What start to March in the North! About 10% of the ground still has snow on it. The Sturgeon Bay channel is almost free from ice. Ahh well, we do have snow coming tonight; the weather guy says 4 to 6 inches overnight. The forecast is actually very nice, a little snow and mild temperatures, snowman weather.
The TTG next show is also coming up fast, later this week I’ll start our preparations and replace sold items. This show will be in the Milwaukee area, it’s been a long time since I did a show there and the first time I’ve done a show in Whitnall High School.
This “blog cycle” will be a little different from the previous blogs. When I started putting it together I got very involved with FDR and realized that the time of Herbert Hoover/FDR have similarities to our present. I felt the same with Andrew Jackson/Donald Trump and let that go; but I’m going to follow through with FDR idea. So, there will be two history blogs this time. I’ll post the regular “Day in History” format first. There are quite a few interesting events in the next two weeks; I would be interested in knowing the ones that catch your eye. I also kept two items separate from the “history chart”, they are listed below;
REMINDER; March 11th is the day to move your clock time ahead one hour.
March 18th – ALDER Month starts
The Alder Month (March 18th - April 14th)
Planet: Neptune
Element: Fire and Water
Symbolism: Release, Shield and Foundation, Determination, Discrimination and Inner Confidence, Royalty
Stone: Amethyst, Lapis Lazuli (understanding the mind)
Birds: Hawk, Seagulls, Raven
Color: Purple
Deity: Bran, Apollo, Odin, King Arthur
Folk Names: Owler
Ogham: Fearn
DAY in HISTORY
NAME
|
HISTORY
|
|
3/11/1952
|
Douglas Adams Birth
|
Douglas Noel Adams (11
March 1952 – 11 May 2001) was an English author, scriptwriter, essayist,
humorist, satirist and dramatist. Adams is best known as the author of The
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, which originated in 1978 as a BBC radio
comedy before developing into a "trilogy" of five books that sold
more than 15 million copies in his lifetime and generated a television
series, several stage plays, comics, a computer game, and in 2005 a feature
film. Adams's contribution to UK radio is commemorated in The Radio Academy's
Hall of Fame. Adams was known as an advocate for environmentalism and
conservation, as being a lover of fast cars, cameras, technological
innovation and the Apple Macintosh, and as a "devout atheist".
|
3/06/1474
|
Michelangelo born Birth
|
Michelangelo
Buonarroti, the greatest of the Italian Renaissance artists, is born in the small
village of Caprese on March 6, 1475. The son of a government administrator,
he grew up in Florence, a center of the early Renaissance movement, and
became an artist’s apprentice at age 13.
|
3/14/1879
|
Albert Einstein
born Birth
|
On March 14, 1879,
Albert Einstein is born, the son of a Jewish electrical engineer in Ulm,
Germany. Einstein’s theories of special and general relativity drastically
altered man’s view of the universe, and his work in particle and energy
theory helped make possible quantum mechanics and, ultimately, the atomic
bomb.
|
3/16/1751
|
James Madison Birth
|
James Madison, “Father
of the Constitution”, drafter of the Constitution, recorder of the
Constitutional Convention, author of the Federalist Papers and fourth
president of the United States, is born on a plantation in Virginia.
|
3/16/1751
|
James Madison Birth
|
Future President James
Madison is born on this day in 1751 in Port Conway, Virginia. Madison, one of
the key drafters of the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights, became
America’s fourth president in 1809. He is considered the Father of the
Constitution, though he humbly referred to its development as the work of
many heads and many hands.
|
3/17/1804
|
Jim Bridger Birth
|
Two months before
Lewis and Clark begin their epic western expedition, Jim Bridger is born in
Richmond, Virginia. Twenty years later, Bridger, heading West along the
routes Lewis and Clark pioneered, became one of the greatest mountain men of
the 19th century.
|
3/18/1858
|
Rudolf Diesel Birth
|
Rudolf Christian Karl
Diesel; Paris, France (18 March 1858 – 29 September 1913) was a German
inventor and mechanical engineer, famous for the invention of the diesel
engine, and for his mysterious death. Diesel was the subject of the 1942 film
Diesel.
|
3/9/1890
|
Vyacheslav
Molotov Birth
|
Vyacheslav
Mikhailovich Molotov, born Skryabin (9 March 1890 – 8 November 1986) was a
Soviet politician and diplomat, an Old Bolshevik, and a leading figure in the
Soviet government from the 1920s, when he rose to power as a protégé of
Joseph Stalin. Molotov served as Chairman of the Council of People's
Commissars (Premier) from 1930 to 1941 and as Minister of Foreign Affairs
from 1939 to 1949 and from 1953 to 1956. He served as First Deputy Premier
from 1942 to 1957, when he was dismissed from the Presidium of the Central
Committee by Nikita Khrushchev. Molotov retired in 1961 after several years
of obscurity. The Molotov cocktail is a term coined by the Finns during the
Winter War, as a generic name used for a variety of improvised incendiary
weapons. During the Winter War, the Soviet air force made extensive use of
incendiaries and cluster bombs against Finnish troops and fortifications.
When Molotov claimed in radio broadcasts that they were not bombing, but
rather delivering food to the starving Finns, the Finns started to call the
air bombs Molotov bread baskets. Soon they responded by attacking
advancing tanks with "Molotov cocktails," which were "a drink
to go with the food." According to Montefiore, the Molotov cocktail was
one part of Molotov's "cult of personality that the vain Premier surely
did not appreciate."
|
3/16/1903
|
Judge Roy Bean dies
|
Roy Bean, the
self-proclaimed “law west of the Pecos,” dies in Langtry, Texas. A
saloonkeeper and adventurer, Bean’s claim to fame rested on the often
humorous and sometimes-bizarre rulings he meted out as a justice of the peace
in western Texas during the late 19th century. By then, Bean was in his 50s
and had already lived a life full of rough adventures.
|
3/10/1913
|
Harriet Tubman dies
|
Harriet Tubman
(c. 1822 – March 10, 1913) Born Araminta Ross as a slave in
Dorchester County, Maryland, was an American abolitionist, humanitarian, and
an armed scout and spy for the United States Army during the American Civil
War. Born into slavery, Tubman escaped and subsequently made some thirteen
missions to rescue approximately seventy enslaved people, family and friends,
using the network of antislavery activists and safe houses known as the
Underground Railroad. She later helped abolitionist John Brown recruit men
for his raid on Harpers Ferry, and in the post-war era was an active
participant in the struggle for women's suffrage.
|
3/15/1937
|
H. P. Lovecraft dies
|
Howard Phillips
Lovecraft (August 20, 1890 – March 15, 1937) was an American writer who
achieved posthumous fame through his influential works of horror fiction. He
was virtually unknown and published only in pulp magazines before he died in
poverty, but he is now regarded as one of the most significant 20th-century
authors in his genre.
|
3/12/1945
|
Anne Frank dies
|
Annelies Marie
"Anne" Frank; (12 June 1929 – February or March 1945) was a
German-born diarist. One of the most discussed Jewish victims of the
Holocaust, she gained fame posthumously with the publication of The Diary
of a Young Girl (originally Het Achterhuis; English: The Secret
Annex), in which she documents her life in hiding from 1942 to 1944, during
the German occupation of the Netherlands in World War II. It is one of the
world's most widely known books and has been the basis for several plays and
films. Anne Frank died in a German concentration camp.
|
3/12/1955
|
Charlie Parker dies
|
Charles Parker Jr.
(August 29, 1920 – March 12, 1955), also known as Yardbird and Bird, was an
American jazz saxophonist and composer. Parker was a highly influential jazz
soloist and a leading figure in the development of bebop,[2] a
form of jazz characterized by fast tempos, virtuosic technique and advanced
harmonies. Parker was a blazingly fast virtuoso, and he introduced
revolutionary harmonic ideas including rapid passing chords, new variants of
altered chords, and chord substitutions.
|
3/10/1792
|
John Stuart dies
|
The Right
HonourableJohn Stuart, 3rd earl of Bute and advisor to the British king,
George III, dies in London. Although most Americans have never heard his
name, Lord Bute played a significant role in the politics of the British
empire that spawned the American Revolution.
|
3/13/1842
|
Henry Shrapnel dies
|
Lieutenant General
Henry Shrapnel (3 June 1761 – 13 March 1842) was a British Army officer whose
name has entered the English language as the inventor of the shrapnel
shell.
|
3/14/1883
|
Karl Marx dies
|
Karl Marx; (5 May 1818
– 14 March 1883) was a German philosopher, economist, historian, political
theorist, sociologist, journalist and revolutionary socialist.
|
3/16/0037
|
Tiberius dies
|
Roman emperor from 14
AD to 37 AD. Born Tiberius Claudius Nero, a Claudian, Tiberius was the son of
Tiberius Claudius Nero and Livia Drusilla. His mother divorced Nero and
married Octavian, later known as Augustus, in 39 BC, making him a step-son of
Octavian.
|
3/17/0180
|
Marcus Aurelius dies
|
Roman emperor from 161
to 180, the last of the so-called Five Good Emperors. He was a practitioner
of Stoicism, and his untitled writing, commonly known as Meditations,
is a significant source of the modern understanding of ancient Stoic
philosophy. It is considered by many commentators to be one of the greatest
works of philosophy.
|
3/17/0461
|
Saint Patrick dies
|
On this day in 461
A.D., Saint Patrick, Christian missionary, bishop and "Apostle of
Ireland", dies at Saul, Downpatrick, Ireland. Although little is
actually known about his life and death. Legend have him as a Roman Britain
captured by pirates. He was taken to Ireland as an adolesent and held as a
slave. He later escaped and had almost mystical experiences, became a
Catholic priest and returned as a missionary to Ireland.
|
3/18/1314
|
Jacques de Molay dies
|
23rd and last Grand
Master of the Knights Templar. Molay (or Molai) was arrested on Friday,
October 13, 1307 by King Philip IV of France. (NOTE: This was the beginning
of the "Friday the 13th curse.) Molay was in France acting a pallbearer
for his sister (and sister-in-law of King Philip) at the time. Molay was
interigated for heresy and ultimately burned at the stake in Paris, on the
Île de la Cité (Island of the City) in the Seine.
|
3/7/0332
BC
|
Aristotle dies
|
Aristotle; (384–322 BC) was an ancient Greek
philosopher and scientist born in the city of Stagira, Chalkidice, on the
northern periphery of Classical Greece. Along with Plato, Aristotle is
considered the "Father of Western Philosophy", which inherited
almost its entire lexicon from his teachings, including problems and methods
of inquiry, so influencing almost any form of knowledge known to the modern
world.
|
3/07/1876
|
The telephone is
patented
|
On this day in 1876,
29-year-old Alexander Graham Bell receives a patent for his revolutionary new
invention–the telephone.
|
3/10/1876
|
The first telephone
call
|
The first telephone
call ("Mr. Watson, come here. I want you.") was made by Alexander
Graham Bell.
|
3/7/1904
|
Japanese bomb
Vladivostok
|
Russo-Japanese War -
ends in 1905, The war concluded with the Treaty of Portsmouth, mediated by US
President Theodore Roosevelt. The complete victory of the Japanese military
surprised world observers. The consequences transformed the balance of power
in East Asia, resulting in a reassessment of Japan's recent entry onto the
world stage. It was the first major military victory in the modern era of an
Asian power over a European one. Scholars continue to debate the historical
significance of the war.
|
3/11/1907
|
The Gentlemen's
Agreement of 1907
|
The Japanese emigrants
living in the United States faced discriminatory activity, especially evident
in California, where many Japanese had settled. President Teddy Roosevelt
induces California to revoke its anti-Japanese legislation. The roots of this
problem came from Asian immigration to California boomed during the Gold Rush
of 1852, but the strict Japanese government practiced policies of isolation
that thwarted Japanese emigration.
|
3/17/1910
|
The Camp Fire Girls
|
The Camp Fire Girls
are informally founded around Lake Sebago, Maine. The Camp Fire Girls was the
first nonsectarian, multicultural organization for girls in America. Its
programs emphasize camping and other outdoor activities for youth, initially
exclusively for girls.
|
3/12/1912
|
The Girl Scouts
|
Juliette Gordon Low
founded the Girl Scouts, in Savannah, Georgia after meeting Robert
Baden-Powell, the founder of Scouting.
|
3/9/1916
|
Pancho Villa attacks
Columbus, New Mexico
|
Angered over American
support of his rivals for the control of Mexico, the peasant-born
revolutionary leader Pancho Villa attacks the border town of Columbus, New
Mexico. The U.S. government sent U.S. Army General John J. Pershing to
capture Villa, but Villa continued to evade his attackers with guerrilla
tactics during the unsuccessful, nine-month incursion into Mexican sovereign
territory (Pancho Villa Expedition). This incursion ended when the United
States entered World War I and Pershing was recalled.
|
3/8/1917
|
February Revolution
begins
|
In Russia, the
February Revolution (known as such because of Russia’s use of the Julian
calendar) begins when riots and strikes over the scarcity of food erupt in
Petrograd. One week later, centuries of czarist rule in Russia ended with the
abdication of Nicholas II, and Russia took a dramatic step closer toward
communist revolution.
|
3/6/1930
|
Birdseye frozen food
|
Clarence Birdseye
started to sell prepackaged frozen food for the first time, in Springfield,
Massachusetts. Birdseye was was a
taxidermist, an American inventor, entrepreneur, and naturalist, and
is considered to be the founder of the modern frozen food industry.
|
3/12/1930
|
Gandhi leads civil
disobedience
|
On March 12, 1930,
Indian independence leader Mohandas Gandhi begins a defiant march to the sea
in protest of the British monopoly on salt, his boldest act of civil
disobedience yet against British rule in India.
|
3/7/1933
|
The board game
Monopoly is invented.
|
Monopoly is derived
from The Landlord's Game, which was created by Elizabeth Magie in the United
States in 1903 as a way to demonstrate that an economy which rewards wealth
creation is better than one in which monopolists work under few constraints
and to promote the economic theories of Henry George and in particular his
ideas about taxation.
|
3/12/1933
|
FDR gives first
fireside chat
|
On this day in 1933,
eight days after his inauguration, President Franklin D. Roosevelt gives his
first national radio address or “fireside chat,” broadcast directly from the
White House.
|
3/12/1933
|
FDR starts Sunday
evening Fireside Chats
|
Fireside chats is the
term used to describe a series of 28 evening radio addresses given by U.S.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt between 1933 and 1944. Roosevelt spoke with
familiarity to millions of Americans about the promulgation of the Emergency
Banking Act in response to the banking crisis, the recession, New Deal initiatives,
and the course of World War II. This would be the predicessor to President
Trump's twitters.
|
3/18/1933
|
Studebaker goes
bankrupt
|
On this day in 1933,
American automaker Studebaker, then heavily in debt, goes into receivership.
The company’s president, Albert Erskine, resigned and later that year
committed suicide. Studebaker eventually rebounded from its financial
troubles, only to close its doors for the final time in 1966.
|
3/12/1938
|
Hitler announces an
Anschluss with Austria
|
On this day, Adolf
Hitler announces an “Anschluss” (union) between Germany and Austria, in fact
annexing the smaller nation into a greater Germany.
|
3/18/1939
|
150th Anniversary of
the Bill of Rights
|
Georgia finally
ratifies the Bill of Rights, 150 years after the birth of the federal
government. Connecticut and Massachusetts, the only other states to hold out,
also ratify the Bill of Rights in this year. Was there a problem, were they
"holding out"? No, there just wasn't any legal need for them to formally
ratify the BoR. The remaining 3 states symbolicly ratified the BoR at the
150th Annyversary.
|
3/8/1948
|
McCollum v. Board of
Education
|
The Supreme Court
ruled that religious instruction in public schools violated the Constitution.
The high court revisited the issue of religious instruction in Zorach v.
Clauson in 1952. The 6 to 3 ruling in the later case held that a New York
program allowing religious education during the school day was permissible,
because it did not use public school facilities or public funds.
|
3/18/1953
|
Boston Braves to
Milwaukee Braves
|
The baseball years
between the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings, then Red Caps, then Beaneaters, to
the 1912 Boston Braves were tumultuous but roots of the team arguably rival
those of the Chicago Cubs as the oldest operating organization. Moved to
Milwaukee in 1953. Moved to Atlanta in 1966.
|
3/9/1954
|
Republican senators
criticize Joseph McCarthy
|
On this day in 1954,
President Eisenhower writes a letter to his friend, Paul Helms, in which he
privately criticizes Senator Joseph McCarthy’s approach to rooting out
communists in the federal government. Senate Republicans level criticism at
fellow Republican Joseph McCarthy and take action to limit his power. The
criticism and actions were indications that McCarthy’s glory days, that began
as a publicity stunt, as the most famous investigator of communist activity
in the United States were coming to an end.
|
3/13/1954
|
Viet Minh attack
French garrison
|
A force of 40,000 Viet
Minh with heavy artillery surround 15,000 French troops at Dien Bien Phu.
French General Henri Navarre had positioned these forces 200 miles behind
enemy lines in a remote area adjacent to the Laotian border. He hoped to draw
the communists into a set-piece battle in which he hoped superior French
firepower would destroy the enemy. He underestimated the enemy.
|
3/8/1957
|
Egypt opens the Suez
Canal
|
Following Israel’s
withdrawal from occupied Egyptian territory, the Suez Canal is reopened to
international traffic. However, the canal was so littered with wreckage from
the Suez Crisis that it took weeks of cleanup by Egyptian and United Nations
workers before larger ships could navigate the waterway.
|
3/14/1958
|
The RIAA awards first
Gold Record
|
On March 14, 1958, the
RIAA awarded its first official Gold Record to Perry Como for his smash-hit
single “Catch A Falling Star.” For as long as most people have been buying
popular music on records, tapes and compact disks, the records, tapes and
disks they’ve bought have carried labels like “Certified Gold!” and “Double
Platinum!!” Those labels have been in use since the early days of the
rock-and-roll era, when a young trade organization called the Recording
Industry Association of America (RIAA) created and trademarked its
precious-metals-based scale for measuring music sales.
|
3/5/1963
|
Hula-Hoop patented
|
On this day in 1963,
the Hula-Hoop, a hip-swiveling toy that became a huge fad across America when
it was first marketed by Wham-O in 1958, is patented by the company’s
co-founder, Arthur “Spud” Melin. An estimated 25 million Hula-Hoops were sold
in its first four months of production alone. look at Wham-o history
|
3/7/1965
|
Bloody Sunday
|
Peaceful civil rights
demonstrators marching from Selma, Ala., are brutally attacked with billy
clubs and tear gas by police on the Edmund Pettus Bridge. The event is later
called “Bloody Sunday.”
|
3/13/1965
|
Eric Clapton leaves
the Yardbirds
|
In and of itself, one
man leaving one band in the middle of the 1960s might warrant little more
than a historical footnote. But what makes the departure of Eric Clapton from
the Yardbirds on March 13, 1965, more significant is the long and complicated
game of musical chairs it set off within the world of British blues rock.
When Clapton walked out on the Yardbirds, he did more than just change the
course of his own career. He also set in motion a chain of events that would
see not just one, but two more guitar giants pass through the Yardbirds on
their way toward significant futures of their own. And through the various
groups they would later form, influence, join and quit, these three guitar
heroes—Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page—would shape more than a
decade’s worth of rock and roll.
|
3/15/1965
|
Johnson calls for
equal voting rights
|
On this day in 1965,
President Lyndon B. Johnson addressed a joint session of Congress to urge the
passage of legislation guaranteeing voting rights for all. LBJ more than any
other president, fully embrassed the inequality of Black America. LBJ -
“Their cause must be our cause, too,” the president said of the Selma
activists. “Because it’s not just Negroes, but really it’s all of us, who
must overcome the crippling legacy of bigotry and injustice. And we shall
overcome.”
|
3/16/1968
|
My Lai massacre takes
place in Vietnam
|
On this day in 1968, a
platoon of American soldiers brutally slaughter more than 500 unarmed
civilians at My Lai, one of a cluster of small villages located near the
northern coast of South Vietnam.
|
3/10/1970
|
Army captain charged
with My Lai war crimes
|
The U.S. Army accuses
Capt. Ernest Medina and four other soldiers of committing crimes at My Lai in
March 1968. The charges ranged from premeditated murder to rape and the
“maiming” of a suspect under interrogation. Medina was the company commander
of Lt. William Calley and other soldiers charged with murder and numerous
crimes at My Lai 4 in Song My village.
|
3/8/1978
|
The Hitchhiker's Guide
to the Galaxy is broadcast
|
Douglas Adams' radio
play was a major success with BBC Radio 4 listeners. The book version
consisting of five novels - A Trilogy in Five Parts - became a worldwide
success.
|
3/8/1979
|
The compact disc is
presented to the public
|
The CD was developed
by Philips and Sony. The companies later collaborated to produce a standard
format and CD players.
|
3/5/1981
|
The home computer ZX81
is launched
|
The ZX81 is a home
computer that was produced by Sinclair Research and manufactured in Scotland
by Timex Corporation. The computer had 1KB on board memory and connected to a
UHF TV, sold over 1.5 million units.
|
3/11/1997
|
Paul McCartney
knighted
|
On this day in 1997,
Paul McCartney, a former member of the most successful rock band in history,
The Beatles, was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II for his “services to music.”
The 54-year-old lad from Liverpool became Sir Paul in a centuries-old
ceremony of pomp and solemnity at Buckingham Palace in central London. Fans
waited outside in a scene reminiscent of Beatlemania of the 1960s. Crowds screamed
as McCartney swept through the gates in his chauffeur-driven limousine and he
answered with a thumbs-up.
|
3/06/1857
|
Dred Scott v. Sandford
|
On this day in 1857,
the United States Supreme Court issues a decision in the Dred Scott case,
affirming the right of slave owners to take their slaves into the Western
territories, slaves could not be American citizens and could not sue the
federal government, thereby negating the doctrine of popular sovereignty and
severely undermining the platform of the newly created Republican Party.
Proponents of slavery hoped that this would settle the "slave
issue", however it created such a backlash that many view it as a
indirect catalyst for the Civil War.
|
3/06/1899
|
Bayer patents aspirin
|
On this day in 1899,
the Imperial Patent Office in Berlin registers Aspirin, the brand name for
acetylsalicylic acid, on behalf of the German pharmaceutical company
Friedrich Bayer & Co. look at history of company. A precursor to aspirin
in the form of leaves from the willow tree has been used for its health
effects for at least 2,400 years.
|
3/08/1781
|
Spanish siege of
Pensacola begins
|
After successfully
capturing British positions in Louisiana and Mississippi, Spanish General
Bernardo de Galvez, commander of the Spanish forces in North America, turns
his attention to the British-occupied city of Pensacola, Florida, on this day
in 1781. General Galvez and a Spanish naval force of more than 40 ships and
3,500 men landed at Santa Rosa Island and begin a two-month siege of British
occupying forces that becomes known as the Battle of Pensacola.
|
3/08/1782
|
Pennsylvania
militiamen senselessly murder Patriot allies
|
On this day in 1782,
160 Pennsylvania militiamen murder 96 Christian Indians–39 children, 29 women
and 28 men–by hammering their skulls with mallets from behind as they kneel
unarmed, praying and singing, in their Moravian Mission at Gnadenhuetten in
the Ohio Country. The Patriots then piled their victims’ bodies in mission
buildings before burning the entire community to the ground. Two boys managed
to survive, although one had lost his scalp to his attackers. Although the
militiamen claimed they were seeking revenge for Indian raids on their
frontier settlements, the Indians they murdered had played no role in any
attack.
|
3/08/1893
|
Emmet Dalton goes to
prison
|
Emmet Dalton, the only
survivor of the Dalton Gang’s disastrous attempt to rob two Kansas banks,
begins serving a life sentence in the Kansas State Penitentiary.
|
3/09/1841
|
Supreme Court rules on
Amistad mutiny
|
At the end of a
historic case, the U.S. Supreme Court rules, with only one dissent, that the
African slaves who seized control of the Amistad slave ship had been illegally
forced into slavery, and thus are free under American law. What was the
effect on history?
|
3/09/1862
|
U.S.S. Monitor battles
C.S.S. Virginia
|
On this day in 1862,
one of the most famous naval battles in American history occurs as two
ironclads,the U.S.S.Monitor and the C.S.S. Virginiafight to a draw off
Hampton Roads, Virginia. The ships pounded each other all morning but their
armor plates easilydeflected the cannon shots, signaling a new era of steam-powered
iron ships.
|
3/10/0049 BC
|
Julius Caesar crosses
the Rubicon
|
The Great Roman Civil
War, also known as Caesar's Civil War transitioned the “Roman Republic” to
the Roman Empire. Caesar, just bac from the Gallic Wars, formed an alliance
with Pompey, and Marcus Licinius Crassus establishing the First Triumvirate
to rule Rome. Caesar soon advocated reforms that threatened the Senate. The
Senate lead by Pompey, fearful of Caesar, asserted their authority over the
army. Caesar retaliated took the army and marched on Rome (crossed the
Rubicon), Pompey fled to Rome and organized an army to stop Caesar and lost
|
3/10/0515 BC
|
The Second Jewish
temple in Jerusalem is completed
|
According to the Book
of Ezra, construction of the Second Temple was authorized by Cyrus the Great
and began in 538 BCE, after the fall of the Babylonian Empire the year
before. It was completed 23 years later, on the third day of Adar, in the
sixth year of the reign of Darius the Great (12 March 515 BCE), dedicated by the
Jewish governor Zerubbabel.
|
3/10/1776
|
"Common
Sense" is published
|
““Common Sense” is a
pamphlet written by Thomas Paine in 1776. The pamphlet presents
straightforward arguments for American Independence and a democratic
republic. The pamphlet is written in persuasive, easy to understand language.
It addressed his points with prevailing Protestant beliefs, calling forth a
clear American identity. It was called "the most incendiary and popular
pamphlet of the entire revolutionary era".
|
3/11/1779
|
Congress establishes
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
|
On this day in 1779,
Congress establishes the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to help plan, design
and prepare environmental and structural facilities for the U.S. Army. Made
up of civilian workers, members of the Continental Army and French officers,
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers played an essential role in the critical
Revolutionary War battles at Bunker Hill, Saratoga and Yorktown.
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3/11/1888
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Great Blizzard of ’88
hits East Coast
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On this day in 1888,
one of the worst blizzards in American history strikes the Northeast, killing
more than 400 people and dumping as much as 55 inches of snow in some areas.
New York City ground to a near halt in the face of massive snow drifts and
powerful winds from the storm. At the time, approximately one in every four
Americans lived in the area between Washington D.C. and Maine, the area
affected by the Great Blizzard of 1888.
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3/13/1868
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Impeachment trial of
Andrew Johnson begins
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For the first time in
U.S. history, the impeachment trial of an American president gets underway in
the U.S. Senate. President Andrew Johnson, reviled by the
Republican-dominated Congress for his views on Reconstruction, stood accused
of having violated the controversial Tenure of Office Act, passed by Congress
over his veto in 1867.
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3/15/0044 BC
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The ides of March:
Julius Caesar is murdered
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Julius Caesar,
the”dictator for life”of the Roman Empire, is murdered by his own senators at
a meeting in a hall next to Pompey’s Theatre. The conspiracy against Caesar
encompassed as many as sixty noblemen, including Caesar’s own protege, Marcus
Brutus.
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3/15/0933
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Henry the Fowler
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Henry the Fowler, (876
– 2 July 936) was the duke of Saxony from 912 and the elected king of East
Francia (became Germany) from 919 until his death in 936. As the first
non-Frankish king, he established the Ottonian Dynasty of kings and emperors.
Henry successfully protected East Francia from invaders from the East. Henry
the Fowler routs the raiding Magyars at Merseburg, Germany. Magyars were a
Hungarian clan from the Ural Mountains.
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3/15/1783
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Washington puts an end
to the Newburgh Conspiracy
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On the morning of
March 15, 1783, General George Washington makes a surprise appearance at an
assembly of army officers at Newburgh, New York, to calm the growing
frustration and distrust they had been openly expressing towards Congress in
the previous few weeks. Angry with Congress for failing to honor its promise
to pay them and for its failure to settle accounts for repayment of food and
clothing, officers began circulating an anonymous letter condemning Congress
and calling for a revolt.
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3/17/1762
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First St. Patrick’s
Day parade
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In New York City, the
first parade honoring the Catholic feast day of St. Patrick, the patron saint
of Ireland, is held by Irish soldiers serving in the British army.
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3/18/1766
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Parliament repeals the
Stamp Act
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The Stamp Act was a
taxation measure on all printed materials it was enacted to raise revenues
for a standing British army in America. Parliament argued that the Colonials
did not own land and therefore were represented by the colonial British
landowners. The Colonials refuted this by pointing out “the relation between
the British Americans, and the English electors, is a knot too infirm to be
relied on.” (i.e. not enough in common between Parliament and the Colonials
to justify imposing the law without the consent of the Colonials). The phrase
“No taxation without representation” was coined and survived to the
Revolutionary War.
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3/18/1834
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Tolpuddle Martyrs
banished to Australia
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In England, six
English agricultural laborers are sentenced to seven years of banishment to
Australia’s New South Wales penal colony for their trade union activities.
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3/18/1852
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Wells and Fargo start
shipping and banking company
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On this day in 1852,
in New York City, Henry Wells and William G. Fargo join with several other
investors to launch their namesake business.
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3/18/1881
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Barnum and Bailey’s
Greatest Show on Earth
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Barnum and Bailey’s
Greatest Show on Earth opens in Madison Square Garden.
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3/6/1836
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The Alamo falls to
Mexican forces.
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Following a 13-day
siege, Mexican troops under President General Antonio López de Santa Anna
launched an assault on the Alamo Mission near San Antonio de Béxar
(modern-day San Antonio, Texas, United States), killing all of the Texian
defenders.
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3/6/1869
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The first periodic
table of chemical elements is presented
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Dmitri Mendeleev
presented the system to the Russian Chemical Society on that day.
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3/6/1884
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Susan B. Anthony
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Over 100 suffragists,
led by Susan B. Anthony, present President Chester A. Arthur with a demand
that he voice support for female suffrage.
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