BORN ON THE FOURTH OF JULY

Bennington Flag A number of notable Americans (famous and infamous), American institutions, and American icons have been born or established on the Fourth of July. 1776    The United States of America, with the approval of the Declaration of Independence by the Continental Congress 1802   Official opening of the United States…

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TOMATOES PROVED EDIBLE! – June 28, 1820

I’m sure you gardeners and salad lovers are relieved to receive this news as you water and weed your tender young plants to encourage a robust crop of these downright voluptuous fruits. Yes, they are fruits, botanically speaking, because they are the ripened, seed-bearing ovaries of the plant.  In 1893,…

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A Busy Week in the Patent Office

This week in 19th Century American history was active in the U. S. Patent Office.  I’ve thrown a couple of other inventions and “firsts” into the mix. Morse – self-portrait June 20, 1840 Samuel Morse (1791-1872) patented the telegraph. Morse was born in Charlestown, MA, attended school at Philips Exeter…

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THE STARS AND STRIPES FOREVER – Flag Day June 14, 1777

Bennington Flag Two hundred thirty-four years ago today, two years into the American War for Independence, the Continental Congress passed the Flag Resolution, which in its entirety states “Resolved, That the flag of the United States be thirteen stripes, alternate red and white: that the union be thirteen stars, white…

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BOMBS BURSTING IN AIR – Memorial Day Musings

On holidays like Memorial Day, the Fourth of July, and Veterans’ Day, we often give lip service only to what these days represent. It’s easy to forget the sacrifices of those in American history, which enable us to enjoy a family cookout with no thought of those service men and…

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Lincoln Receives Patent #6469 – May 22, 1849

Abraham Lincoln Mention inventions and presidents in the same breath, and Thomas Jefferson springs to mind.  Indeed, he invented more things than any other president.  Some of his inventions had a world-wide impact, such as his redesign of the plow.  Jefferson never applied for a single patent, however, believing that…

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HORMEL SPAMS THE WORLD – May 16, 1891

George A. Hormel George A. Hormel, the founder of Hormel Foods, opened a small retail butcher shop in Austin, MN, on May 16th, 120 years ago, a mere seed of what was to germinate.  At the same time, he fertilized grand plans for an innovation which broke ground in the…

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THE TARIFF OF ABOMINATIONS – May 13, 1828

John C. Calhoun Is South Carolina the most independent-minded of our fifty states?  The answer might be yes.  Not only was it the first to secede from the Union in 1860, fulfilling its promise on the election of Lincoln months before Lincoln was inaugurated, but it had considered and threatened…

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May 4, 1865: Lincoln Is Buried in Springfield, IL

After funerals in a dozen or more cities between Washington and Springfield, three weeks after that madman Booth destroyed the nation’s last best hope, the Great Man rolled into town in a special railroad car, gently borne on a million spirits.  A million heads bared, a million knees bent, a…

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