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On this day

August 11

Watts Erupts: Six Days of Riots Tear Los Angeles (1965). Babe Ruth Hits 500: Baseball's Home Run King (1929). Notable births include Gennadiy Nikonov (1950), Davey von Bohlen (1975), Ben Gibbard (1976).

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Watts Erupts: Six Days of Riots Tear Los Angeles
1965Event

Watts Erupts: Six Days of Riots Tear Los Angeles

The Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles erupted on August 11, 1965, after California Highway Patrol officer Lee Minikus pulled over Marquette Frye for erratic driving. A routine traffic stop escalated when Frye's mother arrived and a scuffle broke out, drawing a crowd that grew increasingly angry. Over the next six days, residents burned and looted businesses across a 46-square-mile area. The California National Guard deployed 14,000 troops. When the violence subsided, 34 people were dead, over 1,000 injured, and nearly 4,000 arrested. Property damage exceeded $40 million. Governor Pat Brown appointed a commission under John McCone that identified unemployment, poverty, and police brutality as root causes, but few of its recommendations were implemented.

Babe Ruth Hits 500: Baseball's Home Run King
1929

Babe Ruth Hits 500: Baseball's Home Run King

Babe Ruth hit his 500th career home run off Willis Hudlin at League Park in Cleveland on August 11, 1929, becoming the first player in Major League Baseball history to reach the milestone. The ball sailed into the right-field bleachers in the second inning of a game the Yankees won 6-5. Ruth was 34 years old and had been hitting home runs at a pace no one had imagined possible when he entered the league as a pitcher fifteen years earlier. The 500-homer mark became baseball's definitive measure of power-hitting greatness. Only 28 players have reached it in over a century of professional baseball, and the number remains a virtual guarantee of Hall of Fame induction.

Lamarr Patents Frequency Hop: Wi-Fi's Ancestor Born
1942

Lamarr Patents Frequency Hop: Wi-Fi's Ancestor Born

Hedy Lamarr, the Austrian-born Hollywood actress, and George Antheil, an avant-garde composer, received U.S. Patent 2,292,387 on August 11, 1942, for a "Secret Communication System" that used frequency hopping to prevent radio-guided torpedoes from being jammed. The Navy dismissed the invention during the war, partly because Lamarr was an actress and Antheil was known for composing music for synchronized player pianos. The technology sat unused for decades. In the 1960s, the military adopted frequency hopping for secure communications during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Today, the principle is foundational to Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and all cellular networks. Lamarr received no royalties and was not recognized for her contribution until the 1990s.

Jinnah's Vision: Pakistan's Founding Speech Delivered
1947

Jinnah's Vision: Pakistan's Founding Speech Delivered

Muhammad Ali Jinnah addressed Pakistan's first Constituent Assembly on August 11, 1947, three days before the country's official independence, with a speech that continues to divide historians. He declared that citizens would be free to worship at any temple or mosque and that religion would have "nothing to do with the business of the state." This secular vision contradicted the two-nation theory that had justified partition, the argument that Muslims needed a separate homeland because they could not coexist with Hindus. Jinnah died of tuberculosis just thirteen months later, on September 11, 1948, before he could anchor his vision in the constitution. Pakistan has oscillated between secular and Islamic governance ever since.

East Timor in Chaos: Governor Flees Amid Civil War
1975

East Timor in Chaos: Governor Flees Amid Civil War

Governor Mario Lemos Pires fled the East Timorese capital of Dili on August 11, 1975, as fighting erupted between the Timorese Democratic Union (UDT) and the Fretilin independence movement. Portugal, which had ruled East Timor for over 400 years, was itself in the throes of a revolution following the 1974 Carnation Revolution and had neither the will nor the resources to manage the decolonization process. The power vacuum created by Portugal's withdrawal gave Indonesia the pretext it needed. On December 7, 1975, Indonesian forces invaded East Timor, beginning a 24-year occupation that killed an estimated 100,000 to 180,000 Timorese through violence, famine, and disease, roughly a quarter of the population.

Quote of the Day

“Either you deal with reality, or you can be sure reality is going to deal with you.”

Alex Haley

Historical events

Born on August 11

Portrait of Jacqueline Fernandez
Jacqueline Fernandez 1985

Jacqueline Fernandez is a Sri Lankan model and actress who became a Bollywood star after winning Miss Universe Sri Lanka 2006.

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She has appeared in major Hindi films including "Race 2" and "Kick," building a career in an industry where outsiders from smaller countries rarely reach the top tier.

Portrait of Andy Bell
Andy Bell 1970

Andy Bell played bass for Oasis from 1999 until the band's breakup in 2009, and later joined Liam Gallagher's Beady Eye.

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Before Oasis, he was the guitarist and co-founder of the shoegaze band Ride, whose 1990 debut 'Nowhere' helped define the genre.

Portrait of Shinji Mikami
Shinji Mikami 1965

Shinji Mikami created Resident Evil in 1996, and in doing so created the survival horror genre as a commercial category.

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Born in 1965, he wanted to make something that caused real fear — not just jump scares, but the kind of dread that comes from scarce ammunition and something following you. He succeeded. The franchise has sold over 130 million copies.

Portrait of Gustavo Cerati
Gustavo Cerati 1959

Gustavo Cerati co-founded Soda Stereo in Buenos Aires in 1982.

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The band became the biggest Spanish-language rock act in Latin America — the kind of group that sells out stadiums in every Spanish-speaking country simultaneously. Born in 1959, Cerati suffered a stroke in 2010 after a concert in Caracas and never recovered. He died in 2014. The final tour had 400,000 people in three shows.

Portrait of Joe Jackson
Joe Jackson 1954

Joe Jackson released 'Is She Really Going Out with Him?

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' in 1978 and spent the next 40 years refusing to be pinned down to one sound. Born in 1954, he moved through new wave, jazz, classical, and Latin influences across dozens of albums. Critical respect came easily; commercial consistency was harder. He didn't seem to mind.

Portrait of Frederick W. Smith
Frederick W. Smith 1944

Fred Smith had the idea for FedEx as an undergraduate at Yale and laid it out in an economics paper.

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His professor gave him a C. Born in 1944, he founded Federal Express anyway, launched it in 1973, and watched it lose money for years before it turned a corner. The company now handles over 15 million packages a day. The professor is not remembered.

Portrait of Pervez Musharraf
Pervez Musharraf 1943

He was born in Delhi, not Pakistan — a country that didn't exist yet.

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Pervez Musharraf arrived August 11, 1943, and spent his first four years in a city he'd eventually become the enemy of. His family migrated during Partition's chaos in 1947. He'd rise through Pakistan's army to seize power in a bloodless 1999 coup, ruling 164 million people without a single vote cast. He died in exile in Dubai in 2023. The general who built his career defending borders couldn't die inside his own.

Portrait of Aaron Klug
Aaron Klug 1926

He won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, but Aaron Klug almost never became a scientist at all — he'd enrolled at the…

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University of Witwatersrand to study medicine. A single crystallography paper changed his mind completely. He pivoted to physics, then biology, eventually developing crystallographic electron microscopy to reveal how viruses and DNA-protein complexes actually look in three dimensions. His 1982 Nobel recognized structures nobody had seen before. And that abandoned medical degree? It probably made him better at asking biological questions than most chemists ever could.

Portrait of Charley Paddock
Charley Paddock 1900

Charley Paddock was called 'the fastest human alive' after winning the 100 meters at the 1920 Antwerp Olympics.

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His distinctive 'flying finish' — leaping at the tape — made him one of track and field's first media celebrities and inspired the character of the sprinter in the film 'Chariots of Fire.'

Portrait of Christiaan Eijkman
Christiaan Eijkman 1858

Christiaan Eijkman discovered that beriberi resulted from a vitamin B1 deficiency rather than a bacterial infection.

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By observing that chickens fed polished rice developed the disease while those fed unpolished rice remained healthy, he identified the concept of vitamins. This breakthrough earned him the 1929 Nobel Prize and transformed modern nutritional science.

Died on August 11

Portrait of Eunice Kennedy Shriver
Eunice Kennedy Shriver 2009

She started it in her backyard.

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Literally — in 1962, Eunice Kennedy Shriver turned the lawn of her Maryland estate into a summer day camp for children with intellectual disabilities, at a time when doctors still recommended institutionalizing them. Six years later, that backyard idea became the first Special Olympics Games in Chicago, drawing 1,000 athletes. She wasn't the famous Kennedy. But she outlasted most of them. And the organization she built now serves 5 million athletes across 170 countries.

Portrait of Alfred A. Knopf
Alfred A. Knopf 1984

Alfred A.

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Knopf transformed American literature by championing high-quality design and European modernists like Thomas Mann and Albert Camus. By insisting that books be treated as aesthetic objects, he elevated the standards of the publishing industry and introduced generations of readers to the most rigorous voices of the twentieth century.

Portrait of Max Theiler
Max Theiler 1972

He developed the yellow fever vaccine in a cramped Rockefeller Institute lab, working with live virus so dangerous his…

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colleagues called it "the most hazardous research in the world." Theiler himself contracted yellow fever twice during the work. Twice. The 17D vaccine strain he finally isolated in 1937 has since protected over 600 million people. He won the Nobel in 1951 — one of the few laureates who did the critical work entirely with borrowed equipment and someone else's funding. The virus he tamed still kills 30,000 people annually where the vaccine doesn't reach.

Portrait of John Henry Newman
John Henry Newman 1890

He converted from the Church of England to Catholicism in 1845 — and England treated it like a betrayal.

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Newman lost nearly every friend he'd had. But he kept writing, kept arguing, kept building. His 1859 essay defending the role of conscience over blind obedience sat quietly for over a century. Then Vatican II cited it directly. He was beatified in 2010, 120 years after his death. The man England rejected became one of the most influential Catholic thinkers Rome ever produced.

Portrait of Clare of Assisi
Clare of Assisi 1253

She spent 27 years bedridden, and yet she ran one of the most radical religious experiments in medieval Europe from that bed.

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Clare of Assisi fought the Vatican itself — twice — to win her sisters the right to own nothing collectively. Not a single coin. No monastery, no land. The "Privilege of Poverty," she called it. She got papal approval two days before she died. Behind her: the Poor Clares, still active in 76 countries, still holding to that same fierce refusal.

Portrait of Leonidas
Leonidas 480 BC

King Leonidas of Sparta led a force of roughly 7,000 Greeks, including his personal guard of 300 Spartans, to block the…

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Persian army of Xerxes I at the narrow coastal pass of Thermopylae in 480 BC. For two days, the Greeks held the pass against overwhelming numbers by exploiting the terrain. When a local traitor named Ephialtes revealed a mountain path that allowed the Persians to outflank the position, Leonidas dismissed most of the Greek army and fought a last stand with his 300 Spartans, 700 Thespians, and 400 Thebans. They were annihilated. The three-day delay allowed the Greek fleet to organize at Salamis, where it destroyed the Persian navy and saved Greek civilization from conquest.

Holidays & observances

Chad gained full sovereignty from France in 1960, ending decades of colonial administration that began in the early t…

Chad gained full sovereignty from France in 1960, ending decades of colonial administration that began in the early twentieth century. This transition transformed the territory into a republic, forcing the new nation to immediately navigate the immense challenges of forging a unified state across diverse ethnic and regional divides.

Pakistan's Flag Day encourages citizens to display the national flag and contribute to armed forces welfare funds.

Pakistan's Flag Day encourages citizens to display the national flag and contribute to armed forces welfare funds. The observance supports veterans and military families while reinforcing national identity.

Athracht was an early Irish saint associated with the area around Killaraght in County Sligo.

Athracht was an early Irish saint associated with the area around Killaraght in County Sligo. She is one of many local saints from Ireland's early Christian period whose stories blend hagiography with local folklore.

Saint Philomena presents a historical puzzle.

Saint Philomena presents a historical puzzle. She was venerated widely from 1802, when her remains were found in Rome and attributed to a martyr of that name. By 1961, the Vatican's historical commission had concluded there was no reliable evidence she had ever existed. Her feast was removed from the Roman calendar. Devotees kept venerating her anyway. Some miracles are not subject to historical review.

Clare of Assisi heard Francis preach when she was seventeen.

Clare of Assisi heard Francis preach when she was seventeen. She ran away from her family, took religious vows from Francis himself, and founded the Order of Poor Ladies — later the Poor Clares. Her family sent men to drag her back twice. Both times she refused to leave. She held the papal bull exempting her community from owning property as she died, in 1253. She'd spent her life protecting that poverty.

Saint Susanna was traditionally a Roman martyr, daughter or niece of a priest, who was killed in 295 AD for refusing …

Saint Susanna was traditionally a Roman martyr, daughter or niece of a priest, who was killed in 295 AD for refusing to marry the emperor Diocletian's adopted son. Her Acts are considered largely legendary. She was venerated in Rome for over 1,500 years. The church of Santa Susanna on the Quirinal Hill, built over what tradition held was her home, still stands. The American Catholic community in Rome worships there.

Saint Taurinus was the first bishop of Évreux in Normandy, traditionally sent from Rome in the 3rd or 4th century.

Saint Taurinus was the first bishop of Évreux in Normandy, traditionally sent from Rome in the 3rd or 4th century. He is venerated as the apostle of the region and credited with establishing the first Christian community there. The Cathedral of Évreux, rebuilt multiple times over the centuries, still bears his name. That's the kind of persistence that gets you a feast day.

Géry of Cambrai was a 6th-7th century bishop who served as bishop of Cambrai for about fifty years, evangelizing the …

Géry of Cambrai was a 6th-7th century bishop who served as bishop of Cambrai for about fifty years, evangelizing the region that is now northern France and Belgium. He was known for destroying a pagan idol in the public square of Cambrai — the act that earned him his reputation for zeal. The city he ministered in changed hands between France and the Habsburg Netherlands multiple times in the centuries after his death.

Saint Fiacre was an Irish monk who settled in France in the 7th century, establishing a hermitage near Meaux east of …

Saint Fiacre was an Irish monk who settled in France in the 7th century, establishing a hermitage near Meaux east of Paris. He grew herbs and treated the sick. He became the patron saint of gardeners — and, centuries later, of taxi drivers, because in Paris the first horse-drawn carriages for hire operated out of the Hôtel Saint-Fiacre. He disliked women intensely and reportedly refused to let them enter his oratory.

Saint Attracta was an early Irish female saint associated with County Sligo, possibly a contemporary of Saint Patrick…

Saint Attracta was an early Irish female saint associated with County Sligo, possibly a contemporary of Saint Patrick in the 5th century. She's venerated in the west of Ireland and associated with a healing well at Killaraght. Female saints from early Irish Christianity are poorly documented — the records were mostly kept by men, in monasteries that weren't especially interested in women's religious lives.

John Henry Newman was an Anglican priest who converted to Roman Catholicism in 1845, eventually becoming a cardinal.

John Henry Newman was an Anglican priest who converted to Roman Catholicism in 1845, eventually becoming a cardinal. His intellectual journey from the Oxford Movement to Rome shaped modern Catholic theology. He was canonized as a saint by Pope Francis in 2019 — a rare honor for a figure who spent half his life in the Church of England.

Taurinus of Evreux was a 4th-century bishop who evangelized the region of Normandy, France.

Taurinus of Evreux was a 4th-century bishop who evangelized the region of Normandy, France. His cult developed in the medieval period, and the Abbey of Saint-Taurin in Evreux housed his relics in one of the finest medieval reliquaries in France.

August 11 in the Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar commemorates multiple saints and martyrs venerated in the tradi…

August 11 in the Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar commemorates multiple saints and martyrs venerated in the tradition. The day's observances connect Orthodox Christians worldwide to the shared calendar of the ancient church.

Tiburtius and Chromatius were Roman martyrs venerated together on August 11.

Tiburtius and Chromatius were Roman martyrs venerated together on August 11. Their Acts were considered apocryphal even in the medieval church — the stories were entertaining but not historically reliable. Pope Benedict XVI's 2002 reform of the Roman calendar removed their feast. But they had been in the calendar for roughly 1,400 years before that. Removed, not forgotten.

Mountain Day became Japan's newest national holiday in 2016, created to give people 'opportunities to get familiar wi…

Mountain Day became Japan's newest national holiday in 2016, created to give people 'opportunities to get familiar with mountains and appreciate blessings from mountains.' Japan's mountainous terrain covers 73% of its land area and deeply shapes its culture, from Mount Fuji to hot spring traditions.