Birthdays:
A person born on
February 29 is called a leapling. They
would generally celebrate their birthdays on either February 28 or March 1 on
the non-leap years.
1944 ~ Dennis Farina (d.
2013), American actor.
1944 ~ Leiki Loone, Estonian mathematician.
1936 ~ Alex Rocco, American actor.
1932 ~ Gene H. Golub (d. 2007), American mathematician.
1928 ~ Seymour Papert, South African mathematician and computer
scientist.
1916 ~ Dinah Shore (d. 1994), American singer and actress.
1908 ~ Dee Brown (d. 2002), American author and historian. He is best known for his book, Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee.
1904 ~ Jimmy Dorsey (d.
1957), American bandleader.
1812 ~ Sir James M. Wilson (d. 1880), 8th Premier of
Tasmania. He is the only recorded person
to have been born and died on February 29.
He died on his 68th birthday.
1792 ~ Gioachino Antonio
Rossini (d. 1868), Italian composer, whose works include The Barber of
Seville and William Tell.
1736 ~ Ann Lee (d. 1784),
American religious leader and founder of the Shakers.
1468 ~ Pope Paul III (né Alessandro Farnese, d. 1549).
Events that Changed the
World:
2004 ~ Jean-Bertrand Aristide was ousted as President of Haiti
following a coup.
1996 ~ Faucett Flight 251 crashed in the Peruvian Andes, killing
all 123 passengers and crew aboard.
1960 ~ The comic strip, Family
Circus, made its debut.
1960 ~ An earthquake in Morocco killed over 3,000 people.
1940 ~ Ernest Lawrence received the 1930 Nobel Prize in Physics
at a ceremony held in Berkeley, California.
Due to World War II, Lawrence was unable to travel to Sweden to accept
the award in 1939.
1940 ~ Hattie McDaniel won
an Academy Award for her role as Mammy in Gone with the Wind, becoming
the first African-American to win an Oscar.
1916 ~ In South Carolina, the minimum age for working in
factories, mills and mines was raised from 12 years to 14 years old.
1892 ~ St. Petersburg,
Florida became incorporated.
1720 ~ Swedish Queen Ulrika Eleanora abdicated in favor of her
husband. He officially took the throne
as King Frederick I on March 24, 1720.
1704 ~ During the Queen Anne’s War, French forces, working
together with Native Americans, staged a raid on the settlers of Deerfield,
Massachusetts. Fifty-six villagers were
killed and over 100 were taken captive.
Good-Byes:
2012 ~ Davy Jones (b. 1945), British singer and song-writer,
best known as being a member of The
Monkees.
1980 ~ Yigal Allon (b. 1918), Israeli general and 5th
Prime Minister of Israel.
1908 ~ Pat Garrett (b. 1850), American wild west figure best
known for killing outlaw Billy the Kidd.
1880 ~ Sir James M. Wilson
(b. 1812), 8th Premier of Tasmania. He died on his 68th birthday.
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