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On this day

September 4

Los Angeles Founded: A Spanish Settlement Begins (1781). Geronimo Surrenders: Apache Resistance Ends (1886). Notable births include Beyoncé (1981), Shinya Yamanaka (1962), Mark Ronson (1977).

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Los Angeles Founded: A Spanish Settlement Begins
1781Event

Los Angeles Founded: A Spanish Settlement Begins

Forty-four settlers, recruited from the Mexican provinces of Sonora and Sinaloa, established El Pueblo de Nuestra Senora la Reina de los Angeles del Rio Porciuncula on September 4, 1781. The group included people of Indigenous, African, and Spanish descent, reflecting the multiethnic reality of Spain's colonial frontier. Governor Felipe de Neve selected the site near the Porciuncula River (now the Los Angeles River) for its fertile soil and reliable water supply. The pueblo grew slowly, numbering just 315 residents by 1820. After American conquest in 1847, the arrival of the Southern Pacific Railroad in 1876, and the discovery of oil in the 1890s, the settlement exploded into the sprawling metropolis of Los Angeles, now home to over 13 million people.

Geronimo Surrenders: Apache Resistance Ends
1886

Geronimo Surrenders: Apache Resistance Ends

Geronimo, the most feared Apache leader in the American Southwest, surrendered to General Nelson Miles at Skeleton Canyon, Arizona, on September 4, 1886, ending the last significant armed resistance by Native Americans against the United States government. Geronimo had been fighting since the 1850s, leading a band that never numbered more than 38 warriors but tied down 5,000 U.S. troops and 3,000 Mexican soldiers. His surrender marked the end of the Apache Wars and the Indian Wars more broadly. Geronimo and his followers were sent as prisoners of war to Florida, then Alabama, then Fort Sill, Oklahoma. He was never allowed to return to Arizona. He died in 1909 at Fort Sill, still technically a prisoner of war.

Eastman Patents the Kodak: Photography for All
1888

Eastman Patents the Kodak: Photography for All

George Eastman patented his roll-film camera and registered the trademark "Kodak" on September 4, 1888. The camera came preloaded with a 100-exposure roll of film, and when the roll was finished, the customer mailed the entire camera to Eastman's factory in Rochester, New York, which developed the film, printed the photographs, reloaded the camera with fresh film, and mailed everything back. Eastman's advertising slogan was "You press the button, we do the rest." The $25 camera (roughly $800 today) eliminated the need for chemical knowledge, darkrooms, and heavy glass plates, transforming photography from a specialized technical craft into something anyone could do. Kodak would dominate photography for a century.

Pearl Street Lights Up: The Electric Age Dawns
1882

Pearl Street Lights Up: The Electric Age Dawns

Thomas Edison switched on the Pearl Street Station in lower Manhattan at 3:00 p.m. on September 4, 1882, delivering direct current electricity to 85 customers through a network of underground copper wires. The station powered 400 lamps spread across a one-square-mile area, including the offices of the New York Times and J.P. Morgan's home. Edison had spent three years building the entire system from scratch: the generator, the wiring, the meters, even the light bulbs. The station burned coal to drive six "Jumbo" dynamos, each weighing 27 tons. This was the first investor-owned electric utility in the world. Within two years, Edison had built similar stations in several American cities and in London, launching the electrification of urban civilization.

TV Links Coast to Coast: First Transcontinental Broadcast
1951

TV Links Coast to Coast: First Transcontinental Broadcast

The first live transcontinental television broadcast aired on September 4, 1951, carrying the opening ceremonies of the Japanese Peace Treaty Conference in San Francisco to viewers across the United States. AT&T had just completed a coaxial cable and microwave relay network linking the East and West coasts, making coast-to-coast live television possible for the first time. President Truman addressed the conference via television from Washington, becoming the first president to be seen live simultaneously on both coasts. The broadcast proved that television could unite a continental nation around a single event in real time. Within months, networks shifted from regional to national programming, and television replaced radio as America's dominant mass medium.

Quote of the Day

“Men can starve from lack of self-realization as much as they can from lack of bread.”

Richard Wright (author)

Historical events

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Born on September 4

Portrait of Stefanía Fernández
Stefanía Fernández 1990

She won Miss Universe in 2009 — and then handed the crown to the next winner in 2010, making Venezuela back-to-back…

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champions, the only country ever to pull that off. Stefanía Fernández was 18 when she won, the second-youngest Miss Universe in the pageant's history at the time. Venezuela had won seven titles total by that point, a number that baffles every other competing nation. She passed the crown to another Venezuelan, Ximena Navarrete, on that same stage in Las Vegas.

Portrait of Beyoncé

Beyonce built a career that redefined the modern music industry, rising from Destiny's Child frontwoman to the most…

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decorated Grammy artist in history. Her visual albums, surprise releases, and uncompromising creative control dismantled conventional marketing models and established a new template for how artists command their own narratives.

Portrait of Mark Ronson
Mark Ronson 1977

He started DJing at 16 in New York, got famous at London Fashion Week parties, and eventually produced a song by asking…

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Amy Winehouse to sing over a sample she initially thought was terrible. That song was 'Valerie.' Mark Ronson co-wrote and produced 'Uptown Funk,' which spent 14 consecutive weeks at number one in 2015 — the second-longest run in Billboard Hot 100 history at the time. He has a knack for finding the exact vintage reference point that makes something feel brand new. The retro thing is actually extremely hard to do.

Portrait of Iggor Cavalera
Iggor Cavalera 1970

Iggor Cavalera redefined heavy metal drumming by fusing tribal Brazilian percussion with the aggressive speed of thrash.

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As a founding member of Sepultura, he pushed the genre into new sonic territories, influencing a generation of extreme metal musicians to incorporate global rhythms into their compositions.

Portrait of Giorgi Margvelashvili
Giorgi Margvelashvili 1969

He was a philosophy professor before he became president of Georgia — actual academic philosophy, not the political kind.

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Giorgi Margvelashvili taught at the Georgian Institute of Public Affairs and ran it before entering politics, which made him an unusual figure in a region where power usually flows through different channels. He won the 2013 presidential election, then spent most of his term in visible tension with the ruling party. He left office in 2018 having not been removed, imprisoned, or exiled, which in Georgian political history is its own kind of accomplishment.

Portrait of Shinya Yamanaka
Shinya Yamanaka 1962

In 2006, Shinya Yamanaka took a fully specialized adult cell and reprogrammed it back to an embryonic-like state using just four genes.

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Four. The scientific community didn't believe it at first. What Yamanaka produced — induced pluripotent stem cells — meant you could potentially grow any tissue in the body without using embryos, dissolving one of the most charged ethical debates in modern biology. He won the Nobel in 2012, six years after the paper. He left behind a technique that every major regenerative medicine lab in the world now uses as a starting point.

Portrait of Blackie Lawless
Blackie Lawless 1956

Steven Duren, better known as Blackie Lawless, brought theatrical shock rock to the mainstream as the frontman of W.

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A.S.P. His aggressive stage persona and anthemic songwriting defined the 1980s Los Angeles metal scene, forcing the Parents Music Resource Center to target his music during their crusade against explicit lyrics.

Portrait of John McCarthy
John McCarthy 1927

He coined the word 'artificial intelligence' in 1955 — just typed it into a grant proposal like it was obvious.

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John McCarthy was 27. He also invented Lisp, one of the oldest programming languages still in use, and spent decades at Stanford building machines that could reason. He once calculated that humanity could support 15 billion people sustainably. He left behind the vocabulary that now runs inside every device you own.

Portrait of Henry Ford II
Henry Ford II 1917

Henry Ford II took over a company in 1945 that was reportedly losing a million dollars a day and hadn't had a real…

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organizational structure in years — his grandfather had run it through intimidation and a private security force that kept professional managers out. He was 28, a Navy veteran with no business training, handed a burning enterprise. He hired the Whiz Kids, rebuilt the management structure from scratch, and eventually greenlit the Mustang. He also fired Lee Iacocca, which Iacocca never forgave. He spent his career unbuilding what his grandfather had broken, which was most of it.

Portrait of Stanford Moore
Stanford Moore 1913

Stanford Moore spent decades patiently mapping the exact sequence of amino acids in ribonuclease A — the first enzyme…

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ever to have its structure fully decoded. It took years of painstaking chromatography work at Rockefeller University alongside William Stein. They won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1972. Moore was so methodical that colleagues joked his lab notebooks read like instruction manuals. What they actually were was the first complete description of how an enzyme does its job.

Portrait of Kenzō Tange
Kenzō Tange 1913

Kenzō Tange designed buildings while his country was at war, then designed buildings to help his country heal.

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His Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, completed in 1955, sits on a precise axis aligned directly with the atomic bomb's hypocenter. Deliberate. Unflinching. Then for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics he created the Yoyogi National Gymnasium — two suspension-roofed arenas that looked like nothing built before. He left behind a body of work that turned national trauma into physical form.

Portrait of Richard Wright
Richard Wright 1908

He grew up in Mississippi under Jim Crow, watched a white mob lynch a man near his family's home, and taught himself to…

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read by forging a note to a librarian claiming he was picking up books for a white man. Richard Wright used that borrowed library card to read H.L. Mencken and decided language could be a weapon. Native Son sold 215,000 copies in three weeks in 1940. He left behind a body of work that made American literature argue with itself.

Portrait of Max Delbrück
Max Delbrück 1906

Max Delbrück originally trained as an astrophysicist, then wandered into biology and couldn't leave.

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Working with Salvador Luria and Alfred Hershey, he essentially founded molecular biology by studying how bacteriophages — viruses that infect bacteria — replicate. The 1943 Luria-Delbrück experiment proved mutations happen randomly, not in response to need. He won the Nobel in 1969. The physicist who got distracted by viruses and accidentally built a new science.

Portrait of Manuel Montt
Manuel Montt 1809

Manuel Montt governed Chile for ten years — 1851 to 1861 — and spent most of it fighting the Catholic Church over who…

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controlled cemeteries and civil records. He believed the state should. The Church disagreed loudly. He backed the founding of Chile's first public library, the University of Chile, and a national civil code. The president who picked a decade-long fight with the Church over burial rights also built most of the country's foundational civic institutions.

Portrait of Wanli Emperor of China
Wanli Emperor of China 1563

The Wanli Emperor ascended the Ming throne as a child, presiding over the longest reign of his dynasty.

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While his early years saw a flourishing of statecraft, his decades-long withdrawal from court governance crippled the bureaucracy and accelerated the fiscal collapse that eventually invited the Manchu conquest of China.

Died on September 4

Portrait of Giorgio Armani
Giorgio Armani 2025

He grew up in the rubble of postwar Piacenza, sharing a bedroom with two brothers, and eventually put his name on a…

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fashion house that became synonymous with a particular kind of understated wealth. Giorgio Armani stripped away the shoulder pads, removed the lining, and convinced the 1980s that restraint was power. He built one of the last great independent fashion empires, never went public, and controlled every decision until the end. He died at 90 still running the company.

Portrait of Steve Harwell
Steve Harwell 2023

Steve Harwell formed Smash Mouth in San Jose in 1994 and watched 'All Star' become one of the most remixed, memed, and…

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parodied songs of the internet age — a song so inescapable it started to feel like it had always existed. He'd written it as an earnest underdog anthem. The internet turned it into something else entirely, which he seemed to take in stride. Born in 1967, he died at 56 from acute liver failure. He left behind a song that will genuinely never go away, which is a stranger kind of immortality than most musicians get.

Portrait of Gustavo Cerati
Gustavo Cerati 2014

Gustavo Cerati suffered a massive stroke immediately after performing a concert in Buenos Aires in May 2010.

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He never regained consciousness. Soda Stereo had been the biggest rock band in Latin American history — stadiums across the continent, a farewell tour in 1997 that drew 250,000 people in Buenos Aires alone. He lay in a coma for four years and two months. He left behind Soda Stereo's catalog and a solo body of work that Argentina still plays like a national soundtrack.

Portrait of Aldo Rossi
Aldo Rossi 1997

Aldo Rossi redefined modern architecture by stripping buildings down to their most elemental, geometric forms, a…

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philosophy that earned him the Pritzker Prize. His death in 1997 left behind a legacy of stark, rationalist structures like the Bonnefanten Museum, which challenged the era's obsession with ornamentation and shifted contemporary design toward a focus on urban memory.

Portrait of Joan Clarke
Joan Clarke 1996

Joan Clarke decoded high-level Nazi naval communications at Bletchley Park, often working alongside Alan Turing to break the Enigma cipher.

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Her expertise in cryptanalysis shortened the war in the Atlantic, while her later life as a dedicated numismatist earned her the Sanford Saltus Medal for her research into Scottish coinage.

Portrait of Albert Schweitzer
Albert Schweitzer 1965

Albert Schweitzer built a hospital in the jungle of Gabon in 1913 and worked there, on and off, for fifty years.

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He was already famous in Europe as an organist and Bach scholar before he went to medical school in his thirties and sailed for Africa. The hospital at Lambarene grew from a chicken coop to a complex treating thousands of patients annually. He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1952 and used the prize money to expand the hospital and establish a leper colony. His critics — and there were many, particularly after his death — argued his approach was paternalistic. His patients, who had access to medical care they'd otherwise not have had, had a different view.

Portrait of Robert Dudley
Robert Dudley 1588

Robert Dudley was almost certainly the love of Queen Elizabeth I's life, and almost certainly got away with murder.

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His wife Amy Robsart died in 1560 — fell down a staircase, the inquest said. Convenient. Elizabeth never married Dudley, but she kept him close for nearly 30 years, showering him with titles and estates. He died in September 1588, just weeks after the Armada's defeat — a triumph he'd helped organize. Elizabeth kept his last letter to her in a box beside her bed until she died, 15 years later.

Portrait of Joan of England
Joan of England 1199

Joan of England, daughter of Henry II, died in 1199 after fleeing her husband’s court to seek sanctuary as a nun at Fontevraud Abbey.

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Her death followed a difficult childbirth, ending a life defined by her role as Queen of Sicily and her strategic marriage alliances that linked the Angevin Empire to Mediterranean politics.

Holidays & observances

Argentina declared Immigrant's Day on the anniversary of the arrival of the first immigrant ship under a national col…

Argentina declared Immigrant's Day on the anniversary of the arrival of the first immigrant ship under a national colonization law — the Devonshire, which docked in 1884. But the real wave had started earlier: between 1870 and 1930, Argentina received nearly 7 million immigrants, mostly from Italy and Spain. Buenos Aires in 1914 was majority foreign-born. The country's food, language, football culture, and politics were all reshaped by people who arrived with almost nothing. October 4th isn't a ceremony. It's a reckoning with who actually built the place.

The first newspaper carrier in America was Benjamin Franklin — or at least, he organized one of the first delivery ne…

The first newspaper carrier in America was Benjamin Franklin — or at least, he organized one of the first delivery networks, using apprentice boys to distribute the Pennsylvania Gazette in the 1730s. By 1833, the New York Sun pioneered the 'penny press' model, which only worked financially because young carriers bought papers wholesale and sold them retail, pocketing the difference. Thousands of American kids funded their first savings accounts, first bikes, and first business lessons through paper routes. The job taught more future entrepreneurs and executives than most business schools. It just paid worse.

Paul Jones was the Episcopal Bishop of Utah — until 1918, when he was forced to resign for publicly opposing U.S.

Paul Jones was the Episcopal Bishop of Utah — until 1918, when he was forced to resign for publicly opposing U.S. entry into World War I. He refused to recant, traveled the country speaking for pacifism anyway, and spent the rest of his career as a field secretary for the Fellowship of Reconciliation. The Episcopal Church added him to its calendar decades after his death, a quiet institutional acknowledgment that the bishop they pressured out was right to say what he said. He left behind a conscience, documented in the public record.

Lutheran and Eastern Orthodox congregations honor the brothers Moses and Aaron today, recognizing their leadership in…

Lutheran and Eastern Orthodox congregations honor the brothers Moses and Aaron today, recognizing their leadership in liberating the Israelites from Egyptian bondage. By establishing the foundational laws and the priesthood, these figures defined the religious structure of ancient Israel, creating a framework for worship that persists in modern liturgical traditions.

Romans honored Jupiter Optimus Maximus each September with the Ludi Romani, a massive festival featuring chariot race…

Romans honored Jupiter Optimus Maximus each September with the Ludi Romani, a massive festival featuring chariot races, theatrical performances, and religious processions. These games transformed the city into a public stage, reinforcing social hierarchies and civic unity while providing the Roman populace with a rare, state-sponsored reprieve from the daily grind of the Republic.

Devotees in Palermo celebrate Saint Rosalia today, honoring the hermit who supposedly ended the 1624 plague by appear…

Devotees in Palermo celebrate Saint Rosalia today, honoring the hermit who supposedly ended the 1624 plague by appearing in a vision to a local hunter. Meanwhile, followers of Saint Rose of Viterbo commemorate the teenage mystic who defied the Holy Roman Emperor in the 13th century, establishing a lasting legacy of political resistance within the Franciscan tradition.

Maronite Christians honor the prophets Aaron and Moses today, recognizing their roles in delivering the Israelites fr…

Maronite Christians honor the prophets Aaron and Moses today, recognizing their roles in delivering the Israelites from Egyptian bondage. By commemorating these figures, the church emphasizes the continuity between Old Testament prophecy and the Christian tradition, grounding its liturgical calendar in the foundational narratives of the desert exodus.

Saint Ultan of Ardbraccan ran a scriptorium in 7th-century Ireland and is credited with collecting the manuscripts of…

Saint Ultan of Ardbraccan ran a scriptorium in 7th-century Ireland and is credited with collecting the manuscripts of Saint Brigid, preserving texts that would otherwise have been lost. He was also, by contemporary accounts, personally responsible for caring for orphaned children during a plague — organizing wet nurses and founding what some scholars call an early model of organized childcare. He died around 657 AD. The manuscripts he saved outlasted almost everything else from his era.

The Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar operates on the Julian calendar, running 13 days behind the Gregorian calend…

The Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar operates on the Julian calendar, running 13 days behind the Gregorian calendar used by most of the world. That gap means Orthodox feast days fall on different civil dates than their Catholic or Protestant equivalents — Christmas on January 7, Easter on a different Sunday. The calendar hasn't been reformed since the Julian system was standard. The Orthodox Church has maintained the discrepancy deliberately, treating calendar continuity as a form of theological fidelity.

Romans kicked off the Ludi Romani, a massive festival honoring Jupiter Optimus Maximus with chariot races, theatrical…

Romans kicked off the Ludi Romani, a massive festival honoring Jupiter Optimus Maximus with chariot races, theatrical performances, and religious processions. These games transformed the city into a public stage, reinforcing the social hierarchy and divine favor of the state through weeks of state-funded entertainment and ritual sacrifice.

Catherine of Racconigi joined the Dominican Third Order as a laywoman in 15th-century Piedmont, reporting visions fro…

Catherine of Racconigi joined the Dominican Third Order as a laywoman in 15th-century Piedmont, reporting visions from childhood and later claiming the stigmata. Her community was skeptical — she was repeatedly tested, examined, and doubted by church authorities during her lifetime. She was beatified in 1808, three centuries after her death. Her feast is observed by communities who venerate her as a mystic whose inner life outlasted the suspicion it provoked.

The Patagonian toothfish — marketed globally as Chilean sea bass after that name was invented in 1977 specifically to…

The Patagonian toothfish — marketed globally as Chilean sea bass after that name was invented in 1977 specifically to make it sound more appealing — is the dominant species in the waters around South Georgia. It can live to 50 years and grow to 7 feet long. South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands celebrate it with their own dedicated day. The fish was essentially unknown in restaurants before a Los Angeles fish wholesaler renamed it. A rebrand that moved millions of pounds of product.

Argentina received more immigrants per capita than almost any other country on earth between 1870 and 1930 — roughly …

Argentina received more immigrants per capita than almost any other country on earth between 1870 and 1930 — roughly 6.6 million people, mostly from Italy and Spain, but also from Syria, Lebanon, Eastern Europe, and Japan. They didn't just arrive; they reshaped the country's food, language, and music. The lunfardo slang that gave tango its voice was a blend of Italian, Spanish, and Genoese dialect spoken in Buenos Aires's immigrant tenements. Argentina's national identity was built so thoroughly by people who weren't from there that celebrating their arrival wasn't generosity — it was simple accuracy.