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February 25

Revels Takes Seat: First Black Senator Sworn In (1870). Ypsilantis Proclaims Revolution: Greece Rises (1821). Notable births include George Harrison (1943), Infanta Branca of Portugal (1259), James Brown (1951).

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Revels Takes Seat: First Black Senator Sworn In
1870Event

Revels Takes Seat: First Black Senator Sworn In

Hiram Rhodes Revels took the oath of office as United States Senator from Mississippi on February 25, 1870, and in doing so occupied the very seat that Jefferson Davis had vacated when Mississippi seceded nine years earlier. The symbolism was staggering: a Black man, born free in North Carolina, representing a state that had fought a war to preserve slavery, sitting in the chamber where the Confederacy's president had once legislated. Revels was an unlikely revolutionary. An ordained minister in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, he had spent the Civil War recruiting Black soldiers for the Union Army and serving as a chaplain. After the war, he settled in Natchez, Mississippi, entered local politics, and was elected to the state senate in 1869. When the Mississippi legislature needed to fill an unexpired U.S. Senate term, they chose Revels on the strength of his moderate temperament and oratorical skills. His swearing-in was contested for two days. Democratic senators argued that Revels could not be seated because the Dred Scott decision of 1857 had ruled that Black people were not citizens, and therefore Revels had not been a citizen for the nine years required by the Constitution. Republican Senator Charles Sumner demolished this argument by pointing out that the Fourteenth Amendment had overturned Dred Scott and that Revels had been a free man his entire life. The Senate voted 48-8 to seat him. Revels served just over a year, advocating for the reinstatement of Black legislators expelled in Georgia and opposing racial segregation in federal workplaces. He was not radical enough for some Black leaders and too radical for most white Mississippians. After leaving the Senate, he became the first president of Alcorn University, the nation's first land-grant college for Black students. His brief tenure proved that Black political participation was possible; the century of disenfranchisement that followed proved how fragile that possibility was.

Ypsilantis Proclaims Revolution: Greece Rises
1821

Ypsilantis Proclaims Revolution: Greece Rises

Alexander Ypsilantis crossed the Prut River into Ottoman-controlled Moldavia with a small band of fighters and a colossal bluff, proclaiming that he had "the support of a great power" — meaning Russia — when no such support had been formally promised. His proclamation at Iasi on February 24, 1821, launched the Greek War of Independence, a decade-long struggle that would redraw the map of southeastern Europe and establish the first independent nation-state born from Ottoman rule. Ypsilantis was a Greek officer in the Russian Imperial Army, an aide-de-camp to Tsar Alexander I, and head of the Filiki Eteria, a secret revolutionary society dedicated to Greek independence. The society had spent years building networks among Greek merchants, intellectuals, and diaspora communities across Europe. Ypsilantis believed that a military incursion into the Ottoman provinces of Moldavia and Wallachia would trigger a general Christian uprising in the Balkans, supported by Russian intervention. He was wrong on both counts. His force of roughly four thousand men, including Greek students, Moldavian boyars, and members of the Sacred Band, marched south from Iasi but found little local support. The Romanian population had no interest in trading Ottoman overlords for Greek ones. The Ottomans crushed Ypsilantis's army at the Battle of Dragasani in June 1821, and he fled to Austrian territory, where he was imprisoned for seven years. Russia, wary of destabilizing the European balance of power established at Vienna, publicly disavowed him. But the spark he struck could not be extinguished. Simultaneous revolts erupted across the Peloponnese in March 1821, and these proved far more durable. The Greek cause attracted volunteers and funding from across Europe, including Lord Byron, who died at Missolonghi in 1824. By 1827, Britain, France, and Russia intervened militarily, destroying the Ottoman fleet at Navarino. Greece won formal independence in 1830, establishing a precedent for national self-determination that would echo through the Balkans and beyond for the rest of the century.

People Power: Marcos Flees, Aquino Takes Philippines
1986

People Power: Marcos Flees, Aquino Takes Philippines

Ferdinand Marcos fled the Philippines with twenty-two crates of cash, gold bars, and his wife Imelda's legendary collection of designer shoes, lifted off the palace grounds by American military helicopters bound for exile in Hawaii. His departure on February 25, 1986, ended a twenty-year dictatorship and completed one of the most remarkable nonviolent revolutions in modern history — four days that proved a dictator could be toppled by ordinary people standing in front of tanks. The crisis had been building since the assassination of opposition leader Benigno Aquino Jr. on the airport tarmac in 1983. Marcos called a snap presidential election in February 1986, confident he could manufacture a victory against Aquino's widow, Corazon. When official counts showed Marcos winning despite overwhelming evidence of fraud — thirty computer technicians walked out of the tabulation center in protest — two senior military officers, Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and Lieutenant General Fidel Ramos, defected and barricaded themselves in military camps along Epifanio de los Santos Avenue, known as EDSA. Cardinal Jaime Sin went on Radio Veritas and asked Filipinos to protect the rebel soldiers. Within hours, hundreds of thousands of people flooded EDSA, forming a human shield between the defectors and Marcos's loyalist forces. Nuns knelt before armored personnel carriers. Civilians offered food and flowers to soldiers. When Marcos ordered tanks to advance, the crews refused to fire into the crowd. The standoff lasted four days, broadcast live on international television. Corazon Aquino was inaugurated as president on the morning Marcos fled. She inherited a nation buried in $28 billion of foreign debt, with institutions hollowed out by crony capitalism. The People Power Revolution inspired nonviolent movements worldwide, from the fall of the Berlin Wall to the protests in Tiananmen Square. The Philippines itself would revisit its Marcos reckoning decades later when Ferdinand Jr. won the presidency in 2022, demonstrating that the memory of dictatorship fades faster than its consequences.

Hebron Massacre: 29 Worshippers Killed at Cave
1994

Hebron Massacre: 29 Worshippers Killed at Cave

Baruch Goldstein, an American-born Israeli settler and physician, walked into the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron during the dawn prayers of Ramadan on February 25, 1994, and opened fire with an IMI Galil assault rifle. He killed twenty-nine Palestinian worshippers and wounded one hundred twenty-five before survivors overwhelmed him with a fire extinguisher and beat him to death. The massacre at the Cave of the Patriarchs — a site sacred to both Muslims and Jews — was the deadliest act of terrorism by an Israeli civilian against Palestinians. Goldstein was a follower of Rabbi Meir Kahane, whose Kach movement advocated the forced expulsion of all Arabs from Israel and the occupied territories. A Brooklyn native who had emigrated to the settlement of Kiryat Arba adjacent to Hebron, Goldstein served as an emergency physician but had reportedly refused to treat Arab patients. Neighbors later said he had grown increasingly agitated over recent Palestinian attacks and the ongoing Oslo peace process, which he viewed as a betrayal. The massacre provoked immediate violence. Riots erupted across the West Bank and Gaza, and in the following days, twenty-six more Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces during protests. Hamas, the militant Islamist organization, cited the Hebron massacre as justification for a new campaign of suicide bombings inside Israel that began weeks later and continued through the mid-1990s, severely undermining public support for the Oslo accords. The aftermath reshaped Hebron itself. Rather than evacuating the small, militant settler community that had precipitated the crisis, Israel divided the city into two zones — H1 under Palestinian Authority control and H2 under Israeli military control — and imposed severe restrictions on Palestinian movement in the Old City. The Ibrahimi Mosque was partitioned, with separate sections for Muslim and Jewish worship. For some settlers, Goldstein became a martyr; his grave in Kiryat Arba became a pilgrimage site until Israeli authorities dismantled the shrine in 1999. The massacre remains a defining moment in the collapse of the Oslo peace process.

U.S. Steel Born: World's First Billion-Dollar Firm
1901

U.S. Steel Born: World's First Billion-Dollar Firm

J.P. Morgan did not merely form a company; he assembled a colossus. When United States Steel was incorporated on February 25, 1901, it became the world's first billion-dollar corporation, capitalized at $1.4 billion at a time when the entire federal budget was roughly $500 million. Morgan had consolidated Andrew Carnegie's steel empire with Federal Steel, National Steel, and several smaller producers into a single entity that controlled two-thirds of American steel output. The deal's origin was a dinner conversation. Carnegie had been making threatening noises about expanding into finished products like wire and tubes, territory dominated by Morgan's clients. Morgan, who viewed industrial competition as wasteful chaos, decided it was cheaper to buy Carnegie out than to fight him. The negotiation was handled by Carnegie's lieutenant, Charles Schwab, who made the pitch at a famous dinner at the University Club in New York. When Morgan asked Carnegie to name his price, Carnegie scribbled $480 million on a slip of paper. Morgan glanced at it and said, "I accept." Carnegie later told friends he should have asked for $100 million more. The corporation Morgan created employed 168,000 workers and produced more steel than any country except the United States itself. Its mills stretched from Gary, Indiana — a city built from scratch and named after U.S. Steel's chairman, Elbert Gary — to Birmingham, Alabama, where the company absorbed the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company in 1907. The federal government filed an antitrust suit in 1911 to break up the trust, but the Supreme Court ruled in 1920 that mere size was not a violation of the Sherman Act. Morgan's creation defined the scale of twentieth-century industrial capitalism. At its peak, U.S. Steel produced sixty-seven percent of all American steel. But the company's enormous debt load and cautious management made it slow to innovate. Competitors, especially Bethlehem Steel under Charles Schwab (who had left U.S. Steel), adopted new technologies faster. By the century's end, U.S. Steel's market share had fallen to eight percent, a monument to the paradox that size can be both a corporation's greatest asset and its heaviest burden.

Quote of the Day

“Laugh and the world laughs with you, snore and you sleep alone.”

Historical events

Colt Revolver Patented: Weapon of the Wild West
1836

Colt Revolver Patented: Weapon of the Wild West

Samuel Colt received U.S. Patent No. 138 on February 25, 1836, for a "revolving gun," a firearm with a rotating cylinder that allowed the shooter to fire multiple rounds without reloading. The invention transformed personal firearms from single-shot weapons into repeaters and changed the nature of armed conflict, law enforcement, and frontier life in the United States. Born in Hartford, Connecticut on July 19, 1814, Colt was an indifferent student who was expelled from boarding school after accidentally setting fire to a building during a chemistry demonstration. He went to sea as a teenager and, according to his own account, conceived the revolving mechanism while watching the ship's wheel lock into fixed positions. Whether the story is true or simply good marketing, it became central to the Colt mythology. His first company, the Patent Arms Manufacturing Company in Paterson, New Jersey, produced revolvers that were innovative but commercially unsuccessful. The company went bankrupt in 1842. Colt stored his remaining patents and waited. The Mexican-American War saved him. Captain Samuel Walker of the Texas Rangers contacted Colt in 1847 and described the Paterson revolver's usefulness in frontier combat, suggesting improvements. Colt had no factory and no inventory. He contracted with Eli Whitney Jr. to manufacture 1,000 improved revolvers, the Walker Colt, the most powerful handgun in the world at that time. The order relaunched his career. He built a massive new factory in Hartford in 1855, one of the largest private arms factories in the world, and pioneered the use of interchangeable parts and assembly line production, techniques that influenced American manufacturing far beyond the firearms industry. His marketing was equally innovative: he gave presentation-grade revolvers to military officers, politicians, and European royalty. The Colt revolver became synonymous with the American West. The phrase "God created men; Colonel Colt made them equal" reflected the weapon's democratizing effect on personal violence. Colt died on January 10, 1862, at 47, one of the wealthiest men in America.

Born on February 25

Portrait of Tyler Sanders
Tyler Sanders 2004

He started acting at eight.

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He started acting at eight. By fifteen, he'd been nominated for an Emmy for his role in *Just Add Magic: Mystery City*. He played Leo in *The Rookie* and Young Colt in *9-1-1: Lone Star*. He died at eighteen, in June 2022. Cause undisclosed. He'd been working steadily for a decade. Most actors his age were still in acting classes.

Portrait of Vernon Carey Jr.
Vernon Carey Jr. 2001

was born in Fort Lauderdale in 2001.

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His father played in the NFL for nine seasons. By eighth grade, Vernon was 6'9" and 270 pounds. Duke offered him a scholarship when he was 14. He took it. Played one season at Duke, averaged 17.8 points and 8.8 rebounds, won ACC Rookie of the Year. The Hornets drafted him 32nd overall in 2020. He was 19. Now he's bouncing between the NBA and the G League, still figuring out if size and skill are enough when everyone else is fast.

Portrait of Eduardo da Silva
Eduardo da Silva 1983

Eduardo da Silva was born in Rio, but Croatia made him a star.

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He played for Arsenal when a tackle shattered his left fibula and dislocated his ankle — bone broke through skin on live TV. Doctors said he'd never play professionally again. He was back in ten months. Croatia gave him citizenship in 2002 specifically to play for their national team. He'd never lived there. He scored 29 goals for them anyway.

Portrait of Kash Patel
Kash Patel 1980

Kash Patel was born in Garden City, New York, in 1980.

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His parents had immigrated from Uganda after Idi Amin expelled South Asians in 1972. He became a federal public defender first, then switched sides to prosecution. He worked terrorism cases at the Justice Department before moving to the House Intelligence Committee. By his late thirties, he'd served in senior national security roles across multiple administrations. The public defender who started representing accused terrorists ended up shaping counterterrorism policy.

Portrait of Samaki Walker
Samaki Walker 1976

Samaki Walker was born in Columbus, Ohio, in 1976.

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He was drafted straight out of high school, 9th overall in 1996. Six-foot-nine center. He bounced between six NBA teams in ten years. Most people don't remember him. But in Game 3 of the 2002 Finals, with 1.4 seconds left, he hit a three-pointer that put the Lakers up by two. The refs missed that he was standing inside the arc. The shot shouldn't have counted. Lakers won that game. They swept the series. Walker got a championship ring because nobody caught the call in real time.

Portrait of Chelsea Handler
Chelsea Handler 1975

Chelsea Handler was born in Livingston, New Jersey, in 1975.

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She was the youngest of six kids. Her mother was Mormon. Her father was Jewish and had fought in World War II at 18. He was 65 when she was born. She moved to Los Angeles at 19 to become an actress. Instead she got arrested for a DUI. The judge made her go to Alcoholics Anonymous. She turned the stories into a stand-up routine. By 32 she had her own late-night show on E!. She was the only woman hosting a late-night talk show on cable. She kept that job for seven years.

Portrait of Jason Byrne
Jason Byrne 1972

He started doing stand-up at 19 because he couldn't hold down a job — kept getting fired for making his coworkers laugh instead of work.

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His first gig paid £15. He spent £20 on beer afterward. For years he was known as "the comedian's comedian" — the one other comics would watch on their nights off. He's been nominated for the Perrier Award five times and never won. He doesn't write his sets down. He walks on stage and improvises for 90 minutes. Every show is different. He's done over 5,000 performances and claims he's never told the same joke twice.

Portrait of Brian Baker
Brian Baker 1965

Brian Baker shaped the sound of American punk by co-founding Minor Threat and later anchoring the melodic intensity of Bad Religion.

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His versatile guitar work bridged the gap between the raw aggression of early hardcore and the polished, anthemic style that defined 1990s skate punk, influencing generations of musicians who sought to balance speed with technical precision.

Portrait of Paul O'Neill
Paul O'Neill 1963

Paul O'Neill was born in Columbus, Ohio, in 1963.

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His father taught him to hate losing more than love winning. He'd throw his batting helmet after strikeouts. He'd punch water coolers. He'd slam his bat into the dugout rack so hard it would snap. George Steinbrenner loved it. The Yankees traded for him in 1993. He hit .300 or better in seven of his nine seasons in pinstripes. Four World Series rings. The right field crowd at Yankee Stadium chanted his name every at-bat. When he retired, they gave him a plaque in Monument Park. The helmet-thrower became a monument.

Portrait of José María Aznar
José María Aznar 1953

José María Aznar was born in Madrid in 1953.

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His grandfather was executed by Franco's forces during the Civil War. Aznar joined Franco's party anyway. He survived an ETA car bomb in 1995 — his armored car absorbed the blast meant to kill him. Three years later, he became Prime Minister. He privatized state companies, cut unemployment in half, and sent troops to Iraq without parliamentary approval. That last decision cost his party the next election.

Portrait of Jerry Chamberlain
Jerry Chamberlain 1952

Jerry Chamberlain pioneered the intersection of alternative rock and theological inquiry as a founding member of Daniel…

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Amos and The Swirling Eddies. His intricate guitar work and production style helped define the sound of the 1980s Christian alternative scene, pushing the genre toward experimental arrangements that challenged the era's standard musical conventions.

Portrait of James Brown
James Brown 1951

C.

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on February 25, 1951, and built a five-decade career as the most recognizable face in American sports broadcasting. Not the Godfather of Soul — the other James Brown. The distinction has been a running joke throughout his career, and football fans still Google "James Brown singer or sportscaster?" every Sunday during the NFL season. Brown played college basketball at Harvard, which gave him both the academic pedigree and the communication skills that would define his broadcasting career. He moved from local CBS affiliates to the network level and eventually became the anchor of The NFL Today on CBS and Fox NFL Sunday, the most-watched pregame shows in American television. His role on these programs was less analyst and more air traffic controller: managing panels of opinionated former players — Howie Long, Terry Bradshaw, Jimmy Johnson, Curt Menefee — who tend toward chaos without a steady hand. Brown has also anchored coverage of three Olympic Games, multiple NCAA Final Fours, and boxing events. His versatility across sports is unusual in an era of specialization. He won three Emmy Awards for broadcast journalism. His on-camera presence is defined by an unflappable calm and a refusal to participate in the shouting that characterizes most sports television. He lets the former players argue while he directs traffic. Behind the scenes, Brown has been an advocate for diversity in sports media, using his position to push for opportunities for Black journalists and commentators in an industry that has been slow to diversify its on-air talent.

Portrait of Néstor Kirchner
Néstor Kirchner 1950

Néstor Kirchner reshaped Argentine politics by steering the nation out of its 2001 economic collapse through aggressive…

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debt restructuring and a shift toward left-wing populism. As president from 2003 to 2007, he consolidated power within the Peronist movement, establishing a political dynasty that dominated the country’s governance for over a decade.

Portrait of Mick Miller
Mick Miller 1950

Mick Miller was born in 1950 in Manchester.

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He worked as a bricklayer for fifteen years before doing stand-up. His act was built on one-liners delivered in rapid fire — seven jokes per minute, sometimes more. He won New Faces in 1976 at age 26. His catchphrase was "What's up with that then?" He'd pause, wait for the laugh, then hit them with three more jokes before they stopped. He never slowed down.

Portrait of Emitt Rhodes
Emitt Rhodes 1950

Emitt Rhodes mastered the art of the one-man studio production, layering multi-instrumental pop melodies that…

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anticipated the bedroom-recording revolution. His 1970 self-titled debut remains a blueprint for DIY power-pop, proving that a single musician could craft lush, radio-ready arrangements entirely in isolation. He arrived in 1950, eventually influencing generations of indie artists who favor creative autonomy over traditional bands.

Portrait of Jean Todt
Jean Todt 1946

Jean Todt was born in Pierrefort, France, in 1946.

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His father ran a doctor's office. Todt became a rally co-driver, then team manager. He joined Ferrari in 1993 when they hadn't won a championship in 14 years. He hired Michael Schumacher. They won five consecutive titles. After Ferrari, he ran the FIA — global motorsport's governing body. He dated actress Michelle Yeoh for 19 years. They married in 2023. He was 77.

Portrait of George Harrison

George Harrison learned to play guitar on a bus.

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He and Paul McCartney rode the same bus to school in Liverpool, and Harrison practiced chords relentlessly, his fingers bleeding against the steel strings. Born on February 25, 1943, in Wavertree, Liverpool, he was the youngest Beatle and the most underestimated. He was 14 when he auditioned for the Quarrymen, the skiffle group John Lennon had formed, and Lennon initially thought he was too young. McCartney persuaded Lennon to let him in. Harrison's musical interests were broader than his bandmates'. He introduced the sitar to Western pop music on "Norwegian Wood" in 1965, an instrument he studied under Ravi Shankar in India. He wrote "Something," which Frank Sinatra called the greatest love song of the past fifty years, and "Here Comes the Sun," two of the most enduring songs in the Beatles catalog. His guitar work was distinctive: economical, melodic, and always in service of the song rather than personal display. The slide guitar on "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" was played by Eric Clapton, whom Harrison invited because he thought the other Beatles would take the recording more seriously with an outsider in the room. After the Beatles dissolved in 1970, Harrison released "All Things Must Pass," a triple album that had been building for years because Lennon and McCartney had dominated the Beatles' recording sessions, leaving Harrison little space for his own material. It became the best-selling solo album by any Beatle. He organized the Concert for Bangladesh in 1971, the first major charity concert in rock history. He co-founded HandMade Films, which produced "Monty Python's Life of Brian." He died of lung cancer on November 29, 2001, at age 58.

Portrait of Diane Baker
Diane Baker 1938

Diane Baker was born in Hollywood, California, in 1938.

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Her father was a stage actor. She started working at 17. By 19 she was opposite Gregory Peck in *The Diary of Anne Frank*. Then Hitchcock cast her in *Marnie* — she played the woman who knew Tippi Hedren's secret. She worked steadily for six decades. Never became a household name. But directors kept calling. She produced *The Silence of the Lambs*. That's the career: always there, always working, never needing to be famous.

Portrait of Wendy Beckett
Wendy Beckett 1930

Wendy Beckett spent 20 years in complete silence as a Carmelite nun before the BBC found her.

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She was 60, living in a trailer in Norfolk, and had never watched television. They asked her to host an art documentary. She said yes. Her first series drew 4 million viewers. She wore full habit, spoke directly to camera, and explained Caravaggio and Rothko like old friends. She became the most unlikely TV star of the 1990s.

Portrait of Christopher George
Christopher George 1929

Christopher George was born in Royal Oak, Michigan, in 1929.

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He spent a decade doing theater nobody remembers before landing the lead in *The Rat Patrol* — a World War II series about Americans in jeeps fighting Nazis in the desert. It ran two seasons and made him famous enough to work steadily for fifteen years. He specialized in disaster films and low-budget action. *The Poseidon Adventure* didn't need him, but it cast him anyway. He died at 54 of a heart attack while taping a TV pilot. His wife, who co-starred with him in several films, was with him when it happened.

Portrait of Ralph Stanley
Ralph Stanley 1927

Ralph Stanley was born in 1927 in the Virginia mountains, where his mother sang ballads brought over from Scotland two centuries before.

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He learned clawhammer banjo from her — the old way, downstroke only, no picks. His brother Carter played guitar. They formed the Stanley Brothers in 1946 and became bluegrass legends. Carter died in 1966. Ralph kept going for 50 more years. At 73, he sang "O Death" for the *O Brother, Where Art Thou?* soundtrack. He'd never recorded it before. It won a Grammy and introduced his voice — high, lonesome, ancient — to millions who'd never heard mountain music. He was still touring at 89.

Portrait of Sun Myung Moon
Sun Myung Moon 1920

Sun Myung Moon was born in what's now North Korea in 1920.

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He claimed Jesus appeared to him on a mountainside when he was 15 and told him to finish his work. He founded the Unification Church in 1954. By the 1970s, he was organizing mass weddings — thousands of couples married simultaneously, often strangers he'd matched himself. In 1982, he married 2,075 couples at Madison Square Garden in a single ceremony. His followers called him the True Father.

Portrait of Brenda Joyce
Brenda Joyce 1917

Brenda Joyce played Jane in five Tarzan films.

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She never wanted the role. RKO cast her after Maureen O'Sullivan quit, and Joyce spent four years swinging through studio jungle sets in a leather two-piece, acting opposite a former Olympic swimmer who couldn't remember his lines. She hated it. The films made millions. After the last one wrapped in 1949, she walked away from Hollywood entirely. She was 32. She spent the next sixty years in Santa Monica, refusing interviews, never watching the movies. She died at 92, outliving every other screen Jane by decades.

Portrait of Perry Miller
Perry Miller 1905

Perry Miller was born in Chicago in 1905.

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He dropped out of the University of Chicago, worked as an actor, then joined the merchant marine. At 23, standing watch on a freighter in the Congo River, he decided to write the intellectual history of America. He came home, finished his degree, and spent the next three decades doing exactly that. His two-volume work on the New England Mind made Puritanism a legitimate field of study. Nobody had taken it seriously before.

Portrait of Peter Llewelyn Davies
Peter Llewelyn Davies 1897

Peter Llewelyn Davies was born in London in 1897.

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He became the publisher of Daphne du Maurier and A.A. Milne. Before that, he was the boy who inspired Peter Pan. J.M. Barrie was his family's friend, then guardian after his parents died. Peter hated it. He called Barrie's obsession with him and his brothers "that terrible masterpiece." The character made him famous for something he never asked to be. He published books his whole adult life, trying to be known for his own work. At 63, he threw himself under a train. The newspapers called him "Peter Pan.

Portrait of John Foster Dulles
John Foster Dulles 1888

John Foster Dulles shaped the architecture of the Cold War as the 52nd U.

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S. Secretary of State, championing the policy of massive retaliation against the Soviet Union. His aggressive stance on containment and the expansion of global alliances defined American foreign policy throughout the 1950s, cementing a rigid bipolar world order that persisted for decades.

Portrait of Princess Alice of Battenberg
Princess Alice of Battenberg 1885

Princess Alice of Battenberg was born deaf.

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She learned to lip-read in three languages by watching people's mouths. Married a Greek prince, had five children, lost everything when the Greek monarchy fell. During the Nazi occupation of Athens, she hid a Jewish family in her home for over a year. When the Gestapo questioned her, she used her deafness as cover — pretended not to understand them. They left. After the war, she founded a nursing order and wore a nun's habit for the rest of her life. Her son became Prince Philip. She's buried in Jerusalem, where she wanted to be, honored as Righteous Among the Nations.

Portrait of Princess Alice of Battenberg
Princess Alice of Battenberg 1885

She was born deaf.

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Learned to lip-read in three languages by watching people's mouths. Married a Greek prince, had five children, founded a nursing order during the Balkan Wars. When the Nazis occupied Athens in 1943, she hid a Jewish family in her home for over a year. The Gestapo questioned her. She used her deafness as cover, pretending not to understand them. They left. After the war, she sold her jewelry to feed starving children. Gave everything away. Her son Philip found her living in a two-room apartment with no possessions. She died at Buckingham Palace wearing a nun's habit. Israel named her Righteous Among the Nations in 1994.

Portrait of José de San Martín
José de San Martín 1778

José de San Martín crossed the Andes with an army of 5,200 men in January 1817 — through mountain passes at 15,000 feet…

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in winter, with artillery and cavalry, in seventeen days. It was considered impossible. He liberated Chile immediately after arriving, then sailed north to free Peru. When his army and Simón Bolívar's finally met, they disagreed about the future so completely that San Martín simply left — withdrew from his command, went to Europe, and let Bolívar finish the work.

Portrait of Sir Hyde Parker
Sir Hyde Parker 1714

Sir Hyde Parker was born in 1714 into a family that expected him to command ships.

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He did. For 68 years. He fought in the War of Austrian Succession, the Seven Years' War, and the American Revolution. He captured French privateers in the Caribbean. He defended Jamaica against invasion. He died at sea in 1782, still an admiral, still commanding a squadron. His son, also named Hyde Parker, also became an admiral. His grandson too. Three generations, same name, same rank, same ocean.

Died on February 25

Portrait of Henry Kelly
Henry Kelly 2025

He hosted *Going for Gold* for nine years — the quiz show where contestants from across Europe competed for actual gold bars.

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Before that, he'd been a Fleet Street journalist. He covered the Troubles for *The Times*. Then he switched to breakfast television and became the voice people woke up to across Britain and Ireland. His radio show on Classic FM ran for two decades. He had that rare thing: a voice that made you feel like he was talking only to you, even when millions were listening. He never lost the curiosity of a reporter.

Portrait of Jane Reed
Jane Reed 2025

She ran *Woman's Own* in the 1970s when it had 2.

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She turned it from fashion and recipes into real journalism: domestic violence, equal pay, divorce law. Readers wrote 10,000 letters a week. She moved to *Woman* magazine, then became editorial director at IPC, overseeing dozens of titles. She trained a generation of editors who now run British media. Women's magazines used to be the place serious issues got discussed before Parliament touched them. Reed built that.

Portrait of Shirley Hughes
Shirley Hughes 2022

She wrote and illustrated over 200 children's books.

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She wrote and illustrated over 200 children's books. Fifty million copies sold. She drew ordinary British life — kids in wellies, washing on the line, corner shops in the rain. Her character Alfie wore hand-me-down jumpers and had actual tantrums. No talking animals. No magic. Just a toddler who couldn't tie his shoes and a little sister who took his things. She made the mundane worth drawing. Other illustrators did fantasy. Hughes did Tuesday.

Portrait of Alfred E. Mann
Alfred E. Mann 2016

Alfred Mann died on February 25, 2016.

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He'd built and sold seventeen medical device companies. Not one or two—seventeen. He started MiniMed, which made the first wearable insulin pump. Sold it to Medtronic for $3.7 billion. He founded Advanced Bionics, which made cochlear implants for the deaf. Sold that too. He gave away $1 billion to medical research before he died. He held more than 50 patents. He was 90 and still running a company. He said retirement was "a fate worse than death.

Portrait of Victor Watson
Victor Watson 2015

He ran Waddingtons, the company that made Monopoly in Britain.

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For decades, he decided which streets made it onto the UK board. He picked real London streets — Mayfair, Park Lane, Old Kent Road — but the rents and prices were his call. Millions of British families fought over properties he priced in a boardroom in Leeds. He also turned down the chance to buy the worldwide rights to Trivial Pursuit for £30,000 in 1982. It went on to sell 88 million copies. He called it the worst business decision of his life.

Portrait of Chokwe Lumumba
Chokwe Lumumba 2014

Chokwe Lumumba died seven months into his term as Jackson, Mississippi's mayor.

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Heart failure at 66. He'd spent decades as a civil rights attorney—defended Tupac Shakur, represented the Republic of New Afrika, sued Mississippi over its state flag. He ran for mayor on the most radical platform Jackson had seen: participatory budgeting, worker cooperatives, community land trusts. He called it building "the most radical city on the planet." He won with 87% of the vote in the general election. His son would later win the same office, running on the same vision. The movement didn't die with him.

Portrait of C. Everett Koop
C. Everett Koop 2013

C.

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Everett Koop died at 96, having outlived most of his critics. As Surgeon General under Reagan, he was supposed to stay quiet on AIDS. He didn't. He mailed an eight-page report to every household in America — 107 million copies explaining how HIV spread and how to prevent it. Conservative groups wanted him fired. Reagan kept him on. Koop called smoking "the chief preventable cause of death." Cigarette companies hated him too. He didn't care.

Portrait of Martha Stewart
Martha Stewart 2012

Not that Martha Stewart — the other one, who came first.

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She sang with big bands in the 1940s. She had a hit with "I'm in Love with a Wonderful Guy" from South Pacific. She appeared in dozens of films and TV shows through the 1970s. Then the other Martha Stewart became famous. For thirty years, people meeting her would pause, confused. She'd smile and say "I was Martha Stewart first." The domestic goddess built an empire. This Martha Stewart just kept working.

Portrait of Dick Davies
Dick Davies 2012

He played for the New York Knicks during the 1958-59 season — one of the few players ever to make an NBA roster without…

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He'd been working construction when a scout saw him in a pickup game. He appeared in 28 games that season, averaged 2.4 points, then never played professionally again. Back to construction. Most NBA careers end with injury or age. His ended with a choice. He walked away at 23.

Portrait of William Anderson
William Anderson 2007

William Anderson commanded the USS Nautilus under the North Pole in 1958 — the first ship to cross it submerged.

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They traveled 1,830 miles beneath the ice cap in four days. No communication with the surface. No GPS. Dead reckoning and a gyrocompass. They surfaced near Greenland. Anderson retired from the Navy at 43, then served four terms in Congress. He died in 2007. The Nautilus is now a museum in Connecticut, still floating.

Portrait of Peter Benenson
Peter Benenson 2005

Peter Benenson died on February 25, 2005.

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He'd founded Amnesty International forty-four years earlier after reading about two Portuguese students sentenced to seven years in prison for raising a toast to freedom. He was riding the London Tube when he read it. He got off at his stop furious, with no plan beyond writing a newspaper article called "The Forgotten Prisoners." Within a year, that article had become a movement in seven countries. By the time he died, Amnesty had freed tens of thousands of political prisoners in 150 countries. It started because he missed his stop on the Tube and stayed angry.

Portrait of Glenn T. Seaborg
Glenn T. Seaborg 1999

Glenn Seaborg died on February 25, 1999, after a six-month coma following a stroke.

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He'd discovered ten elements — more than anyone in history. Plutonium, americium, curium, berkelium, californium, einsteinium, fermium, mendelevium, nobelium, seaborgium. He got element 106 named after himself while he was still alive, the only person ever to have that happen. He'd worked on the Manhattan Project at 28. He held the patent on plutonium. After winning the Nobel Prize in 1951, he spent the next decade running the Atomic Energy Commission. Then he went back to Berkeley and kept discovering elements. He was 86.

Portrait of Theodor Svedberg
Theodor Svedberg 1971

Theodor Svedberg died on February 25, 1971.

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He'd won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1926 for inventing the ultracentrifuge — a machine that spins samples at 100,000 rotations per minute to separate molecules by weight. Before Svedberg, scientists argued whether proteins were real molecules or just clumps of smaller things. His machine proved they were real. It could measure their exact molecular weights. Every lab that studies proteins, viruses, or DNA today uses descendants of his invention. He built the first one in a Swedish basement in 1923.

Portrait of John McGraw
John McGraw 1934

John McGraw managed the New York Giants for 30 years and won 10 pennants.

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He died of cancer and uremia on February 25, 1934, at 60. He'd been forced to retire the previous June. His players called him "Little Napoleon" — five-foot-seven, 155 pounds, and he'd fine you for missing a sign. He invented the hit-and-run. He platooned players by handedness decades before anyone else. He fought umpires so often the league assigned him a personal fine schedule. Babe Ruth called him the smartest man in baseball. McGraw never saw Ruth play for the Yankees — he refused to watch them.

Portrait of Paul Reuter
Paul Reuter 1899

Paul Reuter died in Nice on February 25, 1899.

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He'd built the first international news agency by strapping newspapers to pigeons and flying them between Brussels and Aachen. That was 1850. The telegraph existed but had gaps in the line. Reuter saw the gap as an opportunity. Within a decade, his agency broke the news of Lincoln's assassination to Europe before official channels. By the time he died, "Reuters" was how the world learned what was happening. He started by trusting birds to carry stock prices faster than trains. He ended up defining speed itself.

Portrait of Henrik Hertz
Henrik Hertz 1870

Henrik Hertz died in Copenhagen in 1870.

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He'd spent decades writing plays nobody remembers now, but one poem — "King René's Daughter" — became an opera that Tchaikovsky loved. He wrote it in 1845. Within ten years it had been translated into five languages and adapted for stages across Europe. He was famous for exactly one thing. But here's what matters: he proved you could write serious literature in Danish when everyone said the language was too small, too provincial, too late to the game. Before him, Danish writers switched to German if they wanted to be read. After him, they didn't have to.

Portrait of Daoguang Emperor of China
Daoguang Emperor of China 1850

The Daoguang Emperor died on February 25, 1850, leaving China dramatically weaker than he had found it when he ascended…

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the throne thirty years earlier. His reign was defined by a single catastrophe: the Opium War with Britain, which exposed the Qing dynasty's military obsolescence and shattered the empire's illusion of self-sufficiency. Daoguang had initially taken a hard line against opium, appointing the zealous Commissioner Lin Zexu to suppress the trade in Canton. Lin destroyed 20,000 chests of British opium, provoking the war that followed. The Qing military, still fighting with matchlock muskets and war junks, was humiliated by British steamships and modern artillery. The Treaty of Nanking in 1842 cost China five treaty ports, $21 million in silver, and the island of Hong Kong. It was the first of what the Chinese would call the "unequal treaties" that carved away sovereignty for the next century. Daoguang responded to the disaster with austerity. He wore patched robes, banned luxuries at court, and slashed palace budgets. The gestures were sincere but futile. The treasury had been drained by the war and by decades of declining tax revenue. The bureaucracy was riddled with corruption that personal frugality at the top couldn't fix. On his deathbed, Daoguang chose his fourth son as successor over the more obvious heir apparent. That son became the Xianfeng Emperor, who would face the Taiping Rebellion within a year of taking the throne. The rebellion would rage for fourteen years and kill an estimated fifty million people, making it the deadliest civil war in human history. Daoguang died before the worst of what his failures had made possible.

Portrait of Christopher Wren
Christopher Wren 1723

Christopher Wren designed fifty-two London churches after the Great Fire of 1666 burned the old city to the ground.

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St. Paul's Cathedral took thirty-five years. He lived to see it finished. He was buried inside it. The inscription on his memorial, written by his son, reads: If you seek his monument, look around you. He was also a mathematician and astronomer who built the first weather station and designed a blood transfusion device before he ever drew a building.

Holidays & observances

The Benedictine nun who spent 60 years behind convent walls praying for Malta's conversion is celebrated today.

The Benedictine nun who spent 60 years behind convent walls praying for Malta's conversion is celebrated today. Maria Adeodata Pisani entered the monastery at 16 in 1820. She never left. Malta was 98% Catholic already — she was praying for depth, not numbers. She wore chains under her habit. She slept three hours a night. She spent the rest on her knees. Her sisters found her levitating during prayer twice. After her death in 1855, her body didn't decay for months in Malta's heat. The Vatican beatified her in 2001. Malta made her feast day a public holiday in 2017, the first time they'd done that for a nun.

South Korea's presidents serve exactly one five-year term.

South Korea's presidents serve exactly one five-year term. No exceptions, no extensions, no second chances. The rule came after Park Chung-hee ran the country for 18 years until his own intelligence chief shot him at dinner. Now every president knows their expiration date from day one. Four have been arrested after leaving office. One jumped off a cliff. The single term was supposed to prevent dictatorship. It just compressed the corruption.

Georgia marks Soviet Occupation Day on February 25th, the anniversary of the Red Army's invasion in 1921.

Georgia marks Soviet Occupation Day on February 25th, the anniversary of the Red Army's invasion in 1921. The Soviets crossed the border claiming they were "liberating" Georgia from itself — the country had been independent for exactly three years. Stalin was Georgian. He helped plan the takeover of his own homeland. Georgia lost 70 years. The holiday was established in 2010, two decades after independence, because some wounds take time to name.

Æthelberht of Kent died on February 24, 616.

Æthelberht of Kent died on February 24, 616. He was the first English king to convert to Christianity. Augustine of Canterbury baptized him in 597. He gave Augustine land to build Canterbury Cathedral. He wrote the first laws in English instead of Latin. Ninety laws, mostly about compensation for injuries. If you knocked out someone's front tooth, you paid six shillings. A back tooth was four. He married a Christian princess from Paris before he converted. She brought her own bishop with her. That marriage made England Christian.

Kuwait's National Day marks February 25, 1961 — the day Sheikh Abdullah Al-Salim Al-Sabah became emir.

Kuwait's National Day marks February 25, 1961 — the day Sheikh Abdullah Al-Salim Al-Sabah became emir. Not independence. That came seven months later. But this date mattered more to Kuwaitis because it ended a treaty that gave Britain control of their foreign policy since 1899. The country had been self-governing internally for decades. They had oil wealth, a parliament, a welfare state. They just couldn't speak for themselves internationally. When Abdullah took power, he immediately began negotiations to end that arrangement. By June, they were sovereign. The celebration isn't about breaking free from colonizers. It's about the leader who decided they were ready.

Walburga was an English missionary nun who died on February 25, 779.

Walburga was an English missionary nun who died on February 25, 779. Germans celebrate her feast day on May 1st — six decades after her death, that's when her relics were moved to a new church. The timing matters. May 1st was already Walpurgis Night, an old pagan festival when spirits supposedly roamed free. The Church layered a saint's day over it. Now the same night honors both a devout healer and the witches' sabbath. Her name became Walpurgisnacht. Goethe used it in Faust. The witch connection stuck harder than the saint.

Eastern Orthodox and traditional Roman Catholic churches honor Saint Tarasius today, the eighth-century Patriarch of …

Eastern Orthodox and traditional Roman Catholic churches honor Saint Tarasius today, the eighth-century Patriarch of Constantinople. He navigated the turbulent iconoclastic controversies by presiding over the Second Council of Nicaea, which formally restored the veneration of religious images. His leadership ended decades of theological division regarding the role of iconography in Christian worship.

John Roberts was a slave who became a priest.

John Roberts was a slave who became a priest. The Episcopal Church ordained him in 1887 — one of their first Black priests. He spent 40 years serving Black communities in North Carolina and South Carolina, building churches where none existed. The church now commemorates him on September 4th. His ordination came 22 years after the Civil War ended, when most denominations still refused Black clergy. He died in 1920. His churches are still standing.

The plum blossoms at Kitano Tenman-gū bloom before the cherry trees.

The plum blossoms at Kitano Tenman-gū bloom before the cherry trees. That matters because plums were the favorite of Sugawara no Michizane, the exiled scholar who became the shrine's deity. When he was banished from Kyoto in 901, legend says his beloved plum tree flew 180 miles overnight to join him. The February festival celebrates his connection to learning — students still come to pray before exams. Tea ceremony masters serve outdoors under the branches, using bowls made by living national treasures. The plums bloom first because Michizane died in exile, and the trees couldn't wait.

Hungary remembers February 25, 1947.

Hungary remembers February 25, 1947. That's when the Communist Party arrested Béla Kovács, secretary general of the Smallholders' Party, which had won 57% of the vote in free elections. Soviet officers dragged him to a military truck. He disappeared into the Gulag for eight years. Within months, the Communists controlled everything. They hadn't won an election. They didn't need to. Hungary marks this day because the dictatorship didn't start with tanks or war. It started with one arrest, and nobody stopped it.

People Power Day marks February 25, 1986 — the day millions of Filipinos stood on a highway and refused to move.

People Power Day marks February 25, 1986 — the day millions of Filipinos stood on a highway and refused to move. Ferdinand Marcos had ruled for 20 years. He'd just stolen another election. A defense minister defected. Two generals barricaded themselves in military camps. Marcos sent tanks. But nuns knelt in front of the treads. Families brought food to the soldiers. Radio stations broadcast where the tanks were heading so people could block them. For four days, EDSA highway became a human wall. The tanks never fired. Marcos fled to Hawaii. The Philippines calls it the revolution that smiled.

Revolution Day marks the 1980 military coup that ended democratic rule in Suriname.

Revolution Day marks the 1980 military coup that ended democratic rule in Suriname. Sergeant Dési Bouterse led sixteen soldiers into the capital and seized power. He promised to fight corruption. Instead, his regime executed fifteen opposition leaders in a fort two years later. The Netherlands suspended aid. The economy collapsed. Civil war followed. Bouterse stayed in power, on and off, for decades. He was convicted of murder in 2019. The holiday still celebrates the day he took over.

The Eastern Orthodox Church celebrates different saints on February 25 depending on where you are.

The Eastern Orthodox Church celebrates different saints on February 25 depending on where you are. In Greece, it's Saint Tarasios of Constantinople, who became patriarch in 784 despite being a layman — he got ordained and elevated in a single week. In Russia, it's often Saint Alexis, who lived as a beggar under his parents' stairs for 17 years. They didn't recognize him. Same faith, same calendar, different saints. Geography determines who's holy today.