Today In History logo TIH

Today In History

February 3 in History

Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Daddy Yankee, Antonio José de Sucre, and Elizabeth Holmes.

The Day Music Died: Holly, Valens, and Bopper Fall
1959Event

The Day Music Died: Holly, Valens, and Bopper Fall

A plane crash in a cornfield outside Clear Lake, Iowa, killed Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, J.P. 'The Big Bopper' Richardson, and pilot Roger Peterson on February 3, 1959. Holly had chartered the small Beechcraft Bonanza because the tour bus's heater was broken and he wanted to do laundry before the next show. Valens won his seat on a coin toss with Tommy Allsup. The Big Bopper talked Waylon Jennings out of his seat because he had the flu. Peterson, a 21-year-old with limited instrument flight experience, flew into a snowstorm and likely became disoriented. The plane crashed at full speed three miles from the airport. Holly was twenty-two. Valens was seventeen. Don McLean's 1971 song 'American Pie' named it 'the day the music died,' a phrase that stuck permanently. The crash ended the first golden age of rock and roll and scattered its surviving artists into uncertainty.

Famous Birthdays

Antonio José de Sucre

Antonio José de Sucre

1795–1830

Elizabeth Holmes

Elizabeth Holmes

b. 1984

Beau Biden

Beau Biden

d. 2015

Dave Davies

Dave Davies

b. 1947

E. P. Thompson

E. P. Thompson

b. 1924

Greg Mankiw

Greg Mankiw

b. 1958

Hugo Junkers

Hugo Junkers

1859–1935

Joey Bishop

Joey Bishop

1918–2007

Juan Negrín

Juan Negrín

b. 1892

Historical Events

Swedish King Charles XII personally led a force of 9,400 men against roughly 30,000 Saxon, Polish, and Russian troops at Fraustadt on February 3, 1706, executing one of the most devastating tactical victories of the Great Northern War. Swedish cavalry charged simultaneously on both flanks in a classic double envelopment that trapped the enemy center. The coalition army disintegrated within two hours, suffering over 7,000 killed and 8,000 captured against fewer than 400 Swedish casualties. The Russian contingent, positioned at the center, was massacred almost to a man. The victory temporarily secured Swedish control over Poland and demonstrated Charles XII's reputation as the most aggressive battlefield commander of his era. However, the battle also sowed the seeds of overconfidence that led Charles to invade Russia three years later, culminating in the catastrophic defeat at Poltava that ended Sweden's time as a European great power.
1706

Swedish King Charles XII personally led a force of 9,400 men against roughly 30,000 Saxon, Polish, and Russian troops at Fraustadt on February 3, 1706, executing one of the most devastating tactical victories of the Great Northern War. Swedish cavalry charged simultaneously on both flanks in a classic double envelopment that trapped the enemy center. The coalition army disintegrated within two hours, suffering over 7,000 killed and 8,000 captured against fewer than 400 Swedish casualties. The Russian contingent, positioned at the center, was massacred almost to a man. The victory temporarily secured Swedish control over Poland and demonstrated Charles XII's reputation as the most aggressive battlefield commander of his era. However, the battle also sowed the seeds of overconfidence that led Charles to invade Russia three years later, culminating in the catastrophic defeat at Poltava that ended Sweden's time as a European great power.

The Sixteenth Amendment, ratified on February 3, 1913, granted Congress the explicit power to levy income taxes without apportioning them among the states based on population. This overturned the Supreme Court's 1895 decision in Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co., which had struck down a federal income tax as unconstitutional. The amendment was the culmination of decades of populist agitation against a tax system that relied heavily on tariffs and excise taxes, which fell disproportionately on consumers and farmers. The first income tax under the new amendment imposed a one percent rate on incomes over ,000, affecting roughly three percent of the population. Within five years, World War I pushed the top marginal rate to 77 percent. The amendment permanently transformed the federal government's fiscal capacity, enabling the massive expansion of domestic programs and military spending that defined the twentieth century.
1913

The Sixteenth Amendment, ratified on February 3, 1913, granted Congress the explicit power to levy income taxes without apportioning them among the states based on population. This overturned the Supreme Court's 1895 decision in Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co., which had struck down a federal income tax as unconstitutional. The amendment was the culmination of decades of populist agitation against a tax system that relied heavily on tariffs and excise taxes, which fell disproportionately on consumers and farmers. The first income tax under the new amendment imposed a one percent rate on incomes over ,000, affecting roughly three percent of the population. Within five years, World War I pushed the top marginal rate to 77 percent. The amendment permanently transformed the federal government's fiscal capacity, enabling the massive expansion of domestic programs and military spending that defined the twentieth century.

British intelligence intercepted and decoded a telegram from German Foreign Minister Arthur Zimmermann to the German ambassador in Mexico on January 16, 1917, proposing a military alliance against the United States. Germany promised Mexico the return of Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona if it attacked its northern neighbor. The British sat on the telegram for weeks before revealing it to Washington, timing the release for maximum political impact. President Wilson had been reelected on a platform of neutrality and was reluctant to enter the European war. The Zimmermann Telegram, combined with Germany's resumption of unrestricted submarine warfare, made neutrality impossible. When Zimmermann himself confirmed the telegram's authenticity in a press conference, American public opinion shifted decisively toward war. Congress declared war on April 6, 1917, transforming the conflict from a European struggle into a global one.
1917

British intelligence intercepted and decoded a telegram from German Foreign Minister Arthur Zimmermann to the German ambassador in Mexico on January 16, 1917, proposing a military alliance against the United States. Germany promised Mexico the return of Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona if it attacked its northern neighbor. The British sat on the telegram for weeks before revealing it to Washington, timing the release for maximum political impact. President Wilson had been reelected on a platform of neutrality and was reluctant to enter the European war. The Zimmermann Telegram, combined with Germany's resumption of unrestricted submarine warfare, made neutrality impossible. When Zimmermann himself confirmed the telegram's authenticity in a press conference, American public opinion shifted decisively toward war. Congress declared war on April 6, 1917, transforming the conflict from a European struggle into a global one.

A plane crash in a cornfield outside Clear Lake, Iowa, killed Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, J.P. 'The Big Bopper' Richardson, and pilot Roger Peterson on February 3, 1959. Holly had chartered the small Beechcraft Bonanza because the tour bus's heater was broken and he wanted to do laundry before the next show. Valens won his seat on a coin toss with Tommy Allsup. The Big Bopper talked Waylon Jennings out of his seat because he had the flu. Peterson, a 21-year-old with limited instrument flight experience, flew into a snowstorm and likely became disoriented. The plane crashed at full speed three miles from the airport. Holly was twenty-two. Valens was seventeen. Don McLean's 1971 song 'American Pie' named it 'the day the music died,' a phrase that stuck permanently. The crash ended the first golden age of rock and roll and scattered its surviving artists into uncertainty.
1959

A plane crash in a cornfield outside Clear Lake, Iowa, killed Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, J.P. 'The Big Bopper' Richardson, and pilot Roger Peterson on February 3, 1959. Holly had chartered the small Beechcraft Bonanza because the tour bus's heater was broken and he wanted to do laundry before the next show. Valens won his seat on a coin toss with Tommy Allsup. The Big Bopper talked Waylon Jennings out of his seat because he had the flu. Peterson, a 21-year-old with limited instrument flight experience, flew into a snowstorm and likely became disoriented. The plane crashed at full speed three miles from the airport. Holly was twenty-two. Valens was seventeen. Don McLean's 1971 song 'American Pie' named it 'the day the music died,' a phrase that stuck permanently. The crash ended the first golden age of rock and roll and scattered its surviving artists into uncertainty.

1825

A catastrophic flood drowned the narrow isthmus connecting Vendsyssel-Thy to the Jutland peninsula, permanently severing it into Denmark's largest island. The breach created the Limfjord's direct connection to the North Sea, rerouting trade patterns and forcing coastal communities to rebuild their livelihoods around the new geography.

1900

Kentucky Governor William Goebel died three days after being shot outside the state capitol in Frankfort, becoming the only sitting U.S. governor ever assassinated. His contested election and violent death exposed the fierce factional politics of turn-of-the-century Kentucky and triggered a constitutional crisis over the legitimacy of his brief governorship.

Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press around 1440, borrowed heavily to build it, and was sued by his financial backer, Johann Fust, who won the lawsuit and walked off with the press and most of the type. Gutenberg kept going with a new workshop. The Bible he printed — the Gutenberg Bible, 180 copies, two volumes, 1,282 pages — is one of the most valuable books in the world. He died in 1468, having received a modest pension from the Archbishop of Mainz. The press had already spread to Italy, France, and Spain. Within 50 years of his death, more books had been printed than in all of European history before him.
1468

Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press around 1440, borrowed heavily to build it, and was sued by his financial backer, Johann Fust, who won the lawsuit and walked off with the press and most of the type. Gutenberg kept going with a new workshop. The Bible he printed — the Gutenberg Bible, 180 copies, two volumes, 1,282 pages — is one of the most valuable books in the world. He died in 1468, having received a modest pension from the Archbishop of Mainz. The press had already spread to Italy, France, and Spain. Within 50 years of his death, more books had been printed than in all of European history before him.

1047

The Normans conquered Southern Italy because younger sons had nothing to inherit back home. Drogo of Hauteville was one of twelve brothers who left Normandy as mercenaries. They hired themselves to Italian city-states, then turned on their employers. By 1047, Drogo controlled enough of Apulia that the other Norman warlords elected him count. He legitimized what had been armed robbery. Within a generation, his family would rule Sicily, lead the First Crusade, and create a kingdom that lasted 700 years. It started with landless younger brothers and sharp swords.

1112

Ramon Berenguer III married Douce I of Provence in 1112. She was 18. He was 35 and already widowed. The marriage joined Barcelona's Mediterranean ports with Provence's inland trade routes — suddenly one family controlled commerce from the Pyrenees to the Rhône. Their son inherited both. Within two generations, the House of Barcelona ruled Aragon, Catalonia, Provence, and parts of southern France. All because a teenage countess needed a husband and Barcelona needed Provence's roads.

1377

Papal mercenaries under Cardinal Robert of Geneva slaughtered over 2,000 residents of Cesena after the city resisted Church authority, an atrocity so severe it earned Robert the nickname "Butcher of Cesena." The massacre deepened Italian resentment of the Avignon papacy and fueled the political chaos that culminated in the Western Schism just months later.

1488

Bartolomeu Dias sailed past the southern tip of Africa without realizing it. A storm pushed his ships so far off course that when he turned back north, he hit the Indian Ocean side. His crew was terrified — they'd been at sea for months with no land. They forced him to turn around. On the way back, he finally saw the cape. He named it the Cape of Storms. King John II renamed it the Cape of Good Hope. Ten years later, Vasco da Gama used Dias's route to reach India.

1509

The Portuguese won at Diu with seventeen ships against a combined fleet of over a hundred. They controlled the Indian Ocean spice trade for the next century because of it. The Ottomans never tried again. Venice lost its monopoly on Eastern goods overnight. Gujarat's sultan watched from shore as his alliance collapsed in four hours. One battle, and Europe's center of wealth shifted from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic. Lisbon became richer than Rome.

1583

Three English warships sailed into São Vicente expecting to trade. Three Spanish galleons were waiting. Edward Fenton had orders from Elizabeth I to avoid conflict — she couldn't afford a war with Spain yet. He ignored them. The battle lasted four hours. One Spanish galleon sank. Fenton limped back to England expecting execution. Instead, Elizabeth promoted him. Five years later, she'd send the entire English fleet against Spain.

1637

The Dutch tulip market collapsed when a buyer in Haarlem didn't show up to an auction. Within days, contracts for single bulbs — some worth more than houses — became worthless. Traders had been buying and selling tulips that didn't exist yet, just promises of future flowers. At the peak, one Semper Augustus bulb cost 10,000 guilders. A skilled worker made 150 guilders per year. The crash wiped out fortunes in a week. It was history's first recorded speculative bubble.

1787

General Benjamin Lincoln's militia marched through a blizzard to reach Petersham at dawn. They covered thirty miles in one night. The rebels — farmers who'd fought in the Revolution, now facing foreclosure — were sleeping in a tavern. Most escaped into the woods in their nightclothes. No battle. Just a rout in the snow. Shays' Rebellion was over, but it terrified the Founders. Thirteen independent states couldn't coordinate a response to armed farmers. Massachusetts had to raise a private army because Congress had no money and no authority. Four months later, fifty-five men showed up in Philadelphia to write a new Constitution. They gave the federal government an army.

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 3

Quote of the Day

“Everybody gets so much information all day long that they lose their common sense.”

Gertrude Stein

Share Your Birthday

Create a beautiful birthday card with events and famous birthdays for February 3.

Create Birthday Card

Explore Nearby Dates

Popular Dates

Explore more about February 3 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.