Today In History
February 5 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: H. R. Giger, André Citroën, and Bobby Brown.

Immigration Act of 1917: Nativism Bans Asian Entry
Congress overrode President Wilson's veto to enact the Immigration Act of 1917 on February 5, creating an 'Asiatic Barred Zone' that prohibited immigration from virtually all of Asia, including India, Southeast Asia, and the Pacific Islands. The law also imposed a literacy test requiring all immigrants over sixteen to demonstrate reading ability in any language, a provision designed to reduce Southern and Eastern European immigration. The act represented the culmination of decades of nativist agitation that had begun with the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and expanded to target increasingly broad categories of 'undesirable' immigrants. Wilson vetoed the bill twice on the grounds that the literacy test was un-American, but Congress overrode him both times with supermajorities. The 1917 Act established the legal framework for even more restrictive quotas in 1921 and 1924 that effectively shut America's doors to most of the world for forty years.
Famous Birthdays
1940–2014
André Citroën
1878–1935
Bobby Brown
b. 1969
Hiram Maxim
1840–1916
Michael Mann
b. 1943
Nolan Bushnell
b. 1943
Robert Peel
1788–1850
Andreas Papandreou
d. 1996
John Boyd Dunlop
1840–1921
Historical Events
Tsar Nicholas I opened the Hermitage Museum to the public in 1852, granting ordinary Russians access to a collection that had been the exclusive preserve of the imperial family for nearly a century. Catherine the Great had begun the collection in 1764 by purchasing 225 paintings from a Berlin merchant, and subsequent emperors added obsessively until the Winter Palace and its adjoining buildings housed one of the world's most extraordinary accumulations of art. The public museum occupied a separate building to keep commoners away from the royal residence. Visitors were required to wear formal attire, a rule that effectively limited access to the educated classes. Despite these restrictions, the opening represented a radical shift in the idea that great art belonged to the people rather than the monarch. The Hermitage today holds over three million items across six buildings, and a single person spending one minute at each exhibit would need eleven years to see everything.
Congress overrode President Wilson's veto to enact the Immigration Act of 1917 on February 5, creating an 'Asiatic Barred Zone' that prohibited immigration from virtually all of Asia, including India, Southeast Asia, and the Pacific Islands. The law also imposed a literacy test requiring all immigrants over sixteen to demonstrate reading ability in any language, a provision designed to reduce Southern and Eastern European immigration. The act represented the culmination of decades of nativist agitation that had begun with the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and expanded to target increasingly broad categories of 'undesirable' immigrants. Wilson vetoed the bill twice on the grounds that the literacy test was un-American, but Congress overrode him both times with supermajorities. The 1917 Act established the legal framework for even more restrictive quotas in 1921 and 1924 that effectively shut America's doors to most of the world for forty years.
Byron De La Beckwith was tried three times for the murder of civil rights leader Medgar Evers, who was shot in the back with an Enfield rifle in his own driveway on June 12, 1963. The first two trials in 1964 ended in hung juries despite Beckwith's fingerprint being found on the rifle's scope. All-white juries refused to convict. The case sat dormant for decades until journalist Jerry Mitchell uncovered evidence that the Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission had secretly screened potential jurors to help Beckwith. A third trial in 1994, before a racially mixed jury, convicted Beckwith of first-degree murder. He was seventy-three years old. The thirty-year gap between crime and conviction exposed the depth of institutional racism in Mississippi's justice system and demonstrated that civil rights-era cold cases could still be successfully prosecuted with persistence and new evidence.
Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, and D.W. Griffith signed the papers creating United Artists on February 5, 1919, in response to a plan by major studios to consolidate their control over film distribution. The four founders were the biggest names in Hollywood, and their defection sent studio executives scrambling. Metro Pictures president Richard Rowland reportedly quipped, 'The lunatics have taken over the asylum.' United Artists did not produce films itself; instead it distributed films made independently by its founders and later by other producers. The model was revolutionary: for the first time, creative talent owned and controlled the distribution of their own work. The company struggled financially at times because its founders could not produce enough films to fill a full distribution slate. But the principle it established, that artists could bypass the studio system, influenced every subsequent generation of independent filmmakers.
A federal grand jury in Miami indicted Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega on drug trafficking and money laundering charges on February 5, 1988, marking the first time the United States criminally charged a sitting head of state. Noriega had been a CIA asset for years, funneling intelligence from Central America while simultaneously running cocaine through Panama for the Medellin cartel. His usefulness ended when the Cold War wound down and his drug connections became publicly embarrassing. The indictment made diplomatic removal impossible because Noriega had nothing to gain by surrendering. President George H.W. Bush launched Operation Just Cause on December 20, 1989, invading Panama with 27,000 troops. Noriega hid in the Vatican embassy before surrendering on January 3, 1990, reportedly driven out by US troops blasting rock music at the building. He was convicted in Miami in 1992 and spent seventeen years in American prisons.
An earthquake hit Pompeii seventeen years before Vesuvius buried it. The tremors knocked down temples, cracked aqueducts, and collapsed the forum. Intensity IX to X on the Mercalli scale — buildings destroyed, ground cracked open, panic everywhere. The city was still rebuilding when the volcano erupted in 79 AD. Some historians think the quake was the first warning. The Romans didn't connect earthquakes to volcanoes. They rebuilt right where they were.
An Lushan commanded 164,000 troops — nearly half the Tang Dynasty's entire army. The emperor had given him that power. Trusted him completely. An Lushan was a foreign general who'd risen through charm and military skill, becoming one of the emperor's favorites. Then in 755, he marched those troops south toward the capital. By January 756, he declared himself emperor of a new state: Yan. The rebellion would kill 36 million people — roughly one-sixth of the world's population at the time. The Tang Dynasty survived, but it never recovered its strength. China fractured. The emperor who'd trusted An Lushan fled his own capital and never saw it again.
Henry of Navarre walked into a Catholic church in Tours and walked out Protestant again. Fourth time he'd switched religions. He'd been raised Protestant, forced Catholic after the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre, kept Catholic to stay alive at the French court, and now — back. The Catholic nobles holding him hostage had finally loosened their grip. He rejoined the Huguenot forces the same day. Twenty years later, he'd switch one more time to become King of France. "Paris is worth a Mass," he'd say. The man who couldn't pick a church united a country that had been tearing itself apart over exactly that question.
Twenty-six Christians were crucified in Nagasaki on February 5, 1597. Six Franciscan missionaries and twenty Japanese converts. Toyotomi Hideyoshi had them marched 600 miles from Kyoto with their ears cut off. He'd welcomed missionaries at first — wanted trade with Spain and Portugal. Then he realized Christianity taught loyalty to God above the shogun. The converts sang hymns as they died. Japan sealed itself off from the West for the next 250 years.
Alexander John Cuza became ruler of both Wallachia and Moldavia on January 24, 1859. Two separate assemblies, meeting in two separate capitals, elected the same man on purpose. The Ottomans had forbidden unification. So the Romanians didn't unite the territories. They just happened to pick the same prince for both. Constantinople couldn't argue with two legal elections. Within seven years, Cuza merged the administrations, created a single capital at Bucharest, and abolished feudalism. The Ottomans watched their empire shrink by technicality. Romania exists because of the best loophole in diplomatic history.
Two miners were walking to work in Moliagul, Victoria. Their cart wheel hit something. They dug it up with their hands. 72 kilograms of gold. Pure alluvial gold, shaped like a flattened potato, too big for the town's scales. They had to break it into three pieces just to weigh it. Worth about $10 million today, but they sold it immediately to the Bank of Victoria. The bank melted it down within days. No photographs exist. The second-largest nugget ever found, the "Welcome," came from the same area two years earlier. After the Welcome Stranger, prospectors tore apart every creek bed in Victoria. Nobody found anything close.
The United States and Britain signed the first Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, granting America the right to build and operate a canal across Central America while requiring it to remain unfortified and open to all nations. The agreement superseded the fifty-year-old Clayton-Bulwer Treaty that had blocked unilateral American construction. A revised version the following year removed the neutralization clause, clearing the final diplomatic obstacle to building the Panama Canal.
J. P. Morgan paid $480 million for Andrew Carnegie's steel company. Carnegie wanted the check made out to him personally. Morgan handed him the largest personal check ever written. Carnegie later said he should have asked for $100 million more. Morgan probably would have paid it. The deal created U.S. Steel — the first billion-dollar corporation in history. It controlled 67% of American steel production. One company. Two-thirds of the market. Carnegie retired at 65 and spent the rest of his life giving the money away. He built 2,509 libraries. Morgan kept building. What Carnegie saw as an exit, Morgan saw as a beginning.
Baekeland was trying to make a better shellac. Shellac came from beetles — literally, the secretions of lac bugs in India. It took 15,000 beetles six months to make a pound of it. He mixed phenol and formaldehyde instead, expecting a sticky mess. What he got wouldn't melt, wouldn't dissolve, and could be molded into any shape. He called it Bakelite. Within five years it was in telephones, radios, jewelry, engine parts. The first material that didn't exist in nature. Everything plastic in your house traces back to a chemist who was just tired of waiting on beetles.
Baekeland mixed formaldehyde and phenol under heat and pressure, expecting another failed experiment. Instead he got a material that wouldn't burn, melt, or dissolve in any common solvent. He called it Bakelite. Within two years it was in telephones, radios, electrical insulators, jewelry, kitchenware, engine parts. The first fully synthetic plastic — meaning it didn't exist anywhere in nature until a chemist in Yonkers made it in 1907. He announced it publicly in 1909. Everything plastic you've ever touched descends from that batch. We now produce 400 million tons of plastic annually. Baekeland thought he'd invented a better insulator for wires.
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 5
Quote of the Day
“Change is inevitable. Change for the better is a full-time job.”
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