September 29 is:
World Heart Day established to raise awareness about cardiovascular disease.
Michaelmas Day, the Feast of Saint Michael, the Archangel, honoring Michael as representative of all the angels. In Christianity, the Archangel Michael is the greatest of all the Archangels and is honored for defeating Lucifer in the war in heaven.
“Old Michaelmas Day” fell on 11 October. It is said that the Devil fell out of Heaven on this date, and fell into a blackberry bush, cursing the fruit as he fell. According to an old legend, blackberries should not be picked after this date. In Yorkshire, it is said that the devil had spat on them. According to Morrell (1977), this old legend is well known in all parts of the United Kingdom, even as far north as the Orkney Islands. In Cornwall, a similar legend prevails; however, the saying goes that the devil urinated on them.
International Coffee Day
International Mocha Day
Birthday of Horatio Nelson, (September 29, 1758) English admiral who is remembered for his admonition, “England expects that every man will do his duty”.
He was wounded several times in combat: A musket ball severed an artery and his arm was amputated immediately – without anaesthetic – in the unsuccessful attempt to conquer Santa Cruz de Tenerife in the Canary Islands. He lost the sight in one eye in Corsica. Of his several victories, the best known and most notable was the Battle of Trafalgar on the south coast of Spain in 1805. During this battle he called his captains a “band of brothers”. It was a reference to Shakespeare’s Henry V play. At Trafalgar he was shot, the shot puncturing his lung and fracturing his spine. His last words were, “Thank God I have done my duty”.
On Sept. 29, 1957, the New York Giants played their last game at the Polo Grounds, losing to the Pittsburgh Pirates 9-1. The Giants moved to San Francisco for the next season. in the summer of 1957 both the New York Giants and Brooklyn Dodgers announced their moves to California, ending the three-team golden age of baseball in New York City.
September 29, 1966 – The Chevrolet Camaro, originally named Panther, was introduced. It was built as competition to the Ford Mustang.
Automotive press asked Chevrolet product managers, “What is a Camaro?” and were told it was “a small, vicious animal that eats Mustangs.”
2005 – John Roberts was sworn in as the nation’s 17th chief justice.
Believed to be the Birthday of Confucius about 551 B.C. Some quotes:
In 1779, American Revolution:
Napoleon Bonaparte (16) graduated from the military academy in Paris in 1785 (42nd in a class of 51).
1850 – U.S. President Millard Fillmore named Brigham Young the first governor of the Utah territory. In 1857, U.S. President James Buchanan removed Young from the position.
King Camp Gillette (Jan 5, 1855-July 9, 1932, and William Emery Nickerson invented the safety razor. Their innovation was the thin, inexpensive, disposable blade of stamped steel. Gillette is widely credited with inventing the so-called razor and blades business model, where razors are sold cheaply to increase the market for blades, but in fact he only adopted this model after his competitors did.
1937 –
Birthday of Samuel Adams (September 27, 1722), American patriot, signer of the Declaration of Independence. Samuel Adams along with John Hancock founded the secret society the Sons of Liberty in 1765.
In 1789 –
John Jay was appointed the first Chief Justice of the United States;
Samuel Osgood was appointed the first United States Postmaster General;
and Edmund Randolph was appointed the first United States Attorney General.
Birthday of George Gershwin (September 26, 1898), American composer famed for “Rhapsody in Blue” and “Porgy and Bess”
In 1933 – As gangster George Barnes, aka Machine Gun Kelly, surrendered to the FBI, he shouted out, “Don’t shoot, G-Men!”, which became a nickname for FBI agents.
1981 – Baseball: Nolan Ryan set a Major League record by throwing his fifth no-hitter. In his career, he threw a total of seven no-hitters, three more than any other pitcher. He is tied with Bob Feller for most one-hitters, with 12. Ryan also pitched 18 two-hitters. Despite the seven no-hitters, he never threw a perfect game, nor did he ever win a Cy Young Award. Ryan is one of only 29 players in baseball history to have appeared in Major League baseball games in four decades and the only pitcher to have struck out seven pairs of fathers and sons. He struck out 5, 714 players, leading second place Randy Johnson by 839.
1493 Christopher Columbus set sail from Cadiz, Spain, with a flotilla of 17 ships on his second voyage to the Western Hemisphere. The second voyage brought European livestock (horses, sheep, and cattle) and settlers to America for the first time.
During the Mexican–American War,
Birthday of F. Scott Fitzgerald (September 24, 1896), the famed American novelist, best known for his novels depicting the flamboyance and excess of the Jazz Age—a term which he coined. Wrote This Side of Paradise, The Beautiful and Damned, The Great Gatsby (his most famous), and Tender Is the Night. A fifth, unfinished novel, The Love of the Last Tycoon, was published posthumously. 
In 1845, the
Checkers Day or Dog in Politics Day In 1952, Richard Nixon made his “Checkers speech”. As the Vice-Presidential candidate, running with Eisenhower, Nixon had been accused of improprieties relating to his political expenses. With his place on the Republican ticket in doubt, he delivered a half-hour television address in which he defended himself and stated that regardless of what anyone said, he intended to keep one gift: a black-and-white dog who had been named Checkers by the Nixon children, thus giving the address its popular name.
The F-14 Tomcat retired from the United States Navy on September 22, 2006. As of 2014, the F-14 was in service with only the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force, having been exported to Iran in 1976, when the U.S. had amicable diplomatic relations with Iran.
Birthday of Margaret Taylor (September 21, 1788), wife of
Ferdinand Magellan (born Fernão de Magalhães) set sail from Sanlúcar de Barrameda in southern Spain with about 270 men on his expedition to circumnavigate the globe in 1519. Magellan’s expedition of 1519–1522 became the first expedition to sail from the Atlantic Ocean into the Pacific Ocean (then named “peaceful sea” by Magellan; the passage being made via the Strait of Magellan), and the first to cross the Pacific. His expedition completed the first circumnavigation of the Earth. Magellan did not complete the entire voyage, as he was killed during the Battle of Mactan in the Philippines in 1521.