Musings
and History
Quote
of the day:
“Dancing
is a perpendicular expression of a horizontal desire.”
George
Bernard Shaw
Trivia
question of the day:
Who
played the “Tin Man” in The Wizard Of Oz? Answer at the end of
the blog.
This
Date in History January 22
1819 On this date
the Spanish minister Don Luis Onis and the United States Secretary of
State John Quincy Adams sign the Florida Purchase Agreement in which
Spain cedes Spanish holdings in what is now Florida to the United
States. The ownership of Florida has a checkered past that began
with the establishment of the Spanish colony of St. Augustine in
1565. The colonists at St. Augustine enjoyed several years of
serenity until the Native Americans got fed up and established a
consistent routine of attack and withdrawal. Along with that, in
the early 17th century the irascible English colonists
north of St. Augustine joining with the Indians hoping to drive the
Spanish out of Florida. Then Spain made a mistake when it sided with
France in the French and Indian War which the French lost and that
indiscretion cost Spain its interests in Florida and Great Britain
assumed ownership. Great Britain kept control for about 20 years
then they lost the American Revolution and part of the treaty ending
the War was that Great Britain had to give ownership of Florida back
to Spain in 1783. This was Spain’s reward for recognizing (along
with France) American independence earlier. There was several border
and some time violent confrontations between the American settlers in
southern Georgia and the Spanish in Florida, then John Quincy Adams
pulled off this coup by gaining ownership of Florida for nearly
nothing. All we had to do was assume the debt of about $5 million in
suits that had filed against Spain by American interests. The US
government appointed Andy “Old Hickory” Jackson as governor of
The Florida Territory in 1819. Florida entered the fold of American
states in 1845 as a slave state.
1847 On this date
the American army numbering 5,000 under the command of General
Zachary “Old Rough and Ready” Taylor is cornered near Angostura
Pass in Mexico by Mexican General Santa Ana and his army of 15,000.
Santa Ana sent a messenger to Taylor demanding his surrender. Taylor
had been ordered to invade after the United States had declared war
on Mexico. The US had annexed disputed lands in what is now Texas and
sent in troops commanded by Taylor to protect the border. Santa Ana
sent in several raids on the disputed land which prompted the attack
on Mexico. Anyway, after receiving the order to surrender Taylor
sent the messenger back to Santa Ana telling him to “Go to h’ell
or go to hell”. The next day Santa Ana attacked. Taylor sent the
cream of his artillery to protect the right flank (Stonewall Jackson
had command of one of these batteries) and he sent Jefferson Davis
and his group of sharpshooters to protect the left flank. After
daylong attacks and being repulsed, Santa Ana began to withdraw. The
engagement was known as the Battle of Buena Vista. That’s right
folks, the Jefferson Davis that I am talking about became the
Secretary of War under President Franklin Pierce in 1853 and the
President of the Confederate States of America in 1861.
1864 On this date
Confederate Cavalry commander General Nathan Bedford Forrest routs a
Federal army twice the size of his. Earlier US General William T.
Sherman was heading east from Vicksburg intending to destroy the
Confederate supply depots. He was successful in the destruction of
the Confederate depot in Meridian, Mississippi and was headed toward
a known depot in Selma, Alabama. Sherman was suppose to meet US
General William Sooy Smith and his cavalry unit coming southeast from
Memphis at a point near West Point, Mississippi. Smith’s unit was
intercepted north of West Point by CSA Colonel Jeffrey Forrest
(Nathan’s younger brother) and a small cavalry unit. Jeffrey’s
job was to suck Smith and his cavalrymen into a trap south of West
Point where his older brother Nathan and a large CSA cavalry unit
awaited. Smith followed Jeffrey south of West Point but smelled the
trap in the nick of time and with the combined forces of Nathan and
Jeffrey hard on his ass he hauled ass back north and tried to make a
stand north of West Point. A sharp battle ensued in which Jeffrey
was killed but the Confederates had sealed off Smith’s access to
West Point. This meant that he would not make the rendezvous with
Sherman and more support so he disengaged and headed back to Memphis.
Word was sent to Sherman about this turn of events and he turned
around and headed back to Meridian. After the war was over even
General William T. Sherman said that Nathan Bedford Forrest was “the
greatest cavalry officer ever foaled”. Forrest was not the only
superb cavalry officer in the Confederacy, there was Turner Ashby,
J.E.B. Stuart, John S. Mosby, Fitzhugh Lee, Wade Hampton III, John
Hunt Morgan, Joe Wheeler and many others. The Confederacy could not
fight a war of attrition and logistics and that is exactly what
happened.
1918 On this date
Montana passed a law that was the largest violation of Constitutional
rights in American history, they past the “Sedition Act.” Not
only that, the Federal Government passed a similar law modeled after
the Montana abomination. The United States was at war with Germany
in WWII and Montana had a large population of German immigrants.
This, and the fact that many of the mine workers unions in Montana
were radical and had no problem with raising hell about local, state
and federal government operations and were fervently anti-war made
the Montanans very nervous and they were afraid of spying and
sabotage by their German settlers. The “Sedition Act” forbade
anyone from speaking adversely about any government agency in the
time of war. It also forbade peaceful assembly in a demonstration of
displeasure against any government agency. The even arrested people
that spoke badly about the Red Cross. This law was not struck down
until the war was over but it got the job done by crushing those
radical unions. You would have thought that the United States would
have learned from this raping of the people’s rights, but they
didn’t. About 20 years later after the attack on Pearl Harbor, we
locked up thousands of people of Japanese descent even if some of
them were third and forth generation Americans. We did this because
the attack on Pearl Harbor was perpetrated by Japan and out federal
government was afraid of spying and sabotage by anyone that had
yellow skin and almond shaped eyes. Like I have said in the past, I
guess we all need someone to hate and the Constitution guarantees us
that right.
Born
today:
1819 US writer
James Russell Lowell. He said “In creating, the only hard thing is
the start; it is no harder to create a blade of grass as it is an oak
tree.” Jim, you left out creating an amicable relationship with a
bitterly divorced woman.
1864 French writer
Jules Renard. He said “Love is like an hourglass, with the heart
filling up as the brain empties.” That’s right Jules; everything
is focused on what is below.
Answer to the trivia
question:
Jack Haley played the
“Tin Man”.
Thanks
for listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow.
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