Happenings at This Day in History

About a year ago I stopped making regular updates to this blog to concentrate on my Namnesia Antidote blog. While that is an ongoing effort, I am starting what should be about a year long effort to revitalize the concept of a "This Day in History" blog. I have decided to leave this blog intact and as-is, using a new "This Day in History 2.0" blog for my expanded and full version. Please feel free to email with your ideas. The two tables below should allow you to find a posting for the "Day in History" you wish to research.

A Proud Liberal


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Tuesday, February 19, 2008

February 19......

February 19 is the 50th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar. There are 315 (316 in leap years) days remaining in the year on this date.

Day of the week in surrounding years:
1979,. . . .,1990,1996,2001—MON—2007
1980,1985,1991,. . . .,2002—TUE—2008
. . . .,1986,1992,1997,2003—WED—. . . .
1981,1987,. . . .,1998,2004—THU—2010
1982,1988,1993,1999,. . . .—FRI—2011
1983,. . . .,1994,2000,2005—SAT—2012
1984,1989,1995,. . . .,2006—SUN—2013

PASCAL DATE INFORMATION
Easter Sunday for the Western Christian Church is defined as the first Sunday following the first full moon after the Spring Equinox. Lent is defined as the forty days prior to Easter not including Sundays thus Lent begins on Ash Wednesday, which is 46 days prior to Easter. Calculations for Ash Wednesday and Easter Sunday were performed for the 3774 years from 326 to 4099. For the year range 326 to 1582, dates are based on the Julian calendar. For years 1583 to 4099, dates are based on the Gregorian calendar. Ash Wednesday falls in a range of 36 days from February 4 to March 10. Easter Sunday falls in a range of 35 days from March 22 to April 25. The extra day in the Ash Wednesday range is February 29, which only occurs in leap years. February 29 only effects when Ash Wednesday occurs since it is well before the Spring Equinox and has no effect on the date for Easter Sunday. March 10 to March 21 is a twelve-day range that must occur in Lent no matter the timing of Easter Sunday. The entire range of 82 dates from February 4 to April 25 represents all dates with Pascal ramifications.

February 19 is the 16th possible date for Ash Wednesday. Ash Wednesday occurs on this date 131 times during the 3774 years calculated and is ranked 7th of the 36 dates.

It occurred on this date previously in the years:
329, 391, 402, 413, 424, 475, 486, 497, 508, 570, 581, 592, 665, 671, 676, 755, 760, 766, 839, 850, 861, 923, 934, 945, 956, 1007, 1018, 1029, 1040, 1102, 1113, 1124, 1197, 1203, 1208, 1287, 1292, 1298, 1371, 1382, 1393, 1455, 1466, 1477, 1488, 1539, 1550, 1561, 1572, 1586, 1597, 1670, 1676, 1681, 1738, 1744, 1749, 1806, 1817, 1890, 1896, 1947, 1958, 1969
It will occur on this date in the future in the years:
2042, 2048, 2053, 2110, 2121, 2194, 2200, 2262, 2268, 2273, 2319, 2330, 2336, 2341, 2414, 2420, 2425, 2566, 2572, 2577, 2634, 2640, 2645, 2702, 2713, 2786, 2792, 2797, 2876, 2881, 2887, 2944, 2949, 3006, 3012, 3017, 3096, 3158, 3164, 3169, 3248, 3253, 3259, 3310, 3316, 3321, 3400, 3468, 3473, 3536, 3541, 3620, 3625, 3772, 3783, 3840, 3845, 3851, 3902, 3908, 3913, 3992, 3997, 4003, 4076, 4087, 4098

Best Liberal Quote of the Day: On Dissent "The dissenter is every human being at those moments of his life when he resigns momentarily from the herd and thinks for himself." — Archibald MacLeish

Stupidest and/or Scariest Quote from the Right for the Day: On War Is Hell ". . .
In addition to this core mission, New Bridge Strategies also will be able to provide risk-management and financial services in Iraq through its affiliates Diligence, LLC a premier global risk-consulting, corporate intelligence, due diligence and investigative research company staffed by former Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and other intelligence agency personnel which is based in Miami, London and Washington, D.C., and Milestone Merchant Partners, a merchant bank with offices in Washington, D.C., Miami, and New Jersey.
. . . " — From the website of New Bridge Strategies, a firm headed by Joe M. Allbaugh, who was George W. Bush's campaign manager in 2000. The firm was founded in May 2003. newbridgestrategies.com.—Part 7 of 9 {Due to the length of some of these nutball quotes, I have decided to split the longer ones into parts. I could have abridged them but I think that would have lessened the impact of showing just how crazy these guys are. Please refer to previous and/or subsequent posts for complete quote.}

Dumbest Thing Said for the Day: From the world of Sports "You have have a catcher, or you'll have all passed balls." — Charles "Casey" Stengel, New York Yankees Hall of Fame Manager, was another master of obfuscation, Stengel is Hall of Shame member #7.

{Disclaimer: I have attempted to give credit to the many different sources that I get entries. Any failure to do so is unintentional. Any statement enclosed by brackets like these are the opinion of the blogger, A Proud Liberal.}


MOON PHASE

Berkeley, California—Times are Pacific Standard Time (PST)
Feb 19, 2008 2:00 AM Name: Waxing Gibbous Percent of Full: 97% Age: 44% Rise: 4:36 PM Set: 6:09 AM
Surprise, Arizona—Times are Mountain Standard Time (MST)
Feb 19, 2008 2:00 AM Name: Waxing Gibbous Percent of Full: 96% Age: 44% Rise: 5:03 PM Set: 6:19 AM
Iowa City, Iowa—Times are Central Standard Time (CST)
Feb 19, 2008 2:00 AM Name: Waxing Gibbous Percent of Full: 96% Age: 44% Rise: 4:19 PM Set: 6:13 AM
Cambridge, Massachusetts—Times are Eastern Standard Time (EST)
Feb 19, 2008 2:00 AM Name: Waxing Gibbous Percent of Full: 96% Age: 44% Rise: 3:52 PM Set: 5:52 AM


NASA ASTRONOMY PICTURE OF THE DAY

Columbus Laboratory Installed on Space Station


Credit: STS-122 Crew, Expedition 16 Crew, ESA, NASA
Click picture to go to NASA APOD site for full explanation


EVENTS

● 197 - Roman Emperor Septimius Severus defeats usurper Clodius Albinus in the Battle of Lugdunum, the bloodiest battle between Roman armies.

● 356 - Emperor Constantius II shuts all heathen temples

● 607 - Boniface III becomes Pope.

● 842 - The Medieval Iconoclastic Controversy ended, when a Council in Constantinople formally reinstated the veneration of images (icons) in the churches. (This debate over icons is often considered the last event which led to the Great Schism between the Eastern and Western Churches.)

● 1401 - William Sawtree, first English religious martyr, burned, London.

● 1473 - Birth of astronomer Nicholas Copernicus. Blasphemer who foolishly postulated the theory that Man isn't the center of the universe.

● 1512 - French troops under Gaston de Foix occupy Brescia

● 1537 - Weavers of Leiden Netherlands strike

● 1539 - Jews of Tyrnau Hungary (then Trnava Czechoslovakia), expelled

● 1568 - Death of Miles Coverdale, 80, translator and publisher of the first complete Bible to be printed in English (1535). Coverdale was also editor of the Great Bible of 1539.

● 1574 - Spanish troops plunder Krommenie, Wormerveer & Jisp Netherlands

● 1582 - Francis of Valois becomes duke of Brabant

● 1594 - Having already inherited the throne of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth through his mother Catherine Jagellonica of Poland, Sigismund III of the House of Vasa is crowned King of Sweden, succeeding his father John III of Sweden.

● 1600 - The Peruvian stratovolcano Huaynaputina exploded in the most violent eruption in the recorded history of South America.

● 1619 - Trial against Johan van Oldenbarnevelt begins in The Hague

● 1634 - Battle at Smolensk Polish king Wladyslaw IV beats Russians

● 1674 - England and the Netherlands sign the Peace of Westminster, ending the Third Anglo-Dutch War. A provision of the agreement transfers the Dutch colony of New Amsterdam to England, which renamed it New York.

● 1700 - Last day of the Julian calendar in Denmark

● 1797 - 1/3 of papal domain ceded to France

● 1803 - Congress accepts Ohio's constitution, statehood not ratified till 1953

● 1807 - British squadron under Admiral Duckworth forces passage of Dardanelles

● 1807 - In Alabama, Former Vice President of the United States Aaron Burr is arrested for treason and confined to Fort Stoddart; later found innocent.

● 1812 - Congregational missionaries Adoniram Judson, 23, and his wife Ann, 22, first sailed from New England to Calcutta, India. (Judson eventually concentrated his labors in Burma.)

● 1819 - British explorer William Smith discovers the South Shetland Islands, and claims them in the name of King George III.

● 1831 - 1st practical US coal-burning locomotive makes 1st trial run, Pennsylvania

● 1846 - In Austin, Texas the newly-formed Texas state government is officially installed. The Republic of Texas government officially transfers power to the State of Texas government following Texas' annexation by the United States.

● 1847 - In the eastern foothills of California's Sierra Nevada Mountains, a relief party reaches the Donner Party, finding only about half of the original 89 pioneers have survived. For the rest of their lives, memories of the harrowing experience would eat at them.

● 1852 - The Phi Kappa Psi fraternity is founded at Jefferson College in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania.

● 1856 - Tin-type camera patented by Hamilton Smith, Gambier OH

● 1858 - Leschi, chief of the Nisqually and Yakama, is hanged for leading attack on Seattle.

● 1859 - Dan Sickles is acquitted of murder on grounds of temporary insanity 1st time this defense is successfully used

● 1861 - Serfdom is abolished in Russia by Tsar Alexander II.

● 1864 - Knights of Pythias founded at Washington, DC by Justus H. Rathbone.

● 1869 - Death of Elizabeth Clephane, 39, an orphaned Scottish poet who left the Church with two hauntingly beautiful hymns: "Beneath the Cross of Jesus" and "The Ninety and Nine." (All of Clephane's poetry was published posthumously.)

● 1869 - US Assay Office in Boise ID authorized

● 1878 - The phonograph is patented by Thomas Edison.

● 1881 - Kansas became the first U.S. state to prohibit all alcoholic beverages.

● 1884 - Tornadoes in Mississippi, Alabama, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky & Indiana kill 800 people

● 1887 - Eduard Douwes Dekker (1820-1887), best known under his pseudonym, Multatuli (Latin, "I have suffered much"), dies in Germany. Great Dutch anarchist writer/novelist, a one-time civil servant who wrote the autobiographical novel "Max Havelaar," reflecting his disgust with Dutch colonialism and racism. Despised middle-class conformism, excoriating religion, the family, and prejudices of all kinds -- racist, sexist or sexual. Multatuli's ideas influenced the socialist and libertarian milieu of his time, and practising his libertarian ideals scandalized his contemporaries, living as he did with two women and their children.

● 1889 - Quileut Indian reservation (at La Push, WA) established.

● 1891 - Cecilia colony founded.

● 1900 - British troops occupy Hlangwane Natal

● 1903 - Birth of Kay Boyle, St. Paul, Minn. Novelist, short story writer, anti-war activist. In 1967, at the height of the Vietnam War protests, S.I. Hiyakawa, president of SF State University (and later U.S. Senator), publicly fired Boyle for her active role in the student protests. She was 65 years old. As an American expatriate writing in Paris in the '20s and '30s, a journalist documenting the fall of France in the '40s for the New Yorker, a blacklisted writer in the '50s, an anti-war activist and essayist in the '60s and '70s, and founder of the San Francisco chapter of Amnesty International in the '80s, Kay Boyle's literary and political career is a chronicle of the events and concerns of the 20th century.

● 1906 - W K Kellogg & Charles D Bolin incorporate Battle Creek Toasted Corn Flake Company, Battle Creek MI

● 1910 - Three hundred street cars destroyed during Philadelphia transit strike.

● 1912 - In the Bread and Roses textile strike in Lawrence, Mass., 200 police draw their clubs and go after 100 women pickets, knocking them to the ground and beating them. As the police clubbing become more frequent and violent, strike leader Big Bill Haywood urges the women not to picket. Instead of agreeing, an Italian woman suggests (quote) - "Tomorrow morning, man no go on picket line. All man, boy stay home, sleep. Only woman, girl on picket line tomorrow morning. Soldier and policeman no beat woman, girl. You see, I got big belly, she too got big belly. Policeman no beat us." The next morning, however, the women are beaten so badly that the Italian woman who spoke, and Bertha Crouse, another pregnant striker, lose their babies and almost die.

● 1912 – Stan Kenton, the American bandleader who was an innovator in the progressive jazz style of the 1950's, was born.

● 1913 - Mexican General V Huerta takes power with US support

● 1913 - Prizes are included in Cracker Jack candy boxes for the first time.

● 1915 - British fleet fire on Dardanellen coast

● 1915 - World War I: The Battle of Gallipoli began. Plans for Mutiny in the British Indian army uncovered in India.

● 1919 - First Pan African Congress held, in Paris, organized by W.E.B. DuBois.

● 1920 - John Creaghe dies in Washington DC. Doctor and Irish anarchist. Active in the U.S., England, and Argentina. Participant in the Mexican Revolution.

● 1920 - Netherlands joins League of Nations

● 1927 - General strike against British occupiers in Shanghai

● 1929 - Medical diathermy machine 1st used, Schenectady NY

● 1933 - Prussian minister Göring bans all Catholic newspapers

● 1934 - US contract air mail service canceled, replaced by US army for 6 months

● 1936 - Manuel Azaña becomes Spanish premier

● 1937 - During a public ceremony at the Viceregal Palace (the former Imperial residence) in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, two Eritrean nationalists attempt to kill viceroy Rodolfo Graziani with a number of grenades. The Italian security guard fire indiscrimately into the crowd of Ethiopian onlookers. Over the following weeks the colonial authorities execute 30,000 persons in retaliation - including about half of the younger, educated Ethiopian population.

● 1938 - Soviet arctic ice research station North Pole 1 evacuated, Denmark

● 1941 - Nazis raid Koco Amsterdam & round up 429 young Jews for deportation

● 1941 - World War II: The Afrika Korps, the corps-level headquarters controlling the German Panzer divisions in North Africa, was formed.

● 1942 - 112,000 citizens of Japanese ancestry interned in U.S. concentration camps set up from this day, ten weeks after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. With the strong support of California Attorney General Earl Warren (later U.S. Supreme Court Justice), liberal journalist Walter Lippmann, and Time magazine -- which referred to California as "Japan's Sudetenland" -- FDR signs Executive Order 9066, authorizing the Secretary of War and military commanders "to prescribe military areas...from which any or all persons may be excluded." The order set the stage for the forced relocation of Americans of Japanese descent to concentration camps; they lose businesses, homes, and belongings to whites who take advantage of their plight.

● 1942 - Dutch actors protest obligatory membership of Culture Chamber

● 1942 - Japanese troop land on Timor

● 1942 - New York Yankees announce 5,000 uniformed soldiers will be admitted free at each of their upcoming home games

● 1942 - World War II: nearly 250 Japanese warplanes attack the northern Australian city of Darwin killing anywhere from 243 to 1100 people.

● 1943 - World War II: Battle of the Kasserine Pass in Tunisia begins.

● 1944 - 823 British bombers attack Berlin

● 1944 - U-264 sinks off Ireland

● 1945 - 900 Japanese soldiers reportedly killed by crocodiles in 2 days

● 1945 - Brotherhood Day-1st celebrated

● 1945 - The first wave of U.S. Marines storm onto the tiny volcanic island of Iwo Jima, a Pacific island located in bomber-range of the Japanese home islands. Six thousand Americans died in the following six weeks while capturing Iwo Jima; 17,200 were wounded. Almost all of the 22,000 Japanese defenders perished.

● 1947 - French anarcho-syndicalist Pierre Besnard dies.

● 1948 - Joe Ettor, IWW organizer, dies.

● 1949 - Ezra Pound is awarded the first Bollingen Prize in poetry by the Bollingen Foundation and Yale University.

● 1949 - Mass arrests of communists in India

● 1952 - French offensive at Hanoi

● 1953 - The State of Georgia approved the first literature censorship board in the U.S. Newspapers were excluded from the new legislation.

● 1955 - South East Asia Collective Defense Treaty goes into effect

● 1959 - Britain, Turkey & Greece sign agreement granting Cyprus independence

● 1959 - Gabon adopts its constitution

● 1959 - The United Kingdom grants Cyprus its independence, which is then on formally proclaimed on August 16, 1960.

● 1959 - USAF rocket-powered rail sled attains Mach 4.1 (4970 kph), New Mexico

● 1960 - France becomes the world’s fourth nuclear power.

● 1960 - Protest strike in Poznan Poland

● 1961 - Albania disavows Chinese "Revisionism"

● 1961 – Lumumba rally clashes with UK police; Police battle with supporters of the murdered Congolese premier outside the Belgian embassy in London.

● 1962 - US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site

● 1963 - Ernest Armand, individualist anarchist, free love activist, dies. Jailed numerous times, including during WWI for advocating desertion, and internment camps during WWII.

● 1963 - USSR informs JFK it's withdrawing several thousand troops from Cuba

● 1964 - Paul Simon writes "The Sounds of Silence," the song which, in a year and a half, will catapult him and Art Garfunkel to stardom as Simon & Garfunkel.

● 1965 - Weekend of protests in 30 U.S. cities against escalation of war in Vietnam.

● 1968 - 1st US Teachers strike (Florida)

● 1968 – Damages for thalidomide children; The British High Court awards compensation to 62 children born with thalidomide-induced deformities.

● 1968 - Egyptian commando forces attempt to intervene in a hijacking situation at Larnaca International Airport, without authorisation from the Republic of Cyprus authorities. The Cypriot National Guard and Police forces kill 15 Egyptian commandos and destroy the Egyptian C-130 transport plane in open combat.

● 1968 - National Educational Television (the predecessor to the Public Broadcasting Service in the United States debuts the children's television program Mister Rogers' Neighborhood

● 1969 - 1st Test flight of Boeing 747 jumbo jet

● 1970 - USSR launches Sputnik 52 & Molniya 1-13 communications satellite

● 1972 - Leech Lake band of Chippewa, Minnesota, wins right to hunt, fish, trap, and gather wild rice by tribal law.

● 1972 - Longest ILWU strike ends.

● 1972 - Paul McCartney's "Give Ireland Back to the Irish" is immediately banned by the BBC.

● 1976 - Four recruits die at Fort Dix, New Jersey of a new flu virus which is a hybrid of Asian flu with one that causes flu-like illness in pigs ("swine flu"). Worries about an epidemic similar to the 1918-19 swine flu epidemic, which affected 500,000 Americans. Big vaccination campaign started. The epidemic never materialized.

● 1976 - Frente Polisario forms Democratic Republic of Sahara

● 1977 - Forty thousand demonstrate against nuclear power, Brokdorf, West Germany.

● 1977 - France performs nuclear test at Muruora Island

● 1977 - Shuttle Enterprise makes 1st test flight atop a 747 jetliner

● 1978 – Egyptian forces die in Cyprus gunfight; At least ten Egyptian commandos are killed in a gun battle with Greek Cypriot soldiers at Larnaca airport.

● 1980 - Bon Scott (Ronald Belford Scott), lead singer of AC/DC, dies after a night of heavy drinking.

● 1981 - George Harrison is ordered to pay ABKCO Music $587,000 for "subconscious plagiarism" "My Sweet Lord" with "He's So Fine"

● 1982 - Hanneke Jelgersma (Jagersma?) installed as Netherlands' 1st Communist mayor

● 1982 - Maiden flight of Boeing 757

● 1982 - Ozzy Osbourne arrested for urinating on The Alamo.

● 1982 - USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakhstan/Semipalitinsk USSR

● 1984 - USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakhstan/Semipalitinsk USSR

● 1985 - Artificial heart recipient William J. Schroeder becomes the first such patient to leave hospital.

● 1985 - Iberia Airlines Boeing 727 crashes into Mount Oiz in Spain, killing 148.

● 1986 - Farm Labor Organizing Committee signs agreement with Campbell Soup Co., ending seven-year-old boycott. Campbell is later bought by a tobacco company.

● 1986 - Jordanian King Hussein severs ties with PLO

● 1986 - The Soviet Union launches the Mir space station.

● 1986 - U.S. Congress ratifies UN treaty outlawing genocide -- after 37 years. Between 1991-2000, 1,500 children under the age of 5 per month die in Iraq due to U.S.-imposed economic embargo of Iraq, according to the U.N.

● 1987 - A controversial, anti-smoking ad aired for the first time on television. It featured Yul Brynner who died shortly after of lung cancer.

● 1987 - Minnesota sheriff office arrest FBI most wanted, Thomas G Harrelson

● 1987 - Reagan lifts trade boycott against Poland

● 1988 - Passaic County (N.J.) Prosecutor's Office files motion to dismiss the 1966 murder indictments against Rubin "Hurricane" Carter, championed in the song "Hurricane" by Bob Dylan.

● 1990 - Police kill 8 demonstrators for multi party system in Nepal

● 1990 - Soyuz TM-9 lands

● 1990 - Students at Tennessee State University, a primarily African-American school, sit in to demand equal funding. Nashville, TN.

● 1991 - Six thousand rally against Gulf War, Brisbane, Australia.

● 1992 - North and South Korea sign nuclear weapons ban.

● 1996 - Ten thousand gather at the state capitol in Olympia, Wash., in a "Rally for Working Families" opposing cuts in social programs.

● 1997 - Deng Xiaoping of China died at the age of 92. He was the last of China's major revolutionaries.

● 1997 - Seattle School District unexpectedly reverses itself after extensive community pressure and drops plans to allow corporate advertising in public schools.

● 1997 - Twelve hundred rally in support of striking musicians union, forcing cancellation of opening night Disney production of "Beauty and the Beast" at 5th Ave. Theater in Seattle.

● 1998 - About 300 Ohio State Univ. students interrupt a CNN infomercial for the Clinton Administration's planned military strike on Iraq, both heckling White House representatives and peppering them with tough (and unanswered) questions. The PR debacle, broadcast live globally, galvanized anti-war efforts and may have single-handedly stopped the attacks.

● 1998 - Soyuz TM-26 lands

● 1998 - US hockey team destroys their rooms at Olympics village in Japan

● 2001 - An Oklahoma City bombing museum is dedicated at the Oklahoma City National Memorial.

● 2001 – Foot-and-mouth scare at UK abbatoir; A five-mile exclusion zone is placed around an abbatoir in Essex after a suspected case of foot-and-mouth disease is detected.

● 2002 - NASA's Mars Odyssey space probe begins to map the surface of Mars using its thermal emission imaging system.

● 2004 – After sanctioning more than 2,800 gay marriages, the city of San Francisco sued the state of California, challenging its ban on same-sex marriages.

● 2004 – Former Enron Corp. chief executive Jeffrey Skilling was charged with fraud, insider trading and other crimes in connection with the energy trader's collapse. (He was later convicted and sentenced to more than 24 years in prison.)

● 2004 - Nazi-hunter Simon Wiesenthal is awarded an honorary knighthood in recognition of a "lifetime of service to humanity."

● 2005 – Eight suicide bombers struck in quick succession in Iraq in a wave of attacks that killed dozens.

● 2005 – The USS Jimmy Carter, the last of the Seawolf class of attack subs, was commissioned at Groton, Conn.

● 2006 - The Rolling Stones made the largest show open to the public of the world in Copacabana beach, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. 1.3 million people went to the show.

● 2007 - Three Salvadoran deputies to the Central American Parliament and their driver are murdered in Guatemala.


BIRTHS

● 1473 - Nicolaus Copernicus, Polish mathematician and astronomer (d. 1543)

● 1526 - Charles de L'Ecluse, Flemish botanist (d. 1609)

● 1552 - Melchior Klesl, Austrian cardinal and statesman (d. 1630)

● 1630 - Shivaji, founder of the Maratha Empire (d. 1680)

● 1660 - Friedrich Hoffmann, German physician and chemist (d. 1742)

● 1717 - David Garrick, British actor (d. 1779)

● 1722 - Tiphaigne de la Roche, French writer (d. 1774)

● 1743 - Luigi Boccherini, Italian composer (d. 1805)

● 1780 - Richard McCarty, American politician (d. 1844)

● 1802 - Wilhelm Matthias Naeff, Swiss Federal Councillor (d. 1881)

● 1804 - Carl Freiherr von Rokitansky, German physician (d. 1878)

● 1804 - David Wark, Canadian politician (d. 1905)

● 1821 - August Schleicher, German linguist (d. 1868)

● 1833 - Élie Ducommun, Swiss journalist, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (d. 1906)

● 1856 – Rudolf Stammler, German jurist and teacher (d. 1938)

● 1859 - Svante Arrhenius, Swedish chemist, Nobel laureate (d. 1927)

● 1865 - Sven Hedin, Swedish explorer (d. 1952)

● 1876 - Constantin Brancusi, Romanian sculptor (d. 1957)

● 1877 - Gabriele Münter, German painter (d. 1962)

● 1880 - Alvaro Obregon, Mexican president (d. 1928)

● 1888 - José Eustasio Rivera, Colombian writer (d. 1928)

● 1893 - Sir Cedric Hardwicke, British actor (d. 1964)

● 1895 - Louis Calhern, American actor (d. 1956)

● 1897 - Alma Rubens, American actress (d. 1931)

● 1899 - Yury Olesha, Russian novelist (d. 1960)

● 1900 - Giorgos Seferis, Greek poet, Nobel laureate (d. 1971)

● 1902 - Kay Boyle, American writer (d. 1992)

● 1904 - Havank, Dutch writer (d. 1964)

● 1911 - Merle Oberon, British actress (d. 1979)

● 1912 - Saul Chaplin, American composer (d. 1997)

● 1912 - Stan Kenton, American musician (d. 1979)

● 1913 - Prince Pedro Gastão of Orléans-Braganza, pretender to the Brazilian throne (d. 2007)

● 1914 - Jacques Dufilho, French comedian (d. 2005)

● 1916 - Eddie Arcaro, American jockey (d. 1997)

● 1917 - Carson McCullers, American author (d. 1967)

● 1920 - C. Z. Guest, American socialite (d. 2003)

● 1920 - George Rose, British music hall entertainer (d. 1988)

● 1920 - Jaan Kross, Estonian writer (d. 2007)

● 1924 - Bruce Norris, American ice hockey executive (d. 1986)

● 1924 - David Bronstein, Ukrainian chess player (d. 2006)

● 1924 - Lee Marvin, American actor (d. 1987)

● 1929 - Jacques Deray, French film director (d. 2003)

● 1930 - John Frankenheimer, American film director (d. 2002)

● 1934 - Carole Eastman, American screenwriter (d. 2004)

● 1936 - Marin Sorescu, Romanian writer and novelist (d. 1997)

● 1936 - Sam Myers, American musician and songwriter (d. 2006)

● 1937 - Robert "Bilbo" Walker Jr., American blues guitarist

● 1939 - Gwen Taylor, English actress

● 1940 – Bobby Rogers, R&B singer (The Miracles)

● 1940 – Carlin Glynn, Actress

● 1940 - Saparmurat Niyazov, President of Turkmenistan (d. 2006)

● 1940 - Smokey Robinson, American singer

● 1941 - David Gross, American physicist, Nobel laureate

● 1942 - Paul Krause, American football player

● 1943 - Homer Hickam, American author and retired NASA Engineer

● 1943 - Lou Christie, American singer

● 1943 - Tim Hunt, British biochemist, Nobel laureate

● 1945 - Michael Nader, American actor

● 1946 - Karen Silkwood, American activist (d. 1974)

● 1946 - Paul Dean, Canadian guitarist (Loverboy)

● 1946 - Peter Hudson, Australian rules footballer

● 1947 - Tim Shadbolt, mayor of Invercargill, New Zealand

● 1948 - Big John Studd, American professional wrestler (d. 1995)

● 1948 - Mark Andes, American musician

● 1948 - Pim Fortuyn, Dutch politician (d. 2002)

● 1948 - Tony Iommi, British musician (Black Sabbath)

● 1949 - Dan Bunten, American software developer (d. 1998)

● 1950 - Andy Powell, British musician

● 1951 - Stephen Nichols, American actor

● 1951 - Tahir-ul-Qadri, Pakistani Islamic scholar

● 1952 - Amy Tan, American novelist

● 1952 - Rodolfo Neri Vela, Mexican astronaut

● 1953 - Cristina Elisabet Fernández - Argentinian politician

● 1953 - Massimo Troisi, Italian actor (d. 1994)

● 1954 - Socrates, Brazilian footballer

● 1955 - Jeff Daniels, American actor

● 1956 – Dave Wakeling, Rock musician-singer (General Public, English Beat)

● 1956 - Kathleen Beller, American actress

● 1956 - Roderick MacKinnon, American biologist, Nobel laureate

● 1957 - Falco, Austrian singer (d. 1998)

● 1957 – Lorianne Crook, Talk show host

● 1957 - Ray Winstone, British actor

● 1960 - Andrew, Duke of York

● 1960 - Leslie Ash, English actress

● 1961 - Andy Wallace, English race car driver

● 1961 - Justin Fashanu, English footballer (d. 1998)

● 1962 - Hana Mandlíková, Czech tennis player

● 1962 - John Laroche, American orchid poacher

● 1963 - Laurell K. Hamilton, American writer

● 1963 - Seal, English singer

● 1964 - Dmitri Lipskerov, Russian writer

● 1964 - Sonu Walia, Indian actress

● 1966 - Enzo Scifo, Belgian footballer

● 1966 - Justine Bateman, American actress (''Family Ties'')

● 1966 - Paul Haarhuis, Dutch tennis player

● 1967 - Benicio Del Toro, Puerto Rican actor

● 1969 - Burton C. Bell, American vocalist

● 1971 - Gil Shaham, Israeli/American violinist

● 1971 - Miguel Batista, Dominican baseball player

● 1972 - Francine, American professional wrestler

● 1974 - Danny Doring, American professional wrestler

● 1975 - Daewon Song, Korean professional skateboarder

● 1975 – Daniel Adair, Rock musician (Nickelback)

● 1975 - Katja Schuurman, Dutch actress and singer

● 1975 - Mikko Kavén, Finnish footballer

● 1977 - Gianluca Zambrotta, Italian footballer

● 1977 - Ola Salo, Swedish singer (The Ark)

● 1978 - Immortal Technique, American rapper

● 1978 - Michalis Konstantinou, Greek-Cypriot footballer

● 1979 - Clinton Morrison, Irish footballer

● 1979 - Mariana Ochoa, Mexican singer and actress

● 1979 - Mariska, Finnish rapper

● 1980 - Ma Lin, Chinese table tennis player

● 1980 - Mike Miller, American basketball player

● 1980 - Neleh Dennis, American Survivor contestant

● 1981 - Beth Ditto, American singer (The Gossip)

● 1981 - Gil Reyes, American boxer

● 1981 - Nicky Shorey, English footballer

● 1981 - Ronnie Arniell, Canadian professional wrestler

● 1981 - Vitas, Russian singer

● 1983 - Assunta De Rossi, Filipino actress

● 1983 - Mika Nakashima, Japanese singer/actress

● 1983 - Vitas, Russian singer

● 1984 - Chris Richardson, American Idol finalist

● 1985 - Haylie Duff, American singer/actress (''7th Heaven'')

● 1986 - Henri Karjalainen, Finnish racing driver

● 1986 - Maria Mena, Norwegian singer

● 1986 - Marta, Brazilian footballer

● 1986 - Reon Kadena, Japanese model/actress

● 1993 - Victoria Justice, American actress and musician


DEATHS

● 197 - Clodius Albinus, Roman governor of Britain

● 1133 - Irene Ducaena, wife of Alexius I Comnenus (b. 1066)

● 1553 - Erasmus Reinhold, German astronomer and mathematician (b. 1511)

● 1589 - Saint Philothei, Orthodox martyr and Patron of Athens (b. 1522)

● 1602 - Philippe Emmanuel, Duke of Mercoeur, French soldier (b. 1558)

● 1605 - Orazio Vecchi, Italian composer (b. 1550)

● 1620 - Roemer Visscher, Dutch writer (b. 1547)

● 1622 - Sir Henry Savile, English educator (b. 1549)

● 1653 - Luigi de Rossi, Italian composer (b. 1597)

● 1663 - Adam Adami, German bishop and diplomat (b. 1603)

● 1670 - King Frederick III of Denmark (b. 1609)

● 1672 - Charles Chauncy, English-born president of Harvard College (b. 1592)

● 1709 - Tokugawa Tsunayoshi, Japanese shogun (b. 1646)

● 1716 - Dorthe Engelbrechtsdatter, Norwegian poet (b. 1634)

● 1789 - Nicholas Van Dyke, American lawyer and President of Delaware (b. 1738)

● 1799 - Jean-Charles de Borda, French mathematician, physicist, political scientist, and sailor (b. 1733)

● 1806 - Elizabeth Carter, English writer (b. 1717)

● 1837 - Georg Büchner, German playwright (b. 1813)

● 1873 - Vasil Levski, Bulgarian revolutionary (b. 1837)

● 1887 - Multatuli, Dutch writer (b. 1820)

● 1897 - Karl Weierstraß, German mathematician (b. 1815)

● 1916 - Ernst Mach, Austrian-Czech physicist and philosopher (b. 1838)

● 1927 - Robert Fuchs, Austrian composer (b. 1847)

● 1936 - Billy Mitchell, American general and military aviation pioneer (b. 1879)

● 1936 - Charles Harding Firth, British historian (b. 1857)

● 1936 - Max Schreck, German actor (b. 1879)

● 1942 - Frank Abbandando, American gangster (executed) (b. 1910)

● 1951 - André Gide, French writer, Nobel laureate (b. 1869)

● 1952 - Knut Hamsun, Norwegian author, Nobel laureate (b. 1859)

● 1957 - Maurice Garin, French cyclist (b. 1871)

● 1962 - Georgios Papanikolaou, Greek doctor, inventor of the Pap smear (b. 1883)

● 1968 - Georg Hackenschmidt, Estonian professional wrestler (b. 1878)

● 1969 - Madge Blake, American actress (b. 1899)

● 1972 - John Grierson, Scottish documentary filmmaker (b. 1898)

● 1972 - Tedd Pierce, American animator (b. 1906)

● 1973 - Joseph Szigeti, Hungarian violinist (b. 1892)

● 1973 - Kostas Negrepontis, Greek footballer (b. 1897)

● 1975 - Luigi Dallapiccola, Italian composer (b. 1904)

● 1977 - Anthony Crosland, British politician (b. 1918)

● 1977 - Mike González, Cuban baseball player (b. 1890)

● 1980 - Bon Scott, Australian musician and singer for the band AC/DC (b. 1946)

● 1983 - Alice White, American film actress (b. 1904)

● 1986 - Adolfo Celi, Italian actor (b. 1922)

● 1988 - André Frédéric Cournand, French-born physician, Nobel laureate (b. 1895)

● 1994 - Derek Jarman, British film director (b. 1942)

● 1996 - Antonio Creus, Spanish racecar driver (b. 1924)

● 1996 - Charles O. Finley, American sports entrepreneur (b. 1918)

● 1997 - Deng Xiaoping, Chinese Communist leader and revolutionary (b. 1904)

● 1997 - Leo Rosten, American Yiddish writer and humorist (b. 1908)

● 1998 - Grandpa Jones, American entertainer (b. 1913)

● 1998 - John Acheson, British actor

● 1999 - Mohammad Sadeq al-Sadr, Iraqi Shiite leader (assassinated)

● 2000 - Friedensreich Hundertwasser, Austrian artist (b. 1928)

● 2001 - Charles Trenet, French singer (b. 1913)

● 2001 - Priscilla Davis, American socialite (b. 1942)

● 2001 - Stanley Kramer, American director (b. 1913)

● 2003 - Johnny Paycheck, American singer (b. 1938)

● 2007 - Celia Franca, founder of National Ballet of Canada (b. 1921)

● 2007 - Janet Blair, American actress (b. 1921)


HOLIDAYS AND OBSERVANCES

● Roman Catholic:
● St. Alvarez of Corova
● St. Auxibius
● St. Barbatus
● St. Beatus
● St. Belina
● St. Boniface of Lausanne
● St. Odran
● St. Valerius
● St. Zambdas
● Bl. Lucy

● Russian Orthodox Christian Menaion Calendar for February 6 (Civil Date: February 19)
● St. Bucolus, Bishop of Smyrna.
● Martyr Julian of Emesa.
● Virgin Martyr Fausta, and with her Evilasius and Maximus, at Cyzicus.
● Virgin Martyr Dorothy, two sisters Christina and Callista, and Theophilus, at Caesaria in Cappadocia.
● Virgin Martyrs Martha and Mary, and their brother Lycarion, in Egypt.
● St. Photius, Patriarch of Constantinople.
● Saints Barsanuphius the Great and John the Prophet, monks of Palestine.
● St. Dorothy, schema-nun of Kashin.

● Greek Calendar:
● Martyrs Faustus, Basil, Silvanus, and the holy Martyrs of Darion in Constantinople.
● St. John of Thebes, monk.
● St. James the Ascetic.
● Repose of Archbishop Theophanes of Poltava (1940).

● Christian:
● St. Conrad

● Chaoflux (Discordianism)

● Astrology - First day of sun sign Pisces

● Astrology - Can also be last day of sun sign Aquarius depending on the time of birth and the astrologer's viewpoint.

● Ethiopia - Martyr's Day (1930s)

● Gabon - Constitution Day (1959)

● These Holidays are only applicable on a given "day of the week"
● US : Presidents' Day (formerly Washington's Birthday)-legal holiday - ( Monday )
● World : Brotherhood Day (1934) - ( Sunday )



THIS IS AN ABBREVIATED POST FOR THIS DATE USING ONLY THE FOLLOWING EIGHT SOURCES. A COMPLETE POST IS PLANNED AS SOON AS TIME ALLOWS.

This Previous Day in History Post With

This Original Wikipedia List form the core of this post.

Additional facts taken from:


Geov Parrish's this Day in Radical History, things that happened on this day that you never had to memorize in school.

Roman Catholic Saint of the Day

Russian Orthodox Christian Menaion Calendar

Liberal Quotes of the Day taken from The Best Liberal Quotes Ever: Why the Left Is Right Compiled by William P. Martin ©2004

Quotes from the Right of the Day taken from Take Them at Their Words: Startling, Amusing and Baffling Quotations from the GOP and Their Friends, 1994-2004 Compiled by Bruce J. Miller with Diana Maio ©2004

Dumbest Thing Said for the Day taken from 1001 Dumbest Things Ever Said Edited by Steven D. Price ©2004


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