Tuesday, March 2, 2021

Tuesday

 

  •                               Musings and History

    Quote of the day:
    I do not believe in reincarnation and have not believed it ever since I was a rhinoceros.”
                                                           Al Campbell

    Trivia question of the day:
    Who played Mr. Potter in "It's A Wonderful Life"?  Answer at the end of the blog.

    I am changing the format somewhat today...here is a history lesson about something that has been carefully researched by myself and should eliminate any misgivings about what really happened. I think you will be surprised.

                         History of Slavery in America

    It is accepted by the present day scientists that the Native Americans arrived in North America about 13,000 years ago during the last Ice Age. It is alleged that they came across from Siberia to Alaska and then south using the Bering Sea land bridge. This geographical phenomenon was caused by the enormous amount of sea water that was frozen in the polar ice caps lowering the sea levels by at least 300 feet, this resulted in the land bridge. It was discovered after the Europeans arrived that the Native Americans commonly kidnapped and enslaved humans to replace members of their tribes that had died of a variety of causes not to mention the wholesale selling, buying and trading of members of other tribes for profit. The tribes realized that if there was not at least the same number births as deaths their tribes would become extinct.


    Middle of the 16th Century: The Spanish conquistador Coronado explored from Mexico into what is now California, Arizona (his troops were the first Europeans to see the Grand Canyon), New Mexico and on into Kansas before returning to Mexico. They had slaves with them to carry their necessities.

    In near the same time period the remnants of a Spanish exploratory expedition in Florida was making its way west headed for Mexico and home. They were captured by a Native tribe near Mobile, Alabama and kept for three years as slaves because they had a rudimentary knowledge of medicine. They eventually escaped and somewhere in Texas they met a Spanish search party from Mexico headed north and found their way to Vera Cruz, Mexico and eventually home. What was the search party looking for? They were not looking for treasure, they were looking for people to capture and enslave.

    In the 1559-1565 era the Spanish settled Saint Augustine and Pensacola among several other very small villages especially in the “Big Bend” area of Florida. All used slaves for the “grunt” work.


    1607 The European settlement of Jamestown, Virginia is founded. There is no documentation but it is believed that the settlers enslaved some of the Natives and even their own people for periods of time as punishment for crimes.

    1614 English sea Captain John Smith landed at what is now Plymouth, Massachusetts and conducted a survey in anticipation of starting a plantation in the area. Smith left his second in command on site and sailed away on another expedition. His second in command lured about 30 local Natives onto his ship, locked them into the hold and sailed for a known Spanish slave market on the Mediterranean coast. He missed his target and landed within sight of a Franciscan monastery. When he began auctioning off the natives, the monks came down and put a stop to it. They took some of the Natives under their wing and began teaching them Christianity, others scattered across the countryside (see Squanto).

    1620 The colony of Plimouth, Massachusetts (their spelling) is established. It was reported that they also enslaved the Natives, and anyone else for that matter, as punishment for crimes.

    The leader of the “pilgrims” William Bradford and Massasoit the chief of the local Native coalition arrived at an agreement whereby if a Native committed a crime against the Europeans they would be handed over to Massasoit for trial and punishment and if a pilgrim committed a crime against the Natives he would be handed over to Bradford for punishment. Both side realized how important it was to get along. The Natives believed that the Europeans could unleash an epidemic at will and had never seen a firearm...the Europeans knew they were severely outnumbered. The very first documentation of slaves being imported to this country was about four years later when a Dutch slave ship stopped by Plimouth and traded slaves for food to get them back across the North Atlantic and home.

    1624-1807 There was a constant flow of settlers from nearly all European countries and Asia into the North America. There also was a constant flow of slaves mostly, but not all, from west Africa into the West Indies to be used on the English and Dutch settlements. They were also imported to British colonies on the east coast of North America. This means they were used for the “grunt' work building the docks, piers and buildings of Philadelphia, Boston, Norfolk, Wilmington, Charleston, Savannah, et. al. in addition to the cotton, rice and indigo plantations, etc. It is documented that some of the African kings of nations on the west cost of Africa became very wealthy by sending expeditions into the interior and capturing and selling their fellow Africans to the Dutch, Portuguese, English and Spanish slave traders.  Race meant nothing to them, religion did.  They were all Muslim and it was acceptable to enslave any and all non-Muslims.

    In the mid 17th century King James II of England authorized the capture and selling of the Irish into slavery in English and Dutch settlements in the West Indies, especially sugar plantations on Barbados. In fact in the span of a decade in the mid 17th century about 900,000 Irish were killed or sold into slavery including women and children. That is why to this day there are natives of Barbados with red curly hair.

    In 1783 the American British colonies won their independence and became the United States of America via the Treaty of Paris.

    After a careful census showing that there were just as many slaves being born as were dying, in 1807 the Continental Congress passed a law outlawing the further importation of slaves into the United States, but the buying, selling and trading of existing slaves continued unabated.

    As a result of action by the US Congress in 1830 Native tribes (Cherokee, Choctaw, Creek and others) on the American east coast were forced onto lands west of the Mississippi river, mostly Arkansas and Oklahoma. This travesty is known as the “Trail of Tears”. It is documented that the tribes brought all their possessions that they “and their slaves” could carry. They had slaves too, y'all, but their race was not mentioned.

    Not only that, nearly all the plains tribes bought, sold and traded human beings, black, white, Latino, Native, Oriental, etc. for centuries. The largest user/traders that I researched was the Comanche and the Apache...but it is reasonable to assume that those tribes with operating silver mines used slaves also in addition to replacing deceased members of their tribes. This means they were not racists, they enslaved anybody. If any tribe discovered that there was more of their people dying than were being born they had no problem with raiding other tribes or any place for women to keep from going extinct.

    After a ferocious Civil War, in December of 1865 the 13th Amendment to the Constitution was passed by Congress outlawing slavery “in the United States or its possessions”.  Slavery ended on United States soil after 258 years of European occupation.

    The slave owners were not racists, they did not care what race their slaves were as long as their will was done. Beside evil as hell, what label can we put on that?

    Lionel Barrymore played Mr. Potter in "It's A Wonderful Life".

                             Thanks for listening   I can hardly wait until tomorrow

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Monday, March 1, 2021

Monday

 

  •   Musings and History

    Quote of the day:
    Everyone is entitled to my opinion.”
                         Madonna


    A while back for breakfast I had two eggs soft scrambled with cheese, fried salmon patties, yellow grits, toast topped with butter an jelly and strong coffee. You can't get that just anywhere.

    I have started research of the most successful pirates in the western hemisphere. The most successful of all anywhere was a Chinese woman named Mrs. Cheng. This girl had about 600 ships and 17,000 troops. Here is arguably the most successful pirate of the western hemisphere.

                                     Bartholomew Roberts

    There have been four pirates and/or “privateers” in the western hemisphere that have excelled at their craft. The difference between a pirate and a privateer is a pirate will attack any and all ships whereas a privateer is operating under the auspices of a particular nation and will only prey upon that nations enemies. In return the privateer will have safe passage in any of this nations harbors but must share a portion of the booty. Bartholomew Roberts was an out and out pirate. He was living a grinding existence on a British cargo ship when the ship was attacked and captured by pirate Howell Davis. Davis and Roberts were both Welshmen. After Davis threatened his life, Roberts agreed to join Davis' crew as navigator. A short while later Davis was killed during a land assault and the crew elected Roberts as captain because of his navigation skills. All pirate ships operated as a democracy. If they were not happy with the captain they had the authority to fire him and elect another one.

    Roberts decided to establish his base of operations in the Cape Verde Islands off the tip of extreme western Africa. This way he could prey upon the Portuguese, French, Dutch and English slave ships heading south to the Ivory, Gold and Slave coast of Africa and then have another crack at them when they are northwest bound toward the Leeward Islands and the Bahamas loaded with slaves. On occasion he and his fleet could be found near the island of Tortola in the Leeward Islands preying on Spanish treasure ships.

    Roberts captured and looted many ships and became a very wealthy man. On occasion he would keep one the ships he looted and transform it to fit his purposes. At one point he had four pirate ships in his fleet. He also was known as “Black Bart”. The English admiralty was desperate to stop Roberts. The Crown was losing millions due to his piracy and sent their one of their best marine commanders in Admiral Chaloner Ogle aboard the HMS Swallow to stop Roberts at any cost. He found Bartholomew Roberts during a raging thunderstorm aboard his flagship, the Royal Fortune, off the west coast of Africa near Cape Lopez. After Roberts spotted the Swallow he went below and changed clothes. He reappeared resplendent in a scarlet waist coat, scarlet pants, white stockings, a white blouse, a scarlet hat with a white egret feather and around his neck was a gold chain with a huge diamond encrusted gold cross.

    He stood on the rail directing fire at the Swallow. A sniper on the Swallow found Roberts and he fell over the side into a stormy sea and was never seen again. He was 39 years old. The crew of the Royal Fortune surrendered and most were hanged and all that is left is the legend of Bartholomew “Black Bart” Roberts.

    A Marine sergeant on Iwo Jima was assigned the duty as night guard of the Company CP (command post) during the first night of that infamous battle. Very shortly after taking his post a Japanese soldier attacked with his bayoneted rifle. The Marine was able to parry the attack and threw the Japanese soldier to the ground. The Japanese soldier pulled out a hand grenade and tried to throw it at the Marine. The Marine was able to wrestle the grenade from the Japanese but the pin had already been pulled. The Marine grabbed the soldier and initiated a “bear hug” holding the sputtering grenade against the soldier’s back. The grenade exploded taking the Marines hand and most of his arm with it. The Japanese was literally cut into. The Marine later said that just before the grenade exploded, he and the soldier were so close that they were touching noses and looking at each others eyes only inches apart. He said that the look on the soldier’s face stayed with him forever as did the smell of the soldier before and after the explosion and even the texture of his uniform.

    In the battle for Fallujah, Iraq a US Green Beret unit led by a Captain Howell burst into a house known to be occupied by al-Qaeda insurgents. There was no lights in the building. Captain Howell entered a pitch black room and was struck on the left shoulder with a two by four which broke his collar bone. Howell grabbed the attacker with his good arm and finally was able to get his arm around his neck. He could not reach his knife because of the incapacitated left arm so he bit a chunk out of the man’s neck which included a piece of the jugular and held on until he bled out. He said the man’s mouth was just a couple of inches from his face and as he struggled to live he started yelling curses at the Captain Howell but at the last he was praying to Allah. Captain Howell said that the smell and feel of him and his struggles for life and even the taste of the man’s sweat will stay with him forever.

                      This Date in History  March 1

    1864 On this date the United States Congress chose to promote Major General Ulysses S. Grant to Lieutenant General effective on this date. Grant is an interesting study in success. He was born in Ohio in 1822. He graduated from West Point in 1843 an unimpressive 21st out a class of 39. He was assigned to the western frontier and fought in the Mexican War. He resigned his commission and became a manger of a clothing store for several years in Ohio. After the attack on Fort Sumter Grant reenlisted and was given the rank of Colonel and assigned to the 21st Illinois Brigade. In the fall of 1861 he was promoted to Brigadier General after he brilliantly captured the Confederate strongholds of Fort Henry and Fort Donelson on the Tennessee River, which virtually gave the Union the control of the entire state of Tennessee. After a series of successes, and some failures, he was able to neutralize the city of Vicksburg which was a Confederate bastion on the Mississippi River giving the Union control of that great artery and the essentially split the Confederacy in half. After this he was brought back east to capture or destroy the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia, CSA General Robert E. Lee commanding. After a series of ferocious battles, Lee ran out of food and ammo and eventually surrendered to Grant in April of 1865. There were only two other three star Generals in the United States Army up to that time, they were Grant, Washington and Henry Halleck. Halleck’s rank was more an honorary one. He never was in command of a military unit in the field with that rank. Grant was the only commander of the Union military that understood his advantage over the Confederate Generals. He could afford to lose more men than the Confederacy. He had more cannon fodder. He was willing to sacrifice his men just so he could take out some of the Confederates knowing that they had few if any replacements. He fought a war of attrition and won.

                         Thanks for listening   I can hardly wait until tomorrow




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