Today In History
May 11 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Richard Feynman, Edsger W. Dijkstra, and Eric Burdon.

Mossad Captures Eichmann: Nazi Hunt Ends in Buenos Aires
Israeli Mossad agents identified Adolf Eichmann living under the alias Ricardo Klement in a working-class neighborhood of Buenos Aires on May 11, 1960. A four-man team grabbed him as he walked home from a bus stop, bundled him into a car, and held him in a safe house for nine days before smuggling him aboard an El Al flight disguised as a sedated crew member. Eichmann had been the SS officer responsible for organizing the transportation of millions of Jews to extermination camps. His trial in Jerusalem, which lasted from April to December 1961, was the first to be televised internationally. Hannah Arendt covered it for The New Yorker, coining the phrase "the banality of evil." Eichmann was hanged on June 1, 1962, the only execution Israel has ever carried out.
Famous Birthdays
1918–1988
1930–2002
Eric Burdon
b. 1941
Ziad Jarrah
1975–2001
Antony Hewish
b. 1924
Butch Trucks
1947–2017
Camilo José Cela
1916–2002
Chang and Eng Bunker
1811–1874
Christoph Schneider
b. 1966
Robert Jarvik
b. 1946
Historical Events
John Bellingham, a bankrupt Liverpool businessman with a personal grievance against the British government, shot Prime Minister Spencer Perceval through the heart in the lobby of the House of Commons on May 11, 1812. Bellingham had spent five years in a Russian prison and blamed the British ambassador for failing to secure his release. He calmly sat down after the shooting and made no attempt to escape. Perceval died within minutes. Bellingham was tried, convicted, and hanged within a week, despite his lawyers' argument that he was insane. He is the only person to have assassinated a British prime minister. Surprisingly, news of the assassination was celebrated by crowds in several English cities, reflecting widespread anger at the economic hardship caused by the Napoleonic Wars and the Orders in Council.
Workers at the Pullman Palace Car Company walked off the job on May 11, 1894, after George Pullman cut wages by 25% while maintaining rents in his company town at pre-cut levels. When the American Railway Union, led by Eugene Debs, launched a sympathy boycott of all trains carrying Pullman cars, rail traffic across 27 states ground to a halt. President Grover Cleveland deployed 12,000 federal troops on the grounds that the strike obstructed mail delivery. The intervention resulted in 30 deaths and the arrest of Debs, who served six months in prison, where he read Karl Marx and became a socialist. The episode led directly to the establishment of Labor Day as a federal holiday in 1894, as a concession to organized labor.
A massive dust storm on May 11, 1934, carried an estimated 350 million tons of topsoil from the drought-stricken Great Plains to the East Coast, depositing dust on the decks of ships 300 miles out in the Atlantic Ocean. The storm darkened skies from Chicago to Washington D.C. and dumped fine prairie soil on the streets of New York and Atlanta. The Dust Bowl, which lasted from 1930 to 1940, was caused by a combination of severe drought and decades of aggressive farming that destroyed the native grasslands holding the soil in place. An estimated 2.5 million people fled the affected region, many heading to California. The disaster prompted the creation of the Soil Conservation Service and the planting of a 100-mile-wide shelter belt of trees across the Great Plains.
Israeli Mossad agents identified Adolf Eichmann living under the alias Ricardo Klement in a working-class neighborhood of Buenos Aires on May 11, 1960. A four-man team grabbed him as he walked home from a bus stop, bundled him into a car, and held him in a safe house for nine days before smuggling him aboard an El Al flight disguised as a sedated crew member. Eichmann had been the SS officer responsible for organizing the transportation of millions of Jews to extermination camps. His trial in Jerusalem, which lasted from April to December 1961, was the first to be televised internationally. Hannah Arendt covered it for The New Yorker, coining the phrase "the banality of evil." Eichmann was hanged on June 1, 1962, the only execution Israel has ever carried out.
Chechen fighters ambushed Russian federal forces in Ingushetia on May 11, 2000, during the Second Chechen War, demonstrating the insurgency's ability to strike outside Chechnya's borders. The attack exposed the fundamental weakness of Russia's conventional military approach to what had become an asymmetric conflict. Moscow had launched the Second Chechen War in September 1999 after apartment bombings in Russian cities were attributed to Chechen militants. Russian forces captured Grozny in February 2000, but guerrilla resistance persisted for years. The conflict spread terrorism across the North Caucasus and into Russian cities, including the 2002 Moscow theater siege, the 2004 Beslan school massacre, and numerous suicide bombings. The insurgency gradually subsided after 2009 under the authoritarian rule of Ramzan Kadyrov.
Constantine picked a fishing town where Europe meets Asia and spent the treasury building churches. Forty thousand workers had six years to turn Byzantium into something that could rival Rome—forums, hippodromes, walls thick enough to stop armies for a millennium. He called it Nova Roma at the dedication. Nobody cared. Within a generation, everyone just said Constantinople, the city of Constantine. The name he chose disappeared. The name he didn't choose lasted 1,600 years. Sometimes the crowd writes history better than emperors.
Edgar waited fourteen years to have a crown placed on his head. He'd been king since 959, ruling England just fine without the ceremony, but in 973 he decided Bath Abbey would host something new: England's first proper coronation. His wife Ælfthryth got crowned too, making her the first queen consort to receive the honor in her own right. The service they designed that day became the template—every English monarch since has followed Edgar's script. Sometimes the most lasting revolutions happen when someone finally writes down what everyone forgot to formalize.
Louis IX handed over Roussillon, Cerdagne, and all French claims to Barcelona's lands. James I gave back Provence and every Catalan foothold north of the Pyrenees. Both kings were renouncing what their grandfathers had fought wars over, what their fathers had died defending. The treaty took three years to negotiate because neither side could believe the other would actually sign. But they did. In one afternoon at Corbeil, the mountains became a real border instead of just geography. Catalonia stopped being a bridge between kingdoms and became something else entirely: stuck choosing which side it belonged to.
He had a peg leg and a temper to match. Peter Stuyvesant limped off the ship in 1647 to replace Willem Kieft, who'd managed to start a war with every Native tribe within fifty miles of New Amsterdam. Stuyvesant lasted seventeen years as Director-General, longer than any other Dutch leader in the colony. Built a wall on Wall Street. Banned dancing. Tried to keep out Jews and Quakers. And when the British sailed into the harbor in 1664, his own colonists refused to fight for him. They preferred English rule to his.
Marshal de Saxe's French forces defeated an Anglo-Dutch-Hanoverian coalition at Fontenoy in a brutal five-hour engagement that cost 14,000 casualties on each side. The victory secured France's hold on the Austrian Netherlands and established Saxe as the era's foremost commander, while the defeated allies struggled to coordinate multinational armies for the remainder of the war.
They'd been walking in circles for decades. The sandstone cliffs west of Sydney rose like fortress walls, trapping colonists to a coastal strip barely sixty miles wide. Blaxland brought sheep-farming ambition, Wentworth brought youth at twenty-three, Lawson brought the critical insight: follow the ridgelines, not the valleys. For nineteen days in May 1813, they walked along the tops while every previous expedition had descended into dead ends. Beyond those blue-hazed ranges lay grazing land that would become wool empires, inland cities, a continental nation. All because someone finally looked up instead of down.
The Blue Mountains had stopped Sydney cold for twenty-five years. Not metaphorically—literally stopped expansion. Three ridges deep, each valley dropping into impenetrable forest that forced climbers back down. Then Blaxland, Lawson, and Wentworth did something nobody had tried: they followed the ridgelines instead of descending into valleys. Twenty-one days. Four convict servants. Five dogs. They found grasslands. Endless inland plains beyond the ranges. Within three years, settlers were driving sheep across their route. By 1830, tens of thousands had poured through. Sometimes the solution isn't fighting your way through—it's walking on top.
They blew her up themselves. The CSS Virginia—the same warship that had terrorized the Union navy just two months earlier, the beast that made wooden warships obsolete overnight—went to the bottom by her own crew's hand on May 11, 1862. Confederate sailors set charges and watched their ironclad marvel sink into the James River mud rather than let advancing Union forces capture her. She drew too much water to escape upriver. Ten weeks of dominance, ended with a fuse and a retreat. Sometimes your greatest weapon becomes your greatest liability.
The future Tsar of Russia nearly died in a Japanese rickshaw town, his skull opened by a policeman's sword. Tsuda Sanzō got two strikes in before Prince George of Greece—there as his travel companion—clubbed the attacker with a bamboo cane. Nicholas survived with a five-inch scar he'd touch for the rest of his life. Japan's emperor personally apologized. The government panicked, terrified Russia would retaliate. But Nicholas bore no grudge against Japan. Thirty-four years later, different enemies would finish what one policeman started in Ōtsu.
American troops stormed the shores of Attu Island in the Aleutians to dislodge a Japanese garrison that had occupied American territory for nearly a year, fighting through Arctic conditions, dense fog, and mountainous terrain. The nineteen-day battle ended when surviving Japanese soldiers launched a suicidal banzai charge, one of the war's largest, leaving only twenty-eight Japanese prisoners from a garrison of 2,900. The Battle of Attu remains the only ground battle fought on American soil during World War II.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Taurus
Apr 20 -- May 20
Earth sign. Patient, reliable, and devoted.
Birthstone
Emerald
Green
Symbolizes rebirth, fertility, and good fortune.
Next Birthday
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days until May 11
Quote of the Day
“A pretty girl is like a melody That haunts you day and night.”
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