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On this day

September 25

Bill of Rights Proposed: Congress Secures Liberties (1789). Troops Enforce Integration: Little Rock Opens (1957). Notable births include Will Smith (1968), William Faulkner (1897), Thomas Hunt Morgan (1866).

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Bill of Rights Proposed: Congress Secures Liberties
1789Event

Bill of Rights Proposed: Congress Secures Liberties

James Madison introduced thirty-nine proposed amendments to assuage Anti-Federalist fears, resulting in twelve articles that Congress submitted to the states on September 25, 1789. These ten ratified provisions transformed from federal-only limits into universal protections for citizens through the Fourteenth Amendment's incorporation process. The shift from supplemental additions to core constitutional rights fundamentally reshaped American liberty by binding state governments to the same personal freedoms and judicial constraints as the federal government.

Troops Enforce Integration: Little Rock Opens
1957

Troops Enforce Integration: Little Rock Opens

United States Army troops escorted nine Black students into Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, requiring the school to integrate against local resistance. This federal intervention immediately established that states could not nullify Supreme Court rulings on desegregation, setting a direct precedent for future civil rights enforcement across the South.

Arnhem Survivors Withdraw: Market Garden Fails
1944

Arnhem Survivors Withdraw: Market Garden Fails

Battered survivors of the British 1st Airborne Division slipped across the Rhine at night, leaving behind 1,485 dead and over 6,000 captured at Arnhem. Operation Market Garden's failure to secure the "bridge too far" dashed Allied hopes for ending the war by Christmas 1944 and condemned the Netherlands to a brutal winter of German occupation.

Doolittle Flies Blind: Instruments-Only Flight Proven
1929

Doolittle Flies Blind: Instruments-Only Flight Proven

Jimmy Doolittle took off, flew a complete circuit, and landed at Mitchel Field — all without once looking outside the cockpit. Every input came from instruments alone: a Sperry gyroscope, a radio altimeter, and a directional indicator newly developed for the test. His copilot sat in the front seat as a safety backup but never touched the controls. The flight lasted 15 minutes. Doolittle called it 'the most important flight I've ever made.' Twelve years later he'd lead the Tokyo Raid. But this quiet, blind rectangle over Long Island changed how every pilot after him flew.

Steam Locomotives Roar: World's First Public Railway
1825

Steam Locomotives Roar: World's First Public Railway

The engine was called Locomotion No. 1, and it pulled 450 passengers in coal wagons — some sitting on top of the coal itself — for 26 miles from Shildon to Stockton at about 15 miles per hour. Crowds lined the tracks. One man was killed when he fell under the wheels. The Stockton and Darlington's engineer, George Stephenson, had argued for years that steam could replace horses. This 26-mile journey proved it. Every commuter train running today traces its lineage back to that single cold September ride.

Quote of the Day

“Never be afraid to raise your voice for honesty and truth and compassion against injustice and lying and greed. If people all over the world...would do this, it would change the earth.”

Historical events

Algeria Proclaimed: New Nation Born From Revolution
1962

Algeria Proclaimed: New Nation Born From Revolution

Algeria's independence proclamation came eight years after the war started — a conflict that killed somewhere between 400,000 and 1.5 million Algerians, depending on who's counting, and brought down the French Fourth Republic. Ferhat Abbas, elected to lead the provisional government, had once been a moderate who believed in assimilation with France. The war convinced him otherwise. He'd spent years in French prisons and exile arguing for independence. When it finally came, he read the proclamation in Algiers. He was removed from office a year later by more militant factions.

Torres Quevedo Demonstrates Telekino: Remote Control is Born
1906

Torres Quevedo Demonstrates Telekino: Remote Control is Born

Leonardo Torres Quevedo steers a boat from the shore using radio waves before King Alfonso XIII and a massive crowd in Bilbao, effectively launching the age of remote control technology. This demonstration proved that machines could operate without direct human contact, laying the immediate groundwork for modern robotics, drone flight, and automated industrial systems.

First American Newspaper Published in 1690
1690

First American Newspaper Published in 1690

Publick Occurrences ran four pages — one left blank for readers to add their own news before passing it along. Publisher Benjamin Harris had written critically about the Massachusetts colonial government and made uncomfortable remarks about French-allied Indigenous allies. The governor shut it down after a single issue. It never published again. The first newspaper in the Americas lasted one day. The blank page Harris included for readers to fill in was, unintentionally, the most forward-thinking thing about it.

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Born on September 25

Portrait of T.I.
T.I. 1980

He released his debut album 'I'm Serious' at 21, went on to become one of Atlanta's defining voices, and built Grand…

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Hustle Records into a label that launched careers while his own kept growing. T.I. was among the first artists to fully merge trap's production aesthetic with mainstream hip-hop accessibility — 'Trap Muzik' in 2003 documented a world most listeners had never entered. He's also been arrested multiple times, starred in films, and appeared on reality television. The range is genuinely unusual. The consistency underneath it is what the resume obscures.

Portrait of Santigold
Santigold 1976

Before she was Santigold, Santi White was a songwriter-for-hire writing tracks for Res and other artists, and before…

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that she managed a punk band called Stiffed. Her 2008 debut album crossed post-punk, reggae, new wave, and electronic music so deliberately that critics struggled to file it anywhere. That was the point. She produced most of it herself. The former punk band manager who built a solo career on refusing to sound like anything already in the catalog.

Portrait of Bridgette Wilson
Bridgette Wilson 1973

Bridgette Wilson won Miss Teen USA in 1990 at 17 and was working in Hollywood within two years — not the typical…

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trajectory for pageant winners, most of whom disappear quietly. She played Billy Madison's love interest opposite Adam Sandler, the villain in Mortal Kombat, and appeared in I Know What You Did Last Summer. Born this day in 1973 in Gold Beach, Oregon — population around 1,500 — she built a legitimate film career from a very small starting point. She left the industry largely on her own terms after marrying tennis player Pete Sampras in 2000.

Portrait of Will Smith

Will Smith was seventeen when DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince released their debut album.

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He was nineteen when they won the first-ever Grammy for rap. He spent the money badly, owed the IRS a million dollars by age twenty-one, and took the role of a fictionalized version of himself in The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air largely to dig out of debt. The show ran six seasons. Then came Bad Boys, Independence Day, Men in Black, Ali, The Pursuit of Happyness. By the early 2000s, he was the highest-paid actor in Hollywood. He started as a teenager with a boom box in West Philadelphia.

Portrait of Aida Turturro
Aida Turturro 1962

She auditioned for 'The Sopranos' in 1999 and won the role of Janice Soprano, Tony's manipulative, spiritually…

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opportunistic older sister — a character written with enough psychological complexity that critics regularly debated whether she was the show's most interesting person or its most infuriating. Aida Turturro played Janice for eight seasons with unsettling specificity, finding the neediness under the narcissism every time. She's John Turturro's cousin. The family resemblance, onscreen, was not just physical. She made you feel sorry for Janice for about thirty seconds every episode. Then she'd do something unforgivable.

Portrait of Jamie Hyneman
Jamie Hyneman 1956

Jamie Hyneman transformed the public perception of science by proving that rigorous experimentation can be both chaotic and entertaining.

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As the co-host of MythBusters and founder of M5 Industries, he utilized his expertise in animatronics to dismantle urban legends, turning complex engineering challenges into accessible television that inspired a generation of aspiring makers.

Portrait of Robert Gates
Robert Gates 1943

Robert Gates served two presidents from opposite parties as Secretary of Defense — George W.

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Bush, who appointed him in 2006 to replace Donald Rumsfeld after the Iraq War had gone badly, and Barack Obama, who kept him on after taking office in 2009. Before that he'd spent twenty-seven years at the CIA, rising to director under the first President Bush. His memoir, Duty, published in 2014, was unusually critical of the presidents he'd served, characterizing Obama as detached from his own strategy and Biden as wrong on nearly every major foreign policy question of the past four decades. He was sixty-nine when he wrote that.

Portrait of John Taylor
John Taylor 1942

He was one of Europe's most respected jazz pianists — classically trained, harmonically inventive, always slightly outside the mainstream.

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John Taylor, born in 1942, recorded with Kenny Wheeler and Jan Garbarek and spent decades as a professor at the Royal Academy of Music in London. His influence ran through students more than headlines. He died in 2015, and the musicians he trained are still performing the harmonic ideas he spent a lifetime developing.

Portrait of Adolfo Suárez
Adolfo Suárez 1932

He'd been a card-carrying member of Franco's single-party state — and then, somehow, became the man who dismantled it.

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Adolfo Suárez was a bureaucrat who rose through the dictatorship's own machinery, which is exactly why the king trusted him to dismantle it from the inside. Within two years of Franco's death he'd legalized the Communist Party, scheduled free elections, and handed power over. His own party voted him out shortly after. The man who built Spanish democracy was its first casualty.

Portrait of Paul MacCready
Paul MacCready 1925

Paul MacCready won the Kremer Prize in 1977 by building the Gossamer Condor — a human-powered aircraft that flew a…

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figure-eight course of just over a mile near Bakersfield, California. The prize had gone unclaimed for 18 years. MacCready built the Condor in six months, using materials that included cardboard, aluminum tubing, and Mylar. He later built the first solar-powered aircraft to cross the English Channel. He left behind AeroVironment, which still makes unmanned aircraft, and proof that the right engineer given a clear deadline could solve what professionals had called impossible.

Portrait of Eric Williams
Eric Williams 1911

He wrote his doctoral thesis at Oxford on the economics of slavery in the Caribbean — in 1938, when the topic was…

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largely ignored by Western academia. Eric Williams published it as *Capitalism and Slavery* in 1944, arguing that the Industrial Revolution was funded by the slave trade. It was dismissed by many historians at the time. He went home to Trinidad, entered politics, and became the country's first Prime Minister at independence in 1962. The scholar they ignored ended up running the place they'd colonized.

Portrait of William Faulkner

William Faulkner mapped the fictional Yoknapatawpha County onto the American South and populated it with characters…

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whose stream-of-consciousness narratives dismantled conventional storytelling. His novels The Sound and the Fury and Absalom, Absalom! earned the Nobel Prize and permanently altered the architecture of modern fiction, influencing writers from Gabriel Garcia Marquez to Toni Morrison.

Portrait of Thomas Hunt Morgan
Thomas Hunt Morgan 1866

He spent years staring at fruit flies — specifically, at their eyes, their wings, their bristles — and in 1910…

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discovered that genes sit on chromosomes, physically, in specific locations. Thomas Hunt Morgan had actually been skeptical of Mendelian genetics when he started. The flies changed his mind. He mapped them, documented mutations, and built a theory of heredity that turned inheritance from an abstraction into a physical, mappable fact. He won the Nobel in 1933. He left behind a fly room at Columbia that trained half the next generation of geneticists.

Died on September 25

Portrait of Andy Williams
Andy Williams 2012

Andy Williams negotiated a deal in 1969 that gave him his own theater in Branson, Missouri — the Moon River Theatre,…

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named for the song he'd made famous in 1961. He didn't write 'Moon River.' Henry Mancini and Johnny Mercer did, for Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany's. Williams recorded it and made it his. He sold over 100 million records. He left behind the theater, still operating, and a version of 'Moon River' most people think he wrote.

Portrait of Wangari Maathai
Wangari Maathai 2011

She mobilized 45,000 women to plant 51 million trees across Kenya — not as a symbol, but as a direct response to…

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watching rivers dry up and soil erode and women walk farther each year for firewood. Wangari Maathai was arrested, beaten, and called 'a threat to the order' by Daniel arap Moi's government. She won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2004. She left behind the Green Belt Movement, still operating, still planting, in countries far beyond Kenya.

Portrait of Franco Modigliani
Franco Modigliani 2003

He fled Mussolini's Italy in 1939 with almost nothing and rebuilt his entire intellectual life in a new language.

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Franco Modigliani's Modigliani-Miller theorem — developed with Merton Miller in 1958 — showed that under certain conditions, how a company finances itself doesn't affect its value. Simple idea. Enormous consequences for corporate finance forever. He won the Nobel in 1985. He left behind two foundational theories that still get argued over in business schools every single day.

Portrait of Billy Carter
Billy Carter 1988

He registered as a foreign agent of Libya and admitted it publicly, without apology.

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Billy Carter — gas station owner, beer brand ('Billy Beer'), and presidential brother — made $220,000 from Muammar Gaddafi's government while his brother Jimmy was in the White House. The Senate investigated. He shrugged. Born in Plains, Georgia, in 1937, he died of pancreatic cancer at 51, having spent his entire adult life refusing to be anything other than exactly what he was. Which, depending on your view, was either refreshing or catastrophic.

Portrait of Mary Astor
Mary Astor 1987

Mary Astor won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress in 1941, but the thing that had kept her name in every…

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newspaper for years before that was her diary. During a custody battle in 1936, pages describing her affairs in vivid detail were read aloud in court. Hollywood braced for scandal. Audiences showed up to her next film in enormous numbers. She left behind 'The Maltese Falcon,' and a memoir that was considerably more candid than most.

Portrait of Nikolay Semyonov
Nikolay Semyonov 1986

Nikolay Semyonov decoded the complex mechanics of chain reactions, fundamentally altering our understanding of how…

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chemical explosions and combustion processes occur. His rigorous work earned him the 1956 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, the first ever awarded to a Soviet scientist. By quantifying these rapid molecular transformations, he provided the essential framework for modern chemical kinetics.

Portrait of John Bonham

John Bonham left behind a drumming legacy that redefined rock percussion, from the thunderous opening of "When the…

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Levee Breaks" to the explosive power of "Moby Dick." His death from alcohol-related asphyxiation at age thirty-two ended Led Zeppelin immediately, as the remaining members declared the band could not continue without him.

Portrait of Emily Post
Emily Post 1960

Emily Post's 1922 book 'Etiquette' was 627 pages long and became an instant bestseller — which tells you something…

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uncomfortable about how badly Americans felt they were doing it wrong. But Post herself wasn't a rigid aristocrat. She'd survived a very public divorce scandal and wrote about manners as a form of kindness, not superiority. She left behind a book that's still in print, and an institute that still answers etiquette questions by email.

Portrait of William Bradford
William Bradford 1791

He printed the Pennsylvania Journal through a war that could've gotten him hanged.

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William Bradford the Third — grandson of the colonial printer, grandson of the man the Puritans expelled — kept Philadelphia's press running through British occupation, yellow fever, and revolution. But the detail nobody frames: he served as Washington's Quartermaster, hauling supplies for the Continental Army while also setting type. He left behind a paper trail, literally — the Journal ran until 1793.

Portrait of Ambrogio Spinola
Ambrogio Spinola 1630

Ambrogio Spinola spent his own family fortune — reportedly over 1 million ducats — financing Spain's army in the…

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Netherlands because Philip III couldn't pay his troops. He did this voluntarily, an Italian banker turned general, and he was better at the job than most professionals. His 1625 capture of Breda was painted by Velázquez in Las Meninas' forgotten companion piece, The Surrender of Breda — Spinola's face showing something almost like kindness toward the defeated Dutch commander. He died in 1630 still owed most of what Spain had promised him.

Holidays & observances

Nauru is the world's smallest island nation — 21 square kilometers of phosphate rock in the central Pacific.

Nauru is the world's smallest island nation — 21 square kilometers of phosphate rock in the central Pacific. Its youth make up a disproportionate share of its population, which never exceeded 13,000. National Youth Day exists to affirm their place in a country with limited employment, limited land, and no hinterland to retreat to. Nauru's phosphate wealth was mined out by the 1990s, leaving a landscape that looks like the moon and an economy that depends on Australian aid and offshore detention contracts.

Mozambique celebrates Armed Forces Day to honor the 1964 launch of the armed struggle for independence against Portug…

Mozambique celebrates Armed Forces Day to honor the 1964 launch of the armed struggle for independence against Portuguese colonial rule. This anniversary commemorates the initial guerrilla attacks led by FRELIMO, which dismantled colonial authority and eventually secured the nation’s sovereignty in 1975. It remains a central pillar of the country's national identity and military tradition.

Bangladeshi Immigration Day was recognized in the United States to acknowledge the contributions of the Bangladeshi-A…

Bangladeshi Immigration Day was recognized in the United States to acknowledge the contributions of the Bangladeshi-American community, one of the fastest-growing South Asian immigrant populations in the country. New York City has the largest concentration, particularly in the Jackson Heights and Kensington neighborhoods of Queens and Brooklyn. By 2020, over a million Americans claimed Bangladeshi ancestry. The holiday reflects a broader pattern of immigrant communities using civic recognition as a form of belonging.

French revolutionaries celebrated Colchique Day on the fourth of Vendémiaire, honoring the autumn crocus as part of t…

French revolutionaries celebrated Colchique Day on the fourth of Vendémiaire, honoring the autumn crocus as part of their effort to replace the Gregorian calendar with a nature-based system. By anchoring time to seasonal agricultural cycles rather than religious saints, the state attempted to secularize daily life and solidify the Enlightenment ideals of the new Republic.

Sergius of Radonezh founded a monastery in the Russian wilderness in 1337, deep enough in the forest that wolves circ…

Sergius of Radonezh founded a monastery in the Russian wilderness in 1337, deep enough in the forest that wolves circled the building in its first years. He refused the archbishopric of Moscow twice. But when Prince Dmitry Donskoy came asking for his blessing before facing the Mongol-led forces at Kulikovo in 1380, Sergius gave it — and sent two monks to fight alongside the army. Russia won. Sergius is now considered the country's most beloved saint.

Behind every funded research project, every compliant grant submission, every university study that actually gets off…

Behind every funded research project, every compliant grant submission, every university study that actually gets off the ground — there's a research administrator who understood the 47-page federal requirements so the scientist didn't have to. National Research Administrators Day in the U.S. recognizes the people who manage budgets, navigate regulations, and keep institutional research running. They don't get named in the publications. But without them, a remarkable number of those publications simply wouldn't exist.

September 25th on the Orthodox calendar includes the commemoration of the Holy Fathers of the Seventh Ecumenical Coun…

September 25th on the Orthodox calendar includes the commemoration of the Holy Fathers of the Seventh Ecumenical Council — the 787 Council of Nicaea that settled the iconoclasm controversy, ruling that icons could be venerated but not worshipped. It was a distinction that took decades of theological argument, exile, and occasional violence to establish. The empress Irene convened the council — making her one of the few women to chair a council that shaped Christian doctrine.

Finbarr supposedly walked out of the sea.

Finbarr supposedly walked out of the sea. That's the legend — that he arrived at Gougane Barra in Cork on foot across the water, founded a monastery on an island there, and then established what became the city of Cork. He's Cork's patron saint, and the oratory on that lake island still stands. Whether any of the miracles are true is a separate question from whether the monastery was real. It was. Cork grew from it.

Anglicans commemorate Lancelot Andrewes today, honoring the Bishop of Winchester who chaired the committee responsibl…

Anglicans commemorate Lancelot Andrewes today, honoring the Bishop of Winchester who chaired the committee responsible for the first section of the King James Bible. His precise, scholarly approach to translation established the rhythmic, authoritative prose that defined English religious life for centuries, cementing the linguistic standard for the Authorized Version.

The Harkis were Algerians who fought on the French side during the Algerian War of Independence.

The Harkis were Algerians who fought on the French side during the Algerian War of Independence. When France withdrew in 1962, most were left behind. An estimated 60,000 to 150,000 were killed by the new Algerian government in the months that followed. Those who made it to France were placed in internment camps. Their children grew up stateless in their own country. It took France until 2021 to formally acknowledge its responsibility for abandoning them. The Day of National Recognition came three years later.