Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Wednesday

                             Musings and History


Quote of the day:
Michael Jackson looks great for the age of 44 but frankly, I think he has had some work done.”
                                                Jimmy Fallon

Trivia question of the day:
What is the tallest waterfall in the world and where is it? Answer at the end of the blog.

A while back a 43 year old man named Wayne Ridge got into an argument with someone staying at the Sunset Inn motel near Gaffney, South Carolina. The Sunset is famous for “short term” use, if you get my drift. The motel manager came out and told Ridge to get off the property. Ridge did leave but returned about 2 hours later in the company of his 17 year old son Randall. They began pounding on the door of the man the elderly Ridge had an argument with earlier. In a moment of stupidity, the man opened the door. Wayne and Randall grabbed the man and dragged him out on the lawn and began stabbing and hacking on him. At the moment the pounding began the office manger called the cops and when they arrived the Ridges were still on the property. The Ridges were arrested and the man was taken to the hospital to be sewn up with non life threatening injuries. This is not the first time that Wayne Ridge has been in an encounter with the cops at the Sunset Inn. Back in 2008 Wayne had picked up a “working girl” that was in the restaurant next door to the Sunset Inn, the restaurant was Mister Waffle. Working girls on I-85 in the Gaffney area do not have much to work with. Wayne got an argument with the girl and started to beat on her. Fortunately for the girl, there was a cop inside Mister Waffle and he came out and tried to break it up. Wayne wanted to fight and on this occasion, the cop put Wayne in the hospital with help of pepper spray and a five cell cast aluminum flashlight. Wayne is a great example for his kid, isn’t he? Wayne got bail in the amount of $50,000 and Randall got $25,000, what a wonderful family.

            This Date in History   January 24

1781 On this date the combined cavalry forces of the Virginian Lieutenant Colonel Henry “Light-Horse Harry” Lee and South Carolinian Brigadier General Francis “The Swamp Fox” Marion descended upon a 200 man British encampment near Georgetown, South Carolina. Henry Lee was born in Westmoreland County, Virginia and was the father of CSA General Robert E. Lee. Francis Marion was born on a plantation near Georgetown, South Carolina. Marion had been given command of the South Carolina Militia while the commander, Thomas “The Gamecock” Sumter, was recovering from a severe wound. The raid came as a complete surprise to the British and the Patriots were able to capture a large portion on the encampment including several officers and the camp commander. A month later “Light-Horse Harry” Lee was able to destroy another British unit on the banks of the Haw River in North Carolina. Lee’s unit was able to close in on the British without opposition this was because the uniforms worn by the Patriots were very similar to those worn by the British cavalry unit of the infamous Colonel Banastre Tarleton. When the Patriots were within sight of the British they waved greeting to them and kept it up until they were within striking distance. After this is was nothing short of a slaughter. The British commander, Colonel John Pyle, lost three fingers and the sight of one eye during the attack but was able to escape by jumping into a nearby pond and hiding in the reeds. To this day that body of water is known as “Pyle’s Pond”.

1956 Earlier a 14 year old black kid from Chicago named Emmett Till was visiting his great-uncle on his farm near Money, Mississippi. He bragged to the locals there that he had a white girlfriend in Chicago and was challenged to see if he could get one there in Mississippi. Emmett was the typical teenager and accepted the challenge. He went into the local convenience store and made a pass at a married white woman working there. A couple of days later the woman’s husband came home from a business trip and was told of what happened with Emmett. So J.W. Milam and his cousin Roy Bryant go to Emmett’s great-uncle’s farm and kidnap Emmett. I don’t have to tell you what happened next. They beat Emmett to death with their pistols; Milam and Bryant took Emmett’s corpse to the crest of the Tallahatchie Bridge, wrapped barbed wire around Emmett’s neck and the other end to a heavy cotton gin fan and threw them both off the bridge. The corpse was eventually discovered and Milam and Bryant were arrested and went to trial for murder. They were acquitted because the defense lawyer was able to convince the jury that the corpse was so decomposed that the true identification could not be determined. The prosecution produced a ring that was found on the corpse that was known to be owned by Emmett. The defense blew it off as being stolen. Anyway, because of the law of double jeopardy Milam and Bryant, knowing they could not be tried again, on this date sold their description of the murder of Emmett to Look magazine for $4,000. Emmett’s mother retrieved his corpse back to Chicago and in her anger held an open casket funeral that was attended by over 5,000 people. No other attempts to bring Milam and Bryant to justice but they both died of cancer a few years later. God works in mysterious ways.

1943 On this date the commander of the German 6th Army, General Frederick von Paulus, entreated Hitler to allow his army to surrender. Hitler refused. Earlier Hitler had launched Operation Barbarossa which was the attempt to conquer Russia. There were three armies that departed Germany on this mission. Paulus was the commander of the central army whose main target was the capture of the city of Stalingrad. Upon arrival at the gates of Stalingrad he ran across a nut he could not crack so he surrounded the city and established a siege in an attempt to starve the people into submission. In spite of millions starving to death, the city did not fall. Eventually the Russian army got on its feet and attacked Paulus’ army at its weakest point, the Romanian detachment. After breaking through here, the Russians swarmed around the Germans and encircled them cutting off their supplies. After the Russians had overrun his last airfield, Paulus knew the end was near especially since the descent of the worst winter in fifty years. A few days after the loss of this airfield, Paulus surrendered his army to the Russians, Adolph Hitler be damned. The Russians, remembering the people that starved to death in Stalingrad, accepted the surrender and gathered up the 500,000 half starved, half frozen Germans and sent them to prison camps. Of those that were captured, only 5,000 ever lived to see Germany again. Paulus was tried at the Nuremberg War Crimes trials, but was released and spent his last days in East Berlin.

Answer to the trivia question:
The tallest waterfall in the world is Angel Falls in Venezuela. This monster is 3,212 feet high.  The falls were named after American pilot Jimmie Angel who was the first to fly over these falls and told the rest of the world about it.  He died in 1960 was cremated and his ashes scattered over the falls.


                 Thanks for listening   I can hardly wait until tomorrow.   

No comments:

Post a Comment