October 20
1803
The U.S. Senate approved a treaty with France providing for the purchase of the territory of Louisiana, which would double the size of the U.S. Facing war with Great Britain, Napoleon decided to raise money for his war by offering to sell the entire territory to the U.S. for a mere $15 million. Despite Thomas Jefferson's concerns about the constitutionality of the purchase (the Constitution made no provision for the addition of territory by treaty), the treaty was ratified and the Louisiana Purchase now ranks as the greatest achievement of Jefferson’s presidency.
1947
The notorious Red Scare kicked into high gear in Washington, as the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) grills a number of prominent witnesses, asking bluntly “Are you or have you ever been a member of the Communist Party?” A small group known as the “Hollywood Ten” resisted, complaining that the hearings were illegal and violated their First Amendment rights. They were all convicted of obstructing the investigation and served jail terms. Pressured by Congress, the Hollywood establishment started a blacklist policy, banning the work of about 325 screenwriters, actors and directors who had not been cleared by the committee. Those blacklisted included composer Aaron Copland, writers Dashiell Hammett, Lillian Hellman and Dorothy Parker, playwright Arthur Miller and actor and filmmaker Orson Welles.
1977
In the summer of 1977, members of Aerosmith inspected an airplane they were considering chartering for their upcoming tour—a Convair 240 operated out of Addison, Texas. Concerns over the flight crew led Aerosmith to look elsewhere—a decision that saved one band but doomed another. The aircraft in question was instead chartered by the band Lynyrd Skynyrd, who were just setting out that autumn on a national tour. During a flight from Greenville, SC, to Baton Rouge, LA, Lynyrd Skynyrd’s tour plane crashed in a heavily wooded area of southeastern Mississippi during a failed emergency landing attempt, killing band-members Ronnie Van Zant, Steve Gaines and Cassie Gaines as well as the band’s assistant road manager and the plane’s pilot and co-pilot. Twenty others survived the crash.
October 21
1959
Displaying the impressive art collection of mining tycoon Solomon R. Guggenhem, the Guggenheim Museum opened on New York City's Fifth Avenue. In 1943, architect Frank Lloyd Wright was tasked to design not just a museum, but a “temple of spirit,” where people would learn to see art in a new way. Over the next 16 years, until his death six months before the museum opened, Wright worked to bring his unique vision to life. Inside, a long ramp spirals upwards for a total of a quarter-mile around a large central rotunda, topped by a domed glass ceiling. Reflecting Wright’s love of nature, the 50,000-meter space resembles a giant seashell, with each room opening fluidly into the next. Today, more than 900,000 people visit the Guggenheim each year.
1964
The film version of My Fair Lady, staring Audrey Hepburn and Rex Harrison, premiered in NYC. The film depicts a poor Cockney flower-seller named Eliza Doolittle who overhears an arrogant phonetics professor, Henry Higgins, as he casually wagers that he could teach her to speak "proper" English, thereby making her presentable in the high society of Edwardian London. The musical went on to win the 1965 Academy Award for Best Picture and is selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" in 2018.
1967
Nearly 100,000 people gather in Washington, D.C. to protest the American war effort in Vietnam. More than 50,000 of the protesters marched to the Pentagon to ask for an end to the conflict. The protest was the most dramatic sign of waning U.S. support for President Lyndon Johnson’s war in Vietnam. Polls taken in the summer of 1967 revealed that, for the first time, American support for the war had fallen below 50 percent. The protest was also important in suggesting that the domestic Cold War consensus was beginning to fracture. Many of the protesters were not simply questioning America’s conduct in Vietnam, but very basis of the nation’s Cold War foreign policy.
October 22
1965
During the Vietnam War, about 35 miles northwest of Saigon, PFC Milton Lee Olive III of Company B, 2nd Battalion, 503rd Infantry, threw himself on an enemy grenade and saved four soldiers, including his platoon leader, 1st Lt. James Sanford. Private Olive’s body absorbed the full, deadly blast of the grenade and he died saving his comrades. Lieutenant Sanford later said of Olive’s act that “It was the most incredible display of selfless bravery I ever witnessed.” Olive, a native of Chicago, was only 18 years old when he died; he received the Medal of Honor posthumously six months later.
1975
Air Force Sergeant Leonard Matlovich, a decorated veteran of the Vietnam War, was given a “general” discharge by the Air Force after publicly declaring his homosexuality, despite having been awarded both a Bronze Star and a Purple Heart. Matlovich, who appeared in his Air Force uniform on the cover of Time magazine above the headline “I AM A HOMOSEXUAL,” was challenging the ban against homosexuals in the U.S. military. In 1979, after winning a much-publicized case against the air force, his discharge was upgraded to “honorable.”
2012
Lance Armstrong was stripped of the seven Tour de France titles he won from 1999 to 2005 and banned for life from competitive cycling after being charged with systematically using illicit performance-enhancing drugs and blood transfusions as well as demanding that some of his Tour teammates dope in order to help him win races. It was a dramatic fall from grace for the onetime global cycling icon, who inspired millions of people after surviving cancer then going on to become one of the most dominant riders in the history of the grueling French race, which attracts the planet’s top cyclists.
October 23
1915
At least 50,000 people take to the streets of New York City to march in the country’s largest women’s suffrage parade up to that time. Dr. Anna Shaw and Carrie Chapman Catt, founder of the League of Women Voters, lead the marchers up Fifth Avenue from Washington Square to Fifth-Ninth Street. At that point, the fight had been ongoing for more than 65 years, with the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848 first passing a resolution in favor of women’s suffrage. But, many still had reservations. The New York Times ran an article warning that if women get the vote, they will “play havoc for themselves and society,” and that “granted the suffrage, they would demand all the rights that implies. It is not possible to think of women as soldiers and sailors, police patrolmen, or firemen” Heavens, think of the chaos!
1964
With a broken thumb, Joe Frazier announced his presence on the international boxing scene by winning heavyweight boxing gold at the Tokyo Olympics. Boxing as an unknown alternate, Frazier defeated German Hans Huber with a 3-2 judges decision. Six years later, he was world champion. He is now considered one of the 10 greatest heavyweights of all time, and his professional contests against Muhammad Ali and George Foreman have become some of the most discussed and written-about fights of all time. The golden era of boxing included a trilogy of matches between Ali and Frazier, with the final "Thrilla in Manilla" being watched by an estimated 1 billion viewers across the world.
1983
A suicide bomber drove a truck filled with 2,000 pounds of explosives into a U.S. Marine Corps barracks at the Beirut International Airport. The explosion killed 220 Marines, 18 sailors and three soldiers. A few minutes later, a second bomber drives into the basement of the nearby French paratroopers’ barracks, killing 58 more people. Four months after the bombing, American forces left Lebanon without retaliating. The Marines were in Beirut as part of a multinational peacekeeping force that was trying to broker a truce between warring Christian and Muslim Lebanese factions.
October 24
1901
63-year-old schoolteacher Annie Edson Taylor became the first person to successfully take the plunge over Niagara Falls in a barrel. Knocked violently from side to side by the rapids and then propelled over the edge of Horseshoe Falls, Taylor reached the shore alive, if a bit battered, around 20 minutes after her journey began. Between 1901 and 1995, 15 people went over the falls; 10 of them survived. Among those who died were Jesse Sharp, who took the plunge in a kayak in 1990, and Robert Overcracker, who used a jet ski in 1995. No matter the method, going over Niagara Falls is illegal, and survivors face charges and stiff fines on either side of the border.
1921
In the French town of Chalons-sur-Marne, an American officer selected the body of the first “Unknown Soldier” to be honored among the approximately 77,000 United States servicemen killed on the Western Front during WW1. Bearing the inscription “An Unknown American who gave his life in the World War,” the chosen casket traveled to Paris and then to Le Havre, France, where it would board the cruiser Olympia for the voyage across the Atlantic. Once back in the United States, the Unknown Soldier was buried in Arlington National Cemetery, near Washington, D.C. Today, the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier is guarded by Soldiers of the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment, "The Old Guard." Since 1921, two other unknown Soldiers have joined the World War I unknown Soldier: one from World War II and one from the Korean War.
1931
Eight months ahead of schedule, New York governor Franklin D. Roosevelt dedicated the George Washington Bridge over the Hudson River. The 4,760-foot–long suspension bridge, the longest in the world at the time, connected Fort Lee, New Jersey with Washington Heights in New York City. One year later, it had carried 5 million cars from New York to New Jersey and back again. In 1946, engineers added two lanes to the bridge. In 1958, city officials decided to increase its capacity by 75 percent by adding a six-lane lower level.
October 25
1929
Albert B. Fall, Secretary of the Interior under President Warren G. Harding, was found guilty of accepting a bribe from Edward Doheny of the Pan-American Petroleum and Transport Company, who wanted Fall to grant his firm an oil lease in the Elk Hills naval oil reserve in California. The site, along with the Teapot Dome naval oil reserve in Wyoming, had been previously transferred to the Department of the Interior on the urging of Fall, who realized the personal gains he could achieve by leasing the land to private corporations. He was the first individual to be convicted of a crime committed while a presidential cabinet member.
1944
During the Battle of the Leyte Gulf, the largest naval battle in history, the Japanese deployed kamikaze (“divine wind”) bombers against American warships for the first time. Kamikaze pilots deliberately crashed specially made planes directly into enemy warships, which resulted in suicide. Motoharu Okamura, who commanded a kamikaze squadron, remarked that by 1944, “I firmly believe that the only way to swing the war in our favor is to resort to crash-dive attacks with our planes. There is no other way. Provide me with 300 planes and I will turn the tide of war.” Japan was forced to surrender less than a year later.
1994
Susan Smith reported that she was carjacked in South Carolina by a man who took her two small children, three year old Michael and one year old Alex, from the backseat of her car. After nine days of around the clock searches and intense media scrutiny, Smith finally confessed that the carjacking tale was false and that she had driven her Mazda into the John D. Long Lake in order to drown her children. Apparently, Susan was involved with another man who did not want children, and she thought that killing her children was the only way to continue the relationship. She was convicted on two counts of murder and sentenced to life in prison.
October 26
1881
The Earp brothers and Doc Holliday faced off against the Clanton-McLaury gang in a legendary shootout at the O.K. Corral in Tombstone, Arizona. While Wyatt Earp and his brothers represented “law and order," the Clantons and McLaurys were cattle rustlers, thieves and murderers. The Earps and Holliday were arrested and charged with murder, but a Tombstone judge found the men not guilty, ruling they were “fully justified in committing these homicides.” The famous shootout has been immortalized in many movies, including Gunfight at the OK Corral (1957), Tombstone (1993) and Wyatt Earp (1994).
1825
The Erie Canal opened, providing overland water transportation between the Hudson River on the east and Lake Erie at the western end. Popularly known as “Clinton’s Folly,” the eight-year construction project was the vision of New York Governor DeWitt Clinton. He convinced the New York State legislature to commit seven million dollars to the construction of a 363-mile ditch, forty feet wide and four feet deep. A tremendous success, the waterway accelerated settlement of western New York, Ohio, Indiana, and the upper Midwest including the founding of hundreds of towns such as Clinton, in DeWitt County, Illinois, and DeWitt, in Clinton County, Iowa.
1985
Whitney Houston had her first #1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 with "Saving All My Love For You." The daughter of soul singer Cissy Houston and the niece of pop star Dionne Warwick, Whitney Houston parlayed her vocal gifts and the professional nurturing of her well-connected family into superstardom of a kind rarely matched before or since. A near-unknown prior to the release of her debut album "Whitney Houston," she shot to fame and eventually became one of the best-selling music artists of all time. She is still the only artist to have seven consecutive #1 hits.