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On this day

February 12

Chile Declares Independence: O'Higgins Breaks Spanish Rule (1818). Qing Dynasty Ends: Puyi Abdicates the Throne (1912). Notable births include Abraham Lincoln (1809), Bill Russell (1934), Louisa Adams (1775).

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Chile Declares Independence: O'Higgins Breaks Spanish Rule
1818Event

Chile Declares Independence: O'Higgins Breaks Spanish Rule

Bernardo O'Higgins, the illegitimate son of a former Viceroy of Peru, signed Chile's Declaration of Independence near Concepcion on February 12, 1818, formally severing ties with Spain after eight years of revolutionary warfare. The declaration followed Jose de San Martin's decisive victory at the Battle of Chacabuco the previous year, which had liberated Santiago from royalist control. O'Higgins became the new republic's Supreme Director and immediately set about building state institutions, abolishing noble titles, and establishing public education. His authoritarian tendencies, however, quickly alienated the Chilean aristocracy. He was forced to resign in 1823 and spent the rest of his life in exile in Peru. The Chilean independence movement was unusual in Latin America because it was driven more by local elites seeking autonomy than by popular revolution, a pattern that shaped the country's relatively stable political evolution compared to its neighbors.

Qing Dynasty Ends: Puyi Abdicates the Throne
1912

Qing Dynasty Ends: Puyi Abdicates the Throne

Empress Dowager Longyu signed the Imperial Edict of Abdication on behalf of the six-year-old Emperor Puyi on February 12, 1912, ending 2,132 years of imperial rule in China. The deal was brokered by Yuan Shikai, a powerful general who played both sides, promising the Qing court favorable terms while positioning himself to take power in the new republic. Puyi was allowed to retain his title and live in the Forbidden City on an annual stipend of four million taels of silver, creating a surreal arrangement where a deposed emperor maintained a miniature court while a republic governed the country outside the walls. Sun Yat-sen, who had been provisional president of the Republic of China, stepped aside to let Yuan Shikai assume the presidency, a compromise that kept the country from civil war but handed power to an authoritarian who would later attempt to declare himself emperor.

Nine-Day Queen: Lady Jane Grey Executed
1554

Nine-Day Queen: Lady Jane Grey Executed

Lady Jane Grey was sixteen years old when she was beheaded on Tower Green on February 12, 1554, nine months after a Protestant faction had placed her on the English throne as an alternative to the Catholic Mary Tudor. Jane had been queen for nine days before Mary's supporters rallied and Jane's own father-in-law, the Duke of Northumberland, was arrested. Jane was imprisoned in the Tower of London along with her husband Lord Guildford Dudley. Mary initially seemed inclined to spare her cousin but changed her mind after Sir Thomas Wyatt's Protestant rebellion in January 1554, which made Jane a continuing threat as a rallying point. Dudley was executed the same morning; Jane watched from her window as his body was carried past. She went to the block blindfolded, fumbling for the executioner's block and asking a bystander to guide her hands to it. Her composure at sixteen has haunted the English imagination ever since.

San Martin Crosses Andes: Chile Liberated at Chacabuco
1817

San Martin Crosses Andes: Chile Liberated at Chacabuco

Jose de San Martin led an army of 5,000 men across the Andes through six different passes in January 1817, a logistical feat comparable to Hannibal's crossing of the Alps. The army climbed to altitudes above 12,000 feet, losing hundreds of mules and horses to cold and altitude sickness. San Martin divided his forces to confuse the Spanish about which routes he would use, then converged on the Chacabuco valley north of Santiago. The battle on February 12, 1817, lasted about two hours. San Martin's two-pronged assault overwhelmed the royalist defenders, killing roughly 500 Spanish soldiers while losing only 12 of his own. Santiago fell within days. The victory liberated central Chile from Spanish control, though royalist forces held the south for another year. San Martin then turned his attention to Peru, taking his army by sea to attack the viceroyalty's heartland and complete the liberation of South America's Pacific coast.

Lincoln Memorial Cornerstone Laid: Honoring a President
1914

Lincoln Memorial Cornerstone Laid: Honoring a President

The first stone of the Lincoln Memorial went down in 1914. Lincoln had been dead 49 years. Congress had been arguing about the memorial for 47 of them. They couldn't agree on location, design, or whether Lincoln even deserved one — some Southern congressmen voted against it. The architect, Henry Bacon, designed it to look like a Greek temple because he thought Lincoln was that important. It took eight more years to finish. When they dedicated it in 1922, the crowd was segregated. Black attendees, including the keynote speaker, sat in a roped-off section. Lincoln would've hated that.

Quote of the Day

“Folks are usually about as happy as they make their minds up to be.”

Historical events

Born on February 12

Portrait of Jesse Spencer
Jesse Spencer 1979

Jesse Spencer was born in Melbourne on February 12, 1979, into a family where medicine ran deep—both his parents were doctors.

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He chose acting instead. At 12, he landed the lead role in the Australian soap *Neighbours* and stayed for six years. Then he moved to London. Studied at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. In 2004, he auditioned for *House* and got cast as Dr. Robert Chase. The irony wasn't lost on him: he'd spent his whole life avoiding medicine, then played a doctor for eight years. After *House* ended, he joined *Chicago Fire* as a firefighter. Still acting. Still not a doctor. His parents eventually stopped asking.

Portrait of Chynna Phillips
Chynna Phillips 1968

Chynna Phillips was born in Los Angeles in 1968, daughter of two Mamas and Papas members.

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She grew up backstage at concerts she couldn't remember. At 22, she formed Wilson Phillips with Carnie and Wendy Wilson — daughters of Beach Boy Brian Wilson. Their first album sold 10 million copies. Their debut single "Hold On" hit number one for three weeks. Three children of famous musicians, singing harmonies their parents had made famous decades earlier. They outsold their parents' bands combined.

Portrait of Christopher McCandless
Christopher McCandless 1968

Christopher McCandless was born in El Segundo, California, in 1968.

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Top student. Athlete. Gave $24,000 to charity after graduation — his entire savings. Burned his cash. Cut up his credit cards. Told his parents nothing. He walked into the Alaskan wilderness in April 1992 with a ten-pound bag of rice, a .22 rifle, and books by Tolstoy and Thoreau. Four months later, hikers found his body in an abandoned bus. He'd written "I have had a happy life and thank the Lord" in his journal. He was 24. His story became "Into the Wild." Thousands now hike to that bus, risking the same wilderness that killed him.

Portrait of Brett Kavanaugh
Brett Kavanaugh 1965

Brett Kavanaugh ascended to the Supreme Court in 2018, cementing a conservative majority that has since reshaped…

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American jurisprudence on issues ranging from reproductive rights to administrative power. Before his contentious confirmation, he served as a federal judge for over a decade and worked as a key investigator during the Starr inquiry into the Clinton administration.

Portrait of Phil Zimmermann
Phil Zimmermann 1954

Phil Zimmermann revolutionized digital privacy by releasing Pretty Good Privacy in 1991, providing the public with…

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military-grade encryption for the first time. His software sparked a multi-year federal investigation into the export of cryptographic technology, ultimately forcing the U.S. government to relax strict controls and cementing encryption as a fundamental tool for internet security.

Portrait of Michael McDonald
Michael McDonald 1952

Michael McDonald defined the blue-eyed soul sound of the late 1970s with his distinctive, husky baritone and…

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sophisticated jazz-inflected keyboard arrangements. By joining The Doobie Brothers, he steered the band from gritty biker rock toward the polished, radio-friendly R&B that dominated the charts and earned him five Grammy Awards.

Portrait of Ray Kurzweil
Ray Kurzweil 1948

Ray Kurzweil was born in Queens in 1948.

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At seventeen, he built a computer that composed music. It worked. He performed the compositions on national television. At twenty, he sold his first company to Harcourt Brace for over $100,000. He invented the first print-to-speech reading machine for the blind. Stevie Wonder bought the first one and they became friends. He's been taking 200 pills a day since his thirties, trying to live long enough to reach what he calls the Singularity — the moment machines become smarter than humans. He predicted it would happen by 2045. Google hired him as Director of Engineering in 2012. He's still taking the pills.

Portrait of Ehud Barak
Ehud Barak 1942

Ehud Barak became Israel's most decorated soldier before he ever became Prime Minister.

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Thirty-five years in the military. He led the 1976 Entebbe rescue raid disguised as a woman. He commanded the unit that killed three PLO leaders in Beirut in 1973, personally shooting one in his apartment. When he finally entered politics in 1995, he'd already spent more time in combat than most politicians spend in office. He won the prime ministership in 1999 with the largest electoral victory in Israeli history. He lost it 20 months later. The soldier's approach didn't translate. He was born March 12, 1942.

Portrait of Ray Manzarek
Ray Manzarek 1939

Ray Manzarek defined the psychedelic sound of the 1960s by anchoring The Doors with his hypnotic, bass-heavy organ lines.

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His decision to provide the keyboard bass for Jim Morrison’s vocals allowed the band to forgo a traditional bassist, creating the eerie, minimalist atmosphere that propelled hits like Light My Fire to the top of the charts.

Portrait of Bill Russell

Bill Russell's Boston Celtics won eleven championships in thirteen seasons.

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He won two championships as player-coach — the first Black head coach in major American professional sports history. He was a ferocious defender, obsessive about positioning and timing, able to redirect shots rather than swat them away, turning defense into a form of offense. After the 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., he canceled a basketball camp he'd organized and said he wasn't sure basketball mattered anymore. Then he kept playing.

Portrait of Pran
Pran 1920

Pran played villains so convincingly that mothers wouldn't name their sons after him.

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For two decades, "Pran" nearly disappeared from Indian birth records. He'd slap heroes, threaten heroines, and audiences would throw stones at his car. Then in 1967, he played a reformed gangster in *Upkar*. Standing ovation. He kept playing villains, but now parents named their kids Pran again. He acted in over 400 films. The government gave him the Padma Bhushan at 81.

Portrait of Julian Schwinger
Julian Schwinger 1918

Julian Schwinger was born in New York City on February 12, 1918.

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He published his first physics paper at 16. At 17, Columbia kicked him out for skipping classes — he was too busy reading physics journals in the library. He transferred to Columbia's graduate program without finishing his undergraduate degree. At 29, he independently developed quantum electrodynamics, the theory explaining how light and matter interact. He shared the 1965 Nobel Prize with Feynman and Tomonaga. But Schwinger's math was so dense, so elegant, so impossibly difficult that most physicists used Feynman's simpler diagrams instead. Schwinger never forgave him for that.

Portrait of Thubten Gyatso
Thubten Gyatso 1876

Thubten Gyatso was born in 1876 to a peasant family in southern Tibet.

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He became Dalai Lama at age seven. At 23, he fled to Mongolia when British troops invaded Lhasa. At 28, he fled to China when the British invaded again. At 34, he fled to India when China invaded. He spent more time in exile than in his palace. He modernized Tibet's army, banned corporal punishment, and installed Tibet's first electrical plant. He died in 1933, warning his people that China would return.

Portrait of Abraham Lincoln

Abraham Lincoln was born in a log cabin in Kentucky with a dirt floor, taught himself to read by firelight, and lost his mother at 9.

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He failed in business twice, lost eight elections before winning the presidency, and suffered what appears to have been severe clinical depression throughout his adult life. He took office with seven states already seceded. He had no military experience. He fired five generals before he found Grant. The Emancipation Proclamation freed no enslaved people on the day it took effect — its reach was limited to Confederate states where Lincoln had no authority. He was shot on Good Friday, 1865, five days after Lee surrendered. He never saw the end of the war he'd held together.

Portrait of Peter Cooper
Peter Cooper 1791

Peter Cooper built the first American steam locomotive.

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Tom Thumb, he called it — a one-horsepower engine that lost a race to a horse but proved the concept anyway. He made his fortune in glue, then iron, then steel rails. At 87, he founded Cooper Union in New York: a college where every student, forever, would attend free. No tuition. Ever. That was the endowment rule he wrote. He'd had six years of schooling himself. The school opened in 1859 and held to his rule for 155 years. Abraham Lincoln spoke there during his presidential campaign. The Great Hall still stands.

Died on February 12

Portrait of Charles M. Schulz
Charles M. Schulz 2000

Charles Schulz drew Peanuts for fifty years without an assistant.

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Every strip, every Sunday page, entirely by himself. He announced his retirement on December 14, 1999 — the same day he was diagnosed with colon cancer. He died in his sleep on February 12, 2000. The next morning, his final Sunday strip appeared in newspapers. He'd written himself out of it: Charlie Brown reads a letter from the author saying goodbye. Schulz had timed it himself.

Portrait of Anna Anderson
Anna Anderson 1984

Anna Anderson died in Virginia in 1984, still insisting she was Anastasia Romanov.

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She'd spent 60 years claiming it — survived court cases in three countries, married an American history professor, convinced European royalty. DNA testing in 1994 proved she was Franziska Schanzkowska, a Polish factory worker who'd gone missing in Berlin in 1920. She'd studied the Romanovs obsessively. The timing was perfect: everyone wanted a survivor. She almost was one.

Portrait of James Cash Penney
James Cash Penney 1971

James Cash Penney transformed American retail by applying the "Golden Rule" to his department stores, emphasizing fair…

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treatment for both employees and customers. His death in 1971 concluded a career that pioneered the credit-based shopping model, which fundamentally reshaped how middle-class families accessed consumer goods across the United States.

Portrait of Hassan al-Banna
Hassan al-Banna 1949

Hassan al-Banna transformed Egyptian political life by founding the Muslim Brotherhood in 1928, an organization that…

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evolved from a modest social reform group into the most influential Islamist movement of the twentieth century. His assassination in Cairo by government agents triggered a cycle of state repression and radicalization that continues to shape Middle Eastern politics today.

Portrait of Auguste Escoffier
Auguste Escoffier 1935

Auguste Escoffier ran the kitchens of the Savoy and the Ritz in London, then the Carlton, and in doing so dismantled…

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the brigade system that had kept French restaurant kitchens as chaotic as medieval guilds. He replaced it with a clean hierarchy — the brigade de cuisine — that every professional kitchen in the world still uses. He invented peach melba, created the practice of a la carte menus, and wrote Le Guide Culinaire in 1903 as a technical manual so comprehensive it's still in print.

Portrait of Lady Jane Grey
Lady Jane Grey 1554

Lady Jane Grey was beheaded at 16 after ruling England for nine days.

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She didn't want the throne. Her parents forced her into marriage with Guildford Dudley, then forced her to accept the crown when Edward VI died. She spent her entire reign imprisoned in the Tower of London. On the scaffold, she had to feel for the block because they blindfolded her and she couldn't find it. Her husband was executed hours earlier, same day.

Holidays & observances

Saint Benedict of Aniane gets his feast day on February 11th.

Saint Benedict of Aniane gets his feast day on February 11th. He's the other Benedict — not the famous one who wrote The Rule. This Benedict took that Rule and made it mandatory across all of Europe. Charlemagne's son hired him to standardize monasteries in the 9th century. Before that, every monastery did whatever it wanted. Different prayers, different schedules, different everything. Benedict of Aniane traveled monastery to monastery, imposing uniformity. He succeeded. For the next thousand years, Western monasticism meant Benedictine monasticism. One bureaucrat with imperial backing homogenized an entire religious movement.

Damian of Alexandria is honored today in the Coptic Orthodox Church.

Damian of Alexandria is honored today in the Coptic Orthodox Church. He led the church from 569 to 605 AD — thirty-six years during one of its most fractured periods. The church had split from Rome and Constantinople over the nature of Christ. Damian held firm on Coptic theology while Egypt was under Byzantine rule. He kept the church intact when political pressure could have shattered it. Most patriarchs before him lasted less than a decade. He outlasted three Byzantine emperors. The Coptic Church still exists today, largely because he refused to compromise during those decades.

Julian the Hospitaller never existed.

Julian the Hospitaller never existed. He's a medieval legend — a nobleman who accidentally kills his own parents, then spends his life ferrying travelers across a dangerous river to atone. The story spread across Europe in the 13th century. Pilgrims and innkeepers adopted him as their patron saint. Hotels are still named after him. The Catholic Church celebrates him today, February 12th, honoring a fictional murderer who found redemption through service. Guilt, apparently, makes better saints than virtue.

The Roman Catholic Church celebrates the Feast of the Holy Family today — Jesus, Mary, and Joseph as a household unit.

The Roman Catholic Church celebrates the Feast of the Holy Family today — Jesus, Mary, and Joseph as a household unit. It's the first Sunday after Christmas, when most families are still recovering from the actual day. The feast didn't exist until 1893. Pope Leo XIII created it during the Industrial Revolution, when factory work was pulling families apart and he wanted to reinforce the domestic ideal. It's one of the newest major feasts in a church that counts centuries like decades. The timing matters: right after Christmas, before the new year, when everyone's thinking about what family means anyway.

Lincoln's Birthday became a state holiday in New York in 1896, then spread to 30 states.

Lincoln's Birthday became a state holiday in New York in 1896, then spread to 30 states. But it never went federal. His actual birthday is February 12th. Most states folded it into Presidents Day in 1971 to create three-day weekends. Illinois still celebrates it separately. So does California. The rest of the country lumps him with Washington and every other president. The man who held the country together during civil war gets shared billing with William Henry Harrison.

Venezuela celebrates Youth Day on February 12, marking the Battle of La Victoria in 1814.

Venezuela celebrates Youth Day on February 12, marking the Battle of La Victoria in 1814. José Félix Ribas commanded a force of seminary students and university boys — some as young as fourteen — against a royalist army twice their size. The students held the town for eight hours. Most died. The victory kept Simón Bolívar's independence campaign alive when it was weeks from collapse. Today, Venezuelan students get the day off. The battle they're commemorating happened because their school was empty — everyone who could hold a rifle was already at the front.

National Freedom to Marry Day marks the 2015 Supreme Court ruling that legalized same-sex marriage nationwide.

National Freedom to Marry Day marks the 2015 Supreme Court ruling that legalized same-sex marriage nationwide. Before Obergefell v. Hodges, couples crossed state lines to marry, then returned home to legal limbo. Massachusetts was first in 2004. Eleven years later, all fifty states fell in line. The case hinged on the Fourteenth Amendment's equal protection clause — the same one used in Loving v. Virginia to strike down bans on interracial marriage. Different couples, same argument, forty-eight years apart.

Georgia was founded as a prison colony that banned slavery, rum, and lawyers.

Georgia was founded as a prison colony that banned slavery, rum, and lawyers. James Oglethorpe wanted a fresh start for England's debtors. The no-slavery rule lasted 16 years before colonists demanded it be lifted — they couldn't compete economically with South Carolina's plantations. The rum ban fell even faster. The lawyer ban? That one stuck for decades. Georgia Day marks the colony's 1733 founding, celebrating ideals the colonists themselves abandoned almost immediately.

The Martyrs of Abitinae were 49 Christians executed in Carthage around 304 AD for refusing to stop gathering for Mass.

The Martyrs of Abitinae were 49 Christians executed in Carthage around 304 AD for refusing to stop gathering for Mass. The Roman Empire had just banned Christian worship. The group from Abitinae, a small North African town, kept meeting anyway. When arrested, their leader Saturninus said: "We cannot live without the Sunday celebration." They were tortured, then killed. Their defiance became the rallying cry "Sine dominico non possumus" — Without Sunday, we cannot be. The phrase still appears in Catholic liturgy. They died for showing up to church.

Darwin didn't believe in Darwin Day.

Darwin didn't believe in Darwin Day. He wanted his theories judged on evidence, not celebrated like a saint's feast. Now every February 12, scientists and educators mark his birthday anyway. They host lectures, museum exhibits, evolution teach-ins. Started in the 1990s by secular humanists who needed a counter-holiday to creationism debates in schools. Darwin would've hated the irony: a day of dogma-free thinking that became its own ritual.

The Eastern Orthodox Church still uses the Julian calendar for its liturgical year, which is why their Christmas fall…

The Eastern Orthodox Church still uses the Julian calendar for its liturgical year, which is why their Christmas falls thirteen days after the Western one. Every day has its own saints, hymns, and scripture readings — a cycle that repeats annually but feels different depending on where it lands in the week. Sundays always take precedence. The system dates back to the fourth century, when monks in Constantinople started organizing worship around commemorating martyrs. What began as remembering specific deaths became a complete framework for experiencing time itself. Orthodox Christians don't just observe holidays. They live inside a calendar that transforms every single day into sacred time.

Georgians celebrate the anniversary of James Oglethorpe’s 1733 landing at Yamacraw Bluff, which established the colon…

Georgians celebrate the anniversary of James Oglethorpe’s 1733 landing at Yamacraw Bluff, which established the colony as a buffer against Spanish Florida. This founding solidified the British presence in the region and initiated a unique social experiment that initially banned slavery and restricted land ownership to ensure a self-sufficient, agrarian society.

Red Hand Day marks February 12, when the UN calls attention to child soldiers.

Red Hand Day marks February 12, when the UN calls attention to child soldiers. Around 250,000 children are fighting in armed conflicts right now. Some are as young as eight. They're given weapons, forced to the front lines, or used as scouts and spies. The date commemorates the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which entered into force in 2002. It prohibits military recruitment of anyone under 15. But compliance is voluntary. And enforcement is nearly impossible in the places where it matters most. The red hand symbolizes a child's refusal to hold a weapon. Most of them never got to refuse.

Union Day marks Myanmar's independence from British colonial rule on February 12, 1947.

Union Day marks Myanmar's independence from British colonial rule on February 12, 1947. Except it doesn't. That's when Aung San signed the Panglong Agreement with ethnic minority leaders — Shan, Kachin, Chin — promising them autonomy in a federal union. Independence came nine months later. Aung San was assassinated before he saw it. The autonomy he promised never materialized. The ethnic conflicts that followed have lasted 77 years. Myanmar celebrates the agreement, not what it became. The difference matters.