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On this day

October 22

Kennedy Announces Crisis: Cuban Missile Standoff (1962). Shah Enters U.S.: Iran Hostage Crisis Triggered (1979). Notable births include Robert Capa (1913), Bob Odenkirk (1962), Volney Howard (1809).

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Kennedy Announces Crisis: Cuban Missile Standoff
1962Event

Kennedy Announces Crisis: Cuban Missile Standoff

President Kennedy addressed the nation on live television at 7 p.m. on October 22, 1962, revealing the presence of Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba and announcing a naval 'quarantine' of the island. He placed U.S. military forces at DEFCON 3, the highest peacetime alert level, with Strategic Air Command bombers armed and airborne around the clock. The speech was the first time most Americans learned how close they were to nuclear war. Over the next six days, Soviet ships approached the quarantine line and turned back. Secret negotiations between Kennedy and Khrushchev through intermediaries, including Robert Kennedy and Soviet ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin, produced a deal: the Soviets would remove missiles from Cuba, and the U.S. would secretly remove Jupiter missiles from Turkey. The crisis ended on October 28.

Shah Enters U.S.: Iran Hostage Crisis Triggered
1979

Shah Enters U.S.: Iran Hostage Crisis Triggered

The United States admitted the deposed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi for cancer treatment in New York on October 22, 1979. The decision was made over strong objections from the U.S. embassy in Tehran, which warned it would provoke a violent backlash. Two weeks later, on November 4, Iranian students stormed the embassy and seized 66 American hostages. Fifty-two were held for 444 days. The hostage crisis defined the final year of Jimmy Carter's presidency, killed a rescue mission in the Iranian desert that left eight servicemen dead, and contributed to Carter's defeat by Ronald Reagan in 1980. The Shah died in Cairo on July 27, 1980, still in exile. Diplomatic relations between the United States and Iran have not been restored since, making it one of the longest breaks in modern diplomacy.

Pretty Boy Floyd Falls: FBI Ends a Criminal Era
1934

Pretty Boy Floyd Falls: FBI Ends a Criminal Era

FBI agents and local police cornered Charles 'Pretty Boy' Floyd in a cornfield near East Liverpool, Ohio, on October 22, 1934, and shot him as he tried to run. Floyd was the last of the great Depression-era outlaws still at large; Dillinger had been killed in July, Bonnie and Clyde in May. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover had made Floyd's capture a personal priority. Floyd had robbed over 30 banks and was wanted for the Kansas City Massacre, a 1933 ambush that killed four lawmen. He denied involvement until his dying breath. In Oklahoma, where he grew up, Floyd was regarded as a Robin Hood figure; locals claimed he destroyed mortgage papers during bank robberies, freeing farmers from debt. Whether that actually happened is disputed, but his funeral drew 20,000 mourners.

Train Crashes Through Station: Gare Montparnasse
1895

Train Crashes Through Station: Gare Montparnasse

The Granville-Paris Express overran the buffer stop at Gare Montparnasse on October 22, 1895, crossed the station concourse, crashed through a window, and hung its locomotive out over the street below. The driver was running several minutes late and came in too fast. The Westinghouse air brake failed, and the hand brake couldn't stop 120 tons of momentum. The locomotive punched through two walls before its front wheels dangled over the Place de Rennes. Remarkably, only one person died: a woman selling newspapers on the sidewalk who was struck by falling masonry. All passengers survived. The locomotive remained hanging from the facade for days while photographers documented the scene. The resulting image became one of the most reproduced photographs of the nineteenth century and a symbol of industrial-age hubris.

Houdini Sucker-Punched: Blow That Sealed His Fate
1926

Houdini Sucker-Punched: Blow That Sealed His Fate

J. Gordon Whitehead, a McGill University student, visited Harry Houdini's dressing room in Montreal on October 22, 1926, and asked if it was true the magician could withstand any blow to his abdomen. Before Houdini could brace himself, Whitehead punched him repeatedly in the stomach. Houdini had been reclining on a couch reading mail. He was already suffering from appendicitis, though he didn't know it. The blows may have aggravated or ruptured his already inflamed appendix. Houdini refused medical attention and performed that evening despite severe pain. Over the next several days he continued performing while running a fever above 104 degrees. He finally collapsed after a show in Detroit and was hospitalized. Surgeons found a gangrenous appendix. Houdini died on October 31, Halloween, at age 52.

Quote of the Day

“Life begets life. Energy creates energy. It is by spending oneself that one becomes rich.”

Sarah Bernhardt

Historical events

Born on October 22

Portrait of Javier Milei
Javier Milei 1970

Javier Milei calls himself an anarcho-capitalist.

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He wants to abolish Argentina's central bank and replace the peso with the US dollar. He won the presidency in 2023 carrying a chainsaw to rallies, promising to cut government spending by 90%. He's an economist who built his following on television, shouting about monetary policy. Argentina's inflation was 211% when he took office.

Portrait of Shaggy
Shaggy 1968

S.

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Marines during the Gulf War, came home to Brooklyn, and recorded "Boombastic" in 1995. It went triple platinum. He's sold 10 million albums, mostly singing in a fake Jamaican accent. He was born in Kingston but raised in Brooklyn. The accent's real and not real.

Portrait of Amit Shah
Amit Shah 1964

Amit Shah was arrested in 2010 for alleged extrajudicial killings when he was a state minister.

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The charges were dropped. He became president of the BJP, then Home Minister. He's considered the architect of Modi's political strategy. He's the second most powerful person in India and rarely gives interviews.

Portrait of Bob Odenkirk
Bob Odenkirk 1962

Bob Odenkirk was a "Saturday Night Live" writer at 25, got fired, and spent 20 years in comedy obscurity before…

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"Breaking Bad" cast him at 46. "Better Call Saul" ran six seasons. He had a heart attack on set, survived, and finished the series. He was always good. People just finally watched.

Portrait of Peter Cook
Peter Cook 1936

Peter Cook co-founded Archigram in the 1960s, drawing cities that walked, buildings that plugged in, architecture that moved.

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Almost none of it got built. He spent 50 years teaching at the Bartlett, training architects to imagine what's impossible. His legacy is other people's buildings.

Portrait of Doris Lessing
Doris Lessing 1919

Doris Lessing was born on a train in Iran in 1919 and grew up in Rhodesia, where her father farmed unsuccessfully on…

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land that had been taken from its African inhabitants. She moved to London in 1949 with a manuscript and her son from her second marriage, leaving two children behind. She was blacklisted in South Africa and Rhodesia for her political views. She won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2007, at 88 — one of the oldest recipients ever. She was standing on her doorstep when journalists told her. 'Oh Christ,' she said.

Portrait of Yitzhak Shamir
Yitzhak Shamir 1915

Yitzhak Shamir was born Yitzhak Yezernitsky in Belarus, joined the Irgun in Palestine, and planned the 1948…

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assassination of UN mediator Folke Bernadotte. He became Israel's prime minister 35 years later. He never apologized for the killing. He called it war.

Portrait of Robert Capa
Robert Capa 1913

Robert Capa's most famous photograph — a Spanish soldier at the instant of death — might be staged.

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He never said. He stormed Omaha Beach with the first wave and shot 106 frames. A darkroom technician melted all but 11. He died at 40 stepping on a landmine in Vietnam. The camera survived.

Portrait of Joseph Kosma
Joseph Kosma 1905

Joseph Kosma composed 'Autumn Leaves,' the most-recorded song in history.

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He was a Hungarian Jew who fled to Paris, wrote the melody in 1945. Over 1,400 versions exist now. Exile has a long musical memory.

Portrait of Curly Howard
Curly Howard 1903

Curly Howard took 120 pies to the face per film.

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He ad-libbed "nyuk nyuk nyuk" and the high-pitched "woo woo woo." He had a stroke at 43 during filming. His brothers kept working. He died at 48. Physical comedy destroys the body.

Portrait of George Wells Beadle
George Wells Beadle 1903

George Beadle exposed bread mold to X-rays, then tracked how mutations broke specific metabolic pathways.

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One gene, one enzyme. It sounds obvious now. In 1941 it was a revelation. He won the Nobel Prize in 1958, then became president of the University of Chicago during the Vietnam protests. He met with student occupiers personally. The mold experiments changed biology. The conversations changed nothing.

Portrait of Clinton Davisson
Clinton Davisson 1881

Clinton Davisson was studying electron scattering when a liquid-air bottle exploded in his lab.

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The accident oxidized his nickel sample. He heated it in hydrogen to clean it, which accidentally created a single crystal. When he resumed the experiment, electrons suddenly produced diffraction patterns. He'd proven electrons were waves. He shared the Nobel in 1937. The accident changed physics.

Portrait of Lord Alfred Douglas
Lord Alfred Douglas 1870

Lord Alfred Douglas remains best known as the tempestuous lover of Oscar Wilde and the primary catalyst for the legal…

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battles that destroyed the playwright’s career. His own literary output, largely defined by his sonnets and bitter memoirs, reflects a life spent navigating the wreckage of that high-profile scandal.

Portrait of Ivan Bunin
Ivan Bunin 1870

Ivan Bunin left Russia in 1920 and never returned.

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He lived in France, writing about the Russia he'd lost. He was the first Russian to win the Nobel, in 1933. The Soviets never forgave him for leaving. His books weren't published in Russia until 1956, three years after he died. He's buried in Paris. His gravestone faces east.

Died on October 22

Portrait of Ashok Kumar
Ashok Kumar 2014

Ashok Kumar directed and shot films in Tamil and Telugu for 40 years, working steadily in regional cinema that rarely crossed to Bollywood.

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He made 30 films that played in South India and nowhere else. Most film industries are local.

Portrait of Edward Carson
Edward Carson 1935

Edward Carson destroyed Oscar Wilde in court in 1895.

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They'd been classmates at Trinity College Dublin. Carson cross-examined Wilde for three days about his relationships with young men. Wilde's libel case collapsed. Criminal charges followed. Wilde got two years hard labor. Carson became the leader of Ulster Unionism, fighting against Irish Home Rule. He never spoke about the trial again. Wilde died in exile.

Portrait of Andrew Fisher
Andrew Fisher 1928

Andrew Fisher led Australia three separate times as Prime Minister, but he's remembered for one promise: in 1914, he…

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pledged to support Britain "to our last man and last shilling." Australia had 4.9 million people. By war's end, 416,000 had enlisted. Fisher himself resigned in 1915, exhausted. He retired to London, where he died broke in 1928. The last shilling went exactly where he'd promised.

Portrait of Charles Martel
Charles Martel 741

Charles Martel stopped the Umayyad invasion at Tours in 732.

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The battle lasted seven days. He held the line. Islam didn't spread into Western Europe. He never called himself king — just Mayor of the Palace. His grandson was Charlemagne. He hammered enemies so hard they called him Martel. The Hammer. He died in bed, which was rare.

Holidays & observances

Abercius of Hieropolis was Bishop of Hieropolis in Phrygia — modern Turkey — in the late 2nd century.

Abercius of Hieropolis was Bishop of Hieropolis in Phrygia — modern Turkey — in the late 2nd century. His epitaph, carved by his own instruction before his death and discovered in 1882, is one of the most significant early Christian inscriptions in existence. It describes travels to Rome and Mesopotamia and refers in coded language to the Eucharist and baptism — evidence of Christian practice across a vast geographic range at a time when the religion was still illegal in the Roman Empire. The stone is now in the Vatican Museums.

Jidai Matsuri — Festival of the Ages — has been held in Kyoto every October 22 since 1895, recreating the historical …

Jidai Matsuri — Festival of the Ages — has been held in Kyoto every October 22 since 1895, recreating the historical procession of different eras of Japanese history from ancient Imperial periods through the Meiji Restoration. Two thousand participants in historically accurate costumes from 11 different eras walk from the Imperial Palace to the Heian Shrine. The costumes are individually researched by curators. The procession is both civic performance and historical education — an annual argument that Kyoto, despite not being the capital since 1869, remains the heart of Japanese cultural continuity.

The Catholic Church honors Saint Mary Salome today, one of the women who witnessed the Crucifixion and discovered the…

The Catholic Church honors Saint Mary Salome today, one of the women who witnessed the Crucifixion and discovered the empty tomb. Alongside her, the liturgy commemorates the martyrs Philip, Severus, Eusebius, and Hermes, who died for their faith in Heraclea, and the Irish scholar Donatus, who became the beloved Bishop of Fiesole in ninth-century Italy.

The Eastern Orthodox Church follows the Julian calendar for fixed feasts, running thirteen days behind the Gregorian …

The Eastern Orthodox Church follows the Julian calendar for fixed feasts, running thirteen days behind the Gregorian calendar used in the West. October 22 on the civil calendar corresponds to October 9 in the church year. This means Orthodox Christians celebrate Christmas on January 7 by Western reckoning. The calendar split happened in 1582 when Pope Gregory XIII reformed the dating system. Russia didn't adopt the Gregorian calendar until the Bolsheviks forced the change in 1918.

Pope John Paul II survived an assassination attempt in 1981, visited his shooter in prison to forgive him, and later …

Pope John Paul II survived an assassination attempt in 1981, visited his shooter in prison to forgive him, and later asked that the bullet be placed in the crown of the Virgin of Fátima. He spoke eight languages, wrote 14 encyclicals, and canonized 482 saints—more than all his predecessors combined over the previous 400 years. He died in 2005. Benedict XVI fast-tracked his canonization, waiving the usual five-year waiting period. The pope who forgave his assassin became a saint nine years after death.

Nunilo and Alodia were sisters in 9th-century Moorish Spain with a Muslim father and Christian mother.

Nunilo and Alodia were sisters in 9th-century Moorish Spain with a Muslim father and Christian mother. When their father died and their mother remarried another Muslim, they refused to convert to Islam. The local authorities arrested them. They were teenagers—Nunilo about 18, Alodia younger. Both were beheaded around 851 during a wave of executions in Córdoba. They're venerated as the 'Córdoba martyrs.' Two sisters chose execution over conversion in a city famous for coexistence.

Bertharius led the monastery at Monte Cassino when Saracen raiders attacked in 884.

Bertharius led the monastery at Monte Cassino when Saracen raiders attacked in 884. He refused to flee, staying to protect the monks and manuscripts. The raiders killed him at the altar. His death came 340 years after Benedict founded the monastery, and just decades before it would be destroyed entirely. Monte Cassino was rebuilt, bombed in World War II, and rebuilt again. Bertharius chose books and brothers over survival.

French citizens celebrated Pomme Day to honor the humble apple as the first harvest of the month of Brumaire.

French citizens celebrated Pomme Day to honor the humble apple as the first harvest of the month of Brumaire. By replacing traditional saints with seasonal crops and tools, the French Republican Calendar sought to anchor daily life in the rhythms of nature and agriculture rather than the authority of the Catholic Church.

Aaron the Illustrious was a 4th-century Syriac monk who lived in a cave for 40 years near the Euphrates.

Aaron the Illustrious was a 4th-century Syriac monk who lived in a cave for 40 years near the Euphrates. He ate once a week. Pilgrims came to ask advice. He refused to see women, including his sister. When she traveled 12 days to visit him, he spoke to her through the cave wall. She became a hermit too. The Syriac Orthodox Church made them both saints.

International Stuttering Awareness Day was established in 1998 by three organizations representing people who stutter.

International Stuttering Awareness Day was established in 1998 by three organizations representing people who stutter. October 22nd was chosen to anchor Stuttering Awareness Week. About 70 million people worldwide stutter — roughly 1% of the population. The day aims to raise awareness and reduce stigma. Joe Biden stuttered as a child. He practiced reciting poetry in front of a mirror to control it.