Today In History
November 10 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Mikhail Kalashnikov, Diplo, and Richard Burton.

Marines Born: Samuel Nicholas Raises First Flag
The Continental Congress passed a resolution on November 10, 1775, authorizing two battalions of Marines 'good seamen, or so acquainted with maritime affairs as to be able to serve to advantage by sea.' Captain Samuel Nicholas, considered the first Marine commandant, recruited the initial force at Tun Tavern in Philadelphia, a bar that has since become the mythic birthplace of the Corps. The original Marines served as shipboard soldiers and raided British installations in the Bahamas. After the Revolution, the Marines were disbanded and reconstituted in 1798. The 'Marines' Hymn' references 'the shores of Tripoli,' where a Marine detachment fought Barbary pirates in 1805. Today the United States Marine Corps numbers roughly 180,000 active-duty personnel and is the most rapidly deployable conventional force in the American military.
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Historical Events
The Continental Congress passed a resolution on November 10, 1775, authorizing two battalions of Marines 'good seamen, or so acquainted with maritime affairs as to be able to serve to advantage by sea.' Captain Samuel Nicholas, considered the first Marine commandant, recruited the initial force at Tun Tavern in Philadelphia, a bar that has since become the mythic birthplace of the Corps. The original Marines served as shipboard soldiers and raided British installations in the Bahamas. After the Revolution, the Marines were disbanded and reconstituted in 1798. The 'Marines' Hymn' references 'the shores of Tripoli,' where a Marine detachment fought Barbary pirates in 1805. Today the United States Marine Corps numbers roughly 180,000 active-duty personnel and is the most rapidly deployable conventional force in the American military.
Henry Morton Stanley, a journalist for the New York Herald, found the missionary and explorer David Livingstone in the town of Ujiji on the shores of Lake Tanganyika on November 10, 1871. The greeting 'Dr. Livingstone, I presume?' became one of history's most quoted lines, though Stanley later tore the relevant page from his journal. Livingstone had been missing for six years, having plunged into Central Africa searching for the source of the Nile. He was ill, nearly out of supplies, and unable to leave. Stanley brought medicine, food, and letters from home. Livingstone refused to return to England, continuing his explorations until his death in 1873. Stanley's expedition was financed as a newspaper circulation stunt, but it opened Central Africa to European attention that quickly turned to colonial exploitation.
AT&T and Bell Labs rolled out the North American Numbering Plan on November 10, 1951, introducing area codes that enabled customers to dial long-distance calls directly without going through an operator. The system assigned three-digit area codes to every region in the United States and Canada. The most populous areas received codes that were fastest to dial on rotary phones: New York City got 212 (shortest pull distances), Los Angeles got 213. Before the plan, placing a long-distance call required telling an operator the city, exchange name, and number, then waiting while she connected the circuits manually. A coast-to-coast call could take 20 minutes to set up. Direct dialing made it instantaneous. The plan also standardized the seven-digit local number format and the country code system still used today.
Sesame Street premiered on November 10, 1969, on 170 public television stations with a radical premise: use the addictive techniques of commercial television to teach preschoolers. Joan Ganz Cooney and Lloyd Morrisett developed the show after a 1966 study found that young children from low-income families started school already behind their peers. The Children's Television Workshop spent two years testing segments in labs, measuring whether children actually learned from what they watched. Jim Henson's Muppets, including Big Bird, Oscar the Grouch, and the Cookie Monster, were integrated with live actors and animated segments. The show was set on an urban street that reflected the diverse communities its audience lived in. Studies consistently showed Sesame Street viewers entered kindergarten better prepared. The show has aired in over 150 countries and 70 languages.
Atatürk had one year of formal military training, then fought in Gallipoli, reorganized a collapsing army, and carved a republic out of the ruins of the Ottoman Empire. He moved the capital from Istanbul to Ankara, abolished the sultanate, the caliphate, and the fez. He mandated Latin script for Turkish, gave women the vote before France did, and died at 57 from cirrhosis. The clocks in Dolmabahçe Palace were stopped at 9:05 a.m. — the moment he died. Some still haven't been restarted.
Seventy-two countries voted yes. That number stunned diplomats worldwide. The UN General Assembly's Resolution 3379 didn't just criticize Israeli policy — it targeted the foundational ideology of a nation's existence. Ambassador Chaim Herzog refused to accept it quietly. He tore his copy of the resolution apart at the podium. The vote fractured Cold War alliances in new ways, with the Soviet bloc and Arab states aligned against Western democracies. But sixteen years later, in 1991, the UN quietly repealed it — the only resolution in UN history ever rescinded.
The United Nations General Assembly passed Resolution 3379, declaring Zionism a form of racism, in a deeply divisive vote that split the international community along Cold War lines. The resolution was repealed sixteen years later in 1991, but its passage poisoned Arab-Israeli diplomacy for a generation and remains one of the most contested acts in UN history.
Leonid Brezhnev left behind an eighteen-year reign that achieved nuclear parity with the United States but sowed the economic stagnation that would ultimately unravel the Soviet Union. His Brezhnev Doctrine, which justified military intervention to preserve communist regimes, crushed reform movements from Prague to Kabul.
Emperor Leo II died after just ten months on the throne, compelling his father Zeno to reclaim sole rule over the Byzantine Empire. This sudden succession stabilized an empire teetering on civil war and allowed Zeno to consolidate power against rival factions threatening Constantinople's fragile peace.
Li Bian seizes power from Emperor Yang Pu, dissolving the Wu State to establish Southern Tang under his new name Xu Zhigao. This usurpation ends a fragile dynasty and launches a regime that will dominate southern China for decades, shifting the balance of power during the chaotic Five Dynasties period.
Catholics besieging Catholics. Pope Innocent III had written directly, threatening to cut every soldier off from the Church — and they did it anyway. The Venetians, led by the blind 90-year-old Doge Enrico Dandolo, needed payment for their fleet. Zara was the price. Five days. The city fell. Innocent fumed, excommunicated them, then quietly lifted the ban because he still needed the army. And that army would go on to sack Constantinople instead of Jerusalem — meaning a pope's ignored letter helped fracture Christianity itself.
A man who'd been hunted, nearly killed, and forced to hide in a jungle village now sat on the throne of what would become Southeast Asia's most powerful empire. Raden Wijaya didn't just survive — he outmaneuvered Mongol invaders, used their own army against his enemies, then turned on them too. Three moves. One crown. His throne name, Kertarajasa Jayawardhana, meant "he who increases victory." And Majapahit eventually stretched across modern Indonesia, Malaysia, and beyond. The empire began as a desperate man's last gamble.
Vladislaus was nineteen years old. He'd broken a peace treaty to launch this crusade, gambling everything on a decisive blow against the Ottomans near the Black Sea coast. Sultan Murad II crushed him completely. The king's head ended up on a pike, displayed in Bursa. And that broken treaty mattered — it convinced many Christian rulers that crusading promises couldn't be trusted. The Ottomans held southeastern Europe for centuries afterward. One teenager's reckless charge didn't just lose a battle. It ended the last real chance to push the Turks back.
Ninety-two people executed in three days. Christian II had promised amnesty — then broke it spectacularly, massacring Swedish nobles, clergy, and burghers across Stockholm's cobblestones in November 1520. He thought crushing the opposition would secure his Swedish crown forever. But one nobleman's son escaped the slaughter. Gustav Vasa rallied Sweden, drove the Danes out, and founded a dynasty that lasted centuries. Christian's calculated brutality didn't end Swedish resistance. It created it. The Stockholm Bloodbath didn't destroy Sweden's future king — it made him.
Six hundred people. Three days. Lord Grey de Wilton ordered the slaughter after the garrison surrendered — no trial, no mercy, no hesitation. Spanish and Italian soldiers had landed at Dún an Óir to support an Irish rebellion backed by the Pope himself. England couldn't allow that foothold to survive. Edmund Spenser, the poet who'd later write *The Faerie Queene*, was there as Grey's secretary. He watched it happen and defended it afterward. The man who wrote about chivalry witnessed one of its ugliest betrayals.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Scorpio
Oct 23 -- Nov 21
Water sign. Resourceful, powerful, and passionate.
Birthstone
Topaz
Golden / Blue
Symbolizes friendship, generosity, and joy.
Next Birthday
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days until November 10
Quote of the Day
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