Today In History
February 18 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Yoko Ono, Alessandro Volta, and John Hughes.

Jefferson Davis Inaugurated: The Confederacy Begins
Jefferson Davis accepted the provisional presidency of the Confederate States of America on February 18, 1861, six weeks before Abraham Lincoln's inauguration. His acceptance speech in Montgomery, Alabama, struck a conciliatory tone, expressing hope for peace while asserting the South's constitutional right to secede. Davis was a West Point graduate, Mexican War hero, former US Secretary of War, and one of the most experienced politicians in the South. He would have preferred a military command. The Confederate constitution limited the president to a single six-year term, a deliberate rejection of what Southerners viewed as the corrupting influence of reelection politics. Davis spent the next four years struggling with the same fundamental problem: the Confederacy lacked the industrial capacity, manpower, and naval resources to sustain a prolonged war against the Union. His micromanagement of military operations and bitter feuds with generals like Joseph Johnston and P.G.T. Beauregard further undermined the war effort.
Famous Birthdays
b. 1933
1745–1827
1950–2009
b. 1965
1931–2019
Bidzina Ivanishvili
b. 1956
Chaitanya Mahaprabhu
b. 1486
Charles M. Schwab
b. 1862
George Kennedy
1925–2016
Ramakrishna
1836–1886
Audre Lorde
1934–1992
Changmin
b. 1988
Historical Events
Jefferson Davis accepted the provisional presidency of the Confederate States of America on February 18, 1861, six weeks before Abraham Lincoln's inauguration. His acceptance speech in Montgomery, Alabama, struck a conciliatory tone, expressing hope for peace while asserting the South's constitutional right to secede. Davis was a West Point graduate, Mexican War hero, former US Secretary of War, and one of the most experienced politicians in the South. He would have preferred a military command. The Confederate constitution limited the president to a single six-year term, a deliberate rejection of what Southerners viewed as the corrupting influence of reelection politics. Davis spent the next four years struggling with the same fundamental problem: the Confederacy lacked the industrial capacity, manpower, and naval resources to sustain a prolonged war against the Union. His micromanagement of military operations and bitter feuds with generals like Joseph Johnston and P.G.T. Beauregard further undermined the war effort.
He was eighty-eight when he died, still working on St. Peter's Basilica. Michelangelo had spent sixty years reshaping Western art — the Pietà carved before he turned twenty-five, the Sistine ceiling painted flat on his back over four years, David standing seventeen feet tall in Florence's central square. He thought of himself as a sculptor. Painting was something he did reluctantly. The most influential painter of the Renaissance considered it his second skill.
Clyde Tombaugh was a 24-year-old Kansas farm boy without a college degree when he discovered Pluto on February 18, 1930, by comparing photographic plates taken weeks apart through the 13-inch telescope at Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. Percival Lowell had predicted the existence of a 'Planet X' beyond Neptune based on gravitational calculations that later proved erroneous. Tombaugh found Pluto anyway, through sheer diligence: he spent months systematically photographing the sky and comparing plates by hand using a blink comparator. The discovery made global headlines and prompted an 11-year-old English girl named Venetia Burney to suggest the name Pluto, after the Roman god of the underworld. Pluto was classified as the ninth planet for 76 years until the International Astronomical Union reclassified it as a 'dwarf planet' in 2006, a demotion that remains controversial among both the public and some astronomers. Tombaugh died in 1997; his ashes flew aboard the New Horizons probe that passed Pluto in 2015.
Martin Luther didn't intend to split Christianity. He nailed his Ninety-Five Theses to the door of a church in Wittenberg in 1517 as an academic debate invitation — the standard way to propose scholarly argument. A printer got hold of them, translated them from Latin into German, and distributed them across the Holy Roman Empire in weeks. Luther was shocked by the response. He died in Eisleben in 1546, the same town where he'd been born. By then, half of Europe had followed him out of Rome.
British troops suffered their heaviest single-day casualties of the Second Boer War on Bloody Sunday, the opening assault of the Battle of Paardeberg. Frontal charges against entrenched Boer positions proved catastrophic, but the subsequent siege forced General Piet Cronje's surrender nine days later — the first major British victory after months of demoralizing defeats.
Frederick II got Jerusalem back by speaking Arabic with the Sultan over dinner. No battle. No papal blessing — the Pope had excommunicated him. Al-Kamil and Frederick exchanged philosophy texts and geometry problems. They signed a ten-year truce in 1229. Christians got Jerusalem, Nazareth, Bethlehem. Muslims kept the Dome of the Rock. Both sides were furious. The Pope called it blasphemy. Islamic scholars called al-Kamil a traitor. It worked anyway. For exactly ten years.
George, Duke of Clarence, drowned in a barrel of wine. His older brother, King Edward IV, had him convicted of treason — the third time George had switched sides in England's civil war. The execution was private, at the Tower of London, and George got to choose the method. He picked malmsey, a sweet imported wine. His body was never shown. Shakespeare later made the story famous, but the wine barrel was real. Even medieval England thought it was bizarre.
The Spanish fleet caught them off Cornwall in 1637. Twenty ships gone — half the convoy. England and Spain weren't even at war. The Dutch were fighting Spain, England was neutral, but Spanish commanders didn't care. They needed the cargo and the statement. England's navy, supposedly protecting these waters, did nothing. Parliament exploded. Charles I had been cutting naval funding for years. This raid, more than any policy debate, convinced England it needed a real fleet again.
René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, missed the Mississippi River by 400 miles. He meant to build his colony at the river's mouth. Instead he landed at Matagorda Bay in what's now Texas. He built Fort St. Louis anyway. France claimed the entire region based on this mistake. The fort lasted three years before disease and Karankawa raids destroyed it. La Salle was murdered by his own men. Spain found the ruins and panicked into colonizing Texas themselves.
Pakubuwono II needed a new capital. His old one, Kartasura, had been sacked by Chinese rebels and Madurese mercenaries. The palace was burned. The sacred regalia was stolen. So in 1745, he moved his court fifteen kilometers east to a village on the Bengawan Solo River. He called it Surakarta — "the brave city." The kingdom split seventeen years later, but Surakarta survived. Today it's still Java's cultural heartland, home to the oldest palace still inhabited by a sultan's descendants. The city born from a sacking outlasted the kingdom it was built to save.
Captain Thomas Shirley sailed for West Africa's Gold Coast in 1781 with orders to seize Dutch forts while the Netherlands was distracted by war in Europe. The Dutch had thirteen trading posts there. Shirley took them in six weeks. The forts controlled access to gold and enslaved people — Britain wanted both. The Fourth Anglo-Dutch War gets forgotten because it happened during the American Revolution. But it permanently shifted who controlled African trade routes. The Dutch never got their forts back.
Vermont governed itself for 14 years before Congress let it join. It had its own constitution, its own currency, its own postal service. It negotiated with Britain and France. New York claimed Vermont's land and blocked its admission — Vermont had been carved from New York's territory without permission. The dispute ended when Vermont paid New York $30,000. On March 4, 1791, it became the fourteenth state. First new state after the original thirteen. Also the first state to ban slavery in its constitution and allow men without property to vote. The republic that paid its way in.
The Know-Nothings picked a former president who'd never won an election. Millard Fillmore had inherited the job when Zachary Taylor died in office. The party's real name was the American Party, but everyone called them Know-Nothings because members were supposed to say "I know nothing" when asked about their secret meetings. They wanted to ban Catholics and immigrants from holding office. They'd won 52 seats in Congress two years earlier without anyone seeing it coming. Fillmore won one state in the general election. Maryland. The party collapsed within four years, destroyed by the slavery question they'd tried to ignore.
Victor Emmanuel II became King of Italy in 1861, ruling a country that didn't include Rome. The capital was in Florence. The Pope controlled central Italy with French troops protecting him. Venice belonged to Austria. Sicily had been independent nine months earlier. He was king of a patchwork that wouldn't be whole for another decade. His actual title was "King of Italy by the grace of God and the will of the nation" — because nobody could agree on which mattered more.
Sherman's troops burned Columbia, South Carolina, on February 17, 1865. The State House caught fire — whether from Union soldiers or retreating Confederates, nobody knows. What's certain: South Carolina had started the war. It was the first state to secede. Fort Sumter was in Charleston Harbor. Sherman's men knew this. The fire left bronze stars marking where shells hit the building. They're still there. South Carolina kept them as monuments.
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
--
days until February 18
Quote of the Day
“Lead the life that will make you kindly and friendly to everyone about you, and you will be surprised what a happy life you will lead.”
Share Your Birthday
Create a beautiful birthday card with events and famous birthdays for February 18.
Create Birthday CardExplore Nearby Dates
Popular Dates
Explore more about February 18 in history. See the full date page for all events, browse February, or look up another birthday. Play history games or talk to historical figures.