The Untold Story of Garrett Morgan: Inventor of the Gas Mask, the Improved Traffic Light...and More!

On this Day, March 4, 1877, African-American businessman and inventor, Garrett Morgan was born.

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The seventh of eleven children of two formerly enslaved parents, he was born in Kentucky.

Like many American children growing up at the turn of the century, Morgan had to quit school when he was just 14 years old, to work fulltime. Morgan was able to hire a tutor and continue his studies while working in Cincinnati. In 1895, he moved to Cleveland, where he began repairing sewing machines for a clothing manufacturer. This experience sparked Morgan's interest in how things worked, and he built a reputation for fixing them.

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Madge Nelson became his first wife in 1896, but that union ended in divorce. In 1908 he married again to Mary Anne Hassek, and they had three sons.

His businesses thrived. In 1907, he and Mary Anne opened Morgan's Cut Rate Ladies Clothing Store. The shop, that made coats, suits, dresses, and other clothing, ultimately had 32 employees.

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Around 1910, his interes

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Was “Ripley’s Believe It Or Not” Responsible for our National Anthem?

On this Day, March 3, 1931, Francis Scott Key's song The Star-Spangled Banner is adopted as the American national anthem by Congress.

But how that happened exactly is little-known to most. To put it simply, it was an evolution and a process...but to put it mildly, it was not at all simple.

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Of course, Key wrote the song in 1814 after seeing the American flag flying following the British bombardment of Ft. McHenry during the War of 1812.

But in writing the song, Key borrowed widely from other songs and melodies, often with very similar lyrics.

Long assumed to have originated as a drinking song, the melody was taken from the song “To Anacreon in Heaven,” which first surfaced about 1776 as a club anthem of the Anacreontic Society, an amateur mens’ music club in London. Written by British composer John Stafford Smith—whose identity was discovered only in the 1970s by a librarian in the music division of the Library of Congress—the song was sung to signal a transition between the e

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First U.S. Woman Elected Mayor... Nominated as a Prank that Backfired

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Susanna Madora Salter was born today, March 2, 1860. In 1887, Salter, a 27-year old temperance activist, became the first woman in the United States to be elected to the position of mayor. The town was Argonia, Kansas, a small Quaker village with a population of less than five hundred that had only incorporated two years previous, in 1885. She was nominated, without notification, by men intent upon embarrassing and defeating temperance. Local Republicans uncovered the plan early on election day. They asked if she would serve, if elected. Salter agreed and with the support of Republicans and Prohibitionists, she was elected with a two-thirds majority.

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Salter's family was respected, and her father had served as Argonia's mayor and her husband had been selected as town clerk--so Salter knew a great deal about politics. She had four children and was pregnant at the time of her election. Even opponents of woman suffrage were won over, however, by her reputation and her commitment to te...

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The Still-Unsolved “Umbrella Assassination” in London

Because Bulgarian dissident, Georgi Markov was born this week, on March 1, 1929, I thought today would be a good say to tell his compelling, if tragic story.

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While waiting at a bus stop in London, he was stabbed with an umbrella that inserted a ricin-filled pellet. He died several days later. It’s believed that the KGB was behind the assassination at the request of the Bulgarian Secret Service, but no one has ever been charged with his murder.

Markov originally worked as a novelist, screenwriter, and playwright in Bulgaria, eventually defecting and relocating to London in 1968. He worked there as a broadcaster and journalist criticizing the Bulgarian regime.

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After relocating to London, he worked as a broadcaster and journalist for the BBC World Service, the US-funded Radio Free Europe, and West Germany's Deutsche Welle. Markov used such forums to conduct a campaign of sarcastic criticism against the incumbent Bulgarian regime, which, according to his wife at the time he died, ev...

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The Two Men who Started California’s Gold Rush...But Never Profited From It

On this Day, February 28, 1849, the first prospectors for the Gold Rush of '49 arrive in San Francisco. Gold was discovered by James Marshall on Sutter's Mill the previous year. Over 300,000 people, known as "forty-niners" (from year 1849), would go to California to seek their fortune.

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James Wilson Marshall was born to Philip Marshall and Sarah Wilson on his family’s homestead in Hopewell Township, New Jersey on October 8, 1810. The family homestead was known as the Round Mountain Farm and is still known as Marshalls Corner. He was the oldest of four children, and the only son. He followed in his father’s footsteps by becoming a skilled carpenter and wheelwright.

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At age eighteen, after his father died, James Marshall left New Jersey in 1834 and headed west. After spending time in Indiana and Illinois, he settled in Missouri in 1844, and began farming along the Missouri River near Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. There, he contracted malaria, and in 1844, on the advice of his doctor, Mar...

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John Steinbeck: A Writer to the End

history leaders otd writers Feb 27, 2021

John Steinbeck was born today, February 27, 1902, in Salinas, California in a stately home on Central Ave (now open as a popular luncheon spot). He's been called "a giant of American letters," and many of his works are considered classics of Western literature. During his writing career, he authored 33 books, including 16 novels, six non-fiction books, and two collections of short stories. He’s widely known for Cannery Row (1945), the multi-generation epic East of Eden (1952), Of Mice and Men (1937). His Pulitzer Prize-winning The Grapes of Wrath (1939) is considered Steinbeck's masterpiece and part of the American literary canon. In the first 75 years after it was published, it sold 14 million copies. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1962.

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Steinbeck was raised with modest means. His father, John Ernst Steinbeck, tried his hand at several different jobs to keep his family fed: He owned a feed-and-grain store, managed a flour plant and served as treasurer of Monterey

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The Little-known Partnership that Changed what the World Wears

This story came to mind today, because it was on this Day, February 26, 1829, that Levi Strauss was born in Buttenheim, Bavaria. Levi was the son of Hirsch Strauss and his second wife, Rebecca.

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At age 18, Levi Strauss travelled with his mother and two sisters to the United States to join his brothers Jonas and Louis, who had begun a wholesale dry goods business in New York City called J. Strauss Brother & Co. Their business was thriving.

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When the Gold Rush hit, they wanted to meet the needs of the miners and farmers also seeking their fortune, and devised a plan for Levi to travel to the West Coast and set up a version of their dry goods business there.

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Strauss boarded a steamer bound for Panama, then walked across the isthmus and boarded another steamer sailing north to the shores of the California Gold Rush. He arrived on a rainy March day in 1853, and soon set up a dry goods wholesale business on San Francisco’s waterfront under his own name —Levi Strauss & Co.

Within two ...

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Desert Storm Ground Invasion

Uncategorized Feb 24, 2021
On this Day, February 24, 1991, U.S. ground operations began in the Persian Gulf War, more than a month after an air war was launched against Iraq to free Iraqi-occupied Kuwait.
 
Here are some photos of my experience, that day, 30 years ago...today.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Jonas Salk and the Polio Vaccine

 
On February 23, 1954, the inoculation of children with Jonas Salk's polio vaccine began in Pittsburgh. Nationwide testing began two months later. It was the first successful vaccine for the dreaded disease.
 
Before the vaccine, there were about 15,000 cases of paralysis and 1,900 deaths annually from polio in the U.S.
 
Salk chose to not patent the vaccine in order to maximize its distribution.
 
When asked who owns this patent, Salk replied, "Well, the people I would say. There is no patent. Could you patent the sun?"
 
Had it been patented, it’s estimated the patent would have been worth billions.
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It's George Washington’s Birthday!

If you want to be technical about it, Washington was actually born on February 11, 1731, not on February 22, 1732. When he was born, England and its colonies followed the Julian calendar, which was instituted in 46 B.C. by Julius Caesar. So, by that calendar, Washington was born on February 11, 1731. In 1752, England switched to the Gregorian calendar, which is still used today. It’s according to that calendar that he was born February 22, 1732.
 
Washington actually preferred this original date of February 22nd, and his birthday is still celebrated today.
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