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April 13 in History

Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Thomas Jefferson, Catherine de' Medici, and Samuel Beckett.

Apollo 13 Explodes: NASA Saves Three Astronauts
1970Event

Apollo 13 Explodes: NASA Saves Three Astronauts

An oxygen tank exploded aboard Apollo 13 on April 13, 1970, at 9:07 PM Houston time, 55 hours and 54 minutes into the mission and 205,000 miles from Earth. Commander Jim Lovell reported "Houston, we've had a problem here." The explosion crippled the Service Module, eliminating the main oxygen supply and most electrical power. Mission Control and the crew improvised solutions using materials aboard the Lunar Module Aquarius, including a carbon dioxide scrubber built from duct tape, flight manual covers, and plastic bags. The crew endured near-freezing temperatures and severe water rationing during the four-day return journey. They splashed down safely in the Pacific on April 17. Lovell, Haise, and Swigert never walked on the Moon.

Famous Birthdays

Thomas Jefferson
Thomas Jefferson

1743–1826

Samuel Beckett
Samuel Beckett

1906–1989

Frank Winfield Woolworth

Frank Winfield Woolworth

b. 1852

Julius Nyerere

Julius Nyerere

1922–1999

Seamus Heaney

Seamus Heaney

1939–2013

William Sadler

William Sadler

b. 1950

Amy Goodman

Amy Goodman

b. 1957

Hillel Slovak

Hillel Slovak

1962–1988

J. M. G. Le Clézio

J. M. G. Le Clézio

b. 1940

Jon Stone

Jon Stone

b. 1931

Josephine Butler

Josephine Butler

1828–1906

Historical Events

Henry IV of France signed the Edict of Nantes on April 13, 1598, ending 36 years of religious civil war that had killed over three million French people. The edict granted Huguenots freedom of worship in specified towns, access to all public offices, and control of over 100 military strongholds as a guarantee of their safety. Henry himself had converted from Protestantism to Catholicism to secure the throne, reportedly saying "Paris is well worth a Mass." The edict was remarkably progressive for its era but always fragile. Louis XIV revoked it in 1685 with the Edict of Fontainebleau, triggering the exodus of 200,000 Huguenots. These refugees brought their skills in textile manufacturing, silversmithing, and watchmaking to England, the Netherlands, Prussia, and South Africa.
1598

Henry IV of France signed the Edict of Nantes on April 13, 1598, ending 36 years of religious civil war that had killed over three million French people. The edict granted Huguenots freedom of worship in specified towns, access to all public offices, and control of over 100 military strongholds as a guarantee of their safety. Henry himself had converted from Protestantism to Catholicism to secure the throne, reportedly saying "Paris is well worth a Mass." The edict was remarkably progressive for its era but always fragile. Louis XIV revoked it in 1685 with the Edict of Fontainebleau, triggering the exodus of 200,000 Huguenots. These refugees brought their skills in textile manufacturing, silversmithing, and watchmaking to England, the Netherlands, Prussia, and South Africa.

Sidney Poitier won the Academy Award for Best Actor on April 13, 1964, for his role as Homer Smith in Lilies of the Field, becoming the first Black man to receive the honor. Hattie McDaniel had won Best Supporting Actress for Gone with the Wind in 1940, but no Black actor had won a leading role Oscar in the 24 years since. Poitier accepted the award from Anne Bancroft in a ceremony at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. His win came during the peak of the civil rights movement, just months before the Civil Rights Act was signed. No other Black actor would win Best Actor until Denzel Washington in 2002, a 38-year gap that exposed Hollywood's persistent failure to cast Black actors in leading dramatic roles.
1964

Sidney Poitier won the Academy Award for Best Actor on April 13, 1964, for his role as Homer Smith in Lilies of the Field, becoming the first Black man to receive the honor. Hattie McDaniel had won Best Supporting Actress for Gone with the Wind in 1940, but no Black actor had won a leading role Oscar in the 24 years since. Poitier accepted the award from Anne Bancroft in a ceremony at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. His win came during the peak of the civil rights movement, just months before the Civil Rights Act was signed. No other Black actor would win Best Actor until Denzel Washington in 2002, a 38-year gap that exposed Hollywood's persistent failure to cast Black actors in leading dramatic roles.

An oxygen tank exploded aboard Apollo 13 on April 13, 1970, at 9:07 PM Houston time, 55 hours and 54 minutes into the mission and 205,000 miles from Earth. Commander Jim Lovell reported "Houston, we've had a problem here." The explosion crippled the Service Module, eliminating the main oxygen supply and most electrical power. Mission Control and the crew improvised solutions using materials aboard the Lunar Module Aquarius, including a carbon dioxide scrubber built from duct tape, flight manual covers, and plastic bags. The crew endured near-freezing temperatures and severe water rationing during the four-day return journey. They splashed down safely in the Pacific on April 17. Lovell, Haise, and Swigert never walked on the Moon.
1970

An oxygen tank exploded aboard Apollo 13 on April 13, 1970, at 9:07 PM Houston time, 55 hours and 54 minutes into the mission and 205,000 miles from Earth. Commander Jim Lovell reported "Houston, we've had a problem here." The explosion crippled the Service Module, eliminating the main oxygen supply and most electrical power. Mission Control and the crew improvised solutions using materials aboard the Lunar Module Aquarius, including a carbon dioxide scrubber built from duct tape, flight manual covers, and plastic bags. The crew endured near-freezing temperatures and severe water rationing during the four-day return journey. They splashed down safely in the Pacific on April 17. Lovell, Haise, and Swigert never walked on the Moon.

Phalangist gunmen attacked a bus carrying Palestinian passengers through the Christian neighborhood of Ain el-Remmaneh on April 13, 1975, killing 27 people in retaliation for an alleged earlier attack on a church. The massacre ignited the Lebanese Civil War, a 15-year conflict that killed an estimated 120,000 people and displaced one million in a country of just three million. The war drew in Syrian troops, Israeli invasions in 1978 and 1982, Iranian-backed Hezbollah, and Palestinian factions. Beirut, once called the Paris of the Middle East, was divided into Christian east and Muslim west sectors by a devastated no-man's-land called the Green Line. The war ended with the 1989 Taif Agreement, but its sectarian political structure persists today.
1975

Phalangist gunmen attacked a bus carrying Palestinian passengers through the Christian neighborhood of Ain el-Remmaneh on April 13, 1975, killing 27 people in retaliation for an alleged earlier attack on a church. The massacre ignited the Lebanese Civil War, a 15-year conflict that killed an estimated 120,000 people and displaced one million in a country of just three million. The war drew in Syrian troops, Israeli invasions in 1978 and 1982, Iranian-backed Hezbollah, and Palestinian factions. Beirut, once called the Paris of the Middle East, was divided into Christian east and Muslim west sectors by a devastated no-man's-land called the Green Line. The war ended with the 1989 Taif Agreement, but its sectarian political structure persists today.

1612

Miyamoto Musashi defeats Sasaki Kojirō on the sands of Funajima, ending a duel that had defined Japanese swordsmanship for decades. This victory cements Musashi's reputation as an undefeated master and establishes his unique two-sword style as a lasting legacy in martial arts history.

1175

Saladin routed the Zengid forces at the Battle of the Horns of Hama, consolidating his control over Syria from Damascus to the Euphrates with only Aleppo remaining outside his grasp. The victory transformed him from a regional warlord into the dominant Muslim power broker, positioning him for his eventual confrontation with the Crusader kingdoms.

2025

Rory McIlroy won the Masters Tournament at Augusta, completing the career Grand Slam as only the sixth golfer in history to hold all four major championship titles. The victory ended a decade-long quest for the green jacket that had become the defining narrative of his career.

1250

A storm sank the French fleet, trapping King Louis IX in the muddy streets of Damietta while his soldiers starved. He didn't just lose; he paid a massive ransom for his life and twenty-four thousand lives lost to disease or battle. That cash drained France dry for decades, yet it sparked a strange shift: crusaders began learning from their enemies instead of just attacking them. Next time you hear "Crusades," remember that sometimes the only way forward was to pay the guy you're fighting.

1256

Pope Alexander IV just signed Licet ecclesiae catholicae to force scattered hermits into one order. Hundreds of men stopped sleeping in caves and started sharing cells across Italy, France, and England. They traded solitude for a shared rule that demanded they feed the poor together. This wasn't just paperwork; it was a desperate attempt to stop monks from drifting apart while cities grew hungry. Now, when you see an Augustinian friar, remember: he's part of a massive team built on forced togetherness.

1613

Samuel Argall snatched her from a canoe near Passapatanzy, not for glory, but to trade a princess for three Englishmen. Pocahontas spent months at Henricus as a hostage, separated from her people and family while negotiations dragged on. That single kidnapping forced the very future of Jamestown into a fragile peace, binding two cultures in blood and marriage. She became a bridge between worlds she never chose to cross.

1613

Samuel Argall didn't ask permission; he just grabbed Pocahontas near Passapatanzy and shoved her onto his ship. He wanted one thing: to trade this daughter of Powhatan for three English captives held by her father. The negotiation failed. Instead, she stayed in Jamestown, fell ill, converted, and married John Rolfe. That union didn't just stop the fighting; it birthed a generation that would eventually claim the entire continent. We think we know who won the war, but we forget who actually built the future.

1699

Four men walked into Anandpur Sahib, each holding a sword, ready to die for nothing they could name. Guru Gobind Singh asked for their heads one by one; four times he drew blood before a fifth man stepped forward, offering his own life without hesitation. That night, the warrior-saints were born, not from fear of death, but from a choice to face it together. They didn't just fight battles; they redefined what courage looks like when you have no army left. Now, whenever anyone asks why some people refuse to bow, remember the five who stood up first.

1777

British light infantry slipped through fog at dawn, catching General Charles Scott's men with bayonets before they could load muskets. Thirty Americans died in that chaotic scramble, while others fled across the swampy meadows to safety. But this defeat didn't break the spirit; it forced Washington to rethink how he'd protect his supplies and troops. Now you'll tell your friends about the night the British stole a whole brigade's breakfast right from under their noses.

1873

They surrendered with hands raised, only to be shot anyway. In Colfax, Louisiana, former Confederate soldiers and Klansmen didn't just kill; they hunted over 60 Black men who'd fled a courthouse fire for safety. Many were executed after promising their lives would be spared. This slaughter wasn't an accident of war; it was a deliberate choice to erase political power through terror. It convinced the North to stop enforcing Reconstruction laws, leaving millions vulnerable for decades. The true horror isn't that they died, but that the nation looked away while doing it.

1909

April 13, 1909: The Sultan's palace guards turned their rifles on Istanbul itself. But the Young Turks didn't just march in; they stormed the gates with three thousand loyal troops and forced the capital into chaos. Abdul Hamid II lost his throne after ordering a massacre that killed nearly two hundred people right there in the streets. It wasn't freedom, exactly. It was just another bloody step toward an empire that would soon vanish completely. And that's why you remember it: because sometimes the only way to stop a tyrant is to become one yourself.

Fun Facts

Zodiac Sign

Aries

Mar 21 -- Apr 19

Fire sign. Courageous, energetic, and confident.

Birthstone

Diamond

Clear

Symbolizes eternal love, strength, and invincibility.

Next Birthday

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