Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries/August 2
This is a list of selected August 2 anniversaries that appear in the "On this day" section of the Main Page. To suggest a new item, in most cases, you can be bold and edit this page. Please read the selected anniversaries guidelines before making your edit. However, if your addition might be controversial or on a day that is or will soon be on the Main Page, please post your suggestion on the talk page instead.
Please note that the events listed on the Main Page are chosen based more on relative article quality and to maintain a mix of topics, not based solely on how important or significant their subjects are. Only four to five events are posted at a time and thus not everything that is "most important and significant" can be listed. In addition, an event is generally not posted this year if it is also the subject of the scheduled featured article or picture of the day.
To report an error when this appears on the Main Page, see Main Page errors. Please remember that this list defers to the supporting articles, so it is best to achieve consensus and make any necessary changes there first.
Images
Use only ONE image at a time
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Wild Bill Hickock
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Bologna massacre
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The Macedonium monument in Krushevo commemorating the Ilinden Uprising of 1903
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The Tower Subway in 1870
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The Leonardo da Vinci
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Coin of Majorian
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Marie-Adélaïde, Grand Duchess of Luxembourg
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Drawing of the interior of the Tower Subway
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Leo Szilard
Ineligible
Blurb | Reason |
---|---|
Republic Day in North Macedonia | refimprove |
216 BC – Second Punic War: Outnumbered Carthaginian forces led by Hannibal defeated a Roman army near the town of Cannae in southeastern Italy. | Refimprove section |
1610 – English sea explorer Henry Hudson sailed into what is now known as Hudson Bay, thinking he had made it through the Northwest Passage to reach the Pacific Ocean. | refimprove section |
1830 – His hand forced by the recent July Revolution, Charles X of France abdicated the throne in favor of his grandson, Henry. | unreferenced section |
1831 - Dutch troops invaded Belgium in a final attempt to suppress the Belgian Revolution | refimprove section |
1876 – American lawman Wild Bill Hickok was murdered during a poker game in Deadwood, Dakota Territory. | too many {{cn}} tags (11) |
1897 – The Siege of Malakand ended when a relief column was able to reach the British garrison in the Malakand region of colonial India's North West Frontier Province. | primary sources. See FAR |
1903 – The Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization started the Ilinden Uprising against the Ottoman Empire in Macedonia. | refimprove sections |
1914 – World War I: Marie-Adélaïde, Grand Duchess of Luxembourg, and prime minister Paul Eyschen surrendered to the invading German army and the nation remained occupied for the rest of the war. | Primary sources |
1964 – Gulf of Tonkin incident | Moved to August 4 |
1980 – A terrorist bomb exploded at a railway station in Bologna, Italy, killing 85 people and wounding more than 200. | refimprove section |
1985 – Delta Air Lines Flight 191 crashed in Dallas, Texas, due to a microburst, resulting in 137 deaths. | refimprove |
1989 – Sri Lankan Civil War: The Indian Peace Keeping Force began a two-day massacre in Valvettithurai, killing 64 minority Sri Lankan Tamil civilians. | Undue weight, article is mostly on the background and events after. |
1990 – Iraq invaded Kuwait, overrunning the Kuwaiti military within two days, and eventually sparking the outbreak of the Gulf War seven months later. | refimprove section |
Alexander Graham Bell |d|1922| | several unsourced paras |
Kyawswa of Pagan |b|1260| | Citation needed for birth |
Eligible
- 338 BC – An allied army led by Philip II of Macedon overcame the forces of city-states led by Athens and Thebes at the Battle of Chaeronea, securing Macedonian hegemony over the majority of ancient Greece.
- 1870 – One of the world's earliest underground tube railways opened in the Tower Subway, a tunnel beneath the River Thames in London.
- 1916 – An explosion, blamed on Austro-Hungarian saboteurs, sank the Italian dreadnought Leonardo da Vinci.
- 1923 – Calvin Coolidge became the 30th president of the United States after Warren G. Harding suffered a fatal heart attack.
- 1932 – At the California Institute of Technology, American physicist Carl David Anderson proved the existence of antimatter with the discovery of the positron, for which he would receive the 1936 Nobel Prize in Physics.
- 1939 – Leo Szilard (pictured) penned a letter, signed by Albert Einstein and addressed to U.S. president Franklin D. Roosevelt, warning that Germany may develop atomic bombs, leading to the establishment of the Manhattan Project.
- 1947 – Star Dust, a British South American Airways airliner, crashed into Mount Tupungato in the Argentine Andes; its wreckage was not found until 1998.
- 1971 – The English rock band the Who released Who's Next, the group's only album to top the UK charts.
- 2007 – Raúl Iturriaga, a former deputy director of the Chilean secret police, was captured in Viña del Mar after having been on the run following a kidnapping conviction.
- Born/died: | Thomas Grey |d|1415| Andrew Barton |d|1511| Arthur Bliss |b|1891| Jack L. Warner |b|1892| Marija Bursać |b|1920| Hugh Hickling|b|1920| Betsy Bloomingdale |b|1922| Shimon Peres |b|1923| Billy Cannon |b|1937| Jean-Pierre Melville |d|1973| Roy Cohn |d|1986
Notes
- Wild Bill Hickok – Davis Tutt shootout appears on July 21, so Hickok should not appear in the same year
August 2: Roma Holocaust Memorial Day
- 461 – Unpopular among the Senate aristocracy for his reforming efforts, Roman emperor Majorian was deposed by Ricimer and executed five days later.
- 1100 – While on a hunting trip in the New Forest, King William II of England was killed by an arrow through the lung loosed by one of his own men.
- 1790 – The first United States census was officially completed, with the nation's residential population enumerated to be 3,929,214.
- 1920 – Nepalese author Krishna Lal Adhikari (pictured) was sentenced to nine years in prison for publishing a book about the cultivation of corn alleged to contain attacks on the ruling dynasty.
- 1973 – A flash fire killed 50 people at a leisure centre in Douglas, Isle of Man.
- Pope Severinus (d. 640)
- Harriet Arbuthnot (d. 1834)
- Bertha Lutz (b. 1894)
- Simone Manuel (b. 1996)