Showing posts with label Slavery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Slavery. Show all posts

Thursday, June 23, 2016

History timeline 1840-1849

1840: Queen Victoria marries Albert
    World Anti-Slavery Convention
    William Henry Harrison wins the presidential election

1841: Britain takes Hong Kong
    Amistad Case
    Harrison dies/JohnTyler becomes president
   
1842: Webster-Ashburton Treaty

1843: A Christmas Carol published

1844: Princeton explosion
    Joseph Smith murdered
    James K Polk wins presidential election

1845: The Raven published
    U.S. annexes Texas
    Manifest Destiny coined

1846: Krakow Uprising
    Mexican-American War begins
    Bear Flag Revolt in California
    Neptune discovered
    The Oregon Treaty
    Polk creates the Independent Treasury

1847: Battle of Buena Vista
    Battle of Veracruz
    Mormons reach the Great Salt Lake
    Winfield Scott enters Mexico City

1848: Gold discovered in California
    Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
    The Communist Manifesto published
    Revolutions in Europe
    Seneca Falls Convention
    Zachary Taylor wins the presidency

1849: Corn Laws abolished

Friday, May 27, 2016

History timeline 1830-39

1830: Webster-Hayne debate
    Indian Removal Act
    July Revolution (France)

1831: The Liberator begins publication
    Nat Turner's Rebellion
    Charles Darwin begins voyage on the Beagle

1832: Black Hawk War
    Andrew Jackson reelected President
    Bank War
    Nullification Crisis

1834: Jackson Censured
    Britain abolishes slavery

1835: US pays off national debt
    Grimke's Letter
    Texas Revolution begins
    Assassination Attempt on Andrew Jackson

1836: The Alamo
    Goliad Massacre
    Battle of San Jacinto
    Martin Van Buren wins presidential election

1837: Panic of 1837
    Victoria becomes Queen of England

1839: First Opium War (1839-42)
    Daguerre gets patent for his camera

Friday, May 13, 2016

History timeline 1820-1829

1820: George III dies. George IV becomes King of England
    Cato Street Conspiracy
    Missouri Compromise
    James Monroe re-elected

1821: Several countries declare independence from Spain

1822: Chios Massacre

1823: Monroe Doctrine

1824: Lafayette tours U.S.
    Presidential Election thrown into the House of Representatives

1825: U.S. House of Representatives selects John Quincy Adams as President
    Erie Canal opens

1826: Most property requirements for voting removed in U.S.

1827: B&O Railroad opens (first railroad in U.S.)
    Freedom's Journal begins
    Greek War of Independence ends

1828: London Protocol creates modern Greece
    Andrew Jackson wins presidential election

1829: Catholic Relief Act
    Russo-Turkish War ends
    Petticoat Affair (1829-31)

Friday, January 8, 2016

19th Century timeline: 1801-1810

1801: Thomas Jefferson wins the Presidential Election in the House of Representatives
    Battle of Abukir
    The Concordant
    First Barbary War (1801-05)

1802: Treaty of Amiens

1803: Marbury v Madison
    Louisiana Purchase
    Robert Emmet executed

1804: Haiti wins independence
    Decatur's Raid
    Napoleonic Code
    Lewis and Clark Expedition begins (1804-06)
    Burr-Hamilton duel
    Jefferson re-elected

1805: Trafalgar
    Austerlitz
    Peace of Pressburg

1806: Battle of Jena-Auerstedt
    Continental System

1807: Battle of Montevideo
    Battle of Eylau
    Burr Treason trial
    Slave trade banned by British Empire
    Chesapeake-Leopold Affair
    Treaty of Tilsit
    First Steamboat
    Embargo Act

1808: Slave Trade banned in U.S.
    James Madison elected President

1809: Peninsular War (1807-14)
    Non-Intercourse Act

Sunday, January 4, 2015

Stupid Quotes of the Year: 2014

Stupid Quote of the year #1: 'First of all, let me tell my friends from Africa, I do not whip people!'


-Steny Hoyer



#2: "What do we want? Dead Cops! When do we want it? Now!"

-Protestors led by White House advisor Al Sharpton


and the rest...


"In a sense, climate change can now be considered the world's largest weapon of mass destruction, perhaps even, the world's most fearsome weapon of mass destruction."


-John Kerry


"We have always conducted our relationship privately, and we hope that as we consciously uncouple and co-parent, we will be able to continue in the same manner."

-Gwyneth Paltrow and Chris Martin


"Maybe I should offer a good thanks to the distinguished members of the majority, the Republicans, my chairman and others, for giving us an opportunity to have a deliberative constitutional discussion that reinforces the sanctity of this nation and how well it is that we have lasted some 400 years, operating under a Constitution that clearly defines what is constitutional and what is not."


-Sheila Jackson Lee


You can sleep with [black people]. You can bring them in, you can do whatever you want. The little I ask you is not to promote it on that ... and not to bring them to my games."



Clipper Owner Donald Sterling to his girlfriend

"We need to consider whether we can talk about trying to reduce population growth and whether that’s compatible with the very reasonable concerns people have about women’s right to control their life decisions and their reproduction."


-Professor Peter Singer on controlling women to stop climate change.



"What has he done, big Magic Johnson, what has he done?" -


-Donald Sterling

"We came out of the White House not only dead broke, but in debt."


-Hillary Clinton


"What I’ve tried to employ the female members of my family — some of who you all met and talked to and what have you — is that ... let’s make sure we don’t do anything to provoke wrong actions, because if I come — or somebody else come, whether it’s law enforcement officials, your brother or the fellas that you know — if we come after somebody has put their hands on you, it doesn’t negate the fact that they already put their hands on you."


-Steven A Smith


"One problem that I've had today is keeping my Wongs straight."

-Harry Reid at the Asian Chamber of Commerce

"We don't have a strategy."


-Barack Obama on ISIS


"Michael Brown's blood is crying from the ground, crying for vengeance, crying for justice."


-Rev Charles Ewing


"My son as attorney general, the year in Iraq, came back and that’s one of the things that he finds is, was most in need, when he was over there in Iraq for a year, people would come to him and talk about what was happening at home, in terms of foreclosures, in terms of bad loans that were being, I mean these Shylocks who took advantage of these women and men while overseas."


-Joe Biden


"To be very, very honest with you, the South has not always been the friendliest place for African-Americans," Landrieu said. "It’s been a difficult time for [President Obama] to present himself in a very positive light as a leader. It’s not always been a good place for women to present ourselves. It’s more of a conservative place, so we’ve had to work a little bit harder on that."


-Senator Mary Landrieu


"Burn this bitch down."


-Michael Brown's stepfather


 

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Quotes of the Month: August 2014


Quote of the Month:"Don't ever second guess me again on Hamas."

-Benjamin Netanyahu to John Kerry and Barack Obama

 
Stupid Quotes of the Month: 'First of all, let me tell my friends from Africa, I do not whip people!'

-Steny Hoyer
"One problem that I've had today is keeping my Wongs straight."

-Harry Reid at the Asian Chamber of Commerce

and

"We don't have a strategy."

-Barack Obama on ISIS
Chilling Quote of the Month: "It's best not to mess with us."

-Vladimir Putin

and the rest...
"They just lied to people."

-Barney Frank on The Obama Administration and health care.
"Don't do stupid stuff is not an organizing principle."


-Hillary Clinton on Barack Obama's foreign policy
"Drug addicts and alcoholics are always, 'The world is a harsh place.' My mother was in a concentration camp in Nazi Germany. I don't want to hear f**k all about "the world as a harsh place." She gets up every day, smells the roses and loves life. And for a putz, 20-year-old kid to say, 'I'm depressed, I live in Seattle.' F**k you, then kill yourself."


-Gene Simmons
"I am you, I will protect your right to protest."


-Ron Johnson
"Michael Brown's blood is crying from the ground, crying for vengeance, crying for justice."


-Rev Charles Ewing
"I'm sorry for being such an idiot."


-Mark David Chapman

Thursday, May 1, 2014

Quotes of the Month: April 2014

Quote of the Month: “So, if we’re all going to be outraged, let’s be outraged that we weren’t more outraged when (Sterling’s) racism was first evident. Let’s be outraged that private conversations between people in an intimate relationship are recorded and publicly played. Let’s be outraged that whoever did the betraying will probably get a book deal, a sitcom, trade recipes with Hoda and Kathie Lee, and soon appear on ‘Celebrity Apprentice’ and ‘Dancing with the Stars.’ ”
-Kareen Abdul-Jabbar

Stupid Quote of the Month: "You can sleep with [black people]. You can bring them in, you can do whatever you want. The little I ask you is not to promote it on that ... and not to bring them to my games."

Clipper Owner Donald Sterling to his girlfriend

Worst Presidential Quote since Carter's "Crisis of Confidence":
"That may not always be sexy. That may not always attract a lot of attention, and it doesn't make for good argument on Sunday morning shows, but it avoids errors. You hit singles; you hit doubles. Every once in a while, we may be able to hit a home run."
-Barack Obama

"Nirvana defined a moment, a movement for outsiders, from the fags and the fat girls to the shy nerds and the goth kids in Tennessee and Kentucky, for the rockers to the awkward to the too-smart kids and the bullied. We were a community."
-Michael Stipe

“Again, I can’t thank you enough. All of my best to you and yours and I look forward to working with you throughout this election.”
-Senator Chuck Schumer to the Koch Brothers (2010)

"Chill out."
-Congressman Dave Camp to Sander Levin over the IRS Scandal.

"My goodness, I didn't know solid waste management was so controversial."

-Hillary Clinton after someone tossed a shoe at her

“Some presidents take their foreign policy from the idealism of Woodrow Wilson, some from the realism of Henry Kissinger. This is foreign policy from Monty Python.”

– George Will on Obama's foreign policy

"Con man. He has a way of tricking people, and he tricked a lot of people."

-Adrian Dantley on Isiah Thomas


"They abort their young children, they put their young men in jail, because they never learned how to pick cotton."

-Cliven Bundy


Saturday, January 2, 2010

Looking Back: Some 2010 Anniversaries

Happy New Year! The New Year is always a time to look to the future and reminisce about the past. It also provides a time to examine anniversaries of historical events. So, without delay, here are some anniversaries worth noting:

Five Years Ago (2005): Hurricane Katrina wipes out New Orleans. Over 1800 people died when Katrina struck. Government red tape and corruptions kept the levees from being upgraded to withstand a storm of that magnitude. Additionally, local and state officials failed to evacuate citizens in New Orleans resulting in a massive body count. On top of all this, the federal response was slow and incompetent thus demonstrating why government should not be allowed to run anything.

Ten Years Ago (2000): Bush vs. Gore. Gore won the popular vote, but Bush won the electoral college. It all came down to Florida's electoral vote. Gore decided to contest Democratic counties in Florida. During the multiple recounts, Gore made steady progress and cut into Bush’s lead in Florida. In recounts, the person leading the vote usually gains votes. Gore’s progress denotes possible vote fraud which led to protests. The Bush Campaign went to court. After a couple rounds in the Florida Supreme Court, the case went to the U.S. Supreme Court. On a 5-4 vote, they ended the madness in Florida and Bush became president. Gore’s mistake was not requesting a statewide recount at the beginning of this fiasco.

Twenty Years Ago (1990): Iraq invades Kuwait. Saddam Hussein decided to annex Kuwait. Iraq claimed it as a province. Hussein sent feelers to the Bush Administration about the invasion beforehand. The administration failed to warn off Hussein. As a result, Saddam felt he had a free hand and launched the invasion.

Twenty-Five Years Ago (1985): Gorbachev takes command. The Soviet Union buried three leaders during the Reagan Administration. Privately, President Reagan complained that he could not deal with the Soviets if their leaders kept dying. The Communist Party selected Mikhail Gorbachev to lead the country. Gorbachev was young and vigorous as opposed to the walking corpses that previously led the nation. Eventually, the new leader instituted reforms which backfired and helped destroy the USSR.

Fifty Years Ago (1960): Kennedy defeats Nixon. In the closest election anyone could remember, John Kennedy edged Vice-President Richard Nixon for the presidency. The election served as the transition in leadership from the Lost Generation to the G.I. Generation. Additionally, the first debate between Nixon and Kennedy proved the power of television. Radio listeners believed Nixon won the debate. Unfortunately for Nixon, more people saw the debate on television.

Seventy-Five Years Ago (1935): The Dust Bowl. Years of mismanagement of the nation’s farmland came home to roost. The topsoil was destroyed by generations of mismanagement and the great plains literally blew away. People on the east coast watched in amazement as Oklahoma blew into the ocean.

100 Years Ago (1910): Jack Johnson defeats Jim Jeffries. African-American boxer Jack Johnson beat all challengers. Whites demanded former champ Jim Jeffries return from retirement to defeat Johnson. Eventually, Jeffries relented and Johnson won the bout. Race riots broke out all over the country because a black man knocked out a white man in a boxing ring.

150 Years Ago (1860): Lincoln wins! In a bizarre presidential election, Abraham Lincoln defeated three other candidates for the presidency. There were two elections in 1860. In the South, John C. Breckinridge and John Bell squared off. Lincoln was not on the ballot. In the North, Republican Abraham Lincoln and Democrat Stephen Douglas battled. The North had the population and Lincoln won the North. So, Lincoln won the White House and the South left the Union.

200 Years Ago (1810): Macon’s Bill Number 2. Thomas Jefferson destroyed the American economy with his embargo. Congressman Nathaniel Bacon and President James Madison wanted to correct Jefferson’s error. President Jefferson believed Europe needed American goods and he could coerce the British and French into behaving on the high seas through an embargo. The two powers were seizing American ships to stop trade. Bacon’s bill promised to lift the embargo on whatever power promised to stop seizing American ships. Napoleon agreed, the U.S. dropped the embargo on France, and British-American relations suffered eventually leading to war in 1812.
300 Years Ago (1710): The Tuscarora Tribe protest land seizures. In 1710, the Tuscarora Indians sent a protest to the Pennsylvania colonial government. They complained about whites stealing their lands and enslaving their people.400 Years Ago (1610): Jamestown re-supplied. The winter of 1609-1610 was known as “the starving time” in Jamestown. The colonists lacked food and were surrounded by hostile Indians. They resorted to cannibalism. Eventually, the colony was re-supplied and repopulated with new colonists. This saved English North America.

500 Years Ago (1510): Slavery comes to the Americas. In 1510, Spanish King Ferdinand officially opened the New World to African slavery. This began 500 years of racial antagonism between whites and blacks in the Americas.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Presidential Legacies: The Crisis Presidents 1849-1861

After the Mexican War, slavery became the dominant issue in the United States. Democrats supported unrestricted slavery. The Whig Party crumbled over the issue with Northerners becoming Republicans and opposing the institution. Southern Whigs eventually became Confederates. As a result, each president from Taylor to Lincoln had their legacy intimately tied to the issue of slavery.

Zachary Taylor (1849-1850): When California wanted admission to the Union, Taylor supported it even when it was clear they would enter as a Free State. The South felt betrayed. Taylor was a Louisiana slave holder, but he opposed the spread of slavery. When a compromise was put forth that would allow California to enter Free while strengthening slavery elsewhere, Taylor opposed it and threatened to start hanging Democrats. Then, he died.

Millard Fillmore (1850-1853): While Taylor opposed the Compromise of 1850, Fillmore supported it. California entered the US as a free state. Utah and New Mexico entered without restrictions of slavery. A tough fugitive slave law was enacted and the interstate slave trade was banned. The Fugitive Slave Law was a particularly heinous creation. Persons of color had no rights if they were accused of being a runaway. So, slave catchers could go North and haul free persons back to the South with impunity under Federal Law. The Compromise was meant to quell sectionalism. Instead, it helped inflame sectionalism especially after Harriet Beecher Stowe published "Uncle Tom's Cabin."

Franklin Pierce (1853-1857): Franklin Pierce had no backbone. When Stephen Douglas marched into the White House and demand he support the Kansas-Nebraska Act, Pierce folded like a card table. The act split Kansas and Nebraska up into two states. The people of each state could vote on whether they would be a slave state or a free state. It was assumed Nebraska would vote free and Kansas would go slave. Nebraska voted to ban slavery. Kansas was a mess. Several Chicago style elections and an in-state civil war left Pierce in ruins.

James Buchanan (1857-1861): Buchanan attempted to pacify the South. He tried to force a pro-slavery Constitution onto Kansas. He failed. He tried to start a war with the Mormons to bring about national unity. He failed. After Lincoln's election, the South seceded from the union. Buchanan did nothing. James Buchanan was the worst president in history.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Mac Will Bring the Union Back: 1864

Lincoln believed he would lose his bid for re-election in 1864. The Civil War had dragged on since 1861 and people were tired and frustrated. Undaunted, Lincoln was renominated. He then moved to form a National Union ticket. He dumped his loyal Vice-President Hannibal Hamlin for Andrew Johnson. Johnson was the only southern senator to remain loyal to the union. Johnson proved more loyal to the Union during the war than the Democratic candidate.
The Democrats nominated Union General George B. McClellan. During the war, McClellan proved an able organizer and kept his casualty rates relatively low. His troops loved him. However, he was also arrogant and overly cautious. His caution kept him from pressing the war and cost him his job.
The Democrats thought they had the perfect candidate to unseat Lincoln. They promised, "Mac will bring the Union back!" They planned to negotiate a peace with Jefferson Davis. On the other hand, Lincoln promised to press the war and warned voters not "to change horses in the middle of a stream." George W. Bush borrowed this line in 2004. However, without battlefield success, Lincoln was pessimistic about his chances.
Lincoln made plans for the transition to a McClellan Administration. Everyone believed Mac would win until General Sherman intervened. On September 2, 1864, William Tecumseh Sherman took Atlanta. Northerners could see an end to the war. The Democrats looked bad. Why would anyone vote to end the war when Sherman showed it could be won?
The result was predictable. Lincoln won in a landslide. He received 55% of the total vote and 70% of the soldiers' vote. Lincoln's re-election spelled doom for the Confederacy. The CSA hoped to negotiate an end to hostilities with the Democrats. Lincoln would not negotiate.

Election 1856

After four years, the presidency finished Franklin Pierce. His administration's blundering and lack of backbone led to a civil war inside the state of Kansas. Pierce had become a pariah, the nation splintered along sectional lines over the slavery issue, the Whig Party died, and two new political parties rose from the ashes of the Whig Party to challenge the Democrats in 1856.
The Democrats refused to renominate Pierce for a second term and jettisoned him to alcoholism and obscurity. They looked for a candidate untarnished by the Kansas-Nebraska fiasco. Kansas-Nebraska was an attempt by Democrat Stephen Douglas to circumvent the Missouri Compromise by allowing voters in US territories to vote on the issue of slavery. In Kansas, this led to a shooting war between Pro-Slavery and Anti-Slavery forces. It was a debacle. The Democrats found James Buchanan and nominated him for the Presidency. Buchanan had been the ambassador to Great Britain during the Kansas troubles, so he did not get caught up in the mess. He proved offensive to none and was nominated.
Kansas-Nebraska sparked strong feelings amongst many northerners. They saw the fighting in Kansas as an attempt by slave holders to extend their power. As a result, the Republican Party formed to combat the Democrats. Their credo was "Free Soil, Free Labor, and Free Men!" They nominated Mexican War hero and explorer John C. Fremont whose nickname was "The Pathfinder."
Another party rose from the ashes of the Whigs. This party hated immigrants and called themselves the Know-Nothings. This Nativist Party challenged the Republicans for the hearts and minds of Northerners. Instead of rallying against slave power, they attacked the flood of Irish Catholic immigrants and the Pope. They feared a Papal Conspiracy. They argued the Pope would order his Bishops to order the Priests to order their flock to vote in certain ways. Then, the Pope would rule the world. The Know-Nothings nominated former President Millard Fillmore. Some historians argue that Fillmore just wanted to return to the White House and felt this party had a better shot than the GOP did. Another brilliant move on the part of Millard Fillmore.
The campaign's real issue was slavery and its extension. The Democrats had the slight edge going into the general election because they could unite behind Buchanan while Republicans and Know-Nothings would split the anti-Democratic vote. The South threw one of their hissy fits and threatened secession if they lost. That was enough and Buchanan won the White House with 45% of the vote. His opponents tallied 55%. Fremont probably would have won without Fillmore in the race. Even with Fillmore, he came within a hair of winning several key states that would have propelled him the electoral college. Buchanan proved inadequate for the job. He bungled throughout his term, supported the South at every turn, and suborned treason as the South seceded after Lincoln's election in 1860.