March 31st in History
		
		
		
	Today in History
- Mohammed and his early followers win the Battle of the Trench (غزوة الخندق, or Ghazwah al-Khandaq), a key moment in the rise of Islam (627)
 - The Alhambra Decree expels all Jews from Spain (1492)
 - The British close the Port of Boston in response to the Boston Tea Party (1774)
 - The Eiffel Tower officially opens (1889) – cover
 - The NCAA is founded (1906)
 - Construction of RMS Titanic begins (1909)
 - The motion picture industry in the US adopts the Hays Code (1930)
 - Congress authorizes the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) (1933)
 - Newfoundland joins Canada (1949)
 - The first UNIVAC computer is sold (1951)
 - Luna 10 is launched (1966)
 - Explorer 1 reenters Earth’s atmosphere (1970)
 - The first WrestleMania event takes place (1985)
 - The last US battleship, USS Missouri (BB-63), is decommissioned (1992)
 
Birthdays
- René Descartes, philosopher (1596)
 - Andrew Marvell, poet (1621)
 - Johann Sebastian Bach, composer (1685)
 - Joseph Haydn, composer (1732)
 - Никола́й Го́голь (Nikolai Gogol), author (1809)
 - Edward FitzGerald, poet and translator (1809)
 - Mary Chesnut, diarist (1823)
 - Jack Johnson, boxer (1878)
 - Sir William Lawrence Bragg, physicist (1890)
 - 朝永 振一郎 (Sin-Itiro Tomonaga), physicist (1906)
 - Red Norvo, vibraphonist (1908)
 - William Lederer, author (1912)
 - Etta Baker, blues guitarist (1913)
 - Octavio Paz, writer and diplomat (1914)
 - 横井 庄 (Shōichi Yokoi ), one of the last three Japanese soldiers found after the end of the war (1915)
 - Richard Kiley, actor (1922)
 - Leo Buscaglia, author and speaker (1924)
 - John Fowles, author (1926)
 - César Chávez, labor leader (1927)
 - William Daniels, actor (1927)
 - Lefty Frizzell, singer-songwriter (1928)
 - Liz Claiborne, fashion designer (1929)
 - John Jakes, novelist (1932)
 - Richard Chamberlain, actor (1934)
 - Shirley Jones, actress and singer (1934)
 - Carlo Rubbia, physicist (1934)
 - Herb Alpert, trumpet player and producer (1935)
 - Judith Rossner, novelist (1935)
 - Barney Frank, congressman (1940)
 - Michael Savage, talk show host (1942)
 - Christopher Walken, actor (1943)
 - Gabe Kaplan, actor (1945)
 - Eliyahu Goldratt, management theorist (1947)
 - Al Gore, Jr., vice president (1948)
 - David Eisenhower, presidential grandson (1948)
 - Rhea Perlman, actress (1948)
 - Ed Marinaro, football player and actor (1950)
 - Vanessa del Rio, porn star (1952)
 - Tom Barrasso, hockey player (1965)
 - Ewan McGregor, actor (1971)
 - Evan Williams, Twitter co-founder (1972)
 - Josh Saviano, actor (1976)
 
Deaths
- John Donne, poet (1631)
 - Johann Christoph Bach, composer (1703)
 - Olaudah Equiano, slave, merchant, explorer, writer (1797)
 - John C. Calhoun, slavery advocate (1850)
 - Charlotte Brontë, author (1855)
 - J. P. Morgan, financier (1913)
 - Emil Adolf von Behring, Nobel-winning physiologist (1917)
 - Knute Rockne, football coach (1931)
 - Prince Georges V. Machabelli, perfumist (1935)
 - Ralph DePalma, racer (1956)
 - Meena Kumari, actress (1972)
 - Charles Herbert Best, co-discoverer of insulin (1978)
 - Jesse Owens, Olympic athlete (1980)
 - Enid Bagnold, wrote National Velvet (1981)
 - Jerry Paris, actor (1986)
 - Brandon Lee, actor and martial artist (1993)
 - Mitchell Parish, lyricist (1993)
 - Selena, singer-songwriter (1995)
 - Bella Abzug, congresswoman (1998)
 - Clifford Shull, physicist (2001)
 - Anne Gwynne, “scream queen” (2003)
 - Frank Perdue, chicken entrepreneur (2005)
 - Terri Schiavo, right-to-die figure (2005)
 - Raúl Alfonsín, Argentinian president (2009)
 - Shirley Mills, actress (2010)
 
Holidays
- Bunsen Burner Day (Scientific community)
 - César Chávez Day (United States)
 - Jum il-Ħelsien (Malta)
 - National Clams on the Half Shell Day (United States)
 - Thomas Mundy Peterson Day (New Jersey)
 - Transfer Day (US Virgin Islands)
 - วันที่ระลึกพระบาทสมเด็จพระนั่งเกล้าเจ้าอยู่หัวฯ (Wan Thi Raluek Phra Bat Somdet Phra Nangklao Chao Yuhua) (Thailand)
 - Informal and made up holidays include National “She’s Funny That Way” Day, Terri’s Day, Oranges and Lemons Day, and Tater Day.