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On this day

October 18

Seward's Folly: Russia Sells Alaska for $7.2 Million (1867). BBC Launches: A New Voice for Britain (1922). Notable births include Lee Harvey Oswald (1939), Ramiz Alia (1925), Dan Lilker (1964).

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Seward's Folly: Russia Sells Alaska for $7.2 Million
1867Event

Seward's Folly: Russia Sells Alaska for $7.2 Million

Russia sold Alaska to the United States on October 18, 1867, for $7.2 million, roughly two cents per acre for 586,412 square miles of territory. Secretary of State William Seward negotiated the deal. Critics mocked it as 'Seward's Folly' and 'Seward's Icebox.' Russia wanted to sell because it couldn't defend the territory against Britain in a potential war and preferred selling to the Americans rather than losing it to the British. The purchase added more territory than Texas to the United States. For decades, Alaska seemed worthless. Then gold was discovered in the Klondike in 1896, oil at Prudhoe Bay in 1968, and the strategic value of the territory became obvious during the Cold War. At two cents per acre, it may be the greatest real estate bargain in history after the Louisiana Purchase.

BBC Launches: A New Voice for Britain
1922

BBC Launches: A New Voice for Britain

The British Broadcasting Company was formed on October 18, 1922, by a consortium of wireless manufacturers who wanted to stimulate demand for radio receivers by providing something worth listening to. The first regular broadcast came from 2LO in London on November 14. John Reith, a Scottish engineer with no broadcasting experience, was hired as general manager. His vision transformed the BBC from a sales gimmick into a national institution. Reith believed radio should educate, inform, and entertain, in that order. The company became a public corporation in 1927 under a Royal Charter, funded by license fees rather than advertising. That model gave the BBC editorial independence from both government and commercial pressure, establishing a template for public broadcasting that dozens of countries eventually adopted.

Smith and Carlos Raise Fists: Olympic Protest
1968

Smith and Carlos Raise Fists: Olympic Protest

Tommie Smith and John Carlos stood on the medal podium at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics on October 16 and raised black-gloved fists during the American national anthem. Smith wore a black scarf for Black pride. Carlos wore a bead necklace 'for those who were lynched.' Both went shoeless to represent Black poverty. Australian silver medalist Peter Norman wore an Olympic Project for Human Rights badge in solidarity. The International Olympic Committee demanded the U.S. team expel Smith and Carlos. They were sent home within 48 hours. Norman was ostracized by the Australian Olympic establishment for the rest of his life. Smith and Carlos both received death threats and struggled professionally for years. The image of their raised fists became one of the most iconic photographs of the twentieth century.

Moby-Dick Published: Melville's Tale Emerges
1851

Moby-Dick Published: Melville's Tale Emerges

Herman Melville published Moby-Dick on October 18, 1851, under the title The Whale in London. The British edition sold poorly. The American edition, published in November with the now-famous title, sold worse: roughly 3,000 copies in Melville's lifetime. Critics called it rambling and incoherent. Melville had staked his career on the book after modest successes with Typee and Omoo. The failure devastated him financially and professionally. He spent the next 40 years working as a customs inspector on the New York waterfront. The novel was rediscovered in the 1920s during the 'Melville Revival' and is now considered the great American novel. 'Call me Ishmael' is among literature's most recognizable opening lines. Captain Ahab's monomania has become a metaphor so universal that people who've never read the book understand it.

Beamon Leaps 29 Feet: Olympic Record Stands 23 Years
1968

Beamon Leaps 29 Feet: Olympic Record Stands 23 Years

Bob Beamon took off from the board at 8.90 meters (29 feet 2.5 inches) in the long jump at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics, exceeding the world record by 55 centimeters. The optical measuring equipment at trackside didn't extend far enough to register the distance; officials had to use a manual tape measure. Beamon was told the measurement in meters and didn't understand its significance until a teammate converted it. He collapsed and had to be helped off the field. Fellow competitor Igor Ter-Ovanesyan turned to Lynn Davies and said 'Compared to this jump, we are as children.' Ralph Boston, the defending champion, said 'We can all go home.' The record stood for 23 years until Mike Powell jumped 8.95 meters in Tokyo in 1991. Beamon never jumped beyond 27 feet again in his career.

Quote of the Day

“We wish nothing more, but we will accept nothing less. Masters in our own house we must be, but our house is the whole of Canada.”

Pierre Elliott Trudeau

Historical events

Born on October 18

Portrait of Laci Green
Laci Green 1989

Laci Green posted her first sex education video on YouTube at 19.

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She's made over 100 videos explaining consent, birth control, and anatomy to millions of teenagers. She was raised Mormon in Utah. The internet became her classroom, awkward questions and all.

Portrait of Lee Harvey Oswald

Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested for the assassination of John F.

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Kennedy on November 22, 1963, and killed by Jack Ruby on live television two days later before he could be tried. He was 24. He had defected to the Soviet Union, returned to the United States, and distributed pro-Castro leaflets in New Orleans in the months before the shooting. Whether he acted alone remains the most argued question in American political history. He was born on October 18, 1939, in New Orleans. He never stood trial.

Portrait of Dawn Wells
Dawn Wells 1938

Dawn Wells was crowned Miss Nevada in 1959 and went to Hollywood instead of competing for Miss America.

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She landed "Gilligan's Island" five years later. The show lasted three seasons. She spent the next 50 years playing Mary Ann at conventions and autograph signings. She died nearly broke in 2020. Residuals from the show had stopped decades earlier.

Portrait of Melina Mercouri
Melina Mercouri 1920

Melina Mercouri was banned from Greece for six years after the colonels' coup in 1967.

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They stripped her citizenship. She kept campaigning from Paris. When democracy returned, she became Minister of Culture and launched the European Capital of Culture program. She fought for decades to bring the Parthenon Marbles back from the British Museum. She died before they returned. They still haven't.

Portrait of Pierre Trudeau
Pierre Trudeau 1919

Pierre Trudeau reshaped the Canadian identity by patriating the Constitution and enshrining the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in 1982.

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As the country's 15th Prime Minister, he navigated the turbulent October Crisis and championed official bilingualism, fundamentally altering the legal relationship between the federal government and its citizens.

Portrait of Félix Houphouët-Boigny
Félix Houphouët-Boigny 1905

Félix Houphouët-Boigny steered Côte d'Ivoire from French colonial rule to independence, serving as its first president…

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for over three decades. By prioritizing agricultural exports like cocoa and coffee, he transformed his nation into a regional economic powerhouse known as the Ivorian Miracle. His pragmatic, pro-Western governance defined the country's stability throughout the Cold War era.

Portrait of Henri Bergson
Henri Bergson 1859

Henri Bergson argued that time isn't a line — it's a constant accumulation, like a snowball rolling downhill.

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He wrote that intuition sees truth better than analysis can. His lectures in Paris were so popular they caused traffic jams. He won the Nobel for Literature in 1927. When the Nazis occupied France, they offered him exemption from anti-Jewish laws. He refused and stood in line to register. He died of pneumonia in 1941.

Portrait of Frederick III
Frederick III 1831

Frederick III was German Emperor for 99 days.

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Born in 1831, he was already dying of throat cancer when he was crowned in 1888. He couldn't speak, communicating by written notes. He tried to liberalize the government, but his son Wilhelm II reversed everything after Frederick's death. Three months on the throne, then Wilhelm led Germany into World War I.

Died on October 18

Portrait of Colin Powell

Colin Powell grew up in the South Bronx, the son of Jamaican immigrants.

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He joined the ROTC at City College, served two tours in Vietnam, and rose through the Army to become Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff — the first Black man to hold the position. He commanded the Coalition forces in the Gulf War. As Secretary of State he presented evidence of Iraqi weapons programs to the UN Security Council in February 2003. Much of it was wrong. He called it a blot on his record for the rest of his life. He died in October 2021 of COVID-19 complications, having been immunocompromised.

Portrait of Bess Truman
Bess Truman 1982

She gave one press conference in seven years.

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She gave one press conference in seven years. She burned all her husband's letters to her — decades of correspondence, gone. She outlived him by ten years, rarely leaving their house in Independence, Missouri. She died at 97, the longest-lived First Lady at the time. The house is a museum now. The letters are still gone.

Portrait of Ramón Mercader
Ramón Mercader 1978

Ramón Mercader drove an ice axe into Trotsky's skull in Mexico City in 1940.

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Trotsky lived for 26 hours. Mercader served twenty years in Mexican prison, never revealing who'd sent him. The KGB finally admitted it in 1960. He moved to Cuba after his release, then to the USSR. They gave him the Hero of the Soviet Union medal in secret. He died in Havana. His ashes went to Moscow.

Portrait of Elizabeth Arden
Elizabeth Arden 1966

Elizabeth Arden opened her first salon on Fifth Avenue in 1910, painted the door red, and refused to change it when neighbors complained.

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She built an empire on that stubbornness — 29 salons, 300 products, $60 million in sales. The door's still red.

Portrait of Santiago Ramón y Cajal
Santiago Ramón y Cajal 1934

Santiago Ramón y Cajal's father was a barber-surgeon who wanted his son to follow him.

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Cajal wanted to be an artist. They compromised: he'd draw what he saw under microscopes. He discovered that the nervous system was made of individual cells, not one continuous net. He hand-drew over 2,900 illustrations of neurons, each one beautiful enough to hang in a gallery. He won the Nobel Prize. The drawings are still used in textbooks.

Portrait of Thomas Edison
Thomas Edison 1931

Thomas Edison died on October 18, 1931, at 84, at his home in West Orange, New Jersey.

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Herbert Hoover asked Americans to dim their electric lights for one minute in tribute. The country did. Edison had invented the practical incandescent bulb, the phonograph, the motion picture camera, and over 1,000 other patented devices, through a method that was itself an invention: systematic, industrial research, teams of people working on a problem rather than lone geniuses waiting for inspiration. He called it '1% inspiration and 99% perspiration.' He worked through the last days of his life. He told his daughter a few hours before he died: 'It is very beautiful over there.' She asked where he meant. He didn't answer.

Portrait of Henry John Temple
Henry John Temple 1865

Lord Palmerston died in office, ending a political career that spanned over half a century and defined the height of…

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British imperial confidence. As Prime Minister, he championed a muscular, interventionist foreign policy that cemented Britain’s status as the world’s dominant naval and economic power during the mid-Victorian era.

Holidays & observances

Alaska Day commemorates the formal transfer of the territory from Russia to the United States in 1867.

Alaska Day commemorates the formal transfer of the territory from Russia to the United States in 1867. By lowering the Russian flag and raising the Stars and Stripes in Sitka, the U.S. acquired 586,000 square miles of land, ending Russian colonial presence in North America and securing vast natural resources for the expanding nation.

Christians across the globe honor Saint Luke the Evangelist today, the physician-author credited with penning the Gos…

Christians across the globe honor Saint Luke the Evangelist today, the physician-author credited with penning the Gospel of Luke and the Acts of the Apostles. By focusing his narrative on the marginalized and the poor, Luke established the theological foundation for the church’s modern commitment to social justice and humanitarian aid.

Five Canadian women asked the Supreme Court in 1927 whether they counted as 'persons' under the law.

Five Canadian women asked the Supreme Court in 1927 whether they counted as 'persons' under the law. The British North America Act used male pronouns. Women couldn't serve in the Senate because they weren't legally people. The court said no. The women appealed to the Privy Council in London. On October 18, 1929, the ruling came back: yes, women are persons. Henrietta Muir Edwards, Nellie McClung, Louise McKinney, Emily Murphy, and Irene Parlby changed citizenship itself with a question.

The French Revolutionary Calendar placed chili pepper on the 27th day of Vendémiaire — mid-October by Gregorian recko…

The French Revolutionary Calendar placed chili pepper on the 27th day of Vendémiaire — mid-October by Gregorian reckoning. The calendar's authors assigned agricultural products to replace saints' names in a systematic effort to create a secular, rational framework for time. Each of the 360 named days got a plant, animal, or tool. Chili peppers, introduced to Europe from the Americas in the 16th century, were well established in French cooking by the 1790s. Getting a day on the revolutionary calendar was, by the era's standards, a form of official recognition.

Luke the Evangelist, traditionally believed to be a physician and companion of Paul, wrote the Gospel of Luke and Act…

Luke the Evangelist, traditionally believed to be a physician and companion of Paul, wrote the Gospel of Luke and Acts of the Apostles — together they make up 27% of the New Testament. He's the only Gentile author in the Bible. His Gospel focuses on Jesus's compassion for the poor and marginalized. He includes more parables than the other Gospels. Tradition says he painted the first icon of Mary, though no such painting survives. He's the patron saint of artists and doctors.

Croatia celebrates Necktie Day on October 18th because Croatian mercenaries introduced cravats to France in the 1600s.

Croatia celebrates Necktie Day on October 18th because Croatian mercenaries introduced cravats to France in the 1600s. French soldiers wore scarves. Croats wore distinctive knotted neckties. Louis XIV liked them and made cravats fashionable. The French word cravate comes from Croat. Croatia trademarked the tie as a national symbol in 2008.

Azerbaijan declares its sovereignty on October 18, 1991, ending decades of Soviet rule and establishing itself as a m…

Azerbaijan declares its sovereignty on October 18, 1991, ending decades of Soviet rule and establishing itself as a modern nation. This decisive act reshaped the region's geopolitical landscape, allowing Baku to control its vast energy resources and forge independent foreign alliances.

World Menopause Day was established by the International Menopause Society in 1984 to raise awareness of menopause he…

World Menopause Day was established by the International Menopause Society in 1984 to raise awareness of menopause health and support options. It's observed in over 60 countries. The date doesn't commemorate any specific event — it was simply chosen as a day in mid-October. Half the world's population will experience menopause. It took until 1984 for it to get a day.