Senin, 31 Juli 2017

August 01, 1961: Texans head for the thrills at Six Flags

On this day in 1961, amusement park lovers “head for the thrills” as Six Flags Over Texas, the first park in the Six Flags chain, opens. Located on 212 acres in Arlington, Texas, the park was the first to feature log flume and mine train rides and later, the first 360-degree looping roller coaster, modern parachute drop and man-made river rapids ride. The park also pioneered the concept of all-inclusive admission price; until then, separate entrance fees and individual ride tickets were the standard. During its opening year, a day at Six Flags cost $2.75 for an adult and $2.25 for a child. A hamburger sold for 50 cents and a soda set the buyer back a dime.

The park, which took a year and $10 million to build, was the brainchild of Texas real estate developer and oilman Angus Wynne Jr., who viewed it as a short-term way to make a buck from some vacant land before turning it into an industrial complex. Wynne reportedly recouped his personal investment of $3.5 million within 18 months and changed his mind about the park’s temporary status. With 17.5 million visitors in its first 10 years, the park became the Lone Star State’s top for-profit tourist attraction. Today, average annual attendance at the park is over 3 million.

One of Six Flags’ unique aspects was that it wasn’t just a random collection of rides; it was developed around a theme: the history of Texas. The park’s name was a nod to the six flags that had flown over the state at various times–France, Spain, Mexico, the Confederacy, Texas and the United States. The park’s rides and attractions were grouped into six themed sections that represented the cultures of these governments and enabled visitors to experience everything from cowboy culture to Southern belles and pirates. Originally, the park was to be called Texas Under Six Flags, before it was decided that Texas should never be under anything.

Angus Wynne sold Six Flags in 1969 and in the coming years, the company expanded and was resold. Today, Six Flags, Inc. is the world’s largest regional theme park company and owns and operates 30 theme, water and zoological parks in North America. In 2005, almost 34 million people spent a combined 250 million hours at Six Flags parks.



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Daily Quiz for August 1, 2017

This man designed and launched the first successful liquid fuel rocket.

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CWT Book Review: Irish & German– Whiskey & Beer

Irish & German– Whiskey & Beer: Drinking Patterns in the Civil War  Thomas P. Lowry; CreateSpace.com A popular stereotype during the Civil War years was that the Irish were drunk on whiskey and brave in battle, while Germans were said to be drunk on beer and cowardly in battle. Anyone sufficiently interested in the war …

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CWT Book Reviews: The CSS Virginia and the USS Monitor

The CSS Virginia: Sink Before Surrender  John V. Quarstein; The History Press Iron Coffin: War, Technology, and Experience Aboard the USS Monitor  David A. Mindell; The Johns Hopkins University Press A lot has been written on the March 1862 Battle of Hampton Roads, but the discovery of USS Monitor off Cape Hatteras in 1973 and …

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CWT Book Review: With a Sword in One Hand & Jomini in the Other

With a Sword in One Hand & Jomini in the Other: The Problem of Military Thought in the Civil War North  Carol Reardon; University of North Carolina Press Carol Reardon concludes that Napoleonic war analyst Antoine Jomini “and the entire body of antebellum military thought he represented provided far less useful guidance than the Civil …

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CWT Book Review: I Fear I Shall Never Leave This Island

I Fear I Shall Never Leave This Island: Life in a Civil War Prison David R. Bush; University of Florida Press Archaeologist David Bush spent more than 20 years excavating the Union prison camp near Sandusky, Ohio, and investigating the lives of Rebel officers incarcerated there. Using letters by captive Wesley Makely, captain of the …

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CWT Book Review: Robert Toombs

Robert Toombs: The Civil War of the United States Senator and Confederate General Mark Scroggins; McFarland & Co. “Restore the government to the people,” the ex-senator railed. “Let the Government perform faithfully its great mission of administering justice and protecting property and let the people alone.” A modern Tea Party rally? No, it was Robert …

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Ural on URLs- Doc South

Take a moment to visit one of my favorite online resources: “The Southern Homefront 1861-1865,” launched by the University of North Carolina as part of its “Documenting the American South” site. The project addresses an information gap. “The military side of the Southern bid for political independence,” explained UNC Professor of History William L. Barney, …

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CWT Book Review: Tarnished Victory

Tarnished Victory: Finishing Lincoln’s War William Marvel; Houghton Mifflin It has been said that a key contribution by T. Harry Williams to Civil War studies was that he made it acceptable to root for the North. To be sure, Abraham Lincoln’s leadership had always held a hallowed place in American memory of the war. Yet …

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CWT Book Review: Shiloh, 1862

Shiloh, 1862  Winston Groom; National Geographic We should be grateful that Winston Groom is passionate about the Civil War. Thanks to his masterful handling and lively style, readers will find Shiloh, 1862, his new analysis of the conflict’s first battle with horrific casualties, fast-paced and rewarding reading throughout. Groom deftly recounts the oft-told story of …

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Lives on the Line

High-stakes gamesmanship put Confederate and Union POWs on notice for execution following the Battle of Brandy Station. CAPTAIN HENRY W. Sawyer spurred his horse forward, leading Company K of the 1st New Jersey Cavalry into the melee with Major General J.E.B. Stuart’s vaunted cavaliers on Fleetwood Hill at the June 9, 1863, Battle of Brandy …

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Start with the Basics

A select group of essential primary sources helps tell the war’s stories. Any good history of the Civil war should rely heavily on primary sources, documents authored by participants in the conflict. But where to start? Three sources in particular stand out: the Southern Historical Society Papers, the Official Records of the War of the …

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As a Union Prisoner Saw the Battle of Gettysburg

Captured on July 1, 1863, and assigned to tend to wounded troops, this spunky Union cavalryman had an unforgettable experience: he watched Pickett’s Charge from a grandstand seat on a rooftop. From 50 years ago: The author of this hitherto unpublished eyewitness account of the Battle of Gettysburg was Asa Sleath Hardman, who served with …

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One Mile of Open Ground

Was Pickett’s Charge Lee’s best chance for winning Gettysburg? Pickett’s Charge at Gettysburg on July 3, 1863, is probably the most famous single military action to take place on American soil. Reliable estimates place the number of Confederate attackers at around 12,500, and the five leading brigades in the assault suffered an astonishing casualty rate …

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Civil War Times- Letter from the Editor August 2012

The Lost Hero Ulysses S. Grant’s tomb sits in Riverside Park overlooking the Hudson River, on New York City’s Upper West Side. Grant lived in the city the last four years of his life, from 1881 to 1885, and his wife Julia decided that New York would be the best place to bury her husband. …

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Interview with J. David Hacker: An Awful Tally Goes Higher

In December 2011, J. David Hacker, a professor of history at SUNY–Binghamton, made headlines with a study published in the journal Civil War History contending that the longstanding estimate of 620,000 Civil War dead could be 750,000, or even as high as 850,000. He makes his case using census data from 1850 to 1880 to …

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Blue and Gray: ‘The Plain Folk’s Pioneer’ Reframed History

Historian Bell I. Wiley invented the genre of soldier studies. Bell Irvin Wiley (1906-1980) created an influential body of scholarship that marked him as a pioneer in exploring the lives of common people during the war. Born in Tennessee and trained in history at Yale University, he spent most of his teaching career at Louisiana …

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Past and Present- CWT August 2012

Clara Barton’s Missing Soldiers Office Unveiled On April 12, the centennial of Clara Barton’s death, visitors climbed two flights of dusty wooden stairs in an old Washington, D.C., building to get a glimpse of the modest suite where the Civil War legend had masterminded a monumental postwar operation: tracking down missing Union soldiers. It was …

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Civil War Times- Letters from Readers August 2012

Anesthesia on Tap While I enjoyed “Miss Alcott Goes to War” in the April issue, I must correct a common misconception that the author, Robert Sattelmeyer, has perpetuated. In describing the nurses’ duties, he states that they held the hands of the wounded “while the doctors probed their wounds—without benefit of anesthetics.” Both chloroform and …

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Battle of Kernstown: Stonewall Jackson’s Only Defeat

A furious Stonewall Jackson watched impotently as his proud Confederates stumbled down the hillside at Kernstown, Va. 'Give them the bayonet,' Jackson implored -- but no one obeyed.

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Minggu, 30 Juli 2017

July 31, 1975: Jimmy Hoffa disappears

On July 31, 1975, James Riddle Hoffa, one of the most influential American labor leaders of the 20th century, disappears in Detroit, Michigan, never to be heard from again. Though he is popularly believed to have been the victim of a Mafia hit, conclusive evidence was never found, and Hoffa’s death remains shrouded in mystery to this day.

Born in 1913 to a poor coal miner in Brazil, Indiana, Jimmy Hoffa proved a natural leader in his youth. At the age of 20, he helped organize a labor strike in Detroit, and remained an advocate for downtrodden workers for the rest of his life. Hoffa’s charisma and talents as a local organizer quickly got him noticed by the Teamsters and carried him upward through its ranks. Then a small but rapidly growing union, the Teamsters organized truckers across the country, and through the use of strikes, boycotts and some more powerful though less legal methods of protest, won contract demands on behalf of workers.

Hoffa became president of the Teamsters in 1957, when its former leader was imprisoned for bribery. As chief, Hoffa was lauded for his tireless work to expand the union, and for his unflagging devotion to even the organization’s least powerful members. His caring and approachability were captured in one of the more well-known quotes attributed to him: “You got a problem? Call me. Just pick up the phone.”

Hoffa’s dedication to the worker and his electrifying public speeches made him wildly popular, both among his fellow workers and the politicians and businessmen with whom he negotiated. Yet, for all the battles he fought and won on behalf of American drivers, he also had a dark side. In Hoffa’s time, many Teamster leaders partnered with the Mafia in racketeering, extortion and embezzlement. Hoffa himself had relationships with high-ranking mobsters, and was the target of several government investigations throughout the 1960s. In 1967, he was convicted of bribery and sentenced to 13 years in prison.

While in jail, Hoffa never ceded his office, and when Richard Nixon commuted his sentence in 1971, he was poised to make a comeback. Released on condition of not participating in union activities for 10 years, Hoffa was planning to fight the restriction in court when he disappeared on July 31, 1975, from the parking lot of a restaurant in Detroit, not far from where he got his start as a labor organizer. Several conspiracy theories have been floated about Hoffa’s disappearance and the location of his remains, but the truth remains unknown.



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Daily Quiz for July 31, 2017

The earliest Women's Day observance was held on February 28, 1909, in this city.

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Sabtu, 29 Juli 2017

July 30, 1965: Johnson signs Medicare into law

On this day in 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson signs Medicare, a health insurance program for elderly Americans, into law. At the bill-signing ceremony, which took place at the Truman Library in Independence, Missouri, former President Harry S. Truman was enrolled as Medicare’s first beneficiary and received the first Medicare card. Johnson wanted to recognize Truman, who, in 1945,had becomethe first president to propose national health insurance, an initiative that was opposed at the time by Congress.

The Medicare program, providing hospital and medical insurance for Americans age 65 or older, was signed into law as an amendment to the Social Security Act of 1935. Some 19 million people enrolled in Medicare when it went into effect in 1966. In 1972, eligibility for the program was extended to Americans under 65 with certain disabilities and people of all ages with permanent kidney disease requiring dialysis or transplant. In December 2003, President George W. Bush signed into law the Medicare Modernization Act (MMA), which added outpatient prescription drug benefits to Medicare.

Medicare is funded entirely by the federal government and paid for in part through payroll taxes. Medicare is currently a source of controversy due to the enormous strain it puts on the federal budget. Throughout its history, the program also has been plagued by fraud–committed by patients, doctors and hospitals–that has cost taxpayers billions of dollars.

Medicaid, a state and federally funded program that offers health coverage to certain low-income people, was also signed into law by President Johnson on July 30, 1965, as an amendment to the Social Security Act.

In 1977, the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) was created to administer Medicare and work with state governments to administer Medicaid. HCFA, which was later renamed the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), is part of the Department of Health and Human Services and is headquartered in Baltimore.



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Daily Quiz for July 30, 2017

This was H. G. Wells’ first published novel.

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Jumat, 28 Juli 2017

July 29, 1958: NASA created

On this day in 1958, the U.S. Congress passes legislation establishing the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), a civilian agency responsible for coordinating America’s activities in space. NASA has since sponsored space expeditions, both human and mechanical, that have yielded vital information about the solar system and universe. It has also launched numerous earth-orbiting satellites that have been instrumental in everything from weather forecasting to navigation to global communications.

NASA was created in response to the Soviet Union’s October 4, 1957 launch of its first satellite, Sputnik I. The 183-pound, basketball-sized satellite orbited the earth in 98 minutes. The Sputnik launch caught Americans by surprise and sparked fears that the Soviets might also be capable of sending missiles with nuclear weapons from Europe to America. The United States prided itself on being at the forefront of technology, and, embarrassed, immediately began developing a response, signaling the start of the U.S.-Soviet space race.

On November 3, 1957, the Soviets launched Sputnik II,which carrieda dog named Laika. In December, America attempted to launch a satellite of its own, called Vanguard, but it exploded shortly after takeoff. On January 31, 1958, things went better with Explorer I, the first U.S. satellite to successfully orbit the earth. In July of that year, Congress passed legislation officially establishing NASA from the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics and other government agencies, and confirming the country’s commitment to winning the space race. In May 1961, President John F. Kennedydeclared thatAmerica should put a man on the moon by the end of the decade. On July 20, 1969, NASA’s Apollo 11 mission achieved that goal and made history when astronaut Neil Armstrong became the first person to set foot on the moon, saying “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.”

NASA has continued to make great advances in space exploration since the first moonwalk, including playing a major part in the construction of the International Space Station. The agency has also suffered tragic setbacks, however, such as the disasters that killed the crews of the Challenger space shuttle in 1986 and the Columbia space shuttle in 2003. In 2004, President George Bush challenged NASA to return to the moon by 2020 and establish “an extended human presence” there that could serve as a launching point for “human missions to Mars and to worlds beyond.”



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Daily Quiz for July 29, 2017

Scientists began developing radar in the 1930’s. During World War II, the United States and Great Britain continued their work on radar while Germany quit for this reason.

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CWT Book Review: Mary Chesnut’s Illustrated Diary

Mary Chesnut’s Illustrated Diary: Mulberry Edition Boxed Set Mary Chesnut; Pelican Press Mary Boykin Chesnut is the Confederacy’s most famous woman. The wife of James Chesnut, a South Carolina politician and Confederate general, she chronicled the rebellion in a massive diary that has since been published in a number of editions. This most recent edition …

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CWT Book Review: The Abolitionist Imagination

The Abolitionist Imagination Albert Delbanco; Harvard University Press Abolitionism has been a hot- button issue since the word first entered our cultural lexicon in relation to ending slavery in 19th-century America. Albert Delbanco proposes to interpret the concept in a broad cultural context, as a recurrent American phenomenon where a motivated minority sets out to …

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CWT Book Review: Demon of the Lost Cause

Demon of the Lost Cause: Sherman and Civil War History Wesley Moody; University of Missouri Press In this latest entry in the University of Missouri Press’ “Shades of Blue and Gray” series, Wesley Moody explores the myths that still surround William T. Sherman. First is the accusation that he was insane, based on Secretary of …

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CWT Book Review: Unholy Sabbath

Unholy Sabbath: The Battle of South Mountain in History and Memory, September 14, 1862  Brian Matthew Jordan; Savas Beatie On September 14, 1862, Union forces in Maryland seized control of three critical passes in South Mountain in a bitter battle long overshadowed by the slaughter that took place three days later at Antietam. South Mountain …

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CWT Book Review: Thunder Across the Swamp

Thunder Across the Swamp: The Fight for the Lower Mississippi, February 1863- May 1863  Donald S. Frazier; State House Press This second volume of Donald Frazier’s “Louisiana Quadrille” series establishes him as the premier chronicler of the war in the bayous, bottomlands and sawgrass prairies between the Sabine and Mississippi rivers. Frazier argues that “controlling …

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CWT Book Review: Ride Around Missouri

Ride Around Missouri: Shelby’s Great Raid 1863  Sean McLachlan; Osprey Publishing A childhood friend of John Hunt Morgan’s, Joseph O. Shelby gained a reputation in Missouri as a daring Confederate raider similar to Morgan. Shelby’s most audacious foray occurred in July 1863, when he led 600 men and some artillery into the nominally Union state, …

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CWT Book Review: Lincoln and the Triumph of the Nation

Lincoln and the Triumph of the Nation: Constitutional Conflict in the American Civil War  Mark E. Neely Jr.; UNC Press Pulitzer Prize–winning author Mark Neely Jr. caters to readers with a taste for legal and judicial affairs in Lincoln and the Triumph of the Nation. He mines contemporary sources, including judicial opinions, presidential and state …

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Ural on URLs US Dakota War

In August 1862, Americans from New York City to Union-occupied New Orleans watched as Robert E. Lee’s Confederates moved against Union General John Pope’s Army of Virginia. Many were unaware of a boiling cauldron far to their north in Minnesota, where drought and poverty had plagued families all summer, especially in the Dakota nation. Treaties …

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CWT Book Review: Emancipating Lincoln

Emancipating Lincoln: The Proclamation in Text, Context, and Memory Harold Holzer; Harvard University Press There is probably no important document in our nation’s history more little known—even to Civil War students—than the Emancipation Proclamation. Yet much of the proclamation’s importance, it turns out, lies in its back story. Abraham Lincoln, once convinced of both the …

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CWT Book Review: Freedom’s Cap

Freedom’s Cap: The United States Capitol and the Coming of the Civil War Guy Gugliotta; Hill and Wang This fresh angle on the Civil War by award-winning journalist Guy Gugliotta provides a bounty of research insights, as his engaging prose and eye for detail combine to introduce us to a rich cast of characters and …

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Why do we love our Civil War?

We shot each other to pieces. We killed off a generation of men. We should shudder at the thought of the war. Instead, we celebrate it. When we Americans talk about “the” Civil War, we know which one we mean: the brutal four-year conflict waged between the USA and the CSA that settled the question …

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Carnage in Kentucky’s Hills

The Battle of Perryville on October 8, 1862, may be the war’s most overlooked engagement. Several weeks after Kentucky’s largest Civil War battle raged at Perryville, a riverside village of 300 inhabitants, a correspondent from Indiana’s New Albany Daily Ledger expressed indignation about civilians visiting the battlefield. These visitors—many of them residents of neighboring states—were …

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Dorsey Pender

He disliked Jackson and mistrusted Stuart. Here is a revealing profile, based on letters to his wife, of Lee’s favorite young general. UPON RECEIVING A REPORT, which later proved to be false, that General John B. Hood had been killed at the Battle of Chickamauga in the fall of 1863, General Robert E. Lee ruefully …

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‘Little Mac’ did not dawdle

It’s time to get the story straight about when George McClellan became aware of Robert E. Lee’s plans during the 1862 Maryland Campaign. WHEN TWO SOLDIERS OF THE 27TH INDIANA INFANTRY found a piece of paper wrapped around an envelope containing three cigars in a Frederick, Md., field on September 13, 1862, they triggered an …

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CWT Letter from the Editor October 2012

War as Pageant Dozens of posters like the one below were displayed in Hagerstown, Md., in the summer of 1962 to advertise a historical pageant, “Hills of Glory,” and a “Grand Re-Enactment,” both commemorating the Battle of Antietam. A friend kindly gave me this survivor, which I had framed. This colorful momento of the Centennial …

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The National Civil War Museum’s New Man: Interview with Wayne E. Motts

 “My interest, for all my life, has been the Civil War,” says Wayne Motts, the National Civil War Museum’s new CEO, “and if you could create a job that would match my interests and skills, it would be this position.” Passion for American history and the Civil War has propelled Motts throughout his career. For …

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Blue and Gray: What if…?

Counterfactual scenarios can be both fun and enlightening. What if… “Stonewall” Jackson had been with the Army of Northern Virginia at Gettysburg? Nathan Bedford Forrest had been given command of an army in the Western Theater? Joseph E. Johnston had not been wounded at Seven Pines on May 31, 1862? Abraham Lincoln had not called …

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Past and Present- CWT October 2012

Dred Scott Statue Commemorates Historic Fight for Freedom On June 8, St. Louis, Missouri, became home to the nation’s first statue of Dred Scott, the slave whose failed legal battle for freedom helped set the stage for the looming national struggle over slavery. The new statue, depicting Dred Scott and his wife Harriet, stands in …

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Civil War Times- Letters from Readers October 2012

Where Were the Tigers? Great story on Zouave uniforms in the June issue. The only problem I have is there was no mention of the Louisiana Tiger Zouaves. I’m just wondering what happened. Frederick Remington Flanders, N.J. Editor Dana Shoaf Replies: We wanted to include a photo of the Louisiana Tiger Zouave uniform, but we …

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The Glory of the Sun King

Over his lengthy reign Louis XIV defeated successive generations of European royalty—but in so doing he sealed the fate of the absolute monarchy in France. London was still smoldering when France’s King Louis XIV proclaimed his life’s driving force. The year was 1666, and the Great Fire had just reduced the capital of his mortal …

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Kamis, 27 Juli 2017

July 28, 1868: 14th Amendment adopted

Following its ratification by the necessary three-quarters of U.S. states, the 14th Amendment, guaranteeing to African Americans citizenship and all its privileges, is officially adopted into the U.S. Constitution.

Two years after the Civil War, the Reconstruction Acts of 1867 divided the South into five military districts, where new state governments, based on universal manhood suffrage, were to be established. Thus began the period known as Radical Reconstruction, which saw the 14th Amendment, which had been passed by Congress in 1866, ratified in July 1868. The amendment resolved pre-Civil War questions of African American citizenship by stating that “all persons born or naturalized in the United States…are citizens of the United States and of the state in which they reside.” The amendment then reaffirmed the privileges and rights of all citizens, and granted all these citizens the “equal protection of the laws.”

In the decades after its adoption, the equal protection clause was cited by a number of African American activists who argued that racial segregation denied them the equal protection of law. However, in 1896, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Plessy v. Ferguson that states could constitutionally provide segregated facilities for African Americans, so long as they were equal to those afforded white persons. The Plessy v. Ferguson decision, which announced federal toleration of the so-called “separate but equal” doctrine, was eventually used to justify segregating all public facilities, including railroad cars, restaurants, hospitals, and schools. However, “colored” facilities were never equal to their white counterparts, and African Americans suffered through decades of debilitating discrimination in the South and elsewhere. In 1954, Plessy v. Ferguson was finally struck down by the Supreme Court in its ruling in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka.



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Daily Quiz for July 28, 2017

“Park Avenue Beat” is the iconic theme song of this classic TV show.

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CWT Book Review: Georgia Civil War Manuscript Collections

Georgia Civil War Manuscript Collections: An Annotated Bibliography David H. Slay,  University of Alabama Press Students of Civil War history revel in primary material. Nothing can compete with eyewitnesses in the evidential hierarchy. David Slay’s guide to manuscript holdings throughout Georgia unveils a vast array of priceless sources—about 4,000 collections, large and small. But it …

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CWT Book Review: Terrible Swift Sword

Terrible Swift Sword: The Life of General Philip H. Sheridan Joseph Wheelan, Da Capo Press Of all the great generals of the Civil War, Philip H. Sheridan remains the most obscure, which makes Joseph Wheelan’s new Terrible Swift Sword essential reading. A skilled and daring cavalry officer, Sheridan was blessed, in the words of one …

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CWT Book Review: Decided on the Battlefield

Decided on the Battlefield: Grant, Sherman, Lincoln, and the Election of 1864 David Alan Johnson,  Prometheus Books David Alan Johnson interweaves the personalities and events that shaped the outcome of what was arguably the nation’s most pivotal presidential election into a story that underscores why it has long intrigued readers. His study highlights the importance …

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CWT Book Review: Corinth 1862

Corinth 1862: Siege, Battle, Occupation Timothy B. Smith, University Press of Kansas Just as the Eastern Theater battles tended to receive more attention during the war, the battles in the more remote theaters are still mostly overlooked today. Tim Smith’s book helps fill the void of scholarly research available on these important struggles. His work …

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CWT Book Review: A Blaze of Glory

A Blaze of Glory: A Novel of the Battle of Shiloh Jeff Shaara;  Ballentine Jeff Shaara’s new novel about the Battle of Shiloh, Glory, is the first offering in A Blaze of a new trilogy focusing on the war’s Western Theater, a complement to the Michael Shaara/Jeff Shaara father-son team’s previous trilogy The Killer Angels, …

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CWT Book Review: Lee and His Generals

Lee and His Generals: Essays in Honor of T. Harry Williams Edited by Lawrence Lee Hewitt and Thomas E. Schott; University of Tennessee Press Even though he has been dead for 33 years, the quality of T. Harry Williams’ scholarship remains vital to modern Civil War historians. Ten of his former students, and one almost-student, …

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CWT Book Review: The Long Road to Antietam

The Long Road to Antietam: How the Civil War Became a Revolution Richard Slotkin, Liveright Publishing It should come as no surprise that the 150th anniversary of the great September 1862 campaign that culminated in the Battle of Antietam, the bloodiest day in American military history, has inspired a number of new books, including one …

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It was their cause, too

Hundreds of women fought, disguised as men. There were just shy of 400 documented cases of women who served as soldiers during the Civil War, according to the records of the Sanitary Commission. Women from both sides chopped off their hair, traded in their dresses for guns and fought for the side they believed in. …

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‘I Have With the Reg’t Been Through a Terrible Battle’

Major Francis E. Pierce, who took part in the Union’s suicidal attack on Fredericksburg’s Marye’s Heights 150 years ago, wrote a vivid account of his experience in a letter to a friend. FRANCIS E. PIERCE ENROLLED AS A CAPTAIN in Company F of the 108th New York Infantry on August 9, 1862. An 1859 graduate …

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Union Rubicon

Ambrose Burnside’s strategy could have carried him, victorious, into Richmond. But poor communications doomed him to useless slaughter at Fredericksburg. For several weeks after the Battle of Antietam, George McClellan let the Army of the Potomac rest. October 1862, he led seven corps across the Potomac into Virginia, hoping to catch Robert E. Lee’s Army …

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American Graffiti

Common soldiers covered buildings with inscriptions, drawings and rants in many of the places they passed through—yet relatively little research has been devoted to these first-person accounts.  High on a wooden beam in the attic of Arlington House, Robert E. Lee’s stately home in present-day Arlington, Va., is an inscription that appears to have been …

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The Rise and Fall of the Union Balloon Corps

Great weapon or ‘fanciful contraption’? DURING THE 1862 SEVEN DAYS’ Battles on Richmond’s doorstep, Union and Confederate soldiers often spotted immense balloons floating high above the encampments and battlefields. They were watching “Professor” Thaddeus S.C. Lowe, head of the Union Balloon Corps, at work. His balloons could ascend to over 1,000 feet multiple times a …

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Civil War Times- Letter from the Editor December 2012

Blue Highways William Least Heat-Moon’s book Blue Highways: A Journey Into America chronicled his journey across the country on secondary roads, which are shown in blue on paper maps. I recently traveled blue highways as I drove across New York state from Albany to the Finger Lakes region, to learn how to do wet-plate photography, …

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Grappling with Death Interview: Ric Burns

On September 18, PBS Television released Ric Burns’ “Death and the Civil War” as part of its American Experience series. Burns worked closely with Harvard University President Drew Gilpin Faust, author of the award-winning book This Republic of Suffering, and other noted scholars to closely examine and explain how the Civil War’s massive scale of …

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Blue and Gray: Perfect Southern Soldier

Stonewall’s death confirmed his spot in the Rebel pantheon. “Stonewall” Jackson inspirited the Confederate people on many occasions. He played a major role in celebrated victories while exhibiting the audacious generalship his fellow citizens craved. His 1862 Valley Campaign catapulted him to unrivaled fame in the Confederacy (R.E. Lee would surpass him late in 1862 …

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Past and Present- CWT December 2012

It’s great-great-grandfather! A widely publicized portrait of an unnamed Confederate has at last been identified, thanks to the Liljenquist collection of Civil War portraits displayed on the Library of Congress website. Tricia Mullinax, of Villa Rica, Georgia, recognized her maternal great-great-grandfather, Stephen Pollard, who served in the 7th Regiment, Confederate Cavalry (Claiborne’s Partisan Rangers). The …

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Civil War Times- Letters from Readers December 2012

Lost Order Controversy Meridian or Midnight? Maurice D’Aoust’s claim that George McClellan’s September 13, 1862, dispatch to Abraham Lincoln was sent at midnight rather than at noon that day, and that therefore McClellan reacted promptly to the finding of the Lost Order, is based on a false premise. The following is the correct timeline. At …

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Rabu, 26 Juli 2017

July 27, 1974: House begins impeachment of Nixon

On this day in 1974, the House Judiciary Committee recommends that America’s 37th president, Richard M. Nixon, be impeached and removed from office. The impeachment proceedings resulted from a series of political scandals involving the Nixon administration that came to be collectively known as Watergate.

The Watergate scandal first came to light following a break-in on June 17, 1972, at the Democratic Party’s national headquarters in the Watergate apartment-hotel complex in Washington, D.C. A group of men linked to the White House were later arrested and charged with the crime. Nixon denied any involvement with the break-in, but several of his staff members were eventually implicated in an illegal cover-up and forced to resign. Subsequent government investigations revealed “dirty tricks” political campaigning by the Committee to Re-Elect the President, along with a White House “enemies list.” In July 1973, one of Nixon’s former staff members revealed the existence of secretly taped conversations between the president and his aides. Nixon initially refused to release the tapes, on grounds of executive privilege and national security, but a judge later ordered the president to turn them over. The White House provided some but not all of the tapes, including one from which a portion of the conversation appeared to have been erased.

In May 1974, the House Judiciary Committee began formal impeachment hearings against Nixon. On July 27 of that year, the first article of impeachment against the president was passed. Two more articles, for abuse of power and contempt of Congress, wereapproved on July 29 and 30.On August 5,Nixon complied witha U.S. Supreme Court ruling requiring thathe provide transcripts of the missing tapes, and the new evidence clearly implicated him in a cover up of the Watergate break-in. On August 8, Nixon announced his resignation, becoming the first president in U.S. history to voluntarily leave office. After departing the White House on August 9,Nixon was succeeded by Vice President Gerald Ford, who, in a controversial move, pardoned Nixon on September 8, 1974, making it impossible for the former president to be prosecuted for any crimes he might have committed while in office. Only two other presidents in U.S. historyhave beenimpeached: Andrew Johnson in 1868 and Bill Clinton in 1998.



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Daily Quiz for July 27, 2017

Acclaimed as the first professional African-American and Native-American sculptor, her work included “The Arrow Maker” completed in 1866 and “Forever Free” completed in 1867.

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WWII DVD Review: The Road to World War II

The Road to World War II   Directed by Scott Garen, 1978. 6 hours on six discs. $49.99.  In 1978, PBS aired 12 half-hour episodes of Between the Wars, which covered the fraught ground between the Treaty of Versailles and the invasion of Poland. Respected historians glossed the good-to-excellent video footage, but the host, Eric …

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WWII Book Review: Mission to Berlin

Mission to Berlin: The American Airmen Who Struck the Heart of Hitler’s Reich By Robert F. Dorr. 336 pp. Zenith Press, 2011. $28.  On February 3, 1945, more than a thousand heavy bombers of the U.S. Eighth Air Force, protected by 948 fighters, delivered a devastating blow to the center of the Nazi capital. Some …

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WWII DVD Review: Captain America

Captain America: The First Avenger Directed by Joe Johnston, 2011. 125 minutes. $17.99. In the anxious early stages of World War II, America was poised somewhere between “can-do” and “can-we-really?” Steve Rogers (played by Chris Evans), an all-American asthmatic embodies this emotional state. His dogged attempts to join the military are thwarted with a 4F …

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Mystery of London Cage

Did interrogators at a secret British facility go too far in extracting information from German POWs? In the summer of 1940, just after the Dunkirk evacuation and as Britain girded for a possible German invasion, the British War Office decided to ramp up its intelligence-gathering activities. Quickly and secretly, it opened nine Combined Services Detailed …

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Unbreakable: The Navajo Code

The Japanese cracked every American combat code until an elite team of Marines joined the fight. One veteran tells the story of creating the Navajo code and proving its worth on Guadalcanal. JULY–SEPTEMBER 1942 It was our second day at Camp Elliott, near San Diego, our home for the next 13 weeks. The 29 of …

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WWII Today- February 2012

Japan Enslaves Koreans—Twice Kim Hui-jong was forced to work as a slave laborer for Japan, lost part of his hearing in the fighting on Saipan, and spent two years at a POW camp in Hawaii. Then he returned home to Korea and tried to build a normal life. But his World War II agony wasn’t …

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World War II- Letters from Readers February 2012

An Arromanches Admirer THANK YOU FOR your excellent September/October “Time Travel” article on Arromanches; it rekindled memories of my trip there 32 years ago. My wife and I took a walk up the hill east of town and found a dirt-encrusted M4 Sherman tank. I yielded to temptation and climbed up. As I kneeled upon …

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October 2017 Table of Contents

The October 2017 cover story reveals recent findings about legendary lawman Wyatt Earp

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WWII Model Kit: German Rail Car G10

Rail cars were indispensable to the German army when used for moving military troops and supplies— and, of course, moving souls to concentration camps. But despite the historical importance of military rail transport, until now there has been a noticeable absence of rail kits. Enter LZ Models, a “cottage industry” manufacturer that has recently burst …

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WWII DVD Review: Nazi Collaborators

Nazi Collaborators: The True Stories of the Nazi Conspirators  Directed by Jean-François Delassus. 4 discs, $20.  Maintaining the Nazi death grip on the Reich’s far-flung occupied lands partly depended on a patch-quilt network of regional and national leaders and groups willing to cooperate with their new overlords. France’s Pierre Laval, Norway’s Vidkun Quisling, Belgium’s Leon …

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October 2017 Readers’ Letters

Readers share dispatches about Pembina, N.D., early revolvers and Sitting Bull

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WWII Book Review: Exorcising Hitler

Exorcising Hitler :  The Occupation and Denazification of Germany By Frederick Taylor. 438 pp. Bloomsbury Press, 2011. $30. The swift fall of Saddam Hussein and Iraq’s Baathist Party in the spring of 2003 sparked a flurry of interest in the Allied occupation and reconstruction of Germany after World War II. After the collapse of Saddam’s …

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Evolution of a Mountain Man: Ceran St. Vrain

Descended from French nobility, Ceran St. Vrain became by turns a trapper, merchant, Mexican citizen and American patriot

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Eye on a Juggernaut

Military attachĂ© Truman Smith was the first American diplomat to meet a local agitator in Munich named Adolf Hitler, and among the first to warn of Germany’s military resurgence. His reports were timely, prescient—and largely ignored. At six foot four inches tall, Truman Smith cut an imposing figure, and possessed an impressive pedigree. Smith’s grandfather …

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Moving Target

After the Japanese occupied the Philippines, one American family found themselves on a run for their lives. Coming from most adolescent boys, this statement might be dismissed as idle prattle. But 14- year-old Clifford Schuring knew it to be true. He knew that in July and September of 1943, the Japanese army had conducted “punitive …

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WWII Today- April 2012

Fight On Two Fronts They sent him to a segregated boot camp, relegated him to a support role hauling ammunition, and refused to let him fight. But Ambrose Anderson Jr. never considered himself anything less than a full-fledged U.S. Marine. “I wouldn’t want to go through boot camp again,’’ says Anderson, 86, a retired truck …

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World War II- Letters from Readers April 2012

Imperfect Pearl I ENJOYED “The Pearl Harbor Myth” in your November/December issue, as I have all of your articles for many years. But I was surprised that the author omit ted what is perhaps the most serious error the Japanese made: their failure to hit the oil storage tanks and the sub marine yards. Those …

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Frank Hamer’s Del Rio Debut

The Texas Ranger who later stopped Bonnie and Clyde showed great promise in his first gunfight in this dusty border town

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Book Review: Cattle Kingdom

Christopher Knowlton casts his eye for business on the open range era of the frontier West

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Book Review: The Three Battles of Sand Creek

Greg Michno digs deeper into the controversial clash that started as a battle and ended in a massacre

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Book Review: Sharps Firearms

Roy Marcot and Ron Paxton deliver an absorbing first book in their definitive four-volume history of Sharps Firearms

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WWII Book Review: The Taste of War

The Taste of War: World War Two and the Battle for Food  By Lizzie Collingham, 656 pp. The Penguin Press, 2012. $35.  ‘We’re supposed to die of starvation, to make place for the Germans.” This was how the people of Kiev felt after Nazi occupiers began to choke off food supplies from their city in …

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WWII TV Review: Hitler’s Bodyguard

Hitler’s Bodyguard: How history’s most evil tyrant survived 25 years of terror Directed by Alexander Kluge. $79.99. 13 episodes; 10 hours on 4 DVDs. Between Hitler’s early days in Munich and the war’s opening, his security detail mushroomed from a few street thugs brawling at beer halls to tens of thousands of soldiers, paramilitary types, …

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Plot Against a Pilot?

Werner Goering was a skilled B-17 commander, but his family background became a security issue in this strange tale of loyalty to crew and country. On November 21, 1944, a young U.S. Army Air Forces first lieutenant named Werner Goering climbed into a hulking B-17 bomber called Teddy’s Rough Riders and, along with his nine …

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Revolt and Betrayal- Warsaw

The 1944 Warsaw Rising was a courageous insurrection turned disaster when the Soviets showed as much contempt for the Poles as the Nazis did. On an unseasonably wet and chilly summer afternoon in 1944, Warsaw was in a state of nervous readiness. For days, young men and women carrying mysterious packages had been seen on …

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Book Review: Henry Ware Lawton

Michael Shay profiles frontier Army officer Lawton, who proved instrumental in Geronimo's capture

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WWII Today- June 2012

Outcasts No Longer Anywhere else they might have been heroes—the 5,000 Irish soldiers who volunteered to join British and American forces fighting Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan. They landed at Normandy, liberated the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, and endured torture as prisoners of Japan. But back home in the Republic of Ireland, these soldiers were branded …

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World War II- Letters from Readers June 2012

Honored Warriors YOUR NOVEMBER/December article “American Samurai” was a great tribute to our 442nd Infantry Regimental Com bat Team. The photographs were new to me—would love to have a few for my collection. The timing of the article corresponded with our recent visit to Washington, D.C., where we, the 442nd, received the Congressional Gold Medal …

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Angola Rodeo Arts and Crafts

The art show is a highlight of the unconventional rodeo at the Louisiana State Penitentiary (aka Angola)

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Author Christopher Knowlton

Former Wall Street writer Knowlton shows his range by penning a roundup of the beef business

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Letter From Wild West – October 2017

Casey Tefertiller, author of a 1997 biography of Wyatt Earp and writer of the October 2017 Wild West cover story about Earp, always welcomes new sources of information on the famed lawman

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Selasa, 25 Juli 2017

July 26, 1775: U.S. postal system established

On this day in 1775, the U.S. postal system is established by the Second Continental Congress, with Benjamin Franklin as its first postmaster general. Franklin (1706-1790) put in place the foundation for many aspects of today’s mail system. During early colonial times in the 1600s, few American colonists needed to send mail to each other; it was more likely that their correspondence was with letter writers in Britain. Mail deliveries from across the Atlantic were sporadic and could take many months to arrive. There were no post offices in the colonies, so mail was typically left at inns and taverns. In 1753, Benjamin Franklin, who had been postmaster of Philadelphia, became one of two joint postmasters general for the colonies. He made numerous improvements to the mail system, including setting up new, more efficient colonial routes and cutting delivery time in half between Philadelphia and New York by having the weekly mail wagon travel both day and night via relay teams. Franklin also debuted the first rate chart, which standardized delivery costs based on distance and weight. In 1774, the British fired Franklin from his postmaster job because of his revolutionary activities. However, the following year, he was appointed postmaster general of the United Colonies by the Continental Congress. Franklin held the job until late in 1776, when he was sent to France as a diplomat. He left a vastly improved mail system, with routes from Florida to Maine and regular service between the colonies and Britain. President George Washington appointed Samuel Osgood, a former Massachusetts congressman, as the first postmaster general of the American nation under the new U.S. constitution in 1789. At the time, there were approximately 75 post offices in the country.

Today, the United States has over 40,000 post offices and the postal service delivers 212 billion pieces of mail each year to over 144 million homes and businesses in the United States, Puerto Rico, Guam, the American Virgin Islands and American Samoa. The postal service is the nation’s largest civilian employer, with over 700,000 career workers, who handle more than 44 percent of the world’s cards and letters. The postal service is a not-for-profit, self-supporting agency that covers its expenses through postage (stamp use in the United States started in 1847) and related products. The postal service gets the mail delivered, rain or shine, using everything from planes to mules. However, it’s not cheap: The U.S. Postal Service says that when fuel costs go up by just one penny, its own costs rise by $8 million.



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Daily Quiz for July 26, 2017

J. Edgar Hoover, legendary FBI Director for 48 years, had previously worked as a lawyer and in this tourist attraction.

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WWII Model Review: Bishop 25 Pounder Self-Propelled Artillery

When the British Army faced off against the Germans in North Africa’s western desert, they were very much surprised and impressed by the enemy’s use of mobile artillery. Desperate to keep up, the British looked for a fix to their mobile support problem. Their solution: remove the turret from the already obsolete Valentine infantry tank …

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WWII DVD Review: Red Tails

Red Tails (PG-13)  Directed by Anthony Hemingway. 120 minutes.  During World War II, African American military pilots fought bigotry from their own country and fought Axis aggressors overseas to prove themselves worthy of their wings— and, in the process, accelerated the once-unimaginable integration of the U.S. Armed Forces. Their story has inspired generations of Americans, …

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FDR’s China Syndrome

The Asian giant had a powerful hold on the president’s imagination— one that shaped his wartime policy for the worse. Tourists trudging through the Roosevelt family seat in Hyde Park, New York, pass by Ming vases, a dinner gong, and porcelain elephants—lasting evidence of the family’s deep, long-ago ties to China. Franklin D. Roosevelt’s grandfather, …

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First Strike Against Japan

Long before the United States entered the war, an American aviator hatched a brazen scheme—which President Roosevelt authorized—to preemptively attack Japan. Claire Chennault wanted to bomb Japan. Using B-17 bombers flying from Chinese airfields, he planned to drop incendiaries on Japanese cities, whose buildings were constructed largely of wood and paper, to spread terror and …

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WWII Today- August 2012

Eisenhower Family Opposes Grand Memorial Design for a ‘Modest’ Man What sounded at first like a dream match-up—a renowned architect designing a memorial to a beloved president and war hero—has descended into a nasty spat over the proper way to honor Dwight D. Eisenhower. The Eisenhower family is leading the opposition to a $120 million …

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World War II- Letters from Readers August 2012

Celebrity Cutthroats “CUTTHROAT BUSINESS” in the March/ April issue prompts me to wonder if the miscellaneous “uniforms” and lack of rank insignia worn by the Alaska Scouts was the remote ancestor of the later Delta Force practice of the same character. Also, the photo on page 52 seems to show a badly deconstructed human body …

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WWII Fiction Review-October 2012

Mission to Paris By Alan Furst. 272 pp. Random House, 2012. $27. It’s 1938, and Viennese-born Hollywood film star Frederic Stahl arrives in Paris to make a movie. He soon discovers that a secret Nazi propaganda bureau, aiming at weakening French resolve to resist a German invasion, has targeted him to help—and its agents will …

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WWII Model Review: Finnish Assault Gun BT-42

During the war, the Finnish army found itself in a desperate struggle against an increasingly better-equipped Soviet army. The Finns had to make do with a large number of captured tanks, most of them lightly armored and lightly armed. In an attempt to counter this deficit, the Finns adapted a handful of Russian BT-7 model …

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WWII TV Review: Secret War

Secret War: The Secret Agents Who Set Europe Ablaze 13 episodes on 4 DVDs, $79.99. Without their edge in espionage, the Allies would have struggled—at best—to win the war. One of Churchill’s first acts as prime minister was to form the elite Special Operations Executive (SOE), which he ordered to “set Europe ablaze” by aiding …

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WWII Museum Review: The Roosevelts

The Roosevelts: Public Figures, Private Lives Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum Hyde Park, NewYork.Through June 30, 2013.  While the museum at the exquisite Springwood estate on the Hudson River undergoes extensive renovation, the library has mounted an intensive exhibit that thrusts visitors behind the scenes and into the lives of the war’s first …

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WWII DVD Review: The War

The War Directed by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick 900 minutes on 6 discs. $99.99. This Emmy-winning series, an America-centric epic tracking individual tales with pungency and poignancy, is now available on Bluray. Upgrades to this format can be a mixed bag; in this case, still images are generally sharpened but the difference is less …

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WWII Book Review: The Admirals: Nimitz, Halsey, Leahy, and King

The Admirals: Nimitz, Halsey, Leahy, and King:  The Five-Star Admirals Who Won the War at Sea By Walter R. Borneman. 576 pp. Little, Brown and Company, 2012. $29.99. This remarkable quartet of five-star American naval leaders deserves a first-rate collective biography, and The Admirals does them justice. Through wide-ranging research, engaging narrative style, and shrewd …

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Pirates of the Aegean

The Levant Schooner Flotilla, a tiny special forces unit, waged an obscure but merciless campaign across the eastern Mediterranean. Just after midnight on April 22, 1944, two wooden fishing boats and a motor launch landed noiselessly on the shore of Santorini, one of the southernmost islands in the Aegean Sea. The vessels’ crews had spent …

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Death of an Army

Surrounded by Germans and betrayed by its own commander, Russia’s 2nd Shock Army vanished from the battlefield, and from the history books. WHEN RUSSIAN INFANTRYMAN I. I. Kalabin looked back on the last days of the 2nd Shock Army, his description had all the terrible vividness of events impossible to forget. “We weren’t an army …

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Racing for His Life—and His County’s: Conversation with Aili McConnon

IN 1938, GINO BARTALI won the Tour de France, becoming an Italian idol. Ten years later, the 34-year-old Tuscan beat long odds to do it again—a triumph that helped heal his divided nation. In between, he was a courier for a resistance network that forged papers to help Jews escape Nazis who were hunting them. …

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Reading List: Madeleine K. Albright

Prague In the Shadow of the Swastika: A History of the German Occupation 1939–1945 Callum MacDonald and Jan Kaplan (1995) “The story of the occupation of Prague, told in spare prose accompanied by an abundance of startling photographs. Amid the book’s tale of horror and humiliation, the modern reader searches for—and finds—the sparks of resistance …

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WWII Today- October 2012

Hitler Feared Failure As Early As April 1942, Wartime Analyst Concluded Adolf Hitler was sounding like a beaten man as early as April 1942, according to a recently uncovered British intelligence report. A British analyst, psychiatrist John T. MacCurdy, set out “to reconstruct, if possible, what was in Hitler’s mind” when the dictator addressed the …

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World War II- Letters from Readers October 2012

Rising Satisfaction I READ WITH GREAT INTEREST your article “Revolt…and Betrayal” in the May/June issue. My in-laws are Polish and I have heard stories about the Resistance and the August Rising for many years; my mother-in-law was a courier, and was wounded and captured in that fight. My father-in-law was in an artillery unit with …

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Fertile Blood

Medical progress, bought at the enormous cost of human lives, may be the most lasting and vital benefit of war.   “I am badly injured, Doctor; I fear I am dying… I think the wound in my shoulder is still bleeding.” His clothes were saturated with blood, and hemorrhage was still going on from the …

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Building The Army Of the Potomac

When Edwin M. Stanton assumed the post of secretary of war in January 1862, Joseph Medill, the fiery proprietor of the Chicago Tribune, spelled out the hurdles he would face in managing the Union military in Civil War America. “You have a Herculean work before you to penetrate thro’ the frauds and swindling that envelop the …

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War on the Water: A Little Russian Roulette

Citizens of New York awoke the morning of September 11, 1863, to discover a 33-gun screw frigate anchored off Pier 8 in the city’s harbor. The ship flew what was clearly a foreign ensign—crossed blue stripes against a white field—but one unfamiliar to most New Yorkers. The vessel, it was eventually learned, was Oslyabya, a …

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Arsenal | M113A1 Personnel Carrier

A group of troops atop an M113 is one of the iconic images of the Vietnam War. The M113 armored personnel carrier, second only to the UH-1 Iroquois “Huey” helicopter in battlefield importance, entered production in April 1960. Developed by FMC, the aluminum-hulled M113, intended to be amphibious and air transportable, was considerably lighter than …

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General Lovell’s Coat: A Confederate Commander’s Uniform Held A Fascinating Secret

heir faces peer out at us from photographs now some 150 years old. These solemn men, five general officers of the Confederacy, stand or sit proudly for their portraits, each resplendent in his gray uniform. We’ve seen these images and hundreds others like them for generations. But these five men have a secret. There’s a …

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Senin, 24 Juli 2017

July 25, 1978: World’s First Test Tube Baby Born

On this day in 1978, Louise Joy Brown, the world’s first baby to be conceived via in vitro fertilization (IVF) is born at Oldham and District General Hospital in Manchester, England, to parents Lesley and Peter Brown. The healthy baby was delivered shortly before midnight by caesarean section and weighed in at five pounds, 12 ounces.

Before giving birth to Louise, Lesley Brown had suffered years of infertility due to blocked fallopian tubes. In November 1977, she underwent the then-experimental IVF procedure. A mature egg was removed from one of her ovaries and combined in a laboratory dish with her husband’s sperm to form an embryo. The embryo then was implanted into her uterus a few days later. Her IVF doctors, British gynecologist Patrick Steptoe and scientist Robert Edwards, had begun their pioneering collaboration a decade earlier. Once the media learned of the pregnancy, the Browns faced intense public scrutiny. Louise’s birth made headlines around the world and raised various legal and ethical questions.

The Browns had a second daughter, Natalie, several years later, also through IVF. In May 1999, Natalie became the first IVF baby to give birth to a child of her own. The child’s conception was natural, easing some concerns that female IVF babies would be unable to get pregnant naturally. In December 2006, Louise Brown, the original “test tube baby,” gave birth to a boy, Cameron John Mullinder, who also was conceived naturally.

Today, IVF is considered a mainstream medical treatment for infertility. Hundreds of thousands of children around the world have been conceived through the procedure, in some cases with donor eggs and sperm.



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Daily Quiz for July 25, 2017

This event led to the establishment of the hotline between the United States and Moscow.

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WWII Book Reviews: Becoming Clementine and Promoting the War Effort

Becoming Clementine By Jennifer Niven. 368 pp. Plume, 2012. $15. In 2009’s bestselling novel and Emmy- winning film, Velva Jean learned to drive. In her next adventure, she learned to fly and, after Pearl Harbor, joined the Women Airforce Service Pilots. Now it’s 1944, and she’s ferrying a B-17 across the Atlantic. Next up, Velva …

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WWII Model Kit: Russia’s ChTZ S-65 Tractor

The Soviets greatly relied on tractors to transport heavy artillery and mortars across the battlefield. The most ominous of these was the ChTZ S-65 Stalinetz, “Sons of Stalin,” which was built in the Chelyabinsk Tractor Plant. Founded in 1933, the factory began producing agricultural tractors with the S-60, a copy of the American-built Caterpillar 60, …

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WWII Game Review: Condemned Heroes

Since the first was released in 2009, the series has Men of War installment become a favorite of World War II fiends in search of exceptionally challenging strategy games. Returning fans will be pleased that the latest chapter, Condemned Heroes, takes the difficult scenarios and intelligent enemies to brutal new heights. Newcomers, however, will probably …

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WWII Book Review: Islands of Destiny

Islands of Destiny: The Solomons Campaign and the Eclipse of the Rising Sun  By John Prados. 416 pp. NAL Hardcover, 2012. $26.95.  Move over, Midway. John Prados wants to bump the famed naval battle from its vaunted spot as the Allies’ Big Turnaround in the Pacific. Instead, the historian argues, the tide really turned during …

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WWII TV Review: Narrow Escapes of WWII

Narrow Escapes of WWII  Military Channel 13 episodes, now airing  The 333rd Field Artillery Battalion was one of the U.S. Army’s few African American frontline units, though its officers were white. But officers and men alike were green in 1944 when they started fighting across Europe. The battlefield honed their skills: they mastered zeroing their …

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WWII Book Review: Why Germany Nearly Won

Why Germany Nearly Won: A New History of the Second World War in Europe By Steven D. Mercatante. 408 pp. Praeger, 2012. $58. This book’s title doesn’t adequately describe the ambitions of the author. Steven D. Mercatante goes beyond simply restating historians’ standard reasons for why the Wehrmacht was so effective in World War II— …

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WWII Book Review: September Hope

September Hope: The American Side of a Bridge Too Far By John C. McManus. 512 pp. NAL Hardcover, 2012. $27.95. Cornelius Ryan’s classic book A Bridge Too Far dominates the historical landscape of Operation Market Garden, just as in fall 1944 the Nijmegen Bridge loomed over American paratroopers’ crossing of the Waal River in canvas …

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A Bridge Enough: No Mercy at Nijmegen

When a teenage paratrooper landed on Dutch soil as part of Operation Market Garden, his dreams of combat collided with bloody reality. When I heard the 82nd Airborne would be jumping into Holland, I was relieved. It was September 1944. Until I enlisted the year before and got my parachute wings, I’d had a Merchant …

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Heavier Metal at Tarawa

When the Marines hit Tarawa, the punch included Sherman medium tanks—a Pacific Theater first. The battle for Tarawa marked not only the start of the Central Pacific Campaign but also the debut of Marine Corps medium tanks in the Pacific. Though the M4 Sherman’s introduction was haphazard and lacked the doctrine needed to mesh armor …

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The Reading List: John Prados

Many a passion and many a career start with a good book. With that in mind, we asked a leading historian to look back at the World War II histories that were most meaningful to him as a boy. D-Day: The Sixth of June, 1944 David Howarth (1959) “I was caught up in the D-Day …

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WWII Today- December 2012

Decades-Long Search Leads to Discovery of U-Boat Off Nantucket The salvage team had spent two days far off Nantucket Island aboard the 45-foot dive boat Tenacious, pinging the depths with sonar. Night was coming. Suddenly the sonar picked up something, perhaps a rounded metal snout. A second pass revealed a fuller image—a World War II–vintage …

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World War II- Letters from Readers December 2012

Salerno in the Spotlight BY WHAT STANDARD could the Salerno landing be considered a “Battle Without a Victor” (July/August)? The Allies’ immediate objective was to land on the Italian mainland; the Germans’ was to prevent the Allies from doing so. From this perspective, the Allies were the clear victors because they met their objective and …

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Wargame Reviews- Armchair General January 2013

Naval War: Arctic Circle The action in Naval War: Arctic Circle takes place in the near future in the waters off the coast of  Northern Europe and in the Arctic Circle. Gamers fight real-time air, sea and undersea battles, controlling the aircraft and ships individually or grouping them into small formations. Finding the enemy first …

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Game Buzz- Armchair General January 2013

Ubisoft (ubisoft.com) has added yet another iteration to its venerable Ghost Recon series. With Ghost Recon: Future Soldier the company has created an enjoyable, visceral, squad-based tactical shooter that will entertain military and video game enthusiasts alike. This time, the mission of the Ghosts is to find the terrorists who eliminated a previous Ghost team. …

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Greco-Turkish War, 1919-22

The bitter struggle that created modern Greece and Turkey. Since the fall of Constantinople to Ottoman Turks in 1453, the dream of Greeks had been to recover all Greek inhabited lands held by the Turks – European Greece, the Aegean Islands, western and northern Anatolia, even Constantinople itself. After Greece’s 1821-28 war of independence, the …

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What Next, General? Marshal Konev’s East Front Offensive, 1944

As the famed Red Army commander, YOU must defeat Adolf Hitler’s armies and liberate Ukraine. JUNE 1944, THE KREMLIN, MOSCOW It is mid-June 1944 as you assume the role of Marshal of the Soviet Union Ivan Stepanovich Konev, commander of the Red Army’s powerful 1st Ukrainian Front. You have been summoned to Moscow’s Kremlin by …

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You Command Solution: Hungarian Freedom Fighters, 1956

Historical outcome and winning Reader Solutions to CDG #52, September 2012 issue. The September 2012 issue of Armchair General® presented the Combat Decision Game “Hungarian Freedom Fighters, 1956.” This CDG placed readers in the role of Janos Szabo, leader of an ad hoc group of Hungarian freedom fighters during Hungary’s October-November 1956 revolution against oppressive …

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You Command: Confederate Guerrilla Attack, 1863

As commander of a force of irregular cavalrymen, YOU lead your men against Union troops at Fort Blair. In October 1863, the American Civil War continued to rage fiercely on bloody battlefields across the country, from the Atlantic coast to far beyond the Mississippi River. Although stunning Union victories at Gettysburg (July 1-3) and Vicksburg …

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Interactive- U.S. Marines Defend Wake Island, 1941

Choose the correct plan for an American gun crew facing Japanese invaders. You are U.S. Marine Corps Lieutenant Woodrow M. Kessler, commander of an eight-man gun crew. Your 5-inch gun, once mounted on a U.S. Navy battle- ship, is part of the defensive shore batteries for Wake Island, a remote American outpost in the Pacific …

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1943: World War II’s Forgotten Year of Victory

Unfairly overlooked by historians, this crucial year of global conflict turned the tide of war irrevocably in the Allies’ favor. The year 1943 opened badly for the once unstoppable Axis forces of Nazi Germany, fascist Italy and Imperial Japan. And by the close of that unfairly overlooked but momentous year of World War II, the …

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Ploesti: Anatomy of a Disaster

Brave U.S. airmen persevered in the face of horrendously daunting circumstances. On June 11, 1942, 13 B-24D Liberator bombers flew from Fayid, Egypt, and bombed the oil complex at Ploesti, Romania. These aircraft were part of a secret program named HALPRO originally put together to bomb Japan from a base in China. Although the B- …

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America’s Daring Frigate Captains

In the War of 1812, Britain’s powerful Royal Navy met its match in a determined band of U.S. Navy warship commanders. On June 18, 1812, the United States Congress declared war on Great Britain, initiating what some historians judge the final chapter of the American Revolution. The War of 1812 was principally a naval conflict, …

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Gourmet Grunts, 1968-70

GIs used ingenuity – and initiative – to turn field rations into field “cuisine” during the Vietnam War. In every war, soldiers have griped about their food; American GIs serving during the Vietnam War were no exception. Yet even at the remote terminus of an extended logistics chain reaching halfway around the world, the U.S. …

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Germany’s Secret Army, 1918-20

Post-World War I “Freikorps” paramilitary units won control of Germany’s streets amid revolutionary chaos. Following the November 11, 1918, armistice that ended World War I’s four years of brutal fighting, German army troops returning to the beaten fatherland found the country in social and political turmoil. Germany’s new democratic Reich government, established to fill the …

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MacArthur’s Defense of the Philippines, 1941-42

Sound decisions helped create a roadblock to Japan’s Pacific blitzkrieg. The Japanese offensive that began World War II in the Pacific targeted the U.S. Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor, British and Dutch possessions in resource-rich Malaysia and Indonesia, and America’s most advanced Pacific base, the Philippines. Quickly seizing the Philippines was particularly vital to Japan’s …

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Greek Hoplites, 700-300 B.C.

These citizen-soldiers of ancient Greece were nearly unstoppable. Greek hoplites were infantry warriors who carried shields, were primarily armed with spears, and fought in the disciplined ranks of a phalanx formation – a solid mass of soldiers typically eight ranks deep. From about  700 B.C. to around 300 B.C., the hoplite phalanx dominated warfare in …

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Dispatches-Armchair General January 2013

Lost Medal of Honor Returned to Filipino Hero’s Family In November 1912, Jose Baliton Nisperos became the first Asian and Filipino to receive the Medal of Honor, America’s highest valor award. After he died a decade later, his medal was lost for almost 90 years. It was finally returned to his descendants in 2012. Nisperos …

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Crisis Watch-Command on the Move

Drawing disastrous lessons from our last wars. Recently, a friend still on active duty shared an urgent concern about our ground forces. This officer is fighting the good fight to increase our tactical capabilities to operate a headquarters (HQ) on the move. An influential retired general had just told him that we would never have …

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Armchair General- Letters from Readers January 2013

Forrest and Racism As covered in your September 2012 Battlefield Leader article on Nathan Bedford Forrest, two stains on his record – the 1864 Fort Pillow Massacre and his postwar KKK involvement – inevitably raise the issue of Forrest’s racism. His little-known actions during and after the war are therefore revealing. Not only did Forrest …

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