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January 28 in History

Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Carlos Slim, Nicolas Sarkozy, and Jessica Ennis-Hill.

Challenger Explodes: Seven Astronauts Die in Space
1986Event

Challenger Explodes: Seven Astronauts Die in Space

The Space Shuttle Challenger broke apart 73 seconds after launch on January 28, 1986, killing all seven crew members including Christa McAuliffe, a New Hampshire teacher selected from over 11,000 applicants for the Teacher in Space program. Millions of schoolchildren were watching live. The cause was an O-ring seal in the right solid rocket booster that failed to seat properly in the unusually cold temperatures that morning. Engineers at Morton Thiokol had warned NASA the night before that the O-rings had never been tested below 53 degrees Fahrenheit; the launch temperature was 36. NASA managers overruled their recommendation to delay. The Rogers Commission, led by physicist Richard Feynman, demonstrated the failure by dunking an O-ring in ice water on live television. The disaster grounded the shuttle fleet for 32 months and revealed a culture where schedule pressure systematically overrode safety concerns.

Famous Birthdays

Jessica Ennis-Hill

Jessica Ennis-Hill

b. 1986

Nick Carter

Nick Carter

b. 1980

William Seward Burroughs I

William Seward Burroughs I

b. 1857

Charles Taylor

Charles Taylor

b. 1948

Chris Carter

Chris Carter

b. 1953

Gabby Gabreski

Gabby Gabreski

d. 2002

Joey Fatone

Joey Fatone

b. 1977

Karel Čáslavský

Karel Čáslavský

b. 1937

Rakim

Rakim

b. 1968

Rosalía Mera

Rosalía Mera

1944–2013

Historical Events

Henry VIII died at Whitehall Palace on January 28, 1547, after thirty-eight years on the English throne. His nine-year-old son Edward VI inherited a kingdom that Henry had wrenched from papal authority, dissolved the monasteries, and remade in his own image. Edward's regency council, dominated by Protestant reformers led by his uncle Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset, immediately accelerated the English Reformation far beyond what Henry had intended. Thomas Cranmer's Book of Common Prayer replaced Latin services with English. Religious images were stripped from churches. Catholic practices were outlawed. Edward himself was a devout Protestant who took genuine interest in theology despite his youth. His reign lasted only six years before tuberculosis killed him at fifteen, but those six years embedded Protestantism so deeply into English institutional life that even Mary I's subsequent Catholic restoration could not permanently reverse it.
1547

Henry VIII died at Whitehall Palace on January 28, 1547, after thirty-eight years on the English throne. His nine-year-old son Edward VI inherited a kingdom that Henry had wrenched from papal authority, dissolved the monasteries, and remade in his own image. Edward's regency council, dominated by Protestant reformers led by his uncle Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset, immediately accelerated the English Reformation far beyond what Henry had intended. Thomas Cranmer's Book of Common Prayer replaced Latin services with English. Religious images were stripped from churches. Catholic practices were outlawed. Edward himself was a devout Protestant who took genuine interest in theology despite his youth. His reign lasted only six years before tuberculosis killed him at fifteen, but those six years embedded Protestantism so deeply into English institutional life that even Mary I's subsequent Catholic restoration could not permanently reverse it.

1909

United States troops withdrew from Cuba in 1909, ending a military occupation that began during the Spanish-American War while retaining control of Guantanamo Bay. This departure allowed Cuban leaders to assume full sovereignty over their nation's internal affairs, though it cemented a permanent American strategic foothold on the island.

The Space Shuttle Challenger broke apart 73 seconds after launch on January 28, 1986, killing all seven crew members including Christa McAuliffe, a New Hampshire teacher selected from over 11,000 applicants for the Teacher in Space program. Millions of schoolchildren were watching live. The cause was an O-ring seal in the right solid rocket booster that failed to seat properly in the unusually cold temperatures that morning. Engineers at Morton Thiokol had warned NASA the night before that the O-rings had never been tested below 53 degrees Fahrenheit; the launch temperature was 36. NASA managers overruled their recommendation to delay. The Rogers Commission, led by physicist Richard Feynman, demonstrated the failure by dunking an O-ring in ice water on live television. The disaster grounded the shuttle fleet for 32 months and revealed a culture where schedule pressure systematically overrode safety concerns.
1986

The Space Shuttle Challenger broke apart 73 seconds after launch on January 28, 1986, killing all seven crew members including Christa McAuliffe, a New Hampshire teacher selected from over 11,000 applicants for the Teacher in Space program. Millions of schoolchildren were watching live. The cause was an O-ring seal in the right solid rocket booster that failed to seat properly in the unusually cold temperatures that morning. Engineers at Morton Thiokol had warned NASA the night before that the O-rings had never been tested below 53 degrees Fahrenheit; the launch temperature was 36. NASA managers overruled their recommendation to delay. The Rogers Commission, led by physicist Richard Feynman, demonstrated the failure by dunking an O-ring in ice water on live television. The disaster grounded the shuttle fleet for 32 months and revealed a culture where schedule pressure systematically overrode safety concerns.

Jane Austen published Pride and Prejudice on January 28, 1813, under the anonymous attribution 'By the Author of Sense and Sensibility.' The novel sold out its first printing of roughly 1,500 copies within months. Austen received 110 pounds for the copyright, a fraction of what the book earned its publisher. The story of Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy established the template for romantic fiction that has never gone out of print. Austen wrote with a surgeon's precision, using irony and free indirect discourse to expose the economic desperation beneath polite society's veneer. Marriage in her world was not about love but survival: a woman without a husband and without money faced social ruin. The novel's famous opening line, 'It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife,' inverts its own meaning. The truth is that women needed the fortune far more than men needed wives.
1813

Jane Austen published Pride and Prejudice on January 28, 1813, under the anonymous attribution 'By the Author of Sense and Sensibility.' The novel sold out its first printing of roughly 1,500 copies within months. Austen received 110 pounds for the copyright, a fraction of what the book earned its publisher. The story of Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy established the template for romantic fiction that has never gone out of print. Austen wrote with a surgeon's precision, using irony and free indirect discourse to expose the economic desperation beneath polite society's veneer. Marriage in her world was not about love but survival: a woman without a husband and without money faced social ruin. The novel's famous opening line, 'It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife,' inverts its own meaning. The truth is that women needed the fortune far more than men needed wives.

The Prussian siege of Paris lasted over four months, from September 1870 to January 1871, reducing the world's most glamorous capital to eating rats, cats, and the animals from the city zoo. An elephant from the Jardin des Plantes was slaughtered and sold at a premium. When the French government finally signed the armistice on January 28, 1871, the terms were devastating: France ceded Alsace and most of Lorraine to the newly proclaimed German Empire, paid an indemnity of five billion gold francs, and suffered the humiliation of Prussian troops marching through Paris. The territorial loss created a wound in French national pride that festered for forty-three years and became a direct cause of World War I. The defeat also destroyed Napoleon III's Second Empire and gave birth to the Third Republic, which would govern France until Hitler's invasion in 1940.
1871

The Prussian siege of Paris lasted over four months, from September 1870 to January 1871, reducing the world's most glamorous capital to eating rats, cats, and the animals from the city zoo. An elephant from the Jardin des Plantes was slaughtered and sold at a premium. When the French government finally signed the armistice on January 28, 1871, the terms were devastating: France ceded Alsace and most of Lorraine to the newly proclaimed German Empire, paid an indemnity of five billion gold francs, and suffered the humiliation of Prussian troops marching through Paris. The territorial loss created a wound in French national pride that festered for forty-three years and became a direct cause of World War I. The defeat also destroyed Napoleon III's Second Empire and gave birth to the Third Republic, which would govern France until Hitler's invasion in 1940.

98

He wasn't even in Rome when power landed in his lap. Trajan, a Spanish-born military commander, was literally at the edges of the empire when word came that he'd become emperor—a first for a non-Italian to hold the throne. And not just anywhere: Cologne, that frontier outpost where Roman legions guarded against Germanic tribes, became his unexpected coronation ground. Nerva, aging and without an heir, had strategically adopted Trajan, seeing in him the strong leadership the fractious empire desperately needed.

814

The most powerful man in Europe died wearing a white linen shirt and surrounded by chanting monks. Charlemagne - who'd unified most of Western Europe, created a renaissance of learning, and been crowned by the Pope - passed quietly at his palace in Aachen, leaving behind a fractured inheritance. His son Louis, nicknamed "the Pious" for his religious devotion, would inherit an empire that would soon splinter into warring kingdoms. But in that moment: an era ended. One emperor's breath, then silence.

1069

He rode into Durham like he owned the place — which, technically, he did. Robert de Comines, freshly minted Earl of Northumbria by William the Conqueror, couldn't have known his first official visit would be his last. Local rebels swarmed his forces, cutting down the newcomer before he could even establish control. And just like that, a single bloody afternoon would spark one of medieval England's most brutal retaliations: the Harrying of the North, where William would burn entire villages and salt farmlands to crush resistance. Brutal calculus of conquest.

1077

He walked barefoot through snow, wearing a hair shirt, begging forgiveness. The most powerful monarch in Europe reduced to a supplicant, waiting three days outside the papal castle while Pope Gregory VII deliberated. Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor, had been excommunicated for challenging papal authority—and now stood as a penitent, hoping to reclaim his throne and salvation. One of medieval Europe's most dramatic political humiliations unfolded in those frigid Italian mountains. And Gregory? He made Henry wait. Every. Single. Moment.

1393

Six dancers burned alive. The king barely escaped. What started as a lavish masquerade at the Hôtel Saint-Pol turned into a horrific spectacle when one performer's costume—made of highly flammable linen—caught a torch's spark. Charles VI himself was saved only because a cousin quickly wrapped him in a heavy cloak, smothering the flames. But the other dancers weren't so lucky. Burning and screaming, they ran through the royal hall, their blazing costumes turning them into human torches. The incident would haunt the king, who'd later be known as "Charles the Mad.

1568

Religious freedom wasn't exactly trending in 16th-century Europe. But here was John Sigismund Zápolya, radical enough to declare that preachers could teach "according to their understanding" without fear of punishment. Unheard of. His tiny kingdom became the first place in Europe where people could choose their own faith without being burned, imprisoned, or exiled. Protestants, Catholics, Unitarians - all could speak. One radical moment: believing humans might decide their own spiritual path.

1671

Henry Morgan didn't just raid Panama City. He annihilated it. The Welsh privateer and his 1,400 buccaneers swept through like a hurricane, burning everything in sight. Torch in hand, Morgan transformed the Spanish colonial jewel into a smoking crater. And this wasn't just any city—it was the first European settlement on the Pacific coast of the Americas. Survivors watched in horror as centuries of wealth and architecture collapsed into ash. The ruins would stand as a brutal evidence of Morgan's ruthlessness, a skeletal reminder of colonial warfare's savage heart.

1724

Peter the Great wanted Russia's scientists to stop looking west and start creating world-class research right at home. So he imported seventeen top European scholars, giving them salaries, housing, and a mandate to transform Russian intellectual life. And transform they did: within decades, the Academy would map Siberia, catalog its bizarre fauna, and produce new astronomical charts that stunned the scientific world. Not bad for an institution born from one monarch's obsessive desire to drag his country into modernity.

1820

Twelve degrees below zero. Frozen waves. Two Russian ships cutting through impossible white, searching for something no European had ever seen. Bellingshausen and Lazarev didn't just stumble onto Antarctica—they methodically mapped its first coastline, proving it was more than a rumor. And when they finally spotted the continent's stark, ice-covered shores, they'd completed a journey that would reshape global exploration. The Russian Empire had just claimed the last, most brutal frontier on Earth.

1887

The ranchers couldn't believe their eyes. Snowflakes bigger than dinner plates were floating down from the Montana sky, each crystalline monster measuring 15 inches across - wider than most cowboy hats. And not just big: these were architectural marvels of frozen water, thick as a hardcover book and dense enough to blanket the Fort Keogh landscape in an instant. Witnesses swore they'd never seen anything like it: snowflakes so massive they seemed more like falling sheets of white than delicate winter fragments.

Fun Facts

Zodiac Sign

Aquarius

Jan 20 -- Feb 18

Air sign. Independent, original, and humanitarian.

Birthstone

Garnet

Deep red

Symbolizes protection, strength, and safe travels.

Next Birthday

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Quote of the Day

“There is nothing on this earth more to be prized than true friendship.”

Thomas Aquinas

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