Today In History logo TIH

On this day

October 8

Great Chicago Fire: A City Rebuilt From Ashes (1871). Queen Min Assassinated: Korea's Imperial Tragedy (1895). Notable births include Robert "Kool" Bell (1950), Ursula von der Leyen (1958), Pyrrhus of Epirus (319 BC).

Featured

Great Chicago Fire: A City Rebuilt From Ashes
1871Event

Great Chicago Fire: A City Rebuilt From Ashes

The Great Chicago Fire began on October 8, 1871, in or near the O'Leary barn on DeKoven Street. The popular story blames Mrs. O'Leary's cow for kicking over a lantern, but a reporter later admitted he invented that detail. What actually fed the fire was a city built almost entirely of wood after years of drought. Firefighters were already exhausted from a large blaze the night before, and a watchman sent them to the wrong location. Winds off the prairie drove the flames northeast through the business district. The fire burned for three days, destroying 17,450 buildings across 2,000 acres and leaving 100,000 of the city's 300,000 residents homeless. Roughly 300 people died. Chicago rebuilt rapidly, adopting fire-resistant construction codes that pioneered steel-frame architecture and the modern skyscraper.

Queen Min Assassinated: Korea's Imperial Tragedy
1895

Queen Min Assassinated: Korea's Imperial Tragedy

Japanese operatives and soldiers stormed Gyeongbok Palace in Seoul before dawn on October 8, 1895, hunting Queen Min, who had been working to align Korea with Russia rather than Japan. They found her in the inner chambers, stabbed her multiple times, then burned her body on the palace grounds to destroy evidence. Japanese minister Miura Goro had organized the assassination, but when the international outcry proved devastating, Japan tried and acquitted all 56 suspects in what historians regard as a sham trial. Queen Min, later given the posthumous title Empress Myeongseong, had been the most powerful political figure in Korea and the primary obstacle to Japanese domination. Her murder removed that obstacle and accelerated Korea's path to becoming a Japanese protectorate by 1905 and a full colony by 1910.

York Captures 132 Germans: Argonne's Greatest Hero
1918

York Captures 132 Germans: Argonne's Greatest Hero

Corporal Alvin York was a conscientious objector from the mountains of Tennessee who initially sought exemption from military service on religious grounds. His battalion commander talked him into fighting by citing Biblical passages about just war. On October 8, 1918, during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive, York's patrol of 17 men stumbled into a German headquarters unit and captured several soldiers before machine gun fire pinned them down, killing six Americans. York, an expert marksman who had won turkey shoots back home, picked off 28 German soldiers one by one from 300 yards. When six Germans charged him with bayonets, he shot them with his pistol. The surviving Germans surrendered. York and his seven remaining men marched 132 prisoners back to American lines. He received the Medal of Honor and returned home to Tennessee.

Bush Creates Homeland Security: Post-9/11 America
2001

Bush Creates Homeland Security: Post-9/11 America

President George W. Bush created the Office of Homeland Security on October 8, 2001, less than a month after the September 11 attacks. He appointed Pennsylvania Governor Tom Ridge to lead it. The office had no statutory authority and no budget of its own, serving primarily as a coordinating body among existing agencies. That changed in November 2002 when Congress established the Department of Homeland Security, the largest reorganization of the federal government since 1947. The new department merged 22 agencies and 170,000 employees, including the Coast Guard, Secret Service, Customs, Immigration, FEMA, and the newly created TSA. The consolidation was meant to prevent intelligence failures by centralizing threat assessment. Whether it achieved that goal or simply created a larger bureaucracy remains debated.

Second Opium War Begins: Arrow Incident Sparks Clash
1856

Second Opium War Begins: Arrow Incident Sparks Clash

Chinese officials in Canton boarded a cargo ship called the Arrow on October 8, 1856, and arrested twelve crew members for suspected piracy. The ship was Chinese-owned but registered in Hong Kong under a British flag that may have already expired. The British consul, Harry Parkes, demanded an apology and the return of all prisoners. Qing officials returned the men but refused to apologize. The British bombarded Canton. France joined the war after a French missionary was executed in Guangxi province. Over four years of fighting, the Anglo-French forces burned the Old Summer Palace in Beijing as punishment for the torture and execution of envoys. The resulting treaties opened eleven new ports to foreign trade, legalized the opium trade, and allowed Christian missionaries throughout China. An estimated 60,000 Chinese died.

Quote of the Day

“Courage is doing what you are afraid to do. There can be no courage unless you are scared.”

Eddie Rickenbacker

Historical events

Born on October 8

Portrait of Sadiq Khan
Sadiq Khan 1970

Sadiq Khan rose from a childhood in a London council estate to become the first Muslim mayor of a major Western capital.

Read more

His career as a human rights lawyer and his tenure as Minister of State for Transport provided the political foundation for his ongoing efforts to expand public transit and address urban inequality across London.

Portrait of Reed Hastings
Reed Hastings 1960

Reed Hastings co-founded Netflix in 1997 after being charged $40 in late fees on a VHS copy of Apollo 13.

Read more

That's the story he tells. His co-founder Marc Randolph has suggested the actual genesis was more complicated. Either way, the result was a DVD-by-mail service that became a streaming company that became the model for how media is distributed globally. Hastings stepped down as CEO in 2023, having overseen the company's growth from a startup to 230 million subscribers. He gave $120 million to his alma mater, Bowdoin College.

Portrait of Ursula von der Leyen
Ursula von der Leyen 1958

Ursula von der Leyen had seven children before entering politics.

Read more

She became Germany's first female defense minister in 2013. She's now President of the European Commission — the first woman to hold the job. She learned English watching 'Dallas' as a teenager in Brussels. She runs Europe now.

Portrait of Darrell Hammond
Darrell Hammond 1955

Darrell Hammond did 107 impressions on "Saturday Night Live" across 14 seasons — more than any cast member in history.

Read more

He played Bill Clinton 87 times. He was also cutting himself in his dressing room between sketches. He'd been abused as a child and didn't tell anyone for decades. He wrote about it in 2011. He's still performing.

Portrait of Robert "Kool" Bell
Robert "Kool" Bell 1950

Robert "Kool" Bell formed Kool & the Gang with his brother and five friends in Jersey City.

Read more

They played jazz, then funk, then disco when disco paid. "Celebration" has played at every wedding and sporting event for 40 years. He's still touring. The band has never broken up.

Portrait of Johnny Ramone
Johnny Ramone 1948

Johnny Ramone used only downstrokes on his guitar.

Read more

No alternating up-down like every other guitarist. Just down, down, down, for two hours straight, at 200 beats per minute. His right forearm looked like a blacksmith's. The Ramones played 2,263 concerts in 22 years, almost all under 30 minutes. He never did drugs, never drank on tour. He voted Republican. When he died, he left his guitar to Eddie Vedder with one instruction: keep playing it.

Portrait of Paul Hogan
Paul Hogan 1939

Paul Hogan worked as a rigger on the Sydney Harbour Bridge for 10 years before appearing on a TV talent show in 1971.

Read more

He did a comedy sketch making fun of pretentious people. It went viral before viral existed. He got his own show. "Crocodile Dundee" made $328 million in 1986. He'd never acted before.

Portrait of Ray Lewis
Ray Lewis 1910

Ray Lewis won bronze in the 4x400 meter relay at the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics, running for Canada.

Read more

He was born in Hamilton and worked for the railway for 40 years after his running career ended. He lived to 93, long enough to see Canadian athletes win 463 more Olympic medals. Bronze doesn't tarnish if you keep it long enough.

Portrait of Juan Perón
Juan Perón 1895

Juan Perón kept the embalmed body of his second wife, Eva, in his dining room for two years after her death.

Read more

When he was overthrown, the military hid her corpse in Italy under a false name for 16 years. He married a nightclub dancer 35 years younger while in exile. He returned to Argentina in 1973, won the presidency again at 77, and died in office nine months later. His third wife succeeded him as president.

Portrait of Henry Louis Le Châtelier
Henry Louis Le Châtelier 1850

Henry Louis Le Châtelier revolutionized industrial chemistry by formulating the principle that predicts how chemical…

Read more

systems respond to changes in pressure, temperature, or concentration. His work allowed engineers to optimize ammonia production and steel manufacturing, directly increasing the efficiency of global chemical synthesis. He remains the architect of modern equilibrium theory.

Portrait of Pyrrhus of Epirus
Pyrrhus of Epirus 319 BC

Pyrrhus won every battle against Rome and lost the war anyway.

Read more

His casualties were so heavy that "Pyrrhic victory" still means winning at unsustainable cost. He died at 46 when a woman threw a roof tile at his head during street fighting in Argos. Empires fall. Gravity always wins.

Died on October 8

Portrait of George Emil Palade
George Emil Palade 2008

George Emil Palade developed the techniques to see inside living cells.

Read more

Using electron microscopy and cell fractionation, he identified the endoplasmic reticulum, the Golgi apparatus, and the ribosome as distinct functional structures. He essentially created cell biology as a discipline. He was born in Romania, came to the United States in 1946, and worked at Rockefeller University for twenty years before moving to Yale and then UC San Diego. He won the Nobel Prize in 1974. He died in 2008 at 95.

Portrait of Willy Brandt

Willy Brandt knelt at the Warsaw Ghetto memorial in 1970.

Read more

He hadn't planned it. He stood there a moment, then went to his knees in the rain, in silence, in front of the monument to the Jewish uprising. He was a Social Democrat who had fled Nazi Germany in the 1930s. He had nothing personal to atone for. That was the point. He later said he did what people do when words fail them. The photograph ran on front pages across the world. He won the Nobel Peace Prize that year.

Portrait of Philip Noel-Baker
Philip Noel-Baker 1982

Philip Noel-Baker ran the 1,500 meters at the 1920 Antwerp Olympics and won silver.

Read more

He was also managing the British Olympic team. He had served in a Friends' Ambulance Unit at Gallipoli and in Italy in World War I. He spent the following sixty years pursuing international disarmament through every channel available — League of Nations, the UN, the British Parliament. He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1959. He was still campaigning against nuclear weapons in his nineties. He died in 1982 at 92.

Portrait of Clement Attlee
Clement Attlee 1967

Clement Attlee served as deputy prime minister under Churchill during the war, then won the 1945 election by a…

Read more

landslide while Churchill was at Potsdam. He came home to lead the most radical peacetime government Britain had ever seen: the National Health Service, nationalized coal and railways, Indian independence, the welfare state. He did it all in six years. He was quiet, modest, and deeply effective — qualities Churchill mocked and history vindicated. He left office in 1951 with Britain transformed.

Portrait of Premchand
Premchand 1936

Premchand wrote in Urdu, then switched to Hindi to reach more readers.

Read more

He published 300 short stories and 14 novels about Indian peasants and poverty. He earned almost nothing. He started a printing press. It failed. He died at 56, broke. India named its top literary award for him. He never won anything.

Portrait of Franklin Pierce
Franklin Pierce 1869

Franklin Pierce watched his 11-year-old son die in a train derailment two months before his inauguration.

Read more

The boy was decapitated in front of him. His wife believed God took their child as punishment for Pierce's ambition. She wore black for the rest of his presidency and rarely appeared in public. Pierce signed the Kansas-Nebraska Act, bleeding Kansas followed, and the country split toward war. He drank himself to death four years after leaving office, the most obscure president of the 19th century.

Portrait of John Hancock
John Hancock 1793

John Hancock signed the Declaration of Independence so large you could read it across the room.

Read more

He was president of Congress, the richest man in New England, and a smuggler who'd made his fortune evading British taxes. He signed first and biggest. He died in 1793. His signature became slang for any signature. One flourish of vanity made him immortal.

Holidays & observances

Croatia declared independence from Yugoslavia on June 25, 1991, but celebrates it on October 8 — the day parliament c…

Croatia declared independence from Yugoslavia on June 25, 1991, but celebrates it on October 8 — the day parliament cut all ties after three months of war. The Yugoslav army had shelled Dubrovnik and besieged Vukovar. The delay was strategic: European countries wanted a cooling-off period. It didn't cool off. The war lasted four more years. 20,000 people died.

Pelagia was a dancer and courtesan in Antioch who heard a bishop preach, converted, gave away her wealth, and disguis…

Pelagia was a dancer and courtesan in Antioch who heard a bishop preach, converted, gave away her wealth, and disguised herself as a man to live as a hermit on the Mount of Olives. She was discovered to be a woman only after her death. Her story — likely fictional — became one of the most popular saint tales of the Middle Ages. At least four other female saints have similar stories: wealth, beauty, conversion, male disguise, hermitage. The formula worked.

Peru celebrates Navy Day on October 8, commemorating the 1821 founding by José de San Martín.

Peru celebrates Navy Day on October 8, commemorating the 1821 founding by José de San Martín. He needed ships to blockade Lima and cut off Spanish reinforcements. He started with eight vessels, mostly captured Spanish warships. Admiral Miguel Grau later became Peru's greatest naval hero, dying in 1879 during a battle with Chile. They named a cruiser after him.

Children's Day in Iran falls on October 7, established during the pre-revolutionary period and maintained by the Isla…

Children's Day in Iran falls on October 7, established during the pre-revolutionary period and maintained by the Islamic Republic with different framing. Iran has one of the youngest populations in the Middle East — nearly 30% under 15 in the 2010s — though that proportion has been falling as birth rates decline. The Islamic Republic has oscillated between pro-natalist policies encouraging large families and pragmatic acknowledgment that economic conditions limit family size. Children's Day sits in the middle of these competing pressures, officially celebrating childhood while the policies around it shift.

National Fluffernutter Day celebrates a sandwich of peanut butter and marshmallow fluff.

National Fluffernutter Day celebrates a sandwich of peanut butter and marshmallow fluff. Marshmallow Fluff was invented in Massachusetts in 1917. The Fluffernutter name was trademarked in 1960. The sandwich has no historical importance. A state legislator tried to make it Massachusetts's official sandwich in 2006. The bill failed. A day exists for a sandwich that couldn't become official in its home state. The holiday is real. The recognition isn't.

French citizens celebrated the pumpkin during the seventeenth day of Vendémiaire, honoring the humble squash as a sym…

French citizens celebrated the pumpkin during the seventeenth day of Vendémiaire, honoring the humble squash as a symbol of the agrarian values central to the Republican Calendar. By elevating common produce to a place of honor, the radical government sought to replace traditional religious feast days with a secular rhythm rooted in the harvest cycle.

Palatia and Laurentia were martyred in Ancona, Italy, in the 4th century for refusing to renounce Christianity.

Palatia and Laurentia were martyred in Ancona, Italy, in the 4th century for refusing to renounce Christianity. Records say they were sisters. Their relics stayed in Ancona for 800 years, then were moved to a church in Fermo during a siege. The details of their lives are sparse. What survives is devotion — churches, feast days, centuries of remembering their names.

Bolivian villagers in La Higuera honor Che Guevara as San Ernesto, a folk saint believed to intercede for rain and ag…

Bolivian villagers in La Higuera honor Che Guevara as San Ernesto, a folk saint believed to intercede for rain and agricultural prosperity. This veneration transformed a Marxist radical into a local religious figure, blending his 1967 capture site into a site of spiritual pilgrimage that persists long after his execution.

Croatians celebrate their sovereignty today, commemorating the 1991 parliamentary decision to sever all remaining leg…

Croatians celebrate their sovereignty today, commemorating the 1991 parliamentary decision to sever all remaining legal ties with the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. This formal break finalized the country’s transition to an independent state, ending decades of constitutional entanglement and allowing Croatia to pursue its own path toward international recognition and eventual European Union membership.

Fire Prevention Week falls on the second week of October because that's when the Great Chicago Fire started in 1871.

Fire Prevention Week falls on the second week of October because that's when the Great Chicago Fire started in 1871. The fire killed 300 people and destroyed 17,000 buildings. Legend blamed Mrs. O'Leary's cow kicking over a lantern. A reporter invented the story. The real cause was never determined. Fire Prevention Week started in 1922 on the fire's 51st anniversary. It's the longest-running public health observance in America. The cow is still famous.

The International Day for Natural Disaster Reduction falls on the second Wednesday of October, somewhere between the …

The International Day for Natural Disaster Reduction falls on the second Wednesday of October, somewhere between the 8th and 14th. The UN created it in 1989 to promote disaster preparedness. The date is arbitrary — disasters don't follow calendars. But the timing matters. October sits in the middle of Atlantic hurricane season and the end of Pacific typhoon season. It's when people are most aware that nature doesn't negotiate.

Hawaii calls the second Monday in October Discoverer's Day, not Columbus Day.

Hawaii calls the second Monday in October Discoverer's Day, not Columbus Day. It honors the Polynesian navigators who found the islands around 400 CE — a thousand years before Columbus sailed. They crossed 2,000 miles of open ocean in double-hulled canoes, navigating by stars, currents, and bird flight patterns. They brought pigs, chickens, taro, and breadfruit. Columbus never came within 4,000 miles of Hawaii. The name change acknowledges who actually discovered what.

Columbus Day falls on the second Monday of October, meaning it can land anywhere from the 8th to the 14th.

Columbus Day falls on the second Monday of October, meaning it can land anywhere from the 8th to the 14th. The federal holiday was created in 1937 after lobbying by Italian-American groups who wanted a national hero. Colorado had celebrated it since 1906. The date marks Columbus's 1492 arrival in the Bahamas. He thought he'd reached Asia. He never set foot in North America. Several states now call it Indigenous Peoples' Day instead.

World Space Week runs October 4-10, bracketing Sputnik's launch and the Outer Space Treaty signing.

World Space Week runs October 4-10, bracketing Sputnik's launch and the Outer Space Treaty signing. The UN declared it in 1999 to celebrate space science. Eighty countries participate with events and school programs. The dates commemorate a Soviet satellite and a treaty limiting weapons in orbit. A week honoring space exploration marks both the achievement and the agreement not to weaponize it.

India celebrates Air Force Day on October 8th, marking the Indian Air Force's founding in 1932 under British rule.

India celebrates Air Force Day on October 8th, marking the Indian Air Force's founding in 1932 under British rule. It started with four Westland Wapiti biplanes and six officers. The force fought for Britain in World War II. After independence, it kept the same date but changed the flag. A holiday celebrating India's air power commemorates a colonial military unit that became independent fifteen years after its founding.

International Lesbian Day falls on October 8th, chosen in 1990 to honor lesbians specifically within LGBTQ+ movements.

International Lesbian Day falls on October 8th, chosen in 1990 to honor lesbians specifically within LGBTQ+ movements. Activists wanted visibility separate from gay men. The date has no historical event attached. It's observed in dozens of countries. Pride Month in June celebrates the broader community. October 8th belongs to lesbians alone. One day in a calendar full of shared celebrations.