Today In History logo TIH

On this day

February 14

Valentine's Day Massacre: Capone's Gangsters Execute Seven (1929). Hariri Assassinated: Beirut Shaken by Massive Blast (2005). Notable births include Michael Bloomberg (1942), Roger Fisher (1950), Rob Thomas (1972).

Featured

Valentine's Day Massacre: Capone's Gangsters Execute Seven
1929Event

Valentine's Day Massacre: Capone's Gangsters Execute Seven

Five men stood against a garage wall as gunmen disguised as police officers opened fire, killing four instantly and leaving Frank Gusenberg with fourteen bullet wounds before he refused to name his attackers. This St. Valentine's Day Massacre eliminated the leadership of the North Side Gang and cemented Al Capone's dominance over Chicago's bootlegging trade through sheer terror.

Hariri Assassinated: Beirut Shaken by Massive Blast
2005

Hariri Assassinated: Beirut Shaken by Massive Blast

A massive explosion rips through Rafik Hariri's motorcade near Beirut's St. George Hotel, killing the former prime minister and 21 others. This assassination triggers a mass exodus of foreign troops from Lebanon and ignites the Cedar Revolution that forces Syria to withdraw its decades-long military presence from the country.

Bell Claims Telephone: Race Against Gray Won
1876

Bell Claims Telephone: Race Against Gray Won

Alexander Graham Bell filed his patent application for the telephone just hours before rival Elisha Gray submitted his own claim on February 14, 1876. This narrow race secured Bell's legal ownership of the device that would instantly collapse communication distances and reshape global commerce within a single generation.

YouTube Launches: The Birth of Viral Video
2005

YouTube Launches: The Birth of Viral Video

Three former PayPal employees — Chad Hurley, Steve Chen, and Jawed Karim — registered the YouTube.com domain, launching a platform that would demolish the barriers to video distribution worldwide. Within eighteen months Google acquired it for $1.65 billion, and today YouTube hosts over 800 million videos, reshaping entertainment, journalism, education, and political discourse.

France Salutes American Flag: First Foreign Recognition
1778

France Salutes American Flag: First Foreign Recognition

French Admiral Toussaint-Guillaume Picquet de la Motte fired a nine-gun salute to the USS Ranger commanded by John Paul Jones, the first time a foreign naval vessel formally recognized the American flag. This symbolic act confirmed France's willingness to treat the fledgling United States as a sovereign nation, bolstering American morale and foreshadowing the Franco-American alliance that proved decisive in the Radical War.

Quote of the Day

“It has appeared that from the inevitable laws of our nature, some human beings must suffer from want. These are the unhappy persons who, in the great lottery of life, have drawn a blank.”

Historical events

Born on February 14

Portrait of Liv Kristine
Liv Kristine 1976

Liv Kristine pioneered the beauty-and-the-beast vocal style that defined the gothic metal genre in the 1990s.

Read more

By blending ethereal soprano melodies with aggressive death growls in Theatre of Tragedy, she established a blueprint for symphonic metal bands that continues to dominate European rock charts today.

Portrait of Rob Thomas
Rob Thomas 1972

Rob Thomas defined the sound of late-nineties pop-rock by blending post-grunge grit with radio-ready hooks in Matchbox Twenty.

Read more

His collaboration with Santana on Smooth shattered longevity records, spending twelve weeks at number one and earning three Grammy Awards. This crossover success solidified his reputation as one of the era's most versatile and commercially dominant songwriters.

Portrait of Teller
Teller 1948

Teller redefined the art of stage magic by stripping away the traditional patter, forcing audiences to focus entirely…

Read more

on the physical mechanics of his illusions. His silent, minimalist partnership with Penn Jillette transformed the duo into the longest-running headliners in Las Vegas history, proving that psychological misdirection often speaks louder than words.

Portrait of Alan Parker
Alan Parker 1944

Alan Parker was born in London in 1944.

Read more

Started as a copywriter at an ad agency. Made commercials for years before touching film. His first feature, Bugsy Malone, cast only children — they played gangsters with splurge guns that shot whipped cream instead of bullets. Jodie Foster was thirteen. Then he made Midnight Express, Fame, Pink Floyd's The Wall, Evita. He shot musicals, prison dramas, historical epics, never the same thing twice. He never went to film school.

Portrait of Michael Bloomberg
Michael Bloomberg 1942

Michael Bloomberg built Bloomberg LP from nothing in 1981 after being fired from Salomon Brothers with a $10 million severance.

Read more

He used the money to build financial data terminals and a news service. By the time he ran for mayor of New York in 2001 — as a Republican in a Democratic city, weeks after September 11 — he was worth five billion dollars. He served three terms, running as an independent for the third. He spent $60 million of his own money on that campaign. He won by four points.

Portrait of Charles Thomson Rees Wilson
Charles Thomson Rees Wilson 1869

Charles Thomson Rees Wilson was born in Scotland in 1869.

Read more

He climbed Ben Nevis to study clouds. He couldn't bring clouds down from the mountain, so he built them in his lab. He discovered that vapor condenses around charged particles — ions left by radiation passing through air. This made invisible particles suddenly visible. His cloud chamber became the first way to actually see subatomic particles. He photographed the tracks they left. He won the Nobel Prize in 1927. Particle physics went from theory to photographs because a meteorologist missed the mountains.

Portrait of George Washington Gale Ferris
George Washington Gale Ferris 1859

George Washington Gale Ferris Jr.

Read more

was born in Galesburg, Illinois, in 1859. He became a bridge and tunnel engineer. Respectable work. Forgettable career. Then Chicago announced the 1893 World's Fair and challenged American engineers to build something that would outdo the Eiffel Tower. Ferris proposed a rotating wheel that could lift 2,160 people at once, 264 feet into the air. Officials called it unsafe. Investors called it suicide. He funded the first $25,000 himself. It worked. It made $726,805 in ticket sales — roughly $25 million today. He died three years later at 37, broke and embroiled in lawsuits. His wheel outlasted his bank account by a century.

Portrait of Christopher Latham Sholes
Christopher Latham Sholes 1819

Christopher Latham Sholes revolutionized written communication by inventing the first commercially successful typewriter.

Read more

By arranging the keys into the QWERTY layout to prevent mechanical jams, he standardized how the world produces text, a configuration that remains the global default for digital keyboards today.

Portrait of Thomas Robert Malthus
Thomas Robert Malthus 1766

Thomas Malthus wrote An Essay on the Principle of Population in 1798 as a response to William Godwin's utopian vision of social progress.

Read more

His argument — that population always tends to outgrow subsistence, checked only by famine, war, and disease — was unfashionably pessimistic in an age of radical optimism. Darwin found the mechanism of natural selection while reading it. That was not the use Malthus had intended.

Portrait of Leon Battista Alberti
Leon Battista Alberti 1404

Alberti wrote the first book on cryptography — in 1467, using a cipher wheel he invented himself.

Read more

But that was just a side project. He designed churches, wrote plays in Latin, painted, sculpted, and published the Renaissance's definitive text on architecture. He did all this while working as a papal secretary. Oh, and he was illegitimate, which meant he couldn't inherit anything. So he just became good at everything instead.

Died on February 14

Portrait of Carlos Menem
Carlos Menem 2021

Carlos Menem died at 90 after reshaping Argentina twice.

Read more

First time: as president, he privatized everything his Peronist party had nationalized, cut inflation from 5,000% to single digits, and pegged the peso to the dollar. It worked until it catastrophically didn't — the economy collapsed in 2001, two years after he left office. Second time: he came back as senator and voted against every reform he'd championed. He called it "pragmatism." His critics called it something else.

Portrait of Rafic Hariri
Rafic Hariri 2005

Rafic Hariri made his fortune building for Saudi royalty, then spent it rebuilding Beirut.

Read more

He personally guaranteed loans to reconstruct the city center after fifteen years of civil war. On February 14, 2005, a bomb containing 1,000 kilograms of TNT killed him and twenty-one others on the Beirut waterfront. The explosion left a crater ten feet deep. Two million people — half of Lebanon — attended his funeral. Syria withdrew its troops five weeks later after twenty-nine years of occupation.

Portrait of Mick Tucker
Mick Tucker 2002

Mick Tucker died on February 14, 2002, from leukemia.

Read more

He was 54. The Sweet sold 55 million records in the 1970s with songs like "Ballroom Blitz" and "Fox on the Run." Tucker played drums standing up for part of their live shows. He used a double bass drum setup before most rock drummers did. After the band's peak, he worked as a session musician and tried multiple Sweet reunions. None matched the original run. The glam era didn't age well, but those drum fills did.

Portrait of Julian Huxley
Julian Huxley 1975

Julian Huxley spent his life bridging the gap between evolutionary biology and global conservation, ultimately…

Read more

co-founding the World Wide Fund for Nature. His death in 1975 removed a leading voice for international environmental cooperation, leaving behind a framework for protecting endangered species that remains the backbone of modern global wildlife preservation efforts.

Portrait of William Tecumseh Sherman
William Tecumseh Sherman 1891

William Sherman died in New York on February 14, 1891, and his funeral became a strange coda to the Civil War.

Read more

Joseph Johnston, the Confederate general who'd surrendered to Sherman in 1865, was a pallbearer. It was a cold day and Johnston refused to wear his hat out of respect. He caught pneumonia. He died six weeks later. Sherman had once said war is hell. Johnston had made him prove it. They'd ended as something like friends.

Portrait of Vicente Guerrero
Vicente Guerrero 1831

Vicente Guerrero was executed by firing squad on February 14, 1831.

Read more

He'd been president just eight months before. A political rival invited him to a ship under the pretense of negotiating peace, then handed him over to be shot. Guerrero had fought for Mexican independence for eleven years — kept going even after every other rebel leader surrendered or was killed. As president, he abolished slavery in Mexico, three decades before the United States. His execution was so controversial that Mexico later made his home state bear his name. Guerrero is the only Mexican state named after a president.

Portrait of John Dickinson
John Dickinson 1808

John Dickinson died, leaving behind a legacy as the "Penman of the Revolution" for his influential Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania.

Read more

His refusal to sign the Declaration of Independence in 1776, due to his preference for reconciliation with Britain, forced the Continental Congress to refine its arguments for sovereignty and ultimately shaped the structure of the U.S. Constitution.

Portrait of Timur
Timur 1405

Timur died on February 18, 1405, in Otrar, modern-day Kazakhstan.

Read more

He was marching on China with 200,000 men. He'd already conquered everything from Delhi to Damascus. His army stacked skulls into pyramids outside cities that resisted — 90,000 heads at Baghdad, 70,000 at Isfahan. He claimed descent from Genghis Khan through marriage, but historians debate it. What's not debatable: he killed an estimated 17 million people, roughly 5% of the world's population at the time. He was 68, planning his largest campaign yet. His empire fractured within a generation. His great-great-great-grandson founded the Mughal Empire in India.

Portrait of Saint Cyril
Saint Cyril 869

Saint Cyril translated the Gospels into the Slavic language he'd invented a script for, working with his brother…

Read more

Methodius under papal authority. He died in Rome on February 14, 869, having just been made an honorary Roman bishop. He was forty-two. He'd converted the Khazars to Christianity and negotiated with the Arab Caliph before taking on the Slavic mission. His death ended one chapter; Methodius carried the work for another sixteen years.

Holidays & observances

Valentine's Day celebrates love and affection, rooted in ancient traditions that honor romantic relationships and com…

Valentine's Day celebrates love and affection, rooted in ancient traditions that honor romantic relationships and companionship.

February 14 is observed in Eastern Orthodox liturgics, commemorating the feast days of saints and emphasizing spiritu…

February 14 is observed in Eastern Orthodox liturgics, commemorating the feast days of saints and emphasizing spiritual devotion.

Statehood Day celebrates Arizona's admission to the Union, honoring its unique history and cultural heritage.

Statehood Day celebrates Arizona's admission to the Union, honoring its unique history and cultural heritage. This holiday reflects the pride of Arizonans in their state's journey.

Statehood Day in Oregon celebrates the state's admission to the Union, marking a critical moment in its history and i…

Statehood Day in Oregon celebrates the state's admission to the Union, marking a critical moment in its history and identity.

The second day of Lupercalia, an ancient Roman festival, was dedicated to fertility and purification.

The second day of Lupercalia, an ancient Roman festival, was dedicated to fertility and purification. This celebration reveals the cultural significance of rites that sought to ensure prosperity and health.

Oregon became the 33rd state on February 14, 1859.

Oregon became the 33rd state on February 14, 1859. Valentine's Day statehood wasn't romantic — it was strategic. Congress had delayed admission for years because of the slavery question. Oregon's constitution banned both slavery and Black residency. The compromise nobody wanted to talk about. It worked. Oregon entered as a free state, but with exclusion laws that stayed on the books until 1926. The state celebrates admission day every year. The irony gets mentioned less often.

Valentine was a Roman priest who married Christian couples in secret.

Valentine was a Roman priest who married Christian couples in secret. Emperor Claudius II had banned marriage for young men — soldiers fought better without families, he figured. Valentine kept performing ceremonies anyway. When they caught him, Claudius ordered his execution. While awaiting death, Valentine supposedly healed his jailer's blind daughter and left her a note signed "Your Valentine." He was beheaded on February 14th around 269 AD. Sixteen centuries later, greeting card companies would turn his defiance into a billion-dollar industry. He died for letting people marry. Now we buy chocolates.

The Eastern Orthodox Church follows a different calendar than most of the West.

The Eastern Orthodox Church follows a different calendar than most of the West. They still use the Julian calendar for feast days, which is now 13 days behind the Gregorian calendar most countries use. That's why Orthodox Christmas falls on January 7th by Western reckoning — it's still December 25th on their calendar. The gap widens by three days every four centuries. By 2100, Orthodox Easter will be 14 days off. They've kept this system since 1582, when Pope Gregory XIII reformed the Western calendar and the Orthodox churches refused to follow Rome's lead. It wasn't about astronomy. It was about authority.

The second day of Lupercalia belonged to the women.

The second day of Lupercalia belonged to the women. Roman priests called Luperci ran naked through the streets, striking women with strips of goat hide soaked in sacrificial blood. The women lined up for it. They believed the blows cured infertility and eased childbirth. Pregnant women would push to the front. The festival honored Lupercus, god of shepherds, and Romulus and Remus, who were supposedly raised by a wolf in the cave where the ritual started. Christians eventually replaced it with Valentine's Day. Same date, different explanation for why February makes people think about fertility.

Parents' Worship Day in parts of India isn't about cards or brunch.

Parents' Worship Day in parts of India isn't about cards or brunch. It's rooted in the Hindu tradition of Matru Pitru Puja Diwas—a day when parents receive the same ritual worship given to deities. Children touch their parents' feet, offer prayers, and sometimes perform full pujas with flowers and incense. The practice comes from the Vedic idea that parents are your first gods—they created you, fed you, taught you to speak. No restaurants. Just reverence.

The Armenian Apostolic Church celebrates this 40 days after their Christmas — which falls on January 6, not December 25.

The Armenian Apostolic Church celebrates this 40 days after their Christmas — which falls on January 6, not December 25. So the timing's different from everyone else's. It marks when Mary and Joseph brought infant Jesus to the Jerusalem Temple, following Jewish law requiring purification and a firstborn son's dedication. They brought two turtledoves as an offering — the option for families who couldn't afford a lamb. The priest Simeon held the baby and said he could now die in peace. He'd been promised he'd see the Messiah first.

Lovers exchange cards and flowers today to celebrate the feast of Saint Valentine, a tradition rooted in the Roman fe…

Lovers exchange cards and flowers today to celebrate the feast of Saint Valentine, a tradition rooted in the Roman festival of Lupercalia and later Christian martyrdom. This custom transformed from a localized religious observance into a global commercial phenomenon, standardizing the modern expression of romantic affection through the ritualized gifting of chocolates and sentimental notes.

The Catholic Church honors Cyril and Methodius, two brothers who invented an alphabet to spite an empire.

The Catholic Church honors Cyril and Methodius, two brothers who invented an alphabet to spite an empire. In 863, they arrived in Moravia with a problem: Latin liturgy that locals couldn't understand, and Frankish clergy who insisted that was the point. So they created Glagolitic, the first Slavic alphabet, and translated the Bible into Old Church Slavonic. Rome hated it. Constantinople was suspicious. The brothers went anyway. Cyril died in Rome at 42, still arguing his case. Methodius kept teaching in Slavic until his death. Their alphabet evolved into Cyrillic, now used by 250 million people. They're the only saints who are also linguists.

Arizona became the 48th state on February 14, 1912.

Arizona became the 48th state on February 14, 1912. Last of the continental 48. Congress had delayed statehood for years because Arizona kept electing the wrong kind of politicians—progressives who wanted to recall judges. They had to rewrite their constitution to get in. Six months after admission, they amended it right back. The state was 49 years old as a territory. It had been trying to join since 1863. They picked Valentine's Day, but nobody's sure if that was intentional or just when the paperwork cleared.

Oregon became the 33rd state on February 14, 1859.

Oregon became the 33rd state on February 14, 1859. Valentine's Day. The timing wasn't romantic — it was strategic. Congress rushed the admission to tip the balance of free versus slave states before the Civil War. Oregon's constitution banned slavery. It also banned Black people from living there at all. Free state, but whites only. That contradiction held for decades. The exclusion laws stayed on the books until 1926.

Valentine's Day started as a Roman fertility festival where men stripped naked, grabbed goat hides, and whipped women…

Valentine's Day started as a Roman fertility festival where men stripped naked, grabbed goat hides, and whipped women in the streets. Women lined up for it — they believed it made them fertile. Pope Gelasius banned it in 496 AD and replaced it with a saint's feast day. Nobody's sure which Saint Valentine. There were at least three. The Romans kept celebrating anyway, just with clothes on and less whipping.

The Iraqi Communist Party marks Communist Martyrs Day, though the government banned them in 1978.

The Iraqi Communist Party marks Communist Martyrs Day, though the government banned them in 1978. They'd been Iraq's largest political party in the 1950s — half a million members, more than the Ba'athists. Saddam executed their leaders, tortured thousands of members, drove the rest underground or into exile. They still exist. They hold seats in parliament now. They celebrate this day in secret or in diaspora, remembering comrades who were hanged, shot, or disappeared into Abu Ghraib and never came out.

Saints Cyril and Methodius receive honors today for their ninth-century mission to bring Christianity to the Slavic p…

Saints Cyril and Methodius receive honors today for their ninth-century mission to bring Christianity to the Slavic peoples. By developing the Glagolitic alphabet to translate liturgical texts, they enabled the preservation of Slavic culture and literature, bridging the divide between the Eastern and Western churches while establishing a distinct linguistic identity for Slavic nations.