Musings
and History
Quote
of the day:
“Your
best friend...or your worst enemy is a United States Marine”
General “Mad
Dog” Mattis, USMC
Trivia question of the day:
When Queen Elizabeth I died with no male heir the Tudor dynasty died with her. She named her nephew James VI of Scotland as her successor as James I. What was James I family name? Answer at the end of the blog.
Trivia question of the day:
When Queen Elizabeth I died with no male heir the Tudor dynasty died with her. She named her nephew James VI of Scotland as her successor as James I. What was James I family name? Answer at the end of the blog.
Here
is another event that tells me I am here for a reason:
I
was stationed at Elmendorf AFB near Anchorage, Alaska. As I have
said before Alaska is hunter/fisherman's paradise. It was June
during the spawning run of the sockeye salmon and I decided to go
fishing. I borrowed my roomie's car and went down the Kenai
peninsula to a well known parking spot that was the beginning of a
well marked trail that lead to the Kenai river near Kenai Lake. It
was about a 2 mile hike. I was armed with a casting rod, a couple of
lures and a .357 magnum S & W revolver. It never occurred to me
that every carnivore within 100 miles was headed to that river also
including black bears, brown bears, grizzly bears, wolverines, etc.
Not only that, the female bears were not long out of their dens with
their cubs. I had been hiking for quite a distance and the cover was
very heavy on both sides of the trail which was about 6 feet wide at
and over 6 feet tall at that point. I heard something very loud and
very close to my left that went “WOOOF” and then there was the
sound of something very big crashing through the undergrowth. I
pulled my revolver and waited but nothing came out into the open. I
continued a few more steps and there in the trail was a pile of bear
dung still steaming. If that bear had wanted to kill me it would
have been easy because the cover was so heavy that I would not have
seen it before it was too late but that bear chose to run the other
way. Yes indeed, I am here for a reason. BTW, I caught 3 sockeye.
I
was transferred to Eielson AFB south of Fairbanks, Alaska. Eielson
was a multi-purpose facility. There was a SAC (Strategic Air
Command) recon unit and a ADC (Air Defense Command) unit flying
all-weather interceptors. The SAC recon unit had RB-47s, RB-66s,
RB-57s and KC-135s. The ADC unit had F-102's. Because of the recon
unit the security was very tight. I was working in the control tower
and got a call from an aircraft asking for landing instruction...and
casually mentioned that he had flamed out. As I remember it, his
call sign was “Dutch 19”. I did not have advance information
about this flight meaning if he landed it would be a breach of
security. I called the OD (officer of the day) and told him about it
and he asked the call sign and I told him. He said to go ahead and
let him land...he had forgotten to tell us about it. So I gave Dutch
19 landing instructions. 30 minutes later he landed...it was a U-2.
There is no telling at what altitude he was when he flamed out to
stay aloft for 30 minutes. I had never seen one before only
pictures but I understood how this plane could stay aloft for so long
with no power...It had very long wings like a sailplane. Not only
that, after it landed two men ran along beside the aircraft, leveled
the wings and installed a small dolly under both wings indicating how
balanced it was. The U-2 only had landing gear in the center of the
fuselage. I found out later that this plane had departed Del Rio,
Texas. It was a hell of an aircraft designed and built by the
Lockheed “Skunk Works” led by Kelly Johnson. The U-2 became
outdated when the Skunk Works came up with the SR-71 Blackbird.
Recon aircraft became outdated when satellites were invented that can
read an automobile license tag from orbit.
This
Date in History March 15
1783 Previously the
United States Congress had received word that a group of officers in
the Continental Army had planned a secret meeting in the Newburgh,
New York area to plan a revolt or mutiny, if you will, because
Congress had failed to pay them and provide them with a clothing and
food allowance that had been previously promised. On this date,
George Washington showed up at the meeting of the officers. As you
might suspect, you could hear a pin drop when Washington walked up to
the rostrum. He read them the riot act and called the meeting
illegal and unmilitary. He then pulled out a letter that Congress
had sent him about the meeting. With his hands slightly shaking he
reached in his coat pocket and retrieved a pair of spectacles and
before he put them on he said “I am shaking because I have grown
old in the service of my country, and now it appears that I will go
blind.” After this there was not a dry eye in the house because
they realized what a tremendous contribution this great man had made
for his country. They felt very small for what they were
contemplating. The officers withdrew any threat to Congress and
rededicated themselves to the service of their country. We all need
to contemplate this.
44BC On this date,
the Ides of March, Julius Caesar is murdered in the Roman Senate by
60 Senators. Leading the attack was Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius
Cassius Longinus, better known as Brutus and Cassius. After Caesar
was struck in the neck with a sword, the rest of the Senators fell
upon him and made a contribution with a stab of their own. Because
of the contribution that Caesar had made to Rome with his
organizational skills and military expertise, he was named dictator
for life. The Roman senate realized that this much power is too much
for one man and they all agreed that they had to cap Caesar. It is
legend that his last words were “et tu Brute” meaning “You to
Brutus?” Brutus and Caesar had been life long friends and Caesar
could not believe that Brutus would be part of this conspiracy. We
never know who our friends and enemies are.
1831 On this date
Edward R. Perry is born in Richmond, Massachusetts and is educated at
Lee Academy and at Yale. In 1852 he moved to Georgia to teach school
and study law. After a trip to Alabama he decided to settle in
Pensacola, Florida to practice law. At the outbreak of the Civil War
he offered his services to the Confederacy and became a member of the
Pensacola Rifle Rangers. This unit was absorbed into the 2nd
Florida Regiment which played and important role in several battles
later on. His unit was involved in the Peninsular Campaign and
especially the Battle of the Seven Days. The commander of his unit
was killed at the Battle of Williamsburg and Perry assumed command
and was promoted to Brigadier General and was given command of two
other regiments. A few months later his unit was involved in the
Battle of Antietam and suffered heavy losses. He came down with
typhoid fever and missed Gettysburg where his unit suffered heavy
losses once again. He was able to rejoin his unit just in time for
the Battle of the Wilderness where he was seriously wounded. This
wound forced him to surrender command of his unit and he spent the
rest of the war recruiting in Alabama. He served as Governor of
Florida from 1884 to 1888. With his health failing he moved to a
drier climate in Kerrville, Texas in 1889 where he died from a stroke
in October of that year. He is buried in the cemetery of Saint
John’s Church in Pensacola. The city of Perry, Florida is named in
his honor.
1767 On this date
Andrew Jackson is born in the Waxhaw villages on the North
Carolina/South Carolina border. Andy was hell on wheels, y'all.
1849 English
actress Dame Margaret Kendal. When speaking of Sarah Bernhardt she
said “She is a great actress from the waist down.” I wonder what
she meant by that.
1935 US
televangelist Jimmy Swaggart. He said “The media is run by Satan,
I wonder how many Christians are aware of that”. When it comes to
being a sincere preacher, Jimmy is a good singer/piano player.
1892 English writer
Dame Rebecca West. She said “The hatred of doing housework is the
natural progression of civilization.” Methinks the good
Dame Becky and I are related.
Answer to the trivia question:
James I was the son of Mary Queen of Scots and Henry Stuart or Lord Darnley thus beginning the Stuart dynasty.
Answer to the trivia question:
James I was the son of Mary Queen of Scots and Henry Stuart or Lord Darnley thus beginning the Stuart dynasty.
Thanks for
listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow
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