1478 | | George, the Duke of Clarence, who had opposed his brother Edward IV, is murdered in the Tower of London. |
1688 | | Quakers in Germantown, Pa. adopt the first formal antislavery resolution in America. |
1813 | | Czar Alexander enters Warsaw at the head of his Army. |
1861 | | Victor Emmanuel II becomes the first King of Italy. |
1861 | | Jefferson F. Davis is inaugurated as the Confederacy‘s provisional president at a ceremony held in Montgomery, Ala. |
1865 | | Union troops force the Confederates to abandon Fort Anderson, N.C. |
1878 | | The bitter and bloody Lincoln County War begins with the murder of Billy the Kid‘s mentor, Englishman rancher John Tunstall. |
1885 | | The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain, is published in New York. |
1907 | | 600,000 tons of grain are sent to Russia to relieve the famine there. |
1920 | | Vuillemin and Chalus complete their first flight over the Sahara Desert. |
1932 | | Manchurian independence is formally declared. |
1935 | | Rome reports sending troops to Italian Somalia. |
1939 | | The Golden Gate Exposition opens in San Francisco. |
1943 | | German General Erwin Rommel takes three towns in Tunisia, North Africa. |
1944 | | The U.S. Army and Marines invade Eniwetok Atoll in the Pacific. |
1945 | | U.S. Marines storm ashore at Iwo Jima. |
1954 | | East and West Berlin drop thousands of propaganda leaflets on each other after the end of a month long truce. |
1962 | | Robert F. Kennedy says that U.S. troops will stay in Vietnam until Communism is defeated. |
1964 | | The United States cuts military aid to five nations in reprisal for having trade relations with Cuba. |
1967 | | The National Art Gallery in Washington agrees to buy a Da Vinci for a record $5 million. |
1968 | | Three U.S. pilots that were held by the Vietnamese arrive in Washington. |
1972 | | The California Supreme Court voids the death penalty. |
1974 | | Randolph Hearst is to give $2 million in free food for the poor in order to open talks for his daughter Patty. |
1982 | | Mexico devalues the peso by 30 percent to fight an economic slide. |
Born on February 18 |
1516 | | Queen Mary I, also known as Bloody Mary for her persecution of Protestants. |
1795 | | George Peabody, U.S. merchant and philanthropist. |
1848 | | Louis Comfort Tiffany, glassware artist and designer. |
1859 | | Shalom Aleichem, Yiddish author. |
1862 | | Charles M. Schwab, “Boy Wonder” of the steel industry. President of both U.S. Steel and Bethlehem Steel. |
1892 | | Wendell Wilkie, Presidential candidate against President Franklin Roosevelt. |
1909 | | Wallace Stegner, Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist (Angle of Repose). |
1922 | | Helen Gurley Brown, editor of Cosmopolitan magazine. |
1929 | | Len Deighton, English spy writer (The Ipcress File). |
1931 | | Toni Morrison, Nobel laureate and Pulitzer Prize-winning author (The Bluest Eye, Beloved). |
1934 | | Audre Lord, poe |
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