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On this day

November 24

Darwin Publishes Origin: Evolution Changes Everything (1859). D.B. Cooper Vanishes: $200,000 Disappears Mid-Air (1971). Notable births include Cass Gilbert (1859), Donald "Duck" Dunn (1941), Dave Sinclair (1947).

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Darwin Publishes Origin: Evolution Changes Everything
1859Event

Darwin Publishes Origin: Evolution Changes Everything

Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species on November 24, 1859, after 20 years of accumulating evidence. The entire first printing of 1,250 copies sold out on the first day. Darwin had delayed publication for years, partly from caution and partly from awareness of the controversy it would cause. Alfred Russel Wallace forced his hand by independently developing a nearly identical theory of natural selection. The book presented evolution through natural selection in careful, accessible prose, supported by evidence from geology, comparative anatomy, embryology, and biogeography. Darwin deliberately avoided discussing human evolution. The public debate that followed, including the famous 1860 exchange between Thomas Huxley and Bishop Wilberforce, transformed not just biology but humanity's understanding of its place in nature. Within two decades, the scientific community accepted evolution as fact.

D.B. Cooper Vanishes: $200,000 Disappears Mid-Air
1971

D.B. Cooper Vanishes: $200,000 Disappears Mid-Air

A man using the name Dan Cooper boarded Northwest Orient Flight 305 from Portland to Seattle on November 24, 1971, showed a flight attendant a bomb in his briefcase, and demanded $200,000 and four parachutes. The plane landed in Seattle, where the ransom was delivered and 36 passengers were released. Cooper then ordered the plane to fly to Mexico City at low altitude with the rear stairs down. Somewhere over the forests of southwestern Washington, he jumped into a rainstorm at 10,000 feet wearing a business suit and loafers. He was never seen again. The FBI investigated for 45 years, examining over 1,000 suspects without identifying Cooper. In 1980, an eight-year-old boy found $5,800 in deteriorated $20 bills along the Columbia River. The serial numbers matched the ransom. No other trace of Cooper or the remaining money has ever been found.

Ruby Shoots Oswald: Kennedy Mystery Deepens
1963

Ruby Shoots Oswald: Kennedy Mystery Deepens

Jack Ruby stepped from a crowd of reporters in the basement of Dallas Police headquarters on November 24, 1963, and shot Lee Harvey Oswald once in the abdomen with a .38 revolver as Oswald was being transferred to the county jail. It was broadcast live on NBC television to an estimated 20 million viewers, the first time a murder was committed on live national television. Oswald died at Parkland Memorial Hospital, the same hospital where Kennedy had died two days earlier. Ruby, a nightclub owner with connections to organized crime and local police, claimed he shot Oswald to spare Jacqueline Kennedy the ordeal of a trial. He was convicted of murder and sentenced to death, but the conviction was overturned. Ruby died of cancer on January 3, 1967, before a new trial could be held.

Hollywood 10 Cited: The Red Scare Intensifies
1947

Hollywood 10 Cited: The Red Scare Intensifies

The U.S. House of Representatives voted 346 to 17 on November 24, 1947, to cite ten Hollywood screenwriters and directors for contempt of Congress after they refused to answer questions about alleged Communist affiliations before the House Un-American Activities Committee. The Hollywood Ten, including Dalton Trumbo, Ring Lardner Jr., and Edward Dmytryk, were convicted, fined, and sentenced to prison terms of six months to one year. The major studios immediately blacklisted them. The blacklist expanded to include hundreds of writers, actors, and directors over the next decade. Many worked under pseudonyms. Trumbo wrote the screenplay for Roman Holiday under a front, and the Oscar went to his alias. The blacklist gradually collapsed in the early 1960s when Kirk Douglas credited Trumbo by name for Spartacus.

Lucy Found in Ethiopia: 3.2 Million Years of Human History
1974

Lucy Found in Ethiopia: 3.2 Million Years of Human History

Donald Johanson was surveying the Afar Depression in Ethiopia on November 24, 1974, when he spotted a fragment of arm bone protruding from a hillside. Over the next two weeks, his team recovered 47 bones representing about 40% of a single female skeleton, an extraordinary completeness for a 3.2-million-year-old fossil. They named her Lucy because the camp tape player was repeatedly playing 'Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds' during the excavation. Officially designated AL 288-1, Lucy was classified as Australopithecus afarensis. She stood about 3 feet 7 inches tall and weighed roughly 64 pounds. Her pelvis and knee joint proved she walked upright, demonstrating that bipedalism preceded the dramatic brain expansion that characterizes later human species. Humans didn't evolve to think first; they stood up first, and bigger brains came a million years later.

Quote of the Day

“It isn't what you have or who you are or where you are or what you are doing that makes you happy or unhappy. It is what you think about it.”

Dale Carnegie

Historical events

Born on November 24

Portrait of Todd Beamer
Todd Beamer 1968

He worked in software sales.

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Not a soldier, not a cop — just a guy who sold Oracle products and coached Little League. But on September 11, 2001, Todd Beamer led a passenger revolt at 35,000 feet that crashed Flight 93 into a Pennsylvania field instead of the U.S. Capitol. His last recorded words — "Let's roll" — came through a Airfone to a GTE operator named Lisa Jefferson. And they stuck. His wife Lisa named her memoir after those two words. Ordinary job. Extraordinary moment. The Capitol still stands.

Portrait of Dave Bing
Dave Bing 1943

Before politics, before basketball, Bing nearly lost his sight at age five when a childhood accident left him partially blind in one eye.

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He played anyway. Became a seven-time NBA All-Star, starred for the Detroit Pistons through the late 1960s, then built a steel company — Bing Steel — that eventually employed 1,400 people. Detroit elected him mayor in 2009 during the city's financial collapse. He didn't save it from bankruptcy. But he stayed, and that mattered. His company still operates today.

Portrait of Billy Connolly
Billy Connolly 1942

He spent years as a welder in Glasgow's shipyards before anyone called him funny.

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Billy Connolly didn't plan comedy — it leaked out of him during folk performances, the jokes eventually swallowing the music whole. The Humblebums couldn't hold him. He became Scotland's most beloved comic export, selling out arenas, acting alongside Judi Dench, getting knighted. But Parkinson's arrived in 2013. And he kept going anyway. His legacy isn't just the laughs — it's a man who turned working-class rage into art, then refused to stop even when his body disagreed.

Portrait of Donald "Duck" Dunn
Donald "Duck" Dunn 1941

He played bass on some of the most recognizable records in American music — but Duck Dunn never learned to read music.

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Not one note. The Memphis kid who anchored Booker T. and the M.G.'s laid down the groove for Otis Redding, Sam & Dave, and Albert King purely by feel. Then he did it again decades later with The Blues Brothers. And somehow, that limitation became his entire identity. What he left behind: that unmistakable locked-in pulse on "Green Onions." Four notes. Eternal.

Portrait of Tsung-Dao Lee
Tsung-Dao Lee 1926

Tsung-Dao Lee shattered the long-held assumption of parity conservation in weak nuclear interactions, a discovery that…

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earned him the 1957 Nobel Prize in Physics at just 31 years old. His work fundamentally altered how physicists understand the symmetry of the universe, forcing a complete reassessment of the fundamental laws governing subatomic particles.

Portrait of William F. Buckley
William F. Buckley 1925

William F.

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Buckley Jr. reshaped American conservatism by founding the National Review in 1955, providing an intellectual home for the fractured right wing. Through his sharp rhetoric and televised debates, he transformed fringe libertarian and traditionalist ideas into a cohesive political movement that eventually dominated the Republican Party for decades.

Portrait of Simon van der Meer
Simon van der Meer 1925

Simon van der Meer revolutionized particle physics by inventing stochastic cooling, a technique that allowed for the…

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accumulation and manipulation of high-energy antiproton beams. This breakthrough enabled the 1983 discovery of W and Z bosons at CERN, confirming the electroweak theory and earning him the 1984 Nobel Prize in Physics.

Portrait of Christian Wirth
Christian Wirth 1885

He earned the nickname "Christian the Terrible" from his own SS colleagues — not his victims.

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Wirth didn't just run Belzec; he designed the operational blueprint for three other Nazi death camps under Operation Reinhard. Former police detective. Decorated in WWI. He refined the gas chamber process like an engineer solving logistics. And his methods killed an estimated 1.7 million Jews across four camps. He died in Yugoslavia in 1944, ambushed by partisans. What he left behind was a system so efficient it outlasted him.

Portrait of William Webb Ellis
William Webb Ellis 1806

He supposedly grabbed a soccer ball mid-game and just ran with it.

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That's the whole origin story of rugby — one teenager's rulebreaking at Rugby School around 1823. But here's the twist: Ellis became a clergyman, not a sportsman. He didn't build the sport, watch it grow, or claim credit. He died in 1872 without fanfare. And yet today, the Rugby World Cup trophy bears his name. The man who "invented" rugby apparently never cared about rugby at all.

Portrait of Zachary Taylor
Zachary Taylor 1784

He never voted.

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Not once — not even for himself when he ran for president in 1848. Zachary Taylor spent 40 years moving between military posts, never settling long enough to establish residency and cast a ballot. And yet this career soldier, who'd never held elected office, won the White House anyway. He died 16 months into his first term, but left something lasting: his refusal to let the South secede over new territories helped delay a war that would define the next generation.

Portrait of Charles I
Charles I 1394

He spent 25 years as an English prisoner — and wrote poetry the whole time.

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Captured at Agincourt in 1415, Charles of Orléans filled captivity with verse, becoming one of medieval France's finest poets while locked in English castles. He wrote in both French and English, likely the first major bilingual poet in Western literature. Nobody ransomed him for decades. But the poems survived. Over 500 of them. A duke who lost a battle left behind a body of literature that still gets read today.

Died on November 24

Portrait of Warren Spahn
Warren Spahn 2003

He won 363 games — more than any left-handed pitcher in MLB history.

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But Warren Spahn didn't even reach the majors until he was 25, after three years fighting in World War II, including Remagen Bridge, where he earned a battlefield commission and a Purple Heart. He lost those seasons and still dominated. Thirteen 20-win campaigns. A Cy Young. Two no-hitters after turning 39. What he built after the war wasn't a comeback. It was the whole story.

Portrait of Freddie Mercury

Freddie Mercury was born Farrokh Bulsara in Zanzibar, moved to England as a teenager, and became the most theatrical…

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rock vocalist of his generation. Bohemian Rhapsody took three weeks to record, used 180 overdubs, and was nearly not released as a single because it was six minutes long with no chorus. Radio DJs played it anyway. It went to number one. He died in November 1991 at 45, one day after publicly acknowledging he had AIDS.

Portrait of Barack Obama
Barack Obama 1982

earned a degree in economics at Harvard and went back to Kenya to work for the government.

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His son had already been born in 1961 in Honolulu and he'd left. They met only once more, when Barack Jr. was ten. Obama Sr. died in a Nairobi car crash in 1982 at 46. His son wrote about him in Dreams from My Father before running for any office. The book came out in 1995. Three years before his father's absence became the backstory for the presidency.

Portrait of Lee Harvey Oswald

Lee Harvey Oswald was shot dead in the basement of Dallas police headquarters by Jack Ruby, a nightclub owner with…

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Mafia connections, during a live television broadcast on November 24, 1963. Millions watched it happen. Ruby said he acted spontaneously to spare Jacqueline Kennedy a public trial. Oswald had denied shooting the president. He died without a trial. Everything that happened after — every conspiracy theory, every investigation, every doubt — flows from two days in Dallas.

Portrait of Robert Cecil
Robert Cecil 1958

He drafted the actual covenant.

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Not a staffer, not a committee — Robert Cecil sat down and wrote the founding legal text of the League of Nations himself. The man had spent decades arguing that war could be made illegal through international law, and for one brief moment in 1919, the world agreed. But the League collapsed. And yet Cecil kept going, winning the Nobel Peace Prize in 1937 anyway. He died at 94, still believing. What he left behind: the United Nations Charter, which borrowed his framework almost wholesale.

Portrait of Anna Jarvis
Anna Jarvis 1948

She spent her final years trying to destroy the holiday she created.

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Anna Jarvis founded Mother's Day in 1908, pushing until Congress made it national in 1914 — then watched in horror as Hallmark cards and candy boxes swallowed it whole. She called it a "Hallmark holiday" before that phrase even existed. She sued florists. She crashed a confectioners' convention. She died broke, childless, in a sanitarium in West Chester, Pennsylvania. But here's the twist: the flower industry quietly paid her medical bills.

Portrait of Georges Clemenceau
Georges Clemenceau 1929

Georges Clemenceau became Prime Minister of France for the second time in 1917, at 76, when the war was going catastrophically.

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He visited the trenches personally. He prosecuted defeatists. He told the Chamber of Deputies that he had one goal: to win the war. France didn't collapse. He negotiated the Versailles Treaty with an intensity that alarmed even his allies. Born in 1841, he died in 1929, convinced the peace he had made was already beginning to unravel.

Portrait of Hiram Maxim
Hiram Maxim 1916

He tested his first automatic machine gun on himself — sort of.

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Maxim noticed the brutal recoil bruising his shoulder every time he fired a rifle, and thought: what if that wasted energy reloaded the weapon? That single frustration birthed the Maxim gun in 1884, capable of 600 rounds per minute. Armies across six continents bought it. The weapon reshaped warfare so completely that the Boer War, WWI, and colonial conflicts all ran on his design. He died a British knight. But the gun outlived every title he earned.

Portrait of Ulrika Eleonora
Ulrika Eleonora 1741

She gave up a crown voluntarily.

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In 1720, Ulrika Eleonora abdicated in favor of her husband, Fredrik I, believing he'd rule more effectively — one of history's quieter acts of calculated self-erasure. She'd fought hard for that throne after her brother Charles XII died without an heir in 1718, convincing the Riksdag she deserved it. But power, it turned out, didn't suit her the way she'd imagined. She left behind a Sweden where parliamentary power had permanently eclipsed royal authority.

Portrait of Guru Tegh Bahadur
Guru Tegh Bahadur 1675

Guru Tegh Bahadur chose execution in Delhi rather than renounce his faith, becoming a martyr for the right of all…

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people to practice their religion freely. His death galvanized the Sikh community, transforming them into a more militant force under his successor, Guru Gobind Singh, to resist the religious persecution of the Mughal Empire.

Portrait of Muhammad al-Jawad
Muhammad al-Jawad 835

He became Imam at nine years old.

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Nine. Scholars twice his age lined up to challenge him in Baghdad, expecting to humiliate a child — and left humbled instead. Muhammad al-Jawad, ninth of the Twelve Imams, navigated an Abbasid court that watched his every move, married into the caliph's family under political pressure, and died at just 25. But his theological teachings on Shia jurisprudence survived, still shaping how millions understand religious authority today. The youngest Imam left the deepest questions about divine knowledge and age.

Holidays & observances

The soldier didn't want to fight.

The soldier didn't want to fight. Mercurius, a 3rd-century Roman officer, reportedly refused Emperor Decius's order to worship pagan gods — then kept fighting anyway, winning battles before his faith cost him everything. Executed around 250 AD, he became one of the Eastern Church's celebrated warrior-martyrs. His feast day still carries weight in Coptic and Orthodox traditions. But here's the twist: a man remembered for holy devotion was, first and last, a decorated Roman soldier.

Flavian of Ricina barely gets a footnote.

Flavian of Ricina barely gets a footnote. He was a fifth-century bishop from a tiny Roman settlement in central Italy — Ricina, a place so small it eventually disappeared entirely from the map. And yet the Catholic Church still marks his feast day, centuries after his city ceased to exist. His actual deeds? Almost nothing survived. But that erasure is the point. The Church's remembrance outlasted the civilization itself. Some names endure precisely because everything else vanished.

She shares her feast day with two other saints named Firmina — and nobody's quite sure which one this actually honors.

She shares her feast day with two other saints named Firmina — and nobody's quite sure which one this actually honors. The Catholic Church kept all three, just in case. One tradition places her in Amelia, Italy, martyred under Diocletian around 303 AD. A young noblewoman who refused to renounce her faith. Simple story, disputed details. But that uncertainty is the point — the Church preserved her name even when the facts blurred, betting remembrance matters more than perfect documentation.

Chrysogonus was arrested in Rome, dragged north to Aquileia, and beheaded — yet somehow became one of the few early m…

Chrysogonus was arrested in Rome, dragged north to Aquileia, and beheaded — yet somehow became one of the few early martyrs named directly in the Roman Canon of the Mass. That's the prayer at the heart of every Catholic Mass, for centuries unchanged. His name sat alongside Peter, Paul, and Lawrence. No surviving account explains why he earned that honor above thousands of others. And that silence is the whole story — his mystery became his permanence.

Atatürk never held a teaching certificate.

Atatürk never held a teaching certificate. But in 1981, Turkey designated November 24th — the day he first lectured at Ankara's Law School in 1928 — as Teacher's Day, embedding his name permanently into the profession. He'd personally launched a literacy campaign that year, teaching the new Latin-based alphabet to crowds himself. Enrollment in schools tripled within a decade. And the man who dismantled an empire decided teachers were the ones who'd actually build the next one.

Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb gave him a simple choice: convert or die.

Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb gave him a simple choice: convert or die. Guru Tegh Bahadur, the ninth Sikh Guru, chose death — but not just for himself. He died defending the rights of Kashmiri Hindus, people who weren't even his own faith. November 1675. Delhi. He was publicly beheaded at Chandni Chowk. His followers risked everything to retrieve his body. That act of interfaith sacrifice became the foundation of Sikh warrior identity. And the square where he died? It's now called Sis Ganj — "the place of the head."

A bishop who didn't start as one.

A bishop who didn't start as one. Colman of Cloyne spent decades as a royal poet in Munster before converting to Christianity in his fifties — unusually late for a man who'd later become patron saint of County Cork. He reportedly baptized St. Brendan the Navigator, the monk famous for allegedly reaching North America centuries before Columbus. Founded Cloyne Cathedral, still standing. A pagan poet turned saint, which means every prayer offered there carries a stranger backstory than most worshippers realize.

Charles Darwin didn't want to publish.

Charles Darwin didn't want to publish. For twenty years, he sat on his theory — terrified of the backlash. Then Alfred Russel Wallace independently drafted nearly the identical idea, forcing Darwin's hand. Their findings were jointly presented on November 24, 1859, the day *On the Origin of Species* finally hit shelves. It sold out immediately. Evolution Day marks that release. But here's what gets overlooked: the man who accidentally pressured Darwin into publishing never got equal credit. Wallace died largely forgotten.

Six weeks of wine.

Six weeks of wine. That's what Byzantine emperors officially sanctioned every November 24th — a rolling celebration called the Brumalia that ran straight to the winter solstice. Borrowed wholesale from Roman Bacchanalian tradition, each night honored a different person, working alphabetically through names. Your night arrived, your friends came, wine flowed. Emperor Justinian's court celebrated it enthusiastically even as Christian officials grumbled. And the Church eventually killed it. But for centuries, Byzantine civilization kept its pagan party — just rebranded it as neighborly hospitality.

Romans kicked off the month-long Brumalia festival today, honoring Bacchus with heavy drinking, feasting, and theatri…

Romans kicked off the month-long Brumalia festival today, honoring Bacchus with heavy drinking, feasting, and theatrical performances. This celebration eased the transition into the dark winter months, reinforcing social bonds through communal revelry and serving as a precursor to the more structured Saturnalia festivities that followed in December.

Outnumbered and sick, Lachit Borphukan still climbed onto a boat.

Outnumbered and sick, Lachit Borphukan still climbed onto a boat. His generals were retreating on the Brahmaputra River in 1671. He didn't let them. "If you want to run, run," he reportedly said — then led the charge himself, feverish and barely standing. The Mughals, one of history's most powerful empires, lost to Assam that day at Saraighat. They never seriously tried again. Assam remained unconquered. Every November 24th, that one stubborn, ill man on a boat is why.

Andrew Dung-Lac was a Vietnamese priest who was beheaded in 1839 — his third arrest.

Andrew Dung-Lac was a Vietnamese priest who was beheaded in 1839 — his third arrest. He'd been captured twice before, and friends literally bought his freedom each time. But he kept preaching. He even changed his name trying to hide from authorities. Didn't work. Today the Church honors him alongside 116 companions martyred across Vietnam between 1625 and 1886. Farmers, priests, laypeople, bishops. All executed. Pope John Paul II canonized all 117 together in 1988. The sheer number forces a different question: this wasn't persecution — it was systematic elimination.

A single commander stopped one of the largest Mughal naval forces ever assembled.

A single commander stopped one of the largest Mughal naval forces ever assembled. Lachit Borphukan, sick and near death, refused to leave the Battle of Saraighat in 1671. He reportedly told retreating soldiers: "My uncle can't be greater than my country." The Assamese fleet held the Brahmaputra. The Mughals never successfully occupied Assam again. Every November 24th, Assam celebrates his birth anniversary — and the Indian Military Academy awards its best cadet the Lachit Borphukan Gold Medal. His last stand became the standard.

Eastern Orthodox Christians mark November 24 with a packed calendar of saints — but the system behind it nearly colla…

Eastern Orthodox Christians mark November 24 with a packed calendar of saints — but the system behind it nearly collapsed in the 1700s when Russian reformers tried scrapping the liturgical calendar entirely. Peter the Great didn't manage to kill it. The calendar survived him, survived Soviet atheism, survived decades of state suppression. Churches shuttered. Priests disappeared. And still, November 24 kept its saints. That stubborn persistence isn't just religious devotion — it's one of history's quieter acts of resistance disguised as a church calendar.

Lutherans commemorate Justus Falckner, Jehu Jones, and William Passavant today for their foundational roles in Americ…

Lutherans commemorate Justus Falckner, Jehu Jones, and William Passavant today for their foundational roles in American ministry. Falckner became the first Lutheran pastor ordained in North America, while Jones broke racial barriers as the first African American Lutheran pastor and Passavant established the first deaconess motherhouse in the United States, permanently shaping the church's social service mission.