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May 26, 2021
May 26th, 2021

Question: Who coined the phrase, “By Any Means Necessary”?



Yesterday’s Quiz answered below:-Who said “Lafayette, we are here!”…?

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History for 5/26/2021

Birthdays: The Duke of Marlborough, Pope Clement VII the Medici Fox-1478, Mary Wollenstonecraft Godwin 1759- early feminist writer and mother of Mary Shelley, Alexander Pushkin, Isadora Duncan, Norma Talmadge, Paul Lukas, Dorothea Lange, John Wesley Hardin the shootist, John Wayne, Al Jolson, Jay Silverheels (Tonto), Peter Cushing, Robert Morley, Peggy Lee, Sally Ride, Pam Grier is 72, Helen Bonham Carter is 55, Bobcat Golthwaite is 61, Matt Stone the co-creator of South Park



17AD- In Rome, the General Germanicus celebrated a triumph over the German barbarians, the Alemani. Germanicus was the father of Caligula.



735- Saxon Benedictine monk The Venerable Bede died on the floor of his cell, singing "Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit". He was buried in Durham Cathedral. Bede wrote the first Ecclesiastical of the English People, and is considered the father of English history.



1574- The Siege of Leyden begins- Through a series of confusing dynastic trades the Lowlands of Holland wound up owned by Catholic Spain. The Protestant provinces united under their leader William the Silent and fought tenaciously for their freedom. The Spanish army was the finest in the world but the Dutch had a pretty good navy, nicknamed "the Sea Beggars". So when the Spaniards attacked the city of Leyden the Dutch flooded their dykes behind the infantry and floated their ships in to fight them.



1805- Lewis and Clark first sight the Rocky Mountains.



1828- THE MYSTERY OF KASPAR HAUSER- On this day on a street in Nuremberg a judge came upon a filthy boy unable to read, write or even speak. As the boy's trauma eased and he could communicate, he said he had been kept in a dungeon since he was three years old, never seeing another human soul. One day he was suddenly released. His name was Kaspar Hauser and his case became a cause celebre throughout Europe. Some thought he was the rightful prince of the German State of Baden. Then one day while walking in the park a man came up and stabbed Kaspar Hauser to death. The judge who first cared for him was poisoned. The murderers were never found and the mystery was never solved.



1864- Montana territory created.



1865- General William Kirby-Smith surrendered the last organized body of Confederate troops to Yankee General Canby in Shreveport Louisiana. Rather than surrender, rebel Gen. Joe Shelby took his cavalry over the border to Mexico where a Confederate exile community was forming under protection of the French Emperor Maximillian. After a few years most of them drifted home.



1868- At Newgate prison Irish nationalist Michael Barrett was the last man in England to be publicly hanged. England switched to a system of execution behind prison walls. The hangman later sold Barrett’s clothes and the noose for souvenirs. Meanwhile in the American West the spectacle of a public necktie party remained popular for years, the citizenry sometimes hauling out their shooting irons and popping away at the dangling body to give him a good send off. Yee-Hah!



1895 -Nicholas II crowned Czar-Autocrat of all the Russias. During the ceremony a reviewing stand collapsed and several hundred people were crushed. Not a good omen.



1896- Charles Dow started his stock index named the Dow Jones Index. The first Dow Jones closing is 40.94.



1897- A novel by a London theatre manager named Abraham “Bram” Stoker appeared in bookstores. It was titled Dracula.



1913- Actors Equity formed.



1933- Jimmy Rogers "the Singing Brakeman", the father of modern country music, died of tuberculosis at age 31. Shortly before his death he recorded a song called "TB Blues".



1937- The Battle of Millers Overpass- Henry Fords hired thugs beat up Walter Reuther and four other UAW union men for handing out union literature.



1940- The Miracle of Dunkirk- When German panzers overran France they surrounded the British army and pinned them against the Normandy coastline. Instead of finishing them off Hermann Goering asked Hitler's permission to use the Luftwaffe (airforce) to finish them off. Britain mobilized all available ships, and with the help of hundreds of small boat owners who volunteered to cross the channel to effect a rescue. They endured constant dive bombing and strafing for ten days, and evacuated 340,000 troops. 40,000 were left behind and surrendered. The British Army was decimated but not destroyed, and would live to fight again.



1942- The "Witches Cauldron"- Rommel the "Desert Fox" and his Afrika Corps defeat the British army in a whirling, confused, desert tank battle.



1949- The People’s Liberation Army entered Shanghai, winning the Chinese Civil War.



1960-UN ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge complained that the gift of a wood carving of the Great Seal of the United States given the US Embassy by Moscow had a concealed microphone in it.



1962- The Isley Brothers single “Twist & Shout” released.



1969- John Lennon and Yoko Ono have their "Bed-In for Peace" news conference in New York. One of the most testy exchanges was one Lennon had with Lil' Abner cartoonist and curmudgeon Al Capp.



1980- South Korean President Chun Do Hwan orders his army to fire on pro-democracy protestors in Kwang-Ju. 2,000 were killed.



1994- Singer Michael Jackson married Elvis’ daughter Lisa Marie Presley in the Dominican Republic. They keep the wedding a secret for six weeks, then divorced 18 months later.



1995- Looney Tunes director Friz Freleng died at age 89.



1995- In a memo to Microsoft, founder Bill Gates declared the Internet the “most important single development” since the personal computer.



2006- The World Premiere of Pixar’s Cars, held at the NASCAR speedway in Charlotte NC.



2008- To commemorate Memorial Day, President Bush went on camera and asked all Americans to stop what they were doing at 3:00PM to remember the sacrifices of all our soldiers. He then went mountain biking.

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Yesterday’s question: Who said “Lafayette, we are here!”…?



Answer: U.S. General Blackjack Pershing, though an adjutant sent in his name. When the American Army arrived in France to fight in WWI, Pershing went to the tomb of the Marquis de LaFayette and said that. He meant that America was repaying its debt to France, who helped us win independence.


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