Musings
and History
Finally
there is an independent news agency. On line it is is
v2.oann.com.
There is a TV news channel also but in this area it is only on
Direct/AT&T. They ask that you call your provider (Charter
888-438-2427) and request them to carry the OAN network. I read them
on line and it appears that they have no agenda or an ax to
grind...it is very refreshing and sorely needed.
Quote
of the day:
When
told that he had died she said "It made me sad but I am grateful
that I was able to spend so many years with the coolest man on the
planet."
Kim Bush, long
time girlfriend of Ken "The Snake" Stabler
I
was in Pensacola right after Snake retired and he hung out on the
Redneck Riviera a lot and that being the Alabama gulf coast around
Gulf Shores and vicinity. I think he was at the very first “Mullet
Toss” at the immortal “Flora-Bama” Lounge. I was there once
when he was there at the same table with the ex-wife of George
Wallace and a few bikers from the Screwballs Motorcycle Club. The
Flora-Bama was and is a major stop on the gulf coast between New
Orleans and Panama City. Snake kept his yacht/fishing boat at the
Bear Point Marina near Orange Beach, Al. and was named “Honky
Tonk”. There was very few people that ever existed that enjoyed
life any more than Kenneth Stabler. Ken died of colon cancer in a
hospital in Gulfport, Mississippi on July 8, 2015, he was 69 years
old. He was inducted into the Football Hall Of Fame the next year.
His eulogy was given by his grandson and Fred Beletnikoff (also in
the Hall of Fame), one of Snakes favorite receivers amid many tears
by both.
This
Date in History May 29
1780
On this date British Colonel Banastre Tarleton led a cavalry
charge of mostly Loyalists (American colonists who remained loyal to
King George) against an out gunned and out manned Patriot force near
the Waxhaws, a village on the South Carolina/North Carolina border
south of what is now Charlotte, North Carolina. The Patriots did not
have a chance and surrendered but Tarleton ignored the signs of
surrender and kept ordering the shooting and bayoneting of the
Patriots. The end result was 113 Patriots killed and 203 captured
whilst Tarleton’s troops suffered 17 killed or wounded. This event
was from then own known as “giving Tarleton Quarter”. Even
though it was a rout, word of this atrocity spread like wildfire
throughout the Carolinas and lit a fire of revenge under every
Patriot that heard it especially a South Carolinian name Thomas
Sumter, known to the British as “The Gamecock”. Sumter began a
bloody reprisal against the South Carolina Loyalist that could be
interpreted as nothing less than a civil war because it meant killing
your neighbors if they were loyal to King George and kill them he
did. Sumter was originally from Virginia the son of Welch immigrant
parents. Through a series of adventures that would warrant another
lesson, Sumter ended up in central South Carolina with no money. He
eventually married a wealthy widow and opened several successful
businesses and an active plantation near the town of Stateburg
located about 15 miles west of present day Sumter, South Carolina.
Sumter was made Brigadier General of the local militia and was a
proven warrior with the outbreak of the Revolutionary War. He was
instrumental in driving Tarleton and Cornwallis out of the Carolinas
and into the waiting arms of George Washington and the Continental
Army at Yorktown. Again he was one of those people that ended up at
the right place at the right point in time to allow this melting pot
of immigrants to congeal into the great nation we are today. It was
no accident.
1953
On this day with a stupendous display of strength and stamina, New
Zealander Edmund Hillary and Nepalese guide Tensing Norgay reach the
summit of Mount Everest for the first time by anyone. Hillary and
Norgay were part of an 11 man climbing team who reached a base camp
at the elevation of 27,400 feet and Hillary and Norgay made the
assault on 29,030 foot summit alone. Then the hard part began...the
descent. The two had traversed near vertical walls on the way up,
now they had to negotiate them coming down. But they prevailed and
one of the greatest feats of exploration and adventure in history
came to an end.
1914
On this date the ocean liner “Empress of Ireland” departed
Quebec Harbor, Canada into the Saint Lawrence Seaway headed to
Liverpool, England. Since the sinking of the Titanic the shipboard
safety devices and procedures had been greatly improved. The Saint
Lawrence was very foggy on this spring morning and the Norwegian
freighter “Storstad” was nearby but the both the captains of the
Empress and the Storstad were aware of each other and indeed had each
other in sight. Through a series of miss-interpreted signals the two
ships finally engaged in a fatal embrace when the Storstad plunged 15
feet into the starboard side of the Empress. It took the Empress
just 14 minutes to find the bottom and took more than 1500 passengers
with her. There would have been more but the heroic efforts of the
crew of the still floating Storstad resulted in the saving of scores
of passengers in the frigid waters.
1864
After a series of running battles that began near the Wilderness
and swinging south to the James River, US General Ulysses Grant has
been out maneuvered and out guessed by CSA General Robert E, Lee.
After leaving the Wilderness Grant headed as quickly as he could for
the Spotsylvania Courthouse in Virginia only to find CSA General
James Longstreet and his Corps already there and dug in. A fierce
and bloody battle ensued with Grant withdrawing after receiving a
severe ass-kicking. Grant’s intention was to get between Lee and
Richmond and Lee knew this. It was no mystery and Lee simply guessed
where Grant was going to try to make this happen. On this date Grant
reached the Topopotomoy Creek only to be greeted by the grinning
rebels looking down on his army from the bluffs above. The
frustrated Grant slid further south to a small crossroad called Cold
Harbor only to find that Lee had indeed out-guessed and outmaneuvered
him and had the Confederates dug in and waiting. The exasperated and
angry Grant flung his army against the Confederate embrasures only to
have his army chopped to pieces by aimed rifles/muskets and
artillery. This is one of the bloodiest battles ever fought in North
America for its duration. Grant had to admit defeat once again and
withdrew but he knew that he had almost an unlimited supply of
replacements and Lee had none. It was a war of attrition after that.
1843
American explorer John Fremont departed Saint Louis, Missouri on his
second expedition of discovery. He had just returned from the first
one just a few months before. Fremont was fortunate to have a guide
with the skill and knowledge of Kit Carson on the first expedition
and he was scheduled to meet with Carson in Wyoming to guide once
again. This time they were going to explore the lands in the Wind
River mountain Range and then on into Oregon. They ended up on the
Pacific coast across from what is now Portland, Oregon. Fremont was
to return via the Oregon Trail but decided that that was not
adventurous enough and turned south to traverse the Sierra Nevada
range. This proved to be a bad move because they almost got trapped
in the snows and ended up eating some of their horses and had it not
been for Kit Carson they could not have make it to Sutter’s Fort
and safety. After restocking and refitting that headed back to Saint
Louis via the California Trail. His descriptions of what the saw was
instrumental in lighting the flame of adventure for thousands of
immigrants that made the journey to Oregon and other lands in the
American west.
Born today:
1736
American patriot Patrick Henry. He said “If this be treason, then
let’s make the most of it.” Yet another fire breather in the
right place at the right time.
1898
Canadian actress Beatrice Lilly. She said “One time Noel Coward
and I was staying in London, adjoining rooms, of course. I felt
mischievous and knocked on his door. He said “Who is it” and I
lowered my voice and said “It is the hotel detective, do you have a
gentlemen in your room?” Noel said “Just a minute, I will ask
him.”
1917
President John F. Kennedy. He said, “I know nothing for sure
except the fact that I know nothing for sure.” Sound wisdom
Thanks for listening I can hardly
wait until tomorrow
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