Daily Calendar for Saturday, March 15, 2025

Ember Days happen four times a year at the start of each season. Traditionally observed by some Christian denominations, each set of Ember Days is three days, kept on a successive Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. 

Ember Days for 2023
September: 20, 22, 23 
December: 20, 22, 23

Ember Days for 2024
February 21, 23, 24
May 22, 24, 25
September 18, 20, 21
December 18, 20, 21

These three days are set apart for fasting, abstinence, and prayer. The first of these four times comes in winter, after the Feast of St. Lucia, December 13; the second set comes with the First Sunday in Lent; the third set comes after Whitsunday/Pentecost Sunday; the four and last set comes after the Feast of the Holy Cross. Their dates can be remembered by this old mnemonic:

β€œSant Crux, Lucia, Cineres, Charismata Dia Ut sit in angaria quarta sequens feria.”

Which means:

β€œHoly Cross, Lucy, Ash Wednesday, Pentecost, are when the quarter holidays follow.”

In Latin, Ember Days are known as the quattuor anni tempora (the β€œfour seasons of the year”). Folklore has it that the weather on each of the three days foretells the weather for three successive months. 

As with much folklore, this is grounded in some common sense since the beginning of the four seasons cue the changes in weather as well as a shift in how we keep harmony with the Earth and respect our stewardship of the Earth, our β€œgarden of Eden.β€β€œ

The Ides of March has long been considered an ill-fated day. Julius Caesar was assassinated on March 15, 44 B.C. Historians note that it is likely that a soothsayer named Spurinna had warned Caesar that danger would occur by the ides of March. William Shakespeare included the phrase Beware the ides of March” in his play Julius Caesar.

The ides were the 15th days of four months (Martius, or March; Maius, or May; Quintilis, or July; and October) in the ancient Roman lunar calendar; they were the 13th in all other months (originally, Aprilis, or April; Iunius, or June; Sextilis, or August; September; November; and December. Ianuarius, or January, and Februarius, or February, were added later).

The word ides comes from the Latin word idus, which is possibly derived from an Etruscan word meaning β€œto divide.” The ides were originally meant to mark the full Moon (the β€œhalfway point” of a lunar month), but because the Roman calendar months and actual lunar months were of different lengths, they quickly got out of step. The ancient Romans considered the day after the calends (first of the month), nones (ninth day before the ides, inclusive), or ides of any month as unfavorable. These were called dies atri.”

Born

  • Andrew Jackson (7th U.S. president) –
  • John Snow (physician) –
  • Liberty Hyde Bailey (botanist) –
  • Marjorie Merriweather Post (businesswoman) –
  • Harry James (trumpet player) –
  • Norm Van Brocklin (football player) –
  • Rita Joe (Mi’kmaq poet) –
  • Judd Hirsch (actor) –
  • Mike Love (singer) –
  • Phil Lesh (rock bass guitarist) –
  • Sly Stone (musician) –
  • Ry Cooder (guitarist & composer) –
  • Eva Longoria (actress) –
  • Kevin Youkilis (baseball player) –
  • Sean Biggerstaff (actor) –
  • Caitlin Wachs (actress) –

Died

  • Aristotle Onassis (shipping magnate) –
  • Dr. Benjamin Spock (pediatrician) –
  • Sylvester "Pat" Weaver (creator of NBC’s Today and Tonight shows) –
  • Ron Silver (actor) –
  • Eugene Parker (American astrophysicist; proposed the idea of solar wind in 1958 ) –

Events

  • Sister St. Stanislas Hachard became the first Catholic nun ordained in America –
  • Maine was admitted to the Union as the 23rd state –
  • Roman Catholic Archbishop of New York, John McCloskey, was named the first American Cardinal by Pope Pius IX –
  • The first escalator was patented by inventor Jesse W. Reno of New York City –
  • Woodrow Wilson held the first presidential press conference after being in office for only 11 days –
  • U.S. troops entered Mexico in futile search for revolutionary bandit Pancho Villa –
  • The American Legion founded by war veterans in Paris –
  • The first motion picture, My Little Chickadee, featuring both Mae West and W.C. Fields, was released –
  • The King Cole Trio led by Nat King Cole had the first #1 LP on the first Billboard magazine top-selling record album chart –
  • Lerner and Loewe’s play My Fair Lady started what became a 2,717-performance run in New York –
  • Police in Orangeburg, SC, arrested more than 350 African Americans as sit-in demonstrations and sporadic racial violence spread throughout the South –
  • Basketball star Wilt Chamberlain scored his 4,000th point of the season, averaging 50.4 points per game –
  • Actress Elizabeth Taylor married Richard Burton (for the first time) on the 8th floor of the Ritz-Carlton in Montreal –
  • U.S. government eased restrictions on travel to China by U.S. citizens –
  • The film The Godfather premiered in New York City –
  • The family drama Eight is Enough premiered –
  • Martin Buser captured his second Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race in the record time of 10 days, 13 hours, 2 minutes and 39 seconds –
  • Highway line painting apparatus patented –
  • Due to President Barack Obama’s presidential proclamation (issued on February 28, 2011), flags were flown at half staff on this day of the internment of Army Corporal Frank W. Buckles, the last surviving American veteran of World War I, and in remembrance of the generation of American veterans of World War I –

Weather

  • A tornado hit McPaul, Iowa –
  • Blizzard in North Dakota and Minnesota, 71 killed –
  • Dr. Wallace E. Howell was hired by N.Y.C. to make rain –
  • Boston broke its record for snowiest winter on record when 2.9 inches fell on this day, bringing the winter total to 108.6 inches –

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