Feb. 1
– birthdays: 1895 – John Ford (movie director – Stagecoach) / 1901 – Clark Gable (actor – Gone with the Wind) / 1902 – Langston Hughes (poet – The Weary Blues) / 1948 – Rick James (funk musician – “Super Freak”)
– 1790 – Supreme Court convenes for the first time with John Jay as Chief Justice
– 1862 – Julia Ward Howe publishes “The Battle Hymn of the Republic”
– 1865 – 13th Amendment approved (National Freedom Day)
– 1893 – Edison completes the world’s first movie studio in West Orange, New Jersey
– 1917 – Germany renews unrestricted submarine warfare
– 1958 – U.S. launches first satellite (Explorer I)
– 1960 – four African-American students start a sit-in at a lunch counter at a Greensboro, N.C. Woolworths to protest segregation
– 1965 – Martin Luther King, Jr and 700 others arrested in Selma, Alabama
– 1968 – Saigon police chief executes a Viet Cong prisoner; picture of this wins the Pulitzer Prize
– 1978 – Harriet Tubman becomes the first African-American woman on a stamp
– 1979 – Ayatollah Khomeini returns to Iran after fifteen years in exile
– 1979 – Patricia Hearst released from prison for bank robbery
– 1995 – John Stockton sets NBA record for career assists in the NBA
– 2003 – the space shuttle Columbia disintegrates killing all seven astronauts
– 2004 – Janet Jackson has a “wardrobe malfunction” during the half-time show at the Super Bowl
– 2006 – Epiphanny Prince scores a record 113 points in girl’s high school basketball game (her team wins 137-32)
– 2014 – Ray Guy becomes first punter inducted into the Football Hall of Fame
Quote: The more things change, the more they stay the same. – Alphonse Karr
Feb. 2
– birthdays: 1905 – Ayn Rand (developer of the philosophy of “objectivism” and author of Atlas Shrugged) / 1937 – Tom Smothers (brother of Dick of the Smothers Brothers comedy team) / 1947 – Farrah Fawcett (actress – Charlie’s Angels) / 1954 – Christie Brinkley (super model)
– 1624 – Dutch establish New Amsterdam which the British later rename New York City
– 1848 – Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ends the Mexican War
– 1876 – the National League forms
– 1887 – the first Groundhog Day in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania
– 1892 – William Painter patents the bottle cap
– 1913 – Joyce Kilmer writes his famous poem “Trees”
– 1926 – three men dance “The Charleston” for 22 hours
– 1933 – Hitler dissolves the Reichstag, two days after becoming Chancellor
– 1935 – a lie detector is used for the first time by its inventor Leonard Keeler
– 1940 – Frank Sinatra makes his singing debut
– 1943 – the German 6th Army surrenders, ending the Battle of Stalingrad
– 1949 – a B-50 bomber completes the first nonstop flight around the world in 94 hours (23,452 miles)
– 1959 – Buddy Holly’s last performance
– 1964 – toy G.I. Joe debuts
– 1974 – Barbra Streisand has her first #1 hit – “The Way We Were”
– 2009 – Rupaul’s Drag Race debuts
Quote: Character is higher than intellect. – Ralph Waldo Emerson
Feb. 3
– birthdays: 1480 – Ferdinand Magellan / 1821 – Elizabeth Blackwell (first American woman with a medical degree) / 1874 – Gertrude Stein (author – The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas; coined the term “lost generation”) / 1894 – Norman Rockwell (artist – Saturday Evening Post covers) / 1904 – Pretty Boy Floyd (gangster) / 1914 – George Nissan (inventor of the trampoline) / 1940 – Fran Tarkenton (Hall of Fame quarterback) / 1945 – Bob Griese (Hall of Fame quarterback) / 1969 – Terry Bradshaw (Hall of Fame quarterback)
– 1863 – Samuel Clemens first uses the pen name Mark Twain
– 1882 – P.T. Barnum buys Jumbo the elephant
– 1913 – 16th Amendment (federal income tax) is ratified
– 1943 – four chaplains drown after giving their life jackets to others
– 1950 – British scientist Klaus Fuchs arrested for passing Manhattan Project secrets to the Soviets
– 1959 – Buddy Holly and Richie Valens killed in a plane crash
– 1967 – Jimi Hendrix records “Purple Haze”
– 1979 – The Village People’s “YMCA” peaks at #2
– 2009 – Eric Holder becomes first African-American Attorney General
Quote: Those who stand for nothing will fall for anything. – Alex Hamilton
Feb. 4
– birthdays: 1902 – Charles Lindbergh / 1913 – Rosa Parks / 1921 – Betty Friedan (feminist; author of The Feminine Mystique) / 1947 – Dan Quayle (Vice President for George H.W. Bush) / 1948 – Alice Cooper (shock rocker – “School’s Out”) / 1959 – Lawrence Taylor (considered the best linebacker in NFL history) / 1962 – Clint Black (country music star – biggest hit = “When I Said I Do”)
– 1789 – Electoral College chooses Washington as the first President
– 1826 – James Fenimore Cooper publishes The Last of the Mohicans
– 1846 – the Mormons leave Nauvoo, Illinois to settle in the west
– 1861 – Jefferson Davis elected President of the Confederacy
– 1941 – Roy Plunkett patents teflon
– 1970 – Patton premieres
– 1973 – comic strip “Hagar the Horrible” debuts
– 1974 – Patty Hearst is kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army
– 1998 – Bill Gates gets hit in the face with a pie in Brussels, Belgium
– 2004 – Mark Zuckerberg launches Facebook from his Harvard dorm room
Quote: Children have never been good at listening to their parents, but they have never failed to imitate them. – James Baldwin
Feb. 5
– birthdays: 1848 – Belle Starr (outlaw) / 1900 – Adlai Stevenson (Presidential candidate 1952, 1956) / 1934 – Hank Aaron (Hall of Fame baseball player who broke Babe Ruth’s career home run record and finished with 755) / 1942 – Roger Staubach (Hall of Fame quarterback) / 1943 – Norman Bushnell (founded Atari and created Pong) / 1969 – Bobby Brown (singer – biggest hit = “My Prerogative”)
– 1870 – first motion picture shown in a theater
– 1901 – Ed Prescott patents the “loop-the-loop centrifugal railroad” (the roller coaster)
– 1917 – the last of Pershing’s troops leave Mexico after failing to capture Pancho Villa
– 1918 – Stephen Thompson becomes the first American pilot to shoot down a German plane
– 1922 – Reader’s Digest first published
– 1937 – FDR proposes packing the Supreme Court
– 1945 – MacArthur’s forces enter Manila
– 1994 – Byron De La Beckwith convicted of the murder of civil rights activist Medgar Evers, 30 years after the murder
– 1997 – O. J. Simpson found guilty in a civil case for the murder of Nicole Simpson and Ron Goldman
Quote: A child becomes an adult when he realizes he has the right not only to be right, but to be wrong. – Thomas Szasz
Feb. 6
– birthdays: 1756 – Aaron Burr (third Vice President and killer of Hamilton) / 1883 – J.E.B. Stuart (Confederate cavalry commander) / 1895 – Babe Ruth / 1911 – Ronald Reagan / 1912 – Eva Braun (Hitler’s wife) / 1940 – Tom Brokaw (NBC news anchor 1982 – 2004) / 1950 – Natalie Cole (singer – biggest hit = “I’ve Got Love on My Mind”) / 1962 – Axl Rose (singer for Guns and Roses – biggest hit = “Sweet Child O’Mine”)
– 1862 – Gen. Grant captures Fort Henry
– 1868 – Thomas Nast’s version of Uncle Sam appears for the first time
– 1894 – William Painter invents the bottle opener
– 1899 – Senate ratifies the treaty ending the Spanish-American War
– 1911 – first old age home opens in Prescott, Arizona
– 1935 – “Monopoly” goes on sale for the first time
– 1937 – John Steinbeck publishes “Of Mice and Men”
– 1958 – Ted Williams becomes the highest paid baseball player at $135,000
– 1971 – Alan Shepard hits a golf ball on the Moon
– 1981 – Brady Bunch premieres
Quote: Conscience = the inner voice that warns us that someone might be watching. – H.L. Mencken
Feb. 7
– birthdays: 1804 – John Deere (inventor of the steel plow) / 1867 – Laura Ingalls Wilder (author – Little House on the Prairie) / 1885 – Sinclair Lewis (first American winner of 1930 Nobel Prize for Literature for Babbitt) / 1960 – James Spader (actor – The Black List) / 1962 – Garth Brooks (country singer – biggest hit = “Lost in You”) / 1966 – Chris Rock (stand-up comic) / 1978 – Ashton Kutcher (That 70’s Show)
– 1817 – Baltimore becomes first American city lit by gas street lights
– 1882 – John L. Sullivan becomes the last bare-knuckle heavyweight boxing champ
– 1914 – Charlie Chaplin debuts his character The Tramp in the movie “Kid Races”
– 1940 – Walt Disney debuts his second feature length movie – Pinocchio)
– 1945 – MacArthur returns to Manila
– 1962 – Kennedy puts blockade on Cuban imports and exports
– 1964 – The Beatles land in New York City for their first American tour
– 1974 – the movie Blazing Saddles opens
– 1979 – Josef Mengele, the “Angel of Death” doctor from Auschwitz, dies of a stroke while swimming in Brazil
Quote: We must learn to live together as brothers or perish together as fools. – Martin Luther King, Jr.
Feb. 8
– birthdays: 1820 – William Sherman (Union general) / 1925 – Jack Lemmon (actor – The Odd Couple) / 1931 – James Dean (actor – Rebel Without a Cause) / 1932 – John Williams (composer – Star Wars, Jaws) / 1955 – John Grisham (author – The Pelican Brief) / 1961 – Vince Neil (singer for Motley Crue – biggest hit = “Doctor Feelgood”) / 1968 – Gary Coleman (actor – Diff’rent Strokes) / 1974 – Seth Green (actor/voice talent – Robot Chicken) / 1990 – Bethany Hamilton (surfer who lost an arm to a shark) / 1990 – Klay Thompson (NBA player)
– 1861 – Confederate States of America organizes in Montgomery, Alabama
– 1887 – the Dawes Act is passed
– 1910 – William Boyce founds the Boy Scouts
– 1915 – first major motion picture opens – The Birth of a Nation
– 1925 – Marcus Garvey goes to prison
Quote: We’re eyeball to eyeball and I think the other fellow just blinked. – Dean Rusk during the Cuban Missile Crisis
Feb. 9
– birthdays: 1773 – William Henry Harrison (9th President 1841) / 1942 – Carol King (singer – biggest hit = “It’s Too Late/I Fell the Earth Move”) / 1944 – Alice Walker (author – The Color Purple) / 1963 – Travis Tritt (country musician – biggest hit = “Best of Intentions”) / 1987 – Michael B. Jordan (actor – Black Panther)
– 1825 – the House of Representatives elects John Quincy Adams the 6th President
– 1861 – Jefferson Davis elected President of the Confederacy
– 1870 – National Weather Service created
– 1895 – first college basketball game, Minnesota State School of Agriculture defeats the Hamline College Porkers 9-3
– 1909 – first federal law prohibiting a narcotic (opium)
– 1943 – Japanese evacuate their remaining forces on Guadalcanal
– 1950 – Sen. Joseph McCarthy charges that there are 205 communists in the State Department in a speech in Wheeling, West Virginia, thus launching McCarthyism
– 1964 – The Beatles make their first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show
– 1964 – GI Joe toy created
– 1971 – first gay themed TV episode – All in the Family
– 1985 – Madonna’s “Like a Virgin’ album reaches #1
– 1997 – The Simpsons becomes the longest running animated series
Quote: The best is the enemy of the good. – Voltaire
Feb. 10
– birthdays: 1893 – Bill Tilden (first great pro tennis player) / 1927 – Leontyne Price (soprano opera singer) / 1930 – Robert Wagner (actor – It Takes a Thief) / 1939 – Roberta Flack (singer – biggest hit = “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face”) / 1950 – Mark Spitz (swimmer who won 7 gold medals at the 1972 Olympics) / 1974 – Elizabeth Banks (actress – Pitch Perfect) / 1991 – Emma Roberts (actress) / Chloe Grace Moretz (actress – Kick-Ass)
– 1763 – the French and Indian War ends with the Treaty of Paris; Great Britain acquires Canada
– 1863 – Tom Thumb marries Lavinia Warren
– 1920 – baseball bans spit balls
– 1933 – first singing telegram
– 1933 – classic western movie Stagecoach opens
– 1940 – Tom and Jerry cartoon created by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera
– 1962 – Francis Gary Powers is exchanged for Soviet spy Rudolf Abel
– 1967 – 25th Amendment ratified
– 1992 – Mike Tyson convicted of rape
– 2004 – Kanye West releases his first album – “The College Dropout”
Quote: Oh what a tangled web we weave when first we practice to deceive. – Sir Walter Scott
Feb. 11
– birthdays: 1812 – Alexander Stephens (Vice President – Confederate States of America) / 1847 – Thomas Edison / 1926 – Leslie Nielsen (actor – Naked Gun) / 1934 – Tina Louise (Ginger on Gilligan’s Island) / 1935 – Burt Reynolds (actor – The Longest Yard) / 1962 – Sheryl Crow (singer – biggest hit = “All I Wanna Do”) / 1964 – Sarah Palin (Vice President candidate – 2008) / 1969 – Jennifer Anniston (actress – Friends)
– 1809 – Robert Fulton patents the steam boat
– 1942 – Archie comic book debuts
– 1945 – Yalta Conference ends
– 1953 – Pres. Eisenhower refuses clemency for the Rosenbergs
– 1966 – Willie Mays (possibly the greatest baseball player of all time) signs his highest contract – $130,000 per year
– 1993 – Janet Reno is appointed the first female Attorney General by Pres. Clinton
Quote: You may fool all the people some of the time; you can even fool all of the people some of the time; but you can’t fool all of the people all of the time. – Lincoln
Feb. 12
– birthdays: 1663 – Cotton Mather (Puritan minister who was involved in the Salem Witch Trials) / 1809 – Abe Lincoln (born the same day as Charles Darwin) / 1893 – Omar Bradley (WWII general) / 1934 – Bill Russell (NBA Hall of Famer who won 11 championships with the Celtics) / 1938 – Judy Blume (young adult author – Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret) / 1955 – Arsenio Hall (comedian) / 1965 – Brett Cavanaugh (Supreme Court Justice 2019-) / 1980 – Christina Ricci (actress – Addam’s Family)
– 1880 – National Croquet League is formed
– 1909 – NAACP is founded
– 1924 – George Gershwin debuts “Rhapsody in Blue”
– 1959 – Lincoln Memorial penny goes into circulation (replacing the wheat sheaves back)
– 1973 – first POWs released by North Vietnam
– 1999 – Pres. Clinton acquitted by Senate in his impeachment trial
Quote: Democracy substitutes election by the incompetent many for appointment by the corrupt few. – George Bernard Shaw
Feb. 13
– birthdays: 1885 – Bess Truman (First Lady 1945-53) / 1891 – Grant Wood (painter – “American Gothic”) / 1919 – Eddie Robinson (Grambling football coach who won 408 games) / 1923 – Chuck Yeager (test pilot who was the first to break the sound barrier) / 1944 – Jerry Springer (talk show host) / 1947 – Mike Krzyzewski (Duke basketball coach) / 1977 – Randy Moss (football Hall of Fame receiver)
– 1866 – Jesse James holds up his first bank, stealing $15,000
– 1920 – National Negro Baseball League is founded (on this day in 1974, James “Cool Papa” Bell is added to the Baseball Hall of Fame)
– 1935 – Bruno Hauptmann found guilty in the Lindbergh baby kidnapping case
– 1942 – Hitler cancels Operation Sea Lion
– 1945 – Anglo-American bombers begin bombing Dresden, Germany; over 35,000 civilians are killed
– 1957 – SCLC is organized with King as its President
– 1959 – the first Barbie makes its debut at the American Toy Fair in NYC
– 2000 – last original “Peanuts” comic strip appears in newspapers (one day after the death of Charles Schulz)
Quote: Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard. – H.L. Mencken
Feb. 14
– birthdays: 1818 – Frederick Douglass (black abolitionist who published The North Star newspaper) / 1819 – Christopher Sholes (inventor of the typewriter) / 1859 – George Ferris (inventor of the Ferris Wheel) / 1894 – Jack Benny (comedian) / 1913 – Jimmy Hoffa (Teamsters leader who disappeared in 1975) / 1934 – Florence Henderson (actress – The Brady Bunch) / 1944 – Carl Bernstein (newspaper reporter partner of Bob Woodward in the Watergate Scandal) / 1972 – Rob Thomas (singer for Matchbox Twenty – biggest hit = “Bent”)
– 1912 – Arizona becomes the 48th state
– 1920 – League of Women Voters is formed
– 1929 – St. Valentine’s Day Massacre
– 1931 – the original “Dracula” starring Bela Lugosi is released
– 1962 – Jackie Kennedy conducts a televised tour of the White House
– 1967 – Aretha Franklin records “Respect”
– 1971 – Nixon installs a secret taping system in the Oval Office
– 1991 – Silence of the Lambs is released and goes on to win Best Picture
– 2018 – Shaun White wins his third gold medal in the half pipe in the Olympics
Quote: The world must be made safe for democracy. – Woodrow Wilson
Feb. 15
– birthdays: 1803 – John Sutter (owner of the mill where gold was discovered in California) / 1809 – Cyrus McCormick (inventor of the mechanical reaper) / 1812 – Charles Tiffany (jeweler) / 1820 – Susan B. Anthony / 1884 – Alfred Gilbert (inventor of the Erector Set) / 1954 – Matt Groening (cartoonist – The Simpsons) / 1964 – Chris Farley (Saturday Night Live)
– 1898 – the sinking of the USS Maine in Havana harbor
– 1903 – first Teddy Bear, made by Morris and Rose Michtom, goes on sale at their store
– 1933 – assassination attempt of President-elect FDR; Chicago Mayor Anton Cermak is killed
– 1943 – “We Can Do It” poster is seen for the first time
– 1950 – Walt Disney’s Cinderella premieres
– 1996 – Bill Belichick is fired by the Cleveland Browns after going 36-44
– 2005 – YouTube is launched
– 2011 – Obama awards Maya Angelou the Presidential Medal of Freedom
Quote: Democracy is the recurrent suspicion that more than half the people are right more than half the time. – E.B. White
Feb. 16
– birthdays: 1903 – Edgar Bergen (most famous ventriloquist in American History) / 1957 – Levar Burton (Roots, Reading Rainbow) / 1958 – Ice-T (rapper) / 1959 – John McEnroe (tennis player) / 1974 – Mahershala Ali (actor – Moonlight, Green Book)
– 1804 – Stephen Decatur leads a raid into Tripoli harbor to burn the captured USS Philadelphia
– 1862 – Gen. Grant captures Fort Donelson after demanding “unconditional surrender”
– 1959 – Castro takes power in Cuba
– 1968 – first 911 system, Haleyville, Alabama
– 1979 – disco still rules the air waves as the Bee Gees win the Grammy for album “Saturday Night Fever”
– 1972 – Wilt Chamberlain becomes first NBA player to reach 30,000 points
– 2005 – the Kyoto Protocol to combat global warming goes into effect
Quote: Man’s capacity for justice makes democracy possible, but man’s inclination to injustice makes democracy necessary. – Reinhold Niebuhr
Feb. 17
– birthdays: 1844 – Mongomery Ward / 1902 – Marion Anderson (classical singer) / 1936 – Jim Brown (Hall of Fame running back / movie star – The Dirty Dozen) / 1942 – Huey P. Newton (co-founder of the Black Panthers) / 1963 – Michael Jordan (NBA Hall of Famer and winner of 6 championships) / 1963 – Larry the Cable Guy (comedian) / 1972 – Billie Joe Armstrong (singer for Green Day – biggest hit = “Boulevard of Broken Dreams”) / 1981 – Paris Hilton (celebrity)
– 1621 – Miles Standish is elected military commander of the Plymouth colony
– 1801 – House of Representatives breaks electoral tie and elects Jefferson President over his running mate Aaron Burr
– 1815 – Treaty of Ghent ratified by Senate ending the War of 1812
– 1864 – the Confederate submarine H. L. Hunley makes the first successful sub attack, but sinks in the process
– 1876 – first canned sardines by Julius Wolff
– 1933 – Blondie Boopadoop marries Dagwood Bumstead
– 1936 – world’s first super hero, The Phantom, makes his appearance in a comic strip
– 1958 – comic strip BC makes its first appearance
– 1968 – U.S. casualty rate hits all-time high as 543 dead in one week during the Tet Offensive
Quote: The best way out is always through. – Robert Frost
Feb. 18
– birthdays: 1892 – Wendell Willkie (1940 Republican candidate) / 1931 – Toni Morrison (first African-American woman to win the Nobel Prize for Literature) / 1954 – John Travolta (actor – Pulp Fiction, Grease) / 1957 – Vanna White (letter turner – Wheel of Fortune) / 1964 – Matt Dillon (actor – Crash) / 1965 – Dr. Dre (rapper – biggest hit = “Nuthin’ but a G Thang”) / 1968 – Molly Ringwald (actress – Pretty in Pink)
– 1856 – the Know Nothing Party holds its first convention and nominates Millard Fillmore for President
– 1861 – Jefferson Davis inaugurated as President of the Confederacy in Mobile, Alabama
– 1885 – Mark Twain publishes The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
– 1930 – American astronomer Clyde Tombaugh discovers Pluto
– 1970 – Pres. Nixon proclaims the “Nixon Doctrine”
– 2001 – Dale Earnhardt dies due to a crash in the Daytona 500
Quote: It’s a great life if you don’t weaken. – John Buchan
Feb. 19
– birthdays: 1924 – Lee Marvin (actor – Cat Ballou) / 1940 – Smokey Robinson (singer – biggest hit = “The Tears of a Clown”) / 1959 – Roger Goddell (NFL commissioner) / 1967 – Benicio del Toro (actor – Traffic)
– 1847 – first rescuers reach the Donner Party
– 1878 – Edison granted patent for the gramophone (phonograph)
– 1942 – FDR issues Executive Order 9066 which orders the detention of Japanese-Americans
– 1945 – over 900 Japanese soldiers reportedly killed by crocodiles in Burma
– 1945 – invasion of Iwo Jima
– 1960 – “Family Circus” comic strip debuts
– 1963 – Betty Friedan publishes The Feminine Mystique
– 1968 – Mister Rogers’Neighborhood debuts
– 1973 – Tony Orlando and Dawn release “Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Old Oak Tree” (song of the year)
– 1985 – Cherry Coke introduced
Quote: Let us never negotiate out of fear. But let us never fear to negotiate. – Kennedy
Feb. 20
– birthdays: 1902 – Ansel Adams (photographer) / 1927 – Sidney Poitier (first African-American to win Best Actor Oscar for Lilies in the Field) / 1942 – Mitch McConnell (Senate majority leader 2015-) / 1963 – Charles Barkley (NBA Hall of Famer) / 1967 – Kurt Cobain (singer for Nirvana – biggest hit = “Smells Like Teen Spirit”) / 1983 – Justin Verlander (baseball pitcher) / 1988 – Rihanna (singer – biggest hit = “Disturbia”)
– 1942 – Edward “Butch” O’Hare becomes the first American ace of WWII by shooting down five Japanese bombers attacking his carrier Lexington in four minutes
– 1959 – 16 year-old Jimi Hendrix plays his first gig and is fired by the band for playing “wild”
– 1962 – John Glenn becomes the first American to orbit Earth
– 2003 – during a concert by the band Great White, a pyrotechnic display starts a fire and 100 are killed
Quote: Education makes a people easy to lead, but difficult to drive; easy to govern, but impossible to enslave. – Henry Peter Brougham
Feb. 21
– birthdays: 1794 – Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna (President of Mexico during the Texas Revolution and Mexican War) / 1925 – Sam Peckinpah (director – The Wild Bunch) / 1927 – Erma Bombeck (humorist – The Grass is Always Greener over the Septic Tank) / 1946 – Alan Rickman (actor – Harry Potter series) / 1955 – Kelsey Grammer (actor – Frazier) / 1979 – Jennifer Love Hewitt (actress – Party of Five) / 1979 – Jordan Peele (comedian, director – Get Out) / 1987 – Ellen Page (actress – Juno and LGBT activist) / 1996 – Sophie Turner (actress – Game of Thrones)
– 1848 – Marx and Engels publish “The Communist Manifesto” in London
– 1885 – the Washington Monument is dedicated
– 1931 – Alka Seltzer introduced
– 1848 – Congressman and ex-President John Quincy Adams suffers a stroke on the floor of the House of Representatives while speaking against the Mexican War
– 1965 – Malcolm X assassinated by members of the Nation of Islam
– 1970 – the Jackson 5 make their TV debut on American Bandstand
– 1972 – Pres. Nixon becomes first President to visit China; meets Mao Zedong
– 1975 – John Ehrlichman, H. R. Haldeman, and John Mitchell sentenced to prison for involvement in the Watergate Scandal
– 1979 – two Iowa girls basketball teams play to a scoreless tie; the game is decided in the 4th overtime when one wins 4-2
Quote: The aim of education is the knowledge not of facts but of values. – William Ralph Inge
Feb. 22
– birthdays: 1732 – George Washington / 1892 – Edna St. Vincent Millay (poet – “Renascence”) / 1918 – Alfred J. Gross (inventor of the walkie-talkie) / 1932 – Teddy Kennedy (Senator 1962 – 2009) / 1959 – Julius “Dr. J” Erving (NBA Hall of Famer) / 1975 – Drew Barrymore (actress – E.T.)
– 1822 – U.S. acquires Florida through the Adams-Onis Treaty with Spain
– 1847 – Gen. Zachary Taylor defeats Santa Anna in the Battle of Buena Vista in the Mexican War
– 1879 – first 5 and 10 store opened by Frank Woolworth
– 1888 – “Father of American Golf” John Reed demonstrates the game in a cow pasture
– 1909 – the Great White Fleet returns
– 1915 – Germany begins unrestricted submarine warfare
– 1942 – Gen. MacArthur promises “I shall return” as he leaves the Philippines
– 1980 – the “Miracle on Ice” – the American ice hockey team defeats the heavily favored Soviets in one of the biggest upsets in Olympic history
– 2017 – Jay-Z becomes first rapper inducted into the Songwriters’ Hall of Fame
Quote: Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal. – Earl Warren
Feb. 23
– birthdays: – 1868 – W.E.B. DuBois (civil rights activist, founder of the NAACP) / 1915 – Paul Tibbets (pilot of the Enola Gay) / 1940 – Peter Fonda (actor – Easy Rider) / 1965 – Michael Dell (founder of Dell Technologies) / 1983 – Aziz Ansari (comedian – Master of None) / 1994 – Dakota Fanning (actress – I Am Sam)
– 1540 – conquistador Coronado sets out to find the Seven Cities of Gold
– 1778 – Baron von Steuben arrives at Valley Forge
– 1836 – siege of the Alamo begins
– 1896 – Tootsie Roll introduced by Leo Hirshfield
– 1904 – U.S. acquires the Panama Canal Zone for $10 million
– 1919 – Mussolini founds the Fascist Party in Italy
– 1927 – the Federal Communications Commission begins regulating radio
– 1940 – Pinocchio is released
– 1940 – Woody Guthrie writes “This Land is Your Land”
– 1945 – flag raised on Iwo Jima
– 1954 – first mass inoculation for polio by Jonas Salk in Pittsburgh
– 1967 – 25th Amendment is approved
– 1997 – Schindler’s List becomes first movie shown on TV without commercial interruption
Quote: Education is the ability to listen to almost anything without losing your temper or your self-confidence. – Robert Frost
Feb. 24
– birthdays: 1836 – Winslow Homer (painter) / 1885 – Chester Nimitz (commander of the Pacific Fleet in WWII) / 1950 – George Thorogood (singer/guitarist – “Bad to the Bone”) / 1955 – Steve Jobs (co-founder of Apple)
– 1779 – George Rogers Clark and his frontiersmen capture Fort Vincennes in the Revolutionary War
– 1803 – Marbury v. Madison
– 1868 – Andrew Johnson impeached
– 1917 – the British release the “Zimmerman Note”
– 1968 – the Tet Offensive ends with the liberation of Hue
– 1980 – the “Miracle on Ice” American hockey team wins the gold medal over Finland 4-2
– 1991 – American-led coalition forces start the ground offensive in the Persian Gulf War
Quote: A child miseducated is a child lost. – John F. Kennedy
Feb. 25
– birthdays: 1888 – John Foster Dulles (Eisenhower’s Secretary of State) / 1913 – Jim Backus (Mr. Howell on Gilligan’s Island) / 1918 – Bobby Riggs (tennis player in “The Battle of the Sexes”) / 1943 – George Harrison (lead guitarist for the Beatles; biggest hit as a solo artist = “Got My Mind Set on You”) / 1949 – Ric Flair (pro wrestler) / 1971 – Sean Austin (actor – Lord of the Rings) / 1975 – Chelsea Handler (comedian) / 1976 – Rashida Jones (actress – Parks and Recreation)
– 1793 – Pres. Washington holds first Cabinet meeting
– 1836 – Samuel Colt patents the first revolver
– 1837 – Thomas Davenport invents the electric motor
– 1870 – Hiram Revels becomes the first African-American Congressman
– 1901 – J.P. Morgan organizes U.S. Steel Corporation
– 1913 – 16th Amendment goes into effect
– 1957 – Buddy Holly and the Crickets record “That’ll Be the Day”
– 1963 – The Beatles release their first single in America – “Please Please Me”
– 1964 – Cassius Clay (later Muhammad Ali) TKOs Sonny Liston for his first heavyweight championship
Quote: Education is what survives when what has been learned has been forgotten. – B.F. Skinner
Feb. 26
– birthdays: 1829 – Levi Strauss (inventor of blue jeans) / 1846 – William “Buffalo Bill” Cody (buffalo hunter and showman – “Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show”) / 1852 – John Henry Kellogg (developer of flaked grains) / 1908 – Tex Avery (cartoonist – Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck) / 1916 – Jackie Gleason (comedian – The Honeymooners) / 1920 – Tony Randall (Felix on The Odd Couple TV series) / 1928 – “Fats” Domino (early rock n’ roller – biggest hit = “Blueberry Hill”) / 1932 – Johnny Cash (country music giant – biggest hit = “A Boy Named Sue”) / 1953 – Michael Bolton (singer – biggest hit = “How Am I Supposed to Live Without You”) / 1973 – Marshall Faulk (NFL Hall of Fame running back)
– 1919 – Congress creates Grand Canyon National Park
– 1924 – Hitler goes on trial for the Beer Hall Putsch
– 1983 – Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” album goes #1 and stays 37 weeks
– 1991 – hundreds of fleeing Iraqi soldiers are killed by aerial bombardment on the “Highway of Death” during the Persian Gulf War
– 1993 – the first World Trade Center bombing – a van of explosives goes off in the parking garage killing 6
Quote: Vote for the man who promises least; he’ll be the least disappointing. – Bernard Baruch
Feb. 27
– birthdays: 1807 – Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (poet – “The Song of Hiawatha”) / 1897 – Marian Anderson (singer) / 1902 – John Steinbeck (Nobel Prize winner for The Grapes of Wrath) / 1932 – Elizabeth Taylor (actress – Cleopatra) / 1934 – Ralph Nader (consumer advocate and Green Party candidate for President in 2000) / 1980 – Chelsea Clinton (Presidential daughter) / 1981 – Josh Groban (singer – biggest hit = “You Raise Me Up”)
– 1827 – first Mardi Gras celebration in New Orleans
– 1864 – Andersonville prison camp opens
– 1933 – the Reichstag fire is blamed on communists by the Nazis
– 1951 – 22nd Amendment ratified
– 1973 – members of the American Indian Movement occupy Wounded Knee
– 1974 – People magazine goes on sale
– 1976 – Nixon and Mao hold their last meeting on his famous trip to China
– 1996 – first appearance of Pokemon, in a Game Boy game
Quote: It’s a recession when your neighbor loses his job; it’s a depression when you lose yours. – Harry Truman
Feb. 28
– birthdays: 1901 – Linus Pauling (chemist, winner of Nobel Prizes in 1954 & 1962) / 1940 – Mario Andretti (race car driver)
– 1844 – gun on USS Princeton blows up killing two cabinet members but sparing Pres. Tyler
– 1854 – Republican Party formed
– 1883 – first vaudeville theater opens in Boston
– 1933 – Frances Perkins becomes first female Cabinet member (Labor)
– 1967 – Wilt Chamberlain sets NBA record with 35th consecutive made field goal
– 1972 – Nixon ends his trip to China
– 1983 – last episode of “MASH” sets record with 125 million viewers
– 1993 – six cult members and four ATF agents die when the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas is raided
Quote: He makes no friend who never made a foe. – Alfred, Lord Tennyson
Feb. 29
– birthdays: 1840 – John Philip Holland (father of the modern submarine) / 1840 – William Carney (first African-American awarded the Medal of Honor) / 1976 – Ja Rule (rapper – biggest hit = “Always on Time”)
– 1504 – Columbus uses a lunar eclipse to frighten Jamaican Indians
– 1692 – first accusations leading to the Salem Witch Trials
– 1940 – Hattie McDaniel becomes the first African-American woman to win an acting Oscar (Gone With the Wind)
– 1960 – first Playboy Club opens in Chicago featuring bunnies
– 1972 – Hank Aaron becomes first baseball player to make $200,000
Quote: You shall judge a man by his foes as well as his friends. – Joseph Conrad