“We have been more than patient. We’ve tried sanctions. We’ve tried the carrot of oil for food and the stick of coalition military strikes. But Saddam Hussein has defied all these efforts and continues to develop weapons of mass destruction.
The first time we may be completely certain he has nuclear weapons is when, God forbid, he uses one. We owe it to all our citizens to do everything in our power to prevent that day from coming.”

~President George W. Bush
Speech to the United Nations General Assembly
September 12, 2002


1776 – 21-year old Nathan Hale, a member of Knowlton’s Rangers, the first organized intelligence service organization in the United States, went behind enemy lines on Long Island.
Gen. George Washington, desperate for information on the probable site of a British invasion, had requested volunteers to spy on British movements. Hale was the only volunteer.
Hale crossed Long Island sound, left his uniform, silver shoe buckles and other personal possessions, and slipped into the darkness at Huntington Bay, L.I.
His story continues on September 21


1857 – After being caught up in a Category 2 hurricane while off the coast of the Carolinas, the SS Central America sank about 160 miles east of Cape Hatteras, NC.
The ship was carrying 13–15 tons of gold from the California Gold Rush.
153 survived the sinking but a total of 425 passengers and crew, including Captain William Lewis Herndon, drowned.
Herndon Factoid: Two years after the sinking, Herndon’s daughter Ellen married Chester Alan Arthur, later the 21st President of the United States.


1862 – The Battle of Harpers Ferry began.
As General Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia advanced into Maryland, he made plans to capture the vital Union garrison at Harpers Ferry, Virginia (now West Virginia).
Although Maj. Gen. George McClellan’s Army of the Potomac was in pursuit (at his usual leisurely pace), Lee – in a bold maneuver – divided his army, sending three columns under Gen. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson to Harpers Ferry while the rest of the army marched towards Hagerstown, Maryland.
Surrounded on three sides by steep heights, the terrain at Harpers Ferry made it nearly impossible to defend, a problem made worse by the Union commander, Colonel Dixon S. Miles, who lacked experience leading troops and insisted on keeping most of the troops near the town instead of taking up commanding positions on the surrounding heights.
The story continues on September 15


1919 – Adolf Hitler joined the obscure German Workers’ Party as its 55th member (he later claimed he was the 7th member), agreeing not with workers’ rights, but with its German Nationalism and antisemitism.
Hitler’s talent as an orator resulted in a large growth in party members (over 2,000) who were quickly won over to Hitler’s political beliefs. By 1920, his influence was such that the party was renamed the National Socialist German Workers’ Party.

lascaux
1940 – Near Montignac, France, a collection of 600 prehistoric cave paintings and nearly 1,500 engravings were discovered by four teenagers.
The 15,000- to 17,000-year-old paintings, consisting mostly of animal representations, are among the finest examples of art from the Upper Paleolithic period.
The Lascaux grotto was opened to the public in 1948 but was closed in 1963 because artificial lights had faded the vivid colors of the paintings and caused algae to grow over some of them.
A replica of the Lascaux cave was opened nearby in 1983 and receives tens of thousands of visitors annually.

laconia
1942 – The RMS Laconia, a former Cunard White Star ship put to use to transport troops, including prisoners of war, was in the South Atlantic bound for England when it encountered U-156, a German submarine.
The sub attacked, sinking the troop ship and imperiling the lives of more than 2,200 passengers. But as Capt. Werner Hartenstein, the sub commander, was to learn, among those passengers were 1,500 Italians POWs.
Realizing that he had just endangered the lives of so many of his fellow Axis members, he put out a call to an Italian submarine and two other German U-boats in the area to help rescue the survivors.
In the meantime, one French and two British warships sped to the scene to aid in the rescue. The German subs immediately informed the Allied ships that they had surfaced for humanitarian reasons.
The Allies assumed it was a trap.
An American B-24 bomber, the Liberator, flying from its South Atlantic base on Ascension Island, saw the German sub and bombed it – despite the fact that Hartenstein had draped a Red Cross flag prominently on the hull of the surfaced sub. The U-156, damaged by the air attack, immediately submerged.
Admiral Karl Donitz, supreme commander of the German U-boat forces, had been monitoring the rescue efforts. He ordered that “all attempts to rescue the crews of sunken ships…cease forthwith.”
Consequently, more than 1,400 of the Laconia‘s passengers, which included Polish guards and British crewmen, drowned.


1943 – Otto Skornezy, a colonel in the German Waffen-SS, made a daring rescue of deposed Italian dictator Benito Mussolini from captivity.
Skorzeny took a contingent of his troops up in gliders and crashed them on the steep rocky slopes surrounding Campo Imperatore Hotel, a ski resort in Italy’s Gran Sasso, high in the Apennine Mountains.

Skorzeny and his troops stormed the hotel, capturing it without a shot. After finding the room where Mussolini was held prisoner, Skorzeny entered and destroyed the transmitting equipment.
Mussolini was flown to Vienna in an aircraft that had landed after the assault began.

jfk-wedding
1953 – Senator John Fitzgerald Kennedy of Massachusetts married Jacqueline Lee Bouvier, a photographer for the Washington Times-Herald, at St. Mary’s Church in Newport, Rhode Island.

lassie
1954 – Lassie premiered on CBS.
The program went through several personnel changes over the course of its 19-year run, including six different dogs playing the title role … all of them were male.


1959 – Bonanza premiered on NBC.
Lasting 14 seasons and 431 episodes, Bonanza was the second-longest-running western series in U.S. television history.


1962 – Speaking at Rice University in Houston, President John F. Kennedy reaffirmed that the U.S. would put a man on the moon by the end of the decade.
No nation which expects to be the leader of other nations can expect to stay behind in this race for space. We choose to go to the Moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard. This will be done in the decade of the sixties. It may be done while some of you are still here at school at this college and university. It will be done during the terms of office of some of the people who sit here on this platform. But it will be done. And it will be done before the end of this decade.
On July 20, 1969, almost seven years after Kennedy’s speech, Apollo 11 landed the first manned spacecraft on the Moon.


1966 – The Monkees premiered on NBC, beginning a two-year run.
Producers Bert Schneider and Bob Rafelson had placed an ad in Variety for four folk and rock musicians to appear in a TV series emulating the madcap humor of the Beatles’ A Hard Day’s Night.
Over 400 applied for the job, including Stephen Stills, John Sebastian, Harry Nilsson and Danny Hutton (later of Three Dog Night), but as it turned out, only one of the four winners, guitarist and songwriter Michael Nesmith, actually saw the ad.
Micky Dolenz (who would play drums), Davy Jones (who would sing), and Peter Tork (bass) found out about the opportunity from other sources.
Monkees Factoid: A longstanding myth claims that Charles Manson also applied, but he was in prison at the time and would not be paroled until March 21, 1967.

arthur-garrity
1974 – In Boston, opposition to court-ordered school busing turned violent on the opening day of classes, particularly in South Boston, the city’s main Irish-Catholic neighborhood.
School buses carrying African American children were pelted with eggs, bricks and bottles. Police in combat gear fought to control angry white protesters besieging the schools.

In a June 1974 ruling in the matter of Morgan v. Hennigan, Judge Wendell Arthur Garrity had stated that Boston’s de facto school segregation discriminated against black children.
Garrity ruled that the Boston school system was unconstitutionally divided, writing that school officials “knowingly carried out a systematic program of segregation affecting all of the city’s students, teachers, and facilities and have intentionally brought about and maintained a dual school system.”
Thousands of students, teachers, and administrators were reassigned, based on race, to different schools, often requiring the children to be bused into unfamiliar neighborhoods.
Protests continued unabated for months, and many parents, white and black, kept their children at home. In October, the National Guard was mobilized to enforce the federal desegregation order.


1975 – Pink Floyd released the Wish You Were Here album.
The album’s themes included criticism of the music business, alienation, and a tribute to founding member Syd Barrett, who had left seven years earlier with deteriorating mental health.
The album received mixed reviews from critics upon its initial release, but it retrospectively received critical acclaim, hailed as one of the greatest albums of all time, and reached #1 in the U.S. and UK.

taxi
1976 – Taxi premiered on ABC.
The series, which switched to NBC in 1982, would win 18 Emmy Awards (including three for Outstanding Comedy Series) during its 5-year run.

hopalong-cassidy
1977 – After nearly 40 years of riding across millions of American TV and movie screens, cowboy actor William Boyd, best known for his role as Hopalong Cassidy, died at the age of 77.

carl-yastrzemski
1979 – Carl Yastrzemski of the Boston Red Sox drove a single into right field for his 3,000th career hit.
He became the first American League player to reach 3,000 career hits and 400 career home runs.


1983 – A militant Puerto Rico independence group pulled off a robbery of a Wells Fargo depot in West Hartford, CT.
Los Macheteros, which broke away from the mainstream Puerto Rico independence movement in the early 1970s to pursue independence by militant or violent means, stole $7 million in the robbery, the largest cash heist in U.S. history at the time.
Records seized from the organization by the FBI later showed that the doctrinaire Marxist organization intended to use the money to pursue its military objectives and support leftist insurgencies elsewhere in Latin America.
Most of the suspects were arrested in 1985.
12 jailed members of the nationalist group accepted President Bill Clinton’s conditional offer of clemency. Eleven were released within days, while Juan Segarra Palmer, one of the leaders of the group, had his 55-year sentence drastically reduced and was paroled in 2004.


1988 – Hurricane Gilbert slammed into Jamaica. With winds reaching 175 miles per hour, the Category 5 hurricane (with a 40-mile-wide eye) covered the entire island.
The tin roofs that covered most homes were no match for the winds – about 80 percent of the island’s homes were seriously damaged and approximately 500,000 of the country’s 2 million people were left homeless. Nearly every home on the island lost electricity. Worst of all, more than 200 people lost their lives.
The storm went on to cause death and destruction in Mexico and spurred a batch of tornadoes in Texas.


1992 – Actor Anthony Perkins (Friendly Persuasion, Fear Strikes Out, Goodbye Again, but forever remembered for playing the role of Norman Bates in Psycho) died at the age of 60 from AIDS-related pneumonia.

raymond-burr
1993 – Actor Raymond Burr died of cancer at the age of 76.
He co-starred in several films, including (A Place In The Sun and Rear Window, but is best remembered for playing the title role in television’s Perry Mason and Ironside.


1994 – Frank Eugene Corder, a truck driver with very limited knowledge of piloting a plane, stole a Cessna 150 and departed from Aldino Airport in Maryland while severely intoxicated.
He crashed the stolen aircraft onto the South Lawn of the White House at 1:49 a.m., apparently trying to hit the building. The aircraft skidded across the ground, struck a magnolia tree just west of the South Portico steps, and hit the southwest corner of the first floor of the building. Corder was killed and was the sole casualty.
The crash caused a re-evaluation in security procedures around the White House, as the pilot had entered restricted airspace. Though the White House is rumored to be equipped with surface-to-air missiles, none were fired. The Secret Service has neither confirmed nor dispelled the rumor.


2002 – Former executives from Tyco International, including the CEO and CFO, were indicted in New York on charges that they stole hundreds of millions of dollars from the company.
CEO Dennis Kozlowski and CFO Mark Swartz were later convicted and sentenced to 8 1/3 years to 25 years in prison. Kozlowski, 58, was ordered to pay $170 million in fines and restitution. Swartz, 45, was ordered to pay $72 million.
Kozlowski was released from prison in 2014; Swartz in 2015.


2002 – President George W. Bush told the United Nations to confront the “grave and gathering danger” of Saddam Hussein’s Iraq.
Bush made it plain that America would rather move in concert with other nations, but he also made it clear that America, in the end, would act alone against Iraq if need be.

johnny-cash
2003 – Singer Johnny Cash died of complications from diabetes at the age of 71.
I Walk The Line, Ring Of Fire, Rock Island Line, A Boy Named Sue, Hurt are just a few of his many hits.
Cash is an inductee in the Country Music Hall of Fame, Songwriters Hall of Fame, Rockabilly Hall of Fame, and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.


2006 – In a speech at the University of Regensburg in Germany, Pope Benedict XVI quoted from an obscure medieval text that characterized some teachings of Islam’s founder as “evil and inhuman,” unleashing a torrent of rage across the Islamic world.
The quote, which had originally appeared in Dialogue Held with a Certain Persian, the Worthy Mouterizes, in Anakara of Galatia (written in 1391), was “Show me just what Muhammad brought that was new and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached.”


2008 – The Chatsworth train collision occurred at 4:22 p.m. PDT , when a Union Pacific freight train and a Metrolink commuter train collided head-on in the Chatsworth district of Los Angeles.
There were 25 fatalities, and 135 others were injured.
According to the National Transportation Safety Board which investigated the cause of the collision, the Metrolink train ran through a red signal before entering a section of single track where the opposing freight train had been given the right of way by the train dispatcher.
The NTSB faulted the Metrolink train’s engineer, 46-year-old Robert M. Sanchez, for the collision, concluding that he was distracted by text messages he was sending while on duty.

Compiled by Ray Lemire ©2019 RayLemire.com / Streamingoldies.com. All Rights Reserved.