Today In History
July 9 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Courtney Love, Donald Rumsfeld, and Isaac Brock.

Wimbledon Opens: Birth of Championship Tennis
Spencer Gore won the first Wimbledon championship on July 9, 1877, defeating 21 other competitors in a tournament organized by the All England Croquet and Lawn Tennis Club to raise money for a broken roller. The entry fee was one guinea and the prize was a silver cup worth 25 guineas. Gore, a racquets player who found lawn tennis rather dull, won by rushing the net before anyone else thought of the strategy. He never defended his title, calling the sport "monotonous." The tournament he dismissed has since become the most prestigious event in tennis, and the grass courts he played on still host the championship 150 years later.
Famous Birthdays
b. 1964
Donald Rumsfeld
1932–2021
Isaac Brock
1975–1812
Jack White
b. 1975
Chris Cooper
b. 1951
Dean Koontz
b. 1945
Edward Heath
d. 2005
Elias Howe
1819–1867
Govan Mbeki
1910–2001
Henry Campbell-Bannerman
d. 1908
Michael Graves
d. 2015
Mitch Mitchell
1947–2008
Historical Events
Spencer Gore won the first Wimbledon championship on July 9, 1877, defeating 21 other competitors in a tournament organized by the All England Croquet and Lawn Tennis Club to raise money for a broken roller. The entry fee was one guinea and the prize was a silver cup worth 25 guineas. Gore, a racquets player who found lawn tennis rather dull, won by rushing the net before anyone else thought of the strategy. He never defended his title, calling the sport "monotonous." The tournament he dismissed has since become the most prestigious event in tennis, and the grass courts he played on still host the championship 150 years later.
William Jennings Bryan was 36 years old and a two-term congressman from Nebraska when he delivered the "Cross of Gold" speech at the 1896 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. The speech attacked the gold standard as a policy that enriched Eastern bankers while crushing Western and Southern farmers under deflation and debt. His closing line declared: "You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold." The audience erupted. Delegates carried him on their shoulders. He won the presidential nomination the next day. He lost the general election to William McKinley, but the speech became the most famous piece of American political oratory of the nineteenth century.
Queen Victoria granted royal assent to the Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act on July 9, 1900, merging six separate British colonies into a single federal nation that formally came into existence on January 1, 1901. The constitution was the product of a decade of conventions and referendums, making Australia one of the few nations literally voted into existence by its own citizens. The new federation kept the British monarch as head of state while creating its own parliament, courts, and military. Indigenous Australians were excluded from the census and most civil rights until the 1967 referendum, a deliberate omission written into the founding document.
New Yorkers elected George Clinton as their first governor, establishing a stable executive branch that immediately began organizing the state's defense against British occupation. This swift move solidified local governance during the Radical War, ensuring the new republic could function even while under active military threat.
Argentina declared independence from Spain on July 9, 1816, at the Congress of Tucuman, where delegates from across the former Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata gathered to formally sever colonial ties. The declaration came six years after the May Revolution of 1810 had established a provisional government, but internal factions had delayed formal independence. Jose de San Martin, leading military campaigns in the Andes, pressured the congress to act quickly so he could liberate Chile and Peru under the banner of an officially sovereign nation rather than a rebel province. The new republic immediately faced decades of civil war between federalists and unitarians over how to govern.
President Zachary Taylor attended Fourth of July celebrations at the Washington Monument on a blisteringly hot day in 1850, then reportedly consumed large quantities of raw cherries and iced milk. He fell ill within hours and died five days later on July 9, likely from acute gastroenteritis, though conspiracy theories about arsenic poisoning persisted until his body was exhumed in 1991 and tested negative. Taylor had been the last obstacle to the Compromise of 1850, opposing the package of bills because it made too many concessions to slaveholders. His successor, Millard Fillmore, signed every one of them, temporarily averting civil war by admitting California as a free state while strengthening the Fugitive Slave Act.
Shanxi Governor Yuxian ordered the execution of 45 foreign Christian missionaries and Chinese converts, including women and children, during the Boxer Rebellion's bloodiest provincial purge. The massacre galvanized Western powers into assembling the Eight-Nation Alliance that would march on Beijing within weeks. The atrocity permanently damaged China's diplomatic standing and contributed to the punitive Boxer Protocol that imposed crippling indemnities on the Qing dynasty.
Senegal's National Assembly legalized a restricted multi-party system, cracking open one of West Africa's most stable one-party states. The reform initially limited competition to just three ideologically defined parties, but it initiated a gradual democratization process. Senegal's measured political opening became a model for other African nations navigating the transition from single-party rule.
The Heruli guardsmen attacked at night, elite troops betting everything on darkness and surprise. Odoacer had ruled Italy for fifteen years—longer than most emperors—but Theoderic's Ostrogoths had pushed him to this: a desperate strike outside Ravenna's walls at Ad Pinetam. Both armies bled through the pines. Thousands fell before dawn. But Odoacer retreated behind Ravenna's gates, and those gates wouldn't open again for two more years. When they finally did, Theoderic invited him to a reconciliation banquet and personally cut him down. Sometimes the battle you survive kills you anyway.
General Kim Yu-sin's Silla forces crush the Baekje army at Hwangsanbeol, shattering their military power and compelling a surrender that ends three centuries of independent rule. This decisive victory unifies the Korean peninsula under Silla, redefining the region's political landscape for generations to come.
Kim Yu-shin commanded 50,000 Silla troops against Baekje's army at Hwangsanbeol, near modern Nonsan. The battle lasted just one day. Baekje lost 10,000 soldiers. Their kingdom, which had stood for 678 years, collapsed within weeks—Silla and Tang China divided the peninsula. General Gyebaek led Baekje's defense after reportedly killing his own family to avoid their capture. He died fighting. Korea's Three Kingdoms became two, then one. Sometimes a single afternoon erases centuries.
The ocean pulled back nearly a mile from Sendai's coast on May 26, 869. Then it returned as a wall. The Jōgan earthquake—magnitude 8.6—killed an estimated thousand people when tsunami waves traveled two and a half miles inland across the Sendai Plain. Buddhist monks recorded buildings swept away, farmland salted for years, survivors clinging to temple roofs. Eleven centuries later, seismologists studying ancient sand deposits found evidence of the Jōgan tsunami. They warned another could hit the same coast. On March 11, 2011, it did—almost exactly where the monks said it would.
A massive 8.4 to 9.0 magnitude quake shattered northern Honshu, sending a tsunami that surged several kilometers inland and scoured the Sanriku coast. This catastrophic event established the region as one of the world's most seismically active zones, compelling centuries of coastal settlement patterns to adapt to recurring, devastating inundations.
Fatimid general Jawhar led the Friday prayer in Fustat under Caliph al-Mu'izz li-Din Allah, completing the Islamic conquest of Egypt. This act established Fatimid authority and triggered the immediate founding of Cairo as their new capital, shifting the region's political center from Fustat to a purpose-built metropolis that would dominate the Mediterranean for centuries.
Arnold von Winkelried supposedly threw himself onto Austrian pikes, creating a gap in their line. That's the legend. What's certain: 600 Austrian knights died at Sempach on July 9th, 1386, including Duke Leopold III himself. The Swiss peasant militias, outnumbered and fighting uphill, shattered the Habsburgs' armored cavalry using halberds—long axes that could hook riders from horses. Austria's grip on the Alpine passes ended that afternoon. The Confederacy gained room to grow from three cantons to thirteen. Switzerland became possible because farmers learned they could kill noblemen wearing full plate armor.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Cancer
Jun 21 -- Jul 22
Water sign. Loyal, emotional, and nurturing.
Birthstone
Ruby
Red
Symbolizes passion, vitality, and prosperity.
Next Birthday
--
days until July 9
Quote of the Day
“If you want to succeed you should strike out on new paths, rather than travel the worn paths of accepted success.”
Share Your Birthday
Create a beautiful birthday card with events and famous birthdays for July 9.
Create Birthday CardExplore Nearby Dates
Popular Dates
Explore more about July 9 in history. See the full date page for all events, browse July, or look up another birthday. Play history games or talk to historical figures.