Musings
and History
Quote
of the day:
“All
of us have had a crush on a teacher. For me it is my wife's aerobics
instructor.”
Brian
Kelly
Trivia
question of the day
On
the long running TV show “Gunsmoke” what was the name of Matt
Dillon's horse? Answer at the end of the blog.
This Date in
History November 27
1746
Robert R. (R.R.) Livingston is born on this date at his father’s
estate, Clermont,
on the banks of the Hudson River in upstate New York. R.R. was born
into a family of the wealthy and privileged. In 1766 R.R.’s uncle
Lord Livingston had been treating his tenant farmers severely and
they revolted. They attacked the Livingston
Manor
in force and would have prevailed had not the English Army had not
intervened and the attack was stopped. However, in 1777 the British
army burned the Livingston estates of Clermont
and Belvedere
in retaliation for the Livingston’s siding with the Patriots in
their search for independence and freedom. R.R. graduated from
King’s
College
or present day Columbia.
He was the Secretary of Foreign Affairs during the time of the
Articles of Federation. He was a contributor in the phrasing of the
Declaration
of
Independence
but was not there for the signing. As he was the Chief Judge of New
York, it was he that issued the oath if Office to George Washington
at his first inauguration. He was selected as Chancellor of the
state of New York and from that time on he was known as “The
Chancellor” for the rest of his days. It was Livingston that was
present in France trying to negotiate the sale of the port of New
Orleans to the fledgling United States during the Jefferson
administration. At the time, France was governed by Napoleon
Bonaparte. Napoleon had dreamed of coming ashore in New Orleans and
conquering all of North America but he knew that war with England was
on the near horizon and he could not fight a war of two fronts that
far apart. After an offer to buy New Orleans was issued to
Talleyrand, Napoleon’s chief of staff, Talleyrand responded with
“How much will you give me for it all? He was talking about all of
the French lands in North America except for Canada. Well, R.R. and
John Jay about peed their pants and asked for some time to come up
with an amount. This was the beginnings of the Louisiana Purchase
which all but doubled the lands of the United States. R.R.’s soul
departed this earth on February 26, 1813.
1863
On this date Confederate Raider John Hunt Morgan and most of his
staff, having previously been captured, tunneled out of the US Prison
Camp in Columbus, Ohio and escaped back to Tennessee. Morgan was a
native Kentuckian but when Kentucky did not secede, he moved to
Alabama and offered his services to the Confederate Army. He was
assigned the task of making raids on US installations in Kentucky
since he was familiar with the area. Later he felt his Wheaties and
went into Ohio and raided several US facilities. The down side was
that when he came back to his place of crossing the Ohio River back
into Kentucky, there was an overwhelming US cavalry unit waiting for
him. After an extended chase, Morgan and most of his staff were
captured. After returning to Tennessee, Morgan assembled another
cavalry unit and began his raids again. Ironically, a year later
Morgan’s cavalry unit was the victim of a surprise US cavalry
attack near Greeneville, Tennessee. Morgan was killed trying to
organize a defense. His attacks in Kentucky and Ohio did little
logistic damage but did enormous good for the morale of the
Confederacy.
1978
On this date former San Francisco city supervisor Dan White walked
into city hall and killed Mayor George Moscone and supervisor Harvey
Milk. He shot them both several times with a 9mm automatic pistol.
It seems that earlier Dan White has not happy with the way things
were going in city hall and had resigned. Soon thereafter, Mayor
Moscone hires Harvey Milk to replace White. Milk was the very first
acknowledged homosexual to hold public office. White was arrested in
short order and charged with premeditated murder. White was upset
because Moscone had not conferred with him before hiring Milk, and he
expected Moscone to try and get him to come back to his supervisor
job but Moscone did not do it and hired Milk. The funny thing about
all of this was that White’s defense was that he was hyped up from
eating too much junk food. It was the first of the so called
“Twinkie” defenses. The astounding part about this is that the
jury bought it and White got ten years for manslaughter. After White
was paroled he had a hard time adjusting and eventually blew his own
brains out. I guess he got back on the Twinkies.
1868
A year before, US Calvary officer Colonel George A. Custer had
been disciplined for the mistreatment of his troops and was demoted
and removed from active service for a year. While he was out of
service, US General Phillip Sheridan’s troopers had been getting
their asses handed to them by the Cheyenne in Kansas and Oklahoma.
Sheridan relented and after 10 months he brings Custer back to active
duty to see if he can contain the fierce Cheyenne. On this date,
Custer launches a surprise attack on a peaceful Cheyenne village led
by Chief Black Kettle near the present day town of Cheyenne,
Oklahoma. As was common with Custer, he did no scouting or
reconnoitering before attacking. If he had, he would have determined
that this village was peaceful and was indeed on a reservation. It
did not seem to bother Custer that the village was essentially
unarmed and they killed 105 men, women and children in cold blood.
Custer was not interested in punishing the Indians as much as he was
in making a name for himself and getting back into a good light with
his superiors no matter how many lives it took. It was his
recklessness and lack of scouting that cost him 227 of his troopers
being slaughtered and cut to pieces at Little Big Horn. In my
personal opinion he may have been the worst officer the United States
ever had. He was a good fighter but his ego came first before
anything else, a very dangerous combination.
Births and deaths:
8BC
Roman writer Horace is born. He said “Whatever your advice,
make it brief.” The only advice I remember receiving was “Go
slower”, and it was brief.
1874
US historian Charles Beard is born. He said “Whom the Gods
choose to destroy, make mad with power.”
1909
US writer/critic James Agee is born. After reviewing the play
“You Were Meant for Me” he wrote “That’s what you think”.
1937
US writer Gail Sheehy is born. She said “Creativity consists of
letting go of certainties.”
1940
Legendary martial arts master Bruce Lee is born. He said “I am
not in this world to fulfill your expectations of me and you are not
here to fulfill mine.” Here, Here.
Answer
to the trivia question:
Matt
Dillon's horse's name was “Buck”
Thanks
for listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow
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