KOREAN WAR FACTS

Stalin green-lighted the North Korean invasion partly because an American sergeant who worked in the U.S. Embassy became a spy for the Soviets. He revealed that the U.S. was withdrawing from South Korea to Japan.  Stalin assumed the U.S. would not fight for South Korea. the Bodo League Massacre – Read more…

THE BROWNSVILLE AFFAIR

                In July, 1905, the 25th Regiment arrived at Fort Brown outside Brownsville, Texas.  The 25th was part of the Buffalo Soldiers.  It was an all-black unit with white officers.  Whenever the soldiers went to town, they would be verbally and sometimes physically abused by the citizens who were upset Read more…

CALAMITY JANE

                Martha Jane Canary was born in Missouri around 1852.  Her family moved west, but both her parents died when she was a teenager.  She took up prostitution to survive, but decided life as a man was the route to go.  She had learned to be a teamster during her Read more…

HERBERT HOOVER

Today is the anniversary of the birth of Herbert Hoover.  Here is the info on him that you can find on this web site for every President.  NAME –  Herbert Clark Hoover NICKNAME(S) –  Chief  /  the Great Engineer  BIRTH / DEATH –  Aug. 10, 1874  West Branch, Iowa  /  Read more…

THE GULF OF TONKIN INCIDENT

 –  On August 4, 1964, President Johnson went on national television to tell about an unprovoked attack on American warships off the coast of North Vietnam.  He announced that the U.S. had already launched retaliatory air raids on North Vietnam.  Three days later, Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution which Read more…

PATTON SLAPS TWO SOLDIERS

                On August 3, 1943, Gen. George Patton visited a field hospital on the island of Sicily.  He was coming off the capture of the city of Palermo and was moving on Messina.  “Old Blood and Guts” toured the hospital, stopping at beds to chat with the wounded soldiers.  He Read more…

THE WAGON BOX FIGHT

                The last of the three battles of Red Cloud’s War occurred on August 2, 1867.  The war was an attempt by the Sioux and Cheyenne Indians to force whites to abandon the Bozeman Trail, which crossed Indian lands to get to the gold fields of Montana.  Earlier, the Indians Read more…