Today In History
October 2 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Christian de Duve, Donna Karan, and Johnnie Cochran.

Marshall Takes Seat: First Black Supreme Court Justice
Thurgood Marshall had already argued 32 cases before the Supreme Court and won 29, including Brown v. Board of Education, before Lyndon Johnson nominated him to sit on the bench himself. His confirmation hearings lasted longer than any previous Supreme Court nominee's, with Southern senators grilling him for days. He was confirmed 69-11 on August 30, 1967, becoming the first Black justice in the Court's 178-year history. Over his 24-year tenure, Marshall became the Court's most consistent voice for individual rights, dissenting powerfully against the death penalty and for affirmative action. His legal career spanned the entire arc from Jim Crow to the modern civil rights framework he helped build.
Famous Birthdays
Christian de Duve
1917–2013
Donna Karan
b. 1948
Johnnie Cochran
1937–2005
Lal Bahadur Shastri
1904–1966
Liaqat Ali Khan
b. 1896
Mike Rutherford
b. 1950
Alexander R. Todd
1907–1997
Charles Borromeo
1538–1584
Cordell Hull
1871–1955
John Gurdon
b. 1933
Lene Nystrøm
b. 1973
Philip Oakey
b. 1955
Historical Events
Thurgood Marshall had already argued 32 cases before the Supreme Court and won 29, including Brown v. Board of Education, before Lyndon Johnson nominated him to sit on the bench himself. His confirmation hearings lasted longer than any previous Supreme Court nominee's, with Southern senators grilling him for days. He was confirmed 69-11 on August 30, 1967, becoming the first Black justice in the Court's 178-year history. Over his 24-year tenure, Marshall became the Court's most consistent voice for individual rights, dissenting powerfully against the death penalty and for affirmative action. His legal career spanned the entire arc from Jim Crow to the modern civil rights framework he helped build.
Saladin took Jerusalem on October 2, 1187, ending 88 years of Crusader control without the mass slaughter that had marked the Christian conquest in 1099. Where the Crusaders had waded through blood, Saladin offered terms: residents could buy their freedom for ten dinars per man, five per woman, one per child. Those who couldn't pay were enslaved, but Saladin's brother al-Adil freed a thousand of his own share. The contrast with the First Crusade's butchery was deliberate and effective propaganda. Christian Europe erupted. Pope Urban III reportedly died of shock. The Third Crusade launched within months, bringing Richard the Lionheart to the Levant, but Jerusalem remained in Muslim hands for the next seven centuries.
Charles Schulz drew every single Peanuts strip himself for 49 years and 11 months, producing 17,897 strips without ever using an assistant. The comic debuted in seven newspapers on October 2, 1950, featuring a cast that included Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Patty, and Shermy. Schulz infused childhood with genuine philosophical weight: Charlie Brown's perpetual failures, Lucy's psychiatric booth charging five cents, Linus's security blanket, and Snoopy's fantasy life as a World War I flying ace all resonated because they treated kids' anxieties as real. At its peak, Peanuts ran in 2,600 newspapers across 75 countries. A Charlie Brown Christmas and the Great Pumpkin specials became annual rituals. Schulz died the night before his final strip ran.
An attacker struck a Manchester synagogue during Yom Kippur services, killing two worshippers and injuring at least four others in one of Britain's deadliest antisemitic assaults. The attack on Judaism's holiest day forced a national reckoning with rising hate crimes against religious minorities.
Angry crowds stormed the Goose Fair in Nottingham, smashing stalls and demanding lower prices for their daily bread and cheese. This violent uprising forced local authorities to intervene immediately, establishing a precedent where public order could be restored through direct negotiation with rioters rather than military force.
Otto I shatters the rebel coalition led by Eberhard of Franconia at the Battle of Andernach, crushing their bid to overthrow his authority. This decisive victory forces the Frankish dukes into submission and secures Otto's grip on the throne for decades, allowing him to consolidate the fragmented German territories into a unified Holy Roman Empire.
Richard Neville, the Earl of Warwick, had made Edward IV king in 1461. Nine years later, he turned on him. Warwick invaded with French backing and 30,000 men. Edward fled to Burgundy. Henry VI was pulled from the Tower and restored to the throne. Warwick had switched kings twice. They called him the Kingmaker. He'd die in battle six months later.
The Battle of Rancagua lasted two days. Bernardo O'Higgins and 1,500 patriots were surrounded by 5,000 Spanish royalists. They broke through and escaped at dawn. Spain regained control of Chile. O'Higgins fled to Argentina. Three years later, he'd return with San Martín's army, defeat the Spanish, and become Chile's first head of state. Rancagua was a loss that led to victory.
Mexican colonel Domingo de Ugartechea sent 100 dragoons to Gonzales to retrieve a small cannon the town had been loaned for defense against Comanche raids. The 18 Texian settlers who faced them on October 2, 1835, flew a homemade flag depicting the cannon with the words 'Come and Take It' stitched beneath. They fired the cannon, loaded with scrap iron, at the Mexican cavalry. The skirmish lasted minutes, killed one Mexican soldier, and accomplished nothing militarily. But the defiance spread like wildfire through the Anglo settlements. Within six weeks, Texian forces had captured San Antonio. Within six months, Sam Houston defeated Santa Anna at San Jacinto. Texas was an independent republic because a town refused to return a borrowed gun.
Union forces attacked the Confederate salt works at Saltville, Virginia, seeking to destroy a resource critical to preserving food for Southern armies. Confederate defenders repelled the assault and subsequently massacred wounded Black Union soldiers, an atrocity that intensified Northern resolve and deepened the war's racial dimensions.
Nicholas Creede found silver in a gulch near the headwaters of the Rio Grande. He sent a telegram: "Holy Moses, I've struck it rich!" He named the claim Holy Moses. Within a year, 10,000 people lived in a town that didn't exist before. They called it Creede. The boom lasted five years. The town burned down twice. Creede died broke in Los Angeles in 1897.
Woodrow Wilson suffered a catastrophic stroke at the White House after collapsing during a speech tour, leaving him physically and mentally incapacitated for the rest of his term. This silence allowed First Lady Edith Wilson to secretly control access to the president and manage executive decisions without congressional knowledge or public debate.
Mikhail Frunze ordered the Red Army to immediately halt fighting against the Radical Insurgent Army of Ukraine, ending a brutal three-way civil war stalemate. This ceasefire allowed Bolshevik forces to redirect their full strength toward defeating the White armies in southern Russia, securing Soviet control over the region by year's end.
Josemaría Escrivá founded Opus Dei in Madrid with no members, no money, and no clear plan. He said he saw the organization's mission during prayer. It grew slowly—20 members by 1939. Escrivá moved the headquarters to Rome in 1946. By his death in 1975, Opus Dei had 60,000 members across 80 countries. John Paul II made it a personal prelature, answering only to the Pope.
Rafael Trujillo ordered soldiers to identify Haitians by asking them to say "perejil"—parsley. Haitians speaking Creole couldn't roll the r. Those who failed were killed with machetes and thrown into the Massacre River. The killing lasted five days. Estimates range from 9,000 to 20,000 dead. Trujillo paid Haiti $525,000 in compensation. He stayed in power 24 more years.
Fun Facts
Zodiac Sign
Libra
Sep 23 -- Oct 22
Air sign. Diplomatic, gracious, and fair-minded.
Birthstone
Opal
Iridescent
Symbolizes creativity, inspiration, and hope.
Next Birthday
--
days until October 2
Quote of the Day
“Be the change that you wish to see in the world.”
Share Your Birthday
Create a beautiful birthday card with events and famous birthdays for October 2.
Create Birthday CardExplore Nearby Dates
Popular Dates
Explore more about October 2 in history. See the full date page for all events, browse October, or look up another birthday. Play history games or talk to historical figures.