Monday, August 25, 2025

August 25th: This Day in History

 






Once again, it should be reiterated, that this does not pretend to be a very extensive history of what happened on this day (nor is it the most original - the links can be found down below). If you know something that I am missing, by all means, shoot me an email or leave a comment, and let me know!




Here's a more detailed look at events that transpired on this date throughout history:


Today marks some important anniversaries. Perhaps none of them have had as much of an impact on world history, or particularly at least Western history, as the Council of Nicea, which adopted the doctrine of the Holy Trinity, and established set criteria as the official belief of Christianity, which included banning some books and beliefs suddenly considered inconvenient. Galileo demonstrated his first telescope to Venetian lawmakers on this day in 1609. Montreal was taken by the Iroquois. Hundreds of French colonists arrived in what is now Louisiana, and thus the city of New Orleans was founded on this day in 1718 by the French explorer Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville. Haitian revolutionary Toussaint L'Ouverture was imprisoned in France in 1802. Uruguay declared independence from Brazil (National Independence Day) on this day in 1825. In 1829 on this day, American President Andrew Jackson made an offer to buy Texas, but the Mexican government ultimately rejected the offer. On this day in 1830 following a performance of the opera, 'La Muette de Portici', riots broke out in Brussels. The citizens of Brussels wanted to defend themselves against these riots, and established a citizens' militia. This led to the Belgian Revolution, during which several of the southern provinces would break away from rule by the British and Netherlands. During the first World War, German zeppelins bombed Belgium on this day. In 1941 on this day, U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt signed the bill appropriating funds for the construction of the Pentagon. This also marks the anniversary of the Liberation of Paris on this day in 1944, as Allied forces liberated the French capital from the Nazi occupiers. There were huge celebrations to mark the event.  The last Soviet forces left Austria in 1955. Arthur Ashe became the first black men's player to win the US Open in 1968. Iran and Iraq began negotiations to end their war on this day in 1988. The United States authorized the use of force against Iraq on this date in 1990 in the lead up to Gulf War I. Belarus declared it's independence on this day in 1991.


Here's a more detailed look at events that transpired on this date throughout history:


• On this day in 325, the Council of Nicaea (now Iznik, Turkey).ended with the adoption of the Nicene Creed, which established the doctrine of the Holy Trinity (the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost). 

• The Battle at Straatsburg was fought on this day in 357, when Julianus defeated Alamannen, with Chonodomarius caught. 

• The Children's crusaders under Nicolas (10) reached Genoa on this day in 1212. 

• The Dutch city of Ommen received city rights and fortification rights from Otto III, the Archbishop of Utrecht, on this day in 1248. 

• On this day in 1330, AntiPope Nicolaas V absolved himself of authority. Countess Jacoba of Bavaria escaped from jail on this day in 1425. 

• The Battle at Bosworth Fields took place on this day in 1485, with Henry Tudor defeating King Richard III. 

• On this day in 1499, the Battle at Sapienza was fought, with the Ottoman fleet beating the Venetians.


• 1537 - The Honourable Artillery Company, the oldest surviving regiment in the British Army, and the second most senior, is formed.

• 1540 - Explorer Hernando de Alarcon travels up Colorado River

• 1566 - Iconoclastic fury begins in Dutch province Utrecht

• 1580 - Battle of Alcantara, Spain defeats Portugal




Replica of the statue of Galileo Galilei outside of Carnegie Museums of Natural History

• Galileo demonstrated his first telescope to Venetian lawmakers on this day in 1609.


1628 - Assault on sultan of Mantarams of Batavia

1689 - Battle at Charleroi: Spanish & English armies chase French


• 1689 - Montreal taken by Iroquois

1698 - Czar Peter the Great returns to Moscow after trip through West-Europe
1704 - Battle at Malaga: French vs English & Dutch fleet






• Hundreds of French colonists arrived in what is now Louisiana, and thus the city of New Orleans was founded on this day in 1718 by the French explorer Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville. It was called La Nouvelle-Orléans in honor of Philippe II, Duke of Orléans, who was the Regent of France at that time. With the location at the mouth of the Mississippi River and the Gulf of Mexico, this location proved to be a valuable strategic settlement. New Orleans later became the capital of the French colony of Louisiana. 



Picture of a statue of British explorer Captain James Cook


• 1768 - Captain James Cook departs from Plymouth, England on his first voyage onboard the Endeavour bound for the Pacific Ocean

1795 - Curacao slaves opponents returns to St Christopher



Flag of Haiti

• 1802 - Toussaint L'Ouverture imprisoned in Fort de Joux, Jura, France


1804 - Alice Meynell becomes 1st woman jockey (England)
1814 - British forces destroy Library of Congress, containing 3,000 books




Flag of Uruguay


• Uruguay declared independence from Brazil (National Independence Day) on this day in 1825.



• In 1829 on this day, American President Andrew Jackson made an offer to buy Texas, but the Mexican government ultimately rejected the offer. 



• On this day in 1830 following a performance of the opera, 'La Muette de Portici', riots broke out in Brussels. The citizens of Brussels wanted to defend themselves against these riots, and established a citizens' militia. This led to the Belgian Revolution, during which several of the southern provinces would break away from rule by the British and Netherlands.


1835 - NY Sun publishes Moon hoax story about John Herschel

• 1862 - Secretary of War authorizes Gen Rufus Saxton to arm 5,000 slaves

1864 - Combination rail & ferry service available from SF to Alameda
1864 - Petersburg Campaign-Battle of Ream's Station
1875 - Matthew Webb becomes 1st to swim English Channel (21h 45m)
1886 - 1st intl polo meet (US vs England)
1888 - 8th US Mens Tennis: Henry W Slocum Jr beats Howard A Taylor (64 61 60)
Russian Tsar Peter the GreatRussian Tsar Peter the Great 1890 - Would be start of Eng/Aust Test Cricket at Old Trafford Washout
1894 - -26] Balinese troops assault Dutch army, 97 killed
1894 - Shibasaburo Kitasato discovers the infectious agent of the bubonic plague and publishes his findings in The Lancet.

• 1898 - 700 Greeks and 15 Englishmen are slaughtered by the Turks in Heraklion, Greece.



1908 - National Association of Colored Nurses, forms
1910 - 30th US Mens Tennis: Wm Larned beats Thomas Bundy (61 57 60 68 61)
1910 - Yellow Cab is founded.
1912 - 1st time an aircraft recovers from a spin
1912 - Different nationalities battle with each other in Macedonia
1912 - The Kuomintang, the Chinese nationalist party, is founded.
1914 - -26] Belgian offensive at Antwerp
1914 - Belgium: German army begins 6 week plundering of Leuven Belgium


• 1914 - German Zeppelins bomb Antwerp Belgium, 10 die

1914 - German troops march into France pushes French army to the Sedan
1915 - Hurricane kills 275 in Galveston, Texas with $50 million damage
1916 - Dept of Interior forms National Park Service

1919 - 1st scheduled passenger service by airplane (Paris-London)
1920 - 1st US woman to win in Olympics (Ethelda Bleibtrey)


• 1920 - Russia suffers a decisive defeat in the battle of Warsaw against Poland

1921 - US signs peace treaty with Germany

1921 - The first skirmishes of the Battle of Blair Mountain occur.
1922 - Cubs beat Phillies 26-23 in highest scoring major-league game
1924 - International maritime treaty drawn

1925 - Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters organizes (Harlem NY)
1925 - Last Belgian troops vacate Duisburg
1926 - Pavlos Koundouris becomes president of Greece
1928 - Tri-City Rugby Football Union forms consisting of Moose Jaw, Regina & Winnipeg
1929 - Graf Zeppelin passes over SF for LA after trans-Pacific voyage

• 1932 - Amelia Earhart completes transcontinental flight

1936 - 3 Braves hit twice in an inning getting 2 hits each
1937 - Japanese fleet blockades Chinese coast
1940 - 1st (British) night bombing of Germany (Berlin)
1940 - Lithuania, Latvia & Estonia incorporated into Soviet Union
1941 - English & Russian troops attack pro-German Iran
1941 - German troops conquer Nowgorod, Leningrad



Franklin D. Roosevelt Memorial in Washington, D.C.

• In 1941 on this day, U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt signed the bill appropriating funds for the construction of the Pentagon.


1942 - SS begins transporting Jews of Maastricht Neth
1943 - 10th NFL Chicago All-Star Game: All-Stars 27, Washington 7 (48,471)

1943 - German occupiers impose 72-hour work week
1943 - Lord Mountbatten appointed Supreme Allied Commander in SE Asia
1943 - Red Army under Gen Vatutin recaptures Achtyrka
1943 - US forces overrun New Georgia in Solomon Islands during WW II



  



French President Charles De Gaulle


• On this day in 1944 during World War II, Paris was fully liberated from Nazi occupation. General Charles De Gaulle returns to Paris/walks Champs Elysees Paris. The Second Tank division under General Leclerc reached Notre Dame.



On August 25, 1944, after more than four years of Nazi occupation, Paris is liberated by the French 2nd Armored Division and the U.S. 4th Infantry Division. German resistance was light, and General Dietrich von Choltitz, commander of the German garrison, defied an order by Adolf Hitler to blow up Paris’ landmarks and burn the city to the ground before its liberation. Choltitz signed a formal surrender that afternoon, and on August 26, Free French General Charles de Gaulle led a joyous liberation march down the Champs d’Elysees.  

Paris fell to Nazi Germany on June 14, 1940, one month after the German Wehrmacht stormed into France. Eight days later, France signed an armistice with the Germans, and a puppet French state was set up with its capital at Vichy. Elsewhere, however, General Charles de Gaulle and the Free French kept fighting, and the Resistance sprang up in occupied France to resist Nazi and Vichy rule.  

The French 2nd Armored Division was formed in London in late 1943 with the express purpose of leading the liberation of Paris during the Allied invasion of France. In August 1944, the division arrived at Normandy under the command of General Jacques-Philippe Leclerc and was attached to General George S. Patton’s 3rd U.S. Army. By August 18, Allied forces were near Paris, and workers in the city went on strike as Resistance fighters emerged from hiding and began attacking German forces and fortifications.  

At his headquarters two miles inland from the Normandy coast, Supreme Allied Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower had a dilemma. Allied planners had concluded that the liberation of Paris should be delayed so as to not divert valuable resources away from important operations elsewhere. The city could be encircled and then liberated at a later date.

On August 21, Eisenhower met with de Gaulle and told him of his plans to bypass Paris. De Gaulle urged him to reconsider, assuring him that Paris could be reclaimed without difficulty. The French general also warned that the powerful communist faction of the Resistance might succeed in liberating Paris, thereby threatening the re-establishment of a democratic government. De Gaulle politely told Eisenhower that if his advance against Paris was not ordered, he would send Leclerc’s 2nd Armored Division into the city himself.  

On August 22, Eisenhower agreed to proceed with the liberation of Paris. The next day, the 2nd Armored Division advanced on the city from the north and the 4th Infantry Division from the south. Meanwhile, in Paris, the forces of German General Dietrich von Choltitz were fighting the Resistance and completing their defenses around the city. Hitler had ordered Paris defended to the last man, and demanded that the city not fall into Allied hands except as “a field of ruins.” Choltitz dutifully began laying explosives under Paris’ bridges and many of its landmarks, but disobeyed an order to commence the destruction. He did not want to go down in history as the man who had destroyed the “City of Light”—Europe’s most celebrated city.  

The 2nd Armored Division ran into heavy German artillery, taking heavy casualties, but on August 24 managed to cross the Seine and reach the Paris suburbs. There, they were greeted by enthusiastic civilians who besieged them with flowers, kisses, and wine. Later that day, Leclerc learned that the 4th Infantry Division was poised to beat him into Paris proper, and he ordered his exhausted men forward in a final burst of energy. Just before midnight on August 24, the 2nd Armored Division reached the Hótel de Ville in the heart of Paris.

AUG 25 1944 Paris is liberated after four years of Nazi occupation by HISTORY.com Editors, Published: July 21, 2010 Last Updated: July 22, 2025:

https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/august-25/paris-liberated


1944 - US 12nd Army corp reaches Troyes
1945 - Jewish immigrants are permitted to leave Mauritius for Palestine

1947 - Marion Carl in D-558-I sets world aircraft speech record, 1,047 kph


• 1950 - Pres Harry Truman orders army to seize control of RR to avert a strike
1950 - Sugar Ray Robinson KOs Jose Basora to win middleweight boxing title

• 1952 - Puerto Rico becomes a US commonwealth


• 1955 - Last Soviet forces leave Austria

• 1957 - Prince Suvanna Phuma forms government in Laos, with Pathet Lao



Flag of the Olympics
• 1960 - 17th summer olympics opens in Rome

1960 - AFL begins placing players names on back of their jerseys

1960 - Demonstrations against premier Lumumba



• 1961 - Brazilian president Janio Quadros, resigns



1962 - USSR performs nuclear test at Novaya Zemlya USSR
1962 - USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR
1963 - Kathy Whitworth wins LPGA Ogden Ladies' Golf Open


• 1963 - Paul McCartney is fined 31 pounds & given a 1 yr suspended license for speeding

1964 - Singapore limits imports from Neth due to Indonesian aggression


• 1967 - Beatles go to Wales to study TM with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi



• 1967 - Paraguay accepts its constitution

1967 - Train crash at Beesd, 2 die
1968 - Arthur Ashe becomes 1st black to win US singles championship


1970 - Elton John's 1st US appearance (Los Angeles)
1973 - Butch Trucks drummer of Allman Brothers, breaks leg in a car crash
1973 - France performs nuclear test at Muruora Island
1973 - Guitarist Henry McCullough quits Wings


• 1973 - Zambia adopts constitution


1974 - France performs nuclear test at Muruora Island
1974 - LA Aztecs defeat Miami Toros to win NASL cup

1979 - "Madwoman of Central Park West" closes at 22 Steps NYC after 86 perfs

1979 - Somali adopts constitution
1980 - "42nd Street" opens at Winter Garden Theater NYC for 3486 performances

1981 - Jeff Schwartz, sets solo record for trampoline bouncing (266:09)
1981 - Voyager 2's closest approach to Saturn (63,000 miles/100,000 km)

1983 - US & USSR sign $10 billion grain pact
1984 - French airship capsizes
1984 - USSR performs underground nuclear test

1985 - STS 51-I scrubbed at T -9m because of an onboard computer problem

1987 - Dow Jones industrial stock avg reaches record 2722.42
1987 - Madonna sings in Rotterdam
1988 - Challenger Center opens its classroom doors in Houston
1988 - Heavy fire destroys historic center of Lisbon
1988 - Iran and Iraq begin talks to end their 8 year war

• 1988 - NASA launches space vehicle S-214
1989 - After 12-year, 4-billion-mile journey, Voyager 2 flies over cloudtops of Neptune & its moon Triton, sending back photographs of swamps
1989 - Mayumi Moriyama becomes Japan's first female cabinet secretary.
1990 - Li Hui Rong of China sets triple jump woman's record (47'8½")
1990 - UN security council authorizes military action against Iraq
1991 - "Getting Married" closes at Circle in Sq Theater NYC after 70 perfs
1991 - 43rd Emmy Awards: LA Law, Cheers, Kirstie Alley & Patricia Wettig


• 1991 - Norway & Denmark recognize independence of former USSR Baltic reps

1991 - Wanda Panfil wins 3rd female world champion marathon (2:29:53)

• Belarus declared it's independence on this day in 1991.

1991 - Linux was born when Linus Torvalds sent off the email announcing his project to create a new operating system.

• 1997 - Egon Krenz, the former East German leader, is convicted of a shoot-to-kill Berlin Wall policy.


2003 - The Tli Cho land claims agreement is signed between the Dogrib First Nations and the Canadian federal government in Rae-Edzo (now called Behchoko).
2012 - 330 people are killed as a result of conflict in the Syrian civil war
2012 - 39 people are killed and 80 are injured after a gas leak in North Venezuelan refinery
2012 - 85,000 people are displaced by severe floods in Myanmar



1718 - Hundreds of colonists from France arrived in Louisiana. Some settled in present-day New Orleans.   1814 - The U.S. Library of Congress was destroyed by British forces.   1840 - Joseph Gibbons received a patent for the seeding machine.   1875 - Captain Matthew Webb swam from Dover, England, to Calais, France making him the first person to swim the English Channel. The feat took about 22 hours.   1902 - "Al-Hoda" began publication in New York City making it the first Arabic daily newspaper in the U.S.   1916 - The National Park Service was established as part of the U.S. Department of the Interior.   1920 - Ethelda Bleibtrey won the 100-meter freestyle swimming competition in Antwerp, Belgium. She was the first woman to win an Olympic competition for the U.S.   1920 - The first airplane to fly from New York to Alaska arrived in Nome.   1921 - The U.S. signed a peace treaty with Germany.   1939 - The movie "Wizard of Oz" opened around the United States.   1940 - Arno Rudolphi and Ann Hayward were married while suspended in parachutes at the World’s Fair in New York City.  1941 - Soviet and British troops invaded Iran. This was in reaction to the Shah's refusal to reduce the number of German residents.   1941 - Allied forces invaded Iran. Within four days the Soviet Union and England controlled Iran.   1941 - U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt signed the bill appropriating funds for construction of the Pentagon.   1944 - Paris, France, was liberated by Allied forces ending four years of German occupation.   1944 - Romania declared war on Germany.     1949 - NBC Radio debuted "Father Knows Best." The show went to TV in 1954.   1950 - U.S. President Truman ordered the seizure of U.S. railroads to avert a strike.   1972 - In Great Britain, computerized axial tomography (CAT scan) was introduced.   1978 - The Turin shroud believed to be the burial cloth of Jesus Christ went on display for the first time in 45 years.   1981 - The U.S. Voyager 2 sent back pictures and data about Saturn. The craft came within 63,000 miles of the planet.   1983 - The U.S. and the Soviet Union signed a $10 billion grain pact.   1987 - Saudi Arabia denounced the "group of terrorists" that ran the Iranian government.   1988 - Iran and Iraq began talks in Geneva after ending their eight years of war.   1990 - Military action was authorized by the United Nations to enforce the trade embargo that had been placed on Iraq after their invasion of Kuwait.   1991 - Belorussia declared independence from the Soviet Union.   1992 - It was reported by researchers that cigarette smoking significantly increased the risk of developing cataracts.   1993 - The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 3,652.09, an all-time high.   1995 - Harry Wu, human rights activist, returned to the United States. He said the spying case against him in China was "all lies."   1997 - The tobacco industry agreed to an $11.3 billion settlement with the state of Florida.   1998 - A survey released said that 1/3 of Americans use the Internet.


1875 Matthew Webb became the first person to swim across the English Channel. It took him 21 hours and 45 minutes. 1916 The Department of the Interior created the National Park Service to manage and preserve national parks and monuments for future generations. 1944 Paris was liberated from Nazi occupation by Allied forces. 1984 Author Truman Capote was found dead in Los Angeles. 2001 Singer and actress Aaliyah died in a plane crash in the Bahamas. 2003 NASA launched the infrared Spitzer Space Telescope. 2009 Senator Edward "Ted" Kennedy, a fixture in the Senate for 46 years, dies of brain cancer at the age of 77. 2009 Edward "Ted" Kennedy, who served as a Democratic senator from Massachusetts since 1962, dies. He was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor in 2008. 2012 The first human to walk on the moon, Neil Armstrong, died after suffering complications from a heart bypass

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