Today In History logo TIH

Today In History

February 21 in History

Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: John Lewis, Tsar Peter III of Russia, and Antonio López de Santa Anna.

Malcolm X Assassinated: Civil Rights Movement Shocked
1965Event

Malcolm X Assassinated: Civil Rights Movement Shocked

Three gunmen opened fire on Malcolm X as he began speaking at the Audubon Ballroom in Upper Manhattan on February 21, 1965. Twenty-one shotgun pellets and bullet wounds killed him at age 39. Talmadge Hayer was tackled by the audience and beaten before police arrested him. Two other men, Norman 3X Butler and Thomas 15X Johnson, were convicted despite consistent alibis and Hayer's repeated testimony that they were innocent and that four other Nation of Islam members from a Newark mosque had participated. In 2021, a 22-month investigation by the Manhattan District Attorney exonerated Butler and Johnson, finding that both the FBI and NYPD had withheld evidence that would have cleared them at trial. The FBI had infiltrated Malcolm's security detail and was aware of assassination threats but did nothing to protect him. The case exposed how federal surveillance of Black leaders actively enabled rather than prevented violence against them.

Famous Birthdays

John Lewis
John Lewis

1940–2001

Antonio López de Santa Anna

Antonio López de Santa Anna

1794–1876

Hubert de Givenchy

Hubert de Givenchy

b. 1927

Jeanne Calment

Jeanne Calment

1875–1997

Robert Mugabe

Robert Mugabe

d. 2019

Seo Taiji

Seo Taiji

b. 1972

Abe no Seimei

Abe no Seimei

921–1005

Douglas Bader

Douglas Bader

d. 1982

Henrik Dam

Henrik Dam

d. 1976

Jack Coleman

Jack Coleman

b. 1958

John Henry Newman

John Henry Newman

d. 1890

Historical Events

Three gunmen opened fire on Malcolm X as he began speaking at the Audubon Ballroom in Upper Manhattan on February 21, 1965. Twenty-one shotgun pellets and bullet wounds killed him at age 39. Talmadge Hayer was tackled by the audience and beaten before police arrested him. Two other men, Norman 3X Butler and Thomas 15X Johnson, were convicted despite consistent alibis and Hayer's repeated testimony that they were innocent and that four other Nation of Islam members from a Newark mosque had participated. In 2021, a 22-month investigation by the Manhattan District Attorney exonerated Butler and Johnson, finding that both the FBI and NYPD had withheld evidence that would have cleared them at trial. The FBI had infiltrated Malcolm's security detail and was aware of assassination threats but did nothing to protect him. The case exposed how federal surveillance of Black leaders actively enabled rather than prevented violence against them.
1965

Three gunmen opened fire on Malcolm X as he began speaking at the Audubon Ballroom in Upper Manhattan on February 21, 1965. Twenty-one shotgun pellets and bullet wounds killed him at age 39. Talmadge Hayer was tackled by the audience and beaten before police arrested him. Two other men, Norman 3X Butler and Thomas 15X Johnson, were convicted despite consistent alibis and Hayer's repeated testimony that they were innocent and that four other Nation of Islam members from a Newark mosque had participated. In 2021, a 22-month investigation by the Manhattan District Attorney exonerated Butler and Johnson, finding that both the FBI and NYPD had withheld evidence that would have cleared them at trial. The FBI had infiltrated Malcolm's security detail and was aware of assassination threats but did nothing to protect him. The case exposed how federal surveillance of Black leaders actively enabled rather than prevented violence against them.

Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels published The Communist Manifesto in London on February 21, 1848, a 23-page pamphlet commissioned by the Communist League that opened with one of history's most famous lines: 'A spectre is haunting Europe.' The timing was extraordinary: within weeks, revolutions erupted across the continent, though the pamphlet itself had almost nothing to do with them. The Manifesto's core argument was elegantly simple: all history is the story of class struggle, capitalism creates its own gravediggers in the proletariat, and the workers will inevitably overthrow the bourgeoisie. Marx wrote most of the text in a three-week frenzy at a Brussels cafe. The pamphlet sold poorly at first and had negligible influence on the 1848 revolutions. Its impact grew over decades as labor movements adopted its language and framework. By the twentieth century, governments claiming to follow its principles controlled a third of the world's population.
1848

Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels published The Communist Manifesto in London on February 21, 1848, a 23-page pamphlet commissioned by the Communist League that opened with one of history's most famous lines: 'A spectre is haunting Europe.' The timing was extraordinary: within weeks, revolutions erupted across the continent, though the pamphlet itself had almost nothing to do with them. The Manifesto's core argument was elegantly simple: all history is the story of class struggle, capitalism creates its own gravediggers in the proletariat, and the workers will inevitably overthrow the bourgeoisie. Marx wrote most of the text in a three-week frenzy at a Brussels cafe. The pamphlet sold poorly at first and had negligible influence on the 1848 revolutions. Its impact grew over decades as labor movements adopted its language and framework. By the twentieth century, governments claiming to follow its principles controlled a third of the world's population.

Richard Nixon stepped off Air Force One in Beijing on February 21, 1972, and shook hands with Premier Zhou Enlai, a gesture deliberately staged to erase the insult John Foster Dulles had delivered in 1954 when he refused to shake Zhou's hand at the Geneva Conference. Nixon, the Cold Warrior who had built his career on anti-communism, was the only American president who could visit Mao without being accused of being soft on communism. Henry Kissinger had secretly visited Beijing the previous July to arrange the trip. The strategic calculation was brilliant: by opening relations with China, Nixon exploited the Sino-Soviet split and forced Moscow to negotiate from a weaker position. The Shanghai Communique issued at the trip's end acknowledged Taiwan as part of China without formally recognizing the People's Republic, a diplomatic ambiguity that has governed US-China-Taiwan relations for over fifty years.
1972

Richard Nixon stepped off Air Force One in Beijing on February 21, 1972, and shook hands with Premier Zhou Enlai, a gesture deliberately staged to erase the insult John Foster Dulles had delivered in 1954 when he refused to shake Zhou's hand at the Geneva Conference. Nixon, the Cold Warrior who had built his career on anti-communism, was the only American president who could visit Mao without being accused of being soft on communism. Henry Kissinger had secretly visited Beijing the previous July to arrange the trip. The strategic calculation was brilliant: by opening relations with China, Nixon exploited the Sino-Soviet split and forced Moscow to negotiate from a weaker position. The Shanghai Communique issued at the trip's end acknowledged Taiwan as part of China without formally recognizing the People's Republic, a diplomatic ambiguity that has governed US-China-Taiwan relations for over fifty years.

1975

Three men who ran the most powerful office in the world got 2.5 to 8 years for obstruction of justice. John Mitchell, the Attorney General, had ordered the break-in. H.R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman, Nixon's closest advisors, covered it up. All three reported to minimum-security prisons. Mitchell served 19 months. Haldeman served 18. Ehrlichman served 18. The burglars who actually broke into the Watergate got longer sentences than the men who told them to do it.

1245

Thomas resigned in 1245 after confessing to torture and forgery. He was Finland's first bishop. The job came with converting pagans who didn't want converting. He'd held the position for twenty years. Nobody knows exactly what he forged or who he tortured, but the confession was public enough that Rome accepted his resignation immediately. He didn't face trial. He didn't lose his status as a priest. The Catholic Church just let him step down quietly. Finland's entire Christian infrastructure had been built by a man who admitted to crimes serious enough to end his career, but not serious enough to prosecute. He disappeared from records after that.

1543

Ahmed Gragn had conquered two-thirds of Ethiopia. For fourteen years, his Muslim forces burned churches, enslaved populations, pushed the Christian empire to the edge of extinction. The Ethiopian emperor was down to a mountain fortress and 400 Portuguese musketeers who'd sailed up from the coast. They met Gragn's army at Wayna Daga with 8,000 troops against his 15,000. The Portuguese guns cut through cavalry charges. Gragn took a musket ball to the chest and died on the field. His army disintegrated within hours. Ethiopia survived because 400 men with early firearms showed up at exactly the right moment.

1613

A sixteen-year-old hiding in a monastery became Tsar of Russia because nobody else wanted the job. Mikhail Romanov's father was in Polish captivity. His mother was a nun. The previous decade had seen three false Tsars, a Polish invasion, and mass starvation. The national assembly chose him precisely because he was weak — young, inexperienced, with no powerful backers. They thought they could control him. His dynasty ruled for 304 years, until a firing squad ended it in a basement in 1918.

1797

The last foreign army to invade mainland Britain landed at Fishguard, Wales — 1,400 French troops sent to spark an Irish rebellion. They were ex-convicts and conscripts, led by an Irish-American general who'd never seen combat. They spent their first night looting local farms for food and got drunk on stolen wine. The British sent 500 reservists — part-time soldiers, mostly farmers. The French surrendered after two days without a real battle. One reason given: they mistook Welsh women in traditional red cloaks for British Redcoats and thought they were outnumbered. Napoleon was still two years from taking power. This was the revolution's foreign policy.

1828

The Cherokee Phoenix printed in two columns — English on the left, Cherokee on the right. Sequoyah had invented the syllabary just twelve years earlier. Before that, Cherokee had no written form. Now they had a newspaper. They used it to publish Cherokee laws, tribal decisions, and arguments against their forced removal. The U.S. government shut it down three years later. They knew what literate resistance looked like.

1878

The first telephone book had 50 names. No numbers. You just picked up and told the operator who you wanted. The New Haven District Telephone Company published it on a single sheet of paper in February 1878. Within two years, they had to add numbers because operators couldn't keep up. That's when your phone stopped being a person you asked and became a number you dialed.

1896

Bob Fitzsimmons knocked out Peter Maher in 95 seconds. One punch to the solar plexus. Shortest heavyweight title fight in history. But the fight itself wasn't the story — the location was. Texas banned prizefighting. So promoters built a temporary arena on a sandbar in the Rio Grande. Four hundred spectators took a train to the Mexican border, then crossed on a pontoon bridge. The ring sat in technically Mexican territory. Texas Rangers watched from the American side. They couldn't do anything. Fitzsimmons won the title on a sandbar because the law stopped at the river. Three countries involved, 95 seconds of actual boxing.

1919

Kurt Eisner was shot walking to parliament. February 21, 1919. He'd been Bavaria's first republican premier for three months. The assassin was a 22-year-old aristocrat who thought Eisner had dishonored Germany by admitting war guilt. Eisner died on the street. Within hours, a communist burst into the Bavarian parliament and shot two politicians. The government fled Munich that night. Workers' councils seized control. They declared a Soviet Republic. It lasted three weeks before Freikorps paramilitaries crushed it, killing over 600 people. The violence radicalized a young veteran living in Munich at the time. His name was Adolf Hitler.

1945

The Brazilians took Monte Castello on their fifth attempt. They'd been trying since November. Three thousand men from the Brazilian Expeditionary Force — the only Latin American ground troops in Europe — finally broke through German positions in the Northern Apennines. They'd trained in the tropics. Now they were fighting in snow. The Germans held the high ground for months, dug into rock and ice. Brazil sent 25,000 soldiers to Italy total. More than 450 died there. When they came home, nobody talked about it. The dictatorship didn't want heroes who'd fought for democracy abroad.

1945

The USS Bismarck Sea sank in 90 minutes. February 21, 1945, off Iwo Jima. Four kamikaze pilots hit her in succession. 318 men died — the last American aircraft carrier lost in combat. The Saratoga, hit the same night, survived with 123 dead. She'd been torpedoed twice before, bombed four times, and still made it home. Japan had 2,800 kamikaze pilots left. They'd sink or damage 368 ships before August. The Bismarck Sea's survivors watched her go down while still in the water themselves. Some carriers burn for days. This one didn't make it to dawn.

Edwin Land's daughter asked why she couldn't see a photo right away. He spent three hours walking around Santa Fe working out the chemistry in his head. Three years later, he stood in front of the Optical Society of America and took a picture. Sixty seconds later, he peeled apart the print and showed them a finished photograph. The camera had to develop the image inside itself while you held it. Kodak thought it was a gimmick. Land sold 900 cameras the first day they went on sale.
1947

Edwin Land's daughter asked why she couldn't see a photo right away. He spent three hours walking around Santa Fe working out the chemistry in his head. Three years later, he stood in front of the Optical Society of America and took a picture. Sixty seconds later, he peeled apart the print and showed them a finished photograph. The camera had to develop the image inside itself while you held it. Kodak thought it was a gimmick. Land sold 900 cameras the first day they went on sale.

Fun Facts

Zodiac Sign

Pisces

Feb 19 -- Mar 20

Water sign. Compassionate, intuitive, and artistic.

Birthstone

Amethyst

Purple

Symbolizes wisdom, clarity, and peace of mind.

Next Birthday

--

days until February 21

Quote of the Day

“Lean your body forward slightly to support the guitar against your chest, for the poetry of the music should resound in your heart.”

Andrés Segovia

Share Your Birthday

Create a beautiful birthday card with events and famous birthdays for February 21.

Create Birthday Card

Explore Nearby Dates

Popular Dates

Explore more about February 21 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.