Today In History
June 1 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Heidi Klum, Brian Cox, and Brigham Young.

Superman Debuts: The Birth of the Superhero
Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster's Superman debuted in Action Comics #1, published on June 1, 1938, by Detective Comics (later DC Comics). The two Cleveland teenagers had created the character five years earlier and been rejected by every major publisher. They sold the rights to Superman for $130 (roughly $2,800 today), a decision that haunted them for decades. Action Comics #1 sold for 10 cents; a near-mint copy sold at auction in 2014 for $3.2 million. Superman's combination of extraordinary power and humble alter ego as Clark Kent created the superhero archetype that spawned an entire industry. The character has generated billions in comics, films, television, and merchandise. Siegel and Shuster died in relative poverty before DC granted them annual pensions and credit lines in 1975.
Famous Birthdays
b. 1973
b. 1968
1801–1877
b. 1979
b. 1947
d. 2023
David Berkowitz
b. 1953
Norman Foster
b. 1935
Robert Cecil
1864–1958
Ron Dennis
b. 1947
Colleen McCullough
1937–2015
Edmund Ignatius Rice
1762–1844
Historical Events
James Clark Ross located the North Magnetic Pole on June 1, 1831, during an expedition with his uncle John Ross to find the Northwest Passage. Ross took compass readings at a point on the Boothia Peninsula in the Canadian Arctic where the dip needle pointed straight down, indicating the magnetic pole's location at approximately 70 degrees 5 minutes N, 96 degrees 46 minutes W. The magnetic pole is not fixed; it moves continuously due to changes in Earth's liquid iron outer core. Since Ross's discovery, it has drifted northward across the Canadian Arctic and is currently moving toward Siberia at roughly 37 miles per year. This accelerating drift has required more frequent updates to navigation systems and is studied as evidence of changes deep within Earth's interior.
Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster's Superman debuted in Action Comics #1, published on June 1, 1938, by Detective Comics (later DC Comics). The two Cleveland teenagers had created the character five years earlier and been rejected by every major publisher. They sold the rights to Superman for $130 (roughly $2,800 today), a decision that haunted them for decades. Action Comics #1 sold for 10 cents; a near-mint copy sold at auction in 2014 for $3.2 million. Superman's combination of extraordinary power and humble alter ego as Clark Kent created the superhero archetype that spawned an entire industry. The character has generated billions in comics, films, television, and merchandise. Siegel and Shuster died in relative poverty before DC granted them annual pensions and credit lines in 1975.
Dr. Henry Heimlich published his abdominal thrust technique for choking victims in the journal Emergency Medicine on June 1, 1974. The method works by compressing the diaphragm, forcing air up through the trachea to expel the obstruction. Before the Heimlich maneuver, the recommended response to choking was back blows, which were often ineffective and could push the object further into the airway. Heimlich's technique was quickly adopted by the American Heart Association and the American Red Cross. An estimated 50,000 lives have been saved by the technique in the United States alone. Heimlich himself performed it for the first time on another person in 2016, at age 96, saving a woman choking on a hamburger in his retirement home. He died later that year.
Lord Howe's British fleet intercepted a French convoy escort 400 miles into the Atlantic and captured or sank seven warships in the first major naval engagement of the French Radical Wars, a battle so celebrated that it was named for the date itself. The tactical victory elevated British morale, but the grain convoy France was protecting slipped through to Brest, averting the famine that had threatened radical Paris. Both sides claimed success: Britain won the battle, France saved its food supply.
Lou Gehrig pinch-hit for Pee Wee Wanninger on June 1, 1925, beginning a consecutive game streak that would reach 2,130 games over 14 seasons. Gehrig replaced first baseman Wally Pipp in the starting lineup the following day and never relinquished the position. He played through broken fingers, back spasms, and headaches that were likely early symptoms of the amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) that would kill him. His streak ended on May 2, 1939, when he removed himself from the lineup after batting .143 in eight games. Gehrig's farewell speech at Yankee Stadium on July 4, 1939, where he called himself "the luckiest man on the face of the earth," is considered one of the greatest speeches in American history. He died on June 2, 1941, at age 37. Cal Ripken Jr. broke his record in 1995.
Senator Margaret Chase Smith of Maine delivered her "Declaration of Conscience" on the Senate floor on June 1, 1950, becoming the first Republican senator to publicly challenge Joseph McCarthy's anti-communist witch hunt. Without naming McCarthy directly, she condemned "the Four Horsemen of Calumny: Fear, Ignorance, Bigotry, and Smear." Six other Republican senators co-signed the declaration. McCarthy retaliated by removing Smith from the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations and referring to the group as "Snow White and the Six Dwarfs." Smith won reelection by the largest margin in Maine history in 1954. She served four terms in the Senate and in 1964 became the first woman to have her name placed in nomination for president at a major party convention. She served until 1973.
Jalal Talabani and fellow Kurdish leaders founded the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan to challenge both Iraqi state repression and rival Kurdish factions. The PUK organized armed resistance in the mountains while building political infrastructure that would eventually help Talabani become Iraq's first Kurdish president after the 2003 invasion.
Genghis Khan didn't destroy Zhongdu — he waited. For two years, his forces strangled the city's supply lines until Emperor Xuanzong fled south, abandoning his own capital. The people left inside starved. When the Mongols finally entered in 1215, the city was already broken. Contemporary accounts describe bones piled so high outside the walls they looked like hills. And from that ruins, Kublai Khan would later build Khanbaliq — the city that became Beijing. The conqueror didn't erase the city. He handed it a future.
The Livonian Order had conquered the Baltic for over a century — crusading knights, fortified castles, total dominance. Then Turaida happened. In 1298, an alliance of Riga's merchants and Lithuanian warriors routed them on their own turf, killing the Order's Master, Bruno von Harpe, in the fighting. Bruno didn't survive to explain what went wrong. And the Order never fully recovered its grip on Riga. The city's traders had decided swords beat prayers. They were right.
Forty thousand nobles crammed into Buda for a party with a price tag nobody advertised. Sigismund of Hungary needed cash — badly — so he pledged thirteen Spiš towns to Poland as collateral for a loan of 37,000 Czech groschen. Władysław II Jagiełło got the feast, the tournament, the pageantry. And he got real estate. Those thirteen towns stayed under Polish control for 360 years. The grandest royal gathering in medieval Buda wasn't a celebration. It was a mortgage signing dressed in silk.
Charles V sent 30,000 soldiers and 400 ships to North Africa — not just to fight Ottomans, but to free roughly 20,000 Christian slaves held in Tunis. Hayreddin Barbarossa, the Ottoman admiral who'd taken the city just a year earlier, fled before the assault even peaked. The Spanish-led coalition stormed in, liberated the slaves, and installed a friendly ruler on the Tunisian throne. But here's the twist: the "liberated" city was sacked by Charles's own troops anyway. The rescuers became the looters.
Agustin Sumuroy didn't want an empire. He wanted to stay home. Spanish authorities were forcibly relocating Filipino laborers from Northern Samar to distant shipyards in Cavite — thousands of miles away, tearing men from their families, their rice fields, their lives. Sumuroy said no. His revolt spread fast, igniting uprisings across Visayas and Mindanao. But Spain crushed it within two years, and Sumuroy was killed in 1650. The real shock? This wasn't rebellion against colonial rule. It was a labor dispute that became a war.
Charles II signed away England's foreign policy in secret — and his own Parliament never knew. The Treaty of Dover, 1670, wasn't just a military alliance; Louis XIV was paying Charles £166,000 a year to keep England fighting the Dutch and, quietly, to convert England back to Catholicism. Charles pocketed the money. He never seriously pursued the conversion clause. But the war came anyway, draining English blood and treasure for Dutch trade routes Charles didn't control. He'd sold England's independence for cash. And spent it before anyone found out.
Seven trips into the surf. Fourteen men dragged to shore. Wolraad Woltemade, a retired soldier turned dairy farmer, had already done the impossible when his horse Vonk carried him back in for an eighth run. Desperate survivors grabbed on — too many, too hard. Vonk couldn't fight the current anymore. Both went under. The Dutch East India Company later named a medal after him. But here's the thing: he didn't have to go back after the seventh.
Benedict Arnold walked into that court-martial as a war hero. Saratoga. Valcour Island. A man who'd taken a musket ball through the leg charging British lines. But Philadelphia's civilian officials wanted him punished for using military wagons to haul personal cargo. Small stuff. Petty stuff. Washington privately thought so too. Arnold was acquitted of most charges but received a formal reprimand. That reprimand broke something in him. Within months, he was secretly writing to the British. The court-martial didn't create a traitor — it finished one.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Gemini
May 21 -- Jun 20
Air sign. Adaptable, curious, and communicative.
Birthstone
Pearl
White / Cream
Symbolizes purity, innocence, and wisdom.
Next Birthday
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days until June 1
Quote of the Day
“It is even better to act quickly and err than to hesitate until the time of action is past.”
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