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February 15 in History

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Maine Explodes in Havana: War With Spain Begins
1898Event

Maine Explodes in Havana: War With Spain Begins

The forward magazines of the USS Maine detonated at 9:40 PM on February 15, 1898, while the battleship sat at anchor in Havana Harbor. The explosion killed 260 of the 355 men aboard, most of them enlisted sailors sleeping in the forward berthing areas. The cause was never definitively established. A naval court of inquiry blamed an external mine, but modern forensic analysis suggests an internal coal fire ignited the adjacent ammunition magazine. The actual cause mattered far less than the political effect. 'Remember the Maine, to Hell with Spain' became the rallying cry of the yellow press, particularly Joseph Pulitzer's New York World and William Randolph Hearst's New York Journal, which published inflammatory coverage that made war inevitable. President McKinley, who privately opposed war, buckled under public pressure. Congress declared war on Spain on April 25, launching the conflict that transformed America into an imperial power.

Famous Birthdays

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1564–1642

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1909–2010

Charles Lewis Tiffany

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Cyrus McCormick

Cyrus McCormick

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James R. Schlesinger

James R. Schlesinger

1929–2014

Kevin McCarthy

Kevin McCarthy

1965–2010

Niklaus Wirth

Niklaus Wirth

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Sara Jane Moore

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d. 2025

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Historical Events

Justinian II ordered the public execution of his predecessors Leontios and Tiberios III in the Hippodrome of Constantinople in 706, forcing them to lie prostrate before him while he rested his feet on their necks before the crowd. He then had them dragged to the Hippodrome's execution grounds and beheaded. Justinian had been deposed and mutilated in 695, his nose slit by Leontios, who was himself overthrown by Tiberios in 698. Justinian spent a decade in exile before returning with Bulgar mercenaries to reclaim his throne in 705. His brutal vengeance against anyone who had supported his overthrow, combined with erratic policy decisions and punitive taxation, alienated virtually every faction in the empire. Within five years, his own generals rebelled. Justinian was captured, beheaded, and his six-year-old son was murdered to prevent any future Heraclian restoration.
706

Justinian II ordered the public execution of his predecessors Leontios and Tiberios III in the Hippodrome of Constantinople in 706, forcing them to lie prostrate before him while he rested his feet on their necks before the crowd. He then had them dragged to the Hippodrome's execution grounds and beheaded. Justinian had been deposed and mutilated in 695, his nose slit by Leontios, who was himself overthrown by Tiberios in 698. Justinian spent a decade in exile before returning with Bulgar mercenaries to reclaim his throne in 705. His brutal vengeance against anyone who had supported his overthrow, combined with erratic policy decisions and punitive taxation, alienated virtually every faction in the empire. Within five years, his own generals rebelled. Justinian was captured, beheaded, and his six-year-old son was murdered to prevent any future Heraclian restoration.

The forward magazines of the USS Maine detonated at 9:40 PM on February 15, 1898, while the battleship sat at anchor in Havana Harbor. The explosion killed 260 of the 355 men aboard, most of them enlisted sailors sleeping in the forward berthing areas. The cause was never definitively established. A naval court of inquiry blamed an external mine, but modern forensic analysis suggests an internal coal fire ignited the adjacent ammunition magazine. The actual cause mattered far less than the political effect. 'Remember the Maine, to Hell with Spain' became the rallying cry of the yellow press, particularly Joseph Pulitzer's New York World and William Randolph Hearst's New York Journal, which published inflammatory coverage that made war inevitable. President McKinley, who privately opposed war, buckled under public pressure. Congress declared war on Spain on April 25, launching the conflict that transformed America into an imperial power.
1898

The forward magazines of the USS Maine detonated at 9:40 PM on February 15, 1898, while the battleship sat at anchor in Havana Harbor. The explosion killed 260 of the 355 men aboard, most of them enlisted sailors sleeping in the forward berthing areas. The cause was never definitively established. A naval court of inquiry blamed an external mine, but modern forensic analysis suggests an internal coal fire ignited the adjacent ammunition magazine. The actual cause mattered far less than the political effect. 'Remember the Maine, to Hell with Spain' became the rallying cry of the yellow press, particularly Joseph Pulitzer's New York World and William Randolph Hearst's New York Journal, which published inflammatory coverage that made war inevitable. President McKinley, who privately opposed war, buckled under public pressure. Congress declared war on Spain on April 25, launching the conflict that transformed America into an imperial power.

Lieutenant General Arthur Percival surrendered Singapore to the Japanese on February 15, 1942, handing over approximately 80,000 British, Australian, and Indian troops in what Winston Churchill called 'the worst disaster and largest capitulation in British history.' The defeat was a catastrophe of overconfidence. British commanders had assumed the Malay Peninsula's dense jungle was impassable; Japanese forces bicycled through it in sixty-five days. The 'fortress' of Singapore had its heavy guns pointed seaward, useless against a land assault from the north. Japanese General Tomoyuki Yamashita, outnumbered nearly three to one, bluffed Percival into surrendering by demanding it in a face-to-face meeting, hiding the fact that his troops were low on ammunition. The fall of Singapore shattered the myth of European invincibility in Asia, emboldening independence movements across Southeast Asia that would dismantle the British, French, and Dutch colonial empires within two decades.
1942

Lieutenant General Arthur Percival surrendered Singapore to the Japanese on February 15, 1942, handing over approximately 80,000 British, Australian, and Indian troops in what Winston Churchill called 'the worst disaster and largest capitulation in British history.' The defeat was a catastrophe of overconfidence. British commanders had assumed the Malay Peninsula's dense jungle was impassable; Japanese forces bicycled through it in sixty-five days. The 'fortress' of Singapore had its heavy guns pointed seaward, useless against a land assault from the north. Japanese General Tomoyuki Yamashita, outnumbered nearly three to one, bluffed Percival into surrendering by demanding it in a face-to-face meeting, hiding the fact that his troops were low on ammunition. The fall of Singapore shattered the myth of European invincibility in Asia, emboldening independence movements across Southeast Asia that would dismantle the British, French, and Dutch colonial empires within two decades.

Richard Feynman diagnosed the Challenger disaster by dropping a piece of O-ring into a glass of ice water during a televised Senate hearing. The rubber stiffened. That was the whole presentation. He'd done it alone, after the official investigation kept steering around the answer. He won the Nobel Prize for work so abstract it still resists plain explanation. What he couldn't stand was pretending not to know something when you did know it.
1988

Richard Feynman diagnosed the Challenger disaster by dropping a piece of O-ring into a glass of ice water during a televised Senate hearing. The rubber stiffened. That was the whole presentation. He'd done it alone, after the official investigation kept steering around the answer. He won the Nobel Prize for work so abstract it still resists plain explanation. What he couldn't stand was pretending not to know something when you did know it.

Twenty mushers and their sled dog teams completed a 674-mile relay across frozen Alaska to deliver diphtheria antitoxin to the isolated town of Nome, saving the community from a deadly epidemic. Lead dog Balto became a national hero, immortalized with a statue in Central Park, and the feat inspired the annual Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race.
1925

Twenty mushers and their sled dog teams completed a 674-mile relay across frozen Alaska to deliver diphtheria antitoxin to the isolated town of Nome, saving the community from a deadly epidemic. Lead dog Balto became a national hero, immortalized with a statue in Central Park, and the feat inspired the annual Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race.

2000

A failed steam generator at Indian Point II nuclear power plant vented a small amount of radioactive steam into the air north of New York City. Though the release posed no immediate health risk, the incident reignited public debate over nuclear safety in one of America's most densely populated regions and contributed to the plant's eventual permanent shutdown.

590

Khosrau II took the Persian throne at 23 after his father was murdered. He'd spend the next 38 years building the largest empire Persia had seen in centuries — conquering Egypt, Jerusalem, and reaching the gates of Constantinople. His treasury held enough gold to mint coins for a generation. Then he lost it all in eight years. A general named Heraclius destroyed his armies, took back everything, and Khosrau was executed by his own son. The collapse was faster than the rise.

1002

Arduin of Ivrea became King of Italy because the German emperor couldn't be bothered to show up. Otto III had died suddenly at 21, leaving no heir, and Italy's nobles weren't waiting around for the next German to claim their throne. They crowned Arduin at Pavia in 1002—a local margrave who'd already been fighting the German-appointed bishops for years. He lasted three years. Henry II marched south with an army, and most of Arduin's supporters switched sides before the battle even started. Arduin died in a monastery. Italy wouldn't have another Italian king for 859 years.

1214

King John of England landed an invasion force at La Rochelle to reclaim territories lost to Philip II of France, opening the southern front of the Anglo-French War. The campaign ultimately failed to recover the lost Angevin lands, and John's costly military adventures abroad drained the English treasury, fueling the baronial unrest that forced him to seal Magna Carta the following year.

1493

Columbus wrote his America letter while still at sea, addressed to nobody in particular. He described gold rivers that didn't exist, docile natives who'd make excellent slaves, and spices he couldn't identify. It was printed in nine cities within months — Europe's first viral marketing campaign. He'd found islands, not Asia. He knew it. The letter claimed otherwise. Every subsequent voyage tried to make the letter true.

1690

Constantin Cantemir signed a treaty in Sibiu that Moldavia couldn't honor. The Prince promised Habsburg troops, supplies, and safe passage through his territory to fight the Ottomans. But Moldavia was an Ottoman vassal state. The Ottomans had installed him. They could remove him. He was promising to betray the empire that controlled his throne. The treaty stayed secret for good reason. When the Ottomans eventually discovered similar dealings by his son Dimitrie thirty years later, they abolished Moldavian autonomy entirely. The principality lost the right to choose its own rulers for over a century. Constantin was betting the Habsburgs would win quickly enough to protect him. They didn't.

1798

French troops marched into Rome on February 10, 1798. Five days later, the Pope's thousand-year temporal power ended with a proclamation. General Louis Alexandre Berthier — Napoleon's chief of staff, not even the main commander — declared Rome a republic. Pope Pius VI was 81 years old. The French gave him three days to leave. He died in French captivity eighteen months later, in Valence, never having returned. The Papal States had governed central Italy since 756. They wouldn't return to full power until 1815, and even then, never the same. Napoleon's army toppled a millennium of papal rule as a side project between bigger campaigns.

1852

The Helsinki Cathedral took 30 years to build and opened empty. No congregation. Finland was under Russian rule, and Tsar Nicholas I wanted a statement — a massive neoclassical dome visible from the sea, announcing imperial power. The architect, Carl Ludvig Engel, died before it was finished. When it finally opened in 1852, it was a Lutheran church named for an Orthodox saint. After independence in 1917, they dropped "St. Nicholas" entirely. Now it's just "Helsinki Cathedral" — the empire's symbol, stripped of the empire.

1862

Grant nearly lost Fort Donelson before he won it. Confederate General John B. Floyd broke through Union lines on February 15, 1862 — had an open escape route to Nashville with 12,000 men. Then he hesitated. Called a council of war. Argued for hours. By morning, Grant had reinforced the gap. Floyd fled by steamboat before dawn, taking two regiments with him. His second-in-command also escaped. The third officer, Simon Buckner, was left to surrender 13,000 men. Grant's terms: "No terms except unconditional and immediate surrender." It made him famous. Floyd died eighteen months later, disgraced and forgotten. Grant became president.

1870

Stevens Institute of Technology opened in Hoboken with money from a single family — Edwin Stevens left his entire fortune to build an engineering school. His will specified mechanical engineering as the core program. In 1870, no American college offered a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering. Students learned Latin and philosophy, not machine design. Stevens changed that. Within a decade, MIT and Cornell copied the model. American industry needed engineers who could actually build things, not just theorize about them.

Fun Facts

Zodiac Sign

Aquarius

Jan 20 -- Feb 18

Air sign. Independent, original, and humanitarian.

Birthstone

Amethyst

Purple

Symbolizes wisdom, clarity, and peace of mind.

Next Birthday

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days until February 15

Quote of the Day

“In the sciences, the authority of thousands of opinions is not worth as much as one tiny spark of reason in an individual man.”

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