HISTORY OF EASTER

            We do not know the date of the first Easter.  In fact, we are not even sure what year Jesus was crucified.  I used 30 A.D. in my Western Civ class, but I have also seen 33 A.D.  The idea of celebrating the Resurrection goes back to the early Read more

HISTORY OF APRIL FOOL’S DAY

Some historians trace April Fool’s Day back to France in the late 16th Century.  France converted to the Gregorian Calendar in 1582.  Under the Julian Calendar, French people celebrated New Year’s Day on April 1 in conjunction with the spring equinox.  With the switch, the French who continued that were Read more

THE GALVESTON GIANT

Today is the birthday of the first great African-American boxer.  Live large today in his honor. Jack Johnson was born on March 31, 1878 in Galveston, Texas. His parents were former slaves.  He was frail as a child, he would not stay that way.  After only five years of schooling, Read more

THE “NERVE MEDICINE”

On March 29, 1885,  Dr. John Pemberton brewed up the first batch of Coca-Kola in his backyard. In 1886, Atlanta pharmacist John Pemberton was working on a non-alcoholic “nerve medicine” to sell in his drug store.  He boiled a concoction of herbs, coca leaves, and kola nuts (caffeine) in his Read more

The Leningrad Zoo in Wartime

                During WWII, the city of Leningrad was besieged by the German army for 872 days.  Before the siege began, the zoo employees moved 80 animals to another city.  These included black panthers, tigers, polar bears, a tapir, and a rhino.  The crocodile was released into the river and never Read more

TYPHOID MARY

On March 27, 1915,  Typhoid Mary was arrested and sent back to quarantine after being on the lam for five years. Mary Mallon immigrated to America from Ireland at age 15 in 1883.  She started as a domestic servant and moved up to cook.  She cooked for some of the Read more

THE HEAVEN’S GATE CULT

On March 26, 1997, the last of 39 members of the Heaven’s Gate cult committed ritual suicide.             In 1972, Marshall Applewhite met a nurse named Bonnie Nettles at a psychiatric hospital.  Applewhite, the son of a Presbyterian minister, had been fired from his job as a music professor for Read more