What Happened On
"Star Wars" Speech
March 23, 1983
U.S. President Ronald Reagan gives what became known as the "Star Wars" speech outlining his Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI). It included the use of lasers to shoot down incoming Soviet ICBMs.
Adolf Hitler
March 23, 1933
Adolf Hitler passes the Enabling Act which effectively gave him dictatorial powers. He then used that power to ban other political parties.
First Passenger Elevator
March 23, 1857
The first commercial passenger elevator is opened to the public. Elisha Graves Otis' passenger elevator had a safety device that prevented the fall of the cab if the cable broke. He had demonstrated it at the New York exposition in the Crystal Palace in a dramatic, death-defying presentation in 1854, earning him his first customer, the Haughwout Department Store in New York City.
Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death
March 23, 1775
Patrick Henry proclaims, "I know not what course others may take, but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!," during the American Revolution.
Dan Quayle - "If we do not succeed, then we run the risk of failure"
March 23, 1990
U.S. Vice-President Dan Quayle in a speech to the Phoenix Republican Forum comments, "If we do not succeed, then we run the risk of failure."
Cold Fusion
March 23, 1989
Martin Fleischmann and Stanley Pons report that they had produced fusion at near room temperature. Despite much media frenzy, the inability of others to reproduce their results led the scientific community to eventually reject their claim.
Beat the Clock
March 23, 1950
The TV show Beat the Clock debuts on CBS with Bud Collyer as emcee. Contestants had to complete challenges before the timer ran out. This show provided a then unknown James Dean his first job in TV (1952), testing the challenges done on the show. Host Bud Collyer was also famous for having voiced Superman/Clark Kent on radio and in cartoons.
Mussolini
March 23, 1919
Benito Mussolini organizes the Fascio de Combattimento, which became the nucleus of the Fascist Party (1921).
U.S. Polygamy Ban
March 23, 1882
The Edmunds Act is signed into law making polygamy a felony and bigamous cohabitation a misdemeanor. More than 1300 men were convicted under this law, but not the women, as they were seen as victims.
Those practicing, or approving of, polygamy were banned from voting and holding public office.
Birthdays
Wernher von Braun
Born March 23, 1912 d. 1977
German engineer, SS Officer. He launched the first long-range guided missile (Germany's V-2 Rocket, 1942) and the first U.S. rocket to reach outer space (25 miles, 1949). After World War II, von Braun led the team of German scientists who worked for the U.S. under Project Paper Clip. He developed the Saturn and the Mercury Redstone (which put the first U.S. astronaut in space in 1961) and led the development of the Saturn V booster rocket which was used to put the first men on the Moon (1969).
Joan Crawford (Lucille LeSueur)
Born March 23, 1904 d. 1977
American actress. She starred in the pilot for TV's Night Gallery (1969) as a "…blind queen who reigns in a carpeted penthouse on Fifth Avenue—an imperious, predatory dowager who will soon find a darkness blacker than blindness". Film: What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962).
Schuyler Colfax
Born March 23, 1823 d. 1885
American politician. 17th U.S. Vice-President (1869-73), 25th Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (1863-69), U.S. House of Representatives (1855-69, Indiana). Colfax was known for his opposition to slavery while serving in Congress, and was a founder of the Republican Party.
Princess Eugenie (Eugenie Victoria Helena)
Born March 23, 1990
British royalty, second child of Prince Andrew and the Duchess of York.
Chaka Khan (Yvette Marie Stevens)
Born March 23, 1953
American singer, songwriter. Music: Tell Me Something Good (1974).
Photo Credit: Pruneau
First Person to Run a 4-Minute Mile
Roger Bannister
Born March 23, 1929 d. 2018
British runner. First person to run a 4-minute mile (1954, 3 minutes 59.4 seconds). According to his book, The Four-Minute Mile, his training consisted primarily of 30-minute runs consisting of hard intervals, 3-4 times a week.
Marty Allen
Born March 23, 1922 d. 2018
American comedian, with his famous catchphrase "Hello Dere!" TV: Regular on Hollywood Squares.
Photo Credit: Kritzolina
Morris Frank
Born March 23, 1908 d. 1980
American pioneer for the blind. Blind himself, he brought Buddy the first seeing eye dog in the U.S. (1928) over from Switzerland and co-founded The Seeing Eye, the first dog guide school in the U.S.
Arthur St. Clair
Born March 23, 1737 d. 1818
15th president of the Continental Congress (1787-88).
Deaths
Madeleine Albright (Marie Jana Korbelová)
Died March 23, 2022 b. 1937
American diplomat. Madeleine Albright served as the United States Secretary of State from 1997 to 2001 under President Bill Clinton. She was the first female U.S. Secretary of State.
In 1948, Albright immigrated with her family to the United States from Czechoslovakia and she became a U.S. citizen in 1957.
Creator of the Pet Rock
Gary Dahl
Died March 23, 2015 b. 1936
American entrepreneur. Creator of the Pet Rock (1975). While sitting in a bar listening to people complain about their pets, he joked that he had the perfect pet - a rock.
He then sold rocks to people as pets, complete with instructions. From the Pet Rock manual: "To be sure, training a rock to come when it's called requires extraordinary patience."
Elizabeth Taylor
Died March 23, 2011 b. 1932
British-American Oscar-winning actress. She was the first woman paid $1 million to appear in a film (1963, Cleopatra). Film: Lassie Come Home (1943), A Place in the Sun (1951), Butterfield 8 (1960, Oscar), and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966, Oscar).
George Segal
Died March 23, 2021 b. 1934
American actor. Film: Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966, Oscar nomination). TV: Just Shoot Me! (1997-2003, Jack Gallo) and The Goldbergs (2013-21, Albert "Pops" Solomon).
Lola Albright
Died March 23, 2017 b. 1924
American actress, singer. TV: Peter Gunn (1958-61, Peter Gunn's girlfriend).
Joe Garagiola Sr.
Died March 23, 2016 b. 1926
American baseball player, sportscaster.
Giulietta Masina (Guilia Anna Masina)
Died March 23, 1994 b. 1921
Italian actress, wife of Federico Fellini. Film: La Strada (1954, Gelsomina), and Nights of Cabiria (1956, Cannes Best Actress, as the prostitute).
First Black Woman U.S. Ambassador
Patricia Roberts Harris
Died March 23, 1985 b. 1924
American lawyer, educator. She was the first black woman U.S. ambassador (1965-67, Luxembourg) and the first woman to hold two cabinet positions: Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (1977-79) and Secretary of Health Education and Welfare (1979-81).
John Haley "Zoot" Sims
Died March 23, 1985 b. 1925
American saxophonist. He played with Bobby Sherwood, Benny Goodman, and Woody Herman.
Barney B. Clark
Died March 23, 1983 b. 1921
American dentist. He was the first person to have a permanent artificial heart successfully implanted (Dec. 2, 1982), performed by Dr. Robert Jarvik.
Peter Lorre (Laszlo Loewenstein)
Died March 23, 1964 b. 1904
American actor. Film: The Maltese Falcon (1941), Casablanca (1942, Ugarte), and star of the Mr. Moto movies (1930s).
Harry Thurston Peck
Died March 23, 1914 b. 1856
American educator, magazine editor, coined the word "Bestseller" (1895).
Morrison Remick Waite
Died March 23, 1888 b. 1816
American jurist, chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1874-88).
Founded Boston Female Medical School
Samuel Gregory
Died March 23, 1872 b. 1813
American medical educator. He founded Boston Female Medical School (1848), the first medical school exclusively for women, because he was opposed to male doctors attending births.
By 1852, this school was called the New England Female Medical College. It merged with the Boston University School of Medicine in 1874 to become one of the first co-ed medical schools in the world.
Dr. Rebecca Davis Lee Crumpler graduated in 1864 and was the first African American woman to earn a medical degree.
Julius III (Giovanni Maria Ciocchi del Monte)
Died March 23, 1555 b. 1487
Italian religious leader, 221st Pope (1550-55).