Musing
and History
Quote
of the day:
“Margaret
Thatcher has the mouth of Marilyn Monroe and the eyes of Caligula.”
Francois
Mitterrand
Trivia
question of the day:
Who
was the most successful pirate in world history? Answer at the end
of the blog.
Thursday
lunch was at one of my favorite restaurants and one of my friends as
the server. She has an infectious smile and a cheery attitude...in
fact she has a following. After a crossword I had:
I
had eggplant Parmesan, garlic bread, a cup of tomato Florentine pasta
soup, water and 3 cups of coffee. It cost twice as much as the “down
home” food I had a couple of days ago but there was twice as much
food. I ate half and brought half home and had it later in the
evening so it equaled out. All of it was delicious.
This
was from pre-election times:
I
don't want to appear prejudicial but after 2 super Tuesdays it looks
like the Trump freight train is unstoppable but I ain't sure about
the Hillary skate board. I heard a newsman on CNN say that he
questions if the Democratic National Committee will even nominate her
in spite of her delegates. They are really concerned about the
likelihood that she will be indicted. Her wrong doings are a lot
more serious that those of General Petraeus and he got hammered by
Congress and the media. But no one ever said that everybody gets
treated equally in the eyes of the law here in the land of the free
and the home of the brave.
This
Date in History March 11
1779
On this date the United States Congress decided to implement an
arm of the Government called the Corp of Engineers. The Congress
decided that better offensive and defensive structures were sorely
needed, especially around the mouth of New York harbor. In the war
of 1812 The British navy took one look the defenses in the approaches
to New York and said “To hell with, we ain’t going through
there.” Then they attempted to invade other American ports and
were successful for the most part that is until they ran across
Andrew Jackson at the Battle of Chalmette or better know as the
Battle of New Orleans. With the aid of the Corp of Engineers, “Old
Hickory” constructed a formidable defense and kicked the crap out
of the attacking British. The sad part here was that the Treaty
ending this War of 1812 had been signed several weeks before and the
war was actually over before the Battle was fought. After the
Revolutionary War ended in 1784, the Corp of Engineers shrunk
appreciably as a great number of civil engineers went back to the
house to start their lives over. In 1804 the Corp was given an even
larger role in the management of our natural resources. They were
assigned the task of flood control of our rivers and later on were
tasked with damming of there river for electricity and recreation.
In my home state nearly all the lakes of the border rivers with the
accompanying states are “Corp” lakes meaning they are responsible
for the flow of the rivers related to flood control and maintenance
of the dams and the power is governed by individual power companies
such as Duke Energy and Carolina Power and Light, etc.
1862
On this date Abraham Lincoln being fed up with his field
commanders, as was evident in their defeat in the Battle of 1st
Manassas, decided to break the army into three sections which
essentially demoted the previous Commander of the Army, General
George C. McClellan. The vain and arrogant McClellan still retained
command of the Army of the Potomac which meant he was still the hound
chasing the fox in CSA General Robert E. Lee. The three sections
went to McClellan in the East, Fremont in the Appalachians and
Halleck in the west. The bad thing about this arrangement was that
Fremont was no military commander; he was an explorer/surveyor and a
good one. While in this capacity as a military leader, he had the
misfortune of running up against CSA General “Stonewall” Jackson
during his brilliant Shenandoah Valley Campaign and Fremont had his
ass handed to him. Fremont was so severely whipped that he resigned
and went back out west and did some superb mapping and surveying
which was his calling. Halleck was in his sixties and everyone felt
he was too damned old to be in the field even though he had told Abe
what strategy he should use and eventually that is what happened, The
Anaconda Plan was Halleck’s. This plan was blown off by the
younger officers as being untenable. But the plan called for the
blockading of all the Southern ports and taking control of the
Mississippi river and that is exactly what they did. Abe brought
Halleck back to Washington and put him behind a desk. That left
McClellan the only feasible commander out there. That is until a
scruffy Ohioan named Grant began raising hell out west and then Abe
told McClellan to take a hike.
1897
Up in Chicago there was a wealthy man named Adolph Leutgent.
Adolph owned a sausage factory there. Adolph was a notorious woman
chaser of the first magnitude and one day Adolph ordered his crew in
the factory to put 300 pounds of potash (potassium chloride) into one
of the larger vessels. Soon thereafter he took a walk in the park
with his wife and this girl was never seen again. Adolph told the
police that his wife had run off with another man but her friends
knew better than that. Adolph and she had three children that his
wife was devoted to them and they told the police about it. In their
investigation they inspected Adolph’s plant and in the vessel with
all the potash they found four teeth and three rings, one with
Adolph’s wife’s name on it. On this evidence alone, Adolph was
convicted and sentenced to life. He died in his cell 14 years later.
1884
Earlier a Texan named Ben Thompson gained a reputation as a
gunslinger by shooting a black man in a fight in Austin, Texas. He
was 16. As with the majority of the gunfighters of that era they
learned their trade during the Civil War. Ben earned no special
notoriety during the war and even began an honest occupation of a
typesetter in New Orleans after the war. But the whorehouses and
gambling parlors there was too much of an attraction and Ben went
over to the dark side. In 1872 Ben went to the cow town of
Ellsworth, Kansas to meet his brother Billy. One night Billy and Ben
got into an argument with other gamblers and the local deputy came in
and broke it up. About that time the sheriff named Chauncey Whitney
came to the deputy’s assistance and was escorting the Thompson
brothers across the street to their hotel. All of a sudden Billy
pulled out his hog leg and killed Sheriff Whitney. The two got away
and Ben roamed around Kansas staying clear of Ellsworth. He gained
some respectability and was successful in running for sheriff of
Austin, Texas. He could not stay away from the gambling, however and
got into fight over a gambling debt with three other men. Ben killed
one of them but the other two escaped. On this date, Ben was coming
out of the Vaudeville Theater in San Antonio when he was ambushed and
killed by the two other gamblers that got away. Evil begets evil,
y'all.
Born today:
1936
US Supreme Court Justice Anthonin Scalia. He said “It is no
secret in the realization that the Constitution insulates the
criminality of a few in order to protect the privacy of us all.”
Well said your Honor...and RIP.
Answer
to the trivia question:
The
most successful pirate in world history was a Chinese woman known a
Madame Cheng. At one point she had 17,000 ships and boats and
60,000 fellow pirates. She had ocean going vessels and smaller boats
with a much shallower draft to travel up and down rivers.
Thanks for
listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow
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