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On this day

January 28

Challenger Explodes: Seven Astronauts Die in Space (1986). Henry VIII Dies: Edward VI Becomes Protestant King (1547). Notable births include Carlos Slim (1940), Dick Taylor (1943), Bob Hay (1950).

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Challenger Explodes: Seven Astronauts Die in Space
1986Event

Challenger Explodes: Seven Astronauts Die in Space

Seventy-three seconds after liftoff, the Space Shuttle Challenger broke apart over the Atlantic Ocean in full view of millions of television viewers, including schoolchildren across the country who had tuned in to watch teacher Christa McAuliffe become the first civilian in space. All seven crew members died on January 28, 1986, in what became the defining disaster of the American space program. The crew—Commander Dick Scobee, Pilot Michael Smith, mission specialists Judith Resnik, Ellison Onizuka, and Ronald McNair, payload specialist Gregory Jarvis, and McAuliffe—had boarded Challenger on an unusually cold Florida morning. Temperatures at the launch pad had dropped to 36 degrees Fahrenheit overnight, well below the 53-degree minimum at which the shuttle''s solid rocket booster O-rings had ever been tested. Engineers at Morton Thiokol, the O-ring manufacturer, had argued strenuously against launching, warning that the rubber seals could fail in the cold. NASA managers overruled them. At T+0.678 seconds, cameras recorded a puff of dark smoke emerging from the right solid rocket booster''s aft field joint. The cold had caused the O-ring to lose its elasticity and fail to seal properly. For nearly a minute, solidified aluminum oxides temporarily plugged the gap. Then, at T+58 seconds, wind shear broke the temporary seal. Superheated gases burned through the external fuel tank, and at T+73 seconds, aerodynamic forces tore the shuttle apart at an altitude of 48,000 feet. The crew cabin, largely intact, continued to rise briefly before falling for two and a half minutes into the ocean. Evidence suggests at least some crew members survived the initial breakup. President Reagan''s address to the nation that evening, written by Peggy Noonan, closed with the words "slipped the surly bonds of earth to touch the face of God." The Rogers Commission investigation, with physicist Richard Feynman memorably demonstrating the O-ring failure with a glass of ice water, revealed that NASA''s organizational culture had suppressed safety concerns under schedule pressure. The shuttle program was grounded for 32 months. The disaster permanently altered how Americans understood the risks of spaceflight.

Henry VIII Dies: Edward VI Becomes Protestant King
1547

Henry VIII Dies: Edward VI Becomes Protestant King

Henry VIII, the king who remade England in his own image, died in his bed at Whitehall Palace on January 28, 1547, at the age of 55. He had ruled for 37 years, married six times, broken with the Roman Catholic Church, dissolved England''s monasteries, executed two of his wives and countless rivals, and transformed a medieval kingdom into an early modern state. His nine-year-old son Edward succeeded him and immediately steered England deeper into Protestantism. The Henry who died in 1547 bore little resemblance to the athletic, cultured young prince who had taken the throne in 1509. Decades of indulgence had swollen him to an estimated 400 pounds. A jousting accident in 1536 had left him with a chronically ulcerated leg that never healed, causing constant pain and likely contributing to his increasingly volatile temperament. His final years were marked by paranoia, factional court politics, and the burning question that had consumed his reign: the succession. Henry''s legacy was a transformed England. His break with Rome, initially motivated by the pope''s refusal to annul his marriage to Catherine of Aragon, created the Church of England with the monarch as Supreme Head. The dissolution of the monasteries between 1536 and 1541 transferred roughly a quarter of England''s landed wealth to the Crown and its supporters, creating a new Protestant gentry with a financial stake in the Reformation. The six marriages produced three children—Mary, Elizabeth, and Edward—each of whom would rule, and whose competing religious commitments would define the rest of the century. Edward VI''s accession shifted the religious balance decisively. Henry had been a theological conservative who burned Protestants and Catholics alike; Edward''s regency council, led by the Duke of Somerset and later the Duke of Northumberland, pushed aggressively toward Calvinist Protestantism. The Book of Common Prayer replaced the Latin Mass. When Edward died in 1553, the crown passed to the Catholic Mary, then to the Protestant Elizabeth, and the religious pendulum swung for decades. The England Henry left behind was a country permanently divided between old faith and new, its identity forged in the furnace of one king''s relentless will.

Pride and Prejudice Published: Austen's Masterpiece
1813

Pride and Prejudice Published: Austen's Masterpiece

"It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife." With those words, one of the most celebrated novels in the English language arrived in bookshops on January 28, 1813. Pride and Prejudice, published anonymously by "the Author of Sense and Sensibility," introduced the world to Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy—characters whose influence on fiction, romance, and the popular imagination has never diminished. Jane Austen had first drafted the novel in 1796-1797 under the title "First Impressions," completing it when she was just 21 years old. Her father offered it to the London publisher Thomas Cadell, who rejected it sight unseen. The manuscript sat in a drawer for over fifteen years before Austen revised it extensively and sold the copyright to Thomas Egerton for £110—roughly £10,000 today. Egerton published it in three volumes at 18 shillings, and the first edition of approximately 1,500 copies sold out within months. The novel''s genius lay in its narrative voice. Austen perfected the technique of free indirect discourse, filtering the story through Elizabeth''s perception while maintaining an ironic authorial distance that allowed the reader to see what Elizabeth could not. The comedy of manners on the surface—balls, visits, proposals, entailments—concealed a sharp analysis of economic dependency, class rigidity, and the limited choices available to women in Regency England. Elizabeth''s refusal of Mr. Collins and her initial rejection of Darcy were acts of radical self-assertion in a world where women married for security or faced genteel poverty. Contemporary reviews were positive. The British Critic praised "the sentiments which are inculcated" and the Edinburgh Review noted Austen''s "exhaustless invention." Austen herself called Elizabeth "as delightful a creature as ever appeared in print." The novel has never been out of print. Over two centuries, it has generated dozens of film and television adaptations, inspired countless romance novels, and been translated into virtually every major language. Elizabeth Bennet remains literature''s most popular heroine—a woman who insisted on being loved for her mind.

Paris Surrenders: German Empire Rises from French Defeat
1871

Paris Surrenders: German Empire Rises from French Defeat

After 131 days of siege, starvation, and relentless Prussian bombardment, Paris surrendered on January 28, 1871. The fall of the French capital ended the Franco-Prussian War and set in motion the unification of Germany under Prussian leadership—the single most consequential geopolitical event in Europe between Napoleon and World War I. The war had begun in July 1870, provoked by Prussian Chancellor Otto von Bismarck through the manipulation of a diplomatic telegram regarding the Spanish succession. Napoleon III, France''s emperor, walked into the trap and declared war. The French army, believed by many to be the finest in Europe, was systematically dismantled by Prussian forces using superior organization, railway logistics, and modern Krupp artillery. Napoleon III himself was captured at the Battle of Sedan on September 2, 1870, and his empire collapsed overnight. A new Government of National Defense declared a republic and vowed to fight on. Paris was encircled on September 19. Over the following months, two million Parisians endured escalating deprivation. When food supplies ran out, residents ate horses, cats, dogs, rats, and eventually the animals of the Paris Zoo—including the elephants Castor and Pollux. Attempts to break the siege using hot air balloons for communication (including one carrying the future Premier Léon Gambetta) showed ingenuity but could not change the military reality. Prussian artillery began shelling the city directly in January 1871, killing hundreds of civilians. The armistice terms were severe: France ceded Alsace and most of Lorraine, paid an indemnity of five billion francs, and endured German military occupation until the debt was settled. On January 18, ten days before the surrender, the German princes had proclaimed Wilhelm I as Kaiser of a united German Empire in the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles—a deliberate humiliation staged in the heart of French royal grandeur. The resentment this generated festered for 43 years, until it erupted in the trenches of World War I. The peace that ended the Franco-Prussian War planted the seed of Europe''s next catastrophe.

We Are the World Recorded: Music Fights Ethiopian Famine
1985

We Are the World Recorded: Music Fights Ethiopian Famine

Forty-five of the biggest names in American music crowded into A&M Recording Studios in Hollywood on the night of January 28, 1985, and in a single ten-hour session recorded a song that would raise $63 million for famine relief in Africa. "We Are the World," written by Michael Jackson and Lionel Richie and produced by Quincy Jones, became one of the best-selling singles of all time and the defining moment of celebrity humanitarian activism in the 1980s. The session was organized with military precision. Jones famously posted a sign on the studio door: "Check your egos at the door." The artists—including Bruce Springsteen, Stevie Wonder, Bob Dylan, Tina Turner, Diana Ross, Ray Charles, Billy Joel, and Paul Simon—had gathered immediately after the American Music Awards ceremony, arriving at the studio around 10 p.m. Each received a demo cassette and lyric sheet. Jones and Richie assigned solo lines based on each singer''s vocal strengths. The chorus was recorded with the entire group singing together, shoulder to shoulder in a semicircle. The recording session produced moments of tension and magic in equal measure. Dylan, famously private, struggled with his solo line until Stevie Wonder improvised a Dylan impression to help him find the right phrasing. Ray Charles, nearly the oldest performer in the room, delivered his solo with an emotional power that brought the session to a hush. Prince, notably, declined to participate in person but contributed a guitar track separately. The finished recording was mixed and mastered within days. "We Are the World" was released on March 7, 1985, and sold over 20 million copies worldwide. The proceeds, channeled through USA for Africa, funded food, medical supplies, and development programs in Ethiopia and other African nations suffering from catastrophic drought and famine. The song''s impact extended beyond the money: it demonstrated that popular culture could mobilize global humanitarian response at a scale that governments had failed to achieve, and it inspired a generation of benefit concerts, telethons, and celebrity-driven activism that continues today.

Quote of the Day

“There is nothing on this earth more to be prized than true friendship.”

Historical events

Born on January 28

Portrait of Jessica Ennis-Hill
Jessica Ennis-Hill 1986

She won Olympic heptathlon gold in London 2012 and broke the world record at Daegu 2011.

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Jessica Ennis-Hill was Britain's most popular athlete at the London Games, competing at a home Olympics with every expectation, and winning it. She came back from pregnancy to win silver at Rio 2016. She was made a Dame in 2017. In an era of British athletic success, she was the face of all of it — not because she was the best at any single event but because she was best across seven, and because she did it all with what seemed like total presence of mind.

Portrait of Nick Carter
Nick Carter 1980

Nick Carter rose to global fame as the youngest member of the Backstreet Boys, the vocal group that defined the late-nineties pop explosion.

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His transition from teen idol to solo artist and producer helped sustain the band’s multi-decade career, cementing their status as the best-selling boy band in music history.

Portrait of Joey Fatone
Joey Fatone 1977

Joey Fatone rose to global fame as a tenor in *NSYNC, the boy band that defined the late-nineties pop landscape.

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Beyond his multi-platinum record sales, he successfully transitioned into Broadway and television, proving that pop stardom could serve as a viable launchpad for a versatile career in musical theater and reality competition hosting.

Portrait of Rakim
Rakim 1968

Revolutionized hip-hop with just his voice.

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Rakim transformed rap from shouting to a whispered, jazz-like flow that made every word count. His internal rhymes were so precise they sounded like musical notation — each syllable placed with surgical skill. And before him, rappers were loud. He was cool. Cerebral. The first MC who made listeners lean in, not step back.

Portrait of Vinod Khosla
Vinod Khosla 1955

A teenage tinkerer who'd build radios from spare parts, Vinod Khosla didn't just want to use technology—he wanted to remake it.

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Growing up in Delhi, he'd already dropped out of engineering school before most kids pick a major. But Silicon Valley wasn't ready for him: he'd go on to co-found Sun Microsystems, creating the programming language Java and helping launch the internet's infrastructure. And he did it all before most people understood what a computer could really do.

Portrait of Nicolas Sarkozy
Nicolas Sarkozy 1955

Nicolas Sarkozy, who would become the twenty-third president of France, was born on January 28, 1955, in Paris.

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The son of a Hungarian immigrant father and a French mother of Greek Jewish descent, he rose through conservative French politics with an ambition and energy that his allies called dynamism and his critics called hyperactivity. Sarkozy entered politics at an unusually young age, becoming mayor of Neuilly-sur-Seine, one of the wealthiest municipalities in France, at 28. He served in multiple cabinet positions under Presidents Chirac and Balladur, most notably as Minister of the Interior, where he adopted a confrontational approach to crime and immigration that polarized French public opinion. He won the French presidency in 2007, defeating Socialist candidate Segolene Royal. His presidency was marked by an energetic personal style that broke with the dignified reserve traditionally expected of French presidents. He jogged in public, married Italian-French singer and model Carla Bruni during his first year in office, and engaged in public disputes that kept him in tabloid headlines. His policy achievements included pension reform, the French military intervention in Libya in 2011, and the management of the 2008 financial crisis during France's presidency of the European Union. His critics accused him of authoritarian tendencies, of favoritism toward wealthy supporters, and of exploiting racial and religious tensions for political advantage, particularly in his rhetoric about immigration and French national identity. He lost his reelection bid to Socialist Francois Hollande in 2012 and was subsequently convicted of corruption and illegal campaign financing in multiple legal proceedings. In 2021, he was sentenced to one year in prison for attempting to bribe a judge, though the sentence was converted to home detention with an electronic bracelet. He was the first former French president to be convicted of a criminal offense and sentenced to prison.

Portrait of Chris Carter
Chris Carter 1953

Chris Carter pioneered the industrial music genre by manipulating tape loops and custom-built synthesizers, first with…

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the confrontational Throbbing Gristle and later through his rhythmic, electronic collaborations as Chris & Cosey. His technical innovations pushed experimental sound into the mainstream, directly influencing the development of modern techno and ambient electronic music.

Portrait of Charles Taylor
Charles Taylor 1948

Charles Taylor rose from a rebel leader to the 22nd President of Liberia, orchestrating a brutal civil war that claimed over 250,000 lives.

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His eventual conviction by a UN-backed tribunal established a legal precedent for holding a former head of state accountable for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in a neighboring country.

Portrait of Rosalía Mera
Rosalía Mera 1944

Rosalía Mera transformed the global fashion industry by co-founding Inditex and the retail giant Zara, starting from a…

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small workshop in Galicia. Her business model pioneered the fast-fashion cycle, allowing trends to move from design to store shelves in weeks rather than months. She remains the wealthiest self-made woman in Spanish history.

Portrait of Carlos Slim
Carlos Slim 1940

Carlos Slim Helu, the Mexican businessman who became the richest person in the world, was born on January 28, 1940, in Mexico City.

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His fortune, built primarily through the acquisition of Mexico's state telephone monopoly during privatization, has made him one of the wealthiest individuals in history and the most powerful business figure in Latin America. Slim's parents were Lebanese immigrants who settled in Mexico in the early twentieth century. His father, Julian Slim Haddad, built a successful retail and real estate business in Mexico City. Slim studied engineering at the National Autonomous University of Mexico and began investing in the stock market as a teenager, buying shares of Mexican banks and insurance companies that he considered undervalued. His transformative deal came in 1990, when the Mexican government privatized Telmex, the national telephone company. Slim, in partnership with France Telecom and Southwestern Bell, acquired a controlling stake for $1.76 billion. The acquisition gave him a monopoly over Mexico's telephone infrastructure at precisely the moment when telecommunications was becoming the most valuable industry in the world. As mobile phone adoption exploded across Latin America, Slim's company, now called America Movil, became the largest telecommunications provider in the region. His wealth grew from the Telmex acquisition to exceed $70 billion at its peak, making him the richest person in the world according to Forbes from 2010 to 2013. His business empire, organized through the holding company Grupo Carso, extends beyond telecommunications into retail, mining, construction, banking, and media. Critics argue that Slim's wealth derives from monopolistic market positions maintained through regulatory capture and political connections rather than from innovation or competitive excellence. Mexico's telecommunications market has among the highest prices and lowest service quality in the OECD, a condition that enriches Slim while disadvantaging Mexican consumers and businesses.

Portrait of Tomas Lindahl
Tomas Lindahl 1938

A lab accident changed everything.

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While studying bacterial enzymes, Lindahl discovered DNA wasn't the stable molecule everyone believed—it actually decays constantly. But instead of seeing this as a problem, he saw a puzzle. His new work on DNA repair mechanisms would eventually earn him the Nobel Prize, proving that what scientists thought was a weakness was actually a crucial cellular maintenance system. And he did it by questioning the fundamental assumptions of molecular biology.

Portrait of Karel Čáslavský
Karel Čáslavský 1937

He collected Communist-era propaganda films like rare butterflies.

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Karel Čáslavský wasn't just a historian — he was an obsessive archiver who rescued thousands of Czech propaganda reels that would've vanished forever. And not just any archiving: he meticulously documented every bizarre, ridiculous moment of state-controlled media, creating an extraordinary record of how totalitarian systems told their own stories. His work wasn't just preservation; it was cultural forensics.

Portrait of Gabby Gabreski
Gabby Gabreski 1919

The kid from a Polish immigrant family in New York would become America's top World War II fighter ace in Europe.

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Francis "Gabby" Gabreski shot down 34.5 enemy aircraft - more than any other American pilot in the European theater. But he didn't start as a hero: he'd been rejected from the Air Corps multiple times before finally getting accepted, proving pure grit could overcome initial rejection. A first-generation American who'd turn potential limitations into legendary achievement.

Portrait of William Seward Burroughs I
William Seward Burroughs I 1857

He wasn't just an inventor—he was obsessed with precision.

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Burroughs created an adding machine that could calculate faster than any human, transforming how businesses tracked money. But here's the wild part: he started as a bank clerk who was constantly frustrated by arithmetic errors. His first machine, patented in 1885, was a mechanical marvel that automatically printed totals, eliminating human calculation mistakes. And it made him a millionaire before he turned 40.

Died on January 28

Portrait of Yves Chauvin
Yves Chauvin 2015

The chemist who made molecular machinery dance.

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Chauvin cracked the code of chemical reactions, revealing how metals could elegantly shepherd molecules into precise new formations. His work on metathesis — essentially molecular square dancing — transformed industrial chemistry, letting manufacturers create plastics, medications, and fuels with stunning efficiency. And he did it quietly, without fanfare, from a small research lab in France. His Nobel Prize came late in life, but transformed how scientists understood chemical transformations forever.

Portrait of Shotaro Ishinomori
Shotaro Ishinomori 1998

The godfather of Japanese manga who turned superheroes into a national obsession.

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Ishinomori created entire universes where ordinary people transformed: "Kamen Rider" and "Super Sentai" weren't just comics, but cultural touchstones that would inspire generations of Power Rangers and masked heroes. He drew over 128,000 pages in his lifetime—more than any other manga artist in history. And he did it all while essentially inventing a genre that would define Japanese pop culture for decades.

Portrait of Jerry Siegel
Jerry Siegel 1996

He dreamed up a bulletproof alien in Cleveland during the Great Depression, when hope looked a lot like a muscular guy…

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in tights punching bad guys. Jerry Siegel and artist Joe Shuster were teenage nobodies when they invented Superman in 1938 — selling the character's rights for just $130. And yet, that character would become America's most enduring superhero, worth billions. Siegel died knowing he'd created a global icon, but never truly profiting from his most famous creation.

Portrait of Joseph Brodsky
Joseph Brodsky 1996

He wrote poetry like a smuggled manuscript—dangerous, compressed, brilliant.

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Brodsky survived Soviet labor camps, exile, and intellectual persecution, only to become one of the most celebrated poets of the 20th century. And yet, he never saw poetry as resistance, but as pure art: precise, uncompromising. His English-language poems sang with a Russian soul, sharp as vodka, tender as winter birch trees. When he died in New York, an entire tradition of resistance poetry went silent.

Portrait of Judith Resnik
Judith Resnik 1986

Judith Resnik, an electrical engineer and NASA astronaut, died on January 28, 1986, when the Space Shuttle Challenger…

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disintegrated 73 seconds after launch. She was 36 years old and was on her second spaceflight. She was the second American woman in space, after Sally Ride, and the first Jewish American astronaut. Resnik earned a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from Carnegie Mellon University and a doctorate from the University of Maryland. Before joining NASA, she worked as a biomedical engineer and systems engineer at the National Institutes of Health and at Xerox Corporation, developing circuit designs and software for specialized imaging systems. She was selected as an astronaut candidate in 1978 as part of the same class as McNair, Ride, and other members of NASA's effort to diversify the astronaut corps. Her first spaceflight was the maiden voyage of the Space Shuttle Discovery on the STS-41-D mission in August 1984, during which she operated the shuttle's robotic arm to deploy three communications satellites and conducted experiments on the effects of microgravity on crystal growth. Resnik was intensely private and resisted media attempts to make her a symbol of women in science. She preferred to be recognized for her engineering competence rather than her gender. Colleagues described her as brilliant, driven, and impatient with anything she considered superficial or tokenistic. Her assignment to the STS-51-L mission included responsibility for operating the shuttle's remote manipulator system to deploy the TDRS-B communications satellite and to photograph Halley's Comet using a camera system she had helped design. The mission's destruction at launch prevented any of these objectives from being accomplished. The IEEE Judith Resnik Award, established in 1986, honors engineers who have made outstanding contributions to space engineering. Carnegie Mellon University named its student residence hall and an engineering building in her honor.

Portrait of Christa McAuliffe
Christa McAuliffe 1986

Christa McAuliffe, a high school social studies teacher from Concord, New Hampshire, died on January 28, 1986, when the…

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Space Shuttle Challenger broke apart 73 seconds after launch, killing all seven crew members. McAuliffe had been selected from over 11,000 applicants for NASA's Teacher in Space Project, and her death in the Challenger disaster turned what was intended as a celebration of education into a national trauma. McAuliffe was 37 years old and taught American history, law, and economics at Concord High School. She had applied to the Teacher in Space program with a proposal to keep a journal of her experiences and to teach two lessons from orbit, broadcasting them live to classrooms across the country. Her selection in July 1985 made her a national figure, and her infectious enthusiasm for the mission generated enormous public interest, particularly among schoolchildren. NASA scheduled the launch for January 28, 1986, despite unusually cold temperatures at Kennedy Space Center. Engineers at Morton Thiokol, the manufacturer of the shuttle's solid rocket boosters, warned that the O-ring seals in the booster joints had not been tested at temperatures below 53 degrees Fahrenheit. The launch-morning temperature was 36 degrees. NASA management overruled the engineers' recommendation to delay. The O-ring failure allowed hot combustion gases to escape from the right solid rocket booster, burning through the external fuel tank. The shuttle broke apart at an altitude of 48,000 feet. The crew cabin remained intact and was recovered from the ocean floor. Evidence suggested that at least some crew members survived the initial breakup and may have been conscious during the two-and-a-half-minute fall to the ocean surface. Millions of schoolchildren watched the launch live on television because of McAuliffe's participation. The explosion was replayed on television throughout the day, creating a shared national experience of shock and grief.

Portrait of Space Shuttle Challenger crew
Gregory Jarvis
Space Shuttle Challenger crew Gregory Jarvis 1986

Seventy-three seconds.

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That's how long the Challenger's flight lasted before breaking apart, killing all seven crew members in a horrifying instant watched live by millions. They weren't just astronauts—they were a teacher, engineers, physicists, pilots who embodied America's space-exploring dream. Christa McAuliffe, the first teacher selected for space, was supposed to broadcast lessons from orbit. Instead, her students watched her final moments. NASA would later call it an "anomaly." But it was a catastrophic failure that exposed deep flaws in shuttle design and institutional decision-making, a tragedy born of bureaucratic pressure and ignored warning signs.

Portrait of Francis R. Scobee
Francis R. Scobee 1986

Francis "Dick" Scobee commanded the Space Shuttle Challenger on its final flight on January 28, 1986, leading a crew of…

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seven to their deaths when the spacecraft broke apart 73 seconds after launch. He was 46 years old and had spent his entire adult life in aviation, progressing from Air Force enlisted mechanic to test pilot to astronaut. Scobee's path to the commander's seat was distinctly working-class for a program that traditionally drew from elite military and academic backgrounds. He enlisted in the Air Force at eighteen without a college degree, working as a reciprocating engine mechanic while taking night classes. He earned his engineering degree from the University of Arizona while on active duty and was subsequently selected for pilot training, eventually becoming a test pilot at Edwards Air Force Base. He logged over 6,500 hours of flight time in 45 types of aircraft before being selected as an astronaut in 1978. His first spaceflight was as pilot of the STS-41-C mission in April 1984, during which the crew repaired the Solar Maximum Mission satellite in orbit, one of the most complex and successful repair operations in shuttle history. His selection as commander of the STS-51-L mission reflected NASA's confidence in his abilities. The mission carried a complex payload including the TDRS-B satellite and the Teacher in Space program with Christa McAuliffe. Scobee was responsible for the overall conduct of the mission and the safety of his crew. The investigation following the disaster revealed that Scobee and pilot Michael Smith had received no warning of the O-ring failure that caused the explosion. Cockpit voice recorder evidence indicated that Smith said "Uh oh" approximately one second before the breakup, suggesting the crew had only the briefest awareness that something was wrong. Scobee's family became active in space safety advocacy and education, establishing the Challenger Center for Space Science Education, which operates learning centers across the United States.

Portrait of Ronald McNair
Ronald McNair 1986

Ronald McNair, the second African American astronaut to fly in space, died on January 28, 1986, in the Challenger disaster.

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He was a physicist who had earned his doctorate from MIT at twenty-six and was on his second shuttle mission when the spacecraft broke apart 73 seconds after launch. McNair grew up in Lake City, South Carolina, during the era of racial segregation. As a child, he was refused a library card because of his race, an incident that became widely known after the library was renamed in his honor decades later. He excelled academically despite the limitations imposed by segregated schooling and was accepted at MIT, where he earned his Ph.D. in physics in 1976, specializing in laser physics and quantum electronics. He was selected by NASA as an astronaut candidate in 1978, part of the first astronaut class to include women and minorities. His first spaceflight was aboard Challenger on the STS-41-B mission in February 1984, during which he operated the shuttle's robotic arm and conducted experiments in laser physics. He was also a fifth-degree black belt in karate and an accomplished jazz saxophonist who had planned to record the first piece of music in space during the STS-51-L mission. McNair's career represented the intersection of scientific excellence and civil rights progress. His journey from a segregated Southern town to the astronaut corps embodied the possibilities that the civil rights movement had fought to create. His death at age 35 cut short a career that had already broken barriers and promised further achievements. The Ronald E. McNair Post-Baccalaureate Achievement Program, established by the U.S. Department of Education in 1989, provides funding for colleges and universities to prepare low-income, first-generation, and underrepresented students for doctoral study. The program has helped thousands of students pursue advanced degrees, extending McNair's legacy of overcoming barriers to academic achievement.

Portrait of Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim
Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim 1951

He commanded Finland's defense against the Soviet Union in the Winter War of 1939-40, when Finland had fewer than…

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400,000 men and the USSR had over 750,000. Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim held for three months. The Finns lost territory but kept their independence. He later commanded Finnish forces in the Continuation War as Finland allied with Germany. When Germany started losing, he negotiated Finland out of the alliance before it ended. He had fought in the Russian Imperial Army, participated in a civil war, and lived through two world wars while being the single thread of Finnish military continuity. He died in Switzerland in 1951 at 83.

Portrait of W. B. Yeats
W. B. Yeats 1939

William Butler Yeats, the Irish poet who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1923 and became the defining literary…

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voice of modern Ireland, died on January 28, 1939, in Menton, France, at the age of 73. He had been revising poems and dictating letters until the day before his death, maintaining the creative intensity that had characterized his entire career. Yeats's body of work spans the transition from Victorian Romanticism to literary modernism, and his ability to reinvent his poetic voice across five decades is unique among English-language poets. His early work drew on Irish mythology, folklore, and the Celtic Revival movement, producing poems of ethereal beauty that established him as the leading figure of the Irish Literary Renaissance. "The Lake Isle of Innisfree" and "The Stolen Child" are characteristic of this period. His later work, produced after 1916, is radically different: compressed, violent, and politically charged. "Easter, 1916," written in response to the Easter Rising, and "The Second Coming," with its famous image of a "rough beast" slouching toward Bethlehem, are among the most frequently quoted poems in the English language. The transformation from dreamy Celtic romanticism to modernist intensity is unparalleled in literary history. Yeats was also a central figure in the Irish independence movement, serving as a senator in the Irish Free State from 1922 to 1928. He co-founded the Abbey Theatre in Dublin, which became the national theater of Ireland and a platform for the work of J.M. Synge, Sean O'Casey, and other Irish dramatists. He was buried initially in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, France. In 1948, his remains were exhumed and returned to Ireland aboard an Irish naval vessel, and he was reinterred at Drumcliffe churchyard in County Sligo, beneath a tombstone bearing the epitaph he had written: "Cast a cold eye / On life, on death. / Horseman, pass by!"

Portrait of Michael J. Smith
Michael J. Smith

Navy test pilot turned NASA astronaut, Smith died instantly when the Challenger space shuttle disintegrated 73 seconds after liftoff.

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His wife and children watched from the ground, believing he was still alive in the crew compartment — a devastating hope that would last hours before the truth emerged. A decorated pilot who'd flown 128 missions over Vietnam, Smith was selected for space in 1980, dreaming of orbital science. But on that January morning in 1986, he became part of a national tragedy that would reshape America's space program forever.

Portrait of Ellison Onizuka
Ellison Onizuka

First Asian-American in space.

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And then, catastrophically, first Japanese-American to die on a NASA mission. Onizuka was aboard Challenger when it exploded 73 seconds after liftoff, killing all seven crew members. A Hawaii-born engineer who'd dreamed of flight since childhood, he represented both scientific excellence and cultural breakthrough. His final mission carried the hopes of multiple communities: engineers, Asian-Americans, space explorers. Gone in a terrible instant of mechanical failure and national grief.

Holidays & observances

Your data is worth more than gold—and big tech knows it.

Your data is worth more than gold—and big tech knows it. Every click, scroll, and like gets packaged and sold without your permission. Data Privacy Day emerged from European efforts to remind people that digital footprints aren't just harmless breadcrumbs, but valuable personal currency. And corporations? They're collecting those crumbs faster than you can say "terms of service." Privacy isn't just about hiding; it's about controlling your own digital identity in a world where algorithms know you better than your friends.

Thomas Aquinas didn't just write theology — he revolutionized how humans think about God and reason.

Thomas Aquinas didn't just write theology — he revolutionized how humans think about God and reason. A massive man nicknamed the "Dumb Ox" by his classmates for his quiet bulk, he'd become the most influential philosopher of medieval Christianity. And he did it all before dying at 49, leaving behind 60 books that would reshape Western philosophical thought. Dominicans claimed he fell into mystical trances while writing, seeing divine understanding that transcended human logic. One legendary moment: during a crucial theological writing session, he reportedly heard Christ speak directly to him, validating his entire intellectual project.

Armenia remembers its soldiers with fierce pride.

Armenia remembers its soldiers with fierce pride. Not just a military parade, but a day honoring survival itself. The country that survived genocide now celebrates its defenders - young conscripts and battle-hardened veterans who've kept their mountainous homeland intact through impossible odds. And they know something about impossible: defending borders against larger neighbors, maintaining cultural identity through centuries of challenge. Every soldier here carries generations of resistance in their bones.

A medieval philosopher who'd rather argue theology than eat.

A medieval philosopher who'd rather argue theology than eat. Thomas Aquinas was so massive — both intellectually and physically — that his fellow monks nicknamed him the "Dumb Ox." But he wasn't dumb. He wrote over 60 philosophical works that would reshape how Western Christianity understood reason and faith. And he did it all before dying at 49, leaving behind a intellectual legacy that would make the Renaissance look like a warm-up act.