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1932 Hitler refuses President von Hindenburg's proposal to become vice-chancellor of Germany.
1940 Hermann Goering's "Adler Tag" (Eagle day); 45-48 German aircraft shot down over Southern England (Battle of Britain). |
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Regarding the battle of Britain, Len Deighton's "Fighter" is a real eye opener, and also a very good book. Trying to drive England into withdrawing their declaration of war did not work out as planned.. but it only did because England made less mistakes than Germany. I am also thinking very different of Churchill now than ten years ago. Just of all the "winner" and architect Hugh Dowding was discharged. But the man who made it all possible was another scot, Mr. Robert Watson-Watts and his idea of a "chain home" radar. Germany just underestimated it. On the other hand, since Hitler had no real intention to invade or fight England, this general attitude could also be found in the german air force. |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tear_down_this_wall! Quote:
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1863 Submarine "HL Hunley" arrives in Charleston on railroad cars.
1900 The Boxer Rebellion: In China, the Empress, her family and court retainers flee while foreign troops move through Peking in an attempt to quell the rebellion. 1939 13 Stukas dive into the ground during a disastrous air-practice at Neuhammer. No survivors. 1940 Heavy dogfights above England: 161 German aircraft shot down against 34 British losses. 1944 German field marshal Günther von Kluge vanishes for one day; he killed himself on 19th in the aftermath of the attempt to kill Hitler. 1945 Victory over Japan Day, the Japanese surrender and the end of WWII is announced in Japan (due to time zones 14th Aug in the Americas). |
Have a blackfaced heart and quit ronan' around
1812: The Fort Dearborn massacre takes place near Lake Michigan on what is now 18th St. Chicago....only it wasn't a massacre. It was a single 10-15 minute battle in two wars The Pan-Indian uprising under Tecumseh and early round of the War of 1812 when British interests had made allies of the western native Americans. (British politics!??) http://www.trbimg.com/img-502ae599/t...g-20120814/600Led by 400 Pottawattamie warriors, the battle lasted 10 minutes. American Legion Captain Wells, a longtime veteran and Indian agent, adopted and raised by Indians, knew the Indians would attack and had painted his face black: a sign of bravery, a sign to the Pottawattamie that he knew their intentions, and as a sign that he knew he was going to die. As the evacuated garrison walked down the beach, Wells rode in advance to keep an eye on the Pottawattomie, and he was one of the first to go down when they attacked. Wells disengaged from the main battle and attempted to ride to the aid of those at the wagons. In doing so, he was brought down; according to eyewitness accounts he fought off many Native Americans before being killed, and a group of Indians immediately cut out his heart and ate it to absorb his (raw:huh:)courage...https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Wells_(soldier)https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...soldier%29.jpg Ensign Ronan, also dying bravely leading 90 civilians to safety, was the first commissioned West Point Corps of Cadets graduate to die in battle. A sculpture: "Defense" mounted adjacent to the site of Fort Dearborn, centered the bas-relief on an unnamed junior officer who was depicted performing the role — protection of civilians — that Ronan tried to carry out in reality. Ronan Park a 3-acre park located at 3000 West Argyle Street on the Chicago River, is named in his honor.https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...nry_Hering.jpgAmerican loss: 26 regulars, all 12 of the militia, two women and twelve children killed, with the other 28 regulars, seven women and six children taken prisoner...some would later be ransomed. Seen from the perspective of the War of 1812, and the larger conflict between Britain and France which precipitated it, this was a very small and brief battle, but it ultimately had larger consequences in the territory. Arguably, for the Native Americans, it was an example of "winning the battle but losing the war": the U.S. later pursued a policy of removing the tribes from the region ie The Northwest Territories,https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...y-usa-1787.png resulting in the Treaty of Chicago, which was marked at its culmination in 1835 by the last great Native American war dance in the then nascent city. Thereafter, the Pottawatomie and other tribes were moved further west. Fort Dearborn was rebuilt in 1816. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Fort_Dearborn (<one of five sources:D)
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1281: In his second attempt at invading Japan, Mongol emperor Kublai Kahn has assembled 140,000 troops aboard 4,400 ships. Earlier in the year the Japanese inflicted heavy losses on the Mongol invaders, first at Tsushima, and again at Shikano and Iki Islands. On August 15th the Mongol fleet was hit by a monster typhoon, now called Kamikaze, or Divine Wind. Most of the Chinese craft were flat-bottomed coastal boats not designed for ocean use, and around 4,000 of them were destroyed with the loss of 110,000 troops.
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a3...pssjxt7ydv.jpg https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongol_invasions_of_Japan |
1819 Peterloo Massacre, Manchester, England: cavalry charges demonstrators.15 people killed and 400–700 injured.
1944 First flight of the Junkers Ju 287. 2012 Wikileaks founder, Julian Assange is granted political asylum by Ecuador. |
1940 Hitler orders total blockade of Great Britain.
1941 German raider attacks Dutch SS Kota Nopan. 1943 498 British bombers attack Peenemunde (development base for the V weapons). 1945 Korea is divided into North and South Korea along the 38th parallel. 1998 Monica Lewinsky scandal: US President Bill Clinton admits in taped testimony that he had an "improper physical relationship" with White House intern Monica Lewinsky. On the same day he admits before the nation that he "misled people" about his relationship. |
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but along comes Monica and dashes that hope. I think God sent a Jewish brunette to entice Bill Clinton ... the devil would've sent a blonde. :D |
The true nature of party-animal bubbas!
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Minnesota NICE??? Enjoy that SPAM BBY!
1985!: 1400 meatpackers walk off the job for a year at Austen Minnesota at the Geo A Hormel Plant in a bitter strike that lasts a year.Hormel froze wages in 1977. So by 1985, when the company demanded a 23 percent wage cut on top of that wage freeze, workers walked off the job in protest.
The strike was declared by Local P-9, but the UFCW parent union did not support it. The UFCW ultimately struck a deal with Hormel management, seized control of Local P-9, and removed the local union leaders, actions that challenged the credibility of the UFCW in the eyes of many in the larger labor movement. The strike gained national attention and led to a widely publicized boycott of Hormel products. (Thank god there was no drop in Spam supplies to create misery at:subsim:) In the course of their struggle, the P-9ers took on Hormel, the local authorities, the courts, the press, their own national, and the National Guard. The union mobilized its members in a display of democracy not seen in the labor movement for many years. Union activists poured into Austin to participate in the pickets, demonstrations and rallies. It became a fight for the rank and file throughout the nation. Many strikers' lives became transformed. As they entered into the field of political activity, these "typical workers" became class-struggle militants, willing to face jails and bullets in their fight for social justice. They learned to look beyond their own narrow economic interests, viewing their struggle as part of an international movement of workers against all their employers. After six months, a significant number of strikebreakers crossed the picket line, provoking a vigorous response. On January 21, 1986, Minn. Gov. Rudy Perpich called in the National Guard to protect the strikebreakers. This brought protests against the governor, and the National Guard withdrew. People were shocked that the National Guard and the State Police would haul people off to jail, would bust the windshields out of cars that were trying to block exit ramps off I-90, that they were very rough with people who were trying to commit what they considered in a very Martin Luther King-kind of way, to be a principled, civil disobedience. https://img.apmcdn.org/d6c9816a660dc...0100803-s3.jpg http://peoplesworld.org/assets/Uploads/dragonmural.jpg In the midst of the fray, a P-9 leader, Denny Mealy, and muralist Mike Alewitz led the workers in painting an exuberant mural on their union hall which came to symbolize the strike. The union dedicated the mural to then-imprisoned Nelson Mandela, at a time when he was still being vilified as a terrorist by Reagan's government. After the strike ended, the national union wiped out the memory of the historic struggle by sandblasting the mural off the wall. By October of 1986 it was gone. The green dragon of capitalism featured in the mural was recreated by Alewitz in another mural commissioned in 1990 for the Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research in Los Angeles, and still exists. A song, entitled "P-9," was written by Dave Pirner of the Minneapolis band Soul Asylum. The song was included on their 1989 album "Clam Dip & Other Delights." https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZlDACRwRVz0 |
1940 Battle of Britain - 'The hardest day" Luftwaffe lose 69 aircraft, the RAF 68 in largest combined losses during an air battle.
1941 German concentration camp Amersfoort opens. 1943 Final convoy of Jews from Salonika, Greece, arrives at Auschwitz. 1943 Otto Skorzeny's Heinkel-111 shot down at Sardinia. |
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