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February 22 in History

Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Ramesses II, Robert Kardashian, and Horst Köhler.

Coolidge Broadcasts from White House: Radio Era Dawns
1924Event

Coolidge Broadcasts from White House: Radio Era Dawns

Calvin Coolidge became the first sitting president to deliver a political speech over radio on February 22, 1924, broadcasting from the White House to a national audience. Radio had existed for a few years, but its use for political communication was still experimental. Coolidge, known as 'Silent Cal' for his taciturn personality, proved surprisingly effective on the new medium. His flat, unemotional delivery, which fell flat in large auditoriums, came across as trustworthy and sincere through living room speakers. The broadcast reached millions of homes simultaneously, bypassing the newspaper editorial filter that had controlled political messaging since the founding of the republic. Within four years, radio had become the dominant platform for political communication. Franklin Roosevelt would master the format with his fireside chats. But Coolidge was first, and his broadcast established the principle that a president could speak directly to every American household at once.

Famous Birthdays

Ramesses II
Ramesses II

b. 1300 BC

Robert Kardashian

Robert Kardashian

d. 2003

Horst Köhler

Horst Köhler

1943–2025

J. Michael Bishop

J. Michael Bishop

b. 1936

John Ashton

John Ashton

1957–2024

John Mills

John Mills

1905–2005

Renato Dulbecco

Renato Dulbecco

b. 1914

Ximena Navarrete

Ximena Navarrete

b. 1988

Historical Events

Calvin Coolidge became the first sitting president to deliver a political speech over radio on February 22, 1924, broadcasting from the White House to a national audience. Radio had existed for a few years, but its use for political communication was still experimental. Coolidge, known as 'Silent Cal' for his taciturn personality, proved surprisingly effective on the new medium. His flat, unemotional delivery, which fell flat in large auditoriums, came across as trustworthy and sincere through living room speakers. The broadcast reached millions of homes simultaneously, bypassing the newspaper editorial filter that had controlled political messaging since the founding of the republic. Within four years, radio had become the dominant platform for political communication. Franklin Roosevelt would master the format with his fireside chats. But Coolidge was first, and his broadcast established the principle that a president could speak directly to every American household at once.
1924

Calvin Coolidge became the first sitting president to deliver a political speech over radio on February 22, 1924, broadcasting from the White House to a national audience. Radio had existed for a few years, but its use for political communication was still experimental. Coolidge, known as 'Silent Cal' for his taciturn personality, proved surprisingly effective on the new medium. His flat, unemotional delivery, which fell flat in large auditoriums, came across as trustworthy and sincere through living room speakers. The broadcast reached millions of homes simultaneously, bypassing the newspaper editorial filter that had controlled political messaging since the founding of the republic. Within four years, radio had become the dominant platform for political communication. Franklin Roosevelt would master the format with his fireside chats. But Coolidge was first, and his broadcast established the principle that a president could speak directly to every American household at once.

At least six men kidnapped the manager of a Securitas cash depot in Tonbridge, Kent, on February 21, 2006, along with his wife and child, then used him to gain access to the vault. They escaped with 53 million pounds in bank notes, the largest cash robbery in British history. The gang used a white Volvo truck to haul the money, but the sheer volume of cash, weighing over a ton, created immediate logistical problems. Police recovered 21 million pounds within days, some of it found in a van abandoned near a school. Ringleader Lee Murray, a mixed martial arts fighter, fled to Morocco, which has no extradition treaty with the UK. He was eventually convicted by a Moroccan court and sentenced to ten years. Several other gang members received sentences of up to fifteen years. Roughly 32 million pounds was never recovered. The robbery forced a complete overhaul of security protocols for UK cash handling facilities.
2006

At least six men kidnapped the manager of a Securitas cash depot in Tonbridge, Kent, on February 21, 2006, along with his wife and child, then used him to gain access to the vault. They escaped with 53 million pounds in bank notes, the largest cash robbery in British history. The gang used a white Volvo truck to haul the money, but the sheer volume of cash, weighing over a ton, created immediate logistical problems. Police recovered 21 million pounds within days, some of it found in a van abandoned near a school. Ringleader Lee Murray, a mixed martial arts fighter, fled to Morocco, which has no extradition treaty with the UK. He was eventually convicted by a Moroccan court and sentenced to ten years. Several other gang members received sentences of up to fifteen years. Roughly 32 million pounds was never recovered. The robbery forced a complete overhaul of security protocols for UK cash handling facilities.

Spain ceded Florida to the United States under the Adams-Onis Treaty, signed on February 22, 1819, resolving years of border conflicts, Seminole raids, and Andrew Jackson's unauthorized military incursions into Spanish territory. Secretary of State John Quincy Adams negotiated the deal, which also defined the western boundary of the Louisiana Purchase by drawing a line from the Sabine River to the 42nd parallel and then west to the Pacific. Spain received no payment for Florida; the US agreed only to assume  million in claims by American citizens against Spain. The treaty was a masterpiece of diplomatic pressure: Jackson's invasion of Florida in 1818, ostensibly to fight Seminoles, had demonstrated that Spain could not defend its territory. Adams used the embarrassment to force a sale that Spain could not refuse. The agreement also implicitly confirmed that Spain renounced any claims to the Oregon territory, opening the Pacific Northwest to American expansion.
1819

Spain ceded Florida to the United States under the Adams-Onis Treaty, signed on February 22, 1819, resolving years of border conflicts, Seminole raids, and Andrew Jackson's unauthorized military incursions into Spanish territory. Secretary of State John Quincy Adams negotiated the deal, which also defined the western boundary of the Louisiana Purchase by drawing a line from the Sabine River to the 42nd parallel and then west to the Pacific. Spain received no payment for Florida; the US agreed only to assume million in claims by American citizens against Spain. The treaty was a masterpiece of diplomatic pressure: Jackson's invasion of Florida in 1818, ostensibly to fight Seminoles, had demonstrated that Spain could not defend its territory. Adams used the embarrassment to force a sale that Spain could not refuse. The agreement also implicitly confirmed that Spain renounced any claims to the Oregon territory, opening the Pacific Northwest to American expansion.

705

A palace coup executed the Zhang brothers and forced Empress Wu Zetian to abdicate, restoring the Tang dynasty after fifteen years of her Zhou interregnum. Wu Zetian remains the only woman in Chinese history to hold the title of emperor in her own right, and her removal ended one of the most extraordinary — and controversial — reigns in East Asian history.

896

Pope Formosus crowned Arnulf of Carinthia as Holy Roman Emperor in Rome, cementing an alliance between the papacy and the Carolingian successor state. Arnulf suffered a debilitating stroke almost immediately and withdrew his army back across the Alps, leaving Rome undefended. His incapacitation triggered a power vacuum that rival Italian factions exploited for decades.

1371

Robert II waited 55 years to become king. He was named heir in 1318 as a child. He didn't take the throne until 1371. He was 55 years old — ancient by medieval standards. His legs were so weak from old injuries he could barely walk. His advisors ran most of the government. But his bloodline mattered more than his body. The Stuarts would rule Scotland for 300 years, then England too. All from a king who could barely stand.

1632

Galileo sent Ferdinando II the first copy of his *Dialogue* knowing exactly what he was doing. The book was written as a conversation between three men — one defending Copernicus, one defending Aristotle, and one playing dumb. The dumb one was named Simplicio. Everyone knew Simplicio was the Pope's position. Galileo had gotten approval to publish it. He'd followed the rules, added the required disclaimers. But he'd made the Pope's arguments sound idiotic. Ferdinando read it in Florence while the Vatican was reading it in Rome. Within months, Galileo was summoned to the Inquisition. The book that reached the Grand Duke first would be banned for two hundred years.

1744

A chaotic naval engagement off Toulon saw the combined Franco-Spanish fleet escape destruction due to poor coordination among British captains, several of whom refused to break the line of battle to engage. The resulting courts-martial exposed deep flaws in Royal Navy discipline and prompted Parliament to amend the Articles of War, imposing the death penalty for captains who failed to do their utmost against the enemy.

1770

Ebenezer Richardson panicked. The Boston customs officer was trapped in his house, protesters throwing rocks at his windows. He grabbed his musket and fired blind into the crowd. Christopher Seider, 11 years old, took the shot. He died that night. Five thousand people came to his funeral — a fifth of Boston's population. They carried his coffin through the streets for hours. Ten days later, the Boston Massacre happened. But Seider was first.

1821

Alexander Ypsilantis crossed the Prut River at Sculeni with a ragtag force of students and intellectuals on February 22, 1821. He was a one-armed Greek general in the Russian army betting everything on a gamble: that Romanian peasants would rise up against Ottoman rule and spark a wider Greek revolution. They didn't. The Romanians stayed home. His Sacred Band of 500 volunteers got slaughtered at Drăgășani three months later. But his failed invasion did something he never intended — it triggered the real Greek War of Independence in the Peloponnese. The Greeks there saw his disaster and decided to try anyway. Sometimes the spark matters more than the flame.

1862

Jefferson Davis took the oath of office in a driving rainstorm at Richmond, formally inaugurated as president of the Confederate States for a six-year term. The ceremony replaced his earlier provisional appointment and aimed to project legitimacy to European powers whose recognition the Confederacy desperately sought. The Union Army stood fewer than a hundred miles away.

1872

The Prohibition Party met in Columbus and nominated James Black for president. He was a Pennsylvania lawyer nobody had heard of. They got 5,608 votes — 0.02% of the total. They ran a candidate in every presidential election for the next 148 years anyway. By 1916, they'd helped pass prohibition in 26 states. Four years later, the 18th Amendment banned alcohol nationwide. The party that couldn't win a single county changed the Constitution.

1889

President Grover Cleveland signed the Enabling Act authorizing North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, and Washington to draft constitutions and apply for statehood, adding four stars to the American flag in a single legislative stroke. The act accelerated the political incorporation of the western frontier, granting voting representation to hundreds of thousands of settlers. Cleveland deliberately shuffled the Dakota documents so no one would know which state was admitted first.

1899

General Antonio Luna ordered the first Filipino counterattacks against American forces on this day in 1899. His troops had been retreating for weeks. Now they pushed back toward Manila with 4,000 men. Luna was a chemist before the war — he'd studied in Europe, spoke five languages, had a temper that got him into seven duels. He believed in discipline and modern tactics. His own officers hated him for it. The counterattacks failed. Manila stayed American. But Luna kept fighting for four more months until his own men stabbed him to death at a train station. Thirty-two wounds. The Americans didn't kill him. His fellow revolutionaries did.

1904

Britain sold its meteorological station on the South Orkney Islands to Argentina, inadvertently handing Buenos Aires a foothold in the sub-Antarctic that would fuel territorial disputes for over a century. Argentina maintained continuous occupation of the station, using it as evidence for sovereignty claims that London contested when it reasserted control over the islands in 1908. The transaction remains a footnote in the long-running dispute over Antarctic and South Atlantic territories.

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 22

Quote of the Day

“It is better to be alone than in bad company.”

George Washington

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