KLAN INFILTRATOR

                Stetson Kennedy loved Southern and African-American folklore from childhood.  When he turned 21, he got a job working for the Works Progress Administration.  He headed the Florida Writers’ Project.  It collected folklore and oral histories of African-Americans.  After WWII, he became interested in civil rights.  Since he was unable Read more…

THE GIN AND GUNS GUY

                Eli Whitney was born on Dec. 8, 1765 in Massachusetts.  As a youth he showed talent in the mechanical arts by building his own violin.  He graduated from Yale in 1789 and hope to become a teacher.  Things did not work out and he ended up stranded in Georgia.  Read more…

PEARL HARBOR HEROES

                The night of Dec. 6 Second Lieutenants George Welch and Ken Taylor spent drinking, like most servicemen stationed at Pearl Harbor.  Next morning, they sobered up quickly as Japanese planes bombed the Pacific Fleet and their air base Wheeler Field.  It was impossible to take off from there, so Read more…

THE MAD KING

                Charles VI ruled France from 1380 – 1422.  He started off well and was known as “Charles the Beloved”, but before his reign was over he was known as “Charles the Mad”.  His insanity was evidenced in several ways.   He once murdered some of his knights in a fit.  Read more…

THE LOST FLIGHT 19

                The myth of the Bermuda Triangle exploded after an incident on Dec. 5, 1945.  On that day, a training flight took off from the naval station at Fort Lauderdale, Florida.  The 5 TBM Avengers torpedo bombers were led by Lt. Charles Taylor.  He was a veteran of the war Read more…

BEATEN WITH HIS OWN LEG

                Sir Arthur Aston was a professional soldier who commanded mercenary forces in the Thirty Years’ War.  In 1642, he was back in England and he joined the king’s forces in the English Civil War.  Somewhere along the way he lost a leg and it was replaced by a prosthetic.  Read more…