This is a list of selected October 22 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. Before doing so, please review the selected anniversaries guidelines. If your suggestion is potentially controversial or relates to a day currently or soon to appear on the Main Page, post it on the talk page instead.
Please note:
- Events listed on the Main Page are selected based on article quality and to provide a diverse range of topics, rather than solely on the importance or significance of the events.
- Only four or five events are featured each day; therefore, not all important or significant events can be included.
- An event is generally excluded if it is already the subject of the scheduled featured article or picture of the day.
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| ← October 21 | October 23 → |
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Images
Ineligible
| Blurb | Reason |
|---|---|
| 1383 – King Ferdinand I died without a male heir to the Portuguese throne, resulting in a period of civil war and anarchy. | Interregnum: refimprove; Ferdinand: refimprove |
| 1730 – Construction of the Ladoga Canal linking the Neva and the Svir River, one of the first major canals constructed in Russia, was completed. | refimprove |
| 1836 – Sam Houston became the first president of the Republic of Texas. | refimprove section, expansion |
| 1844 – Millerites, including future members of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, were greatly disappointed that Jesus did not return as predicted by American preacher William Miller. | refimprove section |
| 1879 – Thomas Edison performed a successful test using a carbon filament thread in an incandescent light bulb, which would become the most successful version of the product. | refimprove section |
| 1883 – The Metropolitan Opera in New York City opened with a performance of French composer Charles Gounod's opera Faust. | refimprove/unreferenced sections |
| 1884 – At the International Meridian Conference, the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, London, was adopted as the Universal Time meridian of longitude. | Conference: unreferenced section; UTC: refimprove section |
| 1934 – Pretty Boy Floyd, an American bank robber and alleged killer who was later romanticized by the media, was gunned down by Federal Bureau of Investigation agents near East Liverpool, Ohio. | refimprove |
| 1962 – Cold War: U.S. President John F. Kennedy announced that Soviet nuclear weapons had been discovered in Cuba and that he had ordered a naval "quarantine" of the island nation. | refimprove sections |
| 1964 – The French philosopher and writer Jean-Paul Sartre became the first Nobel Laureate to voluntarily decline the prize, saying that he did not wish to be "transformed" by such an award. | refimprove, external links |
| 1999 – Vichy France official Maurice Papon was jailed for crimes against humanity committed during World War II. | unreferenced sections |
| 2006 – An expansion project to double the Panama Canal's capacity was approved by Panamanian voters in a national referendum by a wide margin. | unreferenced section |
| 2008 – India launched Chandrayaan-1, the country's first unmanned lunar mission. | refimprove section |
| 2013 – The Marriage Equality (Same Sex) Act 2013 made the Australian Capital Territory the nation's first jurisdiction to legalise same-sex marriage, although the High Court struck the act down two months later. | lots of CN tags |
| Charles Scott (governor) (d. 1813) | TFA for 2018 |
Eligible
- 1727 – George II and Caroline of Ansbach were crowned King and Queen of Great Britain.
- 1740 – A two-week massacre of ethnic Chinese in Batavia, Dutch East Indies, came to an end with at least 10,000 people killed.
- 1797 – Dropping from a hydrogen balloon 3,200 feet (980 m) above Paris, André-Jacques Garnerin carried out the first descent using a frameless parachute.
- 1877 – The Blantyre mining disaster, Scotland's worst mining accident, occurred when an explosion at a colliery in Blantyre killed 207 miners.
- 1907 – A bank run forced New York's Knickerbocker Trust Company to suspend operations, which triggered the Panic of 1907.
- 1940 - After evading French and Spanish authorities, Belgian Prime Minister Hubert Pierlot arrived in England, marking the beginning of the Belgian government in exile in London
- 1966 – With their album The Supremes A' Go-Go, The Supremes became the first all-female group to reach number one on the U.S. Billboard 200.
- 2001 – The controversial video game Grand Theft Auto III was first released to critical acclaim, and went on to popularise open world and mature-content games.
- Born/died: Qian Weijun (b. 955) · Sahle Selassie (d. 1847) · Deepak Chopra (b. 1946)
Notes
- Jeanne Geneviève Labrosse appears on October 12 so André-Jacques Garnerin should not appear in the same year.
October 22: International Stuttering Awareness Day
- 1633 – Ming Chinese naval forces defeated a Dutch East India Company fleet in the Taiwan Strait, the largest naval encounter between Chinese and European forces before the First Opium War more than two hundred years later.
- 1707 – In one of the worst maritime disasters in the history of the British Isles, at least 1,400 sailors on four Royal Navy ships were lost in stormy weather off the Isles of Scilly.
- 1895 – At Gare Montparnasse station in Paris, an express train derailed after overrunning the buffer stop, crossing the concourse before crashing through a wall and falling to the plaza below (pictured).
- 1924 – The educational non-profit organization Toastmasters International was founded at a YMCA in Santa Ana, California.
- 2015 – Sweden suffered its deadliest school attack when a sword-wielding man attacked students and teachers in a high school in Trollhättan, killing three people.
George Coulthard (d. 1883) · Edith Kawelohea McKinzie (b. 1925) · Oona King (b. 1967)