Today In History
February 19 in History
Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Prince Andrew, Smokey Robinson, and Shivaji.

Japanese Americans Interned: Rights Stripped by Fear
Executive Order 9066 authorized military commanders to exclude all people of Japanese ancestry from the West Coast, displacing over 110,000 individuals into interior camps. This action stripped sixty-two percent of those incarcerated—U.S. citizens themselves—of their liberty based on racism rather than genuine military threat. The Supreme Court later upheld these exclusion orders in *Korematsu v. United States*, establishing a legal precedent that ignored the due process violations suffered by American citizens.
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Boris Pugo
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Historical Events
Executive Order 9066 authorized military commanders to exclude all people of Japanese ancestry from the West Coast, displacing over 110,000 individuals into interior camps. This action stripped sixty-two percent of those incarcerated—U.S. citizens themselves—of their liberty based on racism rather than genuine military threat. The Supreme Court later upheld these exclusion orders in *Korematsu v. United States*, establishing a legal precedent that ignored the due process violations suffered by American citizens.
About 30,000 US Marines stormed the black volcanic beaches of Iwo Jima on February 19, 1945, beginning a 36-day battle that killed nearly 7,000 Americans and virtually all 21,000 Japanese defenders. The island, only eight square miles, was needed as an emergency landing strip for B-29 bombers returning damaged from raids over Japan. General Tadamichi Kuribayashi had spent months constructing an elaborate system of tunnels, bunkers, and hidden gun positions that made the island a fortress. Unlike previous Pacific battles, the Japanese did not waste men in suicidal banzai charges; they fought from concealed positions, emerging to attack and disappearing underground. Marines had to clear each position individually with flamethrowers and demolition charges. The battle's most famous image, Joe Rosenthal's photograph of the flag raising on Mount Suribachi, was actually the second flag raised that day, though its iconic status remains undiminished.
Tsar Alexander II signed the Emancipation Manifesto on February 19, 1861, freeing roughly 23 million serfs who had been legally bound to the land and their landlords for centuries. The reform was driven by military necessity as much as moral conviction: Russia's humiliating defeat in the Crimean War had exposed the inability of a serf-based economy to compete with industrialized Western powers. The terms were deliberately complicated. Former serfs received personal freedom but had to purchase their land allotments through 'redemption payments' stretched over 49 years, payments that many could never afford. The land they received was often the worst plots, while landlords kept the most productive acreage. The result was a half-emancipation that left millions of peasants in poverty, fueling the rural discontent that would eventually explode in the revolutions of 1905 and 1917. Alexander himself was assassinated by revolutionaries in 1881.
Deng Xiaoping was purged twice before he finally consolidated power in 1978. Mao sent him to work in a factory during the Cultural Revolution. He came back. He sent him away again. He came back again. When he finally ran China, he didn't reverse Mao's legacy so much as hollow it out — keeping the flag while quietly dismantling everything behind it. He never held the title of president. He ran the country for two decades anyway.
Septimius Severus and Clodius Albinus each brought 150,000 men to Lugdunum in 197 AD. The battle lasted two days. At one point, Severus's flank collapsed and he threw off his purple cloak to fight on foot with his guards. When it ended, 60,000 Romans lay dead. Killed by other Romans. Over who got to wear the purple. The Rhône River ran red for days. Locals found armor in the riverbed for centuries.
Sigismund III became the only person to rule both Sweden and Poland simultaneously. He'd inherited Poland through his mother in 1587, then Sweden through his father in 1592. Two kingdoms, two crowns, one king. It lasted three years. Swedish nobles wanted a Protestant ruler. Sigismund was Catholic. They deposed him in 1599 and installed his uncle. The fight over succession dragged Sweden and Poland into sixty years of wars. His attempt to keep both thrones cost both kingdoms thousands of lives and bankrupted their treasuries. The Commonwealth never fully recovered.
The Dutch traded Manhattan for sugar plantations in Suriname. They thought they got the better deal. New Amsterdam had 1,500 people and kept getting attacked. Suriname had established plantations already producing profit. The English renamed it New York after the Duke of York, who'd actually captured it a decade earlier. This treaty just made the paperwork official. The Dutch got wealthy off Suriname for centuries. New York became New York.
Sweden's army was starving. At Napue, they were outnumbered two-to-one by Russian forces, but that wasn't the real problem. Charles XII had dragged them across Finland with no supply lines. The men were eating bark. They charged anyway. The Russians held their ground with artillery and cavalry that the Swedes couldn't match. Sweden lost 4,000 men in a single afternoon. Russia lost 300. Finland, which Sweden had controlled for five centuries, was gone within a year. This was the battle that broke Swedish imperial power in the Baltic. They'd been a superpower. After Napue, they were just another kingdom.
Aaron Burr was arrested for treason in Wakefield, Alabama, on February 19, 1807. He'd been traveling through the frontier with boats and men, allegedly planning to carve out his own empire in Spanish territory. Or invade Mexico. Or split the western states from the Union. Nobody could agree on what he was actually doing. Thomas Jefferson wanted him hanged. The trial became a constitutional showdown over what counts as treason. Chief Justice John Marshall presided. Burr walked free — not enough evidence of an "overt act." He fled to Europe anyway.
William Smith was hunting seals, not glory. He'd been blown off course in a storm south of Cape Horn when he spotted land nobody had charted — the South Shetland Islands, first confirmed sighting of Antarctic territory. He claimed them for King George III, but the British government barely cared. No trees, no natives to trade with, no obvious value. Within two years, American and British seal hunters had killed so many fur seals the islands were commercially worthless. The seals recovered. The territorial claim stuck. Britain still holds it, overlapping with claims from Chile and Argentina. A navigation error became a sovereignty dispute that's lasted two centuries.
Texas stopped being a country on February 19, 1846. The Republic of Texas — which had its own president, its own navy, its own foreign debt — handed over power to a state governor in Austin. Nine years as an independent nation, done. The ceremony was simple. Anson Jones, the last president of the Republic, lowered the Lone Star flag and said "The final act in this great drama is now performed. The Republic of Texas is no more." He thought he'd be remembered as a founding father. He killed himself four years later, bitter and broke. Texas kept the flag.
Edison's phonograph worked by accident. He was trying to improve the telegraph when he noticed his machine made a noise that sounded like speech. So he wrapped tinfoil around a cylinder, rigged up a needle, and shouted "Mary had a little lamb" into it. It played back. His own team didn't believe it would work until they heard it. The patent came through on February 19, 1878. He called it his favorite invention. Within a year, he'd moved on to the light bulb. But this one changed how humans experience time — you could hear the dead.
Two Eritrean nationalists threw grenades at Italian viceroy Rodolfo Graziani during a public ceremony in Addis Ababa. They missed. What followed wasn't a manhunt — it was three days of organized slaughter. Italian Blackshirts went house to house killing Ethiopians. They burned entire neighborhoods. They executed anyone literate, anyone who'd worked for the previous government, anyone they suspected. Conservative estimates: 19,000 dead in 72 hours. Graziani survived with minor wounds. Ethiopia still commemorates Yekatit 12 as Martyrs' Day. The assassination attempt failed. The massacre succeeded.
The first Japanese bombs hit Darwin at 9:58 AM. By 10:40, 243 people were dead and the city was burning. More bombs fell on Darwin that day than on Pearl Harbor. The Australian government censored the news for months — they feared panic would spread south. Darwin was evacuated. It stayed a ghost town for years. Most Australians didn't know it happened until after the war ended.
Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 twenty-three days after the FBI told him Japanese Americans posed no security threat. J. Edgar Hoover's report was explicit: mass incarceration wasn't necessary. Roosevelt signed anyway. Within months, 120,000 people lost their homes, businesses, farms. Two-thirds were American citizens. Many were children. The camps had barbed wire and guard towers. Families lived in horse stalls at assembly centers. No charges. No trials. The order never mentioned Japanese Americans by name — just "any persons." Legal cover for what everyone knew it meant.
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 19
Quote of the Day
“To know that we know what we know, and to know that we do not know what we do not know, that is true knowledge.”
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