Daily Calendar for Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Daily Calendar

View daily calendar information including holidays, advice, and daily features.

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Ramadan begins at sundown. The exact timing is subject to the first sighting of the Moon. Beginning at age 12, all Muslims take part in the month-long sunrise-to-sunset fast that is the hallmark of Ramadan. Eating and drinking (including water) is prohibited during daylight hours, and the day’s abstinence is offset by a nightly meal known as iftar. The holiday honors the time when the angel Gabriel revealed the first verses of the Qur’an, the holy book of Islam, to a desert-wandering caravan trader named Muhammad. Muslims believe that fasting cleanses the body, and the practice reminds them of the suffering of the poor. Food is often shared with a poor family during Ramadan. At the end of the 30-day fast is Eid al-Fitr (Festival of Breaking the Fast), replete with feasting and celebration. Read more about Ramadan.

Mardi Gras is French for “fat Tuesday”—the final feasting before the fasting of Lent, which begins tomorrow, Ash Wednesday. Fat Tuesday is also called Shrove Tuesday, a name that comes from the practice of shriving—purifying oneself through confession—prior to Lent. Many of the names applied to this day relate to food and eating. In many Latin countries, Mardi Gras is the culmination of the carnival season of revelry and feasting. (Carnival from the Latin carnem levare, means to take meat away.) Among the Pennsylvania Dutch, this Tuesday is Fastnacht (fast night), and everyone enjoys the traditional fastnachtkuchen, a rectangular doughnut with a slit in the middle. For the English, Shrove Tuesday is also called Pancake Day, as they use up the cooking fats that are forbidden during Lent. Learn more about Mardi Gras and find great recipes including Shrove Tuesday Pancakes!

The new year is by far the most important festival of the Chinese lunar calendar. It is celebrated on the second new Moon after the winter solstice. The holiday is a time of renewal, with debts cleared, new clothes bought, shops and homes decorated, and families gathered for a reunion dinner. Chinese New Year is marked by fireworks, traditional lion dances, gift giving, and special foods. Learn more about Chinese New Year traditions.

Born

  • Arcangelo Corelli (composer)
  • Raphaelle Peale (American painter Raphaelle Peale was born in Annapolis, Maryland.)
  • Dorothy Canfield Fisher (author)
  • Marjorie Lawrence (opera singer)
  • Michiaki Takahashi (virologist best know for inventing first chickenpox vaccine )
  • Rene Russo (actress)
  • Richard Karn (actor, game show host)
  • Michael Jordan (basketball player)
  • Jerry O'Connell (actor)
  • Jason Ritter (actor)
  • Paris Hilton (heiress)
  • Ed Sheeran (musician)

Died

  • Geronimo (Chiricahua Apache leader)
  • Wilfred Laurier (8th Prime Minister of Canada)
  • Thelonious Monk (jazz pianist)
  • Lee Strasberg (actor and director; died in New York, NY)
  • Rush Limbaugh (American radio personality and writer)

Events

  • Myles Standish appointed commander of Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts
  • Tie broken: Thomas Jefferson to be U.S. president; Aaron Burr, Vice President
  • Baron Karl von Drais de Sauerbrun patented draisine (bicycle precursor)
  • Confederate H. L. Hunley was first submarine to sink a warship (USS Housatonic)
  • Columbia, South Carolina, burned by Union Army (U.S. Civil War)
  • First sardines canned in Maine
  • The National Congress of Mothers, later known as the PTA, founded
  • Marcel Duchamp’s painting, Nude Descending a Staircase, outraged viewers
  • First publication of Newsweek magazine
  • Elvis Presley awarded his first gold album for Elvis”“
  • 9-pound 6-ounce chain pickerel caught near Homerville, Georgia

Weather

  • McIntosh, South Dakota, recorded a low temperature of -58 degrees F
  • Record low of 60 degrees below zero F, Labrador
  • The temperature dipped to -60F in Esker, Labrador
  • Blizzard dumped more snow in Boston than any other storm in the state’s history— including the Blizzard of 1978—Logan International Airport measured 27.5 inches