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Topic: OT - Weird History

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FearlessF

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5992 on: January 16, 2026, 08:31:26 AM »
THIS DAY IN HISTORY: 

Prohibition Era Begins in the US (1920)
By January of 1919, members of the US temperance movement had been campaigning against excessive drinking for a century. Their efforts resulted in the 18th Amendment, which, when it went into effect in 1920, prohibited the sale—but not the consumption—of liquor. Prohibition spawned what John D. Rockefeller called "a vast army of lawbreakers" who profited from the illegal sale of alcohol, and the failed ban was repealed in 1933.
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

FearlessF

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5993 on: January 16, 2026, 08:44:08 AM »
The Finnish Sniper Who Killed Over 500 Soviet Soldiers, the Most Confirmed Kills in Military History



The Soviet soldiers never saw him. Their artillery failed to kill him. Entire units refused to advance because of his skills. Simo Häyhä killed more enemy combatants than any sniper in recorded military history, and he did it without the telescopic sights that other marksmen considered essential.


Over 500 confirmed kills. Less than 100 days of combat. Temperatures that plunged to 40 degrees below zero. The 34-year-old Finnish farmer accomplished what no sniper before or since has matched, using methods so effective that the Red Army launched artillery barrages on entire forest sections just hoping to eliminate him.

When the Soviet Union invaded Finland on Nov. 30, 1939, Simo Häyhä was living quietly on his family farm near the Russian border. He stood just five feet three inches tall. He was the seventh of eight children in a farming family. He'd completed his mandatory military service in 1925, joined the Finnish Civil Guard as a reservist, and spent his free time hunting and competing in marksmanship contests. His home was reportedly filled with shooting trophies.

The invasion changed everything. Stalin sent over 500,000 troops across the border. Finland mobilized roughly 300,000 soldiers. Häyhä grabbed his Finnish-produced M/28-30 rifle, a variant of the Mosin-Nagant, and reported to the 6th Company of Infantry Regiment 34.


The Battle of Kollaa
The Finnish command assigned Häyhä's unit to defend a position along the Kollaa River in southeastern Finland. The waterway itself offered little protection, but ridges up to 33 feet high provided key defensive terrain. The Soviets threw a massive force at the position. At one point, the Finns guarding the sector faced 12 divisions, roughly 160,000 soldiers. In some sectors, as few as 32 Finnish troops held off more than 4,000 Soviet attackers.

Häyhä served under Lt. Aarne Juutilainen, an officer who had earned the nickname "The Terror of Morocco" during his years in the French Foreign Legion.

When Major General Woldemar Hägglund asked "Will Kollaa hold?" Juutilainen gave an answer that became legendary among Finnish troops, "Kollaa will hold, unless the orders are to run."

The position held against overwhelming Soviet numbers. Häyhä became a major reason for the success.

He operated primarily alone, moving between positions with complete freedom to engage targets as he saw fit. The dense forests and brutal winter became his advantages. The extreme winter of 1939-1940 was one of the coldest in decades, with snow sometimes deeper than his height.

Soviet troops advanced in standard brown uniforms that stood out against the white landscape. They moved in predictable formations. They lacked proper winter gear. Many spoke different languages and struggled to coordinate with other units.

Stalin's purges in the late 1930s had devastated the Red Army's officer corps, eliminating three of five marshals and 220 of 264 division-level commanders. The remaining leadership made tactical blunders that Finnish defenders exploited ruthlessly.

Häyhä dressed entirely in white. He arrived at his chosen position before dawn and stayed until after sunset. He kept bread and sugar in his pockets, eating the calories he needed to maintain body heat during hours of motionless waiting. His slight frame made him easier to conceal.

As the Soviet infantry moved forward through the snowy forests, the Finnish sniper dropped them, usually at a rate of five per day, sometimes by the dozen. Häyhä would relocate, only to ambush Soviet reinforcements sent to find him. The Soviets were terrified of the elusive Finnish sniper.



Techniques That Kept Him Alive
The decision to use iron sights rather than a telescopic scope was deliberate. Scopes required the shooter to raise his head higher, creating a larger profile. The glass could fog in extreme cold, obscuring the target at critical moments. Sunlight reflecting off the lens could reveal a sniper's position to enemy observers. Häyhä understood these vulnerabilities and rejected the use of scopes.

Instead, he relied on skills developed through years of hunting. He could estimate distances up to 150 meters with remarkable accuracy. Most of his kills came at ranges between 100 and 150 meters, distances where the dense Finnish forest allowed clear shots without exposing him to longer-range return fire.

Before each day's mission, Häyhä built his position with meticulous care. He packed dense mounds of snow in front of his rifle. The barrier concealed his location, provided a stable platform, and absorbed the muzzle blast that would otherwise kick up clouds of snow. He kept snow in his mouth to cool his breath. In the frigid air, exhaled moisture created visible condensation that could expose his hidden position.

He memorized the terrain around each location. Tree trunks, depressions, shadows, the shapes of snowdrifts. If anything changed when he returned, it signaled enemy activity. He never climbed trees. Other snipers sought elevation for better fields of fire. Häyhä recognized that height meant exposure and limited escape chances.

When Soviet forces intensified their search for the sniper, he adapted. He used sounds from artillery bombardments to mask his movements between positions. He exploited smoke from fires and explosions for cover. He studied his enemies' patterns and anticipated their routes.

No matter what the Soviets did, they continued losing men to Finnish sniper fire.

The Soviets grew desperate. They sent their own snipers to hunt him, they never returned. They launched artillery at suspected positions, firing thousands of rounds at forest sections where they thought he might be hiding. They placed a bounty on his head.

Soviet troops allegedly began calling him "Belaya Smert," the White Death. Though many assert this was Finnish propaganda.

Regardless, his actions were a huge morale boost for the small Finnish nation. The Soviet war effort waned as its troops were too terrified to poke their heads up above cover.

https://www.military.com/daily-news/investigations-and-features/2026/01/06/legendary-finnish-sniper-who-killed-over-500-soviet-soldiers-most-confirmed-kills-military-history.html

On Dec. 21, 1939, Häyhä achieved his highest single-day count, 25 confirmed kills. The figure seems nearly impossible, but in many ways, the Soviets gave him the opportunity to amass such a large kill-count. Soviet forces attacked in waves along predictable routes. They massed at chokepoints. They advanced across open ground where Finnish defensive positions could observe their approach.

Häyhä had more targets than he could engage at times.

His division commander later reported that Häyhä had killed 219 Soviet soldiers with his rifle and an equal number with his Suomi KP/-31 submachine gun when close-range combat required it. A military chaplain kept a diary that recorded 259 sniper kills by early March. Other sources suggested the number could exceed 500.

Häyhä's own war memoir, written in 1940 and discovered only in 2017, estimated around 500 enemy soldiers killed. He called it his "sin list."

The exact count remains debated. What isn't debatable is that no sniper in any war has matched his body count, achieved in such a short timeframe, under such extreme conditions.

Finnish propaganda celebrated him as "The Magic Sniper." His fellow soldiers were amazed at his efforts. The psychological impact on Soviet forces was significant. Entire units became paralyzed with fear, knowing that any movement could draw fire from an invisible enemy.

But Häyhä himself remained modest about his role.

"The Russians did not give us peace, even during Christmas," he recalled years later, "but God was close to us, we sang psalms."

On Feb. 17, 1940, Finnish headquarters pulled Häyhä from the front for a ceremony. A Swedish businessman had donated a custom rifle in his honor. Officers presented him with the SAKO M/28-30 bearing his nameplate. He slept in a real bed that night for the first time in months. He ate hot Finnish food and drank imported wine.

The respite lasted one night. He returned to Kollaa the next day.

Wounded in Combat
An explosive bullet fired by a Soviet soldier struck Häyhä in the lower left jaw. The impact tore away half his face. Soldiers who found him reported that "half his face was missing." They loaded him onto a sled and rushed him to a field hospital.

Doctors managed to stabilize him, but they made no promises about his survival. Häyhä slipped into a coma. He remained unconscious for seven days. When he finally woke up on March 13, 1940, Finland and the Soviet Union had signed the Moscow Peace Treaty. The Winter War was over.

Though technically a Soviet victory which saw Finland cede land to the USSR, the Finns had stunned the world, blunted the largest army on Earth, and maintained their national sovereignty. The embarrassing failures of the Soviet troops was a huge motivating factor for the Germans deciding to invade the USSR the following summer.

Häyhä spent 14 months in hospitals recovering from his wounds. He underwent 26 surgeries. His face remained permanently disfigured. The injury ended any possibility of returning to combat in 1941 during the Continuation War, when the Finns joined the Axis invasion of the Soviet Union.

The Finnish government promoted him from corporal directly to second lieutenant, an unprecedented jump in rank. He received the First and Second Class Medals of Liberty and the Third and Fourth Class Crosses of Liberty. The latter two awards were normally reserved for commissioned officers.

After the War
Häyhä returned to the only life he'd known before the fighting. The Moscow Peace Treaty had ceded his family's land to the Soviet Union. He relocated to Ruokolahti, a small municipality in southeastern Finland, and started over as a farmer. He bred dogs and hunted moose. He avoided publicity and rarely discussed his wartime service.

His friend Kalevi Ikonen later said of him, "Simo spoke more with animals in the forest than with other people."

When asked in 1998 how he had become such an effective sniper, his answer was "Practice."

In December 2001, shortly before his 96th birthday, a newspaper reporter convinced the elderly veteran to discuss his experiences. The journalist asked if he felt remorse for killing so many people.

"I did what I was told, as well as I could," Häyhä replied. "There would be no Finland unless everyone had done the same."

Häyhä died on April 1, 2002, at age 96, in a war veterans' nursing home. He was buried in Ruokolahti.

The Kollaa and Simo Häyhä Museum in Rautjärvi preserves his legacy today. His rifle, serial number 60974, is held in Finnish military collections. In 2004, a Finnish television poll ranked him 74th among the 100 greatest Finns of all time.

More than 500 confirmed kills, less than 100 days of combat, with a rifle without a scope. A simple farmer who answered his nation's call against the largest army on Earth became the deadliest sniper in military history.


"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

MrNubbz

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5994 on: January 16, 2026, 09:47:24 AM »
Ya I've read alot on that guy,I'm sure he saved one in the chamber of his side arm in case he got caught.Can't see a guy like that going to the gulags
I love sleep. My life has the tendency to fall apart when I'm awake - Ernest Hemingway

Brutus Buckeye

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5995 on: January 16, 2026, 01:01:27 PM »
Some of the southern states used to have a state holiday the Friday before MLK day, transforming this into a four day weekend. 

MrNubbz

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5996 on: January 17, 2026, 11:57:55 PM »
https://www.nationalww2museum.org/about-us/notes-museum/native-american-d-day-veteran-charles-norman-shay-dies-101


https://www.quora.com/
Mika Salvador
Dec 7


Master Sergeant Charles Norman Shay, saved many lives on D-Day at Normandy while putting his own life at risk.

“I saw there were many wounded men struggling in the water,” he said. “And I knew that if nobody went to help them, they would die.”

At the time, he was an Army private with the First Infantry Division. He once explained how he rescued the soldiers:
“I tried to get as many men out of the water as I could by turning them onto their backs and holding them under their shoulders. I don’t know where my strength came from, but they say once adrenaline starts, you can do amazing things.”

Shay also fought in the Battle of Hürtgen Forest and the Battle of the Bulge. Near the end of the war, he was captured and became a prisoner of war. He was awarded the Silver Star for his bravery.
I love sleep. My life has the tendency to fall apart when I'm awake - Ernest Hemingway

FearlessF

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5997 on: January 18, 2026, 12:05:08 PM »
THIS DAY IN HISTORY: 

Legionnaire's Disease Mystery Declared Solved (1977)
In July 1976, members of the American Legion veterans association who were gathered at a Philadelphia hotel began falling ill with a mysterious respiratory ailment that sickened 221 and killed 34. Months later, the US Centers for Disease Control announced that a new bacterium—Legionella pneumophila—had been identified as the culprit. It had spread through the hotel's air conditioning system.
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FearlessF

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5998 on: January 19, 2026, 08:06:17 AM »
THIS DAY IN HISTORY: 
British Parliament Expels John Wilkes for Libelous, Racy Writings (1764)
Despite his notoriously dissolute reputation, Wilkes became a champion of the freedom of the press as a journalist and politician. While a member of the British Parliament, he repeatedly published criticisms of King George III, riling the monarch. During the 1760s, he was variously arrested, prosecuted, shot in the stomach, and expelled from Parliament multiple times, ostensibly for his racy writings.
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FearlessF

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5999 on: January 20, 2026, 08:55:44 AM »
ARTICLE OF THE DAY: 

The Blond Knight of Germany
Known as "the Blond Knight Of Germany," Erich Hartmann was the World War II Luftwaffe pilot now recognized as the most successful fighter ace in the history of aerial combat. A master of stalk-and-ambush tactics, Hartmann scored 352 victories in 1,404 combat missions and was never shot down or forced to land due to enemy fire. During the war, Russians nicknamed him “Black Devil" due to the black tulip design he had added to his plane.
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FearlessF

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #6000 on: January 20, 2026, 08:56:56 AM »
THIS DAY IN HISTORY: 

Nazi Officials Decide on "The Final Solution" (1942)
In early 1942, Nazi officials held a conference at Lake Wannsee in Berlin to discuss what "final solution" would be used to eliminate the Jewish population of Europe. On paper, the plan called for gathering Jews into camps for deportation to work details in the East. The official record of the meeting does not mention killing but notes that the "evacuation" was to happen as soon as possible.
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FearlessF

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #6001 on: January 21, 2026, 10:10:08 AM »
ARTICLE OF THE DAY:

Murder, Inc.
Murder, Inc., is the name given by the press to the band of professional killers who operated throughout the US in the 1930s and 40s as the enforcement arm of the Syndicate, a confederation of organized crime groups. Allegedly protected by corrupt politicians, they were able to commit well over 100 murders before law enforcement authorities launched a campaign against the mob that resulted in a number of convictions and executions.
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FearlessF

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #6002 on: January 21, 2026, 10:11:21 AM »
THIS DAY IN HISTORY: 

Battle of Khe Sanh Begins (1968)
Located near the demilitarized zone that marked the border between North and South Vietnam, Khe Sanh was the site of a protracted battle during the Vietnam War. It involved months of near-constant artillery attacks on the local US Marine base, matched by a bombing barrage of surrounding areas by US planes. The US forces retained the base but gained no advantage, and both sides suffered heavy casualties.
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SFBadger96

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #6003 on: January 21, 2026, 11:50:08 AM »
Gained no advantage is a bit of a simplification. The NV wanted the Marines out of Khe Sanh because of its ability to interdict supplies coming from Cambodia. The Marines holding Khe Sanh enabled continued supply chain disruption, which is a critical factor in war. So while it was politically unimportant, it was strategically important.

MrNubbz

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #6004 on: January 22, 2026, 06:51:46 AM »
1472 Great comet of 1471 (C/1471 Y1) becomes the closest comet in modern times, coming within 10 million kilometers of Earth [1]

1673 Regular mail delivery begins between New York and Boston

1908 Katie Mulcahey is arrested for lighting a cigarette, violating the one-day-old "Sullivan Ordinance" banning women from smoking in public, and is fined $5. Appearing before the judge, she states, “I’ve got as much right to smoke as you have. I never heard of this new law, and I don’t want to hear about it. No man shall dictate to me.”

1506 The first contingent of 150 Swiss Guards arrives at the Vatican

1690 Iroquois tribes renew their allegiance to the British in opposition to the French

1814 First Knights Templar Grand Encampment in the US is held in New York City

1879 Battle of Rorke's Drift: A British garrison of about 150 holds off 3,000 to 4,000 Zulu warriors. Eleven Victoria Crosses and several other decorations are awarded to the defenders.

1879 Zulu warriors attack British Army camp in Isandhlwana, South Africa

1881 Cleopatra's Needle, a 3,500-year-old Ancient Egyptian obelisk, is erected in Central Park, New York

1930 -35°F (-37°C), Mount Carroll, Illinois (state record)

1943 Temperature rises 49°F (9°C) in 2 minutes in Spearfish, South Dakota

1944 Allied forces begin landing at Anzio on the Italian mainland

1951 Fidel Castro is ejected from a Winter League baseball game after hitting a batter

1956 30 people die in a train crash in Los Angeles

1964 World's largest cheese (15,723 kg) is produced in Wisconsin for the New York World's Fair

1968 "Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In" sketch comedy television program premieres on NBC

1973 George Foreman TKOs Joe Frazier in 2 rounds to win WBC & WBA heavyweight boxing titles in Kingston, Jamaica

1973 In a landmark decision, the US Supreme Court legalizes most abortions (Roe v. Wade). Writing the majority opinion, Justice Harry Blackmun states that the criminalization of abortion does not have "roots in the English common law tradition."

1976 Bank robbery in Beirut nets a record $20 to $50 million

1984 Super Bowl XVIII, Tampa Stadium, Tampa, FL: LA Raiders beat Washington Redskins, 38-9; MVP: Marcus Allen, Los Angeles, RB

1985 -30°F (-34°C), Mountain Lake Bio Station, Virginia (state record)

1987 Blizzard in NJ, as 334 attend Devils-Flame NHL game, NJ wins 7-5

1989 Super Bowl XXIII, Joe Robbie Stadium, Miami, FL: San Francisco 49ers beat Cincinnati Bengals. After winning his third Super Bowl as head coach, Bill Walsh retires.

2006 Kobe Bryant scores 81 points in a 122-104 Lakers victory over the Toronto Raptors

2010 Conan O'Brien's last The Tonight Show episode after a big controversy over the Tonight Show timeslot

2016 Winter storm conditions strand 500 motorists for 24 hours in Somerset and Bedford counties, about 80 miles southeast of Pittsburgh, on the Pennsylvania Turnpike

2018 Netflix becomes the largest digital media and entertainment company in the world worth $100 billion

2018 New Orleans Pelicans' DeMarcus Cousins has 44 points, 24 rebounds & 10 assists in 132-128 double-OT win over Chicago Bulls; 1st player since Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (1972) with 40+ points, 20+ rebounds & 10+ assists


I love sleep. My life has the tendency to fall apart when I'm awake - Ernest Hemingway

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