Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Ken Burns Makes a Point About Sanitizing the American Revolution, Even Though He Himself Could Not Resist Sanitizing It

Last year, I expressed disappointment in Ken Burns after watching really only part of the first episode of his new series on the American Revolution.

What bothered me was the premise he was arguing, that it was the most consequential revolution in world history. That is debatable at best, and seemed like a very transparently Americentric sentiment at a time when Americans should be more aware than ever of the dangers of being overly fixated on ourselves as a nation. I turned off the television right then and there, and never turned it back on. Never watched the rest of the episode, or any other episodes, so disappointed was I in Ken Burns.

Recently, Burns spoke of the American Revolution, claiming that some people have sanitized it of violent episodes in order to make it look more glowing in popular perception. Some people only want to fixate on the heroic and patriotic images, as well as the ideals which ultimately inspired the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

Burns argues that the violence does not, in fact, detract from these ideals.

And while I largely agree with him on this  point, I cannot help but wonder why he himself took such pains to sanitize the American Revolution for an American television audience by once again assuring them that everything in the world always and forever revolves around what happens here. That what happens here is far and away the most important and influential thing in the world.

That whole "Thank God for the United States and for Americans" mentality is one thing which, I think it's safe to say, the rest of the world is getting damn sick of. And for good reason.

So while I agree on some level with Burns here on this specific point, he himself seemed to contradict this by not being able to resist his own sanitization of the American Revolution by once again making sure that Americans hear what they want to hear, and probably at the expense of what they need to hear at this point. 

Namely, that the rest of the world is not always waiting with bated breath to see how things turn out here within these sacred American borders. 

In short, maybe it's time for us to get over ourselves.




Ken Burns: ‘We have sanitized’ the American Revolution by Tara Suter - 02/01/26 4:47 PM ET

https://thehill.com/blogs/in-the-know/5717757-ken-burns-sanitized-war/?fbclid=IwY2xjawPultJleHRuA2FlbQIxMABzcnRjBmFwcF9pZBAyMjIwMzkxNzg4MjAwODkyAAEeurRJyGVjemLr0J9ZNmIdRDbvmG1VqY57Lri279yWOezeK9yunHBzsATypXY_aem_FGEZA8zD_Y0xJQ9_Osk57Q

Ken Burns: ‘We have sanitized’ the American Revolution

February 3rd: This Day in History

 



Once again, it should be reiterated, that this does not pretend to be a very extensive history of what happened on this day (nor is it the most original - the links can be found down below). If you know something that I am missing, by all means, shoot me an email or leave a comment, and let me know!


On this day in 1377, Cardinal Robert of Geneva (anti-pope Clemens VII) started his term. In 1377 on this day, there was a mass execution of the population of Cesena, Italy. In 1451 on this day, Sultan Mehmed II inherited the throne of the Ottoman Empire. Johann Gutenberg, German printer and inventor of the movable printing print, died on this day in 1468. On this day in 1488, Bartholomeus Diaz became the first European to find discovered Mosselbaai (Angra dos Vaqueros), now known as Mossel Bay in South Africa. The Battle of Diu, between Portugal and the Ottoman Empire, was fought on this day in 1509 in Diu, India. Henry of Navarre (future Henry IV) escaped from Paris on this day in 1576. On this day in 1591, the German monarchy formed the Protestant Union of Torgau. Cardinal Mazarin returned to Paris from exile on this day in 1653. In 1660 on this day, the army of General Moncks reached London. The first paper money in what would become the United States was issued in the colony of Massachusetts on this day in 1690. In 1740 on this day, Charles de Bourbon, King of Naples, invited Jews to return to Sicily. On this day in 1820, poet John Keats, aged 24, coughed up blood and realized that he, like his brother Tom, was doomed to die of tuberculosis. In 1887 on this day, in an attempt to avoid disputed national elections, Congress created the Electoral Count Act. On this day in 1917 during World War I, the United States broke off diplomatic relations with Germany after the US liner Housatonic was sunk by German submarines. In 1950 on this day, Klaus Fuchs, a German-born British nuclear physicist who helped developed the atomic bomb, was arrested in Great Britain for passing atomic bomb information to the Soviets. On this day in 1962, American President John F. Kennedy baned all trade with Cuba except for food & drugs. In 1993 on this day, a federal trial of 4 police officers charged with civil rights violations in the videotaped beating of Rodney King commenced in Los Angeles, California. On this day in 1995, Col. Eileen Collins became the first woman to pilot the space shuttle when the STS 63 (Discovery 19), blasted off. 

Here's a more detailed look at events that transpired on this date throughout history:

 On this day in 1377, Cardinal Robert of Geneva (anti-pope Clemens VII) started his term. 

 In 1377 on this day, there was a mass execution of the population of Cesena, Italy. 

 In 1451 on this day, Sultan Mehmed II inherited the throne of the Ottoman Empire. 

 Johann Gutenberg, German printer and inventor of the movable printing print, died on this day in 1468. 

 On this day in 1488, Bartholomeus Diaz became the first European to find discovered Mosselbaai (Angra dos Vaqueros), now known as Mossel Bay in South Africa. 

 The Battle of Diu, between Portugal and the Ottoman Empire, was fought on this day in 1509 in Diu, India. Henry of Navarre (future Henry IV) escaped from Paris on this day in 1576. 

 On this day in 1591, the German monarchy formed the Protestant Union of Torgau. 

 Cardinal Mazarin returned to Paris from exile on this day in 1653. 

 In 1660 on this day, the army of General Moncks reached London. 







 The first paper money in what would become the United States was issued in the colony of Massachusetts on this day in 1690. 


 In 1740 on this day, Charles de Bourbon, King of Naples, invited Jews to return to Sicily.


 1743 - Philadelphia establishes a "pesthouse" to quarantine immigrants

 1752 - Dutch States-General forbid export of windmills

 1781 - Dutch West Indies island of St Eustatia taken by British

 1783 - Spain recognizes US independence

 1807 - A British military force, under Brig-Gen. Sir Samuel Auchmuty captures the city of Montevideo, then part of the Spanish Empire now capital of Uruguay.

 1809 - Territory of Illinois organizes (including present-day Wisconsin)

 1815 - World's 1st commercial cheese factory established, in Switzerland


 On this day in 1820, poet John Keats, aged 24, coughed up blood and realized that he, like his brother Tom, was doomed to die of tuberculosis. Despite the tender care of his fiancÝe, Fanny Brawne, and a journey to Italy in the hopes of improving his condition, he dies in February 1821, only 25 years old. But in that short time, he achieved a remarkable reputation as a leading poet.    Unlike many writers of his day, Keats came from a lower-middle-class background. His father worked at a stable in London and eventually married the owners' daughter. John was the first of the couple's five children. At private school, John was high-spirited and boisterous, given to fist fights and roughhousing despite his small stature-even as an adult, he was barely over five feet tall. Keats' schoolmasters encouraged his interest in reading and later introduced him to poetry and theater.    When John was eight, his father died after falling off a horse, launching a long economic struggle that would keep Keats in poverty throughout his life, despite the large inheritance due him. His mother quickly remarried, and the five Keats children were sent to live with their maternal grandparents. The marriage failed, and their mother soon joined them. However, she died in 1810, and John's grandparents died by 1814. An unscrupulous guardian kept the Keats children away from their money and apprenticed John to a surgeon in 1811. Keats worked with the surgeon until 1814, then went to work for a hospital in London as a junior apothecary and surgeon in charge of dressing wounds.   In London, Keats pursued his interest in literature while working at the hospital. He became friends with the editor of the Examiner, Leigh Hunt, a successful poet and author who introduced him to other literary figures, including Percy Bysshe Shelley. Although Keats did not write his first poem until age 18, he quickly showed tremendous promise, encouraged by Hunt and his circle. Keats' work first appeared in the Examiner on this day in 1816, followed by Keats' first book, Poems (1817). After 1817, Keats devoted himself entirely to poetry, becoming a master of the Romantic sonnet and trying his hand at epic poems like Hyperion.    In 1818, Keats' brother Tom fell ill with tuberculosis. Another brother's poor investment left him stranded and penniless in Kentucky. Keats' economic struggles worsened, and a strenuous walking tour of England's Lake District damaged his health. The one bright spot in his life was Fanny Brawne, a young woman with whom he fell madly in love. They became engaged, but Keats' poverty did not allow them to marry. From January to September 1819, Keats produced an outpouring of brilliant work, including poems like "Ode on a Grecian Urn," "Ode to a Nightingale," and "La Belle Dame Sans Merci."

 1825 - Dutch North Sea coast floods



 1830 - The sovereignty of Greece was confirmed in a London Protocol.


 1834 - Wake Forest University is established.
1836 - Whig Party holds its 1st national convention (Albany NY)
1844 - Hector Berlioz' "Carnaval Romain," premieres in Paris
1855 - Wisconsin Supreme Ct declares US Fugitive Slave Law unconstitutional
1860 - Thomas Clemson takes office as 1st US superintendent of agriculture

 1864 - Sherman's march through Mississippi
1865 - Hampton Roads Peace Conference, Lincoln & Stephens reach an impasse
1867 - Prince Mutsuhito, 14, becomes Emperor Meiji of Japan (1867-1912)
1869 - Booth theater at 23rd & 6th opens in NYC (Romeo & Juliet)





An image of the iconic "We the People" wording of the Constitution.



The American Bill of Rights (picture that I took of a copy of the Bill of Rights, not the original)

 On this day in 1870, the 15th Amendment (Black suffrage) was ratified.



1876 - Albert Spalding with $800 starts sporting goods co, manufacturing 1st official baseball, tennis ball, basketball, golf ball, & football


 1882 - Circus owner PT Barnum buys his world famous elephant Jumbo







The Capitol Building in Washington, D.C.

 In 1887 on this day, in an attempt to avoid disputed national elections, Congress created the Electoral Count Act.

1892 - Russia closes down Yeshiva of Volozhin
1894 - 1st US steel sailing vessel, Dirigo, launched, Bath, Me
1895 - Wilhelm Mauseth skates world record 500 m (46.8 secs)
1900 - Rival forces fight for control of the Union Park ball grounds in Balt
1900 - Gubernatorial candidate William Goebel is assassinated in Frankfort, Kentucky.


 1901 - Dutch troops under Gen Van Heutsz conquer Batu Ilië on Sumatra


 1903 - Frederick Lugard occupies Kano West Africa

 1908 - Supreme Court rules a union boycott violates Sherman Antitrust Act

1908 - Foundation of Panathinaikos in Athens, Greece.
1913 - 16th Amendment, federal income tax, ratified
1913 - Golden/Cawthorne's musical "Sunshine Girl," premieres in NYC
1915 - Turkish & German army reach Suez Canal
1916 - Canada's original Parliament buildings, in Ottawa, burns down
1916 - Tristan Tzar publishes Dada-manifest in Zurich Switzerland
1917 - US liner Housatonic sunk by German sub & diplomatic relations severed

 On this day in 1917 during World War I, the United States broke off diplomatic relations with Germany after the US liner Housatonic was sunk by German submarines. On this day in 1917, President Woodrow Wilson speaks for two hours before a historic session of Congress to announce that the United States is breaking diplomatic relations with Germany.    Due to the reintroduction of the German navy's policy of unlimited submarine warfare, announced two days earlier by Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann Hollwegg, Wilson announced that his government had no choice but to cut all diplomatic ties with Germany in order to uphold the honor and dignity of the United States. Though he maintained that We do not desire any hostile conflict with the German government, Wilson nevertheless cautioned that war would follow if Germany followed through on its threat to sink American ships without warning.    Later that day, Count von Bernstorff, the German ambassador to the U.S., received a note written by Secretary of State Robert Lansing stating that The President hasdirected me to announce to your Excellency that all diplomatic relations between the United States and the German empire are severed, and that the American Ambassador at Berlin will be immediately withdrawn, and in accordance with such announcement to deliver to your Excellency your passports. Bernstorff was guaranteed safe passage out of the country, but was ordered to leave Washington immediately. Also in the wake of Wilson's speech, all German cruisers docked in the United States were seized and the government formally demanded that all American prisoners being held in Germany be released at once.    On the same day, a German U-boat sunk the American cargo ship Housatonic off the Scilly Islands, just southwest of Britain. A British ship rescued the ship's crew, but its entire cargo of grain was lost.    In Berlin that night, before learning of the president's speech, German Foreign Secretary Arthur Zimmermann told U.S. Ambassador James J. Gerard that Everything will be alright. America will do nothing, for President Wilson is for peace and nothing else. Everything will go on as before. He was proved wrong the following morning, as news arrived of the break in relations between America and Germany, a decisive step towards U.S. entry into the First World War.



1918 - Twin Peaks Tunnel longest (11,920 feet) streetcar tunnel begins service
1919 - Herbert/Blossom's musical "Velvet Lady," premieres in NYC



 In 1919 on this day, the League of Nations held it's first meeting in Paris.


1919 - Socialist conference convenes (Berne Switzerland)
1923 - The Alpha Zeta chapter of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia founded at Pennsylvania State University.
1924 - Alexei Ryko elected as Pres of People's commission (succeeds Lenin)
1927 - Uprising against regime of general Carmona in Portugal
1929 - Revolutionary Socialist Party forms in Amsterdam

 1930 - William Howard Taft, resigns as chief justice for health reasons

 1930 - The Communist Party of Vietnam is established.

Journalist and Critic H. L. MenckenJournalist and Critic H. L. Mencken 1931 - Arkansas legislature passes motion to pray for soul of H L Mencken after he calls state "apex of moronia"
1931 - The Hawke's Bay earthquake, New Zealand's worst natural disaster, kills 258
1933 - 1st interstate legislative conference in US opens, Washington, DC


 1933 - German Minister Hermann Goering bans social-democratic newspaper Vorwarts

1933 - Marinus van der Lubbe departs to Berlin
1937 - Bradman scores 212 (in 441 minutes!) in 5th Test Cricket v England
1938 - Paul Osborn's "On Borrowed Time," premieres in NYC
1941 - Supreme Court upheld Federal Wage & Hour law, sets min wages & max hrs
1942 - 1st Japanese air raid on Java
1942 - Baseball owners agree to permit each club up to 14 night games in 1942
1943 - 4 chaplains drown after giving up their life jackets to others
1944 - World War II: United States troops capture the Marshall Islands.
1945 - Almost 1,000 Flying Fortresses drop 3,000 tons of bombs on Berlin
1945 - Walt Disney's "3 Caballeros" released
1947 - -81°F (-63°C), Snag Yukon (North American record)
Nazi Politician Hermann GoeringNazi Politician Hermann Goering 1947 - 1st black reporter in Congressional press gallery (Percival Prattis)
1947 - Bradman bowled by Alec Bedser for a duck in 4th Test Cricket
1948 - Dick Button becomes 1st world figure skating champion from US


 In 1950 on this day, Klaus Fuchs, a German-born British nuclear physicist who helped developed the atomic bomb, was arrested in Great Britain for passing atomic bomb information to the Soviets.  Klaus Fuchs was arrested in Great Britain for passing top-secret information about the bomb to the Soviet Union. The arrest of Fuchs led authorities to several other individuals involved in a spy ring, culminating with the arrest of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg and their subsequent execution.    Fuchs and his family fled Germany in 1933 to avoid Nazi persecution and came to Great Britain, where Fuchs earned his doctorate in physics. During World War II, British authorities were aware of the leftist leanings of both Fuchs and his father. However, Fuchs was eventually invited to participate in the British program to develop an atomic bomb (the project named "Tube Alloys") because of his expertise. At some point after the project began, Soviet agents contacted Fuchs and he began to pass information about British progress to them. Late in 1943, Fuchs was among a group of British scientists brought to America to work on the Manhattan Project, the U.S. program to develop an atomic bomb. Fuchs continued his clandestine meetings with Soviet agents. When the war ended, Fuchs returned to Great Britain and continued his work on the British atomic bomb project.    Fuchs' arrest in 1950 came after a routine security check of Fuchs' father, who had moved to communist East Germany in 1949. While the check was underway, British authorities received information from the American Federal Bureau of Investigation that decoded Soviet messages in their possession indicated Fuchs was a Russian spy. On February 3, officers from Scotland Yard arrested Fuchs and charged him with violating the Official Secrets Act. Fuchs eventually admitted his role and was sentenced to 14 years in prison. His sentence was later reduced, and he was released in 1959 and spent his remaining years living with his father in East Germany.    Fuchs' capture set off a chain of arrests. Harry Gold, whom Fuchs implicated as the middleman between himself and Soviet agents, was arrested in the United States. Gold thereupon informed on David Greenglass, one of Fuchs' co-workers on the Manhattan Project. After his apprehension, Greenglass implicated his sister-in-law and her husband, Ethel and Julius Rosenberg. They were arrested in New York in July 1950, found guilty of conspiracy to commit espionage, and executed at Sing Sing Prison in June 1953.


1951 - "Victor Borge Show," debuts on NBC TV
1951 - Dick Button wins US skating title for 6th time
1951 - Largest purse to date in horse racing, $144,323, won by Great Circle
1951 - Tennessee Williams' "Rose Tattoo," premieres in NYC
1953 - J Fred Muggs, a chimp, becomes a regular on NBC's Today Show
1954 - Jeen van den Berg wins Dutch Eleven Cities Skating race (7:32)
1956 - Autherine J Lucy admitted to U of Alabama, suspended 2/7 after a riot
1956 - Toni Sailor becomes 1st Olympic skier to sweep 3 alpine events
1957 - Patty Berg wins LPGA Havana Golf Open
1958 - Royal Teens' "Short Shorts" enters Top 40 chart & peaks at #3
1959 - American Airlines Electra crashes in NY's East River, killing 65
Playwright Tennessee WilliamsPlaywright Tennessee Williams 1961 - 6th largest snowfall in NYC history (17.4" (44.2cm))
1962 - John Uelses pole vaults record 489 cm





Statue of President John F. Kennedy in Fort Worth, Texas

 On this day in 1962, American President John F. Kennedy baned all trade with Cuba except for food & drugs.



1963 - Mickey Wright wins LPGA Sea Island Women's Golf Invitational






    


 The "Meet the Beatles" album went Gold on this day in 1964.




1964 - Black & Puerto Rican students boycott NYC public schools
1965 - 105 USAF cadets resigned for cheating on exams
1965 - Geraldine McCullough wins Widener Gold Medal for Sculpture
1965 - Orbiting Solar Observatory 2 launches into Earth orbit (552/636 km)
1965 - Braves offer Milwaukee $500,000 to terminate their lease a year earlier, the proposal is turned down
1966 - 1st operational weather satellite, ESSA-1 launched US
1966 - 1st soft landing on Moon (Soviet Luna 9)


 1967 - "Purple Haze" recorded by Jimi Hendrix



Flag of Australia

 Ronald Ryan, the last person to be executed in Australia, was hanged in Pentridge Prison, Melbourne, on this day in 1967.


1969 - "Canterbury Tales" opens at Eugene O'Neill Theater NYC for 122 perfs
Palestinian Leader Yasser ArafatPalestinian Leader Yasser Arafat 1969 - The Palestine National Congress appointed Yasser Arafat head of PLO
1971 - KTSC TV channel 8 in Pueblo-Colorado Spgs, CO (PBS) 1st broadcast
1972 - 11th Winter Olympic games opens in Sapporo, Japan (1st in Asia)
1972 - US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site
1973 - Dr Hook's "Cover of "Rolling Stone"" enters Top 40 & peaks at #6

 1973 - President Nixon signs Endangered Species Act into law
1974 - "Pajama Game" closes at Lunt Fontanne Theater NYC after 65 perfs
1974 - Sandra Palmer wins LPGA Burdine's Golf Invitational
1975 - Billy Herman, Earl Averill, & Bucky Harris elected to Hall of Fame
1976 - 26th NBA All-Star Game: East beats West 123-109 at Philadelphia
1977 - Martin Dihigo John Lloyd elected to Hall of Fame
1978 - Australia beat India 3-2 on 6th day of final test
1978 - India needing 493 to beat Australia at Adelaide, all out 445
1979 - "YMCA" by Village People peaks at #2 on pop singles chart
1979 - Minnesota Twins trade Rod Carew to California for 4 players
Rock Guitarist Jimi HendrixRock Guitarist Jimi Hendrix 1979 - US female Figure Skating championship won by Linda Fratianne
1979 - US male Figure Skating championship won by Charles Tickner
1980 - 30th NBA All-Star Game: East beats West 144-136 (OT) at Washington
1980 - Larry Holmes TKOs Lorenzo Holmes in 6 for heavyweight boxing title




American President Jimmy Carter

 On this day in 1980, American President Jimmy Carter had former heavyweight boxing champion Mohammed Ali tour Africa as a special envoy to rally support for a boycott of the Summer Olympic Games set to be played in Moscow later that year. Carter wanted the games boycotted to the extent possible in protest of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. 



1981 - Australia beats NZ 3-1 to win World Series Cup
1981 - Gro Harlem Brundtland elected premier of Norway


 1982 - Columbia Shuttle moves to Vandenberg AFB for mating for STS-3 mission

1982 - Greatest helicopter lift, 56,888 kg, Podmoscovnoe, USSR
1982 - John Sharples of England finishes 371 hours of disco dancing
1982 - Porn star John Holmes ordered to stand trial for murder
1983 - US female Figure Skating championship won by Rosalynn Sumners
1984 - 10th Space Shuttle Mission (41B)-Challenger 4 launched
1985 - "Harrigan 'n Hart" closes at Longacre Theater NYC after 5 performances
1985 - Joanne Carner wins LPGA Elizabeth Arden Golf Classic
US President & Actor Ronald ReaganUS President & Actor Ronald Reagan 1986 - US President Reagan announces formation of Comm on Challenger Accident
1987 - Expos trade Jeff Reardon to Twins for Neal Heaton
1987 - SD Yacht Club celebrates return of America's Cup
1989 - Bill White named NL president; 1st black major-league sports head



Flag of Paraguay

 On this day in 1989, a military coup overthrew Alfredo Stroessner, the dictator of Paraguay who had been in power since 1954. 


1989 - Start 1st Test Cricket, NZ v Pak, washed out
1990 - Darryl Strawberry voluntarily enters Smither Center for Alcohol rehabilitation
1990 - Jockey Billy Shoemaker (58), retires after 40,350 horse race
1991 - Meg Mallon wins Oldsmobile LPGA Golf Classic
1991 - NFL Pro Bowl: AFC beats NFC 23-21


 1992 - Defense opens calling Noriega "our ally in war on drugs"

1992 - Labor strike at Royal Canadian Mint ends
1992 - Maximum NY State unemployment benefits raised to $300 per week
1993 - Cin Red owner Marge Schott suspended for 1 year due to racist comments
1993 - General Hospital's Tristan Rogers convicted of drunk driving
Victim of Police Violence Rodney KingVictim of Police Violence



 In 1993 on this day, a federal trial of 4 police officers charged with civil rights violations in the videotaped beating of Rodney King commenced in Los Angeles, California.



1994 - "Les Miserables," opens at Kallang Theatre, Singapore
1994 - President Bill Clinton lifts US trade embargo against Vietnam
1994 - STS-60 (Discovery) launches into orbit
1995 - STS 63 (Discovery 19), launches into orbit



Space Shuttle on display at Expo Park in Los Angeles, California



 On this day in 1995, Col. Eileen Collins became the first woman to pilot the space shuttle when the STS 63 (Discovery 19), blasted off. 



Bust of Carl Sagan

 Carl Sagan Public Memorial was dedicated at Ithaca, New York, on this day in 1997. 

1997 - Howard Stern Radio Show premieres in Detroit MI on WKRK 97.1 FM
1998 - Fla Panther Dino Ciccarelli's is 9th NHLer to score 600 career goals
1998 - NY Yankees replace general manager Bob Watson with Brian Cashman
1998 - Stamps commemorating Princess Diana go on sale in Britain
1998 - US military plane clips cable car lines in northern Italy, kills 20
1998 - Mary Kay LeTourneau, 36, former teacher, violates probation with 14 year-old father of her baby
1998 - Karla Faye Tucker is executed in Texas becoming the first woman executed in the United States since 1984.
1999 - In Jammu and Kashmir the political party Democratic Janata Dal (Jammu and Kashmir) is revived.




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New England Patriots


 Super Bowl XXXVI was played on this day in 2002 at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans. It was the first Super Bowl ever played in February, although it had originally been scheduled for January. However, it was pushed back due to the September 11th attacks, which postponed regular season play. The New England Patriots surprised many with the success they enjoyed in the 2001-02 season, but they pulled off one of the biggest upsets in Super Bowl history by shutting down the "Great Show on Turf" offense of the St. Louis Rams, ultimately beating them with a field goal on the final play of the game to win 20-17. It was the first Super Bowl title in franchise history, with young quarterback Tom Brady being named the Super Bowl MVP.




42nd US President Bill Clinton42nd US President Bill Clinton 2007 - A Baghdad market bombing kills at least 135 people and injures a further 339.



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New York Giants


• Super Bowl XLII was played on this day in 2008 at the University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. The New York Giants pulled off perhaps the most iconic upset in Super Bowl history since the Jets beat the Colts by denying the previously undefeated New England Patriots of the perfect season. It was a low scoring game, but there were still three lead changes in the fourth quarter, as the Giants ultimately pulled of a shocking 17-14 win. Quarterback Eli Manning was named the Super Bowl MVP.



2011 - All available blocks of IPv4 internet addresses are officially distributed to regional authorities.
2013 - 33 people are killed by a suicide bombing by an explosive-packed truck in Kirkuk, Iraq



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Baltimore Ravens

 Super Bowl XLVII was played on this day in 2013 at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome. It was the first Super Bowl in which two brothers - John Harbaugh of the Ravens and Jim Harbaugh of the 49ers - faced each other as opposing head coaches. This Super Bowl also stands out as the only big game interrupted for a long duration because of a sudden, unexplained power outage. Ultimately, the Baltimore Ravens hung on to defeat the San Francisco 49ers, 34-31, which was the first loss in the Super Bowl for San Francisco. Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco, who had enjoyed a record-setting performance during the playoffs, was named the Super Bowl MVP.




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New England Patriots


 Super Bowl LIII was played on this day in 2019 at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia. The New England Patriots won their sixth Super Bowl title in franchise history by topping the Los Angeles Rams, 13-3, in what still stands as the lowest scoring Super Bowl in history (both teams). New England Wide Receiver Julian Edelman was named the Super Bowl MVP.





1488 - The Portuguese navigator Bartholomeu Diaz landed at Mossal Bay in the Cape, the first European known to have landed on the southern extremity of Africa.   1690 - The first paper money in America was issued by the Massachusetts colony. The currency was used to pay soldiers that were fighting in the war against Quebec.   1783 - Spain recognized the independence of the United States.   1809 - The territory of Illinois was created.   1815 - The world's first commercial cheese factory was established in Switzerland.   1862 - Thomas Edison printed the "Weekly Herald" and distributed it to train passengers traveling between Port Huron and Detroit, MI. It was the first time a newspaper had been printed on a train.   1869 - Edwin Booth opened his new theatre in New York City. The first production was "Romeo and Juliet".   1900 - In Frankfort, KY, gubernatorial candidate William Goebels died from an assasin's bullet wounds. On August 18, 1900, Ex-Sec. of State Caleb Powers was found guilt of conspiracy to murder Gov. Goebels.   1913 - The 16th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified. It authorized the power to impose and collect income tax.   1916 - In Ottawa, Canada's original parliament buildings burned down.   1917 - The U.S. broke off diplomatic relations with Germany, which had announced a policy of unrestricted submarine warfare.   1918 - The Twin Peaks Tunnel began service. It is the longest streetcar tunnel in the world at 11,920 feet.   1927 - The Federal Radio Commission was created when U.S. President Calvin Coolidge signed a bill.   1941 - In Vichy, France, the Nazis used force to restore Pierre Laval to office.   1945 - Russia agreed to enter World War II against Japan.   1946 - The first issue of "Holiday" magazine appeared.   1947 - Percival Prattisbecame the first black news correspondent admitted to the House and Senate press gallery in Washington, DC. He worked for "Our World" in New York City.   1951 - Dick Button won the U.S. figure skating title for the sixth time.   1951 - The Tennessee Williams play, "The Rose Tattoo", opened on Broadway in New York.   1966 - The first rocket-assisted controlled landing on the Moon was made by the Soviet space vehicle Luna IX.   1969 - At the Palestinian National Congress in Cairo, Yasser Arafat was appointed leader of the PLO.   1972 - The first Winter Olympics in Asia were held at Sapporo, Japan.   1984 - Challenger 4 was launched as the tenth space shuttle mission.   1988 - The U.S. House of Representatives handed rejected U.S. President Reagan's request for at least $36.25 million in aid to the Nicaraguan Contras.   1989 - South African politician P.W. Botha unwillingly resigned both party leadership and the presidency after suffering a stroke.   1998 - Texas executed Karla Faye Tucker. She was the first woman executed in the U.S. since 1984.   1998 - In Italy, a U.S. Military plane hit a cable causing the death of 20 skiers on a lift.   2009 - Eric Holder was sworn in as attorney general. He was the first African-American to hold the post.   2010 - The Alberto Giacometti sculpture L'Homme qui marche sold for $103.7 million. 



1468 Johann Gutenberg, German printer and inventor, died. 1870 The 15th Amendment (black suffrage) passed. 1913 The 16th Amendment, establishing federal income tax, was ratified. 1917 The U.S. broke off diplomatic relations with Germany. 1959 Rock singers, Buddy Holly, Richie Valens, and Big Bopper died in a plane crash. 1995 Col. Eileen Collins became the first woman to pilot the space shuttle when the Discovery blasted off. 1998 Texas executed Karla Faye Tucker, the first woman to be executed in the United States since 1984.  




The following links are to web sites that were used to complete this blog entry:

http://www.historyorb.com/today/events.php

http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/feb03.htm


http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory

Monday, February 2, 2026

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell Discusses Belichick Hall of Fame Snub & Possible 18-Game Season

  


We are just days away from the Super Bowl, and it feels already like the NFL is losing the momentum it usually loses at this time of the year.

I don't know about anybody else, but it's difficult for me to take the Pro Bowl seriously. It used to be somewhat entertaining back when I was younger. But it feels like they tried to add and changes so many things to it, that it just became intensely uninteresting, to the point that I personally never watch it. Also, I never hear anyone so much as talking about it, and that feels telling.

Besides that, however, the biggest news in recent days was about how Bill Belichick was snubbed from being a first round Hall of Famer. I do not remember anyone's exclusion making so much news before this. My guess is that it was either because some people still feel that Belichick was a cheater (for Spy Gate and, to a lesser extent, Deflate Gate) which seemed to reinforce some notion in people's minds that the New England Patriots were cheaters. That, and also, he was not the most personable guy out there. So there are probably plenty of people who took a strong personal disliking of the man.

Here's the thing: Belichick was a great football coach, undeniably. He won two Super Bowls as an assistant coach with the New York Giants (his defensive plans for Super Bowl XXV are in the Hall of Fame in Canton) and he won a record six Super Bowls as head coach of the New England Patriots, and a record nine overall Super Bowl appearances. In fact, he had all sorts of records during his tenure as head coach of the Patriots, including more consecutive wins by any team (21) and most consecutive playoff appearances (11, because they won a record 11 division titles) and a record eight consecutive Championship Game appearances (8). He is third all-time in terms of wins by a head coach.

There is no way that he is not a Hall of Famer. Yes, it should have happened on the first ballot. But it will happen, surely.

Commissioner Roger Goodell confirmed that earlier today, and he also addressed some other things, like the possibility (it feels like an inevitability) of the NFL extending the season to 18 regular season games. I suspect that if they do that, they also will switch to eight teams reaching the playoffs, and that the NFL will then adapt a schedule reflecting what other North American sports leagues have, where the number one seed would face the number eight seed, number two would face number seven, and so on and so forth. It would make sense, although that would eliminate anyone from having a playoff bye in the first week.

Let's see what happens on that score. 






Goodell: Belichick will be Hall of Famer, but NFL has no role play ESPN News Services Feb 2, 2026, 07:03 PM ET

https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/47810777/belichick-hall-famer-nfl-no-role

Goodell: Belichick will be Hall of Famer, but NFL has no role - ESPN




NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell discusses 18-game schedule, diversity hiring ahead of Super Bowl LX Published: Feb 02, 2026 at 07:46 PM Author Image Associated Press

https://www.nfl.com/news/nfl-commissioner-roger-goodell-discusses-18-game-schedule-diversity-hiring-ahead-of-super-bowl-lx

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell discusses 18-game schedule, diversity hiring ahead of Super Bowl LX

President Trump Always Seemed Unhealthily Obsessed With Barack Obama

 

This is a picture of a magnet that was being sold at Strand's Book Store in New York City a few years ago. No, I did not buy it, but I liked it and took a picture, which I am sharing here now. 


Trump always seems just incredibly obsessed with his political rivals. And that seems particularly true of former President Barack Obama.

Now let me just say that I do not consider myself a fan of either Obama or Trump. That said, sometimes I miss the days when we had a president who was not so clearly a national embarrassment as Trump proves to be, time and time again.

Like him or not - and I have many more criticisms of him than most people who are opposed to Trump generally do - Obama was clearly intelligent and well-spoken. He also felt like a real person, and did not bend over backwards to put on airs.

Meanwhile, Trump has that ridiculous fake orange tan, bizarre hair that may be real but is clearly done in a way to hide what otherwise would be baldness, and is fake in so many other ways, as well. Case in point, when Trump made claims (clearly false) that he was 6'3 and 239 pounds. Remember when they showed a picture of a professional athlete  - former Bears quarterback Jay Cutler - who actually matched that physical description. They put a picture of Cutler, a trim athlete, next to Trump, typically playing golf with his fat ass and big belly hanging out, and you know that something is wrong in that description.

That Trump lies is not even questionable. The issue now is that he lies so much, and about everything, that you literally cannot believe anything that he says, because there is a good likelihood that he is lying. People - particularly Trump fans - tend to wave that off. But it is not a minor issue.

In fact, it is a disgrace.

As is Trump's conduct, which is more than just a bit immature. He is an overgrown child, frankly. There is literally not one admirable thing that I can see in the man. The few things which he does well - like self-promotion and self-preservation - are also done in such a tacky and tasteless way as to be disgusting.

Admittedly, I never saw the appeal of Trump.

And while I am not the biggest fan of Obama, at least he was real. You might not like him or what he does. But he clearly was a man who had come a long way, a self-made man who was not born into enormous privileges like Trump was, and then pretends otherwise.

Frankly, it feels like Trump's obsession with bringing up Obama over and over again does him a disservice. Because then you cannot help but compare him with Obama and, frankly, in almost every way, Trump is found lacking. 

What an embarrassment Trump is. And yeah, I would take Obama over Trump any day. 




‘So jealous of him’: Trump is thrown off by a reporter’s question, then turns the heat on Barack Obama in a way that has fans saying the same thing Story by Y. Kyles • 2d •

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/so-jealous-of-him-trump-is-thrown-off-by-a-reporter-s-question-then-turns-the-heat-on-barack-obama-in-a-way-that-has-fans-saying-the-same-thing/ar-AA1VowfL?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=697f1f231f754103bc6a30f2043e0049&ei=20

‘So jealous of him’: Trump is thrown off by a reporter’s question, then turns the heat on Barack Obama in a way that has fans saying the same thing

February 2nd: This Day in History

 



Once again, it should be reiterated, that this does not pretend to be a very extensive history of what happened on this day (nor is it the most original - the links can be found down below). If you know something that I am missing, by all means, shoot me an email or leave a comment, and let me know!


On this day in 506, King Alarik II of Visigoten delegated Lex Romania Visigothorum out. In 962 on this day, Pope John XII crowned German King Otto I the Great Emperor. Conrad II, Holy Roman Emperor, became the King of Burgundy on this day in 1032, succeeding Rudolf III. On this day in 1119, Guido di Borgogna was elected Pope Callistus II. The Battle at Lincoln was fought on this day in 1141, when King Stephen was captured. The Second Battle of St Alban's was fought on this day in 1461, when Lancastrian defeated  Yorkists. Pedro de Mendoza founded the Argentine city of Buenos Aires on this day in 1536. On this day in 1542, the Portuguese under Christovão da Gama captured a Muslim-occupied hillfort in northern Ethiopia in the Battle of Baçente. English Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset, was freed on this day in 1550. M Rossi's Opera "Erminia sul Giordano," premiered in Rome on this day in 1633. Zorilla's "El más Impropio Verdugo Para Las," premiered in Madrid on this day in 1637. New Amsterdam became a city (which was later renamed New York City) on this day in 1653. On this day in 1709, British sailor Alexander Selkirk was rescued after being marooned on a desert island for 5 years. His story inspired "Robinson Crusoe." In 1714 on this day, Nicholas Rowe's "Tragedy of Jane Shore," premiered in London. On this day in 1781, Nathanael Greene found fortification at Steele's Tavern. In 1852 on this day, Alexandre Dumas Jr's "Le Dame aux Camélias," premiered in Paris. On this day in 1878, Greece declared war on the Ottoman Empire. Irish novelist James Joyce was born on this day in in 1882 in Dublin, Ireland, the eldest of 10 children. On this day in 1887, Groundhog Day, featuring a rodent meteorologist, was celebrated for the first time at Gobbler's Knob in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania. On this day in 1943, two days after German Field Marshal Friedrich Paulus and his Sixth Army had surrendered to the Soviet Red Army at Stalingrad, the final German regiments followed suit and also surrendered, making the major Soviet victory and costly German defeat a fait accompli. In 1954 on this day, American President Eisenhower publicly reported the detonation of the first H-bomb (done in 1952). On this day in 1971, brutal dictator Idi Amin ousted Milton Obote and took power in Uganda. The final Soviet armored column left Kabul, Afghanistan, on this day in 1989 following nine years of war and Soviet military occupation. On this day in 1989, FW de Klerk replaced PW Botha as South Africa's National Party leader. One year later on this day in 1990 during the days of apartheid, South African President F.W. de Klerk lifted the ban on the African National Congress and 60 other outlawed political organizations, and promised to free anti-apartheid activist Nelson Mandela after he had been imprisoned for 27 years. In 1999 on this day, 19 people were killed at Luanda International Airport when a cargo plane crashed moments after takeoff.  Also on this day in 1999, Hugo Chávez Frías took office. He had been elected president of Venezuela in December 1998. On this day in 2003, Czech Republic President Vaclav Havel stepped down after 13 years in office.

Here's a more detailed look at events that transpired on this date throughout history:

 On this day in 506, King Alarik II of Visigoten delegated Lex Romania Visigothorum out. 

 In 962 on this day, Pope John XII crowned German King Otto I the Great Emperor. 

 Conrad II, Holy Roman Emperor, became the King of Burgundy on this day in 1032, succeeding Rudolf III. 

 On this day in 1119, Guido di Borgogna was elected Pope Callistus II. 

 The Battle at Lincoln was fought on this day in 1141, when King Stephen was captured. 

 The Second Battle of St Alban's was fought on this day in 1461, when Lancastrian defeated  Yorkists. 


Flag of Argentina

 The Argentine city of Buenos Aires, which is still the capital and largest city of Argentina to this day, was founded by Pedro de Mendoza of Spain on this day in 1536.   



 On this day in 1542, the Portuguese under Christovão da Gama captured a Muslim-occupied hillfort in northern Ethiopia in the Battle of Baçente. 

 English Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset, was freed on this day in 1550. 

 M Rossi's Opera "Erminia sul Giordano," premiered in Rome on this day in 1633. 

  Zorilla's "El más Impropio Verdugo Para Las," premiered in Madrid on this day in 1637. 



The modern skyline of New York City, which formerly was known as New Amsterdam.

 1653 - New Amsterdam, now known as New York City, was incorporated.   New Amsterdam became a city (which was later renamed New York City) on this day in 1653. On this day in 1709, British sailor Alexander Selkirk was rescued after being marooned on a desert island for 5 years. His story inspired "Robinson Crusoe." In 1714 on this day, Nicholas Rowe's "Tragedy of Jane Shore," premiered in London.




Bust of German-British composer George Friedrich Handel

  George F Handel's opera "Poro," premiered in London on this day in 1731.



 1732 - King Frederik Willem I moves Lutherans towards East-Prussia

 1742 - British Walpole government resigns

 1762 - Thomas Arnes opera "Artaxerxes," premieres in London

 On this day in 1781, Nathanael Greene found fortification at Steele's Tavern.  On this day in 1781, American General Nathanael Greene receives two bags of specie (coin as opposed to paper currency) from Elizabeth Maxwell Steele at her tavern in Salisbury, North Carolina--an incident later memorialized in a painting by Alonzo Chappel.    General Greene spent the night of February 1 until midnight awaiting the remaining militia from the previous day's encounter at Cowan's Ford in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. But the militia never arrived at the appointed meeting spot, David Carr's house on the road to the town of Salisbury, and General Greene soon learned of Brigadier General William Davidson's death at Cowan's Ford the previous day. He also learned that British Lieutenant Colonel Banastre Tarleton's Dragoons had launched a surprise attack on Davidson's remaining forces gathered at Tarrant's (or Torrence's) Tavern six miles south of Carr's, killing between 10 and 50 men. The battle-weary militia took significant casualties before alighting on horseback.    Greene rode overnight and arrived at Steele's Tavern for breakfast on the morning of February 2. Once there, Greene told his physician, who was also at the tavern, that he was hungry and penniless. After overhearing their conversation, Mrs. Steele saw first to Greene's hunger with breakfast and then gave him the much-needed money to supply both him and his army.    With his mood boosted, Greene inscribed the back of Mrs. Steele's portrait of George III, O George, Hide thy face and mourn, before turning it to face the wall. The picture and inscription remain at the Thyatira Presbyterian Church Museum, in Salisbury, North Carolina.    Greene's circumstances improved greatly while in Salisbury. First, he garnered Mrs. Steele's aid. Second, he discovered a collection of more than 1,700 Continental arms stashed away for the militia. In writing Baron von Steuben the following day, Greene happily observed that the Patriot's distribution of publick stores is enough to ruin a nation.


 1787 - Arthur St. Clair is elected the 9th President of the President of the Continental Congress under the Articles of Confederation.
Composer George Friedrich HandelComposer George Friedrich Handel 

 1795 - Joseph Haydns 102nd Symphony in B, premieres

 1798 - Federal St Theater, Boston, becomes 1st in US destroyed by fire

 1802 - 1st leopard exhibited in US, Boston (admission 25 cents)

 1811 - Russian settlers establish Ft Ross trading post, north of SF
1823 - Rossini's opera "Semiramide" premieres in Venice
1829 - Madman Jonathan Martin sets York Cathedral afire, does £60,000 damage
1843 - US & British settlers in Oregon Country choose government committee
1848 - 1st ship load of Chinese arrive in SF
1848 - Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ends Mexican War; US acquires Texas California, New Mexico & Arizona for $15 million
1852 - 1st British public men's toilet opens (Fleet St London)




 In 1852 on this day, Alexandre Dumas Jr's "Le Dame aux Camélias," premiered in Paris. 

1854 - Pope Pius IX encyclical "On persecution of Armenians"

 1863 - Samuel Clemens becomes Mark Twain for 1st time

1864 - -Oct 7th) Cruise of CSS Florida
1869 - James Oliver invents removable tempered steel plow blade
1870 - Cardiff Giant (supposed petrified human) proved to be gypsum
1876 - Baseball's National League forms with teams in Boston, Chicago, Cincinnati, Hartford, Louisville, New York, Philadelphia, St Louis



 On this day in 1878, Greece declared war on the Ottoman Empire. On February 2, 1878, in a brief conflict known as the Greco-Turkish War. However, the Greek forces returned to their bases shortly after crossing the border due to the intervention of the Great Powers. 


 1880 - SS Strathleven arrives in London with 1st Australian frozen mutton

 1882 - Knights of Columbus forms in New Haven, Conn

 Irish novelist James Joyce was born on this day in in 1882 in Dublin, Ireland, the eldest of 10 children. His father, a cheerful ne'er-do-well, will eventually go bankrupt.    Joyce attended Catholic school and University College in Dublin. A brilliant scholar, he learned Dano-Norwegian in order to read the plays of Henrik Ibsen in the original. In college, he began a lifetime of literary rebellion, self-publishing an essay rejected by the school's literary magazine adviser.    After graduation, Joyce moved to Paris. He planned to become a doctor to support himself while writing, but soon gave up his medical studies. He returned to Dublin to visit his mother's deathbed and remained to teach school and work odd jobs. On June 16, 1904, he met Nora Barnacle, a lively uneducated woman with whom he fell in love. He convinced Nora to return to Europe with him. The couple settled in Trieste, where they had two children, and then in Zurich. Joyce struggled with serious eye problems, undergoing 25 operations for various troubles between 1917 and 1930.    In 1914, he published The Dubliners. The following year, his novel Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man brought him fame and won him several wealthy patrons, including Edith Rockefeller.    In 1818, the American journal Little Review began to serialize Ulysses, Joyce's revolutionary stream-of-consciousness novel. However, the U.S. Post Office stopped the publication's distribution in December of that year on the grounds that the novel was obscene. Sylvia Beach, owner of the bookstore Shakespeare and Co. in Paris, published the novel herself in 1922, but it was banned in the United Kingdom and in the United States until 1933.    Joyce's last novel, Finnegan's Wake, was published in 1939, and Joyce died two years later. On this day in 1887, Groundhog Day, featuring a rodent meteorologist, was celebrated for the first time at Gobbler's Knob in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania. According to tradition, if a groundhog comes out of its hole on this day and sees its shadow, there will be six more weeks of winter weather; no shadow means an early spring.    Groundhog Day has its roots in the ancient Christian tradition of Candlemas Day, when clergy would bless and distribute candles needed for winter. The candles represented how long and cold the winter would be. Germans expanded on this concept by selecting an animal--the hedgehog--as a means of predicting weather. Once they came to America, German settlers in Pennsylvania continued the tradition, although they switched from hedgehogs to groundhogs, which were plentiful in the Keystone State.    Groundhogs, also called woodchucks and whose scientific name is Marmota monax, typically weigh 12 to 15 pounds and live six to eight years. They eat vegetables and fruits, whistle when they're frightened or looking for a mate and can climb trees and swim. They go into hibernation in the late fall; during this time, their body temperatures drop significantly, their heartbeats slow from 80 to five beats per minute and they can lose 30 percent of their body fat. In February, male groundhogs emerge from their burrows to look for a mate (not to predict the weather) before going underground again. They come out of hibernation for good in March.    In 1887, a newspaper editor belonging to a group of groundhog hunters from Punxsutawney called the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club declared that Phil, the Punxsutawney groundhog, was America's only true weather-forecasting groundhog. The line of groundhogs that have since been known as Phil might be America's most famous groundhogs, but other towns across North America now have their own weather-predicting rodents, from Birmingham Bill to Staten Island Chuck to Shubenacadie Sam in Canada.    In 1993, the movie Groundhog Day starring Bill Murray popularized the usage of "groundhog day" to mean something that is repeated over and over. Today, tens of thousands of people converge on Gobbler's Knob in Punxsutawney each February 2 to witness Phil's prediction. The Punxsutawney Groundhog Club hosts a three-day celebration featuring entertainment and activities.

 1887 - In Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania the first Groundhog Day is observed.
1892 - Bottle cap with cork seal patented by William Painter (Baltimore)
1892 - Johnny Briggs takes a hat-trick, England v Aust SCG
1892 - Longest boxing match under modern rules; 77 rounds in Nameoki, Illinois between Harry Sharpe & Frank Crosby


 

Monuments to Thomas Edison at Menlo Park in Edison,  NJ 


• The Edison Studio in West Orange, NJ, made history on this day in 1893 when they filmed the first motion picture close-up (of a sneeze). The studio was owned and operated by Thomas Edison.  

1894 - US warship Kearsarge wrecked on Roncador Reef, near Solomon Island




Flag of Australia

 In 1899 on this day, the Australian Premiers' Conference held in Melbourne decided to locate Australia's capital (Canberra) between Sydney and Melbourne.


 1900 - Gustave Charpentiers opera "Louise" premieres in Paris
1901 - Female Army Nurse Corps established as a permanent organization
1901 - Queen Victoria's funeral takes place.
1906 - Pope encyclical against separation of church & state
1909 - Italian writer Marinetti publishes Futurist Manifest in Paris
1912 - Frederick R Law, parachutes from Statue of Liberty (stunt for Pathe)
Versatile Athlete Jim ThorpeVersatile Athlete Jim Thorpe 1913 - NY football Giants sign Jim Thorpe
1913 - NYC's Grand Central Terminal opens
1914 - James Royce Shannon's musical "Shameen Dhu," premieres in NYC
1919 - Monarchist riot in Portugal
1920 - Estonia declares its Independence from Russia (Dorpat Peace)
1920 - France occupies (German) Memel territory
1920 - Tarto/Dorpat peace treaty: USSR recognizes Estonian independence
1922 - It was 2:22:22 on 2/2/22


 1922 - James Joyce's "Ulysses" published in Paris (1,000 copies)

1923 - Ethyl gasoline 1st marketed, Dayton, Ohio
1923 - US signs friendship treaty with Central American countries
1924 - International Ski Federation (FIS) forms

 1925 - Belgian episcopacy rejects liberalism, communism & socialism

1925 - Dogsleds reach Nome with emergency diphtheria serum after 1000-km
1925 - NL holds Golden Jubilee Year meeting at same hotel where NL began
Novelist & Poet James JoyceNovelist & Poet James Joyce 1926 - 3 men dance Charleston for 22 hours
1927 - Harry Tierney/Joseph McCarthy's "Rio Rita," premieres in NYC
1927 - Ziegfeld Theater (Loew's Ziegfeld) opens at 6th Ave & 54th St NYC
1931 - 1st siyyum of Talmud celebrated by Daf Yomi students
1931 - 1st use of a rocket to deliver mail (Austria)
1932 - Al Capone sent to prison (Atlanta, Georgia)
1932 - Geneva disarmament conference begins with 60 countries
1932 - Grimmett takes 14 wickets v South Africa (7-116 & 7-83)
1932 - Reconstruction Finance Corp organized
1933 - 2 days after becoming chancellor, Adolf Hitler dissolves Parliament
1933 - Hermann Goering bans communist meetings/demonstrations in Germany
1933 - Ucicky's "Rotten Morning," premieres in Berlin
1934 - Dutch RC Bishops warn against fascism/nazism
1935 - Lie detector 1st used in court (Portage Wisc)
1935 - Leonarde Keeler tests the first polygraph machine.
Singer/Actor Frank SinatraSinger/Actor Frank Sinatra 1940 - Frank Sinatra's singing debut in Indianapolis (Tommy Dorsey Orch)
1942 - LA Times urges security measures against Japanese-Americans
1942 - US auto factories switch from commercial to war production





 On this day in 1943, two days after German Field Marshal Friedrich Paulus and his Sixth Army had surrendered to the Soviet Red Army at Stalingrad, the final German regiments followed suit and also surrendered, making the major Soviet victory and costly German defeat a fait accompli. Feb 2, 1943: Germans surrender at Stalingrad  On this day, the last of the German forces fighting at Stalingrad surrender, despite Hitler's earlier declaration that "Surrender is out of the question. The troops will defend themselves to the last!"    The Battle of Stalingrad began in the summer of 1942, as German forces assaulted the city, a major industrial center and a potential strategic coup. But despite repeated attempts, the German 6th Army, under Friedrich von Paulus, and part of the 4th Panzer Army, under Ewald von Kleist, could not break past the adamantine defense by the Soviet 62nd Army, despite pushing the Soviets almost to the Volga River in mid-October and encircling Stalingrad.    Diminishing resources, partisan guerilla attacks, and the cruelty of the Russian winter began to take their toll on the Germans. On November 19, the Soviets made their move, launching a counteroffensive that began with a massive artillery bombardment of the German position. The Soviets then encircled the enemy, launching pincer movements from north and south simultaneously, even as the Germans encircled Stalingrad. The German position soon became untenable. Surrender was their only hope for survival. But Hitler wouldn't hear of it: "The 6th Army will hold its positions to the last man and the last round." Von Paulus held out until January 31, 1943, when he finally surrendered. Of more than 280,000 men under Paulus' command, half were already dead or dying, about 35,000 had been evacuated from the front, and the remaining 91,000 were hauled off to Soviet POW camps.    Pockets of German belligerence continued until February 2. Hitler berated Von Paulus for not committing suicide. Von Paulus, captured by the Soviets, repaid Hitler by selling out to the Soviets, joining the National Committee for Free Germany, and urging German troops to surrender on other battlegrounds in the USSR.



 1943 - German 6th Army surrenders at Stalingrad, turning point of WW II



1944 - 4th US marine division conquerors Roi, Marshall Islands
1944 - Allied troops 1st set foot on Japanese territory
1944 - Baseball meets in NYC to discuss postwar action
1944 - Edward Chodorov's "Decision," premieres in NYC



 1945 - Escape attempt at Mauthausen concentration camp


1946 - "Nellie Bly" closes at Adelphi Theater NYC after 16 performances














Pictures of the Parliament building in Budapest, Hungary


 The Proclamation of the Hungarian Republic was made on this day in 1946.



Bust of American President Harry Truman

 1948 - President Harry Truman urges congress to adopt a civil rights program



1949 - Golfing champ Ben Hogan seriously injured in an auto accident
Nazi Politician Hermann GoeringNazi Politician Hermann Goering 1950 - "Arms & the Girl" opens at 46th St Theater NYC for 134 performances
1950 - 1st broadcast of "What's My Line," on CBS-TV
1951 - -35°F (-37°C), Greensburg, Indiana (state record until 1994)
1951 - US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site
1954 - Bevo Francis, Rio Grande College, scores 113 pts in basketball game




General Dwight Eisenhower, 34th President of the United States


 In 1954 on this day, American President Eisenhower publicly reported the detonation of the first H-bomb (done in 1952).

 1954 - Snow falls on Gibraltar

1955 - 1st presidential news conference on network TV-Eisenhower on ABC
1956 - Coasters sign with Atlantic Records
1957 - "Candide" closes at Martin Beck Theater NYC after 73 performances
1957 - UN adopts a resolution calling for Israeli troops to leave Egypt
1958 - Fay Crocker wins LPGA Havana Biltmore Golf Open
1958 - Syria joins Egypt in United Arab Republic
1958 - WRIK (now WLUZ) TV channel 7 in Ponce, PR (PTC) begins broadcasting
1959 - Buddy Holly's last performance
Singer -songwriter Buddy HollySinger -songwriter Buddy Holly 


 1959 - Vince Lombardi signs a 5 year contract to coach Green Bay Packers
1960 - Michale Eufemia sinks 625 balls in pool match without a miss
1961 - Prince Bernhard opens new RAI building in Amsterdam
1962 - 1st pole vault over 16' (4.88m) (John Uelses-16', Melrose Games)
1962 - 8 of 9 planets align for 1st time in 400 years
1962 - USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR





 1963 - Helen Shapiro begins tour (Beatles are part of undercard)

 1964 - GI Joe, debuts as a popular American boy's toy
1964 - Sjoukje Dijkstra (Neth) wins Olympic gold for figure skating
1964 - Red Faber, Burleigh Grimes, Tim Keefe, Heinie Manush, John Montgomery Ward, & Miller Huggins are selected to Hall of Fame
1965 - Joe Ortons "Loot," premieres in Brighton
1966 - Pakistan suggests a six-point agenda with Kashmir dispute as number one item for the proposed Indo-Pak ministerial talks after 1965 war.


 1967 - Bolivia adopts its constitution
1967 - Formation of American Basketball Association is announced
1968 - Springer Publishers in West Berlin, bombed
1969 - KMST TV channel 46 in Monterey-Salinas, CA (CBS) begins broadcasting
1969 - Stan Coveleski & Waite Hoyt are voted into baseball Hall of Fame
1970 - Pete Maravich becomes 1st to score 3,000 college basketball points


On this day in 1971, brutal dictator Idi Amin ousted Milton Obote and took power in Uganda.  One week after toppling the regime of Ugandan leader Milton Obote, Major General Idi Amin declares himself president of Uganda and chief of the armed forces. Amin, head of the Ugandan army and air force since 1966, seized power while Obote was out of the country.    Ruling directly, Amin soon revealed himself as an extreme nationalist and tyrant. In 1972, he launched a genocidal program to purge Uganda of its Lango and Acholi ethnic groups. Later that year, he ordered all Asians to leave the country, and some 60,000 Indians and Pakistanis fled, thrusting Uganda into economic collapse. A Muslim, he reversed Uganda's friendly relations with Israel and sought closer ties with Libya and the Palestinians. In 1976, he made himself president for life and stepped up his suppression of various ethnic groups and political opponents in the military and elsewhere.    In 1978, Amin invaded Tanzania in an attempt to annex the Kagera region and divert attention from Uganda's internal problems. In 1979, Tanzania launched a successful counteroffensive with the assistance of the Uganda National Liberation Front, a coalition of various armed Ugandan exiles. Amin and his government fled the country, and Obote returned from exile to reassume the Ugandan presidency. Amin received asylum from Saudi Arabia. He is believed to have been responsible for the murder of as many as 300,000 Ugandans, though he never stood trial for his crimes.    Amin died on August 16, 2003, in Saudi Arabia.



1972 - Lefty Gomez, Ross Youngs & William Harridge selected for Hall of Fame
Playwright Tom StoppardPlaywright Tom Stoppard 1972 - Tom Stoppard's "Jumpers," premieres in London
1973 - "Midnight Special" rock music show debuts on NBC-TV
1973 - James R Schlesinger, becomes 9th director of CIA (until July)
1973 - Richath Helms, ends term as 8th director of CIA
1973 - Test Cricket debut of Richard John Hadlee, NZ v Pakistan, Wellington
1974 - Barbra Striesand's 1st #1 hit, "The Way We Were"
1974 - Pope Paul VI encyclical "To Honor Mary"
1974 - Smallest crowd at Cleveland Arena (Cavs vs Golden State-1,641)
1974 - The F-16 Fighting Falcon flies for the first time.
1975 - Army offensive against rebels in Eritrea Ethiopia
1975 - Donna Caponi Young wins LPGA Burdine's Golf Invitational
1975 - US female Figure Skating championship won by Dorothy Hamill
1975 - US male Figure Skating championship won by Gordon McKellen Jr
1976 - "Honeymooners Second Honeymoon" airs on TV
1976 - "Rich Little Show," debuts on NBC-TV
1976 - Roger Connor, Fred Lindstrom & ump Cal Hubbard elected to Hall of Fame
1977 - Burn up of Salyut 4 Space Station (USSR)
1977 - Radio Shack officially begins creating TRS-80 computer
1977 - Toronto's Ian Turnbull scores 5 goals, NHL REcord for a defenseman
1980 - FBI releases details of Abscam, a sting operation that targeted 31 elected & public officials for bribes for political favors


 1982 - Government troops & Moslem-fundamentalists battle in Hamah Syria

1982 - San Diego beats Miami 41-38 in OT after blowing a 24-0 lead
1982 - Hama Massacre: The government of Syria attacks the town of Hama and kills thousands of people.
1983 - Chicago Absp Joseph L Bernardin is among 18 new cardinals invested
264th Pope John Paul II264th Pope John Paul II 



 1983 - Pope John Paul II names 18 new cardinals


1984 - 8th Soap Opera Digest Poll Awards
1984 - Lebanese army fight in Beirut
1985 - US male Figure Skating championship won by Brian Boitano
1986 - "Jerome Kern Goes to Hollywood" closes at Ritz NYC after 13 perfs
1986 - Ayako Okamoto wins LPGA Elizabeth Arden Golf Classic
1986 - Dalai Lama meets Pope John Paul II in India
1986 - NFL Pro Bowl: NFC beats AFC 28-24
1986 - Oscar Arias Sanchez elected president of Costa Rica
1987 - KC Royal pitcher Dennis Leonard (3X 20 game winner), retires
1987 - Philippines adopts constitution
1988 - David Boon's 6th Test Cricket century, 184* v England at Sydney
1989 - 0°F (-18°C) or below in 15 US states


 The final Soviet armored column left Kabul, Afghanistan, on this day in 1989 following nine years of war and Soviet military occupation.   


 Also on this day in 1989 - FW de Klerk replaces Botha as South Africa's National Party leader




The four sculptures of Nobel Square at the V&A Waterfront in Cape Town, South Africa. From left to right: Albert Lutuli, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, President FW DeKlerk, and President Nelson Mandela



FW DeKlerk



Nelson Mandela

 On this day in 1989, FW de Klerk replaced PW Botha as South Africa's National Party leader during the days of apartheid white minority rule in the country. One year later on this day in 1990, South African President F.W. de Klerk lifted the ban on the African National Congress and 60 other outlawed political organizations, and promised to free anti-apartheid activist Nelson Mandela after he had been imprisoned for 27 years. This was the first very serious hint of real reform and a move away from apartheid by the white minority government. Mandela later stated that the reforms had reached the point of no return. 


1991 - Aravinda De Silva scores 267 v NZ at Wellington
1991 - NH snaps its 32-game losing streak at home beating Holy Cross, 72-56
1991 - US postage is raised from 25 cents to 29 cents
1991 - Sting scores his second UK No.1 album with 'The Soul Cages'
1992 - Colleen Walker wins Oldsmobile LPGA Golf Classic
1992 - Danny Everett runs world record 400m indoor (45.02 sec)
1992 - David Boon's 13 Test Cricket century, 107 v India at Perth
1992 - IRS & Willie Nelson settle on $9M tax bill (of $16.7M)
1992 - Kieren Perkins swims world record 1500m freestyle (14:32.40)
1992 - NFL Pro Bowl: NFC beats AFC 21-15
1993 - Frito Lay pays court ordered $2,500,000 to Tom Wait for using his song
1993 - Irina Privalova runs world record 50m indoor (6.05 sec)
1995 - "Moliere Comedies" opens at Criterion Theater NYC for 56 performances
1995 - Henry Olonga no-balled for throwing in Zimbabwe-Pakistan Test Cricket
Country Singer Willie NelsonCountry Singer Willie Nelson 1995 - US space shuttle Discovery launched
1996 - Ali Landry, 22, (Louisiana), crowned 45th Miss USA
1997 - "Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus" closes at Gershwin NYC
1997 - Mark O'Meara wins Pebble Beach National Golf Pro-am
1997 - NFL Pro Bowl: AFC beats NFC 26-23 (OT)
1997 - Royal Caribbean Senior Golf Classic
1998 - Daniel Baldwin hospitalized in NYC for cocaine overdose
1998 - Philippine DC-9 crashes apparently killing all 104 on board


 In 1999 on this day, 19 people were killed at Luanda International Airport when a cargo plane crashed moments after takeoff.  Also on this day in 1999, Hugo Chávez Frías took office. He had been elected president of Venezuela in December 1998. On this day in 2003, Czech Republic President Vaclav Havel stepped down after 13 years in office.



2003 - Russian pop girl duo Tatu start a four-week run at No.1 on the UK singles chart with 'All The Things She Said'
2003 - NFL Pro Bowl: AFC beats NFC 45-23
2012 - Cold snap across Europe kills more than 100 people (over 400 people by 08-02)
2012 - MV Rabaul Queen sinks off the coast of Papa New Guinea with 246 people saved and 126 missing (100 of these estimated to be trapped inside)
2012 - NHL player Sam Gagner becomes the first player to scores eight points in one game for the Edmonton Oilers against the Chicago Blackhawks since 1989
2013 - 23 people are killed and 8 are injured after militants attacked an army base in the Lakki Marwat District, Pakistan
2013 - Shinzō Abe, Japan’s Prime Minister, vows to defend the Senkaku Islands "at all costs"


2013 - 18 people are killed and 34 are injured after a bus catches fire after falling down a ravine in Gansu province, China






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Seattle Seahawks






Super Bowl XLVIII

Seattle Seahawks 43,. Denver Broncos 8



East Rutherford, New Jersey
February 2, 2014

 Super Bowl XLVIII was played on this day in 2014 at the MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey. It was the first Super Bowl outright played outdoors in a cold weather city. The Seattle Seahawks, with their top-ranked defense, largely shut down the Denver Broncos and their record-shattering offense Denver had become the first team in NFL history to score 600 points in a season, but Seattle contained them to just a total of eight points off one touchdown and a successful two-point conversion, and that came after the Seahawks had built up a 36-0 lead. Seattle Linebacker Malcom Smith was named the Super Bowl MVP.



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Kansas City Chiefs

 Super Bowl LIV was played on this day in 2020 at the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami, Florida. The Kansas City Chiefs overcame a 20-10 fourth quarter deficit to the San Francisco 49ers and scored 21 unanswered points in the final six minutes and change to secure the first Super Bowl championship in 50 years for the franchise. KC Quarterback Patrick Mahomes was named the Super Bowl MVP.



 1802 - The first leopard to be exhibited in the United States was shown by Othello Pollard in Boston, MA.   1848 - The Mexican War was ended with the signing of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. The treaty turned over portions of land to the U.S., including Texas, New Mexico, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, California and parts of Colorado and Wyoming. The U.S. gave Mexico $15,000,000 and assumed responsibility of all claims against Mexico by American citizens. Texas had already entered the U.S. on December 29, 1845.   1848 - The first shipload of Chinese emigrants arrived in San Francisco, CA.   1863 - Samuel Langhorne Clemens used a pseudonym for the first time. He is better remembered by the pseudonym which is Mark Twain.   1870 - The "Cardiff Giant" was revealed to be nothing more than carved gypsum. The discovery in Cardiff, NY, was alleged to be the petrified remains of a human.   1876 - The National League of Professional Base Ball Clubs (known as the National League) was formed in New York. The teams included were the Chicago White Stockings, Philadelphia Athletics, Boston Red Stockings, Hartford Dark Blues, Mutual of New York, St. Louis Brown Stockings, Cincinnati Red Stockings and the Louisville Grays.   1878 - Greece declared war on Turkey.   1880 - The S.S. Strathleven arrived in London with the first successful shipment of frozen mutton from Australia.   1887 - The beginning of Groundhog Day in Punxsutawney, PA.   1892 - William Painter patented the bottle cap.   1897 - The Pennsylvania state capitol in Harrisburg was destroyed by fire. The new statehouse was dedicated nine years later on the same site.   1913 - Grand Central Terminal officially opened at 12:01 a.m. Even though construction was not entirely complete more than 150,000 people visited the new terminal on its opening day.   1935 - Leonard Keeler conducted the first test of the polygraph machine, in Portage, WI.   1943 - During World War II, the remainder of Nazi forces from the Battle of Stalingrad surrendered to the Soviets. Stalingrad has since been renamed Volgograd.   1945 - U.S. President Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill left for a summit in Yalta with Soviet leader Josef Stalin.   1946 - The first Buck Rogers automatic pistol was made.   1946 - The Mutual Broadcasting System aired "Twenty Questions" for the first time on radio. The show moved to television 3 years later.   1949 - Golfer Ben Hogan was seriously injured in an auto accident in Van Horn, TX.   1950 - "What's My Line" debuted on CBS television.   1962 - The 8th and 9th planets aligned for the first time in 400 years.   1967 - The American Basketball Association was formed by representatives of the NBA.   1971 - Idi Amin assumed power in Uganda after a coup that ousted President Milton Obote.   1980 - The situation known as "Abscam" began when reports surfaced that the FBI had conducted a sting operation that targeted members of the U.S. Congress. A phony Arab businessmen were used in the operation.   1989 - The final Russian armored column left Kabul, Afghanistan, after nine years of military occupation.   1990 - South African President F.W. de Klerk lifted a ban on the African National Congress and promised to free Nelson Mandela.   1998 - U.S. President Clinton introduced the first balanced budget in 30 years.   1999 - 19 people were killed at Luanda international airport when a cargo plane crashed just after takeoff.   1999 - Hugo Chávez Frías took office. He had been elected president of Venezuela in December 1998.   2004 - It was reported that a white powder had been found in an office of Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist. The CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) later confirmed that the powder was the poison ricin.


1536 The city of Buenos Aires, Argentina, was founded by Spanish conquistador Pedro de Mendoza. 1709 Scottish sailor Alexander Selkirk, the inspiration for Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe, was rescued after four years alone on an island off the coast of Chile. 1848 The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, ending the Mexican War, was signed. In the treaty, Mexico ceded to the United States a huge portion of what is today the American West and Southwest, including California and New Mexico. 1870 The Cardiff Giant was revealed to be a hoax. 1876 The National League of Professional Baseball Clubs was formed. 1887 The first gathering at Gobbler's Knob in Punxsatawney, Pa. to wait for the groundhog's shadow occurred. 1922 James Joyce's Ulysses was published. 1943 Nazi troops surrendered in the World War II Battle of Stalingrad. 1971 Idi Amin became dictator of Uganda. 1980 The Abscam scandal was revealed. 1990 South African President F. W. de Klerk lifted a ban on the African National Congress and promised to free Nelson Mandela. 2003 Czech Republic President Vaclav Havel stepped down after 13 years.



The following links are to web sites that were used to complete this blog entry:

http://www.historyorb.com/today/events.php

http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/feb02.htm


http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory