This morning in Seoul, Mun Segwang (various similar transliterations possible) was hanged for an assassination attempt four months earlier.
Mun, a Japanese-reared Korean who needed a translator for his subsequent trial, tried to gun down dictator Park Chung-hee at a Independence Day speech Aug. 15.
Mun missed Park, but he did kill two others: a high school student; and, Park’s wife Yuk Yeong-su, the seated white-clad figure in the middle of the assassination footage who can be seen beginning to crumple on stage as the camera pans away.
South Korea figured him as the agent of a North Korean/Communist plot, which conclusion Japan and the North rejected vehemently. (Trial evidence also indicated that he read The Day of the Jackal.)
Park got lucky this time, but the autocrat was successfully iced five years later by his own intelligence chief. (Guess what happened to him.)
On this day..
- 1583: Edward Arden, Shakespearean kin
- 1769: Three Spitalfields weavers, well located
- 1717: Five at Tyburn
- 1531: John Tewkesbury, Thomas More's unwilling guest
- 1689: William Davis, the Golden Farmer
- Themed Set: The creation of a Newgate Calendar legend
- 1879: Swift Runner, wendigo
- 1806: Hepburn Graham, HMS St. George rapist
- 1704: John Smith, peruke-maker and highwayman for a week
- 1961: Robert McGladdery, the last execution in Northern Ireland
- 1946: A triple execution in Washington, DC
- 1786: Hannah Ocuish, age 12
- 1882: Guglielmo Oberdan