Tuesday, February 10, 2026

February 10th: 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 the year 60, St Paul was thought to have been shipwrecked at Malta. Crusaders defeated Prince Redwan of Aleppo at Antioch on this day in 1098. In 1355 on this day, the St. Scholastica's Day riot broke out in Oxford, England, leaving 63 scholars and perhaps 30 locals dead after two days. On this day in 1535, 12 nude anabaptists run through Amsterdam streets. Tomé de Sousa was appointed Governor General of Brazil on this day in 1549. In 1635 on this day, the Academie Francaise was formed in Paris (by Cardinal Richelieu). Wampanoag Indians under King Philip killed all of the men in Lancaster Massachusetts on this day in 1676. On this day in 1713, Netherlands & England signed an accord concerning anti-French Barrier [OS=Jan 31]. Scottish Pretender to the throne James III Edward returned to France on this day in 1716. Edmund Halley was appointed the second Astronomer Royal of England on this day in 1720. On this day in 1746, the English Pelham government resigned. On this day in 1749, the 10th (final) volume of Fielding's "Tom Jones" was published. In 1763 on this day, the Treaty of Paris ended the Seven-Years War (commonly known as the French & Indian War in North America), with France ultimately surrendering Canada to Great Britain. On this day in 1814 during the Napoleonic Wars, the Battle of Champaubert was fought. It was the opening battle of the Six Days' Campaign, and fought between the French, led by Emperor Napoleon, and a small Russian corps commanded by Lieutenant General Count Zakhar Dmitrievich Olsufiev. On this day in 1824, the Congress of Peru made "El Libertador" Simón Bolívar the dictator of the country, after Bolivar had led the country to independence from Spain. They hoped that he would reorganize the country, politically and militarily. The first fire extinguisher patent was granted to Alanson Crane of Virginia on this day in 1863. Peter Tsjaikovsky's 4th Symphony in F premiered on this day in 1878. Russia declared war on Japan on this day in 1904 after a surprise attack by the Japanese on the Russian fleet at Port Arthur had disabled seven Russian warships. In 1943 on this day, the "Manifesto of Algerian People" by Ferhat Abbas was published. It called for equality & self-determination for the Algerian nation, and was signed by 28 elected Muslim officials. In 1954 on this day, American President Dwight D. Eisenhower warned against US military intervention in Vietnam. The 25th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution,  detailing Presidential Disability & Succession, went into effect on this day in 1967, just a few years following the JFK assassination. An Iran/Iraqi border fight broke out on this day in 1974. On this day in 1990 during apartheid white minority government rule in South Africa, President FW de Klerk announced that anti-apartheid activist and icon Nelson Mandela would be freed the next day, on Sunday, February 11th. Lithuania voted for independence from the Soviet Union (USSR) on this day in 1991. In 1996 on this day, IBM computer Deep Blue became the first computer to win a game of chess against a reigning (human) chess champion, Gary Kasparov.


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

 On this day in the year 60, St Paul was thought to have been shipwrecked at Malta. 

 Crusaders defeated Prince Redwan of Aleppo at Antioch on this day in 1098. 

 In 1355 on this day, the St. Scholastica's Day riot broke out in Oxford, England, leaving 63 scholars and perhaps 30 locals dead after two days. 

 On this day in 1535, 12 nude anabaptists run through Amsterdam streets. 

 Tomé de Sousa was appointed Governor General of Brazil on this day in 1549. 


 In 1635 on this day, the Academie Francaise was formed in Paris (by Cardinal Richelieu). 

 Wampanoag Indians under King Philip killed all of the men in Lancaster Massachusetts on this day in 1676. On this day in 1713, Netherlands & England signed an accord concerning anti-French Barrier [OS=Jan 31]. 

 Scottish Pretender to the throne James III Edward returned to France on this day in 1716. 

 Edmund Halley was appointed the second Astronomer Royal of England on this day in 1720. 

 On this day in 1746, the English Pelham government resigned. 

 On this day in 1749, the 10th (final) volume of Fielding's "Tom Jones" was published. 

 In 1763 on this day, the Treaty of Paris ended the Seven-Years War (commonly known as the French & Indian War in North America), with France ultimately surrendering Canada to Great Britain.

 1774 - Andrew Becker demonstrates diving suit

 1794 - Joseph Haydn's 99th Symphony in E, premieres

 1798 - Louis Alexandre Berthier invaded Rome, on February 15 proclaimed a Roman Republic and then on February 20 take Pope Pius VI as a prisoner.

 1807 - US Coast Survey authorized by Congress





French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte



 On this day in 1814 during the Napoleonic Wars, the Battle of Champaubert was fought. It was the opening battle of the Six Days' Campaign, and fought between the French, led by Emperor Napoleon, and a small Russian corps commanded by Lieutenant General Count Zakhar Dmitrievich Olsufiev. The Russians fought hard, but the French ultimately prevailed. Survivors fled into the nearby woods while Olsufiev became a French prisoner.




Pictures of the statue of Simón Bolívar just outside of Central Park in New York City.


 On this day in 1824, the Congress of Peru made "El Libertador" Simón Bolívar the dictator of the country, after Bolivar had led the country to independence from Spain. They hoped that he would reorganize the country, politically and militarily.




1846 - Beginning of Mormon march to west US


 1846 - British defeat Sikhs in battle of Sobraon, India


1846 - Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints began their exodus to the west from Illinois.   

1855 - US citizenship laws amended; all children of US parents born abroad granted US citizenship
1859 - Gen Horsford defeats Begum of Oude & Nana Sahib in Indian mutiny
1860 - John Brahms' 2nd Serenade in A, premieres
1862 - Dutch 2nd government of Thorbecke forms


  The first fire extinguisher patent was granted to Alanson Crane of Virginia on this day in 1863.   




1866 - Dutch government of Frans van der Putte forms
1868 - Conservatives & military seize Convention Hall in Florida
1870 - City of Anaheim incorporates (1st time)
1870 - YWCA (Young Women's Christian Association) forms (NYC)


 1878 - Peace of Zanjón




Bust of Russian Romantic era composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

 Peter Tsjaikovsky's 4th Symphony in F premiered on this day in 1878.


1879 - 1st electric arc light used (California Theater)
1879 - Henry Morton Stanley departs for the Congo


 1880 - Pope Leo XIII publishes encyclical Arcanum about Christian marriage
1881 - Jacques Offenbach's opera "Les Contes d'Hoffman," premieres in Paris
1882 - Rimski-Korsakovs opera "Snyegurochka," premieres in St Petersburg
1883 - Fire at un-insured New Hall Hotel in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, kills 71
1890 - Around 11 million acres ceded to US by Sioux Indians opens for settlement
1897 - NY Times begins using slogan "All the News That's Fit to Print"
1899 - -39°F (-39°C), Milligan, Ohio (state lowest record temperature)
1899 - US-Spain peace treaty signed by Pres McKinley. US gets PR & Guam
1900 - Peter Ostlund skates world record 500m (45.2 sec)



 Russia declared war on Japan on this day in 1904 after a surprise attack by the Japanese on the Russian fleet at Port Arthur had disabled seven Russian warships.

1906 - British battleship HMS Dreadnought launched after only 100 days, renders all other capital ships obsolete with revolutionary design
1906 - State of siege proclaimed in Zululand
1908 - Tommy Burns KOs Jack Palmer in 4 for heavyweight boxing title
1912 - Hobbs & Rhodes make 323 cricket opening stand v Aust at MCG
1913 - Edward Sheldons "Romance," premieres in NYC


 1916 - Military conscription begins in Britain

 1917 - Johanna Westerdijk installed as Neth 1st female professor

1920 - Baseball outlaws all pitches involving tampering with ball

 1920 - Jozef Haller de Hallenburg performs symbolic wedding of Poland to the sea, celebrating restitution of Polish access to open sea.
1923 - Ink paste manufactured for 1st time by Standard Ink Company
1923 - Owen Davis' "Icebound," premieres in NYC
1923 - SDAP speaks out against allied occupation of the Ruhr
1924 - Bucky Harris, 27, becomes youngest baseball manager (Wash Senators)
1925 - 1st waterless gas storage tank put into service, Michigan City, Ind
1925 - AL decides to alternate leagues for game 1 of World Series each year
1926 - Building of Olympic Stadium Amsterdam, begins
30th US President Calvin Coolidge30th US President Calvin Coolidge 

 1927 - Pres Calvin Coolidge asks for 2nd disarmament conference
1929 - Bishop Stephen Alencastre, dedicates the beautiful Romanesque church of Saint Patrick in Honolulu


 1930 - Grain Stabilization Corporation authorized by Congress
1931 - New Delhi becomes capital of India
1931 - Richard Rodgers/Lorenz Harts premieres in NYC
1933 - -54°F (-48°C), Seneca, Oregon (state record)
1933 - Delivery of 1st singing telegram (Postal Telegram Co NYC)
1933 - Dutch seaplane bombs Dutch ship


 1933 - Hitler proclaims end of Marxism

 1933 - Mutiny on "7 Provinces" ends (began Feb 4th), 23 killed
1934 - 1st Jewish immigrant ship to break the English blockade in Palestine
1934 - Byrd souvenir sheet issued, NYC; 1st unperforated ungummed US stamp
1934 - Howard Hanson's "Merry Mount," premieres in NYC
1934 - Stalin ends 17th CPSU-congress, says "Life becomes merrier"
1934 - Thomson/Gertrude Steins opera premieres in NYC
Soviet Union Premier Joseph StalinSoviet Union Premier Joseph Stalin 1935 - 1st US streamlined electric RR engine begins service
1935 - Pennsylvania RR begins passenger service on new electric locomotive
1937 - Ragnhild Hveger swims world free style record 400m (5:14.2)
1938 - King Carol II of Romania drives out dictator Goga
1940 - "In The Mood" by Glenn Miller hits #1


 1940 - Tom & Jerry created by Hanna & Barbera debut by MGM


1940 - US female Figure Skating championship won by Joan Tozzer
1940 - US male Figure Skating championship won by Eugene Turner
1941 - 1st highway post office makes 1st trip, Wash, DC-Harrisonburg, VA
1941 - Anti-nazi "Het Parool" begins publishing in Netherlands
1942 - Glenn Miller awarded 1st ever gold record for selling 1 million copies of "Chattanooga Choo Choo"


Flag of Algeria

 In 1943 on this day, the "Manifesto of Algerian People" by Ferhat Abbas was published. It called for equality & self-determination for the Algerian nation, and was signed by 28 elected Muslim officials.

1943 - British 8th Army sweeps through North Africa to Tunisia
1943 - Van der Veen Resistance starts fire in Amsterdam employment bureau
1944 - Belgian resistance fighter and author Kamiel van Baelen arrested
1944 - U-666/U-545/U-283 sink off Ireland
1945 - "Rum & Coca Cola" by Andrews Sisters hits #1
1947 - Italy cedes most of Venezia Giulia to Yugoslavia
1947 - Netherlands Radio Union forms


 1947 - Province of Petsamo returned to Soviet Union by Finland


 1947 - WW II peace treaties signed


1948 - Greek Gen Markos' guerrilla army bombs Saloniki
Playwright Arthur MillerPlaywright Arthur Miller 1949 - Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman" opens at Morosco Theater, NYC
1951 - "John & Marsha" by Stan Freberg peaks at #21
1953 - Ice Dance Championship at Davos won by Westwood & Demmy GRB
1953 - Ice Pairs Championship at Davos won by Jennifer & John Nicks of GRB
1953 - Ladies Figure Skating Championship in Davos won by Tenley Albright USA
1953 - Men's Figure Skating Champion in Davos won by Hayes Alan Jenkins USA



General Dwight Eisenhower, 34th President of the United States


 In 1954 on this day, American President Dwight D. Eisenhower warned against US military intervention in Vietnam.


1954 - Ice Dance Championship at Oslo won by Jean Westwood/Lawrence Demmy GRB
1954 - Ice Pairs Championship at Oslo won by Frances Dafoe/Norris Bowden CAN
1954 - Ladies Figure Skating Championship in Oslo won by Gundi Busch GER
1954 - Men's Figure Skating Championship in Oslo won by Hayes Alan Jenkins US
1956 - "My Friend Flicka" premieres on CBS (later NBC) TV
1957 - Fay Crocker wins LPGA Serbin Golf Open
1957 - Southern Christian Leadership Conference forms
1959 - Dutch Princess Wilhelmina publishes "Lonely, but not alone"
1959 - Tornado in St Louis kills 19 & injures 265
1960 - "Unsinkable Molly Brown" closes at Winter Garden NYC after 532 perfs
1960 - Charles Ives' "Lincoln, the Great Commoner," premieres
1961 - AFL's LA Chargers move to San Diego
1961 - Niagara Falls hydroelectric project begins producing power
1961 - Walter Piston's 7th Symphony, premieres
1962 - Jim Beatty sets American indoor mile record (3:58.9) in LA


1962 - USSR swaps spy Francis Gary Power to US for Rudolph Abel
1963 - Mickey Wright wins LPGA St Petersburg Women's Golf Open
1963 - US female Figure Skating championship won by Lorraine Hanlon
1963 - US male Figure Skating championship won by Thomas Litz
1964 - Australian destroyer HMAS Voyager sinks after colliding with aircraft carrier HMAS Melbourne, killing 82
1964 - WBGU TV channel 27 in Bowling Green, OH (PBS) begins broadcasting
1966 - Harmel government in Belgium resigns







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)

 The 25th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution,  detailing Presidential Disability & Succession, was ratified on this day in 1967, just a few years following the JFK assassination. The amendment required the appointment of a vice-president when that office became vacant and instituted new measures in the event of presidential disability.   

1968 - "Spooky" by Classics IV hits #3
1968 - Peggy Fleming wins Olympic figure skating gold medal, Grenoble, France
1969 - LSU Pete Maravich scores 66, despite losing to Tulane 101-94
1970 - 26.4 cm precipitation falls on Mount Washington NH (state record)



1970 - Dry powder avalanche moving at 120 mph smashes into youth hostel killing 40 Belgian, French, & German youths (Val d'Isere, France)
1971 - American Mensa Ltd incorporates in New York
1971 - Bill White becomes 1st black baseball announcer (NY Yankees)
1971 - John Guares "House of Blue Leaves," premieres in NYC
1971 - Royal Albert Hall bans scheduled concert featuring Frank Zappa
1972 - BBC bans "Give Ireland Back to the Irish" by Wings
1972 - Ras al Khaima joins United Arab Emirates
1972 - USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR



Feb 10, 1972: Ziggy Stardust makes his earthly debut  It was one of those events that virtually nobody witnessed, yet almost but many wish they had: the concert at London's Toby Jug pub on February 10, 1972, when the relatively minor rocker named David Bowie became the spaceman Ziggy Stardust. While it might be said of many such historic moments—like John meeting Paul at a backyard birthday party, or Elvis ad-libbing "That's All Right (Mama)" between takes at Sun Studios—that their significance became clear only in hindsight, there was at least one man who knew exactly where Ziggy's earthly debut would lead: David Bowie himself.    "I'm going to be huge," is what David Bowie told Melody Maker less than three weeks earlier and still six months prior to the release of the album The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. "And it's quite frightening in a way, because I know that when I reach my peak and it's time for me to be brought down it will be with a bump."  That last bit may have been a case of Bowie confusing his Ziggy persona with real life, but that was what put the act over in the first place. Any rock musician can put on a costume, but how many could have inhabited the identity of an androgynous Martian rock star come to Earth in its dying days so convincingly, so effortlessly?    Bowie has credited two men with serving as his inspiration for creating Ziggy Stardust. One was the man he met and spoke with after his first Velvet Underground concert and took to be Lou Reed, but who was, in fact, Reed's replacement in the Velvets. "He sat there and talked as though he was Lou and he was talking about how he wrote 'Waiting For The Man' and all these things!" recalled Bowie years later. "And it was at that point that I realised that, at the time, it didn't matter to me if this was the real one or a fake one." The other inspiration was Vince Taylor, an obscure figure to Americans, but a figure well-known in late-60s London as a former pop star very publicly losing his mind. "He fired his band and went on-stage one night in a white sheet. He told the audience to rejoice, that he was Jesus. They put him away."    From this mix, Bowie created the persona and groundbreaking album that offered "a finger up the nose of pop sincerity...a boot in the collective sagging denim behind of hippie singer-songwhiners" and made his career. As one of the roughly sixty young Londoners in the audience that night at the Toby Jug now recalls, "Bowie had brought theatre to a humble pub gig....I couldn't blink for fear of missing something—nothing would ever be the same again."



1973 - 2nd time Rangers shut-out Islanders 6-0
1973 - 83m wide gas tank on Staten Island explodes, 40 die
1973 - Mushtaq Mohammad follows up 201 to take 5-49 v NZ Dunedin
1974 - "Gigi" closes at Uris Theater NYC after 103 performances
1974 - Gail Denenber wins LPGA Sears Women's Golf Classic


 An Iran/Iraqi border fight broke out on this day in 1974.

1974 - Judy Ikenberry wins 1st Us women's marathon (2:55:17)
1974 - Silver futures hit record $4.81½ an ounce in London
1975 - William "Judy" Johnson selected to baseball Hall of Fame
1977 - "Party with Comden & Green" opens at Morosco Theater NYC for 92 perfs
1977 - Bomb explosion in Moscow metro
1977 - Jonathan Netanyou Lane in the Bronx named in honor of Bronx-born Israeli prime minister



 1977 - Israeli soldier who died freeing hostages in Entebee Raid (1976)

1978 - Frank C Carlucci succeeds John F Blake as deputy director of CIA
Singer Rod StewartSinger Rod Stewart 1979 - "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" by Rod Stewart peaks at #1
1979 - Border is named 12th man for Australia, only Test Cricket he missed
1980 - Ianford Wilsons "Talley's Folly," premieres in NYC
1980 - Jane Blalock wins LPGA Elizabeth Arden Golf Classic
1981 - 33rd NHL All-Star Game: Campbell beat Wales 4-1 at LA
1981 - 8 killed & 198 injured by fire at Las Vegas Hilton
1981 - Dennis Lillee becomes Australian Cricket's top wicket-taker with 249
1982 - 28 skiers perform backflips while holding hands, Bromont, Quebec
1983 - Anglican synod vote 338-100 against unilateral UK nuclear disarmament
1985 - Andrea Schöne skates ladies world record 5 km (7:32.82)
1985 - 35th NBA All-Star Game: West beats East 140-129 at Indiana


1985 - Challenger moves to Vandenberg AFB for mating of STS 51-E mission


1985 - Patty Sheehan wins LPGA Sarasota Golf Classic
1985 - USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR
1986 - "John Lennon: Live in NYC" album is released
1987 - Philippine troops murder 17 civilians in Lupao Massacre


 1988 - Rocky Malebane-Metsing coup in Bophuthatswana fails

1988 - 3-judge panel of 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals in SF strikes down Army's ban on homosexuals (later overturned by appeal)
1989 - Celtic KC Jones & Cavalier Lenny Wilkens elected to NBA Hall of Fame
1989 - Miami Vice's 100th episode seen on TV
1989 - Minor League Football System opens organizational meeting, St Louis
1989 - Ron Brown chosen 1st black chairman of a major US party (Democrats)
1989 - Test Cricket debut of Aaqib Javed, Pak v NZ age 16 years 189 days
1989 - Tony Robinson of Jamaica becomes Nottingham's 1st black sheriff
1989 - US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site

1989 - To gain deregulation WWF admits pro wrestling is an exhibition & not a sport, in a NJ court


1990 - 6th Largest wrestling crowd (63,900-Tokyo Dome)
1990 - Pierrer Water pulls product from shelf due to benzine in water






Flag of South Africa during the apartheid era


Statue of South African President & Nobel Peace Prize Recipient F.W. de Klerk in Cape Town


Statue of Nelson Mandela in the gardens in front of the Union Building in Pretoria, South Africa

 On this day in 1990 during apartheid white minority government rule in South Africa, President  F.W. de Klerk announced that anti-apartheid activist and icon Nelson Mandela would be freed the next day, on Sunday, February 11th, after 27 years of imprisonment. 



The New York Times from February 12, 1990 showed a picture of Mike Tyson nursing his wounds following the loss to Buster Douglas.

 Even though it actually took place in Tokyo, Japan, on February 11, 1990, viewers in the Western Hemisphere, including Americans (both fighters were from the United States) watched the most shocking upset in sports history on this day in 1990, as James "Buster" Douglas scored a knockout of the seemingly invincible and previously undefeated, undisputed heavyweight champ of the world, "Iron" Mike Tyson. 


1990 - US female Figure Skating championship won by Jill Trenary
1991 - "La Bete" opens at Eugene O'Neill Theater NYC for 24 performances
1991 - 41st NBA All-Star Game: East beats West 116-114 at Charlotte
1991 - Beth Daniel wins LPGA Phar-Mor at Inverrary Golf Tournament
1991 - Johann Koss skates world record 10 km (13:43.54)





The flag of Lithuania.

  Lithuania voted for independence from the Soviet Union (USSR) on this day in 1991.



1991 - NBA All Star Game at Charlotte NC
1992 - "Dangerous Women" final episode on WWOR-TV
1992 - Bonnie Blair wins 1992 Olympics 1st gold medal for USA



 Former (and future) boxing heavyweight champion Mike Tyson was convicted in Indianapolis of raping Desiree Washington, Miss Black American contestant on this day in 1992.

Feb 10, 1992: Boxing legend convicted of raping beauty queen  Former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson, accused of raping 18-year-old beauty-pageant contestant Desiree Washington, is found guilty by an Indiana jury. The following month, Tyson was given a 10-year prison sentence, with four years suspended.    Mike Tyson rose to fame in 1986 when he beat Trevor Berbick and became, at age 20, the youngest heavyweight champ in boxing history. Born June 30, 1966, in Brooklyn, New York, Tyson had a troubled childhood and was sent to reform school in upstate New York. There, his boxing talent was discovered and he flourished under the tutelage of legendary trainer Cus D'Amato. Tyson turned pro in 1985 and the following year became heavyweight champ, a title he retained until 1990, when he was upset by James "Buster" Douglas.    In July 1991, Tyson met Desiree Washington at a rehearsal for the Miss Black America pageant in Indianapolis. Washington accompanied Tyson back to his hotel room, where, in the early hours of July 19, he allegedly raped her. Tyson claimed the sex was consensual. The world-famous fighter was indicted by a grand jury in September of that year and convicted in February 1992. In March, he began serving his term at the Indiana Youth Center near Plainfield, Indiana. While in prison, he reportedly studied Islam and the writings of Mao Zedong and Malcolm X. He was released, after serving three years, in March 1995.    Post-prison, Tyson briefly recaptured the heavyweight title in 1996. However, the notorious pugilist continued to court controversy. In 1997, during a bout against Evander Holyfield, Tyson bit off a piece of the heavyweight champ's ear; as a result, his boxing license was temporarily revoked. Tyson also had run-ins with the law and spent several months in jail for assaulting motorists after a traffic accident. Additionally, he battled drug addiction and faced financial problems after squandering the multi-million dollar fortune he had amassed. Tyson's professional career ended in 2005, when he quit during the middle of a bout against Kevin McBride.


1993 - Jani Sievinen swims world record 200m backstroke (1:55.59)
1993 - US officially backs peace plan in Bosnia
1993 - "Michael Jackson Talks To Oprah Winfrey" airs on ABC & drew an astounding 39.3 rating/56 share, 90 million people
1995 - Chelsi Smith, 21, (Texas), crowned 44th Miss USA
King of Pop Michael JacksonKing of Pop Michael Jackson 1995 - Sun Cayun pole vaults female indoor world record (4.12m)
1995 - US female Figure Skating championship won by Nicole Bobek






 In 1996 on this day, IBM computer Deep Blue became the first computer to win a game of chess against a reigning (human) chess champion, Gary Kasparov.

Feb 10, 1996: Kasparov loses chess game to computer    On this day in 1996, after three hours, world chess champion Gary Kasparov loses the first game of a six-game match against Deep Blue, an IBM computer capable of evaluating 200 million moves per second. Man was ultimately victorious over machine, however, as Kasparov bested Deep Blue in the match with three wins and two ties and took home the $400,000 prize. An estimated 6 million people worldwide followed the action on the Internet.    Kasparov had previously defeated Deep Thought, the prototype for Deep Blue developed by IBM researchers in 1989, but he and other chess grandmasters had, on occasion, lost to computers in games that lasted an hour or less. The February 1996 contest was significant in that it represented the first time a human and a computer had duked it out in a regulation, six-game match, in which each player had two hours to make 40 moves, two hours to finish the next 20 moves and then another 60 minutes to wrap up the game.    Kasparov, who was born in 1963 in Baku, Azerbaijan, became the Soviet Union's junior chess champion at age 13 and in 1985, at age 22, the youngest world champ ever when he beat legendary Soviet player Anatoly Karpov. Considered by many to be the greatest chess player in the history of the game, Kasparov was known for his swashbuckling style of play and his ability to switch tactics mid-game.    In 1997, a rematch took place between Kasparov and an enhanced Deep Blue. Kasparov won the first game, the computer the second, with the next three games a draw. On May 11, 1997, Deep Blue came out on top with a surprising sixth game win--and the $700,000 match prize.    In 2003, Kasparov battled another computer program, "Deep Junior." The match ended in a tie. Kasparov retired from professional chess in 2005.




1997 - 13th Soap Opera Digest Awards
1997 - 5th annual ESPY Awards presented
1997 - Comet Shoemaker-Holt 2 Closest Approach to Earth (1.9245 AU)
1997 - O J Simpson jury reaches decision on $25M in punitive damages
1997 - Soyuz TM-25 launches to the MIR
1997 - Lemrick Nelson found guilty in the fatal stabbing on Hasidic Jew Yankel Rosenbaum in Crown Heights Brooklyn in 1991
1998 - AOL raises monthly flat rate internet access from $19.95 to $21.95
1998 - Olympic figure skater Peggy Fleming undergoes breast cancer surgery


 1998 - Voters in Maine repeal a gay rights law passed in 1997 becoming the first U.S. state to abandon that law.


 2003 - France and Belgium break the NATO procedure of silent approval concerning the timing of protective measures for Turkey in case of a possible war with Iraq.


 2005 - North Korea publicly announced for the first time that it had nuclear arms. The country also rejected attempts to restart disarmament talks in the near future saying that it needed the weapons as protection against an increasingly hostile United States.

2007 - NFL Pro Bowl: AFC beats NFC 31-28
2008 - The 2008 Namdaemun fire severely damages Namdaemun, the first National Treasure of South Korea.
Singer Amy WinehouseSinger Amy Winehouse 2008 - 50th Grammy Awards: Rehab, Amy Winehouse wins
2008 - NFL Pro Bowl: NFC beats AFC 42-30


 2013 - Nigeria defeat Burkina Faso 1-0 to win the football 2013 Africa Cup of Nations


 2013 - 5 people are killed by a falling lifeboat from the cruise ship Thomson Majesty in the Canary islands


 2013 - 36 people are killed and 39 are injured in a stampede at a train station in Allahabad, India







1763 - The Treaty of Paris ended the French and Indian War. In the treaty France ceded Canada to England.   1840 - Britain's Queen Victoria married Prince Albert of Saxe Coburg-Gotha.  1870 - The city of Anaheim was incorporated for the first time.   1870 - The YWCA was founded in New York City.   1879 - The electric arc light was used for the first time.   1897 - "The New York Times" began printing "All the news that's fit to print" on their front page.   1920 - Major league baseball representatives outlawed pitches that involve tampering with the ball.   1923 - Ink paste was manufactured for the first time by the Standard Ink Company.   1925 - The first waterless gas storage tank was placed in service in Michigan City, IN.   1933 - The singing telegram was introduced by the Postal Telegraph Company of New York City.   1933 - Primo Carnera knocked out Ernie Schaaf in round 13 at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Schaaf died as a result of the knockout punch.   1934 - The first imperforated, ungummed sheets of postage stamps were issued by the U.S. Postal Service in New York City.  1935 - The Pennsylvania Railroad began passenger service with its electric locomotive. The engine was 79-1/2 feet long and weighed 230 tons.   1942 - The Normandie, the former French liner, capsized in New York Harbor. The day before the ship had caught fire while it was being fitted for the U.S. Navy.   1949 - "Death of a Salesman" opened at the Morocco Theatre in New York City.   1962 - The Soviet Union exchanged capture American U2 pilot Francis Gary Powers for the Soviet spy Rudolph Ivanovich Abel being held by the U.S.     1981 - The Las Vegas Hilton hotel-casino caught fire. Eight people were killed and 198 were injured.   1989 - Ron Brown became the first African American to head a major U.S. political party when he was elected chairman of the Democratic National Committee.      1997 - The U.S. Army suspended its top-ranking enlisted soldier, Army Sgt. Major Gene McKinney following allegations of sexual misconduct. McKinney was convicted of obstruction of justice and acquitted of 18 counts alleging sexual harassment of six military women.   1998 - A man became the first to be convicted of committing a hate crime in cyberspace. The college dropout had e-mailed threats to Asian students.   1998 - Voters in Maine repealed a 1997 gay rights law. Maine was the first state to abandone such legislation.   1999 - Avalanches killed at least 10 people when they roared down the French Alps 30 miles from Geneva.   2005 - North Korea publicly announced for the first time that it had nuclear arms. The country also rejected attempts to restart disarmament talks in the near future saying that it needed the weapons as protection against an increasingly hostile United States.
2009 - A Russian and an American satellite collide over Siberia.


1763 Treaty of Paris signed, ending the French and Indian War. France ceded Canada and all its North American territories east of the Mississippi to Great Britain. 1837 Russian poet and novelist Alexander Pushkin was killed in a duel. 1840 Queen Victoria married Prince Albert. 1942 Glenn Miller received the first ever gold record for selling a million copies of "Chattanooga Choo Choo." 1962 The Soviet Union exchanged captured American U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers for Rudolph Abel, a Soviet spy held by the United States. 1967 The 25th Amendment was ratified, establishing presidential succession. 1996 IBM's computer, Deep Blue, beat the world chess champion, Garry Kasparov, in the first game of their match. 2005 Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Arthur Miller died.


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/feb10.htm


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

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory

Monday, February 9, 2026

Robert Reich Posted Some Interesting Points About Trump's Racist Truth Social Video Depicting the Obamas as Apes

Here we go again. Facing backlash for his unhinged behavior and low approval ratings for the miserable job he has done in his first year back in office, Trump is once again applying classic "divide and conquer" tactics.

On his Truth Social account, King Con Don depicted the Obamas as apes. It was quite transparently racist and not okay. Even some Republicans voiced rare criticism.

Robert Reich  almost always makes solid points. He did so again about this latest absurdity from the Trump White House. And while he might not be surprised any longer, Reich urges us not to turn a blind eye, or too quickly or easily dismiss this as yet another example of Trump's ugly and divisive and often racist behavior.  Reich says:

It was disgusting and abhorrent, and sadly not at all surprising. We must not become numb to his racism — it drives much of the cruelty and chaos this regime is inflicting on the entire country.






Robert Reich 6 February,  2026 · Trump shared a racist video depicting the Obamas as apes on his Truth Social platform. It was disgusting and abhorrent, and sadly not at all surprising. We must not become numb to his racism — it drives much of the cruelty and chaos this regime is inflicting on the entire country.

https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1441880717305371&set=a.397968961696557

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Super Bowl LX Review

 

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AFC Champions

New England Patriots 


v.


NFC Champions

Seattle Seahawks



This Super Bowl could have been very close, or it could have been fairly one-sided - as it turned out to be - in favor of either team, and it would not have felt shocking. At least to me. Both teams had shown the capacity to be surprisingly dominant. Yet both teams, also and paradoxically, felt capable of a sudden letdown. Where everything starts to go wrong and it all compounds, all at once.

The only scenario that would truly have shocked me is if this game turned out to be a complete, laughable blowout for either team. Even this would not have been a total and complete surprise. After all, the Seahawks had blown out the 49ers - themselves a Super Bowl team just two years ago, and a seemingly legitimate contender this season until the blowout playoff loss - en route to this Super Bowl. What if their defense was playing lights out, and their offense was playing extremely well? After all, that offense had scored 41 in the divisional round against those 49ers and 31 in the NFC Championship against the Rams, respectively. What if their offense gets going early, perhaps benefits from a break or two, like turnovers (which I definitely saw going in Seattle's favor prior to this game)? Yeah, it could be quite lopsided.

However, that simply was not what I expected. The Seahawks defense might have been the best in the league, and certainly ranks among the elite defenses this season. But the Patriots also have a tough, elite defense, and I felt certain that they would give Seattle's offense a tough time. That is precisely what happened. If through the first quarter, it felt like the two teams were mostly feeling each other out, by the second and third quarter, it was obvious that both offenses were struggling against the opposing defense. It's just that the Seahawks were obviously better at capitalizing on their limited opportunities. New England's offense just seemed unable to get anything going, although at least they were not self-destructive (particularly in the first half). 

For all intents and purposes, the game felt like this: both defenses were tough and physical and aggressive, and caused the opposing offenses fits. Yet the Seahawks kept doing just enough to get in some scoring opportunities, even if they had to settle for field goals. It seemed to me that the Patriots never got good enough field position that scoring even seemed like a real possibility, at least not through the first three quarters.

So that suggests that Seattle's Dark Side Defense just dictated the tempo of the game, more than any unit. New England's defense proved very tough, and seemed almost to flirt with forcing Seattle into a key turnover. Yet to their credit, the Seahawks never actually did commit a single turnover at any point. And they did just enough with those field goal opportunities to chip away at New England's chances of winning the game. They got three field goals in the first half for a 9-0 lead. When the Dark Side Defense still forced the Pats off the field with nary a scoring opportunity, another Seattle field goal made it 12-0, and it was growing decidedly uncomfortable for the Pats, who still could not get anything going. By the time that the Pats finally started scoring, it was very late in the game, when they were already down 19-0, after Seattle finally produced a touchdown. The Pats seemed to finally find something of a rhythm on offense, but by that point, the clock was their biggest enemy.

Also, they made some critical mistakes. New England quarterback Drake Maye threw two INT''s, including that awful pick-six late in the fourth which killed whatever slim chances the Patriots actually still had. But that seems fitting, as the Seahawks defense really was applying heavy and relentless pressure all game long. In the end, it shows with these statistics: the Dark Side Defense produced six sacks and three turnovers. That includes the pick six late in the fourth quarter that ended all real suspense. 

No disrespect intended to Seahawks Kenneth Walker III, who became the first running back to win the Super Bowl MVP Honors since Terrell Davis, back in the late nineties. But it was Seattle's defense which truly dictated how this game went, from beginning to end. They became the first team since Pittsburgh's Steel Curtain defense back in the 1970's to pitch a Super Bowl shutout through the firs three quarters. Not just shutting the Pats out, though. In fact, it felt like New England never really had any scoring chances through the first three quarters. Opportunities were extremely limited. They never even got close. That is the reason why Seattle's very limited offensive production through the first three quarters of play suddenly turned into a death knell once the Seahawks offense actually managed to score a touchdown. Walker was the best tool in Seattle's proverbial offensive shed, but that would not have stood up, or perhaps even been a factor, if the Seahawks defense had not been lights out. If it had been up to me - obviously it wasn't - the entire Seattle defense deserved that MVP honor. At the very least, somebody from the Seahawks defense should have gotten it. Again, no disrespect intended to Walker, but this game was dictated by defenses, and the Seahawks defense just put on a clinic. That is the reason why the Seahawks walked away from this game with their second Vince Lombardi Trophy in franchise history. 

Seattle's defense pitched that shut out through three quarters. And one well-known stat is that no team which has been shut out for the entire first half has ever come back to win. It certainly never felt like New England was going to threaten to be the first. Not against that defense.

So the NFL always seems to favor offenses. No surprise, then, that the MVP went to a offensive player, even though it was that Dark Side Defense which really set the tone, early and always and relentlessly. 

The stats are deceptive in this game. The time of possession favored Seattle, but they only hung onto the ball for a bit over 33 minutes. Seattle produced 335 yards and 20 first downs on offense, while New England had 331 yards and 18 first downs. But most of the Patriots offensive production came very late, when the game was pretty well decided in Seattle's favor. One key statistic perhaps is a bit more important in revealing the way this game actually went: three turnovers by New England, and zero for Seattle. In fact, the Seahawks became one of those rare teams which produced zero turnovers throughout the entirety of these playoffs. 

Sam Darnold became the first quarterback to win a Super Bowl after being on five other NFL teams. Darnold completed 19 of 38 for 202 yards and one touchdown. But his contributions were greater than those seemingly modest (on the surface) stats might suggest. He played well, and did not make any critical, costly mistakes. And that TD was crucial, coming as it did in the fourth quarter, and giving Seattle a nearly insurmountable lead.

Kenneth Walker III was a force on the ground. He won the Super Bowl MVP honors by producing 135 yards on 27 carries. In fact, he was one of the few consistent big producers for the Seattle offense through those first three quarters, when New England's defense proved very tough.

That said, Seattle place kicker Jason Myers deserves a special mention. He converted a Super Bowl record five field goals. Combine that with two successful extra-point conversions, and he obtained 17 points on seven kicks. That's a new Super Bowl record. He might have been a candidate for Super Bowl MVP honors. 

On the losing side, quarterback Drake Maye had a miserable, forgettable day, completing 27 of 43 passes for 25 yards and two touchdowns, but also two INT's. He also lost a fumble. That said, I heard that he had apparently taken painkiller shots before the game. So perhaps something was bothering him, and that may have contributed to his struggles on this day.

Maye received little help on the ground. In fact, he was the leading New England runner, with just 37 yards on five carries. Hard to win a Super Bowl when you receive so little help, although Seattle's defense had more than a little to do with that. 

And so that's it. The Seahawks get some measure of revenge (at least as a franchise) against New England for that heartbreaking Super Bowl XLIX loss back in February of 2015. They did not recover fully as a franchise, it seems, until this Super Bowl. Fittingly, against the same team that haunted them on that day. Seattle became the 17th NFL franchise to win multiple Super Bowl titles, as it now joins the ranks of franchises which have won at least two Super Bowls.


One more thing. It seemed to me that I did fairly well with my postseason predictions this year. I was a perfect 6-0 for Wildcard weekend, 2-2 in the divisional round, and 1-1 for the championship games. Add this Super Bowl prediction, which I got right, and that means that I was right 10 times, and wrong three times with my picks.

Not bad. 

Thought it might be fun to review my own past Super Bowl predictions and see how accurate I was. Yes, I have made predictions for the big game every year since January of 2011, when the Packers beat the Steelers. Since then, it's been a mixed bag. Sometimes, I seem to be on point. Other times, clearly, I underestimated the team that actually emerged victorious. So let's see how I did with each of those predictions, and follow that up  by adding my official prediction for Super Bowl LX.

Here goes:




Super Bowl XLV: Packers over Steelers
My pick: Accurate
https://charbor74.blogspot.com/2011/01/super-bowl-xlv.html


Super Bowl XLVI: Giants over Patriots
My pick: Accurate
https://charbor74.blogspot.com/2012/01/super-bowl-xlvi-preview-new-york-giants.html



Super Bowl XLVII: Ravens over 49ers
My pick: Accurate
https://charbor74.blogspot.com/2013/01/super-bowl-xlvii-preview-baltimore.html


Super Bowl XLVIII: Seahawks over Broncos
My pick: Inaccurate
https://charbor74.blogspot.com/2014/01/super-bowl-xlviii-preview.html


Super Bowl XLIX: Patriots over Seahawks
My pick: Inaccurate
https://charbor74.blogspot.com/2015/01/super-bowl-xlix-preview.html


Super Bowl L: Broncos over Panthers
My pick: Inaccurate
https://charbor74.blogspot.com/2016/02/super-bowl-50-preview.html


Super Bowl LI: Patriots over Falcons
My pick: Accurate
https://charbor74.blogspot.com/2017/01/super-bowl-li-preview.html


Super Bowl LII: Eagles over Patriots
My pick: Inaccurate
https://charbor74.blogspot.com/2018/02/super-bowl-lii-preview-predictions.html



Super Bowl LIII: Patriots over Rams
My pick: Accurate
https://charbor74.blogspot.com/2019/02/super-bowl-liii-preview-new-england.html


Super Bowl LIV: Chiefs over 49ers
My pick: Accurate
https://charbor74.blogspot.com/2020/01/super-bowl-liv-preview.html



Super Bowl LV: Buccaneers over Chiefs
My pick: Inaccurate
https://charbor74.blogspot.com/2021/02/super-bowl-lv-preview.html



Super Bowl LVI:Rams over Bengals 
My pick: Inaccurate
https://charbor74.blogspot.com/2022/02/super-bowl-lvi-preview.html



Super Bowl LVII:Chiefss over Eagles 
My pick: Accurate
https://charbor74.blogspot.com/2023/02/super-bowl-lvii-prediction.html



Super Bowl LVIII:Chiefs over 49ers 
My pick: Inaccurate
https://charbor74.blogspot.com/2024/02/super-bowl-lviii-preview-prediction-san.html


Super Bowl LIX:Chiefss over Eagles 
My pick: Inaccurate   



So if you are keeping count, that means that out of the 15 Super Bowls dating back to Super Bowl XLVI that I have made predictions for here on this blogger, my accuracy for picking the correct winner is to be wrong slightly more often than I am right. Seven times I picked the team that wound up winning, and my guess proved to be inaccurate eight times. Almost like a .500 team, in other words, but I need to get my pick correct today to get back to even. Have to admit, I would have thought my accuracy would have been better. In fact, I was a bit stunned and admittedly disappointed to see how often I got the picks wrong for the big game. 

This Super Bowl will break that tie. I will either have a winning record again, or a losing record. The pressure is on, and it's time to make my pick. 

Now finally, here is my prediction for this year's Super Bowl:


Super Bowl LX:

My pick: Seattle Seahawks - Accurate