Today In History
February 23 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: George Frideric Handel, Michael Dell, and W. E. B. Du Bois.

Gutenberg Prints Bible: Movable Type Changes Everything
Johannes Gutenberg produced the first copies of his 42-line Bible in his Mainz workshop around 1455, using a system of movable metal type, oil-based ink, and a wooden press adapted from a wine press. The Bible was printed on vellum and paper in editions of roughly 180 copies, of which 49 survive today. Gutenberg's innovation was not the concept of printing, which the Chinese had practiced for centuries, but the creation of a complete system: individual metal letters cast from durable alloy, arranged in a composing stick, locked into a form, and pressed uniformly onto paper. A single press could produce 3,600 pages per day, compared to a monk's output of roughly two pages. The cost of books dropped by roughly 80 percent within a generation. By 1500, an estimated 20 million volumes had been printed in Europe. The monopoly on knowledge held by the Catholic Church and literate elite collapsed, enabling the Protestant Reformation, the Scientific Revolution, and mass literacy.
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Historical Events
Johannes Gutenberg produced the first copies of his 42-line Bible in his Mainz workshop around 1455, using a system of movable metal type, oil-based ink, and a wooden press adapted from a wine press. The Bible was printed on vellum and paper in editions of roughly 180 copies, of which 49 survive today. Gutenberg's innovation was not the concept of printing, which the Chinese had practiced for centuries, but the creation of a complete system: individual metal letters cast from durable alloy, arranged in a composing stick, locked into a form, and pressed uniformly onto paper. A single press could produce 3,600 pages per day, compared to a monk's output of roughly two pages. The cost of books dropped by roughly 80 percent within a generation. By 1500, an estimated 20 million volumes had been printed in Europe. The monopoly on knowledge held by the Catholic Church and literate elite collapsed, enabling the Protestant Reformation, the Scientific Revolution, and mass literacy.
A Japanese submarine surfaced approximately one mile off the coast of Ellwood, California, on the evening of February 23, 1942, and fired between 16 and 25 shells from its deck gun at the Ellwood oil field near Santa Barbara. The shelling lasted about twenty minutes and caused minimal damage, destroying a pump house and a catwalk. No one was killed. The submarine, I-17, had visited the area before the war when its captain, Commander Nishino Kozo, reportedly slipped and fell into a prickly-pear cactus while visiting the oil field, an embarrassment he allegedly sought to avenge. Whether this story is true, the attack was the first direct shelling of the US mainland by a foreign power since the War of 1812. The incident triggered immediate panic along the Pacific coast and contributed directly to the 'Battle of Los Angeles' false alarm two days later, when anti-aircraft batteries fired into empty skies over the city.
Joe Rosenthal's photograph of six men raising the American flag atop Mount Suribachi on February 23, 1945, became the most reproduced photograph of World War II and the template for the Marine Corps War Memorial in Arlington. The image was actually the second flag raising that day; the first, smaller flag was replaced with a larger one that could be seen from the beaches below. Three of the six men in Rosenthal's photograph were killed in action during the remaining weeks of fighting on Iwo Jima. The surviving three were pulled from combat and sent on a war bond tour across the United States, raising .3 billion, roughly billion in today's dollars. Ira Hayes, a Pima Indian and one of the survivors, struggled with the celebrity and descended into alcoholism, dying of exposure at age 32. The photograph's power lay not in what it depicted, a routine flag change, but in what it symbolized: collective sacrifice toward a common purpose.
Jonas Salk's polio vaccine field trial began on April 26, 1954, eventually enrolling 1.8 million children in the largest public health experiment in American history. The trial was funded entirely by public donations through the March of Dimes, which had been raising money for polio research since Franklin Roosevelt's presidency. Children were divided into vaccinated and placebo groups, with hundreds of thousands more serving as observed controls. The results, announced on April 12, 1955, showed the vaccine was 80 to 90 percent effective against paralytic polio. Church bells rang across the country. Salk became an instant hero and was asked whether he had patented the vaccine. His response, 'Could you patent the sun?', meant he forfeited an estimated seven billion dollars in personal earnings. Mass vaccination campaigns followed immediately, and polio cases in the US dropped from 35,000 per year to fewer than 100 within a decade.
J. S. Bach performed his secular Shepherd Cantata as Tafel-Music to celebrate the birthday of Christian, Duke of Saxe-Weissenfels, blending pastoral charm with the complex vocal writing that defined his genius. The piece demonstrated Bach's ability to craft music equally at home in court entertainment and sacred worship, showcasing the range that made him the supreme composer of the Baroque era.
Diocletian's soldiers arrived at the church in Nicomedia on February 23, 303, stripped the building, and burned every manuscript they could find. No bloodshed that day — just erasure. The emperor wanted Christianity gone without making martyrs. It backfired spectacularly. The persecution lasted eight years, killed thousands, and created so many martyrs that Christianity spread faster than before. Within a decade of Diocletian's retirement, Constantine legalized it. Twenty years after that, it was the empire's dominant religion.
Justinian ordered the Hagia Sophia built after rioters burned down the previous church during the Nika riots — the same riots where he nearly fled the city until his wife Theodora, a former actress, convinced him to stay and crush the rebellion. Thirty thousand died. He used the rubble as foundation for the new basilica. It took five years, ten thousand workers, and the empire's entire annual revenue. The dome was so massive engineers didn't think it would stand. It did. For 900 years, it was the largest cathedral in the world.
Lautaro had been a Spanish stable boy. He'd fed their horses, watched their drills, learned how they fought. At Marihueñu, he used that knowledge. He let the Spanish cavalry charge into swampland where their horses couldn't maneuver. Then he attacked from three sides. The Spanish commander died in the mud. Spain lost control of southern Chile for three centuries. The Mapuche remained independent longer than any indigenous group in the Americas.
The Continental Army couldn't march in formation. Soldiers loaded muskets differently in every regiment. They didn't know how to use bayonets, so they threw rocks. Baron von Steuben arrived at Valley Forge in February 1778 and wrote a drill manual in French. His translator turned it into English. His assistant translated it into broken English the troops could actually understand. He trained one model company, then those men trained their regiments. Within months, Washington had an army that could stand against British regulars. A Prussian officer saved the Revolution with a pamphlet.
Twenty-three men planned to murder the entire British cabinet at a dinner party. They'd storm Lord Harrowby's house on Grosvenor Square, kill everyone inside, then march on the Bank of England and the Tower of London. Arthur Thistlewood, the leader, wanted to start a revolution. He'd bought grenades and built a ladder for the attack. But one of his men was a government spy. Police raided their meeting place on Cato Street the night before. Five conspirators were hanged. Five more transported to Australia. The dinner party they planned to attack? It was fake. The government had planted the invitation in a newspaper to draw them out.
General Zachary Taylor's 4,600 American troops repelled an assault by roughly 15,000 Mexican soldiers under General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna at the Battle of Buena Vista on February 23, 1847. Taylor had been ordered to stay defensive, but his refusal to retreat from an exposed position forced the engagement. The fighting lasted two days across rugged terrain south of Saltillo. American artillery, particularly a battery commanded by Captain Braxton Bragg, proved decisive, shredding Mexican infantry formations with canister shot. Santa Anna withdrew overnight after suffering over 3,400 casualties. Taylor lost roughly 670 men. The victory made Taylor a national hero and propelled him directly to the White House in 1848, following the pattern of Washington, Jackson, and Harrison in converting military fame into presidential elections. Taylor died in office sixteen months later, possibly from contaminated cherries and milk consumed at a Fourth of July celebration.
President-elect Abraham Lincoln slipped into Washington disguised in a soft hat and overcoat after detective Allan Pinkerton uncovered an assassination plot in Baltimore. The secret overnight train ride drew mockery from political opponents but revealed the genuine danger Lincoln faced even before taking office, foreshadowing the assassination that would claim his life four years later.
Mississippi rejoined the Union in 1870 — last of the Confederate states to do so. The delay wasn't military. It was the Fifteenth Amendment. Congress required ratification before readmission. Mississippi's legislature refused. Twice. Then they calculated: stay out or swallow the amendment. They chose in. Within three years, white supremacists had violently overthrown the biracial government they'd been forced to accept. The amendment stayed on paper. The state wouldn't seriously enforce it for another century.
French forces took Đồng Đăng on February 23, 1885, pushing China out of northern Vietnam for good. The battle lasted three days. Chinese troops abandoned artillery, supply depots, and their main defensive line near the border. France lost 80 men. China lost its claim to Vietnam as a tributary state. The treaty came four months later: China recognized French control of Tonkin, ending centuries of influence over its southern neighbor. Vietnam wouldn't be independent again for seventy years, but it wouldn't be Chinese either. One battle settled what diplomacy couldn't — who controlled Southeast Asia's northern coast.
Charles Martin Hall was 22 when he figured out how to make aluminum cheap. Before 1886, aluminum cost more than gold — $15 per pound. It was so rare Napoleon III served his most important dinner guests with aluminum forks while everyone else got silver. Hall's process used electricity to extract pure aluminum from bauxite ore. Within a decade, the price dropped to 50 cents per pound. His sister Julia ran hundreds of experiments with him in their woodshed laboratory, mixing compounds and testing voltages. She never got credit in the patent. Today we wrap sandwiches in what emperors couldn't afford.
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
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days until February 23
Quote of the Day
“The cost of liberty is less than the price of repression.”
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