On December 3
“We are angry and sad about this loss, but we are most devastated that he chose to give up. Let’s choose to make this the first time we don’t glorify this tragedy with talk of rock and roll and the demons that, by the way, don’t have to come with it.”
~Mary Forsberg
Ex-wife of Scott Weiland
=====================
=====================
1828 – The Electoral College met and overwhelmingly elected Andrew Jackson the seventh president of the United States.
Jackson, the Democratic nominee, had handily defeated incumbent president John Quincy Adams (National Republican) in the popular vote, winning 55.97% of the vote. That translated into a 178-83 win in the Electoral College.
It was not a “pleasant” experience for either candidate.
Jackson’s marriage came in for vicious attacks. When Jackson married his wife Rachel in 1791, the couple believed that she was divorced. However, the divorce was not yet finalized.
In the Adams campaign’s hands, this became a scandal. Charles Hammond, in his Cincinnati Gazette, asked: “Ought a convicted adulteress and her paramour husband be placed in the highest offices of this free and Christian land?”
Jackson also came under heavy attack as a slave trader who bought and sold slaves and moved them about in defiance of modern standards of morality, and he was rebuked for his courts-martial, execution of deserters and massacres of Indian villages.
Adams did not escape attack, either. It was charged that Adams, while serving as Minister to Russia, had “surrendered an American servant girl to the appetites of the Czar.”
Adams was also accused of using public funds to “buy gambling devices for the presidential residence.”
The “gambling devices” were a chess set and a pool table.
1894 – Author Robert Louis Stevenson (Treasure Island, Kidnapped, Strange Case of Dr, Jekyll and Mr. Hyde) died of a cerebral hemorrhage at the age of 44.
1947 – A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams opened at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre on Broadway.
The show would run for more than 800 performances, turning Marlon Brando into an overnight star. Jessica Tandy won a Tony Award for her performance, and Williams was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.
1960 – Camelot opened at the Majestic Theatre on Broadway.
Richard Burton and Julie Andrews played the leading roles in the musical written by Lerner and Loewe. The show had a run of 873 performances.
1965 – The Beatles released their Rubber Soul album in England – and in the U.S. three days later with a slightly different track listing.
The songs demonstrated the Beatles’ increasing maturity as lyricists and, in their incorporation of brighter guitar tones and new instrumentation such as sitar, harmonium and fuzz bass, the group striving for more expressive sounds and arrangements for their music.
“Things were changing,” Paul McCartney later said. “The direction was moving away from the poppy stuff. Dylan was influencing us quite heavily at that point.”
1967 – 53-year-old Lewis Washkansky received the first human heart transplant at Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa.
Washkansky, a South African grocer dying from chronic heart disease, received the transplant from Denise Darvall, a 25-year-old woman who was fatally injured in a car accident. Surgeon Christiaan Barnard, who trained at the University of Cape Town and in the United States, performed the revolutionary medical operation.
Eighteen days after the operation, Washkansky died of double pneumonia. His new heart, however, beat strongly to the end.
1979 – Eleven people were killed in a crush of fans at Cincinnati’s Riverfront Coliseum before a rock concert by The Who.
All of the 18,348 tickets for the concert, which cost $10 each, sold out in 90 minutes. The majority of those tickets – more than 14,000 – were for unreserved seats and for “festival seating” – which wasn’t seating at all, but rather first-come, first-served, standing-room-only spots on the floor in front of the stage.
At 7 p.m., the scheduled time for doors to open for the 8 p.m. show passed, when restless fans, some of whom could hear the band’s sound check inside and mistakenly believed that the concert was already starting, began pounding on the glass doors.
At that point, the entire crowd surged and pushed toward doors, causing hundreds to get trampled.
Eleven people were unable to escape the dense crowd pushing toward them and died by asphyxiation. Twenty-six other people reported injuries.
The concert went on as planned, with the band members not told of the tragedy until after their performance.
1984 – In the early morning hours, one of the worst industrial disasters in history begins when a pesticide plant located in the densely populated region of Bhopal in central India leaked a highly toxic cloud of methyl isocyanate into the air.
Of the estimated one million people living in Bhopal at the time, 2,000 were killed immediately, at least 600,000 were injured, and at least 6,000 have died since.
1991 – After months of bruising political attacks in which he had become the symbol of the increasing disarray in President George H.W. Bush’s domestic policy team, White House Chief of Staff – and former New Hampshire Governor – John Sununu resigned (although it later became clear he was forced out.)
1997 – In Ottawa, Canada, representatives from 121 countries signed the Ottawa Treaty, prohibiting manufacture and deployment of anti-personnel landmines.
The United States, People’s Republic of China, and Russia did not sign the treaty.
In fact, of the 10 largest militaries in the world (China, USA, Russia, India, North Korea, Turkey, South Korea, Pakistan, Iran, Egypt, Vietnam), none of them have still signed the treaty.
While most of these countries concern themselves with nuclear weapons, one of the world’s most deadly weapons remains unaddressed.
1999 – Actress Madeline Kahn died of ovarian cancer at the age of 57.
She starred in Young Frankenstein, High Anxiety and Nixon and was a two-time Academy Award nominee: Blazing Saddles and Paper Moon.
1999 – Tori Murden McClure became the first woman and the first American to row solo across the Atlantic Ocean.
After rowing 2,962 miles in 81 days, she eased her 23-foot boat, American Pearl, to the dock at Fort-du-Bas on the French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe.
2001 – Session guitarist Grady Martin died of heart failure at the age of 72.
Martin played with countless musicians, but his most memorable moments occurred on the unforgettable lead guitar riff for Roy Orbison (Oh, Pretty Woman), the guitar lead for Marty Robbins (El Paso) and the guitar lead for Johnny Horton (Honky Tonk Man and The Battle of New Orleans).
2007 – Winter storms caused the Chehalis River to flood many cities in Lewis County, Washington, and closed a 20-mile portion of Interstate 5 for several days.
At least eight deaths and billions of dollars in damages were blamed on the floods.
2014 – Ian McLagan, a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame keyboardist with The Small Faces (Itchycoo Park) and The Faces (Stay With Me), died of a stroke at the age of 69.
2015 – Rock singer Scott Weiland died from an accidental overdose of cocaine, alcohol and amphetamines. He was 48.
During a career spanning three decades, Weiland was best known as the lead singer of the Stone Temple Pilots and Velvet Revolver.
As noted at the top of this column, Weiland’s ex-wife, Mary Forsberg, released an open letter about her ex-husband, his addictions, and his failure to be a dependable father for their children.
Compiled by Ray Lemire ©2023 RayLemire.com / Streamingoldies. All Rights Reserved.