February 1903
The following events occurred in February 1903:
[February 1], 1903 (Sunday)
- The Mumbles-based British lifeboat James Stevens capsizes at the mouth of the River Afan in Wales, while on its way to rescue the stranded Christina resulting in the deaths of six of her fourteen crew, mostly volunteers who worked as oyster fishermen.
- Died: Sir George Stokes, 1st Baronet, 83, Irish mathematician and physicist
[February 2], 1903 (Monday)
- Born: Bartel Leendert van der Waerden, Dutch mathematician, in Amsterdam
[February 3], 1903 (Tuesday)
- Discovery Expedition: Captain Scott and his companions, Edward Adrian Wilson and Ernest Shackleton, return to after their southern journey of, including relays, in 93 days at a daily average of just over.
- Born: Douglas Douglas-Hamilton, 14th Duke of Hamilton, Scottish politician and pioneering aviator, in London
[February 4], 1903 (Wednesday)
- Born: Alexander Imich, Polish-born American parapsychologist and chemist, in Częstochowa
[February 5], 1903 (Thursday)
- In the South Antrim by-election in Northern Ireland, brought about by the resignation of Irish Unionist MP William Ellison-Macartney, Charles Curtis Craig retains the seat for the party.
- Born: Koto Matsudaira, Japanese diplomat, ambassador to the United Nations, in Tokyo
[February 6], 1903 (Friday)
- Born: Claudio Arrau, Chilean pianist, in Chillán
[February 7], 1903 (Saturday)
- Died: James Glaisher, 93, English meteorologist and aeronaut
[February 8], 1903 (Sunday)
- Born:
- *Greta Keller, Austrian cabaret singer and actress, in Vienna
- *Tunku Abdul Rahman, Malaysian politician first Chief Minister of the Federation of Malaysia, in Alor Setar, Kedah
[February 9], 1903 (Monday)
[February 10], 1903 (Tuesday)
- Born:
- *Waldemar Hoven, German physician and war criminal, in Freiburg
- *Matthias Sindelar, Austrian footballer, in Kozlov
[February 11], 1903 (Wednesday)
- Oxnard strike of 1903: Japanese and 200 Mexican laborers became charter members of the Japanese-Mexican Labor Association ; it is the first time in U.S. history that a labor union has been formed by members of different races.
- Anton Bruckner's 9th Symphony receives its première in Vienna, Austriam, conducted by Ferdinand Löwe, nearly seven years after the composer's death.
[February 12], 1903 (Thursday)
- The aircraft engine that will power the Wright brothers' first airplane later in 1903 is run for the first time in Dayton, Ohio, United States. It is the first successful attempt to build a heavier-than-air aircraft engine.
- Randall Davidson is enthroned as the Archbishop of Canterbury at Canterbury Cathedral in England, succeeding the late Frederick Temple.
- The North British Locomotive Company is established in Glasgow, Scotland, through a merger of manufacturing companies Dübs, Neilson, Reid, and Sharp Stewart.
[February 13], 1903 (Friday)
- Venezuelan crisis of 1902–03: Britain, Germany and Italy reach a settlement with Venezuela, ending the naval blockade imposed because of the country's refusal to pay foreign debts and reparation for damages suffered by European citizens in the Federal War. The settlement is achieved through American intervention by means of the Washington Protocols.
- Born: Georges Simenon, Belgian writer, in Liège
[February 14], 1903 (Saturday)
- Born: Stuart Erwin, American actor, in Squaw Valley, California
- Died: Archduchess Elisabeth Franziska of Austria, 72, Hungarian noblewoman, widow of Archduke Ferdinand Karl Viktor of Austria-Este and Archduke Karl Ferdinand of Austria
[February 15], 1903 (Sunday)
- Morris and Rose Michtom introduce the first teddy bear in the United States, naming it after U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt.
[February 16], 1903 (Monday)
- Romanian inventor Traian Vuia tells the Académie des Sciences of Paris about his procedure for taking off in a heavier-than-air mechanical machine. His ideas are rejected.
- Born: Edgar Bergen, American ventriloquist and actor, in Chicago
[February 17], 1903 (Tuesday)
[February 18], 1903 (Wednesday)
[February 19], 1903 (Thursday)
[February 20], 1903 (Friday)
- King Edward VII of the United Kingdom approves a redesign of the Flag of Australia, on which the stars of the Southern Cross are combined with the Union Jack.
[February 21], 1903 (Saturday)
- Born:
- *Anaïs Nin, French writer, in Neuilly-sur-Seine
- *Raymond Queneau, French poet and novelist, in Le Havre
[February 22], 1903 (Sunday)
- Born:
- *Morley Callaghan, Canadian writer and media personality, in Toronto
- *Ain-Ervin Mere, Estonian Nazi, in Vändra
- *Frank P. Ramsey, English mathematician, in Cambridge
- Died: Hugo Wolf, 42, Austrian composer
[February 23], 1903 (Monday)
- Cuba leases Guantánamo Bay to the United States "in perpetuity" under the terms of the Cuban–American Treaty.
[February 24], 1903 (Tuesday)
- Born: Vladimir Bartol, Slovene author, in Trieste, Austria-Hungary
[February 25], 1903 (Wednesday)
[February 26], 1903 (Thursday)
- The ocean liner SS Columbus, later renamed by the White Star Line as Republic is launched by Harland and Wolff at Belfast, Northern Ireland.
- Born: Giulio Natta, Italian chemist, Nobel Prize laureate, in Imperia
- Died: Richard Jordan Gatling, 84, American inventor
[February 27], 1903 (Friday)
- Battle of Kwatarkwashi: Forces from the British-administered Protectorate of Northern Nigeria defeat the army of the Sokoto Caliphate's Kano Emirate, effectively ending self-government of the emirate.
- Born: Grethe Weiser, German actress, in Hanover
[February 28], 1903 (Saturday)
- Born: Vincente Minnelli, American director, in Chicago