. She won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2013, the first Canadian woman to do so. She had already announced her retirement. She kept her word after the prize.

Portrait of Alejandro de Tomaso
Alejandro de Tomaso 1928

The racing driver who fled Argentina's political chaos in 1955 arrived in Italy with almost nothing—then convinced Ford…

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to let him build their GT40 prototype. Alejandro de Tomaso crashed spectacularly at Modena during his brief driving career, broke his leg, and decided manufacturing beat racing. His Pantera, launched in 1971, stuffed a Cleveland V8 into an Italian body and sold through Lincoln-Mercury dealerships across America. 7,260 units moved before the partnership collapsed. Elvis Presley famously shot his when it wouldn't start. De Tomaso eventually owned Maserati, Innocenti, and Moto Guzzi—an empire built by someone who started over at twenty-seven.

Portrait of John Bradley
John Bradley 1923

John Bradley became the face of American resolve after being photographed raising the flag on Iwo Jima during World War II.

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Though later research clarified his specific role in the event, his service as a Navy corpsman remains a defining symbol of the brutal Pacific campaign and the immense human cost of the conflict.

Portrait of Eunice Kennedy Shriver
Eunice Kennedy Shriver 1921

She was the only Kennedy sibling who didn't chase political office.

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Instead, Eunice Kennedy Shriver turned her family's Maryland estate into a summer camp in 1962, inviting kids with intellectual disabilities to swim and compete when most were still locked in institutions. One hundred children showed up that first year. Six years later, she launched the Special Olympics at Soldier Field in Chicago—1,000 athletes from 26 states. Today, more than 5 million athletes compete in 190 countries. The sister who stayed out of the spotlight built something bigger than any of their campaigns.

Portrait of Harvey Ball
Harvey Ball 1921

He charged $45 for the most recognizable image on earth.

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Harvey Ball, a commercial artist in Worcester, Massachusetts, spent ten minutes in 1963 sketching a yellow circle, two dots, and a curved line for an insurance company employee morale campaign. No trademark. No copyright. No royalties. The smiley face went on to generate billions in merchandise sales—buttons, t-shirts, stickers, emoji descendants—while Ball kept working local graphic design jobs for hourly rates. He did create World Smile Day in 1999, asking people to perform acts of kindness. Ten minutes of work, forty-five dollars, infinite replication.

Portrait of Joe Shuster
Joe Shuster 1914

He drew Superman while nearly blind, squinting through thick Coke-bottle glasses at his own pencil lines.

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Joe Shuster sold the rights to his creation in 1938 for $130—ten years of work, gone. By the 1970s, Superman had generated over a billion dollars while Shuster lived in a Queens apartment, struggling to pay rent. Warner Communications finally granted him a pension after public outcry. The man who gave the world its first superhero couldn't afford to see an eye doctor.

Portrait of Prince Maximilian of Baden
Prince Maximilian of Baden 1867

He was born into royalty but would spend exactly 38 days as Germany's Chancellor — long enough to announce the Kaiser's…

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abdication without permission and hand power to a socialist upholsterer's son named Friedrich Ebert. Prince Maximilian of Baden arrived in 1867 with a bloodline stretching back centuries, but in October 1918, he became the man who dismantled an empire. He didn't want the job. Took it anyway. Then he did something aristocrats rarely do: he gave it away. After founding a progressive boarding school at Salem Castle, he died in 1929, having outlived the monarchy by eleven years but not the guilt of ending it.

Died on July 10

Portrait of Mel Blanc

Mel Blanc passed away after defining an entire generation's childhood with the voices of Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Barney Rubble.

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His death marked the end of an era where a single performer could embody the golden age of American animation and radio comedy.

Portrait of John Hammond
John Hammond 1987

He signed Billie Holiday when she was seventeen, singing in a Harlem club for tips.

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John Hammond heard her voice and brought her into a Columbia Records studio the next day. Over five decades, he discovered Bob Dylan playing harmonica in Greenwich Village, convinced Columbia to sign Bruce Springsteen after everyone else passed, and championed Aretha Franklin before she became the Queen of Soul. He recorded Bessie Smith's final sessions and produced the first integrated jazz concerts at Carnegie Hall in 1938. The man who couldn't carry a tune changed American music by recognizing genius when others heard only noise.

Portrait of Jelly Roll Morton
Jelly Roll Morton 1941

He carried a diamond in his front tooth and claimed he invented jazz in 1902.

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Jelly Roll Morton—born Ferdinand Joseph LaMothe in New Orleans—played piano in Storyville brothels at fourteen, then spent decades turning ragtime into something hotter, faster, more dangerous. His Red Hot Peppers recordings from 1926-27 captured the exact moment jazz became an art form you could write down and still feel. By 1941, broke and forgotten in Los Angeles, he died from heart failure at fifty. The man who said he invented jazz died thinking everyone believed he was lying.

Portrait of John Fisher
John Fisher 1920

The Admiral who revolutionized the British Navy by building the HMS Dreadnought—making every other battleship on Earth…

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obsolete overnight—died broke. John "Jacky" Fisher, born in Ceylon to a coffee planter, forced through oil-powered engines, submarines, and fire control systems that won World War I at sea. He resigned in 1915 after a bitter fight with Churchill over Gallipoli. Five years later, dead at 79. The Royal Navy he'd dragged into the twentieth century buried him with full honors while still using his designs.

Portrait of Louis Daguerre
Louis Daguerre 1851

Louis Daguerre died in 1851, leaving behind the first commercially viable photographic process.

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By capturing permanent, highly detailed images on silver-plated copper, he transformed portraiture from an expensive luxury for the elite into a democratic medium. His invention launched the era of visual documentation, forever altering how humanity records its own existence.

Portrait of Charles II
Charles II 1590

The Habsburg jaw that defined a dynasty ended in a Spanish monastery, far from Vienna.

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Charles II of Inner Austria spent his final years collecting 30,000 books and manuscripts—the largest private library in Europe—while his body deteriorated from generations of cousin marriages. He died at 50, leaving behind six children who'd marry their own relatives and that collection, which became the Austrian National Library. His son Ferdinand would inherit his books and his bloodline's genetic burden, becoming Holy Roman Emperor and sparking the Thirty Years' War. Sometimes what a family preserves destroys them.

Portrait of William the Silent
William the Silent 1584

He was shot in the chest on the stairs of his Delft residence by Balthasar Gérard, a Catholic zealot who'd posed as a nobleman for weeks.

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The assassination made William of Orange the first head of state killed by handgun. King Philip II of Spain had offered 25,000 crowns for his death—calling him a traitor for leading the Dutch revolt against Habsburg rule. Gérard collected nothing. He was tortured for days before execution. But William's seventeen children carried on the rebellion, and the Dutch Republic he fought for lasted two centuries. The man nicknamed "the Silent" for his careful diplomacy wouldn't stop talking in death.

Portrait of Li Shimin

Emperor Taizong of Tang, born Li Shimin, died after presiding over China's most celebrated period of prosperity and cultural achievement.

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His military conquests expanded the empire's borders deep into Central Asia, while his tolerant governance attracted scholars, merchants, and monks from across the known world. The administrative systems he built made the Tang dynasty the benchmark against which all subsequent Chinese rulers measured themselves.

Portrait of Hadrian

Emperor Hadrian left behind a Roman Empire that had deliberately traded expansion for consolidation, defining its…

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borders with walls in Britain and fortified frontiers across Europe. His massive building projects, including the Pantheon's reconstruction and his namesake wall, physically reshaped the empire. The administrative and legal reforms he implemented sustained Roman stability for another generation after his death.

Holidays & observances

A Frankish noblewoman walked away from an arranged marriage in 7th-century Flanders, choosing a monastery over a nobl…

A Frankish noblewoman walked away from an arranged marriage in 7th-century Flanders, choosing a monastery over a noble alliance. Amalberga of Maubeuge—sometimes confused with three other saints of the same name—lived as a Benedictine nun until her death around 690. Her feast day, July 10th, celebrates a virgin saint, though historians note the term marked religious devotion more than biography. The Carolingians later promoted her cult to legitimize their rule through holy ancestry. One woman's refusal became a dynasty's claim to divine favor.

The Bahamas became the last British Caribbean colony to gain independence—not through revolution, but because Britain…

The Bahamas became the last British Caribbean colony to gain independence—not through revolution, but because Britain was actively trying to shed its empire. On July 10, 1973, Prince Charles himself handed over the constitutional documents in Nassau at midnight, representing a crown eager to let go. Prime Minister Lynden Pindling, who'd spent years pushing for the moment, watched the Union Jack lower as 180,000 Bahamians became citizens of their own nation. The timing wasn't accidental: Britain had already granted independence to Jamaica and Trinidad, making continued colonial rule more expensive than freedom. Decolonization as budget cut.

Ireland's National Day of Commemoration honors all Irish people who died in war, but it only began in 1986—deliberate…

Ireland's National Day of Commemoration honors all Irish people who died in war, but it only began in 1986—deliberately vague timing after decades of impossible arguments. July was chosen. No specific date at first. Veterans of World War I couldn't march alongside those who fought against Britain in 1916. The Irish state couldn't pick sides between those who wore British uniforms and those who killed British soldiers. So they commemorated everyone, which meant commemorating no one's specific story. Sometimes remembering together requires forgetting separately first.

Seven brothers faced execution in Rome around 150 AD, their mother Felicity watching each son die rather than renounc…

Seven brothers faced execution in Rome around 150 AD, their mother Felicity watching each son die rather than renounce their faith. The youngest was just seven years old. Emperor Antoninus Pius had offered them wealth, position, freedom—anything but the one thing they wanted. Four months separated the first arrest from the final execution, time deliberately stretched to break their resolve. It didn't. The story spread fastest not through official church records but through whispered accounts among Rome's poor, who had nothing to offer their children except the same choice.

Seven sons executed in front of her, one by one.

Seven sons executed in front of her, one by one. Felicitas, a wealthy Roman widow, watched each refuse to sacrifice to pagan gods in 165 AD. The prefect Publius tried psychological warfare: spare your children, just renounce Christ. She urged them on instead. All seven died—by sword, club, beheading—across a single day. Four months later, authorities executed her too. The Catholic Church celebrates her feast on November 23rd, though historians now question whether all seven were actually her biological children. Maternal love looks different when eternity's at stake.

Two Roman sisters refused to marry pagan fiancés in 257 AD.

Two Roman sisters refused to marry pagan fiancés in 257 AD. That was it. That was their crime. Rufina and Secunda came from wealth—their father a senator—but turned down arranged marriages when their betrothed wouldn't convert to Christianity. The men reported them. Under Emperor Valerian's persecutions, the sisters were scourged, imprisoned, then executed separately: Rufina by the sword, Secunda by beheading. Their feast day, July 10th, became one of early Christianity's most celebrated martyrdoms. All because they said no to a wedding.

The British flag came down at midnight on July 10, 1973, ending 325 years of colonial rule over a chain of islands th…

The British flag came down at midnight on July 10, 1973, ending 325 years of colonial rule over a chain of islands that Columbus had sailed past in 1492. Prime Minister Lynden Pindling, a lawyer who'd fought for Black Bahamian rights since the 1950s, watched Prince Charles hand over constitutional documents in Nassau. The Bahamas became the Caribbean's first post-colonial nation to reject republic status—keeping Queen Elizabeth II as head of state while governing themselves. Independence arrived peacefully, but the choice was pragmatic: tourism dollars preferred constitutional monarchy's stability.

Meher Baba stopped talking on July 10, 1925, at age 31.

Meher Baba stopped talking on July 10, 1925, at age 31. Not for a day. For 44 years. The Indian spiritual master used an alphabet board, then just hand gestures, communicating until his death in 1969 without uttering a single word. His followers commemorate this choice every July 10th with their own silence—no speaking, no phones, no noise. They call it practicing "inner listening." The man who said he came to awaken humanity chose silence as his message, and thousands still gather each year to hear what he never said aloud.

The last country on Earth to officially abolish slavery celebrates its military every February 10th.

The last country on Earth to officially abolish slavery celebrates its military every February 10th. Mauritania's Armed Forces Day honors the troops that staged a bloodless coup in 1978—overthrowing a president who'd dragged the nation into Western Sahara's war and bankrupted it. Colonel Mustafa Ould Salek promised reform. He lasted ten months before another coup. Four more military takeovers followed by 2008. And still, each year, the parades march. The army that keeps seizing power from itself gets its own holiday.

The seven brothers weren't brothers at all.

The seven brothers weren't brothers at all. Ancient Latvians marked this June day by watching the Pleiades star cluster rise before dawn—seven bright points they called *Septiņi Brāļi*, guiding farmers to begin haymaking. Communities gathered in darkness, waiting for the celestial signal that grass had reached peak sweetness for cutting. Miss the window by a week and winter fodder turned bitter. Survival hung on reading stars correctly. Those seven distant suns, hundreds of light-years apart, became family because humans needed the sky to tell them when to swing their scythes.

The Danish king who gave England gold coins and built stone churches died kneeling at an altar while his own subjects…

The Danish king who gave England gold coins and built stone churches died kneeling at an altar while his own subjects threw rocks through the windows. July 10th, 1086. Canute IV had pushed too hard—demanding tithes, restricting freedoms, planning another invasion of England when farmers wanted peace. They stormed Saint Alban's Church in Odense. His brother Benedict died beside him. The Catholic Church canonized him fifteen years later, Denmark's first royal saint. Turns out dying for unpopular taxes counts as martyrdom if you're praying when the mob arrives.

The bones wouldn't stay put.

The bones wouldn't stay put. In medieval Brittany, Saint Maclovius's remains were moved—translated, in church terminology—from their original resting place to a grander shrine, a common practice when a saint's cult grew too popular for the humble tomb. The 6th-century bishop of Saint-Malo had died centuries earlier, but his relics became currency: pilgrims meant money, prestige, protection. Churches competed for holy bones like cities bid for Olympics today. And the "translation" got its own feast day, celebrated separately from his death, because apparently one commemoration per saint wasn't enough when there were 365 days to fill.

Seven sons, one mother, all dead within months.

Seven sons, one mother, all dead within months. Felicity of Rome watched Roman authorities execute each of her boys between 162-166 AD for refusing to sacrifice to pagan gods. The youngest begged to die last so he could see his brothers' courage. Emperor Marcus Aurelius—the philosopher-king who wrote about virtue—signed off on it. Their deaths didn't stop Christianity's spread through Rome. Accelerated it. Turns out watching a mother bury seven children for their faith makes better converts than any sermon ever could.

Wyoming's statehood came with a catch the other 43 states didn't have: keep letting women vote, or don't join at all.

Wyoming's statehood came with a catch the other 43 states didn't have: keep letting women vote, or don't join at all. The territory had granted women's suffrage in 1869—first in the nation—and when Congress debated admission in 1890, some members demanded Wyoming rescind it. The territorial legislature's response? "We will remain out of the Union 100 years rather than come in without the women." Congress blinked. Wyoming became the 44th state on July 10, 1890. The Equality State entered the union because it refused to compromise on equality.

The inventor who died alone in a New York hotel room with a pigeon gets his own day because of a 2003 resolution by t…

The inventor who died alone in a New York hotel room with a pigeon gets his own day because of a 2003 resolution by the Croatian parliament—and they picked July 10th, his birthday in the old Julian calendar, not the Gregorian one the rest of us use. Tesla held 300 patents but died broke in 1943, room 3327 of the New Yorker Hotel, $2,000 in debt. Now tech CEOs name companies after him. The ultimate delayed recognition: celebrated everywhere except on his actual birthday.

Liverpool and Hamburg celebrate Beatles Day to honor the homecoming of the band after their grueling, formative resid…

Liverpool and Hamburg celebrate Beatles Day to honor the homecoming of the band after their grueling, formative residencies in German clubs. This annual tribute recognizes how those relentless performances forged the group’s tight musical chemistry and stage presence, transforming four local musicians into the global icons who redefined popular music for the entire twentieth century.