Musings
and History
Quote
of the day:
“Inanimate
objects are classified scientifically into three major
categories—those that don't work, those that break down and those
that get lost.”
Russell
Baker
Trivia
question of the day:
Who
was Crispus Attucks? Answer at the end of the blog.
This Date in
History March 26
1776 The Provincial
Government of South Carolina declared their independence from Great
Britain, adopted a new constitution and renamed itself the General
Assembly of South Carolina. They elected John Rutledge as president,
Henry Laurens as Vice-President and William Drayton as Chief Justice.
This was four months before the Continental Congress declared
independence for the entire Colonies on July 4. During the next two
years John Rutledge had near dictatorial powers in South Carolina and
the others decided a change was needed. In 1778 changes were
proposed to the State constitution that Rutledge was opposed to and
he resigned. Rawlins Lowndes took over a Governor and instituted the
changes Rutledge found objectionable. The changes took veto powers
from the President and made it a law that state senators were to be
elected in a general election. It also changed the office of the
state President to a governorship. In spite of all of this, in 1779
Rutledge was re-elected only this time he would not be President but
a Governor with a lot less power than before. It was Drayton that
drafted the state constitution that gave Rutledge such heart burn.
Drayton went on to serve in the Continental Congress and died in
Philadelphia at the age of 37 in 1779. Rutledge lost most of his
wealth when the British captured Charleston earlier but lived to see
a new century and died in 1800. Henry Laurens was elected to the
Continental Congress and in 1780 was sent on a diplomatic mission to
Holland but was captured by the British and was imprisoned in the
Tower of London where he served 15 months and was released. He came
back to America and spent the rest of his years on his plantation
where he died in 1792.
1987 On this date
the Philadelphia police are called to a rundown house owned by one
Gary Heidnik. In the basement they find a den of horrors. There
were two women chained to the wall, one woman at the bottom of a deep
pit. There was a fourth but she was the one that had escaped and
called the cops. Hiednik had been a mental patient in the past but
had made his self wealthy on the stock market. He did not pay any
income tax because he had declared himself a Bishop of his own
church, The Church of God’s Ministries. It was in 1986 that
Heidnik had decided to have a harem and began gathering women off the
streets of Philadelphia. He killed one woman by throwing her into
the pit, filling it with water and then throwing in an operating
electric fan. He killed another by chaining her to the wall and
letting her starve to death. The grisliest of all was when he killed
another woman, dismembered her and cooked and fed her to the others.
Needless to say, Heidnik was tried and convicted and sentenced to
death. He was executed in July of 1999. This jackass was able to
live 12 years after committing these abominations. It ain’t right,
y'all. It just ain’t right.
1997 The San Diego
police are called to a fancy mansion in the Rancho Santa Fe area.
They find 39 corpses all in a very peaceful and serene positions.
The police cannot find blood anywhere and it appears that all have
committed suicide by mixing a deadly cocktail of Phenobarbital and
vodka. There were 21 women and 19 men. The head of this cult was a
strange looking guy named Marshall Applewhite. The basis for
Heaven’s gate was to absolve yourself of all earthly possessions,
give whatever money you can get for it and give it to the Heaven’s
Gate organization and then hang around for God to send a space ship
to take you to heaven in a spiritual form. Then the unexpected
happens. The Hale-Bopp comet shows up in spectacular fashion.
Applewhite takes this as a sign from God and believed the space ship
is hidden in the tail of the comet. He decides that it would be
prudent to assume the spiritual form when the comet makes its closest
pass to earth. I am not saying that the Heaven’s Gate faithful are
not sitting aboard a starship as we speak, nor am I denying the
turning of the Nile River into blood, nor water into wine nor the
parting of the Red Sea because all the above require a leap of faith.
It just depends upon what you choose to believe, and it doesn’t
have to be logical. What I don’t get is if they are in a spiritual
form why do they need a piece of hardware like a space ship. Did I
mention Jim Jones and David Koresh?
1832 On this date
the American Fur Company owned by John Jacob Astor launches its
newest device to capture even more of the North American fur trade.
It is the riverboat Yellowstone. Astor had the boat built in New
Orleans to have a shallow draft but yet be maneuverable. The boat
departed Saint Louis on this date and headed up the Missouri River to
the American Fur Company trading post at the intersection of the
Missouri and the Yellowstone rivers. The trading post was name Fort
Union and was nearly the only successful fur trading fort in the
American west. Astor’s fur company was so huge that they could
undercut or absorb any and all of their competition. Normally, the
furs were brought down river to Saint Louis by small 12 man skiffs
with them fighting off the Mandan and Blackfoot Indians most of the
way. The Indians would not attack a vessel the size of the
Yellowstone so the American Fur Company could transport their furs
carrying many times over what the competition could carry and did not
have to fool with the pesky Blackfoot. After the Astor family became
enormously rich, the need for furs faded and the Yellowstone faded
from memory also.
Born today:
1874 American poet
Robert Frost. He said “Home is the place where, when you go there,
they must take you in.” It is a comforting thought isn’t it.
1904 US writer
Joseph Campbell. He said “Computers are like Old Testament gods:
lots of rules and no mercy.” I’ve been there as most of us have.
1911 US writer
Tennessee Williams. He said of Truman Capote. “I have always said
that Truman’s voice is so high it could only be heard by a bat.”
1914 US General
William Westmoreland. He said “The military doesn’t start wars,
politicians start wars.”
1942 US write Erica
Jong. She said “It is often that you see a smart man with a dumb
woman, but it is rare that you see a smart woman with a dumb man.”
Hey my daughters, pay attention to this. Erica says this because
dumb men are so rare.
1944 US singer
Dianna Ross. She said “Hair is always important.” To whom,
Dianna, to whom?
Answer to the trivia
question:
Crispus Attucks was
alleged to be the first person killed in the “Boston Massacre”
which was one of the major causes of the rebellion that became the
American Revolutionary War. Crispus was Native-American/Black.
Thanks for
listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow
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