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On this day

July 24

Supreme Court Orders Nixon: Release the Tapes (1974). Machu Picchu Found: Lost Inca City Revealed (1911). Notable births include Alexandre Dumas (1802), Prince William (1689), Nayib Bukele (1981).

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Supreme Court Orders Nixon: Release the Tapes
1974Event

Supreme Court Orders Nixon: Release the Tapes

Eight justices, zero dissents, and a presidency that had sixteen days left to live. The Supreme Court ruled unanimously that Richard Nixon must surrender sixty-four White House tape recordings subpoenaed by Special Prosecutor Leon Jaworski, rejecting the president's claim that executive privilege placed him above the reach of criminal investigation. Chief Justice Warren Burger, a Nixon appointee, wrote the opinion himself. Nixon had installed a secret recording system in the Oval Office in 1971, taping thousands of hours of conversations without the knowledge of most visitors. The existence of the system became public in July 1973 when White House aide Alexander Butterfield casually mentioned it during Senate Watergate Committee testimony. From that moment forward, the tapes became the central battleground of the Watergate investigation, with Nixon fighting to keep them confidential and prosecutors arguing they contained evidence of criminal conspiracy. The Court acknowledged that executive privilege was constitutionally grounded but held that it was not absolute, particularly when weighed against the requirements of criminal justice. The opinion carefully avoided broad declarations, focusing narrowly on the balance between presidential confidentiality and the need for evidence in a specific criminal proceeding. Nixon's lawyers had argued that only the president himself could determine what fell under executive privilege, a claim the Court rejected completely. Nixon released the tapes within days. Among them was the "smoking gun" recording from June 23, 1972, just six days after the Watergate break-in, in which Nixon personally directed the CIA to obstruct the FBI's investigation. The recording destroyed what remained of his support in Congress. Republican leaders visited the White House to tell him he faced certain impeachment and conviction. Nixon announced his resignation on August 8, 1974, the only American president ever to leave office voluntarily.

Machu Picchu Found: Lost Inca City Revealed
1911

Machu Picchu Found: Lost Inca City Revealed

A local farmer charged fifty cents to guide the Yale lecturer up a steep jungle trail to a set of ruins that no Western academic knew existed. Hiram Bingham III reached the stone terraces of Machu Picchu on a foggy morning, scrambling through dense vegetation to find an elaborate complex of temples, plazas, and agricultural terraces perched on a narrow ridge between two Andean peaks at nearly eight thousand feet. Bingham was searching for Vilcabamba, the legendary last capital of the Inca resistance against Spanish conquest. He had organized a Yale expedition to Peru with funding from the university and the National Geographic Society, traveling by mule through the Urubamba Valley while interviewing local residents about ruins in the mountains. Melchor Arteaga, a farmer living near the Urubamba River, mentioned the site almost in passing, and Bingham initially had low expectations for what he would find. What he discovered was not Vilcabamba but something arguably more remarkable: a fifteenth-century royal estate built by the Inca emperor Pachacuti around 1450. The complex contained roughly two hundred structures, including a precisely carved temple of the sun, an astronomical observatory, and an elaborate system of fountains and channels that carried water from a natural spring through the entire settlement. The stonework was extraordinary, with blocks fitted so tightly that no mortar was needed and a knife blade could not be inserted between them. Machu Picchu had never been "lost" to local Quechua farmers, several of whom were actively cultivating its terraces when Bingham arrived. But it was unknown to the international archaeological community, and Bingham's photographs, published by National Geographic in 1913, introduced the site to the world. He returned twice with larger expeditions, removing thousands of artifacts that became the subject of a century-long repatriation dispute between Yale and Peru. Machu Picchu now draws more than a million visitors annually, making it both Peru's greatest cultural treasure and its most pressing conservation challenge.

Mormons Enter Salt Lake Valley: A City Founded
1847

Mormons Enter Salt Lake Valley: A City Founded

Brigham Young rose from a sickbed in the back of a covered wagon, surveyed a desolate valley of sagebrush and salt flats ringed by mountains, and reportedly declared: "This is the right place." After a 1,300-mile journey from Nauvoo, Illinois, the first Mormon pioneers had reached the place where they would build a city, a temple, and one of the most distinctive religious communities in the Western Hemisphere. The migration was born from violence. Joseph Smith, the founding prophet of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, had been murdered by a mob in Carthage, Illinois, in June 1844. Anti-Mormon hostility in the Midwest had been escalating for years, fueled by the church's communal economics, bloc voting, and the practice of plural marriage. Young, who assumed leadership after a bitter succession struggle, concluded that the Saints would never be safe among their neighbors and began planning an exodus to territory so remote that no one would follow. The advance company of 148 pioneers, including three enslaved Black men, left Winter Quarters near present-day Omaha in April 1847 and followed the north bank of the Platte River to avoid conflict with emigrants on the Oregon Trail. Young chose the Salt Lake Valley partly because it was technically Mexican territory, beyond the jurisdiction of the United States government, and partly because its harsh environment discouraged casual settlement. Within days of arrival, the pioneers dammed City Creek, diverted irrigation ditches, and planted crops in soil that had never been cultivated. Young laid out a grid of wide streets centered on the future site of the Salt Lake Temple, which would take forty years to build. Over the next two decades, roughly seventy thousand Mormon converts migrated to Utah by wagon, handcart, and eventually railroad. The Mexican-American War, concluded just months later, transferred Utah to American control, and the isolation Young sought proved temporary.

Dust Bowl Peaks: 109F Heat Wave Scorches Chicago
1935

Dust Bowl Peaks: 109F Heat Wave Scorches Chicago

Temperatures hit 109 degrees Fahrenheit in parts of the Midwest while crops across the Great Plains were already dead from three years of drought, and the combined catastrophe killed an estimated 3,500 Americans in a single week. The heat wave of July 1935 struck a population that had no air conditioning, no public cooling centers, and no warning system capable of alerting vulnerable people before the worst temperatures arrived. The Dust Bowl had been devastating Plains agriculture since 1932, when severe drought combined with decades of destructive farming practices to strip the topsoil from millions of acres across Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, and neighboring states. Massive dust storms, some carrying 300,000 tons of soil, had already displaced hundreds of thousands of families. The heat wave compounded the disaster, killing livestock that had survived the drought and destroying whatever crops remained. Chicago suffered particularly badly. Temperatures stayed above 100 degrees for multiple consecutive days, and overnight lows barely dropped below 80, giving residents no relief. Hospitals overflowed with heat stroke victims. Families dragged mattresses onto fire escapes and rooftops to sleep, and thousands camped along the Lake Michigan shoreline. The city morgue ran out of space, and authorities commandeered warehouses to hold the dead. The toll across the city exceeded 700 in a single week. Congress responded with emergency relief appropriations, and the Roosevelt administration accelerated programs through the Soil Conservation Service to teach farmers erosion-prevention techniques including contour plowing, terracing, and crop rotation. The Civilian Conservation Corps planted shelter belts of trees across the Plains to break the wind. These measures, combined with the return of rain in the late 1930s, gradually stabilized the region. The 1935 heat wave remains one of the deadliest weather events in American history, though it is largely forgotten beside the more photogenic dust storms.

Tennessee Readmitted: First State Rejoins the Union
1866

Tennessee Readmitted: First State Rejoins the Union

Tennessee became the first former Confederate state to rejoin the Union, clearing the way just fifteen months after Appomattox for a process of reconstruction that would consume the next decade and leave scars lasting far longer. Congress voted to restore Tennessee's representation after the state ratified the Fourteenth Amendment, becoming the only seceded state to avoid the military governance imposed on the other ten. Tennessee's path back was smoother than its neighbors' because of Andrew Johnson, a Tennessee Unionist who had served as military governor of the state before becoming Lincoln's vice president and then, after the assassination, president. Johnson's loyalist government in Nashville had maintained a functioning civil administration throughout the war, giving Tennessee institutional continuity that states under full Confederate control lacked. Governor William "Parson" Brownlow, a fiery Unionist preacher who had been imprisoned by the Confederacy, pushed ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment through the state legislature by questionable means, including arresting two opposing legislators to prevent them from leaving and denying a quorum. The amendment's core provisions guaranteed citizenship and equal protection under the law to all persons born in the United States, directly overturning the Dred Scott decision and establishing the constitutional basis for civil rights enforcement. The political compromise that readmitted Tennessee left the fundamental questions of Reconstruction unresolved. Freedmen technically gained citizenship but faced immediate efforts to restrict their movement, labor, and voting rights through Black Codes that mimicked slavery in all but name. The Ku Klux Klan, founded in Pulaski, Tennessee, just months earlier, was already terrorizing Black communities and white Republicans across the state. Tennessee's early readmission spared it from federal military oversight, which paradoxically may have left its Black citizens less protected than those in states where the army enforced civil rights directly.

Quote of the Day

“The first duty of a government is to give education to the people”

Historical events

Born on July 24

Portrait of Nayib Bukele
Nayib Bukele 1981

His father owned a nightclub and converted from Islam to Christianity.

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Nayib Bukele grew up in San Salvador's business class, studied law but never finished, then ran his family's advertising firm before entering politics at 24. He won the presidency in 2019 without backing from either traditional party that had controlled El Salvador since its civil war. By 2022, he'd imprisoned over 66,000 suspected gang members—roughly 1% of the country's population—in a crackdown that dropped murder rates to historic lows while drawing international criticism for mass detentions without trial. Democracy and safety, it turns out, don't always want the same thing.

Portrait of Charlie Crist
Charlie Crist 1956

Charlie Crist navigated the shifting tides of Florida politics by serving as a Republican governor before successfully…

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rebranding as a Democrat. His career reflects the state's volatile political landscape, as he transitioned from a conservative prosecutor to a centrist challenger in multiple high-profile gubernatorial and congressional races.

Portrait of Zelda Fitzgerald
Zelda Fitzgerald 1900

She named her daughter after herself, then watched F.

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Scott name his most famous character after them both. Zelda Sayre was Montgomery's wildest debutante before she became the novelist's wife—diving into fountains, dancing on dinner tables, kissing whoever she wanted. But she wrote too. Her novel *Save Me the Waltz* came out in 1932, six weeks before Scott's *Tender Is the Night*—both mining their marriage for material. He made her change passages. She died in a hospital fire, locked in a building waiting for electroshock treatment. The muse had her own manuscript.

Portrait of Alphonse Mucha
Alphonse Mucha 1860

He couldn't afford models, so he painted his mother and sister over and over in their cramped Moravian village.

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Alphonse Mucha was 34 before he got his break—a last-minute poster commission for Sarah Bernhardt's play on New Year's Day 1895. The actress loved it so much she locked him into a six-year contract. His flowing-haired women selling bicycles, champagne, and cigarettes became Art Nouveau itself. But he spent his final decade painting Slavic history no one wanted to buy, dying six months after the Gestapo interrogated him.

Portrait of Alexandre Dumas

Alexandre Dumas became the most widely read French author of his century by turning history into breathless adventure…

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in The Three Musketeers and The Count of Monte Cristo. Born in Villers-Cotterets in 1802, he was the grandson of a Haitian slave named Marie-Cessette Dumas and the Marquis Alexandre Antoine Davy de la Pailleterie, a French nobleman who had sold his own children into slavery before eventually reclaiming his son Thomas-Alexandre. That son, Dumas's father, became a general in Napoleon's army and the highest-ranking person of African descent in European military history to that point. The general died when Alexandre was four, leaving the family impoverished. Dumas moved to Paris with nothing but beautiful handwriting and connections to his father's former military colleagues. He wrote plays first, scoring a massive hit with Henri III and His Court in 1829, then turned to novels published in serial installments in Parisian newspapers. His serialized novels, often produced with uncredited collaborators like Auguste Maquet at industrial speed, appeared in daily installments that kept all of France reading. He wrote over a hundred novels and earned enormous sums, but spent even more extravagantly, building a chateau he called Monte Cristo and hosting parties that attracted half of literary Paris. He died nearly penniless in 1870. Throughout his career, he achieved literary fame in a society that openly questioned his racial background, enduring caricatures and insults that he answered with productivity rather than polemic.

Portrait of Prince William
Prince William 1689

Prince William, Duke of Gloucester, son of Queen Anne and Prince George of Denmark, died at age eleven on July 30,…

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1700, extinguishing the last direct Protestant Stuart heir. His death forced Parliament to pass the Act of Settlement in 1701, which barred Catholics from the succession and secured the throne for the Protestant Hanoverian dynasty. This single childhood death thus reshaped the British monarchy for centuries, ensuring that George I of Hanover inherited the crown in 1714.

Portrait of Charles II
Charles II 1529

A German margrave born in 1529 would found an entire city from scratch — but only after losing everything first.

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Charles II of Baden-Durlach watched his territories devastated during religious wars, his castle destroyed, his people scattered. So in 1565 he drew up plans for something new: Karlsruhe's predecessor, a planned Renaissance town called Durlach, rebuilt as his capital with geometric precision. Thirty-two streets radiating from a central palace. And he'd rule for forty-eight years, dying in 1577, having learned that sometimes you have to burn down to build better. Sometimes the margrave becomes the architect.

Died on July 24

Portrait of William J. Brennan
William J. Brennan 1997

William J.

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Brennan Jr. spent 34 years on the Supreme Court, anchoring the liberal wing that expanded civil rights and protected individual liberties. His majority opinions in cases like New York Times Co. v. Sullivan fundamentally reshaped American free speech protections and ensured that public officials faced a higher burden of proof when claiming defamation.

Portrait of Isaac Bashevis Singer
Isaac Bashevis Singer 1991

He wrote every word in Yiddish first, then translated them himself into English—even after winning the Nobel Prize in 1978.

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Isaac Bashevis Singer died in Miami at 87, leaving behind 18 novels and countless short stories about demons, rabbis, and immigrants navigating worlds between the shtetl and America. He'd fled Poland in 1935, watching his native language nearly vanish in the Holocaust. But he kept writing in it anyway, preserving a dying tongue by filling it with unforgettable characters. The last major author to write primarily in Yiddish proved the language's death had been greatly exaggerated.

Portrait of James Chadwick
James Chadwick 1974

He'd bombarded beryllium with alpha particles in 1932, expecting radiation.

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Instead, he found something with mass but no charge—the neutron. James Chadwick's discovery explained why atoms weighed more than their protons and electrons suggested. The Nobel came three years later. But his particle made atomic bombs possible, and he knew it. He worked on the Manhattan Project, watched what his neutral particle could do when it split uranium. He died at 82, the man who'd found the invisible piece that held everything together—and could tear it all apart.

Portrait of Martin Van Buren
Martin Van Buren 1862

He spoke Dutch at home his entire life — the only US president whose first language wasn't English.

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Martin Van Buren died at 79 in Kinderhook, New York, the same village where he was born. He'd lived to see the Civil War tear apart the nation he'd helped build, watched his Free Soil Party challenge the expansion of slavery he'd once accommodated as president. His final words were about his children, not his country. The man who invented the modern political machine left behind eight vice presidents who learned their craft in his shadow.

Holidays & observances

Christina of Bolsena died twice.

Christina of Bolsena died twice. The first time, she was twelve—executed during Diocletian's persecutions around 300 AD for refusing to worship Roman gods. Her father, a Roman official, reportedly ordered her torture himself when she converted. The second death stuck. Her cult spread so widely that three different Christinas—Bolsena, Tyre, and another—became tangled in medieval hagiographies, their stories bleeding together until historians couldn't separate them. Churches across Europe claimed her relics. And today, July 24th, six different saints share a feast day that might commemorate one girl's defiance, or three, or none—just the idea that someone, somewhere, once chose differently.

Ecuador celebrates the man who liberated it, then watched it slip away.

Ecuador celebrates the man who liberated it, then watched it slip away. Simón Bolívar freed six nations from Spanish rule between 1813 and 1825, dreaming of a unified Gran Colombia stretching from Venezuela to Peru. But Ecuador broke from his federation just months after his death in 1830. Bitter irony: the country honors him on July 24th, his birthday, yet was the first to abandon his vision of continental unity. They toast the liberator who couldn't keep them together.

Brigham Young spotted the Salt Lake Valley from his sickbed in a wagon, too weak from mountain fever to ride his own …

Brigham Young spotted the Salt Lake Valley from his sickbed in a wagon, too weak from mountain fever to ride his own horse. "This is the right place," he told the 148 Mormon pioneers who'd traveled 1,300 miles fleeing religious persecution. They'd arrived three days earlier—July 24, 1847—and immediately started planting potatoes and damming creeks. Within months, 1,650 more arrived. Utah celebrates Pioneer Day bigger than the Fourth of July in some counties, complete with rodeos and reenactments. The persecuted became the settlers, which meant someone else became the displaced.

The winter solstice wasn't enough for ancient Latvians.

The winter solstice wasn't enough for ancient Latvians. They needed Jēkaba Diena—December 25th—to honor horses and their riders, the ones who'd carried them through harvest and war. Families fed their horses special grain, decorated stables with evergreen branches, and shared meals where the best cuts went to those who worked with animals. The celebration predated Christianity's arrival by centuries, but when missionaries came, the date proved convenient. Same day, different story. Latvia's horses still get extra apples on Christmas morning, though few remember they're keeping a promise older than the holiday that replaced it.

The Distilled Spirits Council didn't create National Tequila Day.

The Distilled Spirits Council didn't create National Tequila Day. Nobody did, officially. It emerged from restaurant marketing campaigns in the early 2000s, bars pushing premium bottles during summer's slowest week. July 24 stuck because it fell perfectly between Fourth of July and Labor Day—dead zone for liquor sales. The date has no connection to Mexico's tequila history, the 1974 denomination of origin, or the agave harvest cycle. Americans now consume 20 million cases annually, triple the rate before the "holiday" appeared. We invented a tradition to sell more of someone else's.

The calendar breaks in half for a birth nobody recorded with precision.

The calendar breaks in half for a birth nobody recorded with precision. No hospital records, no official census entry—just shepherds, a manger, and stories written decades later by people who never met him. Within three centuries, an executed Jewish preacher's followers had converted an empire, split time itself into Before and After, and made his birthday the world's most celebrated holiday. Two billion people now mark December 25th, though historians agree Jesus wasn't born anywhere near winter. The date? Borrowed from a Roman sun festival.

A black bell washed ashore on Ireland's coast centuries before Patrick arrived—or so the story goes.

A black bell washed ashore on Ireland's coast centuries before Patrick arrived—or so the story goes. Declan of Ardmore supposedly sent it floating across from Wales, trusting God and ocean currents for delivery. He built his monastery where it landed, making him Ireland's first bishop by some accounts, though Rome never confirmed the dates. His July 24th feast day celebrates a man whose entire timeline historians can't pin down: fifth century? Fourth? The bell still sits in Ardmore's cathedral. Ireland's patron saint might've had a predecessor nobody can quite prove existed.

A Spanish missionary walked 9,000 miles across South America between 1589 and 1610, learning eight indigenous languag…

A Spanish missionary walked 9,000 miles across South America between 1589 and 1610, learning eight indigenous languages along the way. Francis Solanus played violin in village squares, drawing crowds who'd never seen a European instrument. He baptized an estimated 9,000 people in what's now Argentina, Paraguay, and Peru. But he also defended indigenous rights against colonial authorities, risking expulsion. The Catholic Church canonized him in 1726—making him the first saint born in the Americas. Well, technically Spain. But his work created the template for every missionary who followed.

The Romans called it Vinalia Rustica, a wine festival for Jupiter.

The Romans called it Vinalia Rustica, a wine festival for Jupiter. But when Islam arrived in Tunisia, the locals weren't ready to let go of their August harvest party. So they kept it, renamed it Awussu—from Augustus—and stripped out the wine and pagan gods. What remained: parades, music, communal feasts, and the same summer timing their ancestors had celebrated for centuries. The holiday survived by becoming unrecognizable to both the empire that birthed it and the religion that replaced it. Sometimes tradition's best disguise is transformation.

The kastom ceremony lasted three days before Vanuatu's chiefs agreed: July 24th would honor children in a nation wher…

The kastom ceremony lasted three days before Vanuatu's chiefs agreed: July 24th would honor children in a nation where 40% of the population was under fifteen. In 1983, the newly independent island republic chose this date deliberately—mid-year, when school terms allowed celebration. Villages organized traditional dances where kids led adults, reversing the usual hierarchy. The government declared it a public holiday, making Vanuatu one of the few countries where children get their own national day off. Sometimes the smallest populations make the biggest gestures about who matters most.

The first Polish police officer killed in the line of duty after independence fell on July 24, 1919.

The first Polish police officer killed in the line of duty after independence fell on July 24, 1919. Constable Franciszek Bielecki was shot during a robbery in Warsaw. Just eight months after Poland reformed its police force following 123 years of partition, when three empires had enforced their own laws on Polish soil. The date became Police Day in 1990, after communism ended and Poland could finally honor its own cops. Turns out you can't celebrate your protectors until you choose them yourself.

Ecuador, Venezuela, Colombia, and Bolivia celebrate Simón Bolívar Day to honor the birth of the man who liberated muc…

Ecuador, Venezuela, Colombia, and Bolivia celebrate Simón Bolívar Day to honor the birth of the man who liberated much of South America from Spanish colonial rule. His military campaigns dismantled centuries of imperial control, directly resulting in the independence of six modern nations and the creation of the short-lived state of Gran Colombia.

A Hungarian princess threw her engagement ring into a salt mine in Poland before leaving home in 1239.

A Hungarian princess threw her engagement ring into a salt mine in Poland before leaving home in 1239. Kinga was marrying Duke Bolesław, and legend says when Polish miners dug into rock at Wieliczka, they found her ring embedded in solid salt. The discovery launched what became Europe's oldest operating salt mine—700 years of continuous production. Salt meant wealth, preservation, food that didn't rot. And Kinga, later canonized, became patron saint of both Poland and salt miners. Sometimes the most valuable deposits come from what we're willing to leave behind.

The Mormons who founded Stirling, Alberta in 1899 celebrated July 24th with more fervor than Canada Day.

The Mormons who founded Stirling, Alberta in 1899 celebrated July 24th with more fervor than Canada Day. They'd come north from Utah after the U.S. government banned polygamy, but they brought Pioneer Day with them—commemorating Brigham Young's 1847 arrival in Salt Lake Valley. Stirling's settlers had fled American persecution only to honor the moment their grandparents first escaped it. The town still celebrates with parades and pancake breakfasts every July 24th, a Canadian community keeping alive the memory of entering a different promised land. Sometimes exile preserves tradition better than home ever could.

A monk who lived as a hermit in the Lebanese mountains died on Christmas Eve 1898, and his body wouldn't stop bleeding.

A monk who lived as a hermit in the Lebanese mountains died on Christmas Eve 1898, and his body wouldn't stop bleeding. For months. Saint Charbel Makhlouf's tomb leaked blood and sweat so profusely that monastery officials had to change his clothes twice weekly for 67 nights straight. Witnesses documented it. Doctors examined it. The Vatican investigated three separate times before canonizing him in 1977. Today his shrine in Annaya draws over a million pilgrims annually—Christians and Muslims both—seeking healing from a man who spent 23 years speaking to almost no one.