Sabtu, 30 September 2017

October 01, 1890: Yosemite National Park established

On this day in 1890, an act of Congress creates Yosemite National Park, home of such natural wonders as Half Dome and the giant sequoia trees. Environmental trailblazer John Muir (1838-1914) and his colleagues campaigned for the congressional action, which was signed into law by President Benjamin Harrison and paved the way for generations of hikers, campers and nature lovers, along with countless “Don’t Feed the Bears” signs.

Native Americans were the main residents of the Yosemite Valley, located in California’s Sierra Nevada mountain range, until the 1849 gold rush brought thousands of non-Indian miners and settlers to the region. Tourists and damage to Yosemite Valley’s ecosystem followed. In 1864, to ward off further commercial exploitation, conservationists convinced President Abraham Lincoln to declare Yosemite Valley and the Mariposa Grove of giant sequoias a public trust of California. This marked the first time the U.S. government protected land for public enjoyment and it laid the foundation for the establishment of the national and state park systems. Yellowstone became America’s first national park in 1872.

In 1889, John Muir discovered that the vast meadows surrounding Yosemite Valley, which lacked government protection, were being overrun and destroyed by domestic sheep grazing. Muir and Robert Underwood Johnson, a fellow environmentalist and influential magazine editor, lobbied for national park status for the large wilderness area around Yosemite Valley. On October 1 of the following year, Congress set aside over 1,500 square miles of land (about the size of Rhode Island) for what would become Yosemite National Park, America’s third national park. In 1906, the state-controlled Yosemite Valley and Mariposa Grove came under federal jurisdiction with the rest of the park.

Yosemite’s natural beauty is immortalized in the black-and-white landscape photographs of Ansel Adams (1902-1984), who at one point lived in the park and spent years photographing it. Today, over 3 million people get back to nature annually at Yosemite and check out such stunning landmarks as the 2,425-foot-high Yosemite Falls, one of the world’s tallest waterfalls; rock formations Half Dome and El Capitan, the largest granite monolith in the U.S.; and the three groves of giant sequoias, the world’s biggest trees.



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Daily Quiz for October 1, 2017

Al Capone’s oldest brother had a career in this field.

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Jumat, 29 September 2017

September 30, 1954: USS Nautilus commissioned

The USS Nautilus, the world’s first nuclear submarine, is commissioned by the U.S. Navy.

The Nautilus was constructed under the direction of U.S. Navy Captain Hyman G. Rickover, a brilliant Russian-born engineer who joined the U.S. atomic program in 1946. In 1947, he was put in charge of the navy’s nuclear-propulsion program and began work on an atomic submarine. Regarded as a fanatic by his detractors, Rickover succeeded in developing and delivering the world’s first nuclear submarine years ahead of schedule. In 1952, the Nautilus‘ keel was laid by President Harry S. Truman, and on January 21, 1954, first lady Mamie Eisenhower broke a bottle of champagne across its bow as it was launched into the Thames River at Groton, Connecticut. Commissioned on September 30, 1954, it first ran under nuclear power on the morning of January 17, 1955.

Much larger than the diesel-electric submarines that preceded it, the Nautilus stretched 319 feet and displaced 3,180 tons. It could remain submerged for almost unlimited periods because its atomic engine needed no air and only a very small quantity of nuclear fuel. The uranium-powered nuclear reactor produced steam that drove propulsion turbines, allowing the Nautilus to travel underwater at speeds in excess of 20 knots.

In its early years of service, the USS Nautilus broke numerous submarine travel records and in August 1958 accomplished the first voyage under the geographic North Pole. After a career spanning 25 years and almost 500,000 miles steamed, the Nautilus was decommissioned on March 3, 1980. Designated a National Historic Landmark in 1982, the world’s first nuclear submarine went on exhibit in 1986 as the Historic Ship Nautilus at the Submarine Force Museum in Groton, Connecticut.



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Daily Quiz for September 30, 2017

This was the first national anthem of the Kingdom of Hawaii.

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American History Book Review: Killer Colt

Killer Colt: Murder, Disgrace, and the Making of an American Legend by Harold Schechter; Ballantine Books Gunmaker Samuel Colt was lobbying Congress for funds for his newly invented underwater cable in 1841 when he suddenly found himself dragged into the period’s most celebrated murder trial. The facts: Samuel’s older brother, John Caldwell Colt, was arrested …

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American History Review: Discovering the Civil War

Discovering the Civil War National Archives Traveling Exhibit http://ift.tt/2wpsubF The most cataclysmic event in American history left a huge paper trail, which the National Archives has mined to great effect in a sprawling exhibit that hits the road this summer to commemorate the Civil War’s 150th anniversary. The exhibit avoids predictable blow-by-blow accounts of battles. …

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American History Book Review: America Aflame

America Aflame: How the Civil War Created a Nation by David Goldfield; Bloomsbury Press Did evangelical religion cause the Civil War? This fascinating book’s emphatic answer: Yes. America, its settlers and founders believed, was God’s City on a Hill. As the nation looked west, its God-given Manifest Destiny led to war with Mexico, whence it …

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Thomas Paine’s Revolutionary Reckoning

George Washington refused to come to the rescue when the pamphleteer who put him on his high horse faced the guillotine. On December 28, 1793, at the height of the Reign of Terror in France, Paris police rousted Thomas Paine in the cold hours before dawn, arrested him as a “foreign conspirator” and locked him …

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The Wild Wild West

The culture wars of an expansionist era inspired Charles Deas, but he lost his own battle with madness and obscurity. “From what we can see of it over the shoulders of the hundreds crowding around,” raved the New Mirror in 1844, “it is a chef d’oeuvre.” Charles Deas (pronounced days) was just 25 when the …

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Clarence Darrow: Dragonslayer

Clarence Darrow turned court clashes into mass entertainment as he wielded his lance against big business and big government. He had magnificent presence. He would walk into the courtroom, the conversation would stop and people would murmur, “There’s Darrow.” He was more than 6 feet tall, and handsome in a rough cast way, with eyes …

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Kudzu- Japan’s Wonder Vine

How a wonder vine unveiled by Japan at the 1876 Centennial began eating America. The amazing wonders on display at the 1876 Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia—the first world’s fair held in the United States—included Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone, a Remington typewriter, Heinz ketchup and Hines root beer. But the exhibit that drew the most oohs …

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Jack Kennedy and Dr. Feelgood

Did the mysterious injections the president received from a quack doctor before a crucial summit with Comrade Khrushchev put the world closer to the nuclear brink? The doctor wore a white coat that was frequently splattered with blood. His fingernails were filthy, stained by the chemicals he used to concoct his magic elixirs. He wore …

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Interview with Jill Lepore, endlessly curious about the Revolution

Jill Lepore is a professor of American history at Harvard University. She has written six books, including New York Burning: Liberty and Slavery in an Eighteenth-Century City, a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, and The Whites of Their Eyes: The Tea Party’s Revolution and the Battle Over American History, published last October. She is writing …

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Horace Greeley Interrogates Brigham Young

When Horace Greeley stepped off a stagecoach in Salt Lake City on a sunny July day in 1859, he carried an umbrella and wore a white suit, a white overcoat and a white hat. It was an odd outfit for a hot day in the desert, but it was Greeley’s trademark attire, just as the …

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The First: American Chicken Breed

The U.S. is now home to half the world’s chickens, but the bird is not native to the Americas. (Sorry, but the prairie chicken, which is a native American bird, is actually a type of grouse.) Chickens as we know them were brought by early colonists and, like the humans they accompanied, the birds intermingled …

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Fighting Words Flew When the Nation Was New

When President Barak Obama traveled to Tucson, Ariz., in January in the wake of the shooting rampage at a meet-and-greet gathering for Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, he urged Americans to talk “with each other in a way that heals, not a way that wounds.” At the same time, in perhaps the best speech of his presidency …

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Gazette- American History June 2011

Startling Lincoln Discovery Exposed as Fabrication What a difference a digit makes. Back in 1998, a retired psychiatrist named Thomas Lowry made a splash when he claimed that he had found a pardon in the National Archives issued by Abraham Lincoln on the day the president was shot, April 14, 1865. Lowry made an even …

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Bat Out of Hell

The rocket-powered Me-163 Komet interceptor outperformed every other World War II combat aircraft…if its pilots lived to fight. In late July 1944, P-51 Mustang pilots who thought they flew the best fighter aircraft over Germany received a rude surprise. Colonel Avelin P. Tacon Jr. of the 359th Fighter Group reported: “My eight ship section was …

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Rocket-Powered Snake

Facing a critical shortage of C-Stoff fuel for JG.400, Colonel Wolf­gang Späte was informed by General of Fighters Adolf Galland that “because of a special SS initiative, a defensive surface-to-air rocket aircraft is supposed to be forced into production. And they will be propelled by C-Agent as well. That is the height of stupidity, but …

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The Christmas Bombing

Was our December 1972 bombing of Hanoi a great victory that brought “peace with honor”? Or was it a blunder that cost South Vietnam its freedom?   IF THE MANY CONTROVERSIES THAT SWIRL around the American role in the Vietnam War, one of the most contentious centers on the Christmas bombing of Hanoi in December …

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Kamis, 28 September 2017

Daily Quiz for September 29, 2017

This fellow author was a lifelong friend of Harper Lee, author of “To Kill a Mockingbird”.

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American History Review: The Conspirator

The Conspirator Directed by Robert Redford. Cast: Robin Wright, James McEvoy, Kevin Kline Did Mary Surratt know of the Lincoln assassination plot hatched under her boarding house’s roof? No one knows for sure. But The Conspirator is not really about what Surratt (Wright) knew or what she did. This costume drama doubles as a quasi-parable …

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American History Book Review: David Crockett

David Crockett: The Lion of the West by Michael Wallis; W.W. Norton David Crockett never signed his name “Davy.” He wasn’t born on a mountaintop in Tennessee: Despite the well-known Disney TV-show theme song, his birthplace was part of North Carolina in 1786. And he didn’t kill a “b’ar” when he was only 3—although, according …

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American History Book Review: Captive of the Labyrinth

Captive of the Labyrinth: Sarah L. Winchester, Heiress to the Rifle Fortune by Mary Jo Ignoffo; University of Missouri Sarah Winchester built a 160-room crazy quilt of a house in San Jose, Calif., that has steadily drawn crowds since it opened as a tourist attraction in 1923. But who was she? Pop history—the sort dispensed …

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History Happened Here

Five heritage sites you should go out of your way to visit. Chances are you can quickly tick off the country’s major historic sights: Independence Hall in Philadelphia and the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, Bunker Hill in Boston and Jamestown in Virginia. OK, now think of the major scenic national parks— Yellowstone, Yosemite, the Grand …

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‘I Have Come Into a Dreamland’

Harriet Beecher Stowe seeks refuge in Paris from the notoriety of Uncle Tom’s Cabin. In 1852, a new novel titled Uncle Tom’s Cabin by an unknown author from Maine caused the greatest stir of anything published in America since Thomas Paine’s Common Sense. In the first year, 300,000 copies were sold  in the United States …

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Quorum Busters

Sometimes politicians go to extremes to avoid having to sit down and be counted. When the Democrats wanted Abraham Lincoln to sit down and be counted, Lincoln stood up, scooted to a window and jumped out. It was 1840, and Lincoln was an Illinois state representative in the midst of a nasty political squabble involving …

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December 2017 Table of Contents

The December 2017 cover story considers the aftermath of the 1890 clash at Wounded Knee, South Dakota

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December 2017 Readers’ Letters

Readers share dispatches about Rain-in-the-Face and "Stagecoach Mary" Fields

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Book Review: Thunder in the Mountains

Daniel Sharfstein makes a welcome contribution to the body of historical retrospectives on the 1877 Nez Perce War

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Book Review: Eyewitness to the Fetterman Fight

John Monnett frames the 1866 Fetterman Fight on the Bozeman Trail (in present-day Wyoming) from the viewpoint of Lakota and Cheyenne participants

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Over Here/Over There

American painters like George Ault fought to make sense—and beauty—of a world at war. The world had exploded into chaos. A nation already staggering from the Great Depression was plunged into World War II, touching everyone, whether at home or abroad. An exhibition now at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, “To Make a World: George …

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TV Series Review: The Son

The Son exhibits the best and worst of epic filmmaking—boring in parts, stirring in others

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Sitting Bull: Soothsayer

Sitting Bull’s ability to embrace the Great Mystery and commune with meadowlarks made him one of America’s greatest spiritual leaders. At the end of a hot summer day in 1876, Sitting Bull and his nephew, One Bull, left their lodges in a large encampment of Cheyennes and Lakota Sioux, crossed a bordering stream and climbed …

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Interview with Tom Wolfe, the man in white

The country had reason to cheer on May 5, 1961, when Freedom 7 splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean carrying its precious cargo: Alan Shepard, the first American to go into space. After years of being bested by the Soviet Union, the United States finally had a competitive entry in the space race, and Shepard …

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Robert Byrd Consorts With a KKK Grand Dragon

One Saturday in the 1920s, a small boy named Robert Byrd stood at a second-floor window in Matoaka, W.Va., and watched wide-eyed as a parade of men, including his adoptive father, marched past in white robes, white hoods and white masks. They were local members of the Ku Klux Klan. Byrd never forgot that spectacle. …

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The First: Cross-Country Road Trip

There had to be an easier way to win a $50 bet. When Dr. Horatio Nelson Jackson wagered in May 1903 that he could drive from San Francisco to New York in 90 days, there were only 150 miles of paved road in the entire country. Jackson (at the wheel) enlisted Sewall Crocker as his …

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We’ve Been Here Before: Our Forefathers Cheered Other Revolutions From a Safe Distance

America is a nation born in revolution, and our first reaction when other people throw off repressive rule is to sympathize. Should we also help? Is America, as John Quincy Adams put it, “in search of monsters to destroy”? The question weaves through American history, beginning with the French Revolution, up to today’s Arab Revolt. …

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Gazette- American History August 2011

New Exhibit Lifts Lid on Watergate Cover-up The gift shop at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library & Museum, run by stalwart supporters of the 37th president, sells a mug that asks “What Would Nixon Do?” It has been joined recently at the Yorba Linda, Calif., facility by a Watergate exhibit, put together by the National …

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Jim Nelson

The vibrant layers of Nelson’s paintings conceal Indian symbols of spiritual significance

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Author Tom Clavin

Tom Clavin profiles Bat Masterson, Wyatt Earp and others with ties to the iconic Kansas cow town Dodge City

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Requiem for a Cowboy Poet

Badger Clark spent time in a Cuban jail and on an Arizona Territory ranch before becoming the ‘poet lariat’ of South Dakota

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Letter From Wild West – December 2017

Whether we call Wounded Knee a battle, a massacre or a mixture of both, Minneconjou Lakota Chief Big Foot himself was not to blame

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Hearts and Minds in Mindanao

A century ago American officers Frank Baldwin and John J. Pershing battled a Muslim Filipino insurgency—with strikingly different methods and results. On April 26, 1902, U.S. Army Captain John J. Pershing sat in his office at the old Spanish garrison in Iligan on the north coast of the Philippine island of Mindanao, reflecting on the …

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Books in Brief | Vietnam Warrior Voices

Vietnam Warrior Voices: Caputo, Del Vecchio, Butler, O’Brien, Mark H. Massé, 2017 Exploring post-traumatic growth as a result of the Vietnam War, author Mark H. Massé interviews veterans Philip Caputo, John Del Vecchio, Robert Olen Butler, and Tim O’Brien on the effect that the war played in their lives and in their writing. Massé delivers …

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Solving the Problem of ‘Fog Flying’

How private philanthropy, inventive engineers and a courageous pilot put the “I” in IFR. Airmen of all nations faced a common problem in the 1920s: flying safely when darkness, clouds or fog obscured their way. In an era when IFR flying literally meant “I Follow Railroads,” it constituted the greatest of all flight safety challenges. …

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Rabu, 27 September 2017

Daily Quiz for September 28, 2017

This was the name of the express train that took sailors on leave from Pearl Harbor to Honolulu.

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American History Book Review: Revolutionary Founders

Revolutionary Founders: Rebels, Radicals, and Reformers in the Making of the Nation ed. by Alfred F. Young, Gary B. Nash, and Ray Raphael; Knopf The founding fathers weren’t the only visionaries dreaming of a new order for the New World. They had to fend off, out-argue, marginalize or suppress competing ideas advanced by the hoi …

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American History Book Review: The Clamorgans

The Clamorgans: One Family’s History of Race in America by Julie Winch; Hill and Wang What exactly did race mean in 19th-century America? The Clamorgan clan vividly embodies its ambiguities and historical shifts. In 1781, Jacques Clamorgan arrived in St. Louis to seek his fortune and escape his debt in New Orleans, the start of …

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A Short History of Debt

The last time government red ink posed such a dire threat was during the founding of the republic. America’s long-term national debt now exceeds $14 trillion, a figure that is almost impossible for most people to wrap their minds around. In relative terms, that is roughly equivalent to the nation’s entire economic output last year. …

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Twitter’s Folksy Forerunner

Barack Obama tweets. So do Sarah Palin, Newt Gingrich, Tom Hanks, Lady Gaga and 200 million other people. To tweet is, of course, to write a message on Twitter, an online service that sends out very short dispatches—no more than 140 characters long. Will Rogers died more than 70 years before Twitter was invented, but …

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The Devil’s Advance Agent

Women in the 1890s boldly ignored warnings that riding a bicycle could lead to their damnation. In 1896, as the horse-and-buggy era drew to a close, newspaper offices across the country received an impassioned broadside from Charlotte Smith, the founder of the national Women’s Rescue League. “Bicycling by young women has helped to swell the …

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America’s Greatest Work of Architecture

Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater turns 75 this year. A house of genius and mystery, it may be admired as America’s best 500 years from now. December sun filled the sky in 1934 as department-store mogul Edgar Kaufmann left Pittsburgh with the legendary architect Frank Lloyd Wright. They drove on winding back roads into the deep …

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The Bible According to Thomas Jefferson

No walking on water, no miracles, no virgin birth, no resurrection, but plenty of morality. The president sat at his desk in the White House on a winter evening. He’d finished his work for the day and was ready for something more enjoyable. He took out two Bibles and opened them to the story of …

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Nathaniel Hawthorne Disses Abe Lincoln

“I have shaken hands with Uncle Abe,” Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote in a letter to his wife on March 16, 1862. He was referring, of course, to President Lincoln. That day, Hawthorne left the White House feeling ambivalent about Lincoln. But that wasn’t surprising. Hawthorne tended to feel ambivalent about almost everything. At 57, the great …

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The First: Breakfast Cereal

There were no prizes at the bottom of a Granula tin. Good health was the reward for those who chomped their way through the dense, gritty cereal made from twice-baked whole wheat flour—and nothing else. Dr. James Caleb Jackson introduced Granula in 1863 as a convenient, ready-to-eat breakfast food, although “ready to eat” was a …

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We’ve Been Here Before: Bringing a Public Enemy to Justice Requires Both Luck and Derring-Do

Osama Bin Laden, killed in his Pakistani lair this May, was surely one of the most hated figures in our history. But maybe not the most hated. Two centuries after fleeing to his British paymasters, Benedict Arnold is still a byword for everything despicable. The two share more than odium. Bin Laden the mass murderer …

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Gazette- American History October 2011

Solicitor General Acknowledges Malfeasance in U.S. Handling of Japanese Internment The imprisonment OF 110,000 Japanese Americans during World War II represents a low point in U.S. justice, and now that black mark seems even darker. Recently, the acting solicitor general, Neal Katyal, admitted that one of his predecessors, Charles Fahy, suppressed evidence while arguing for …

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The Kaiser’s Grim Reaper

Fritz Haber saved millions from starvation. Then he turned his genius to chemical warfare. “It was a beautiful day, the sun was shining,” Willi Siebert, a German soldier stationed in the Ypres Sector 1915, recalled in a letter to his son. “Where there was grass, it was blazing green. We should have been going on …

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Selasa, 26 September 2017

Daily Quiz for September 27, 2017

This internationally renowned magazine was first published on February 5, 1922.

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CWT Book Review: The Roosevelt I Knew

The Roosevelt I Knew by Frances Perkins; Penguin Books Frances Perkins was in a unique position to observe Franklin Delano Roosevelt. She met the tall, slender New York state senator at a dance in 1910 and wasn’t all that impressed, deeming him arrogant and self-righteous. But after he was stricken with polio, she saw his …

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CWT Book Review: Grant’s Final Victory

Grant’s Final Victory: Ulysses S. Grant’s Heroic Last Year By Charles Bracelen Flood; Da Capo When he accepted Robert E. Lee’s surrender at Appomattox in 1865, General Ulysses S. Grant was “the most famous man in the United States, and was on his way to being the most photographed person of the nineteenth century,” writes …

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CWT Book Review: The Bitter Waters of Medicine Creek

The Bitter Waters of Medicine Creek: A Tragic Clash Between White and Native America By Richard Kluger; Knopf American Indians are riding tall in the saddle on the publishing trail, with best-sellers like The Killing of Crazy Horse, by Thomas Powers, and Empire of the Summer Moon, by S.C. Gwynne, about Quanah Parker, the last …

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Hard Times in the Big Easy

When the Great Depression tried to strangle the life out of New Orleans. Some cities are just plain photogenic— even in devastation—and the Paris of the South is one of them. A show at the International Center of Photography, “Signs of Life: Photographs by Peter Sekaer,” includes lush images made during the 1930s when life …

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Why Was Life So Hard for the Pilgrims?

America was an unrivaled paradise with rivers full of fish and forests full of game. Even the much-feared natives weren’t so savage. Yet within a year, more than half the colonists at Plymouth, Jamestown, and perhaps Roanoke, were dead. B y 1640, just 20 years after 101 souls on the into Cape Cod Bay, America …

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Interview with Sam Wineburg, critic of history education

Sam Wineburg, 53, is a professor of education and history at Stanford University and director of the Stanford History Education Group. A former high school history teacher and author of Historical Thinking and Other Unnatural Acts: Charting the Future of Teaching the Past, Wineburg is a critic of how American schools teach history and how …

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Gorgeous George Tutors Cassius Clay

They met in Las Vegas, at a radio station, while promoting themselves, which seems entirely appropriate. Both were in the business of mayhem as a spectator sport. One was a rising star, the other was fading, but willing to pass along his wisdom. It was June 1961. The younger man was 19, a handsome boxer …

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The First: Purple Heart

In 1782, General George Washington established the first honor ever designated for the common soldier, declaring, “The road to glory in a patriot army and a free country is thus open to all.” With no money to pay for promotions, Washington ordered that a heart made of purple cloth or silk be awarded for “unusual …

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We’ve Been Here Before: Why a Member of the House Can’t Get Elected President

Michele Bachmann, a Republican Representative of Minnesota and a presidential candidate, has done well in early polling in Iowa, which happens to be her home state. But one of the biggest obstacles in her path to the White House is the House she is coming from. The founders did not expect the presidency to be …

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Gazette- American History December 2011

Truths Finally Surface for Ill-Fated Civil War Sub The Confederate submarine H.L. Hunley knew victory and defeat in its single combat mission on February 17, 1864—becoming the first sub to destroy an enemy ship in battle and then sinking shortly thereafter under mysterious circumstances. Even now, 11 years after the vessel was lifted from the …

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CWT Book Review: The Grand Design

The Grand Design: Strategy and the U.S. Civil War by Donald Stoker, Oxford University Press Strategic analysis requires more than just looking at how armies are moved around in the field. It also involves a study of economics, culture and public opinion—in other words, the broader context within which generals as well as statesmen typically …

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CWT Book Review: Recollections of War Times

Recollections of War Times: By an Old Veteran While Under Stonewall Jackson and Lieutenant General James Longstreet  by William A. McClendon, University of Alabama Press Some hidden surprises still remain in the vast expanse of original Civil War source material—such as William A. “Gus” McClendon’s memoir, a recently rediscovered gem. Previously published for the benefit …

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CWT Book Review: At the Precipice

At the Precipice: Americans North and South During the Secession Crisis  by Shearer Davis Bowman, University of North Carolina Press “We rely on the Bible as authority for the establishment of slavery among men,” Senator Jefferson Davis of Mississippi wrote in 1849, “and on the Constitution for its recognition throughout the United States.” That single …

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CWT Book Review: The Lincoln Assassination

The Lincoln Assassination: Crime & Punishment, Myth & Memory edited by Harold Holzer, Craig L. Symonds and Frank J. Williams, Fordham University Press In this intriguing new anthology, 10 prominent scholars ponder the “public, judicial and memorial reaction” to Abraham Lincoln’s assassination on April 14, 1865. In attempting to “explore the legal, cultural, political and …

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CWT Book Review: American Civil War Guerrilla Tactics

American Civil War Guerrilla Tactics  by Sean McLachlan, Osprey Confined largely to the sidelines and Western frontier regions of the embattled United States, the horse-riding guerrillas of the Civil War, North and South, had little strategic impact on the conflict’s outcome. But they did affect morale, thanks to their sometimes spectacular exploits, notable at some …

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CWT Book Review: The 111th New York Volunteer Infantry

The 111th New York Volunteer Infantry: A Civil War History  by Martin W. Husk, McFarland The 111th New York Volunteer Infantry was recruited from Cayuga and Wayne counties and mustered into Federal service in August 1862. Less than a month later, the New Yorkers surrendered with the rest of the garrison at Harpers Ferry. Later …

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Ural on URLs: Louisiana State University

http://www.cwc.lsu.edu/ In 1993 David Madden, novelist and professor of English at Louisiana State University, founded the U.S. Civil War Center (USCWC) to offer visitors an interdisciplinary approach to America’s defining conflict. The center’s Michael Shaara Award for Excellence in Civil War Fiction highlights its roots, but the history-dominated reviews at “Civil War Book Review” and …

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CWT Book Review: Civil War Citizens

Civil War Citizens: Race, Ethnicity and Identity in America’s Bloodiest Conflict edited by Susannah J. Ural, New York University Press Ethnic minorities had more to prove than average American citizens during the nation’s seminal struggle. Susannah Ural’s new collection of essays looks at the drama resulting from divided loyalties within these groups during the war. …

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Hell on the Water

Just one slaving expedition to Africa could make a fortune for investors, captain and crew. For nearly 350 years, no venture was as lucrative as the transatlantic slave trade. It was the most profitable— and the most horrific—of enterprises. In 1850 a slave acquired for $40 worth of trade goods would bring between $800 and …

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Judging George Custer

The real man has long since been overwhelmed by his myth. When fame reduces a man to caricature, his story is at the mercy of every succeeding generation, and few men in American history have been more famous or more caricatured than George Armstrong Custer. No one knows exactly when, how, or even where he …

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CWT Letter from the Editor-February 2011

Faithfully Capturing an Era There is no doubt that the Civil War remains so popular because of photography. Even though that medium was still in its infancy in the 1860s, with photographers often learning as they went, thousands of striking images captured the era. Through those photos we can gain a visceral connection that simply …

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Interview with Garry Adelman: A Youthful Obsession Turns Into a Career

Garry Adelman is an example of how someone can transform a passion into a vocation through hard work and staying focused. Starting out as a kid who didn’t care much about history, he became an author who has focused on Devil’s Den, as well as co-founder and vice president of the Center for Civil War …

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Collateral Damage: The Weikert Farm’s Controversial Legacy

A crowd of surgeons and orderlies descended on Jacob Weikert’s farm south of Gettysburg on July 2, 1863. Elements of the Army of the Potomac’s V  Corps were fighting on Little Round Top, just west of the farm. By the time the last wounded soldier was evacuated or buried at the farm some days later, …

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Blue and Gray: The War Was Won in the East

I was convinced by the age of 12 that military events in the Eastern Theater far exceeded in importance anything that happened west of the Appalachian Mountains. I based this conclusion on Douglas Southall Freeman’s Lee’s Lieutenants and R.E. Lee, Bruce Catton’s Army of the Potomac trilogy, and biographies and memoirs devoted to generals in …

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CWT Today- February 2011

Great Civil War Maps Now Available Online The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is releasing nearly 400 war–related maps, charts and documents in time for the Sesquicentennial. The collection, named “Charting a More Perfect Union,” is available at NOAA’s Office of Coast Survey website, at http://ift.tt/2yFDpPE historical_zoom.asp. Although battlefields might seem to be outside the …

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CWT Letters from Readers- February 2011

Not the Right Bullets The sidebar “Whitworth’s Better Bullet,” on P. 49 of the December issue, contains a number of common errors. The projectile you labeled as a Whitworth bullet is rather very likely a bullet for the Vandenburg Volley Gun. Nearly all of these bullets have been recovered from Fort Fisher, N.C., where there …

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Game Review: Steel Division-Normany 44

World War II's resident gamer Chris Ketcherside reviews Paradox Interactive's thrilling new installment of their Steel Division strategy games

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Book Review: Sons and Soldiers

Bruce Henderson's latest tells the brave stories of the German-born American soldiers who fought in the U.S. Army against their German compatriots

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Book Review: War Reporters Who Braved the Frontlines

USA Today military reporter Jim Michaels covers two great books about the dedicated war reporters that braved World War II's frontlines.

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Unsung Heroes: 10 Union Generals Who Won Without All the Headlines

here must be more historians of the Civil War than there were generals fighting it,” David Herbert Donald declared in his book Lincoln Reconsidered: Essays on the Civil War Era, adding dryly: “Of the two groups, the historians are the more belligerent.” One would think that by now, some 150-plus years after the war, every …

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Behind the Lines | The Relic Hunter

Shirl Herr’s “hidden-metal detector” paved the way for the development of mine detectors used by the world’s militaries. It was late August 1929 when the black limousine pulled to the front of an Italian hotel to retrieve Shirl Herr. An American businessman, inventor, and self-educated historian, Herr had offered his assistance to the Italian government …

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Artists | Threads of History

A Portuguese king sought to glorify his military exploits through the art of tapestry.  In the 1470s King Afonso V of Portugal (1432–1482) commissioned a series of tapestries from the workshop of Flemish weaver Pasquier Grenier, the preeminent commercial weaver of the late 15th century. Medieval and Renaissance monarchs and merchant princes often commissioned tapestries, …

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Voices | Peter Pace

Peter Pace, a Marine lieutenant whose platoon engaged in fierce fighting near Hue in 1968, devoted his career to the military because of something that did not happen to him in Vietnam. While men all around him were dying or being wounded, Pace did not suffer a single injury. He felt he owed it to …

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The War in Their Words: ‘No Man Wavered’

The Confederate 1st Missouri Brigade paid a high price at Allatoona Pass and Franklin In the foreword to In Deadly Earnest, Phil Gottschalk’s 1991 history of the 1st Missouri Brigade, C.S.A., Ed Bearss, retired Chief Historian of the National Park Service, leader of countless battlefield tours, and member of the Civil War Times advisory board, …

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Senin, 25 September 2017

September 26, 1960: First Kennedy-Nixon debate

For the first time in U.S. history, a debate between major party presidential candidates is shown on television. The presidential hopefuls, John F. Kennedy, a Democratic senator of Massachusetts, and Richard M. Nixon, the vice president of the United States, met in a Chicago studio to discuss U.S. domestic matters.

Kennedy emerged the apparent winner from this first of four televised debates, partly owing to his greater ease before the camera than Nixon, who, unlike Kennedy, seemed nervous and declined to wear makeup. Nixon fared better in the second and third debates, and on October 21 the candidates met to discuss foreign affairs in their fourth and final debate. Less than three weeks later, on November 8, Kennedy won 49.7 percent of the popular vote in one of the closest presidential elections in U.S. history, surpassing by a fraction the 49.6 percent received by his Republican opponent.

One year after leaving the vice presidency, Nixon returned to politics, winning the Republican nomination for governor of California. Although he lost the election, Nixon returned to the national stage in 1968 in a successful bid for the presidency. Like Lyndon Johnson in 1964, Nixon declined to debate his opponent in the 1968 presidential campaign. Televised presidential debates returned in 1976, and have been held in every presidential campaign since.



from History.com - This Day in History - Lead Story

Where does “Sweating Like a Pig” come from?

Where does the phrase “sweating like a pig” come from? Thanks, Sandy Stinson   ???   Dear Ms Stinson, The expression dates to the days of industrial steel production and refers to pig iron, which was shaped in molds that had the pieces branching off to look like piglets suckling on a sow. Once produced, …

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Daily Quiz for September 26, 2017

In 1958 The US Air Force lost one of these off the coast of Georgia.

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Fight Again Another Day

Facing disaster in Brooklyn, Washington gambled on sea-going soldiers to get the army across the East River

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Trial by Stagecoach

Noah Webster's stagecoach book tour was an exercise in survival.

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Smiling Through a Personal Apocalypse

FDR got polio, but polio didn't get him.

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Murder Most Verbal

America's political rhetoric has always been incendiary.

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Weapons Manual: Finland’s Suomi KP/-31 submachine gun

World War II's senior editor Paraag Shukla gives us a closer look at Finland's rugged and accurate Suomi KP/-31 submachine gun

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Weapons Manual: Night Stalker-The Soviet’s U-2 biplane

World War II's senior editor Paraag Shukla gives us a closer look at Finland's rugged and accurate Suomi KP/-31 submachine gun

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Hard Luck Island: The Battle of Wake

When war came to Wake Island, its defenders faced an unknown enemy—and overwhelming odds

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Minggu, 24 September 2017

September 25, 1957: Central High School integrated

Under escort from the U.S. Army’s 101st Airborne Division, nine black students enter all-white Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas. Three weeks earlier, Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus had surrounded the school with National Guard troops to prevent its federal court-ordered racial integration. After a tense standoff, President Dwight D. Eisenhower federalized the Arkansas National Guard and sent 1,000 army paratroopers to Little Rock to enforce the court order.

On May 17, 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled unanimously in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka that racial segregation in educational facilities was unconstitutional. Five days later, the Little Rock School Board issued a statement saying it would comply with the decision when the Supreme Court outlined the method and time frame in which desegregation should be implemented.

Arkansas was at the time among the more progressive Southern states in regard to racial issues. The University of Arkansas School of Law was integrated in 1949, and the Little Rock Public Library in 1951. Even before the Supreme Court ordered integration to proceed “with all deliberate speed,” the Little Rock School Board in 1955 unanimously adopted a plan of integration to begin in 1957 at the high school level. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) filed suit, arguing the plan was too gradual, but a federal judge dismissed the suit, saying that the school board was acting in “utmost good faith.” Meanwhile, Little Rock’s public buses were desegregated. By 1957, seven out of Arkansas’ eight state universities were integrated.

In the spring of 1957, there were 517 black students who lived in the Central High School district. Eighty expressed an interest in attending Central in the fall, and they were interviewed by the Little Rock School Board, which narrowed down the number of candidates to 17. Eight of those students later decided to remain at all-black Horace Mann High School, leaving the “Little Rock Nine” to forge their way into Little Rock’s premier high school.

In August 1957, the newly formed Mother’s League of Central High School won a temporary injunction from the county chancellor to block integration of the school, charging that it “could lead to violence.” Federal District Judge Ronald Davies nullified the injunction on August 30. On September 2, Governor Orval Faubus—a staunch segregationist—called out the Arkansas National Guard to surround Central High School and prevent integration, ostensibly to prevent the bloodshed he claimed desegregation would cause. The next day, Judge Davies ordered integrated classes to begin on September 4.

That morning, 100 armed National Guard troops encircled Central High School. A mob of 400 white civilians gathered and turned ugly when the black students began to arrive, shouting racial epithets and threatening the teenagers with violence. The National Guard troops refused to let the black students pass and used their clubs to control the crowd. One of the nine, 15-year-old Elizabeth Eckford, was surrounded by the mob, which threatened to lynch her. She was finally led to safety by a sympathetic white woman.

Little Rock Mayor Woodrow Mann condemned Faubus’ decision to call out the National Guard, but the governor defended his action, reiterating that he did so to prevent violence. The governor also stated that integration would occur in Little Rock when and if a majority of people chose to support it. Faubus’ defiance of Judge Davies’ court order was the first major test of Brown v. Board of Education and the biggest challenge of the federal government’s authority over the states since the Reconstruction Era.

The standoff continued, and on September 20 Judge Davies ruled that Faubus had used the troops to prevent integration, not to preserve law and order as he claimed. Faubus had no choice but to withdraw the National Guard troops. Authority over the explosive situation was put in the hands of the Little Rock Police Department.

On September 23, as a mob of 1,000 whites milled around outside Central High School, the nine black students managed to gain access to a side door. However, the mob became unruly when it learned the black students were inside, and the police evacuated them out of fear for their safety. That evening, President Eisenhower issued a special proclamation calling for opponents of the federal court order to “cease and desist.” On September 24, Little Rock’s mayor sent a telegram to the president asking him to send troops to maintain order and complete the integration process. Eisenhower immediately federalized the Arkansas National Guard and approved the deployment of U.S. troops to Little Rock. That evening, from the White House, the president delivered a nationally televised address in which he explained that he had taken the action to defend the rule of law and prevent “mob rule” and “anarchy.” On September 25, the Little Rock Nine entered the school under heavily armed guard.

Troops remained at Central High School throughout the school year, but still the black students were subjected to verbal and physical assaults from a faction of white students. Melba Patillo, one of the nine, had acid thrown in her eyes, and Elizabeth Eckford was pushed down a flight of stairs. The three male students in the group were subjected to more conventional beatings. Minnijean Brown was suspended after dumping a bowl of chili over the head of a taunting white student. She was later suspended for the rest of the year after continuing to fight back. The other eight students consistently turned the other cheek. On May 27, 1958, Ernest Green, the only senior in the group, became the first black to graduate from Central High School.

Governor Faubus continued to fight the school board’s integration plan, and in September 1958 he ordered Little Rock’s three high schools closed rather than permit integration. Many Little Rock students lost a year of education as the legal fight over desegregation continued. In 1959, a federal court struck down Faubus’ school-closing law, and in August 1959 Little Rock’s white high schools opened a month early with black students in attendance. All grades in Little Rock public schools were finally integrated in 1972.



from History.com - This Day in History - Lead Story

Daily Quiz for September 25, 2017

On June 30, 1934, the Night of the Long Knives in Germany, hundreds of this group of people were assassinated on Hitler’s orders.

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Sabtu, 23 September 2017

September 24, 1789: The First Supreme Court

The Judiciary Act of 1789 is passed by Congress and signed by President George Washington, establishing the Supreme Court of the United States as a tribunal made up of six justices who were to serve on the court until death or retirement. That day, President Washington nominated John Jay to preside as chief justice, and John Rutledge, William Cushing, John Blair, Robert Harrison, and James Wilson to be associate justices. On September 26, all six appointments were confirmed by the U.S. Senate.

The U.S. Supreme Court was established by Article 3 of the U.S. Constitution. The Constitution granted the Supreme Court ultimate jurisdiction over all laws, especially those in which their constitutionality was at issue. The high court was also designated to oversee cases concerning treaties of the United States, foreign diplomats, admiralty practice, and maritime jurisdiction. On February 1, 1790, the first session of the U.S. Supreme Court was held in New York City’s Royal Exchange Building.

The U.S. Supreme Court grew into the most important judicial body in the world in terms of its central place in the American political order. According to the Constitution, the size of the court is set by Congress, and the number of justices varied during the 19th century before stabilizing in 1869 at nine. In times of constitutional crisis, the nation’s highest court has always played a definitive role in resolving, for better or worse, the great issues of the time.



from History.com - This Day in History - Lead Story

Daily Quiz for September 24, 2017

Originally called the German Workers’ Party, the Nazi Party was founded in this year.

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Jumat, 22 September 2017

September 23, 1875: Billy the Kid arrested for first time

On this day in 1875, Billy the Kid is arrested for the first time after stealing a basket of laundry. He later broke out of jail and roamed the American West, eventually earning a reputation as an outlaw and murderer and a rap sheet that allegedly included 21 murders.

The exact details of Billy the Kid’s birth are unknown, other than his name, William Henry McCarty. He was probably born sometime between 1859 and 1861, in Indiana or New York. As a child, he had no relationship with his father and moved around with his family, living in Indiana, Kansas, Colorado and Silver City, New Mexico. His mother died in 1874 and Billy the Kid—who went by a variety of names throughout his life, including Kid Antrim and William Bonney—turned to crime soon afterward.

McCarty did a stint as a horse thief in Arizona before returning to New Mexico, where he hooked up with a gang of gunslingers and cattle rustlers involved in the notorious Lincoln County War between rival rancher and merchant factions in Lincoln County in 1878. Afterward, Billy the Kid, who had a slender build, prominent crooked front teeth and a love of singing, went on the lam and continued his outlaw’s life, stealing cattle and horses, gambling and killing people. His crimes earned him a bounty on his head and he was eventually captured and indicted for killing a sheriff during the Lincoln County War. Billy the Kid was sentenced to hang for his crime; however, a short time later, he managed another jail break, murdering two deputies in the process. Billy the Kid’s freedom was brief, as Sheriff Pat Garrett caught up with the desperado at Fort Sumner, New Mexico, on July 14, 1881, and fatally shot him.

Although his life was short, Billy the Kid’s legend grew following his death. Today he is a famous symbol of the Old West, along with such men as Kit Carson, Jesse James, Wild Bill Hickok, Doc Holliday and Wyatt Earp, and his story has been mythologized and romanticized in numerous films, books, TV shows and songs. Each year, tourists visit the town of Fort Sumner, located about 160 miles southeast of Albuquerque, to see the Billy the Kid Museum and gravesite.



from History.com - This Day in History - Lead Story

Daily Quiz for September 23, 2017

Until 1956, this island was known as Bedloe’s Island.

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CWT Book Review: War News Blue and Gray in Black and White

War News Blue and Gray in Black and White: Newspapers in the Civil War by Brayton Harris Following the Battle of Shiloh in April 1862, Henry Villard, a special correspondent for the New York Herald, described one of the many problems confronting reporters attempting to write about Civil War battles and soldiers. “In the camps, …

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CWT Book Review: The Fiery Trial

The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery  by Eric Foner, W.W. Norton & Co. Looking for flaws in an Eric Foner book is like looking for flaws in the Hope Diamond; it’s a fool’s errand. Better to get comfortable and let a real pro transport you—in this instance, into the heart and mind of …

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CWT Book Review: Shadow of Shiloh

Shadow of Shiloh: Major General Lew Wallace in the Civil War by Gail Stephens, Indiana Historical Society Press For the remaining 43 years of his life, Lew Wallace could not escape the long shadow of the Battle of Shiloh. He would always be remembered as the general who took too long to reach the battlefield …

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CWT Book Review: A German Hurrah!

A German Hurrah! Civil War Letters of Friedrich Bertsch and Wilhelm Stangel, 9th Ohio Infantry edited by Joseph R. Reinhart, Kent State University Press Enlisting as soldiers in the Civil War enabled thousands of recent immigrants, most of them Irish and German, to prove their worthiness to be citizens and to repay a debt of …

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CWT Book Review: Starving the South

Starving the South: How the North Won the Civil War by Andrew F. Smith, St. Martin’s Press Unlike the Midwest, which produced huge quantities of wheat and meat in the 1860s, Southern plantation owners focused mostly on cotton and tobacco. When Union forces in the West seized Fort Henry, Fort Donelson and Nashville, Confederates faced …

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CWT Book Review: Stealing Secrets

Stealing Secrets: How a Few Daring Women Deceived Generals, Impacted Battles, and Altered the Course of the Civil War H. Donald Winkler, Cumberland House The Civil War is full of tales of deception practiced by enterprising femmes fatales engaged in what H. Donald Winkler calls “the world’s second oldest profession— spying.” He has gathered accounts …

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Ural on URLs: The Historical Marker Database

We’ve all done it. We’ll be driving along a rural road or zipping down a highway when we spot a historical marker off to the side. We find ourselves swerving dangerously onto the shoulder, catching just enough words on the marker to secure our interest and then contemplating an illegal U-turn to learn more about …

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CWT Review: PBS American Experience Robert E. Lee

PBS American Experience: Robert E. Lee  directed by Adriana Bosch In January PBS’ “American Experience” series fired an early shot in the run-up to the Sesquicentennial with the broadcast of its new documentary Robert E. Lee. Although the 83-minute film, now available on DVD for $24.99, doesn’t split much with traditional takes on Lee, it …

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Eye on Arlington

Robert E. Lee’s estate is getting a thorough makeover. Brandon Bies, the new site manager for Arlington House, Robert E. Lee’s antebellum estate, is leading a tour of the mansion and grounds. Without breaking stride, he points to a dense grove of towering trees nearby, noting they are the last remnant of old-growth forest in …

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The Butcher’s Bill

Ulysses S. Grant is often referred to as a ‘butcher,’ but does Robert E. Lee actually deserve that title? It’s one of the old standbys of Civil War mythology: General Ulysses S. Grant was a leader with no regard whatsoever for human life who managed to defeat Robert E. Lee only by means of brute …

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CWT Letter from the Editor- April 2011

Ready or Not, Here We Go The Sesquicentennial is upon us, and much as I don’t want to admit it, I have a nagging feeling it’s going to fall short of expectations—for many of the reasons that Virginia Tech Professor James I. Robertson points to in this issue’s interview (P. 32). As a country we …

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Interview with Bud Robertson, Sage of the Centennial

James I. “Bud” Robertson, professor of history at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg, Va., is one of the nation’s preeminent Civil War scholars—the author or editor of more than 20 books, including Stonewall Jackson: The Man, the Soldier, the Legend. In 1961 Robertson was tapped to serve as the executive director of …

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Collateral Damage: Repaying a Debt of Compassion

In October 1886, John L. Rice—formerly a private of the 2nd New Hampshire Volunteer Infantry—made his way on horseback to Amos and Margaret Benson’s home in northern Virginia, intent on repaying an old debt. How Rice incurred that debt, and how he went about repaying it more than 20 years after the war ended, is …

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Blue and Gray: The War’s Overlooked Turning Points

The Civil War witnessed dramatic shifts of military momentum. As armies contended for supremacy on the battlefield, their successes and failures dramatically influenced politics and civilian morale on the home front. For nearly 150 years, many of the scholars who have written about the conflict—from members of the wartime generation to recent historians—have argued about …

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CWT Today- April 2011

Stonewall Jackson House Goes to VMI The Stonewall Jackson House in Lexington, Virginia, where Thomas J. Jackson resided between 1858 and 1861 with his second wife Anna while he taught at Virginia Military Institute, is expected to become the property of VMI sometime this year. VMI’s Board of Visitors approved the plan this past December. …

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CWT Letters from Readers- April 2011

Custer Never Grew Up Stephen Budiansky did yeoman service to the general in his February article “Judging George Custer.” There is a vast gulf, however, between Custer’s “when in doubt, charge” approach to military strategy and the brilliant tactician Budiansky portrays. It is beyond debate that Custer was indeed reckless, and ultimately it cost the …

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Tales of Bruised Ulysses

New biographers shed light on Grant, who fought inner battles, too.

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Raoul Wallenberg’s Quest to Save a Nation

For tens of thousands of Jews in wartime Hungary, one man stood between life and death

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In Plain Sight: The Pearl Harbor Spy

Using simple observation, a Japanese spy in Pearl Harbor collected crucial information. His full story, however, remains hidden

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Across the Hypersonic Divide

The X-15 tested the limits of speed and altitude for winged aircraft, bridging the gap between the air and space ages.

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Kamis, 21 September 2017

Daily Quiz for September 22, 2017

This many defendants faced trial for war crimes before an international tribune in Nuremburg, Germany after World War II.

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Build Your Own X-15A-2

It’s always wise to look over the in­structions before starting any kit, but if you decide to build Special Hobby’s 1/72nd-scale X-15A-2, it’s best to first check the Internet, since the directions provided with this kit are ambiguous and the exploded diagram is confusing. Two reputable modeling websites are Hyperscale.com and ModelingMadness.com, both of which offer …

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CWT Book Review: Failure in the Saddle

Failure in the Saddle: Nathan Bedford Forrest, Joseph Wheeler, and the Confederate Cavalry in the Chickamauga Campaign by David A. Powell, Savas Beatie  Revisionist historians must constantly fight the temptation to interpret facts to support predetermined hypotheses. The reasons behind actions on the battlefield may have multiple, even seemingly contradictory, interpretations. In Failure in the …

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CWT Book Review: Union General John A. McClernand and the Politics of Command

Union General John A. McClernand and the Politics of Command by Christopher C. Meyers, McFarland John Alexander McClernand rarely receives much sympathy from Civil War buffs. In addition to his being lumped together with the likes of Benjamin Butler and Daniel Sickles by historians lamenting the North’s use of “political generals,” his reputation has been …

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Ural on URLs: Furman University

http://ift.tt/2wL2WFa As we mark the 150th anniversary of secession, it’s worth taking a moment to reflect on the factors that led to the Union’s collapse. One site offers a wonderful opportunity to do this: “The Secession Era Editorials Project,” hosted by Furman University. The creation of Furman professor T. Lloyd Benson, this site provides excerpted …

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CWT Book Review: Imported Confederate Uniforms

Imported Confederate Uniforms of Peter Tait & Co., Limerick Ireland by Frederick R. Adolphus, self-published  For those of us who love to study uniforms, weapons and equipment, Frederick Adolphus’ new volume is just the kind of reading we enjoy. Adolphus evaluates surviving Confederate jackets, all made out of blue-gray cloth and similar in appearance, along …

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CWT Book Review: Trailing Clouds of Glory

Trailing Clouds of Glory: Zachary Taylor’s Mexican War Campaign and His Emerging Civil War Leaders by Felice Flanery Lewis, University of Alabama Press As Felice Flanery Lewis makes clear in the notion that the Mexican War Trailing Clouds of Glory, served as a training ground for future Civil War commanders needs to be reevaluated. The …

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CWT Book Review: Antietam Farmsteads

Antietam Farmsteads: A Guide to the Battlefield Landscape by Keven M. Walker and K.C. Kirkman, Western Maryland Interpretive Association  It’s no secret that you can’t truly understand an engagement until you walk the ground. But beyond strategy and tactics, Civil War battlefields also preserve the priceless natural and built landscapes of the 19th century. Antietam …

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CWT Book Review: One of Morgan’s Men

One of Morgan’s Men: Memoirs of Lieutenant John M. Porter of the Ninth Kentucky Cavalry edited by Kent Masterson Brown, University Press of Kentucky Few Civil War units enjoy the high profile and popularity that John Hunt Morgan’s “Thunderbolt of the Confederacy” cavalry commands with modern audiences. Respected historian Kent Masterson Brown has edited an …

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CWT Exhibit Review: An American Turning Point

An American Turning Point: The Civil War in Virginia Virginia Historical Society through December 30, 2011 You are a slave escaping on the Underground Railroad. You approach two African-American men fishing in a stream. You ask for boat passage, but they demand something in return. Do you offer your food or your money? You choose …

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Hell in the Harbor

Accurate Rebel ‘shot and shell’ terrified Fort Sumter’s garrison. Charleston Harbor, April 1861: Three hours before dawn, a single shell announced the war’s beginning. Suddenly something flashed and boomed ashore. In Fort Sumter men keeping watch saw the projectile  coming toward them, arcing clean and high, like a small comet tracing its course among the …

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Landscape of Remembrance

From Henry Hill, there’s been a Southern perspective for 150 years at Manassas National Battlefield Park. Even on weekends, Interstate 66 west of Washington, D.C., can choke up with traffic. One minute you’re thinking it would be nice to live out here, away from the capital, where there’s grass and trees and a lot less …

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‘Bread or Blood’

Armed women took to the streets to protest against Confederate injustice. On the morning of March 18, 1863, about 20 women, headed by a tall woman with a determined look, began moving through the downtown streets of Atlanta. They stopped in front of a store, and the tall woman queried the merchant pointedly about the …

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Interview with Eric A. Campbell: Answering the Challenge of Cedar Creek

Eric A. Campbell began working for the National Park Service at Gettysburg in 1987. Known for his interpretive skills, Campell added to his luster with his book “A Grand Terrible Dramma”: From Gettysburg to Petersburg: The Civil War Letters of Charles Wellington Reed (2000). Eric left Gettysburg in 2009 for Virginia, to develop programming and …

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CWT Letter from the Editor- June 2011

In the Eye of the Beholder We knew full well when we commissioned a story about the “best and worst” monuments at Gettysburg that we were opening up a can of worms (see P.42). Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, as they say, and it’s very unlikely everyone will agree with author Kim …

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Collateral Damage: ‘Squire’ Bottom Founds a Confederate Cemetery

On the morning of October 8, 1862, Union Major General Don Carlos Buell’s Army of the Ohio faced east across rolling terrain toward Confederate General Braxton Bragg’s Army of the Mississippi northwest of Perryville in Boyle County, Kentucky. Between the lines of Major General Alexander McCook’s I Corps of Buell’s army and Major General William …

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Blue and Gray: How Lee’s ‘Old War-Horse’ Gained a New Following

Two dramatic scenes stand out in James Longstreet’s Confederate career. The first occurred on the evening of September 17, 1862, after a day of ghastly combat at Antietam that almost shattered the Army of Northern Virginia. Upon seeing Longstreet, General Robert E. Lee, who earlier had described his senior lieutenant as “the staff in my …

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CWT Today- June 2011

Flora Stuart’s Battle Flag Finds a New Home The battle flag that Flora Stuart, J.E.B. Stuart’s wife, sewed for her husband is headed for permanent  display at the Texas Civil War Museum in Forth Worth after being held in the Stuart family for generations. General Stuart displayed the banner proudly in his camps. An unfortunate …

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CWT Letters from Readers- June 2011

We Turned the Tables Edward H. Bonekemper’s article “The Butcher’s Bill” in the April 2011 issue, which compared Lee’s and Grant’s casualty totals during the war, was marred by a header mixup in its two “by the numbers” tables—as noted by several readers. In the tables, Confederate casualties were listed as Union, and vice versa. …

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Not A Very Merry Christmas

Life for American troops on the frontline in Italy in late December 1943 brought anything but yuletide cheer

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Time Travel: In the Nazis’ Alpine Fortress

TRAFFIC BUZZES AROUND US as we drive along the busy highway a few miles east of Berchtesgaden, a quaint Bavarian town whose domed church steeples are retreating in the growing distance. My tour guide, Tom Lewis, turns onto a narrow road and as we travel toward Obersalzberg Mountain, where Adolf Hitler built his infamous retreat, …

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Footlocker: Undersea Mystery

In August 1945, Seaman First Class Louis C. Reynolds collected this Japanese garment off the surrendered sub I-14. Does its insignia reveal the name of the original owner?

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Insight: Gary Gallagher on the War in the West

To read Gary Gallagher’s columns about the Civil War in the West that have appeared in Civil War Times magazine, follow the links below: Bold Rebel Venture in the Desert Insight: A Conflict Apart Out West Insight: Army in the Shadows

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Insight: A Conflict Apart

Brutal battles between the U.S. Army and Indians were not considered part of the “real war.” The Civil War witnessed numerous clashes between Indians and the U.S. Army and territorial military units. Three of the most notable involved the Sioux in Minnesota in 1862-1863, the Navajo in Arizona and New Mexico in 1863-1864, and a …

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Fire for Effect: A Man of No Seasons-Walther von Seydlitz

Wehrmacht leader Walther von Seydlitz marched to the beat of his own drum—a trait that, oddly enough, would earn him no friends.

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