HENRY FLIPPER

Today is the anniversary of the entry of Henry Flipper into West Point in 1873.  He became the first black to graduate.                 Henry Flipper was born to slave parents in 1856.  He got an appointment to West Point in 1873 and persevered through the “silent treatment” to become the Read more…

GET OUT OF PRISON FREE CARD

                Christopher “Clutty” Clayton Hutton was a pilot in the Royal Air Corps in WWI.  After the war he worked as a journalist and publicist in Hollywood.  When WWI broke out, his country needed him.  Someone in the Military Intelligence Section 9 (MI9) remembered that in 1915, Hutton had challenged Read more…

REMARQUE’S SISTER

                When Erich Remarque was fighting on the Western Front in WWI, he made the acquaintance of Adolf Hitler.  They participated in the Third Battle of Ypres.  After the war, their paths diverged.  Remarque became a writer.  In 1927, he wrote a novel based on his experiences.  Two years later, Read more…

The Satichaura Ghat Massacre

                The Sepoy Rebellion was from 1857-1859.  It is noted for some infamous atrocities by both the Indian rebels and the British colonialists.  One of those incidents was the Siege of Cawnpore.  Cawnpore was a garrison town for the British East India Company.  Gen. Hugh Wheeler was in command of Read more…

THE OTHER BABE

Happy Birthday to one of the greatest woman athletes in American History.        Two of the greatest athletes of the 20th Century were nicknamed Babe.  One of them was possibly the greatest female athlete in history.  She was born Mildred Ella Didrikson.  Her parents were Norwegian immigrants.  She grew up Read more…

BATTLE OF SLUYS

                In 1337, the Hundred Years’ War began when French King Philip IV died and English King Edward III claimed the throne.  On June 24, 1340, Edward’s fleet won the first major battle of the war at the port of Sluys.  Sluys was one of the biggest ports in Europe Read more…

OPERATION AZORIAN

                In 1968, during the Cold War, the Soviet nuclear sub K-129 sank in the middle of the Pacific.  It came to rest 16,000 feet down.  Soviet attempts to locate it were unsuccessful and they gave up.  A few months later, the USS  Halibut, using a robot with cameras, was Read more…