Good morning,
Quote of the day:
"Life is partially what we make of it, and partially what is made of it by the friends we choose."
Anonymous
Back in the 1740's Long Cane creek was the buffer between the British colonies and the Cherokee nation. This landmark is roughly 7 miles north of present day McCormick, South Carolina near the small town of Troy. The British used this landmark to persuade the Cherokees to drive the French settlers west of this creek. After the French were driven out, a parcel of land was given as a land grant by the King of England to be used by English and Irish settlers, mostly the Calhoun, Norris, and Pickens extended families. A settlement was established on the banks of Long Cane creek. The Cherokees were not pleased. They thought the act of driving out the French would secure their borders, they were wrong. A series of harassment raids on the settlement led to about 150 settlers giving up. They packed up their oxcarts and headed to Augusta, Georgia to get away from the fierce Cherokees. They had gone just a few miles when they were bogged down fording a creek, then a Cherokee raiding party of about 100 mounted warriors fell upon them. There were about 40 mature males among the settlers but their weapons were packed in the oxcarts. 26 of the settlers were killed outright, 68 were captured and nothing was ever found about them to this day. Several adolescents ran into the woods and escaped to be rescued a week or two later. One 5 year old girl name Anne Calhoun was kidnapped and lived with the Cherokees for 12 years before being released. She was able to marry a settler and spent the rest of her days with her husband in the Augusta, Georgia area. One of the survivors of this massacre was 17 year old Andrew Pickens. This man started a war of vengeance against the Cherokees that was unmatched in ferocity and brutality . Andrew Pickens later on became a much heralded Revolutionary War hero. The Pickens name is well know in northwestern South Carolina if not the entire 13 original colonies.
Over in rural Lancaster County, South Carolina there had been a long simmering family feud. On Christmas night it all came to a head when 33 year old Ronnie Wallace was attacked by four other men wielding sticks and 2 X 4's. The blows were effective and Ronnie was killed. The police ran down two of the attackers and the other two turned themselves in....Peace on earth and goodwill toward men.
Over in Cowpens, South Carolina a 30 year old man got in an argument with his 70 year old mother. He finally grabbed her by her wrists and threw her on her bed whereupon Mom unlimbered a .357 Mag and shot her boy in the hind leg. The boy is taken to the local hospital with the cops patting their feet waiting for him to be released. He was eventually released and the cops immediately arrested him and he is at this moment cooling his heels in the joint. Peace on Earth..........
Good news:
Back in 2006 Cassy Rivera from New York City noticed a blurriness in her right eye and soon thereafter in her left eye. A while later she was totally blind. She never saw her child that was born soon after she went blind. The doctors told her that there was a very risky operation for her disease but the cost was $57,000. She found out that her Medicaid would only pay for half of the cost. Her condition was made known to a famous eye surgeon. He went for a visit to Cassy and offered to give her the operation and his clinic would spring for whatever Medicaid would not cover. The day before Christmas the doctor slowly took off the gauze from around her eyes. Cassy held her eyes closed for at least 10 minutes afraid of what she would see...or not see. She finally opened her eyes and let out a scream heard in Yonkers. She could see. Waiting for her in the waiting room was her two year old daughter that she had never seen and the rest of her family. She grabbed her little girls face and they stared into each others eyes. Cassy said that this is the greatest present anyone could ever get...I agree...Peace on Earth and good will toward men.
This date in history December 30
1916 Earlier Czar Nicholas of Russia and his wife the Czarina Alexandra fell under the spell of a holy man named Rasputin. The Czar and Czarina had a son that was a hemophiliac and had suffered a cut and no one could stop the bleeding. Rasputin was called and somehow he was able to stop the bleeding and saved the boy’s life. From this time on Rasputin was in favor with the royal family. In addition to being a holy man, Rasputin was known to be a heavy drinker and skank chaser. Well, the best possible thing happened for Rasputin. Czar Nicholas was called away to a foreign war. This left the Czarina in control of Russia and Rasputin in charge of her. Eventually the other member of royalty got fed up with Rasputin and decided to cap this bastard. A group of them invited Rasputin to dinner in a fancy mansion. What Rasputin did not know was that his food and drink had been heavily poisoned but he swallowed everything with great relish with no apparent ill effects so they shot him. Rasputin falls and as the other try to drag him out of the room, Rasputin gets up and knocks one of them out and then runs outside trying to escape. He was shot once again and fell face down. The others jump on top of him, tied his hands and feet and threw him in a near freezing river never to be seen again. The Czarina was heartbroken at the loss of her lover but the Czar was ecstatic.
1853 Earlier the United States Secretary of War under Franklin Pearce, Jefferson Davis (later to become the President of the Confederate States of America) sent the Ambassador to Mexico named James Gadsden to visit with the President of Mexico, General Santa Ana. Gadsden’s job was to settle the squabbles the United States had been having with Mexico about the lands in the southwestern area of the present day United States. Gadsden and Santa Ana set down with a map and drew up a new border for northern Mexico and the southwestern United States that formed the area known as the Gadsden Purchase and that map became the present day southern border of Arizona and New Mexico. We offered Santa Ana $12 million that was later lowered to $10 million. The United States felt that this strip of land was vital for the development of a transcontinental railroad. In 1861 the “big four” in railroading, Collis Huntington, Leland Stanford, Mark Hopkins and Charles Crocker got together and decided that a railroad was to be built on the newly acquired land and make it a branch of the Central Pacific Railroad known later as the immortal Southern Pacific Railroad.
1862 Earlier the United States ironclad U.S.S. Monitor had dueled with the Confederate ironclad C.S.S. Virginia (originally known as the Merrimac) on the James River near Hampton Roads. They battled to a draw but this duel signaled the end of wooden warships. The Monitor was used also to support U.S. General George B. McClellan’s ill fated Peninsular Campaign. The Monitor was effective in the relatively clam waters of bays and rivers, but it was decided that it would be very effective in the attempt to capture the city of Charleston, South Carolina so they started towing it down the east coast with the side wheeler U.S.S. Rhode Island. Very early on the Monitor started leaking around its turret but the onboard pumps were adequate to keep her afloat. Then they ran across a storm near Cape Hatteras, North Carolina and the leaks got worse to the point that the pumps were overcome and the Monitor began sinking. On this date Captain Bankhead of the Monitor signaled the Rhode Island that they were going to abandon ship so the Rhode Island pulled as close as safety allowed and started taking aboard the crew of the Monitor. But there were 16 sailors aboard the Monitor that were not about to get up on the pitching deck of the Monitor and they went to the bottom with the Monitor. A few years ago the remains of the Monitor was located and photographed.
1803 One of the most important but least known Patriots in America dies on this date. Francis Lewis was born in Llandaff, Wales and immigrated to the colonies when he was 22. He started a very lucrative business supplying provisions to the British army in the colonies. He was an aide to General Hugh Mercer during the Seven Years War and was captured by the Oswego Indians and sent to France as a prisoner of war. Upon his return he was granted 3,000 acres by the New York Government as a reward for his services. In 1765 he sold his mercantile business and retired to Whitestone, Long Island. His retirement gave him a lot of time to get involved in the Revolution. He was a member of Congress, a signatory of the Declaration of Independence, a member of those wild and crazy guys, the Sons of Liberty who made themselves famous at the Boston Tea Party. He served as a member of the Continental Congress until 1779 when he resigned and became a commissioner of the Board of the Admiralty. His patriotism came at a tall price, however. In 1776 the British destroyed his estate on Long Island and captured his wife and kept her as a prisoner of war. The problem with this was that George Washington had no British women to trade for Mrs. Lewis. It was reported that the British kept her without a change of clothes or a bath for some time and it affected her health. The destruction of his estate adversely affected Francis Lewis financially from which he never recovered completely. The time his wife spent as a prisoner of war affected her health to a point that she never completely recovered.
Born today:
1822 US theologian William Alger. He said “A man makes up in wrath what he lacks in reason.” That is a deep truth, ya’ll.
1895 English writer L.P. Hartley He said “Memory is a foreign country, they do things differently there.” Indeed they do.
1982 Canadian actress Kristin Kreuk. She said “Just because I don’t do bad things does not mean that I don’t have bad thoughts.” I have bad thoughts all the time, Kristin.
Died today:
1970 US Boxer Sonny Liston. He said “Newspaper men ask dumb questions. They squint at the sun and ask if it is shining.” Sonny was not the sharpest knife in the drawer.
2003 US writer John Dunne. He said “Writing is like hard labor of the mind, like laying pipe.” I am going to let this one alone.
2006 Iraqi despot Saddam Hussein. After he was caught he said “If you want to execute me, I will bring my own f---k---g rope.” He did not have to, the US provided one.
Thanks for listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow.
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