Popular Posts

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Did you know that Lyndon B. Johnson’s first election was rigged?


            That’s right! During the Democratic primary in 1948, when Lyndon B. Johnson ran for the senate seat in Texas, the vote was so close between him and Coke Stevenson that a recount was called for. The infamous Box 13, from the town of Alice in Jim Wells County ended up finding an additional 203 votes. Of those votes, 202 were for LBJ. The problem with those votes were that the “voters had signed their names in alphabetical order and all had identical handwriting.”[1] This gave LBJ a narrow victory of a mere 87 votes. He was given the title of “Landslide Lyndon” after he won the senate seat in 1949.[2] It sure looks like LBJ would stop at nothing to win the election, even to go so far as to have it rigged.





[1] Randolph B. Campbell, Gone to Texas: A History of the Lone Star State, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2003), 413.
[2] Ibid, 414.

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Did you know that Virginia declared its independence on May 15, 1776?



            That is right! Before the Declaration of Independence was signed on July 4, 1776, the colony of Virginia held a Convention with members of the House of Burgesses, who “adopted resolutions saying that a declaration of rights, a republican constitution, federation with other colonies, and alliances must be adopted.”[1] After the Constitution of Virginia was finished declaring their Bill of Rights—with a preamble written by Thomas Jefferson—Virginia declared its independence;[2] however, men like James Madison, “considered Virginia independent from May 15, 1776.”[3]    



[1] Kevin R. C. Gutzman, James Madison and the Making of America, (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2012), 9.
[2] Winton U. Solberg, The Constitutional Convention and the Formation of the Union, (Champaign:University of Illinois Press, 1990), 30.
[3] Gutzman, James Madison and the Making of America, 9.

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Did you know that America’s first movie was a western?

            That’s right! The first American movie was a western—The Great Train Robbery, which was released in 1903. 


It is true that motion pictures existed before this film was directed by Edwin S. Porter, but this twelve-minute movie “was the first film to use modern film techniques, such as multiple camera positions, filming out of sequence, and editing the scenes into their proper order afterwards.”[1] The movie was a huge hit in theaters and was also shown in traveling carnivals, such as the Pawnee Bill Show. The Paducah Evening Sun called The Great Train Robbery a “vastly exciting dramatic spectacle, which made New York rub its eyes in wonder during 747 performances.”[2] Also exciting to the newspaper was how the film makers had “employ[ed] a real engine and train of cars.”[3] 


            Enjoy the movie that established the foundation of American cinema for the past 112 years!





[1] Sharon Packer, Movies and the Modern Psyche, (Westport: Praeger Publishers, 2007), 20-21.
[2] The Paducah evening sun. (Paducah, Ky.), 23 April 1907. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress. http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85052114/1907-04-23/ed-1/seq-2/.
[3] Ibid.

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

When was the Loch Ness Monster first spotted?

Did you know that the first recorded sighting of the Loch Ness Monster was 1,450 years ago?


The first known recorded sighting of old Nessie comes from an early Christian Irish missionary, by the name of Saint Columbia. In 565 A.D., Saint Columbia reported a “certain water monster” in the 24-mile long loch near the village of Drumnadrochit, Scotland.[1]


However, Nessie has been pretty shy since her famous sighting in 1925, until last year after a 90 year game of hide and seek.[2]

According to Glen Campbell, founder of The Official Loch Ness Monster Fan Club, Nessie has now been captured on satellite imagery after all these years.[3]  





[1] Macduff Everton, “Nessie, Un-Loched?” Islands Magazine (May-June 1987), 12.
[2] “No Loch Ness Monster sightings for first time since 1925,” BBC News, February 7, 2014, http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-highlands-islands-26081992
[3] Liz Fields, “Loch Ness Monster Reportings on the Rise After Sighting on Apple Maps,” ABC News, April 20, 2014, http://abcnews.go.com/International/loch-ness-monster-report-rise-sighting-apple-maps/story?id=23394714.

Monday, June 22, 2015

Lincoln and Davis Battle at Niagara Falls


Did you know that Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis duked it out at Niagara Falls during the Civil War?


Well, not the two presidents anyways. The story goes that according to a South Carolina newspaper, the Yorkville Enquirer, published on October 1, 1862, two ships christened after the presidents of the United States and Confederate States were sent adrift down Niagara Falls to show the fate of each other’s government. The newspaper’s sources, Confederate Officers released from a Federal prison in the area of the supposed incident, said the Yankees at Niagara Falls obtained an old ship and hoped to demonstrate the destiny of the Southern States. These Northerners “painted the name of ‘Jeff Davis’ on her; then they hoisted a Confederate flag on her mast” and sent her down the river towards the falls.[1]
Despite all the huzzas and jeers from the crowd for old “Jeff Davis,” neither the ship nor the river cooperated as planned for the Northerners. Soon they all stood staring at the defiant “Confederate” ship as it became “lodged on the rocks above the precipice...with her noble flag flying proudly to the breeze.”[2] Angered and humiliated by the stubborn ship, people present for the spectacle began to discuss sending for a battery from Buffalo “to dislodge her.”[3]
Not to be outdone, Confederate sympathizers and local Canadians obtained their own vessel and dubbed it the “Abe Lincoln.”[4] In the same spirit of resentment toward the other’s government, they raised the “Stars and Stripes” on Abe Lincoln and turned it “loose to the current;” however, this Union vessel “made the mad leap and was dashed into a thousand fragments.”[5] Naturally, this Southern newspaper hoped the story was a premonition for the fate of the United States government.

   


[1] Yorkville Enquirer. (Yorkville, S.C.), Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress, October 1, 1862, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84026925/1862-10-01/ed-1/seq-1/.
[2] Ibid.
[3] Ibid.
[4] Ibid.
[5] Ibid. 

Friday, April 3, 2015

Did You Know Easter History



          Did you know that Easter has a long history steeped in a myriad of traditions that stem from pagan and Christian beliefs? Here is a brief illumination into a few of the historical traditions of Easter.

Spring, a Time of Celebrations

Since the beginning of time, humans have enjoyed the arrival of spring after a long cold winter. The Earth was seen as coming to life once again or being reborn at this time. The vernal or spring equinox, “the 24-hour period when day and night are equal,” [1] has long been celebrated by many groups of people throughout history as a special event and takes place between March 21 and April 25 each year.


The pagans celebrated the spring equinox with a feast to honor the goddess of spring. Known by the name of Oestre or Eastre by the Anglo-Saxons and Ostara by the Germanic pagans, the goddess of spring received her name from the word, dawn, or light that rises from the east. The “Teutonic moon goddess Ostara”[2] was a goddess of love and fertility that “had a passion for new life.”[3] Today, the name that we associate with the holiday of Easter is originates from this goddess.

Another springtime celebration that occurs around this time of year is the Jewish holiday of Passover. The eight day celebration and feast starts “on the 15th day of the Hebrew month of Nisan,” and commemorates the House of Israel’s escape from Egyptian servitude and bondage.[4] The Christian holiday of Easter celebrates the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, which occurred just after the Jewish Passover and the two have been entwined ever since. One hundred years after the resurrection of Christ, the Catholic Church was divided on the dates when to celebrate Easter, with one group wanting to following the Passover tradition for a weekday observance, while the other group favored celebrating Easter on Sunday.[5] The problem was solved in 325 A.D., when Emperor Constantine had an assembly at the Council of Nicaea decide the official date, which they concluded would be “on the first Sunday after the first full moon of spring.”[6]  
 

The Easter Bunny

The rabbit was seen as a sacred animal by the pagans, especially considering the animal’s ability to create new life rapidly; and the goddess of spring Ostara was often worshiped through a representation “of a hare.”[7] However, the Easter Bunny as we now know him hops into this holiday tradition from sixteenth century Germany. German children came to believe that the Easter bunny, much like the platypus indigenous to Australia, laid eggs. Before the Easter bunny brought baskets full of candy and toys for children or hid their colorfully decorated eggs, he laid eggs in nests built for him by the children.[8] The Oschter Haws, as he was called, only laid his eggs for the good boys and girls. Like a fury varmint version of St. Nicolas, the Easter Bunny was also known to have the power of flight. It is possible that the legend of an egg laying and flying Easter Bunny originated from the old pagan belief that Ostara had once saved a bird whose wings had been frozen by changing it into a rabbit.[9] As German families immigrated to the New World and settled in Pennsylvania, they brought with them their Easter traditions and the legend of what would become our Easter Bunny.  

The Easter Egg


Even before the Oschter Haws or Easter Rabbit laid his Easter eggs for all good boys and girls, the egg was seen as a symbol of resurrection or new life throughout ancient cultures around the world. Both the rabbit and the egg shared a similar symbolism of virgin birth. Chickens are capable of laying eggs without the aid of a rooster; and in some pagan cultures, the rabbit were believed to be able to “conceive without a male, and even give birth without losing its virginity.”[10] For this reason, the two have been adopted into the Christian observance of Easter to represent the immaculate conception of the Virgin Mary and resurrection of Christ.   
The tradition of hardboiled eggs date back to the Medieval Ages and have ties to the Lent. During Lent, eggs were not consumed, so the eggs were collected, boiled, and given as gifts to friends and family during the Easter season. The painting of Easter eggs, which were once multicolored to represent “the sunlight and spring”[11] by the pagans, started to be painted “bright red to symbolize the blood of Christ” by Orthodox Christians located in the Middle East and Greece.[12]  





[1] Bethanne Kelly Patrick and John Milliken Thompson, An Uncommon History of Common Things, (Des Moines: National Geographic, 2009), 54.
[2] Susan E. Davis and Margo DeMello, Stories Rabbits Tell: A Natural and Cultural History of a Misunderstood Creature, (New York: Lantern Books, 2003), 138.
[3] E.A. Jensen, Manipulating the Last Pure Godly DNA: The Genetic Search for God’s DNA on Earth, (Victoria: Trafford Publishing, 2012), 221.
[4] Patrick and Thompson, An Uncommon History of Common Things, 53.
[5] Ibid, 54.
[6] Davis and DeMello, Stories Rabbits Tell,139.
[7] Ibid, 138.
[8] Ibid, 140.
[9] Patrick and Thompson, An Uncommon History of Common Things, 54.
[10] Davis and DeMello, Stories Rabbits Tell, 140.
[11] Gregory K. Moffatt, The Parenting Journey: From Conception Through the Teen Years, (Westport: Praeger Publishers, 2004), 282.
[12] Ellen L. Diggs, On the Road to the Cross: Meditations and Scriptures for the Lenten and Easter Season, (Bloomington: CrossBooks, 2011), 67.

Monday, March 30, 2015

Francis Scott Key's Grandson Was Held Prisoner at Ft McHenry



          Did you know that Francis Key Howard, the grandson of Francis Scott Key, was imprisoned in Fort McHenry forty-seven years to the day (September 13, 1861) after his grandfather had witnessed the British Royal Navy bombard that fort during the War of 1812 on September 13, 1814?




          Not long after the South had seceded from the United States, President Abraham Lincoln authorized his general, Winfield Scott, to suspend the writ of habeas corpus on April 27, 1861.[1] Lincoln gave power to the army to arrest and detain American citizens at will and without the due process of law: 
“You are engaged in repressing an insurrection against the laws of the United States. If at any point on or in the vicinity of any military line which is now or which shall be used between the city of Philadelphia and the city of Washington you find resistance which renders it necessary to suspend the writ of habeas corpus for the public safety, you personally or through the officer in command at the point where resistance occurs, are authorized to suspend that writ.”[2] With that right suspended, thousands of Northern citizens were illegally arrested by the army and held in military prisons from months to years during the duration of the war. Francis Key Howard was one of the many who were arrested.


Many were incarcerated simply for exercising their First Amendment right to speak their opinion and criticize the actions of the Lincoln Administration. No state in the North was safe, as many would find out in the State of Maryland. With disregard for constitutional law and due process, Lincoln disbanded the police force in Baltimore and had the Mayor, a member of Congress, editors, and private citizens arrested without any specific charges against them.[3] Howard, an editor for a newspaper which had been printing anti-Lincoln sentiments in Baltimore, was one of the many men who were arrested in that city during the first year of the war.[4]
Just after midnight on September 13, 1861, several men under orders from Secretary of State Seward entered Howard’s home and arrested him.[5] The “gang” of men, who entered his home, also violated his Fourth Amendment right; when without a warrant, they ransacked every room of his house and carried off all his “private memoranda, bills, note-books, and letters.”[6] Howard was taken to Fort McHenry, where he was accompanied by fifteen others that day, who were also arrested and drug out of their homes; “most of the members of the Legislature from Baltimore, Mr. Brown, the Mayor of the City, and one of [their] Representatives in Congress, Mr. May” joined Howard at the fort.[7] He was aware of the irony of the situation and later wrote about it in an account of his imprisonment:

When I looked out in the morning, I could not help being struck by an odd and not pleasant coincidence. On that day, forty-seven years before, my grandfather, Mr. F. S. Key, then a prisoner on a British ship, had witnessed the bombardment of Fort McHenry. When on the following morning, the hostile fleet drew off, defeated, he wrote the song so long popular throughout the country, the “Star-spangled Banner.” As I stood upon the very scene of that conflict, I could not but contrast my position with his, forty-sever years before. The flag which he had then so proudly hailed, I saw waving, at the same place, over the victims of as vulgar and brutal a despotism as modern times have witnessed.[8]






[1] George Clarke Sellery, Lincoln's Suspension of Habeas Corpus as Viewed by Congress, (Madison: University of Wisconsin, 1907), 7.
[2] Ibid.
[3] Francis Key Howard, Fourteen Months in American Bastiles, (Baltimore: Kelly, Hedian and Piet, 1863), 4-5.
[4] Thomas J. DiLorenzo, The Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an Unnecessary War, (New York: Three Rivers Press, 2003), 133-134.
[5] Francis Key Howard, Fourteen Months in American Bastiles, 7.
[6] Ibid, 8.
[7] Ibid, 9.
[8] Ibid.