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On this day

March 25

EEC Founded: Europe's Economic Union Takes Shape (1957). Greek Independence Day: Revolution Against Ottoman Rule (0). Notable births include Gloria Steinem (1934), Chuck Greenberg (1950), Anders Fridén (1973).

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EEC Founded: Europe's Economic Union Takes Shape
1957Event

EEC Founded: Europe's Economic Union Takes Shape

West Germany, France, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg signed the Treaty of Rome to create the European Economic Community, binding their economies together through a common market. This move dismantled tariff barriers between the six nations and laid the direct groundwork for the single currency and unified political structures that define modern Europe today.

Greek Independence Day: Revolution Against Ottoman Rule

Greek Independence Day: Revolution Against Ottoman Rule

Greece celebrates March 25 as Independence Day, marking the start of the 1821 uprising against Ottoman rule that launched nearly a decade of armed struggle. The revolt attracted international volunteers and the support of Romantic poets like Lord Byron, and its success established the first independent nation-state in southeastern Europe.

Steinem Born: Feminism's Most Visible Voice
1934

Steinem Born: Feminism's Most Visible Voice

Gloria Steinem wrote an exposé of the Playboy Club in 1963, having worked undercover as a Bunny for two weeks. The piece made her reputation and also trapped her: editors kept sending her to women's topics because that's where they'd put her. She co-founded Ms. magazine in 1972, which ran without advertising for years on subscription alone to avoid editorial interference from advertisers. She marched, organized, testified, and wrote for five decades. Born March 25, 1934, in Toledo, Ohio. Her mother had a debilitating mental illness; Steinem essentially raised herself. She married for the first time at 66, to activist David Bale. She said she finally believed in marriage after helping defeat an anti-feminist ballot initiative in South Africa that claimed feminism destroyed it.

WikiWikiWeb, the world's first wiki, and part of the Portland Pattern Repository, is made public by Ward Cunningham.
1995

WikiWikiWeb, the world's first wiki, and part of the Portland Pattern Repository, is made public by Ward Cunningham.

Ward Cunningham named his creation after the Honolulu airport shuttle because "wiki wiki" meant "quick" in Hawaiian—and he wanted something faster than "quick-web." The Portland programmer launched WikiWikiWeb on March 25, 1995, as a tool for software developers to share design patterns. Within hours, strangers were editing each other's work without asking permission first. No logins required. No approval process. Just trust. Six years later, two guys would use Cunningham's open-source code to launch Wikipedia, but here's the thing: Cunningham never patented the concept. He gave away the architecture for collaborative truth-making, betting that humans would build more than they'd destroy.

Italian city Venice is founded with the dedication of the first church, that of San Giacomo di Rialto on the islet of Rialto.
421

Italian city Venice is founded with the dedication of the first church, that of San Giacomo di Rialto on the islet of Rialto.

The refugees weren't building a temporary shelter — they were hammering wooden pilings into a malarial swamp. Attila the Hun's armies had driven them from the mainland, and these desperate families from Padua and Aquileia chose 118 mudflats in a lagoon as their sanctuary. They consecrated San Giacomo di Rialto, their first church, on what they called Rialto — the "high bank" that was barely above water at high tide. Within centuries, this refugee camp became the richest trading power in the Mediterranean, its merchant fleet controlling the spice routes to the East. Sometimes running away builds an empire.

Quote of the Day

“Everywhere I go I'm asked if I think the university stifles writers. My opinion is that they don't stifle enough of them. There's many a bestseller that could have been prevented by a good teacher.”

Flannery O'Connor

Historical events

The trains left at 2 AM, and families had fifteen minutes to pack.
1949

The trains left at 2 AM, and families had fifteen minutes to pack.

The trains left at 2 AM, and families had fifteen minutes to pack. Soviet authorities deported 92,000 Balts in a single March night in 1949 — teachers, farmers, entire villages — cramming them into cattle cars bound for Siberia. The goal wasn't just relocation. It was collectivization through terror: remove anyone who might resist, and the rest will surrender their farms. In Lithuania alone, they took 30,000 people. Many were children who wouldn't see the Baltic Sea again for decades. The Soviets called it "population transfer," but families called it what it was — kidnapping at the scale of a small country, designed to make an entire culture forget it had ever been free.

Confederates Seize Fort Stedman: Union Recaptures Within Hours
1865

Confederates Seize Fort Stedman: Union Recaptures Within Hours

Confederate General John B. Gordon's pre-dawn assault briefly captured Fort Stedman outside Petersburg, Virginia, in a desperate gamble to break the Union siege lines. Federal reinforcements counterattacked within hours, retaking the fort and capturing nearly 2,000 Confederates in the last major offensive of Lee's army. The failed assault convinced Grant that Lee's forces were too weakened to hold Petersburg, accelerating the final campaign that ended the war within two weeks.

Oxford expelled him for a pamphlet he couldn't prove he'd written.
1811

Oxford expelled him for a pamphlet he couldn't prove he'd written.

Oxford expelled him for a pamphlet he couldn't prove he'd written. Percy Shelley and his friend Thomas Jefferson Hogg distributed *The Necessity of Atheism* anonymously in March 1811, but when college authorities demanded they deny authorship, nineteen-year-old Shelley refused on principle. Twenty minutes. That's how long the disciplinary hearing lasted before both students were kicked out. His father, a Member of Parliament, was mortified and cut off his allowance. But the expulsion freed Shelley from conventional life entirely—within months he'd eloped with a sixteen-year-old, began writing the radical poetry that would define Romanticism, and joined the circle that would produce *Frankenstein*. The university that punished him for questioning God created the man who'd write "If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?"

He didn't fight for it.
717

He didn't fight for it.

He didn't fight for it. Theodosius III, Byzantine emperor for barely two years, simply handed over his crown to Leo III and walked into a monastery. No battle, no assassination plot—just resignation. Leo, a brilliant general who'd just saved Constantinople from Arab siege, didn't even have to ask twice. Theodosius took holy orders in Ephesus while Leo founded the Isaurian dynasty that would rule for 85 years and survive the iconoclasm wars that nearly tore Christianity apart. Sometimes the most consequential transfers of power are the ones where nobody dies.

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Born on March 25

Portrait of Aly Michalka
Aly Michalka 1989

Aly Michalka rose to prominence as one half of the musical duo 78violet and a staple of the Disney Channel era.

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Beyond her early pop success, she transitioned into a versatile acting career, anchoring television dramas like iZombie and Hellcats while maintaining a consistent presence in the American entertainment landscape for over two decades.

Portrait of Carrie Lam
Carrie Lam 1980

She was born in British Hong Kong to a family so poor they shared a single room with another household.

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Carrie Lam worked her way through school, joined the civil service at 22, and spent 36 years climbing the bureaucratic ladder with meticulous precision. In 2017, she became Hong Kong's first female Chief Executive—but not the leader most expected. Two years later, she'd propose the extradition bill that triggered the largest protests in Hong Kong's history: two million people flooding the streets, a quarter of the entire population. The girl who'd studied by flashlight to escape poverty became the face of Beijing's tightening grip on the city.

Portrait of Melanie Blatt
Melanie Blatt 1975

Melanie Blatt rose to fame as a founding member of the girl group All Saints, defining the sound of late-nineties…

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British pop with hits like Never Ever. Her vocal contributions helped the quartet sell over ten million records worldwide, securing their place as one of the most successful acts of the decade.

Portrait of Anders Fridén
Anders Fridén 1973

Anders Friden became the voice of In Flames, helping define the Gothenburg sound that merged melodic hooks with death metal aggression.

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His earlier work with Dark Tranquillity and Ceremonial Oath placed him at the center of the Swedish melodic death metal movement that reshaped heavy music worldwide during the 1990s.

Portrait of Naftali Bennett
Naftali Bennett 1972

The son of American immigrants who'd fled San Francisco's counterculture scene built his fortune selling anti-fraud…

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software to RSA Security for $145 million before he turned thirty. Naftali Bennett never planned on politics — he commanded an elite commando unit, then became a tech entrepreneur in the heart of Israel's Silicon Valley. But in 2021, he assembled the most unlikely coalition in Israeli history: eight parties spanning the far-right to the Arab-Israeli left, united only by their desire to end Netanyahu's twelve-year grip on power. His government lasted exactly one year before collapsing, but that single year broke what many thought was an unbreakable political deadlock. Sometimes the disruptor's real legacy isn't how long they last, but proving the impossible wasn't.

Portrait of Daniel Boulud
Daniel Boulud 1955

He couldn't afford culinary school.

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Daniel Boulud learned to cook on his family's farm outside Lyon, killing and butchering chickens at fourteen, making terrines from the pigs they raised. At sixteen, he apprenticed under Roger Vergé and Georges Blanc, but it was those childhood Sunday meals — where his grandmother served seven courses to thirty relatives — that shaped everything. He'd open his Manhattan flagship in 1993, charging $32 for a burger stuffed with braised short ribs, foie gras, and black truffle. Critics called it obscene. The DB Burger became the most copied dish in America, spawning the gourmet burger craze that turned $3 fast food into $20 craft cuisine. Sometimes luxury doesn't trickle down — it inflates upward.

Portrait of Tom Monaghan
Tom Monaghan 1937

He bought a struggling pizzeria for $500 and a borrowed Volkswagen Beetle in 1960, then nearly lost everything when his…

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brother quit and demanded his money back. Tom Monaghan couldn't pay rent, slept in the back of the shop, and survived on pizza scraps. But he obsessed over one thing: getting hot pizza to customers in thirty minutes or less. The guarantee sounded impossible. His drivers raced through Ypsilanti, Michigan, with a three-dot logo that mapped exactly where stores needed to open for maximum delivery speed. By 1983, Domino's had 1,000 locations. He eventually sold the empire for a billion dollars, but here's what nobody expected—he gave most of it away to Catholic charities and spent his final decades funding missions and monasteries. The delivery guy became one of America's most prolific philanthropists.

Portrait of Gloria Steinem
Gloria Steinem 1934

Gloria Steinem wrote an exposé of the Playboy Club in 1963, having worked undercover as a Bunny for two weeks.

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The piece made her reputation and also trapped her: editors kept sending her to women's topics because that's where they'd put her. She co-founded Ms. magazine in 1972, which ran without advertising for years on subscription alone to avoid editorial interference from advertisers. She marched, organized, testified, and wrote for five decades. Born March 25, 1934, in Toledo, Ohio. Her mother had a debilitating mental illness; Steinem essentially raised herself. She married for the first time at 66, to activist David Bale. She said she finally believed in marriage after helping defeat an anti-feminist ballot initiative in South Africa that claimed feminism destroyed it.

Portrait of Johnny Burnette
Johnny Burnette 1934

He drowned at 30 in a fishing accident on Clear Lake, California—the same cursed body of water near where Buddy Holly's…

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plane crashed five years earlier. Johnny Burnette practically invented rockabilly alongside his brother Dorsey and guitarist Paul Burlison in Memphis, 1953. Their Rock and Roll Trio recorded "The Train Kept A-Rollin'" with a deliberately damaged amplifier that created the first distorted guitar sound in rock history. But Burnette couldn't pay his bills with it. He switched to teen ballads, scored two Top 20 hits in 1960-61, then was gone. That broken amp sound? Led Zeppelin covered his song note-for-note, and every hard rock guitarist since has chased the accident he made on purpose.

Portrait of Tom Wilson
Tom Wilson 1931

The white Harvard economics grad became the most important Black producer in music history, but nobody knew he was Black.

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Tom Wilson's secret allowed him to move between worlds — he produced Bob Dylan's electric breakthrough at Newport, Simon & Garfunkel's "The Sound of Silence" remix that made them stars, and the Velvet Underground's debut with Nico. Three different genres. Three different decades of influence. When he overdubbed electric instruments onto a failed acoustic folk song in 1965, the duo didn't even know until "Silence" hit number one. Wilson died broke at 47, but here's what lasted: every time you hear Dylan go electric or folk go pop, that's his fingerprint.

Portrait of Norman Borlaug
Norman Borlaug 1914

Norman Borlaug is credited with saving a billion lives.

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That's the estimate. He developed semi-dwarf, disease-resistant wheat varieties in the 1950s and 1960s that dramatically increased yields in Mexico, India, and Pakistan. India went from importing wheat to exporting it within a decade. The Green Revolution — the transformation of agricultural productivity in the developing world — runs largely through his work. He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970. Born March 25, 1914, in Cresco, Iowa. He grew up during the Dust Bowl, which shaped his sense of urgency. He kept working into his eighties, focusing on Africa, where the Green Revolution had not fully arrived. He died in 2009 at 95. The billion lives number is real, and it's probably an undercount.

Portrait of Jack Ruby
Jack Ruby 1911

He ran strip clubs in Dallas and cried watching Kennedy's motorcade pass days earlier.

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Jack Ruby wasn't a hitman or conspirator — he was a volatile nightclub owner who owed $40,000 in taxes and loved his dachshunds. On November 24, 1963, he walked into a police basement with a .38 Colt Cobra, claiming he wanted to spare Jackie Kennedy the pain of a trial. One bullet. Oswald died at Parkland Hospital, the same place Kennedy had been pronounced dead two days before. Ruby's impulsive act didn't silence conspiracy theories — it turned them into an industry that's still running sixty years later.

Portrait of Gutzon Borglum
Gutzon Borglum 1867

He was born in a Mormon polygamist colony in Idaho, son of a Danish woodcarver who'd fled to America with two wives.

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Gutzon Borglum spent his childhood in frontier settlements before studying art in Paris, where he became obsessed with scale — how to make stone speak across miles. In 1927, at age 60, he began blasting a South Dakota cliff face with dynamite, suspended in a bosun's chair 500 feet up. He'd remove 450,000 tons of granite using methods he invented himself. Fourteen years later, he died before finishing Washington's lapel. The son of pioneers left four presidents' faces visible from three miles away.

Portrait of Jean de Brébeuf
Jean de Brébeuf 1593

He stood six feet tall and could carry two grown men on his back — a giant among 17th-century Frenchmen who'd spend…

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sixteen years living with the Huron people, learning their language so fluently he'd write the first Wendat dictionary. Jean de Brébeuf didn't just translate prayers. He composed the Huron Carol in 1643, setting Christian theology to Indigenous melody, sung continuously for 380 years now. The Iroquois captured him in 1649 during a raid, and his Huron converts watched as enemies tortured him for hours, yet he refused to cry out. They scalped him, poured boiling water over his head in mockery of baptism, and cut out his heart — which, according to witnesses, they ate to gain his courage. The carol survived him.

Died on March 25

Portrait of Taylor Hawkins
Taylor Hawkins 2022

He'd just finished a South American tour when his heart gave out in a Bogotá hotel room.

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Taylor Hawkins was 50. The Foo Fighters' drummer had survived a 2001 heroin overdose that left him in a coma for two weeks—an experience that terrified him into sobriety for years. But toxicology reports found ten substances in his system that March night, including opioids and benzodiazepines. Dave Grohl canceled the band's Grammy performance three days later, unable to speak about losing the man who'd been his musical partner for 25 years. Hawkins left behind three kids and a simple truth: the guy who sang "My Hero" every night couldn't save his own drummer from the thing that almost killed him two decades earlier.

Portrait of Ralph Wilson
Ralph Wilson 2014

He could've moved the team a hundred times.

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Ralph Wilson owned the Buffalo Bills for 54 years, and every single year someone offered him more money to relocate to a bigger market. Detroit wanted them back. Seattle made offers. But Wilson, who'd founded the team in 1959 with a $25,000 investment, refused every deal. He'd shaken hands with Buffalo, and that was that. When he died in 2014 at 95, his will included one final instruction: the team must be sold to someone who'd keep it in Buffalo. In a league where owners chase dollars across state lines without hesitation, Wilson left behind the last handshake deal in professional sports.

Portrait of Buck Owens
Buck Owens 2006

He turned down the Beatles.

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Twice. Buck Owens refused to tour with them in 1965 because he wouldn't abandon his Bakersfield sound for anyone — not even the biggest band on Earth. While Nashville polished country music into something slick, Owens and his Buckaroos kept it raw: Fender Telecasters cranked loud, drums that actually hit hard, and 21 number-one hits between 1963 and 1967. He co-hosted "Hee Haw" for 17 years, which made him a household name but nearly killed his credibility with serious fans. When Dwight Yoakam dragged him back into the studio in 1988, their duet "Streets of Bakersfield" hit number one, proving Owens hadn't softened with age. The man who made country music electric left behind the blueprint every outlaw who followed would steal.

Portrait of Henry
Henry 1345

Henry of Lancaster inherited the most dangerous job in England: mediating between a paranoid king and rebellious barons…

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who'd already executed his own brother Thomas in 1322. For twenty-three years, the 3rd Earl walked that impossible line, somehow surviving Edward II's purges and then serving Edward III as a trusted diplomat to France and Scotland. He negotiated the Treaty of Northampton that recognized Scottish independence—a deal so unpopular it nearly cost him everything. His title and vast estates passed to his son Henry of Grosmont, who'd become the wealthiest peer in England and found a college at Leicester that still stands. The brother died a traitor; Henry died in his bed.

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