Terms and ConditionsDo Not Sell or Share My Personal InformationPrivacy PolicyPrivacy NoticeAccessibility NoticeUnsubscribe
Copyright © 2026 Day In History
April 2: The War That Had to Come, Islands at the Edge of the World, A Shepherd Lays Down His Staff

Today, April 2nd

April 2: The War That Had to Come, Islands at the Edge of the World, A Shepherd Lays Down His Staff

Leadership announces itself differently across time — sometimes in the thunder of a congressional chamber, sometimes in the cold audacity of a military gamble, sometimes in the long, faithful endurance of a man who simply refused to step away from the work he believed he had been called to do. April 2 is a date that has asked a great deal of the world's leaders and of the people who followed them, a date on which words launched armies, an island dispute reshaped two nations, and one of the most consequential figures of the twentieth century finally rested. Each story is a study in what it costs to lead — and what it means to bear that cost with conviction.
April 2: The War That Had to Come, Islands at the Edge of the World, A Shepherd Lays Down His Staff
April 2: They're Going to the Moon

Today, April 2nd

April 2: They're Going to the Moon

It happened. At 6:35 p.m. EDT on Wednesday, April 1, 2026, NASA's Space Launch System generated 8.8 million pounds of thrust and lifted four human beings off the surface of the Earth for the first time in the direction of the Moon in 54 years. Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and CSA astronaut Jeremy Hansen are now aboard the Orion spacecraft — which the crew named Integrity — arcing through the darkness toward the lunar flyby planned for Monday, April 6. The Full Pink Moon hung in the sky as the rocket cleared the tower. The launch went, in the words of one journalist at the Cape, "with barely a hitch." Gene Cernan's promise is, at last, being kept.
April 2: They're Going to the Moon

01 April

April 1: The Joke That Lasted Centuries, A Monster Given a Stage, A Soul Gone Too Soon

April 1: The Joke That Lasted Centuries, A Monster Given a Stage, A Soul Gone Too Soon A date of deception, dangerous miscalculation, and a loss that still echoes through everything that came after April 1 has always been a day that plays tricks on the unwary — a calendar date that arrives wearing a grin and conceals something darker behind it. The tradition of foolishness it celebrates is ancient and mostly harmless; the events that share its date are neither. On this day, history recorded a courtroom blunder that handed a demagogue exactly what he needed, and a domestic tragedy that silenced one of the most gifted voices the twentieth century produced. Between the laughter and the grief, April 1 reminds us that what appears to be one thing is often another entirely. The World's Longest Running Joke The origins of April Fools' Day are, fittingly, a bit of a puzzle. Scholars have traced threads of the tradition to the Roman festival of Hilaria, the Hindu celebration of Holi, and the general chaos that accompanied the arrival of spring in ancient calendars. But it was in 18th-century Britain that the holiday began to crystallize into something recognizable — a day set aside for pranks, hoaxes, and the gleeful humiliation of the credulous. Across towns and cities, people sent one another on impossible errands, planted false rumors, and delighted in the particular pleasure of watching someone else fall for a trick they should have seen coming. The tradition spread quickly through Europe and, eventually, around the world. What makes April Fools' Day endure, across cultures and centuries, is not merely the appeal of the prank but the more complicated pleasure of the reveal — the moment when the deceived party is let in on the joke and laughter replaces embarrassment. It is, at its best, a celebration of human gullibility and the absurdity of taking the world too literally. Newspapers have published elaborate fictional stories; broadcasters have aired impossible reports; corporations have launched products that turned out to be jokes. The BBC's famous 1957 broadcast about the Swiss spaghetti harvest fooled thousands. In an age of rampant misinformation, the tradition carries a sharper edge than it once did — a reminder that the line between a harmless hoax and a genuinely dangerous lie is thinner than we might like to believe.   An 18th-century British street alive with mischief — the world perfecting an ancient art of harmless deception. The Trial That Backfired on History On April 1, 1924, a Munich courtroom handed down what seemed, on its surface, like a decisive verdict against Adolf Hitler. Found guilty of treason for his role in the failed Beer Hall Putsch of November 1923 — a clumsy, chaotic attempt to overthrow the Weimar Republic that had collapsed within hours and left sixteen of his followers dead — Hitler was sentenced to five years in Landsberg Prison. The judges had the power to deport him; Hitler was, after all, an Austrian citizen, not a German national. They declined. It was one of history's most consequential failures of nerve. The leniency of both the sentence and its terms would prove catastrophic: Hitler served less than nine months. But the damage went deeper than the sentence itself. The trial had given Hitler precisely what a failed putsch could not: a national platform. For twenty-four days, he held the courtroom like a stage, delivering impassioned speeches that the German press reported at length, transforming a humiliated conspirator into a magnetic martyr. The failed coup that had looked like the end of his movement became, through the alchemy of the trial, its launching pad. In prison at Landsberg, he dictated Mein Kampf to his deputy Rudolf Hess. By the time he walked free in December 1924, he had a manifesto, a mythology, and an audience far larger than the one he had before the putsch. The courtroom that meant to neutralize Adolf Hitler had, in effect, introduced him to Germany. A Weimar-era courtroom — the setting where a failed coup became a political resurrection. ❦ What's Going On No More On April 1, 1984 — just one day before his 45th birthday — Marvin Gaye was shot and killed at his parents' home in Los Angeles by his father, Marvin Gay Sr., following a violent altercation. The loss was staggering. Gaye had spent more than two decades reshaping the landscape of American popular music, moving from the polished Motown assembly line of the early 1960s into territory that no one in R&B had dared claim before him. His 1971 album What's Going On — recorded against the wishes of Motown founder Berry Gordy, who considered its anti-war, socially conscious themes uncommercial — became one of the most celebrated and influential records in the history of American music, a work of art so perfectly realized that it changed what soul music was permitted to be about. Behind the genius, however, was a man in deep and prolonged pain. Gaye had struggled for years with depression, drug addiction, and a turbulent personal life that had driven him into tax exile in Europe through much of the early 1980s. His final album, Midnight Love, released in 1982, had produced the massive hit "Sexual Healing" and suggested a creative and personal comeback — but the demons were not finished with him. His death at his father's hand, in the house where he had grown up, carried a particular cruelty. He left behind a body of work — Let's Get It On, Trouble Man, I Want You — that scholars and musicians continue to study and celebrate. In 1987 he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The voice is gone; the music, mercifully, is not.   A soul singer alone in the studio — the sacred, private moment where genius and anguish become music.

01 April

April 1: This Full Moon Is No Joke

April 1: This Full Moon Is No Joke Tonight, April Fools' Day delivers something perfectly real: a Full Pink Moon reaching peak brilliance at 10:12 p.m. ET — the Paschal Moon that sets the date of Easter, the first full moon of spring, and the celestial backdrop for the most anticipated rocket launch in half a century. Here is a sentence that sounds like a prank but is entirely, wonderfully true: tonight, on April Fools' Day, a Full Pink Moon will rise over Kennedy Space Center just hours after NASA attempts to launch four astronauts toward the Moon for the first time since 1972. The Full Pink Moon reaches peak fullness at 10:12 p.m. ET — while the Artemis II crew, if all goes to plan, will already be arcing through the darkness of high Earth orbit, 244,036 miles from the same lunar surface that tonight's Moon will illuminate in silver light. The calendar today is doing something it has never done before: staging a crewed Moon launch beneath a full Moon named for the flowers of spring, on the most mischievous day of the year. History has a sense of humor. The Moon That Named Easter — and Spring Itself Despite its name, the Pink Moon will not appear pink. It takes its name — recorded for centuries in the Old Farmer's Almanac and rooted in Indigenous North American tradition — from the moss pink, or wild ground phlox, one of the earliest widespread wildflowers of spring across the eastern half of North America. When this Moon rose, the phlox bloomed. Other traditional names carry the same seasonal weight: the Egg Moon, the Sprouting Grass Moon, the Moon When the Geese Lay Eggs. All of them speak to the same ancient observation: the full moon of April announces that winter is over and the earth is returning to life. It will rise golden above the horizon at moonrise, appearing larger than usual thanks to the Moon illusion — a beautiful trick of perspective that has mystified observers for as long as there have been eyes to notice it — before climbing to its full cold brightness by 10:12 tonight. This particular Pink Moon carries additional weight in the Christian calendar: it is the Paschal Moon — the first full moon of spring following the ecclesiastical equinox — and it is the moon that sets the date of Easter. The calculation, established by the Council of Nicaea in 325 CE and refined over subsequent centuries, defines Easter as the first Sunday after the Paschal Moon. This year's Paschal Moon falls today, April 1. Easter follows on April 5. The same moon that has governed the timing of one of the world's great religious celebrations for seventeen centuries is tonight also the backdrop for humanity's return to deep space. The universe, apparently, does not miss its cues.   The Full Pink Moon takes its name not from its color but from the moss pink phlox — one of the first wildflowers of spring. Tonight it rises as the Paschal Moon of Easter, the astronomical backdrop for a historic lunar launch, and the most poetic April Fools' joke the sky has ever played. Step outside tonight, away from city lights if you can, and watch it rise. It will come up golden and enormous above the horizon — that familiar Moon illusion making it look almost close enough to touch — and it will climb the sky as the night deepens, pulling toward its peak brightness just after 10 p.m. Somewhere above you, if today's launch succeeds, four human beings will be watching the same Moon from a perspective no one alive has ever had: from space, heading toward it. In ancient Egypt, the palm was carried at funerals because it symbolized eternal life — and tonight humanity carries its own kind of palm branch, a 322-foot rocket pointed at the same pale light that has watched over every human life ever lived. Go outside tonight. Look up. It is no joke: the Moon is full, it is spring, and we are going back.

Get Daily Historical Facts!