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Topic: OT - Weird History

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FearlessF

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5572 on: September 07, 2025, 09:15:11 PM »
THIS DAY IN HISTORY: 
Tupac Shakur Is Shot (1996)
In 1996, Shakur, an American rap star and actor, was fatally wounded in a drive-by shooting while stopped at a red light on the Las Vegas strip. He died six days later. The 25-year-old Shakur had been involved in a violent rivalry between the East and West Coast rap scenes and had survived another shooting less than two years earlier. His killer has never been identified. However, some suspect that it was a man who had been in a public altercation with Shakur hours before the shooting
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

FearlessF

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5573 on: September 08, 2025, 07:40:40 AM »
THIS DAY IN HISTORY: 
Star Trek Premieres (1966)
Though the original Star Trek series was cancelled in its third season, the groundbreaking show—in which William Shatner's memorable Captain Kirk leads the crew of the starship Enterprise—developed a cult following of "Trekkies." Over the next four decades, the influential science-fiction franchise spawned five more Star Trek series, more than 10 feature films, and myriad conventions. Its motto, "to boldly go where no man has gone before,"
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

MrNubbz

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5574 on: September 08, 2025, 09:11:38 AM »
Horace Prettyman(how's that for a name) (1857-1945) was a Michigan football hero in the 1880s, when the sport had scarcely begun. Tall and strong, he had movie-star looks before there were movies — dark eyes, brooding brows, and a full but well-regulated moustache. He scored Michigan’s first-ever home-field touchdown, and he was the only Wolverine ever elected captain for three years.

But his larger impact came later, as host and father figure to a generation of Michigan students.

Prettyman came to Ann Arbor from a farm in Bryan, Ohio, when he was already in his early 20s. For a year or two he attended Ann Arbor High. Then he entered Michigan, where he threw the hammer for the track team, boxed, and wrestled. But those were just for fun. Football was the main thing.

According to the Michigan Daily, he was the first Ohioan to play the sport for Michigan. And he soon was a leader, first as a “rusher” then a “forward.”


In true Michigan Football fashion he was attending High School in his 20s :D
"It is better to have died a young boy than to fumble the football" - John Heisman

MrNubbz

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5575 on: September 09, 2025, 09:25:31 AM »
1776 Congress officially renames the country as the United States of America (from the United Colonies)

1836 Ralph Waldo Emerson publishes his influential essay "Nature" in the US, outlining his beliefs in transcendentalism

1841 Great Lakes steamer "Erie" sinks off Silver Creek, NY, killing 300

1841 Tom Hyer beats George McChester in 101 rounds (2 hours and 55 minutes) at Caldwell's Landing, NY, to become the first American heavyweight boxing champion

1850 California is admitted as the thirty-first state of the Union

1904 The Boston Herald again refers to the NY baseball club as Yankees when it reports "Yankees take 2," although the Yankee name is not official until 1913

1908 Orville Wright makes the first hour-long airplane flight, lasting 62 minutes and 15 seconds at Fort Myer, Virginia

1909 Edward Henry Harriman, American leading railroad builder (Union Pacific Railroad Company), dies at 61

1915 A. G. Spalding, American Baseball HOF pitcher, manager and executive, dies at 66

1919 The hydrofoil designed by Alexander Graham Bell, his wife Mabel Bell, and F.W. Casey Baldwin sets a new water speed record of 114 km/h on Bras d'Or, Nova Scotia

1936 New York Yankees beat Cleveland Indians, 12-9 at League Park to clinch AL pennant on the earliest date in history

1944 Allied forces liberate Luxembourg

1954 Indians become first Cleveland team to win 100 games in a season

1955 Don Zimmer hits the 4,000th home run for the Dodgers. I can't picture that,thought he was just a fat guy from the minors


1966 The National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act is signed into law by U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson, establishing the first federal safety standards for vehicles and roads

1969 Allegheny Airlines Flight 853 collides with a Piper Cherokee above Indiana, killing all 83 occupants

1971 Apple Records releases John Lennon's second solo studio album, "Imagine," in the US; it tops the charts in the US, UK, Australia

1976 Mao Zedong, Chinese revolutionary and Chairman of the Communist Party of China (1949-76), dies of a heart attack at 82

1986 Minnesota's Tommy Kramer passes for six touchdowns against Green Bay, 42-7

1987 Gary Hart admits on "Nightline" to cheating on his wife

1987 Larry Bird of the Celtics begins an NBA free throw streak of 59 consecutive successful shots

1987 MLB pitcher Nolan Ryan strikes out his 4,500th batter

1992 MLB player Robin Yount is the 17th to reach 3,000 hits

1997 Burgess Meredith,stage and screen actor, dies at 88

1997 Richie Ashburn, Baseball Hall of Fame infielder and sportscaster, dies of a heart attack at 70

2003 Hungarian-American physicist, father of the Hydrogen bomb (Manhattan Project), dies at 95

2003 Larry Hovis, American actor (Hogan's Heroes), dies at 67

2015 Queen Elizabeth II becomes Great Britain's longest-reigning monarch at 63 years and seven months

2018 Green Bay Packers start their 100th season with a historic 24-23 comeback win over the Chicago Bears at Lambeau Field

2021 Tom Brady becomes the first player in NFL history to start 300 regular-season games as he guides the Tampa Bay Buccaneers to an opening day 31-29 win at home against the Dallas Cowboys

2021 US President Joe Biden announces widespread COVID-19 vaccine mandates for federal workers, contractors, and large employers, affecting 100 million people

2024 James Earl Jones, Tony, Emmy, Grammy, and Golden Globe winning actor, dies at 93



"It is better to have died a young boy than to fumble the football" - John Heisman

FearlessF

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5576 on: September 09, 2025, 10:29:25 AM »
THIS DAY IN HISTORY: 
9-Month-Old Mary Stuart Is Crowned "Queen of Scots" (1543)
When King James V of Scotland died in 1542, his two sons had already died in infancy and his only surviving child—a daughter—was just a week old. The infant Mary Queen of Scots was crowned nine months later in an elaborate coronation at Stirling Castle, where she would spend her early years. Laden with regal robes, the tiny sovereign cried throughout the entire ceremony. Soon thereafter, King Henry VIII of England attacked Scotland
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

MrNubbz

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"It is better to have died a young boy than to fumble the football" - John Heisman

MrNubbz

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5578 on: September 10, 2025, 08:25:22 AM »
1776 George Washington asks for a spy, and Nathan Hale volunteers

1785 Prussia signs a trade agreement with the US

1813 American naval commander Oliver Hazard Perry defeats the British in the Battle of Lake Erie ("We have met the enemy and he is ours")

1847 First theater opens in Hawaii

1894 London taxi driver George Smith is the first person fined for drunk driving

1919 New York City welcomes home General John J. Pershing and 25,000 WWI soldiers

1922 New York Yankees play their farewell home games at Polo Grounds, winning both games of a doubleheader against the Philadelphia Athletics; move to Yankee Stadium the following season

1932 Dodgers' Johnny Frederick hits record sixth pinch-hit home run of the season

1939 Canada, under the leadership of Mackenzie King, declares war on Germany

1940 Buckingham Palace in London is hit by a German bomb

1942 British RAF drops 100,000 bombs on Düsseldorf, Germany

1945 Mike the Headless Chicken is decapitated in Fruita, Colorado, but survives for another 18 months before choking to death (that's weird history)

1955 "Gunsmoke" premieres on CBS TV starring James Arness

1960 New York Yankee Mickey Mantle hits a 643-foot home run over the right field roof in Detroit

1963 Stan Musial hits a home run in his first at-bat as a grandfather, the first in MLB history to do so

1972 American freestyle wrestler Dan Gable wins the 68 kg division gold medal at the Munich Olympics, becoming the only Olympic wrestler not to have a single point scored against him in the competition

1984 First episode of the daily syndicated TV game show "Jeopardy!" with Alex Trebek as host

1989 Five days after hitting a home run for the Yankees in a 12-2 win over the Mariners, MLB and NFL player Deion Sanders returns a punt 68 yards for a touchdown, his first

1995 Cleveland's major league sports franchises, NFL Browns and MLB Indians, play simultaneous regular season games in Cleveland for the only time, and both win; Browns 22-6 vs. Tampa, Indians 5-3 vs. Orioles (Bastards Model/NFL moved them that year)

2000 Indiana University fires basketball coach Bob Knight after an altercation with a student; Knight has spent 29 years at the school, compiling a 662-239 record

"It is better to have died a young boy than to fumble the football" - John Heisman

FearlessF

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5579 on: September 10, 2025, 09:15:51 AM »
THIS DAY IN HISTORY: 

Empress Elizabeth of Austria Is Assassinated (1898)
Renowned for her beauty, Elizabeth of Bavaria married her cousin, Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria, but disliked the rigid etiquette of the Viennese court. She therefore spent much of her life wandering abroad. In 1898, an Italian anarchist stabbed the 60-year-old empress in the chest with a sharpened file while she was travelling in Geneva, killing her. Her domestic life is said to been an unhappy one, marred by family tragedies
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

Brutus Buckeye

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5580 on: September 10, 2025, 11:29:51 AM »
These Nat Geo 9/11 live streams on YouTube have some crazy footage that I've never seen before.

Cincydawg

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5581 on: September 11, 2025, 07:23:00 AM »
Early studies of the electron set the stage for the quantum era | Knowable Magazine

Progress during antiquity and through the Middle Ages was limited. But around the end of the 16th century in England, Queen Elizabeth’s physician, William Gilbert, noted that many substances, including glass rods, acquired attractive powers similar to amber’s when rubbed with silk. Gilbert referred to such rods as “electric bodies” or “electrics” from elektron, the Greek word for amber.

Davisson and Thomson were awarded the Nobel Prize in physics in 1937. It was one of the great ironies in physics history: J.J. Thomson won the 1906 Nobel for proving electrons are particles; his son George won the 1937 Nobel for proving electrons are waves.
« Last Edit: September 11, 2025, 07:34:55 AM by Cincydawg »

FearlessF

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5582 on: September 11, 2025, 07:25:02 AM »
THIS DAY IN HISTORY: 

9/11 Terrorist Attacks (2001)
On September 11, 2001, 19 Al-Qaeda terrorists hijacked four commercial airplanes. They crashed two planes into the World Trade Center's Twin Towers in New York City and flew a third into the Pentagon building in Virginia. Passengers on the fourth flight attempted to retake control of the aircraft, but it crashed in a Pennsylvania field. The devastating terrorist attacks of 9/11 were responsible for 2,996 deaths and countless more injuries.
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

Cincydawg

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5583 on: September 11, 2025, 02:06:54 PM »
Atlanta disaster in Dec. 1946.  The Hotel Winecoff was advertised as "Absolutely Fireproof" by its' owners because it was made primarily from brick, steel and concrete in 1913.  However, there were few federal regulations on safety for  hotels in 1913.  It was built without sprinklers and fire alarms, had only a central stairwell, wooden doors and transoms, no external fire escapes and many of the furnishings were combustible.  To this day, it was the worst hotel fire in American history, 119 people died and almost 100 injured.  The fire truck ladders in the Atlanta fire department could not reach the upper floors, so many jumped to their death as the fire raged up the central stairwell, cutting off any escape.  The tragedy led the government to change fire codes; mandating sprinkler systems, fire alarms, exit signs, multiple fire exits and fire proof doors.  The hotel was gutted and later rebuilt as the Ellis Hotel.


FearlessF

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5584 on: September 12, 2025, 08:29:24 AM »
THIS DAY IN HISTORY: 

Nazi Commandos Rescue Imprisoned Benito Mussolini (1943)
In 1943, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini was deposed by his own government. When German forces discovered that he was being held at a ski resort in the Apennine Mountains, they launched a daring rescue. Arriving on gliders, German troops overwhelmed Mussolini's captors and spirited him away without firing a shot. The operation was a major propaganda success for the Nazis.
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

MrNubbz

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5585 on: September 12, 2025, 09:04:21 AM »
"It is better to have died a young boy than to fumble the football" - John Heisman

 

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