Today In History logo TIH

Today In History

September 14 in History

Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Dmitry Medvedev, Nas, and Renzo Piano.

McKinley Dies, Roosevelt Rises: Progressive Era Begins
1901Event

McKinley Dies, Roosevelt Rises: Progressive Era Begins

William McKinley died at 2:15 a.m. on September 14, 1901, eight days after being shot by anarchist Leon Czolgosz at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo. Theodore Roosevelt, who had been assured McKinley was recovering, was hiking in the Adirondack Mountains when a messenger arrived with the news. He rode through the night to the nearest train station and was sworn in at the home of his friend Ansley Wilcox in Buffalo later that day. At 42, Roosevelt became the youngest president in American history. His presidency would transform the office: he busted trusts, created national parks, built the Panama Canal, and asserted American power globally. The cautious, business-friendly McKinley era ended with a bullet, and the Progressive Era began.

Famous Birthdays

Nas
Nas

b. 1973

Kimberly Williams-Paisley

Kimberly Williams-Paisley

b. 1971

Miyavi

Miyavi

b. 1981

Morten Harket

Morten Harket

b. 1959

Ashley Roberts

Ashley Roberts

b. 1981

Aya Ueto

Aya Ueto

b. 1985

Ferid Murad

Ferid Murad

b. 1936

Jacobo Arbenz

Jacobo Arbenz

b. 1913

Ketanji Brown Jackson

Ketanji Brown Jackson

b. 1970

Historical Events

William McKinley died at 2:15 a.m. on September 14, 1901, eight days after being shot by anarchist Leon Czolgosz at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo. Theodore Roosevelt, who had been assured McKinley was recovering, was hiking in the Adirondack Mountains when a messenger arrived with the news. He rode through the night to the nearest train station and was sworn in at the home of his friend Ansley Wilcox in Buffalo later that day. At 42, Roosevelt became the youngest president in American history. His presidency would transform the office: he busted trusts, created national parks, built the Panama Canal, and asserted American power globally. The cautious, business-friendly McKinley era ended with a bullet, and the Progressive Era began.
1901

William McKinley died at 2:15 a.m. on September 14, 1901, eight days after being shot by anarchist Leon Czolgosz at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo. Theodore Roosevelt, who had been assured McKinley was recovering, was hiking in the Adirondack Mountains when a messenger arrived with the news. He rode through the night to the nearest train station and was sworn in at the home of his friend Ansley Wilcox in Buffalo later that day. At 42, Roosevelt became the youngest president in American history. His presidency would transform the office: he busted trusts, created national parks, built the Panama Canal, and asserted American power globally. The cautious, business-friendly McKinley era ended with a bullet, and the Progressive Era began.

The Soviet Union's Luna 2 probe struck the Moon's surface east of Mare Imbrium on September 14, 1959, becoming the first human-made object to reach another celestial body. The spacecraft carried no landing system; it was designed to crash. It hit at roughly 7,500 mph, scattering Soviet pennants across the impact site. The probe carried instruments that confirmed the Moon had no significant magnetic field and no radiation belts. Luna 2's success came just two years after Sputnik and deepened American anxiety about falling behind in the Space Race. The mission proved that navigation to another world was possible with available technology and directly stimulated the acceleration of NASA's Mercury and Apollo programs.
1959

The Soviet Union's Luna 2 probe struck the Moon's surface east of Mare Imbrium on September 14, 1959, becoming the first human-made object to reach another celestial body. The spacecraft carried no landing system; it was designed to crash. It hit at roughly 7,500 mph, scattering Soviet pennants across the impact site. The probe carried instruments that confirmed the Moon had no significant magnetic field and no radiation belts. Luna 2's success came just two years after Sputnik and deepened American anxiety about falling behind in the Space Race. The mission proved that navigation to another world was possible with available technology and directly stimulated the acceleration of NASA's Mercury and Apollo programs.

Congress passed the Selective Training and Service Act on September 16, 1940 (signed by FDR on that date), establishing the first peacetime military draft in American history. The law required all men between 21 and 36 to register, and 16 million did so within weeks. The first drawing was held on October 29, 1940, at the same glass bowl used for the World War I draft. Draftees served for twelve months, a term extended to eighteen months in August 1941 by a single vote in the House of Representatives. Without the peacetime draft, the United States would have entered World War II after Pearl Harbor with an army of roughly 270,000 men. Instead, it had 1.6 million under arms and the training infrastructure to mobilize twelve million more.
1940

Congress passed the Selective Training and Service Act on September 16, 1940 (signed by FDR on that date), establishing the first peacetime military draft in American history. The law required all men between 21 and 36 to register, and 16 million did so within weeks. The first drawing was held on October 29, 1940, at the same glass bowl used for the World War I draft. Draftees served for twelve months, a term extended to eighteen months in August 1941 by a single vote in the House of Representatives. Without the peacetime draft, the United States would have entered World War II after Pearl Harbor with an army of roughly 270,000 men. Instead, it had 1.6 million under arms and the training infrastructure to mobilize twelve million more.

Joe Kittinger shattered the previous record by piloting a gas balloon solo across the Atlantic, proving that long-duration high-altitude flight could sustain human life without support. This feat directly enabled future transoceanic balloon expeditions and expanded the operational limits of stratospheric travel for both research and exploration.
1984

Joe Kittinger shattered the previous record by piloting a gas balloon solo across the Atlantic, proving that long-duration high-altitude flight could sustain human life without support. This feat directly enabled future transoceanic balloon expeditions and expanded the operational limits of stratospheric travel for both research and exploration.

326

Helena was 77 years old and traveling through Palestine when she reportedly found what she believed to be the True Cross — buried under a pagan temple on Golgotha, along with two others. How she identified Christ's cross: a sick woman reportedly touched all three, and one healed her. Whether you believe it or not, Helena's find launched the relic trade that defined medieval Christianity for a thousand years. Hundreds of fragments of the 'True Cross' circulated across Europe within centuries. John Calvin noted there were enough pieces to build a ship.

786

Three caliphs ruled the Islamic world in a single night. Al-Hadi died — some say poisoned on his mother's orders — and his brother Harun al-Rashid inherited an empire stretching from North Africa to Central Asia before dawn. Harun was just 20. And in that same extraordinary night, his son al-Ma'mun was born, the future caliph who'd sponsor the translation of nearly every Greek scientific text into Arabic. The man who inherited everything and the man who'd preserve ancient knowledge both arrived within hours of each other.

1180

Minamoto no Yoritomo suffers a crushing defeat at Ishibashiyama when Ōba Kagechika routs his forces, driving the future shogun to flee into hiding. This setback delays Minamoto dominance but ultimately solidifies Yoritomo's resolve, leading him to regroup and eventually dismantle Taira power just three years later.

1402

Five hundred English archers under the Earls of March and Northumberland obliterate an invading Scottish force led by Murdoch Stewart and Archibald Douglas at Homildon Hill. This crushing defeat captures nearly every Scottish nobleman on the field, effectively neutralizing Scotland's military leadership for years and ending their ability to launch major invasions into England during that period.

1685

Venetian forces crush the Ottoman fleet under Kapudan Pasha at Kalamata, seizing control of the Peloponnese peninsula. This decisive blow shatters Ottoman naval dominance in the region and secures Venetian rule over Morea for nearly two decades.

1782

General George Washington reviewed French troops led by General Rochambeau at Verplanck's Point, solidifying the alliance that would soon deliver decisive victory at Yorktown. This joint military inspection proved the Franco-American coordination necessary to trap British forces and force their surrender, effectively ending major combat operations in the Radical War.

Napoleon rode into Moscow expecting a surrender. None came. The city was nearly empty — Governor Rostopchin had ordered most residents to leave, and as French troops entered on September 14, 1812, fires began breaking out across the city. Russian agents had lit them deliberately. Three-quarters of Moscow burned over five days. Napoleon waited 35 days in the ruins for a peace offer that never arrived. He'd marched 1,500 miles to capture a city no one would hand over, and left with nothing but winter behind him.
1812

Napoleon rode into Moscow expecting a surrender. None came. The city was nearly empty — Governor Rostopchin had ordered most residents to leave, and as French troops entered on September 14, 1812, fires began breaking out across the city. Russian agents had lit them deliberately. Three-quarters of Moscow burned over five days. Napoleon waited 35 days in the ruins for a peace offer that never arrived. He'd marched 1,500 miles to capture a city no one would hand over, and left with nothing but winter behind him.

1901

Anarchist Leon Czolgosz mortally wounds President William McKinley, triggering a sudden transfer of power to Vice President Theodore Roosevelt. This abrupt succession launches the Progressive Era, as Roosevelt immediately shifts federal policy toward aggressive trust-busting and conservation efforts that reshape American governance for decades.

1911

Dmitry Bogrov shoots Russian Premier Pyotr Stolypin dead during a performance of Rimsky-Korsakov's The Tale of Tsar Saltan at the Kiev Opera House, right before Tsar Nicholas II. This assassination abruptly ends Stolypin's aggressive land reforms and leaves Russia without its most capable statesman just as radical unrest begins to intensify.

1914

HMAS AE1 vanished into the Pacific depths near East New Britain, taking its entire crew of thirty-five men with it. This tragedy marked the first loss of a Royal Australian Navy vessel and forced the fledgling fleet to rely on older ships for nearly two years while investigations concluded.

1936

Spanish Republicans gun down Raoul Villain on Ibiza, ending the life of Jean Jaurès' assassin just months after the French Socialist's murder sparked World War I tensions. This violent retaliation underscores how the unresolved trauma of 1914 continued to fuel bloodshed across Europe during the Spanish Civil War.

Fun Facts

Zodiac Sign

Virgo

Aug 23 -- Sep 22

Earth sign. Analytical, kind, and hardworking.

Birthstone

Sapphire

Blue

Symbolizes truth, sincerity, and faithfulness.

Next Birthday

--

days until September 14

Quote of the Day

“I am more and more convinced that our happiness or unhappiness depends more on the way we meet the events of life than on the nature of those events themselves.”

Alexander von Humboldt

Share Your Birthday

Create a beautiful birthday card with events and famous birthdays for September 14.

Create Birthday Card

Explore Nearby Dates

Popular Dates

Explore more about September 14 in history. See the full date page for all events, browse September, or look up another birthday. Play history games or talk to historical figures.