MAINE BECOMES A STATE: March 15, 1820

It was on the Ides of March in 1820 (191 years ago this week) that Maine became the 23rd of the United States, part of the Missouri Compromise. (This Congressional agreement between the pro-slavery and anti-slavery factions involved primarily the regulation of the expansion of slavery into the western territories….

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Wallace A. Rayfield, black architect (1874?-1941)

 This day, February 28, marks the 70th anniversary (1941) of the death of Wallace Augustus Rayfield, an Alabama architect of local reknown, although now mostly forgotten. He is the first black architect in Alabama to practice professionally, and the second black architect in the United States to practice professionally. Not…

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DELMONICO’S FIRST OPENS – Early February 1827

5th Ave & 44th St location – 1897-1923 On February 2, 1827, Swiss immigrants Giovanni Del-Monico and his brother Pietro Antonio Del-Monico paid $312.50 to rent a quarter-house at No. 23 William Street in New York City.  Sandwiched between the business district and the dwellings of most New Yorkers, the…

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Death of 10th President John Tyler

JOHN TYLER (March 29, 1790 – January 18, 1862) During this week in history, John Tyler, 10th President of the United States, died on January 18, 1862.  In his day, his opponents dubbed him “His Accidency” or “The Accidental President” because he was the first president to sit in the…

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General Tom Thumb (Jan. 4, 1838 – July 15, 1883)

This week, I share my birthday (January 4) with Louis Braille (1809) who developed a system of reading for the blind, actress Jane Wyman (1914), Sir Isaac Newton (1643), and General Tom Thumb, born Charles Sherwood Stratton (1838).  P. T. Barnum & General Tom Thumb Charles Sherwood Stratton’s parents lived…

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