Today In History
August 16 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Menachem Begin, Anne of Austria, and John Bosco.

Elvis Dies at 42: The King of Rock Is Gone
Elvis Presley was found unresponsive on his bathroom floor at Graceland on August 16, 1977, and was pronounced dead at Baptist Memorial Hospital. He was 42. The official cause was cardiac arrhythmia, but his system contained fourteen different drugs at the time of death, including codeine, morphine, and several barbiturates. Presley had revolutionized popular music in 1954 by blending Black rhythm and blues with white country at Sun Studios in Memphis. His hip-swiveling performances on television provoked moral panic and ratings records simultaneously. He sold over 500 million records worldwide. Eighty thousand fans filed past his casket at Graceland. The mansion became a museum and is now the second most-visited private home in America after the White House.
Famous Birthdays
1913–1992
Anne of Austria
b. 1601
John Bosco
d. 1888
Arvind Kejriwal
b. 1968
Carol Moseley Braun
b. 1947
Emily Robison
b. 1972
Hal Foster
d. 1982
Masoud Barzani
b. 1946
Scott Asheton
1949–2014
Umaru Musa Yar'Adua
1951–2010
Historical Events
George Carmack, Skookum Jim Mason, and Dawson Charlie found gold in Rabbit Creek (renamed Bonanza Creek) on August 16, 1896, triggering the Klondike Gold Rush. News reached San Francisco and Seattle the following July when ships arrived carrying literal tons of gold. Within months, an estimated 100,000 people set out for the Yukon, though only 30,000 to 40,000 actually arrived. The Canadian government required each prospector to bring a year's supply of food, roughly 2,000 pounds, over the treacherous Chilkoot Pass. Dawson City exploded from a population of 500 to 30,000 in two years, complete with saloons, dance halls, and a newspaper. Most prospectors found nothing. The claims had been staked before they arrived.
Captain Joseph Kittinger stepped out of the open gondola of the Excelsior III balloon at 102,800 feet above New Mexico on August 16, 1960, and fell for four minutes and 36 seconds. He reached a maximum speed of 614 miles per hour, just short of the sound barrier, in temperatures approaching minus 94 degrees Fahrenheit. His right glove had depressurized during the ascent, causing his hand to swell to twice its normal size. He told no one, fearing the jump would be cancelled. The stabilization drogue chute deployed correctly, preventing the fatal flat spin that had nearly killed another pilot in a previous attempt. Kittinger's records stood for 52 years until Felix Baumgartner jumped from 128,100 feet in 2012.
Elvis Presley was found unresponsive on his bathroom floor at Graceland on August 16, 1977, and was pronounced dead at Baptist Memorial Hospital. He was 42. The official cause was cardiac arrhythmia, but his system contained fourteen different drugs at the time of death, including codeine, morphine, and several barbiturates. Presley had revolutionized popular music in 1954 by blending Black rhythm and blues with white country at Sun Studios in Memphis. His hip-swiveling performances on television provoked moral panic and ratings records simultaneously. He sold over 500 million records worldwide. Eighty thousand fans filed past his casket at Graceland. The mansion became a museum and is now the second most-visited private home in America after the White House.
Chang and Eng Bunker, conjoined twins from Siam (Thailand), arrived in Boston on August 16, 1829, having been brought to America by a British merchant named Robert Hunter. They were joined at the sternum by a band of cartilage roughly five inches long. Their manager exhibited them in freak shows across America and Europe for a decade, after which the twins bought their freedom, became naturalized American citizens, and settled in North Carolina. They purchased a plantation, married sisters Adelaide and Sarah Yates, and fathered a combined 21 children between them. They owned slaves. They died within three hours of each other on January 17, 1874, at age 62. Modern surgery could have separated them easily.
Rabbi Moses Isserles issued a ruling in the Bragadin-Giustiniani dispute, adjudicating one of the earliest copyright conflicts over a printed book. The decision applied rabbinic law to protect publishers' investments in typesetting and distribution, establishing a precedent for intellectual property protection decades before secular European courts addressed the issue.
Prime Minister Gough Whitlam poured a handful of red soil into the cupped hands of Gurindji elder Vincent Lingiari at Wattie Creek in the Northern Territory on August 16, 1975, symbolically returning land that the Gurindji people had fought to reclaim for nine years. The Gurindji had walked off Wave Hill cattle station in 1966 to demand equal wages, but the strike evolved into something far more significant: a claim for the return of their traditional lands, taken from them by the pastoral industry. The ceremony was photographed by Mervyn Bishop in an image that became one of Australia's most iconic photographs. The moment directly inspired the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976, the first legislation recognizing Indigenous land ownership.
Hamdanid forces from Mosul clashed with Baridi troops near Baghdad for four days, igniting a fierce struggle to seize the Abbasid capital. This brutal engagement ended in a decisive Hamdanid victory that temporarily shifted power dynamics within the caliphate and left Basra under their control.
In 1384, the Hongwu Emperor of Ming China received a case involving a couple who had torn paper money during an argument. Destroying imperial currency was technically a crime that required a hundred bamboo strokes. The emperor reviewed the case personally — which itself says something about either the reach of Ming bureaucracy or the slowness of the appeals process — and decided to pardon them, ruling that their intention was an argument, not counterfeiting. The empire had been running for sixteen years. The emperor was still personally reading property dispute cases.
The Battle of Guinegate in 1513 is remembered by the English as the 'Battle of the Spurs' — not because of cavalry charges, but because the French cavalry fled so fast their spurs were the most visible thing about them. Henry VIII and his Holy Roman Emperor ally Maximilian I had invaded France, and the French sent a relief force that arrived, assessed the situation, and galloped away. Henry captured several French noblemen mid-retreat. It wasn't much of a battle. It made excellent propaganda.
John II Zápolya formally renounces his claim to the Hungarian throne, carving out an independent Principality of Transylvania through the Treaty of Speyer. This political realignment secures a distinct power center for Hungarian nobles and Ottoman vassals, allowing the region to develop unique religious toleration laws that would later influence European concepts of pluralism.
Michiel de Ruyter's fleet engages George Ayscue's ships off Plymouth, producing a stalemate that proves Dutch naval resilience against England's superior numbers. This inconclusive clash solidifies the Netherlands' ability to challenge British maritime dominance early in the First Anglo-Dutch War, setting the tone for years of fierce competition across the seas.
American militia led by General John Stark routed British and Brunswick forces at the Battle of Bennington on August 16, 1777, killing or capturing nearly 1,000 enemy soldiers. Stark had refused to serve under the Continental Army's command structure, fighting instead as a New Hampshire militia leader — and the victory helped set up the decisive American triumph at Saratoga two months later.
On August 16, 1792, Robespierre presented the Paris Commune's petition to the Legislative Assembly demanding a revolutionary tribunal. He wanted a court that could try enemies of the revolution without the delays of ordinary justice. The Assembly was skeptical. Three weeks later, September massacres began — mobs broke into Paris prisons and killed over a thousand people they'd decided were enemies of the revolution without any tribunal at all. Robespierre got his court eventually. Then it tried him. He was guillotined the following year.
General William Hull commanded American forces at Fort Detroit in the War of 1812 and surrendered the fort without firing a shot on August 16, 1812. His army outnumbered the British. But Hull was convinced the British were about to unleash Indigenous warriors on his soldiers, and he panicked. He sent his surrender flag out before any attack began. He was later court-martialed and sentenced to death — then pardoned because of his Revolutionary War service. The garrison of Detroit had sat ready to fight. Their commander quit before they could.
Peterloo. August 16, 1819. About 60,000 people gathered at St. Peter's Field in Manchester to demand parliamentary reform — ordinary working people, many dressed in their best clothes to signal peaceable intent. The local magistrates sent cavalry into the crowd. Seventeen people died. Over 600 were injured. The government praised the cavalry. The press coined the name 'Peterloo' as a bitter reference to Waterloo, the great British victory four years earlier. The soldiers who'd beaten Napoleon were now charging textile workers asking for the right to vote.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Leo
Jul 23 -- Aug 22
Fire sign. Creative, passionate, and generous.
Birthstone
Peridot
Olive green
Symbolizes power, healing, and protection from nightmares.
Next Birthday
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days until August 16
Quote of the Day
“All men dream, but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds, wake in the day to find that it was vanity: but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act on their dreams with open eyes, to make them possible.”
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