Today In History logo TIH

On this day

October 24

Black Thursday: Wall Street Crash Begins in 1929 (1929). Telegraph Reaches West: Pony Express Dies (1861). Notable births include Domitian (51), Bill Wyman (1936), Jeff Mangum (1970).

Featured

Black Thursday: Wall Street Crash Begins in 1929
1929Event

Black Thursday: Wall Street Crash Begins in 1929

Panic hit the New York Stock Exchange on October 24, 1929, when a record 12.9 million shares changed hands in frenzied selling. Ticker machines ran hours behind actual trades, amplifying the terror as investors couldn't tell how much they'd lost. A group of leading bankers, including J.P. Morgan's Thomas Lamont, pooled resources to buy stocks and stabilize prices, briefly halting the decline. But it was a finger in a dam. The following Monday and Tuesday brought worse crashes, wiping out $30 billion in market value in two days. Margin buyers who had borrowed heavily were wiped out first, then the banks that had lent to them. The crash didn't cause the Great Depression by itself, but it destroyed consumer confidence and triggered a cascade of bank failures that contracted the money supply for three years.

Telegraph Reaches West: Pony Express Dies
1861

Telegraph Reaches West: Pony Express Dies

The First Transcontinental Telegraph was completed on October 24, 1861, when wires from the east and west were joined in Salt Lake City, Utah. The first message was sent from California Chief Justice Stephen Field to President Lincoln: a pledge of loyalty from a state whose allegiance had been uncertain. The telegraph reduced communication time between New York and San Francisco from ten days by Pony Express to seconds by electrical impulse. The Pony Express, which had been operating for just 18 months, shut down two days later. The timing was critical: with Civil War breaking out, Lincoln needed real-time communication with the Western states. The telegraph kept California and Nevada in the Union by enabling rapid coordination of military and political decisions across 2,000 miles of contested territory.

Peace of Westphalia: Thirty Years' War Ends
1648

Peace of Westphalia: Thirty Years' War Ends

The Peace of Westphalia, signed on October 24, 1648, ended both the Thirty Years' War and the Eighty Years' War through two separate treaties negotiated simultaneously in the Westphalian cities of Munster and Osnabruck. The Thirty Years' War had killed an estimated 8 million people, roughly a third of the population of the German states. The treaties established the principle that each state had sovereignty over its territory and could choose its own religion without external interference. This framework became the foundation of the modern international system. The concept of 'Westphalian sovereignty' still defines how nations interact: no state has the right to intervene in another state's internal affairs. The Holy Roman Empire survived in name but lost all meaningful power. France and Sweden emerged as the dominant European powers.

Houdini's Last Performance: The Final Curtain
1926

Houdini's Last Performance: The Final Curtain

Harry Houdini took the stage at Detroit's Garrick Theater on October 24, 1926, for what would be his final performance. He had been suffering from a ruptured appendix for days, likely aggravated by the punches J. Gordon Whitehead delivered to his abdomen two days earlier in Montreal. His temperature was 104 degrees. A doctor examined him backstage before the show and recommended immediate hospitalization. Houdini refused and went on. He collapsed partway through the performance but finished the show. He was taken to Grace Hospital after the curtain fell. Surgeons found a gangrenous appendix, but peritonitis had already set in. Houdini died a week later on October 31, Halloween, a date he had made his own through years of debunking spiritualists and staging death-defying escapes.

Third Partition of Poland: Nation Erased From Map
1795

Third Partition of Poland: Nation Erased From Map

Russia, Prussia, and Austria signed the Third Partition Treaty on October 24, 1795, erasing Poland from the map of Europe. Russia seized 62% of the territory, including Lithuania and western Ukraine. Prussia took 20%, including Warsaw. Austria took 18%, including Krakow and Lublin. King Stanislaw August abdicated and died in exile in St. Petersburg. Poland had been the largest nation in Europe in the 1600s. The partitioning powers had carved it up in three stages: 1772, 1793, and 1795. Each time, Poland was too divided internally to resist. The nation ceased to exist for 123 years. It reappeared on the map only after World War I destroyed all three empires that had dismembered it. Polish national identity survived through language, literature, and Catholicism during over a century of foreign rule.

Quote of the Day

“A man has always to be busy with his thoughts if anything is to be accomplished.”

Historical events

FLSA Enacted: Minimum Wage and 40-Hour Week Established
1938

FLSA Enacted: Minimum Wage and 40-Hour Week Established

President Roosevelt signed the Fair Labor Standards Act on October 24, 1938, establishing a federal minimum wage of 25 cents per hour and a maximum workweek of 44 hours (reduced to 40 hours by 1940). The law also banned child labor in interstate commerce. But the version that passed Congress was gutted by compromise. Southern Democrats demanded exemptions for agricultural workers, domestic servants, and retail employees, effectively excluding millions of Black and Hispanic workers from protection. The carve-outs were not accidental; they were the price of Southern votes. Farm laborers weren't covered until 1966. Domestic workers waited until 1974. Tipped workers were placed in a sub-minimum wage category in 1966 at $2.13 per hour, where the federal rate remains today, unchanged since 1991.

Markets Collapse on Black Thursday: Panic Grips Wall Street
1929

Markets Collapse on Black Thursday: Panic Grips Wall Street

Wall Street plunged into chaos as terrified investors sold off record volumes of stock, wiping out fortunes in hours and sending the Dow Jones into freefall. This opening salvo of the 1929 crash exposed the fragility of an overheated market built on borrowed money, precipitating a worldwide economic catastrophe that lasted a decade.

Annie Taylor Goes Over Niagara Falls in a Barrel
1901

Annie Taylor Goes Over Niagara Falls in a Barrel

Annie Edson Taylor was a 63-year-old retired schoolteacher facing poverty when she decided to go over Niagara Falls in a barrel on October 24, 1901. She designed a custom oak barrel five feet tall, padded it with a mattress, strapped herself inside with a leather harness, and had her cat sent over first as a test. The cat survived. Taylor went over Horseshoe Falls, a 167-foot drop, and emerged with a small gash on her forehead. 'No one ought ever do that again,' she told reporters. She expected the stunt to make her rich, but her manager stole the barrel and vanished. She spent years standing on street corners selling autographed postcards. Taylor died in 1921 at the Niagara County Infirmary, nearly penniless. She was the first person to survive going over the falls in a barrel.

Daily Newsletter

Get today's history delivered every morning.

Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Born on October 24

Portrait of Jeremy Wright
Jeremy Wright 1972

Jeremy Wright studied law at Cambridge, became a barrister at 25, and entered Parliament at 34.

Read more

He served as Attorney General for England and Wales under David Cameron and Theresa May. He defended the government's Brexit strategy in court and lost. He left office in 2019. He's still an MP. Nobody outside Westminster knows his name.

Portrait of BD Wong
BD Wong 1960

BD Wong was the only actor ever considered for the role of Dr.

Read more

George Huang on "Law & Order: SVU." He played the part for 12 seasons, 142 episodes, always the psychiatrist explaining why people do terrible things. He made empathy look like detective work.

Portrait of Malcolm Turnbull
Malcolm Turnbull 1954

Malcolm Turnbull made his fortune as a lawyer and investment banker before entering politics.

Read more

He defended Peter Wright in the Spycatcher trial, winning against the British government. He led the campaign for Australia to become a republic in 1999. It failed. He became prime minister in 2015, ousted by his own party three years later.

Portrait of Bill Wyman
Bill Wyman 1936

Bill Wyman joined the Rolling Stones in 1962 because he had an amplifier and they didn't.

Read more

He was 26, older than the rest, and kept a diary of everything — every gig, every girl, every flight. He quit in 1993 after 31 years. His archives became the band's official history. He was the only one who'd written it all down.

Portrait of Reginald Kray
Reginald Kray 1933

Reginald Kray and his twin brother Ronnie ran London's East End through the 1960s, controlling nightclubs, protection…

Read more

rackets, and armed robbery. Celebrities posed for photos with them. They were arrested in 1968 and sentenced to life for murder. Reggie spent 32 years in prison. He married twice while incarcerated. Britain had turned gangsters into celebrities, then locked them away forever.

Portrait of Robert Mundell
Robert Mundell 1932

Robert Mundell predicted the euro in 1961, four decades before it existed.

Read more

He described exactly how a currency union would work and what it would need to survive. The European Central Bank cited his papers when they designed it. He won the Nobel in 1999. He bought a castle in Tuscany with the prize money and hosted conferences there. They called him the "father of the euro." He was Canadian.

Portrait of Pierre-Gilles de Gennes
Pierre-Gilles de Gennes 1932

Pierre-Gilles de Gennes studied everything from superconductors to soap bubbles.

Read more

He won the Nobel in 1991 for discovering that methods for studying order in simple systems could explain complex matter — polymers, liquid crystals, colloids. He wrote papers on wet adhesion, cow urine patterns, and how paint dries. He called himself a "scientific vagabond." He published over 500 papers across a dozen fields.

Portrait of Ieng Sary
Ieng Sary 1925

Ieng Sary co-founded the Khmer Rouge, orchestrating the radical agrarian policies that led to the Cambodian genocide.

Read more

As the regime’s foreign minister, he secured the international diplomatic support necessary to sustain the state’s brutal isolation. His actions directly facilitated the deaths of nearly two million people during the late 1970s.

Portrait of George Miller
George Miller 1922

George Miller served as Tucson's mayor during the city's explosive growth in the 1950s.

Read more

He was an educator first, a politician second. He pushed for school integration years before it was mandated. He helped establish what became the University of Arizona's education college. He left office after one term, returning to teaching.

Portrait of Bob Kane
Bob Kane 1915

Bob Kane created Batman at age twenty-three.

Read more

He'd been working in comics for two years. He always claimed sole credit, but his collaborator Bill Finger wrote the stories, designed the costume, created the Joker and Robin. Finger died broke in 1974. Kane made millions, got a credit on every Batman movie. Finger's name wasn't added until 2015.

Portrait of Peng Dehuai
Peng Dehuai 1898

Peng Dehuai rose from a peasant background to become the primary architect of the People's Liberation Army’s…

Read more

modernization and the first Minister of National Defense. His direct criticism of the Great Leap Forward’s economic failures at the 1959 Lushan Conference cost him his career, yet his strategic legacy remains central to Chinese military doctrine.

Portrait of Rafael Trujillo
Rafael Trujillo 1891

Rafael Trujillo seized control of the Dominican Republic in 1930, establishing a brutal three-decade dictatorship…

Read more

defined by state-sponsored terror and the systematic cult of his own personality. His regime modernized the nation’s infrastructure and economy while simultaneously crushing political dissent through mass executions, most notably the 1937 Parsley Massacre against thousands of Haitians.

Portrait of Domitian
Domitian 51

Domitian became emperor after his brother died.

Read more

He expanded the border, rebuilt Rome after a fire, and banned philosophers from the city. The Senate hated him. His wife joined a conspiracy to have him stabbed by his chamberlain. He was 44. The Senate erased his name from every monument they could reach.

Died on October 24

Portrait of Sirikit
Sirikit 2025

Sirikit was Queen of Thailand for 64 years, longer than almost any consort in history.

Read more

She survived coups, protests, her husband's 70-year reign. She had a stroke in 2012 and rarely appeared in public after. She was 92. Thailand mourned a woman most citizens had never known without.

Portrait of John McCarthy
John McCarthy 2011

John McCarthy coined the term "artificial intelligence" in 1955 for a conference proposal.

Read more

He needed funding. He created Lisp in 1958 because no existing programming language could handle symbolic reasoning. Lisp is still used. He spent 50 years trying to make machines think and never believed he'd succeeded. He died still working on it.

Portrait of Raúl Juliá
Raúl Juliá 1994

Raúl Juliá took the role in Street Fighter because his kids loved the video game.

Read more

He was dying of stomach cancer during filming. He could barely stand. It was his last movie. He'd done Shakespeare on Broadway, played Gomez Addams, gotten multiple Tony nominations. He died eight weeks before Street Fighter was released. He was fifty-four.

Portrait of Gene Roddenberry
Gene Roddenberry 1991

Gene Roddenberry pitched Star Trek to NBC in 1964 as 'Wagon Train to the stars.

Read more

' The show was cancelled after three seasons and two pilots. What happened next was unprecedented: fan campaigns kept the idea alive, syndication made it profitable, and the universe Roddenberry had invented expanded into eleven television series and thirteen films. He died in October 1991, just weeks after attending a taping of The Next Generation. The crew of the space shuttle Columbia carried some of his ashes into orbit in 1992.

Portrait of Carlo Abarth
Carlo Abarth 1979

Carlo Abarth was born in Austria, designed motorcycles, and moved to Italy after his racing career ended in a crash.

Read more

He started tuning Fiats in 1949 because they were cheap and everywhere. He turned economy cars into racing machines — bigger exhausts, lighter bodies, hotter engines. Fiat bought his company in 1971. Every Abarth badge still means it goes faster than it should.

Portrait of Jackie Robinson

Jackie Robinson's contract with the Brooklyn Dodgers didn't just break baseball's color barrier — it broke Branch…

Read more

Rickey's unspoken rule about how to do it. Rickey told Robinson he needed a man brave enough not to fight back. For three seasons Robinson absorbed everything: spikings, beanings, death threats, hotels that wouldn't let him stay with his teammates. He batted .311. In 1949 he won the MVP award and stopped holding back. He retired in 1956, ten years after he started. He died at 53, of heart disease accelerated by diabetes.

Portrait of Vidkun Quisling
Vidkun Quisling 1945

A firing squad executed Vidkun Quisling for high treason, ending the life of the man who facilitated the Nazi occupation of his own country.

Read more

His name became a permanent synonym for collaborator, stripping his political legacy of everything but the betrayal of his fellow Norwegians to the Third Reich.

Portrait of Daniel Webster
Daniel Webster 1852

Daniel Webster drank a tumbler of brandy every morning before breakfast.

Read more

He was the greatest orator in American history, people said. He argued over 200 cases before the Supreme Court. He ran for president three times, lost every time. He supported the Fugitive Slave Act in 1850, hoping to save the Union. It destroyed his reputation. He died two years later.

Portrait of Jane Seymour

Jane Seymour died of postnatal complications just twelve days after giving Henry VIII the male heir he had spent two…

Read more

decades and two wives pursuing. Her son Edward VI would inherit the throne at nine years old, while Henry mourned her as his "truest wife," the only queen he chose to be buried beside.

Holidays & observances

Discordianism was invented in the late 1950s by two people who may or may not have been serious about it.

Discordianism was invented in the late 1950s by two people who may or may not have been serious about it. The Principia Discordia, their sacred text, argues that chaos and disorder are as divine as order, that Eris — the Greek goddess of discord — deserves worship, and that the whole exercise might be a joke. Or might not. Maladay is one of its sacred observances, marking time in a calendar deliberately designed to confuse. Discordianism influenced Robert Anton Wilson, the Church of the SubGenius, and internet culture more broadly. A religion built on absurdity turns out to be very durable.

World Development Information Day was established by the UN General Assembly in 1972 to draw attention to development…

World Development Information Day was established by the UN General Assembly in 1972 to draw attention to development problems and the need for international cooperation to solve them. October 24th was chosen because it's the anniversary of the UN's founding. The day focuses on improving the dissemination of information about development. It's observed mainly by UN agencies. Most of the world has never heard of it.

Member states celebrate United Nations Day to commemorate the 1945 entry into force of the UN Charter.

Member states celebrate United Nations Day to commemorate the 1945 entry into force of the UN Charter. This agreement established the first global organization dedicated to maintaining international peace and security through collective diplomacy, replacing the failed League of Nations with a framework designed to prevent future world wars by institutionalizing cooperation between sovereign powers.

World Polio Day marks the birthday of Jonas Salk, who developed the first successful polio vaccine in 1955.

World Polio Day marks the birthday of Jonas Salk, who developed the first successful polio vaccine in 1955. Rotary International established the day in 1988 when it launched its campaign to eradicate polio. That year, 350,000 children were paralyzed by the disease. In 2023, there were six cases worldwide. We're closer to eradicating polio than any disease except smallpox. Salk never patented his vaccine.

French citizens celebrated the pear on this day under the short-lived Republican Calendar, which replaced religious s…

French citizens celebrated the pear on this day under the short-lived Republican Calendar, which replaced religious saints with seasonal harvests and tools. By honoring the fruit during the month of Brumaire, the radical government sought to anchor daily life in the rhythms of nature rather than the traditional ecclesiastical cycle.

Anthony Mary Claret founded a religious order, published 144 books, and claimed the Virgin Mary appeared to him multi…

Anthony Mary Claret founded a religious order, published 144 books, and claimed the Virgin Mary appeared to him multiple times with specific instructions. As Archbishop of Cuba, he survived fifteen assassination attempts—including poisoning and a razor attack that left his face scarred. He heard confessions for up to fifteen hours daily. In 1869, he attended the First Vatican Council and opposed the doctrine of papal infallibility, then submitted when it passed. The mystic who talked to Mary deferred to institutional authority.

Food Day was founded in 1975 by the Center for Science in the Public Interest to promote healthy eating and sustainab…

Food Day was founded in 1975 by the Center for Science in the Public Interest to promote healthy eating and sustainable agriculture. The first observance drew thousands of events across America. It faded by the 1980s, then was revived in 2011. It's always October 24th. The date has no special significance — it was simply chosen as a day in autumn when harvest themes resonate.

International Day of Diplomats was established in 2017 by diplomats in Brazil to honor colleagues killed in the line …

International Day of Diplomats was established in 2017 by diplomats in Brazil to honor colleagues killed in the line of duty. October 24th was chosen because it's United Nations Day. The observance has spread to other countries. Over 1,000 diplomats have been killed since 1945. The day remains largely unknown outside diplomatic circles. Most people don't realize diplomacy can be deadly.

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 24 on the civil calendar corresponds to October 11 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.

Kilobyte Day is October 22 — the 22nd because a kilobyte is technically 1,024 bytes (2 to the 10th power) and 1,024 s…

Kilobyte Day is October 22 — the 22nd because a kilobyte is technically 1,024 bytes (2 to the 10th power) and 1,024 starts with 10, which is October, and ends with 24, which is the 24th... except the actual observance is the 22nd. The logic is playful and deliberately approximate. It exists because geeks wanted a holiday celebrating the elegance of binary computing, and they were willing to construct a somewhat strained numerical justification to have it. The real point is 1,024 — the beautiful first round number in binary.

Zambia became independent from Britain after 73 years of colonial rule as Northern Rhodesia.

Zambia became independent from Britain after 73 years of colonial rule as Northern Rhodesia. Kenneth Kaunda became president. The country had the world's third-largest copper reserves and almost nothing else. Copper prices collapsed in the 1970s. Kaunda ruled for 27 years, declared a one-party state, then lost the first multi-party election in 1991. He accepted defeat peacefully.