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Centenaries - whole and half

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  • GUT
    replied
    May 5 is also the anniversary of "Fair Dinkum" appearing in print fot the frst time in the Bulletin. Just thought since we were on Australia I'd throw that one in.

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  • GUT
    replied
    Originally posted by sdreid View Post
    150 years ago - 1865 May 5 - Australian bushranger Ben Hall is shot and killed by lawmen in an ambush. Policemen had essentially been granted license to hunt down and execute Hall and the members of his gang.
    Rotten troopers.

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  • sdreid
    replied
    150 years ago - 1865 May 5 - Australian bushranger Ben Hall is shot and killed by lawmen in an ambush. Policemen had essentially been granted license to hunt down and execute Hall and the members of his gang.

    Leave a comment:


  • sdreid
    replied
    100 years ago - 1915 May 3 - The mutilated body of Charles Murray, 4, is found stuffed under some stairs in the N.Y.C. apartment building where he had lived with his parents. Charles is the second known victim in a series of child murders. Earlier today, a little girl escaped a man who was believed to be the killer. She described him as a well dressed man complete with a derby hat and sporting a dark mustache. An individual thought to be the murderer, sent mocking letters, signed "H.B. RICHMOND -- JACK-THE-RIPPER", to people involved in the case, including the families of the victims. A suspect was eventually arrested but he was later released when the letters continued during his confinement. At this stage, the slayings apparently ceased and the case remains unsolved.

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  • sdreid
    replied
    700 year ago - 1315 April 30 - Enguerrand de Marigny, a French government official, is publically hanged for sorcery. The charge was trumped up by a political rival.

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  • AlanG
    replied
    sorry thats the link

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  • AlanG
    replied
    Originally posted by sdreid View Post
    Fifty years ago, March 24 of 1958, Terence Cooney stabbed Alan Johnson to death in an Essex County (UK) dance hall. It was over nothing but a turf dispute. Cooney got a life term. Does anyone know he's still alive and inside? He was born in 1939.
    A month after Marwood’s death, 19 year old Terrence Cooney stabbed Allan Johnson at the Woodward Hall in Barking in the course of a similar gang fight. Cooney was a member of the “Dagenham Boys” gang and Johnson was a member of “The Canning Town Boys”. Cooney got a life sentence although did not spend the rest of his life behind bars.

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  • Mayerling
    replied
    Originally posted by GUT View Post
    In fact I'm not sure that many realise what I big day it is.

    Generally it is seen as Australia's "coming out" as a nation, remember we had only been a nation for 13 years at Gallipoli.

    The other thing many seem to not realise is that whilst seen as a total disaster it actually wasn't those brave men held that worthless strip of beech for 9 months against overwhelming opposition who literally held the high ground. And the number of dead and wounded is pretty much equal.

    The withdrawal was a ripe for disaster but was actually puled off pretty smoothly.

    But back on track while most people in Australia regard Easter and Christmas and New Years and even Australia day as an excuse for a weekend away a BBQ and a bit of a booze up, ANZAC day is seen as something special, however in the 1980s it was falling by the wayside, it seems that the bi-centenary bought life back as national pride started to flare.
    G'Day again GUT,

    Years ago I read Alan Moorehead's account of the battle, and it really upset me. When Winston Churchill planned the idea in 1914-15 he was trying to cut a closer link to Russia through the Dardanelles Straight, and take Constantinople. It was an interesting idea, and Moorehead tried to make the case that the ensuing disaster was not Churchill's but the fault of the British and French Admirals and Generals who botched it, like Sir Ian Hamilton. No doubt people like Hamilton did not help matters, but Churchill always had this blind spot regarding grand strategies. He'd look at a map of Europe and figure what was the fastest looking route to an objective and under-estimate the problem about it. In this case he considered the Mediterranean the "soft underbelly" of Europe. It isn't, and never has been. The most frequent source of volcanic activity in modern times was in Italy and Sicily (Vesuvius, Etna). Most of the "soft underbelly" is mountainous. He didn't note this in 1915. In 1941 he would not note this again, when he demanded British units maintain control of the isle of Crete. Again there was a massive bloodbath. It does not matter that in both cases both sides suffered - the attacks or fighting did not need to occur at either time!

    The battle did have one good effect for both sides: Australia had already shown it's nationalistic spirit in the Boer War (although it was angered by the affair of Breaker Morant's sacrificial court-martial and execution). Now it renewed it's sacrifice and was joined by New Zealand by the thousands of men lost at Suva Bay and other locations in the campaign. And the Turks gained a sense of self-sacrifice and self-respect, in particular their Turkish commander Mustapha Kemal. Kemal was there for most of the fighting, and noticed the sacrifice of his own men in keeping the Allies on those horrid beaches they were on. He also noticed (and was angered by) the blasé treatment of his men's sacrifice by the Germans "over him" such as Liman von Sanders.

    Recently I went to a book signing on a book about the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, and Kemal does not look all that good regarding that - but he makes up a small bit for it here. He never forgot that the Turks won the battle, not the Germans. He never forgot that to the Germans the Turks were cannon fodder only. This is why, as the Nazis rose in power in the 1930s, he refused to follow any "sentimental" crap and become their ally. He rightly considered them thoroughly dangerous, as did his friend and successor Inanu, and both agreed that in any Nazi inspired war Turkey would be neutral. It was probably the wisest action of his life.

    There is a follow-up regarding the sacrifice of Aussies and New Zealanders at Gallipoli. It involves the Canadians who sacrificed themselves at Vimy Ridge, and the ex-Boers under Jan Smuts who conducted anti-German operations throughout Africa while the British were busy in Europe. In 1919, when Lloyd George was at Versailles for the negotiation for the peace, the leaders of these Imperial states told him that because of their sacrifices they would sign the treaty separately from him (i.e., Britain did not fully represent them anymore) and they would each have a separate delegate at the League of Nations. Lloyd George had to accept this change in the relationship between the home country and her colonial offsprings. Yes, Gallipoli is the start of true self-governing statehood for Australia and New Zealand, and similar battlefields freed Canada and South Africa.

    Jeff

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  • GUT
    replied
    In fact I'm not sure that many realise what I big day it is.

    Generally it is seen as Australia's "coming out" as a nation, remember we had only been a nation for 13 years at Gallipoli.

    The other thing many seem to not realise is that whilst seen as a total disaster it actually wasn't those brave men held that worthless strip of beech for 9 months against overwhelming opposition who literally held the high ground. And the number of dead and wounded is pretty much equal.

    The withdrawal was a ripe for disaster but was actually puled off pretty smoothly.

    But back on track while most people in Australia regard Easter and Christmas and New Years and even Australia day as an excuse for a weekend away a BBQ and a bit of a booze up, ANZAC day is seen as something special, however in the 1980s it was falling by the wayside, it seems that the bi-centenary bought life back as national pride started to flare.

    Leave a comment:


  • GUT
    replied
    Originally posted by Mayerling View Post
    G'Day GUT,

    As this is the centennial for Gallipoli, are they having any planned national events to celebrate ANZAC Day (including joint celebrations with Australia)?

    Jeff
    G'day Jeff

    Massive commemorations.

    You had to go n a ballot about 2 years ago to get to Gallipoli Yesterday. Wife and I looked a cruise that was there for Dawn Service it sold out in about 3 weeks. Biggest Dawn service ever I believe at Gallipoli itself. Huge Dawn Services all across the country even small towns had record or near record turn outs.


    We had massive storms this week, where I am had nearly half a metre of Rain in 30 hours, that's about 18 inches, coupled with 125km winds, but Saturday morning people still turned out in the tens of thousands for Dawn Service at the local beach.

    Probably what amazes me the most is the respect and reverence that the Turks give, it is truly touching.

    Similar is happening in NZ.

    Leave a comment:


  • Mayerling
    replied
    Originally posted by GUT View Post
    Nope actually 25th, that most holy day on the Calendar ANZAC day
    G'Day GUT,

    As this is the centennial for Gallipoli, are they having any planned national events to celebrate ANZAC Day (including joint celebrations with Australia)?

    Jeff

    Leave a comment:


  • GUT
    replied
    Originally posted by Mayerling View Post
    Hi Stan,

    Actually you are slightly ahead of yourself - today is April 24th.

    Jeff
    Nope actually 25th, that most holy day on the Calendar ANZAC day

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  • Mayerling
    replied
    Originally posted by sdreid View Post
    150 years ago - 1865 April 26 - Troops from the U. S. Army corner John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Abraham Lincoln, in a Virginia barn. In the process of the siege, Booth is mortally wounded in the neck from a shot fired by Sergeant Boston Corbett. Booth was paralyzed as a result and died a couple of hours later.
    Hi Stan,

    Actually you are slightly ahead of yourself - today is April 24th.

    Jeff

    Leave a comment:


  • sdreid
    replied
    150 years ago - 1865 April 26 - Troops from the U. S. Army corner John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Abraham Lincoln, in a Virginia barn. In the process of the siege, Booth is mortally wounded in the neck from a shot fired by Sergeant Boston Corbett. Booth was paralyzed as a result and died a couple of hours later.

    50 years ago - 1965 April 26 - The naked and stabbed body of Alan Wright, 24, is found in his Texas residence. Authorities suspect his roommate William Tahl who had murdered a married couple in California earlier in the month. Tahl was put on the FBI's Ten Most wanted list then was captured and incarcerated in Missouri several months later after he brutally attacked another roommate. This final victim survived his wounds.
    Last edited by sdreid; 04-24-2015, 06:15 AM.

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  • GUT
    replied
    Originally posted by sdreid View Post
    No, I looked but couldn't find out.
    Nor could I, that's why I wondered if maybe he didn't last too long.

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