October 25: Albert Anastasia
October 25: The “Lord High Executioner” of Organized Crime, Albert Anastasia, was gunned down in the barber shop of the Park Sheraton Hotel on this date in 1957.
October 25: The “Lord High Executioner” of Organized Crime, Albert Anastasia, was gunned down in the barber shop of the Park Sheraton Hotel on this date in 1957.
October 24: James McDougal Hart, Scottish-born Hudson River School painter, who specialized in scenes of cattle, died on this date in 1901.
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October 23: On this date in 1974, the United States Postal Service issued a stamp of Nathaniel Currier and his wife in a sleigh, based on a lithograph Currier had published a century earlier.
October 22: World-famous actress Sarah Bernhardt was born on this date in Paris in 1844: she would journey to New York City many times, and would often go to the studio of photographer-to-the-stars Napoleon Sarony to have her portrait taken.
October 21: In 1849, on this date, David Bates Douglass, who designed Green-Wood Cemetery with winding paths and roads, high banks and ponds, died.
October 20: On this date in 1860, the coroner concluded that Fanny White, famed for her beauty and business sense, had not been poisoned, but rather had died of apoplexy.
October 19: on this date in 1906, Charles Pfizer, who in 1849 co-founded Pfizer Inc., the pharmaceutical company, died.
October 18: Elizabeth Fries Lummis Ellet, the first to write about the role women had played in the Revolution, was born on this date in 1818.
October 17: On this date in 1777, Robert Troup, a Continental officer and aide to General Horatio Gates, witnessed the surrender of British General John Burgoyne’s army at Saratoga.