Michael Faraday displays his dynamo invention, an electrical generator, in 1831.
Michael Faraday, on October 28th in 1831 invented the first laboratory models of Electric Generators or Dynamo. It consisted of a copper disc rotating between the poles of magnet. This was not the Dynamo in its true sense as it doesn't use the commutator.
Related On This Day
A radio broadcast of H. G. Wells' "The War of the Worlds," narrated by Orson Welles, supposedly sparks a worldwide panic in 1938.
Tsar Nicholas II of Russia provides civil rights and approves the first Duma in the "October Manifesto" of 1905. (Parliament)
Maxentius, Roman Emperor (306-312), drowns in 312 in the Battle of Milvian Bridge at the age of 34.
Diego Maradona, an Argentine soccer forward, was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1960.
Matthew Lawrence Hayden AM, a former Australian cricketer & cricket commentator, will be 51 years old on October 29, 2022.
In 1999, the worst Indian Ocean tropical super cyclone strikes Odisha, India, killing 9,885 people and reaching wind speeds of 300 miles per hour.
In 2019, Kashmir formally loses its autonomous status, flag, and constitution as India reasserts federal sovereignty over the region, thus abolishing its statehood.
Lala Lajpat Rai, an Indian freedom fighter, was injured in 1928 while organizing a quiet demonstration against a visiting British commission in Lahore.
Christopher Columbus, the Italian adventurer and navigator who found the "New World" for Spain and launched European colonialism, was born in the Republic of Genoa on or around this day in 1451.
Today! Ted Hughes, poet and British Poet Laureate (1984-98), died in 1998 at the age of 68.
Rene Goscinny's "Asterix" is originally published in the French magazine "Pilote" in 1959, drawn by Albert Uderzo.
On his 37th birthday in 1997, Argentine soccer great Diego Maradona announces his retirement from the game.
After a similar incident and President Macron's advocacy of the freedom to print caricatures of Prophet Muhammad, three people were stabbed to death in a church in Nice, France, in 2020.
In 1926, magician Harry Houdini [Erich Weisz] dies in Detroit from gangrene and peritonitis caused by a burst appendix.