Historical anniversaries | March
What historical anniversaries are in March? We round up the events, births and deaths…
1 March
1815: Napoleon boldly returns to France
On 1 March, something extraordinary happened on the south coast of France. Napoleon – who had escaped from Elba on the brig Inconstant – landed in the seaside village of Golfe-Juan, between Cannes and Antibes, with a thousand men. He issued a defiant proclamation, asserting his right to rule.
2 March
537: Belisarius saves Rome from the Goths
As smoke rose from the Goths’ camps, Belisarius knew that his gamble had paid off. He waited until half the retreating Gothic forces were across the Milvian Bridge, and then ordered his troops out of the city. They killed thousands of Goths, and many more were drowned. Belisarius had won. For the time being at least, Rome remained Roman.
3 March
1913: Women’s suffrage takes off in Washington DC
Although the parade got off to a slow start, it was soon evident that this was no passing demonstration. Never before had so many women marched together in pursuit of their right to vote. Marching down Pennsylvania Avenue with two dozen floats, nine bands and four mounted brigades, they were led by the figure of the lawyer and activist Inez Milholland, atop a white horse and wearing a white cape.
- Read more | The 1913 march for women’s suffrage
4 March
1918: The first case of “Spanish flu” is recorded
There was still a chill in the air on the morning of 4 March 1918. Private Albert Gitchell, a US Army mess cook, woke feeling hot and achy, his throat burning. Physically unable to attend to his duties, he dragged himself to the infirmary – Hospital Building 91 – where his temperature was taken, recording a shocking 39.4°C. Wary of spreading whatever disease had infected Gitchell, the camp doctor recom- mended that the cook – whom he diagnosed with “a bad cold” – spend a few days in a separate tent.
It was already too late. Almost immediately afterwards, several more patients descended on the infirmary complaining of the same symptoms. Before lunchtime, 107 cases of the mysterious flu were recorded at Fort Riley.
5 March
1953: Death of Stalin
Stalin’s daughter Svetlana remembered the final moment. “He literally choked to death as we watched,” she wrote. “The death agony was terrible … At the last minute, he opened his eyes. It was a terrible look, either mad or angry, and full of the fear of death.” For a moment, Stalin raised his hand, as if pointing or threatening. “Then,” Svetlana wrote, “the next moment, his spirit after one last effort tore itself from his body.”
6 March
1836: Rebel settlers take a last stand at the Alamo
It was at about 5.30 in the morning that the Mexicans launched their final assault on the Alamo. Five months earlier, American settlers in Texas, or ‘Texians’, had rebelled against the Mexican government, driving away their forces. During the inevitable Mexican counterattack, more than 200 Texian rebels had become trapped at the Alamo Mission, near San Antonio. Steadily the besiegers tightened their grip, and now they were ready to finish the job.
7 March
321: Constantine orders that Sunday become a day of rest
“On the venerable day of the Sun,” Constantine ordered, “let the magistrates and people residing in cities rest, and let all workshops be closed. In the country however persons engaged in agriculture may freely and lawfully continue their pursuits because it often happens that another day is not suitable for grain-sowing or vine planting; lest by neglecting the proper moment for such operations the bounty of heaven should be lost.”
Famous births in March
1 March 1810
Frédéric François Chopin, composer and pianist
1 March 1812
Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin, English Gothic Revival architect and designer
3 March 1847
Alexander Graham Bell, telephone pioneer
3 March 1911
Jean Harlow, film actress and original 'blonde bombshell'
4 March 1678
Antonio Lucio Vivaldi, violinist and composer
6 March 1937
Valentina Tereshkova, first woman to orbit the earth
7 March 1857
Julius Wagner von Jauregg, Nobel Prize winning psychiatrist
8 March 1712
Quaker John Fothergill, physician and naturalist
9 March 1763
William Cobbett, radical politician, farmer and author
10 March 1858
Henry Watson Fowler, lexicographer and author
12 March 1613
André Le Nôtre, landscape gardener
14 March 1808
Narcissa Whitman, in 1836, she and Eliza Spalding are hailed as the first two women to cross the Rocky Mountains
14 March 1879
Albert Einstein, pioneering theoretical physicist
15 March 1813
John Snow, English obstetrician, epidemiologist and public health reformer
16 March 1751
James Madison, fourth US president
20 March 1811
Napoleon II, the son of Napoleon Bonaparte and his second wife, Marie Louise of Austria
21 March 1527
Hermann Finck, German composer
21 March 1768
Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier, mathematician and physicist
22 March 1783
Sarah Goodin Barrett Moulton, young subject of one of Thomas Lawrence’s most famous portraits
23 March 1430
Margaret of Anjou, de facto leader of the Lancastrian faction for much of the Wars of the Roses
23 March 1882
Emmy Noetherm, mathematician
30 March 1811
Robert Bunsen, chemist
31 March 1732
Joseph Haydn, Austrian composer
31 March 1878
John Arthur "Jack" Johnson, first black world heavyweight boxing champion
Famous deaths in March
2 March 1930
DH Lawrence, novelist
3 March 1792
Robert Adam, Scottish neoclassical architect and interior designer
3 March 1808
Johann Christian Fabricius, Danish entomologist
4 March 1193
Saladin, sultan of Egypt and Syria and founder of the Ayyubid dynasty
4 March 1790
Flora MacDonald, Jacobite heroine
5 March 1827
Alessandro Volta, Italian physicist and battery inventor
6 March 1888
Louisa M Alcott, American writer, feminist and abolitionist
7 March 1810
Admiral Cuthbert Collingwood, Nelson's second-in-command at the battle of Trafalgar
8 March 1917
Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin, German airship designer
10 March 1513
John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford
13 March 1842
Henry Shrapnel, British soldier and inventor
25 March 1650
John Williams, Archbishop of York
25 March 1809
Anna Seward, poet known as 'the Swan of Lichfield'
26 March 1827
Ludwig van Beethoven, composer
27 March 1770
Giovanni Battista Tiepolo, Venetian artist
31 March 1631
John Donne, English metaphysical poet
8 March
1711: Marquis de Guiscard stabs Sir Robert Harley
Members of the British cabinet were questioning the French spy the Marquis de Guiscard when he pulled out a knife and stabbed Sir Robert Harley in the chest. Harley, who as chancellor of the exchequer was one of Queen Anne's chief ministers, was said to have been saved from death thanks to the heavy gold thread embroidery that his sister Abigail had sewn onto his coat, which broke the blade of the knife. Harley was, however, wounded by a second blow and forced to take to his bed for six weeks.
9 March
1841: The US Supreme Court frees the slaves of La Amistad
As Justice Story began speaking, it became clear that the Supreme Court had sided with the slaves. As their lawyer put it, they had been “unlawfully kidnapped, and forcibly and wrongfully carried on board”, so they were entitled to their freedom. Abolitionist supporters paid for them to be put up in Farmington, Connecticut, where they were given English lessons and Bible classes, while fundraisers collected money to send them back home. A year later, they set eyes on the African coast for the first time since they had been kidnapped. Most disappeared into obscurity. But one, Sarah Margru Kinson, later returned to the United States to study at Oberlin College, before going back to Sierra Leone as a Christian missionary.
10 March
1910: Release of the silent movie In Old California. Directed by DW Griffith of the Biograph Company, it is the first film to be shot in Hollywood
11 March
AD 222: Rome’s emperor of excess meets a bloody end
The Praetorian Guard, sick of Elagabalus’s excesses, switched their allegiance to his cousin Severus Alexander and turned on Elagabalus. As the historian Cassius Dio recorded, there was no mercy for either Elagabalus or his mother: “Their heads were cut off and their bodies, after being stripped naked, were first dragged all over the city, and then the mother’s body was cast aside somewhere or other while his was thrown into the river.”
- On the podcast | Everything you wanted to know about Roman emperors
12 March
1612: King James VI and I granted the Virginia Company of London a third royal charter, extending its American territories to include Bermuda.
The move gave more control to ordinary investors and allowed the company to run a lottery to raise funds
13 March
1781: William Herschel observes Uranus
Using a telescope of his own design, astronomer William Herschel observed the planet later named Uranus from the back garden of his house in New King Street, Bath. He originally thought it was a comet.
- On the podcast | The space race: everything you wanted to know
14 March
1942: Anne Miller, a nurse from Connecticut, becomes the first known person to have her life saved by penicillin after developing a streptococcal infection after a miscarriage
15 March
1927: Female rowers battle it out at the first women’s boat race
Even the sceptics had to admit that it was a colourful occasion. As if determined to confirm their killjoy reputation, the heads of the women’s colleges had scheduled the race for 1.15pm, “in order to avoid a large body of spectators”. All the same, the banks were packed with “enthusiastic undergraduates, flinging confetti over the river, and blowing toy trumpets”.
16 March
1968: As many as 500 Vietnamese civilians are murdered by US troops at My Lai, South Vietnam. Lieutenant William Calley will be the only participant to be convicted for the crime
17 March
1921: Marie Stopes opens Britain's first family planning clinic
Marie Stopes opened Britain 's first family planning clinic, the Mothers' Clinic, in Holloway, north London. In 1925 the clinic moved to Whitfield Street in central London, where it remains to this day.
18 March
978: King Edward is murdered at Corfe
On 18 March 978, a brutal murder was committed at Corfe in Dorset – and the victim was Edward, king of the English. “No worse deed for the English race was done than this,” the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle lamented.
The main suspect for the assassination was Edward’s stepmother, Ælfthryth, widow of his father, King Edgar. Certainly she had a motive: with Edward dead, his younger half-brother – her son, Æthelred – would inherit the English throne. It has been supposed that she invited the young king to Corfe to participate in a hunt, with murder in mind.
19 March
1962: In the US, a young folk singer called Bob Dylan releases his first album, the imaginatively titled Bob Dylan
20 March
1966: A thief steals into church and pinches the World Cup
As the secretary of the Football Association admitted, the theft had cast “quite a cloud” over the forthcoming tournament. But then, on 27 March, the cup was found. Out walking with his owner in South Norwood, a dog called Pickles disappeared beneath a hedge, and reappeared with something wrapped in newspaper – the Jules Rimet trophy.
21 March
1617: Pocahontas is buried, far from home
By March 1617, at the end of her London visit, Pocahontas was possibly already gravely unwell, and not keen to travel back to Virginia. As an observer wrote: “She is on her return though sore against her will, if the wind would come about to send them away.”
It was planned that the family would sail from London on the George, belonging to Samuel Argall, deputy governor of Virginia. Before the ship set out on the long ocean voyage, it dropped anchor at Gravesend to gather supplies and fresh water. Here, Pocahontas was taken off the ship, dying or possibly already dead. Her body was laid to rest in the chancel of Saint George’s Church – a superior place of burial usually reserved for clergy or high-standing parishioners.
22 March
1960: American physicists Arthur Schawlow and Charles Townes are awarded the world's first patent for a laser
Gordon Gould, who coined the term laser and whose patent application had been rejected, began a 30-year legal battle for his patent rights
23 March
1801: Russia’s tsar is brutally beaten to death
Many accounts agree that the plotters initially planned to force Paul to abdicate, but alcohol soon took over. In the confusion, one officer hit the struggling Paul in the face with a golden snuffbox. The emperor went down, and a group of the plotters piled on top of him, kicking and choking him. One of them wrapped a sash around his neck and began to tighten. Then, when he had stopped twitching, they kicked and stamped on his body, until they were pulled away.
The next morning, when Paul’s son Alexander, now emperor, reviewed the guards, they were wearing their old uniforms.
24 March
1944: The Great Escape arouses Hitler’s fury
As night fell on the 24th, the men chosen for the escape attempt assembled in Hut 104.
By the time the Germans realised the prisoners were getting out, 76 men had crawled to freedom. The snow was so deep that they were forced to use main roads rather than forest paths, as they had planned, and all but three were soon recaptured. Hitler wanted them all shot; in the end, 50 were executed.
25 March
1807: The slave trade is abolished in the British empire
The Abolition of the Slave Trade Act entered the statute books on 25 March 1807, making it illegal to trade enslaved people within the British colonies. The act – culmination of a decades-long struggle by abolitionists in Britain – ruled that, from 1 May 1807, “dealing and reading in the purchase, sale, barter, or transfer of slaves or of persons intending to be sold, transferred, used, or dealt with as slaves, practiced or carried in, at, or from any part of the coast or countries of Africa shall be abolished, prohibited and declared to be unlawful”.
- Read more | A brief guide to the transatlantic slave trade
26 March
1830: The Book of Mormon debuts with a whimper
Today, with an estimated 15 million Mormons worldwide, original copies of the Book of Mormon change hands for well over $50,000. But when the book first went on sale on 26 March 1830, sales were disappointing. Many local citizens thought it was blasphemous; another Palmyra paper even called it “the greatest piece of superstition that has come to our knowledge”.
Local farmer Martin Harris had mortgaged his property to pay for Smith’s security. Harris lost everything, yet he never lost his faith in the Book of Mormon. It was “no fake,” he said on his deathbed. “I know what I know. I have seen what I have seen and I have heard what I have heard. I have seen the gold plates from which the Book of Mormon is written.”
27 March
1881: In the then violent town of Basingstoke, troops are called to clear the streets after the Salvation Army’s anti-alcohol campaign provokes rioting by local brewery workers
28 March
1979: Labour receives a vote of no confidence
As Hamilton reached the clerk’s table he gave “an almost imperceptible thumbs up”. On the other side, a Tory whip was whispering to Mrs Thatcher, and her face paled. “I don’t believe it,” she mouthed, and a gasp of triumph came from the Labour benches. Had they pulled it off, against all the odds?
Then the clerk of the house handed the voting slip to the Conservative teller, Spencer Le Marchant, and the mood changed. Suddenly the government benches were deathly silent, and all the noise was coming from the opposition. “Order, order!” said the speaker, and the house fell absolutely still.
“The Ayes to the right, 311,” Le Marchant said. “The Noes to the left, 310.” Even before he had finished, there came from the Tory benches a roar of unbridled joy. They had done it. Now the election was on.
29 March
2014: As midnight strikes, the first same-sex marriages are solemnised in England and Wales
- On the podcast | LGBT+ history podcast episodes
30 March
1282: Sicilians revolt against their French oppressors
It was on Easter Monday, just before the evening Vespers service at the Church of the Holy Spirit, Palermo, that the moment came. As crowds gathered outside the church for the annual festival, a group of swaggering, tipsy French officials, with a man called Drouet particularly prominent, made overtures to some young Sicilian women. In the ensuing melee, one outraged husband plunged his knife into Drouet – and all hell broke loose.
“To the sound of the bells,” wrote the great historian Steven Runciman, “messengers ran through the city calling on the men of Palermo to rise against the oppressor. At once the streets were filled with angry armed men, crying ‘Death to the French’… They poured into the inns frequented by the French and the houses where they dwelt, sparing neither man, woman nor child.” Whenever they found a suspected Frenchmen, the mob demanded that he pronounce the local word ciciri, which outsiders invariably found difficult. Anyone who failed the test was killed.
By the next morning, 2,000 people lay dead. The War of the Sicilian Vespers had begun; it would last for another 20 years.
31 March
1889: France’s Eiffel Tower opens
The tower was an instant hit: illuminated every night by gas lamps, it dominated not just the Exposition, but Paris itself. When the public were finally allowed in, the lifts were still not working. Yet in the first week alone, almost 30,000 people climbed to the top – a sign of how completely it had caught the world’s imagination.
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