Wednesday, March 18, 2026

MAGA Senator Lindsey Graham Blasts European Allies For Not Getting Involved in Mr. Trump's War

 

This is a picture of a magnet that was being sold at Strand's Book Store in New York City a few years ago. No, I did not buy it, but I liked it and took a picture, which I am sharing here now. 


MAGA Republican Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina blasted European allies yesterday due to their reluctance and rejection of the notion of getting militarily involved with Mr. Trump's war with Iran, particularly sending ships and other military necessities to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.

Graham also suggested in an X post that he had never seen Donald Trump as angry as he had after all of the European allies had rejected involvement. Here, specifically, is what he said:

"Just spoke to President Trump about our European allies’ unwillingness to provide assets to keep the Strait of Hormuz functioning, which benefits Europe far more than America.    

I have never heard him so angry in my life.     

I share that anger given what’s at stake.       

The arrogance of our allies to suggest that Iran with a nuclear weapon is of little concern and that military action to stop the ayatollah from acquiring a nuclear bomb is our problem not theirs is beyond offensive.     

The European approach to containing the ayatollah’s nuclear ambitions have proven to be a miserable failure.  

The repercussions of providing little assistance to keep the Strait of Hormuz functioning are going to be wide and deep for Europe and America.    

I consider myself very forward-leaning on supporting alliances, however at a time of real testing like this, it makes me second guess the value of these alliances.     

I am certain I am not the only senator who feels this way."  

You have the audacity to refer to "our allies" as arrogant? Meanwhile, you let the king of arrogance, Donald Trump, start this war alone, without allies and without even bothering to ask Congress for approval - making this war illegal - and all of that after not holding him accountable for another war in Venezuela, or trying to rein him in when he started ramping up talk about militarily taking over Greenland. This man who personifies arrogance, and you back him up every step of the way, without ever once calling him out on it since he came to power.

But you call out arrogance among our allies - who Donald Trump, in his actual arrogance, never stopped insulting - for hesitating to get involved in a war that they did not start or have any say in, and which Trump seemed to assure them had already been won, so they were not needed? All because you are too weak and cowardly to ever even so much as attempt to hold Trump accountable for his own actions, or force him to own up to his mistakes?

Let's make some things very clear. Trump started this war. He did it alone, and without doing some fundamental things that presidents have done in the past when pursuing a war. Trump launched this war without first bothering to build a case for it to the American people, or to our allies, European or otherwise. He did it without trying to build a coalition or going through the proper channels, either the United Nations on an international level, or making the case in order to obtain Congressional approval domestically. It sure appears that he overstated the urgency of the threat that Iran posed. After all, just months ago, Trump and his team not only declared, but insisted when challenged that they had "totally obliterated" Iran's nuclear weapons capability. Iran had been trying to obtain nuclear weapons for decades now, and again, just a few months ago, he had apparently completely destroyed their entire nuclear capabilities. Yet just a few months later, while facing compromising scandals at home and politically losing popularity and ground in an election year, he suddenly makes the urgent case for outright war with Iran. 

After launching the war, the justifications seemed to fluctuate. It was about stopping their nuclear capabilities. It was about regime change, because those are very bad men. It was a pre-emptive attack, cutting Iran's capabilities of attacking the United States, an attack which they claimed to be sure was to come. 

They also had conflicting reports of how the war was going, or even what it as. Both Trump and Hegseth outright referred to it as a "war" in the first few days. Then they seemed to back off from that, saying it was a war for Iran, but not for the United States (then what, exactly, is this for the United States?). Trump claimed that this was was won within the first hour. He said both before and after  his recent request help from allies, much like he said that he did not actually need their help both before and after asking them for help. 

With such inconsistency and a total lack of clarity, and with Trump seemingly acting hastily and without apparently having thought about any potential pitfalls before he jumped into the fire of war, why would anyone trust that Trump and company actually know what they are doing? Also, he continually and relentlessly takes every opportunity to insult allies - or rather, former allies, evidently. Then he acts shocked - Shocked! - that they would show less than wild enthusiasm to join up in his war games?

But of course, Graham does not address any of those questions regarding Trump. Just as pretty much always, he is too cowardly to ever question or criticize Trump. Graham, as always, is personally too cowardly to demand that Trump do what he, in fact, is legally obligated to do when pursing a war. Namely, to ask Congress for approval. But then, Graham always and forever is giving Trump a pass on all of his ridiculous behavior and bad ideas.  

Of course, Trump himself had plenty to say. Unfortunately. And of course, it reflects his blatant immaturity and false sense of entitlement, as well as his lack of ability to admit to any mistakes or less than perfect actions on his end:

“The United States has been informed by most of our NATO ‘Allies’ that they don’t want to get involved with our Military Operation against the Terrorist Regime of Iran, in the Middle East, this, despite the fact that almost every Country strongly agreed with what we are doing, and that Iran cannot, in any way, shape, or form, be allowed to have a Nuclear Weapon,” Trump wrote in a lengthy Truth Social post.  

He added that the U.S. no longer “‘need,’ or desire, the NATO Countries’ assistance — WE NEVER DID!”

Then why bother asking them for help, asshole? If you make such a point of continually insulting and undermining allies, why should you then get so upset and throw a tantrum when you don't get your way after asking them for assistance? And if you did need their assistance, why not try to build a case for war before launching into one? For that matter, if you did need their help - and it sure seems like he wants it now - why insult them to their faces just weeks before asking for help? Why bother continually making arguments that we don't need them and we're so strong, we can do it all on our own, and then get hot and bothered when they take you at your word and leave you to do it?

If Trump wanted NATO involved, then he has to find a way to drop his ego and let it be a NATO operation. Quite frankly, I am not even sure that Trump is capable of that, and I am not trying to be funny or clever when I say that. No, I literally do not believe that Trump would allow anyone other than Trump to be in charge of such an operation, which means that it cannot be done under NATO. Trump's own ego would not allow it. That said, this is in the Middle East, and is not a defensive war for NATO countries. So it likely could not be a NATO operation. In any case, Trump has done so much to fracture the suddenly fragile NATO alliance that they almost assuredly were not going to go along with this, one way or the other. 

So maybe Trump should have done what he claimed to do to begin with, and forget NATO involvement. After all, it is clear that, as far as he is concerned, NATO is an afterthought. So be it. I am sure NATO countries don't want to join Trump and sink in the quicksand which Trump foolishly rushed into.

Why also repeat Mr. Bush's mistake of declaring victory very prematurely in this war in the Middle East? For that matter, why repeat Mr. Bush's mistake of launching a war in the Middle East, of all places, to begin with? 

As for Mr. Graham, if he can be bothered to surgically remove his lips from Trump's ass long enough to possibly gain a different perspective. Then maybe, just maybe, he might stop his apparently relentless march to discredit himself and stain his name further for posterity. 

What awful times for this country, and indeed, for the world, with such pathetic "leaders" in charge at the moment. 




Below are the links to Graham's X page, as well as a related article. All quotes used above were taken from these two sources:


Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) X Post from earlier:

https://x.com/kyg_best/status/2033930724441518423

Am Yisrael Chai 🇮🇱 on X: "🇺🇸 US Senator Lindsey Graham: "Just spoke to President Trump about our European allies’ unwillingness to provide assets to keep the Strait of Hormuz functioning, which benefits Europe far more than America. I have never heard him so angry in my life. I share that anger https://t.co/sV5ff5QvSk" / X




Graham tears into European allies over Strait of Hormuz reluctance by Ellen Mitchell - 03/17/26 12:58 PM ET

https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/5787883-lindsey-graham-trump-european-allies/

Lindsey Graham slams Europe over Strait of Hormuz reluctance

March 18th: This Day in History

 


Once again, it should be reiterated, that this does not pretend to be a very extensive history of what happened on this day (nor is it the most original - the links can be found down below). If you know something that I am missing, by all means, shoot me an email or leave a comment, and let me know!

On this day in 37, the Roman Senate annulled Tiberius' will and proclaimed Caligula Emperor. On this day in 1229, German Emperor Frederick II crowned himself King of Jerusalem. The city of Kraków in Poland was ravaged by Mongols on this day in 1241. In 1532 on this day, the English Parliament banned payments by English churches to Rome. Russian Czar Ivan IV, often better known historically as Ivan “The Terrible,” died at age 53 on this day in 1584. On this day in 1766, following four months of widespread protest in the American colonies, the British Parliament repealed the Stamp Act, a taxation measure enacted to raise revenues for a standing British army in America. On this day in 1932, Pulitzer Prize-winning author John Updike was born in the small town of Shillington, Pennsylvania. The War Relocation Authority was established in United States on this day in 1942. In 1950 on this day, military forces of the Nationalist Chinese government on Taiwan invaded communist (PRC) People's Republic of China (mainland) China in a surprise raid and capture the town of Sungmen. On this day in 1962, there was a French-Algerian truce ending the war that had lasted for 7½ years, and saw over a quarter of a million people killed. On this day in 1967, the Beatles' "Penny Lane" single went up to #1. On this day in 1990, the first free elections were held in East Germany, in which Conservatives defeated the Communists.


Here's a more detailed look at events that transpired on this date throughout history:

• On this day in 37, the Roman Senate annulled Tiberius' will and proclaimed Caligula Emperor.
• 417 - St Zosimus begins his reign as Catholic Pope
• 731 - St Gregory III begins his reign as Catholic Pope
1123 - 1st Latern Council (9th ecumenical council) opens in Rome
1167 - Battle of El-Babein, Egypt: Franks under Amalrik vs Syrians
1184 - Battle of Ichi-no-Tani near Kobe, Japan
1190 - Crusaders kill 57 Jews in Bury St Edmonds England
• On this day in 1229, German Emperor Frederick II crowned himself King of Jerusalem.



The Barbica in Kraków, Poland

 The city of Kraków in Poland was ravaged by Mongols on this day in 1241.


1314 - Jacques de Molay, the 23rd and the last Grand Master of the Knights Templar, is burned at the stake.
1325 - According to legend, Tenochtitlan is founded on this date. The event is depicted on the Mexican coat of arms.
1438 - Albrecht II von Habsburg becomes king of Germany
1509 - Emperor Maximilian I names Margaretha land guardians of Netherlands

 In 1532 on this day, the English Parliament banned payments by English churches to Rome.

1541 - Hernan de Soto observes 1st recorded flood in America (Mississippi R)
1582 - Prince William of Orange injured in attack at Antwerp
1583 - Dutch States General & Anjou sign treaty


  Russian Czar Ivan IV, often better known historically as Ivan “The Terrible,” died at age 53 on this day in 1584.




Flag of Ethiopia

The Lion of Judah Emblem of the Ethiopian Empire

1608 - Susenyos is formally crowned Emperor of Ethiopia.




 1673 - Lord Berkley sells his half of New Jersey to the Quakers




3rd Roman Emperor Caligula3rd Roman Emperor Caligula 
1754 - Duke of Newcastle becomes English premier


• On this day in 1766, following four months of widespread protest in the American colonies, the British Parliament repealed the Stamp Act, a taxation measure enacted to raise revenues for a standing British army in America.  The Stamp Act was passed on March 22, 1765, leading to an uproar in the colonies over an issue that was to be a major cause of the Revolution: taxation without representation. Enacted in November 1765, the controversial act forced colonists to buy a British stamp for every official document they obtained. The stamp itself displayed an image of a Tudor rose framed by the word "America" and the French phrase Honi soit qui mal y pense--"Shame to him who thinks evil of it."  The colonists, who had convened the Stamp Act Congress in October 1765 to vocalize their opposition to the impending enactment, greeted the arrival of the stamps with outrage and violence. Most Americans called for a boycott of British goods, and some organized attacks on the customhouses and homes of tax collectors. After months of protest, and an appeal by Benjamin Franklin before the British House of Commons, Parliament voted to repeal the Stamp Act in March 1766. However, the same day, Parliament passed the Declaratory Acts, asserting that the British government had free and total legislative power over the colonies.


1773 - Oliver Goldsmith' "She Stoops to Conquer," premieres in London
1781 - Charles Messier rediscovers global cluster M92
1793 - 2nd Battle at Neerwinden: Austria army beats France
1793 - The first republican state in Germany, the Republic of Mainz, is declared by Andreas Joseph Hofmann.
1810 - "Converse," 1st US opera, premieres in NY
1813 - David Melville, Newport, RI, patents apparatus for making coal gas
1818 - Congress approves 1st pensions for government service
1834 - 1st railroad tunnel in US completed, in Penn (275 m long)
1834 - Six farm labourers from Tolpuddle, Dorset, England are sentenced to be transported to Australia for forming a trade union.


British Botanist Charles Darwin

• 1835 - Charles Darwin departs Santiago Chile on his way to Portillo Pass


1847 - 1st Dutch public telegram
1850 - Henry Wells & William Fargo forms American Express in Buffalo
1858 - Dutch Van der Brugghen government resigns
1859 - Vera Cruz besieged by Miramon (Cons) in Mexican War of Reform
1864 - Dale Dike on Humber River crumbles drowning some 240
1865 - Battle of Wilson's raid to Selma, AL


1865 - Congress of Confederate States of American adjourns for last time1865 - The Congress of the Confederate States of America adjourned for the last time.  



1870 - 1st US National Wildlife Preserve (Lake Meritt in Oakland California)


 1871 - Communards revolt in Paris

1874 - Hawaii signs a treaty with the United States granting exclusive trading rights.




Bust of Abolitionist Frederick Douglass

 1877 - President Hayes appoints Frederick Douglass marshal of Wash DC



1881 - Barnum & Bailey's Greatest Show on Earth opens (Madison Square Garden)
1890 - 1st US state naval militia organized (Massachusetts)
1891 - Britain is linked to the continent by Telephone
1892 - Lord Stanley presents silver challenge cup for hockey (Stanley Cup)
1895 - 200 blacks leave Savannah, Ga for Liberia
1899 - Phoebe, a moon of Saturn is discovered by Pickering
1900 - Ajax (Amsterdam Football Club), forms
1902 - Enrico Caruso becomes 1st well-known performer to make a record
Abolitionist Frederick DouglassAbolitionist Frederick Douglass 1902 - Schoenberg's "Verklärte Nacht," premieres in Vienna
1904 - 1st performance of Edward Elgar's "In the South (Alassio)"
1909 - Einar Dessau of Denmark makes 1st ham broadcast
1910 - 1st opera by an US composer (Converse) performed at the Met, NYC
1911 - North Dakota enacts a hail insurance law
1913 - King George I of Greece is assassinated in the recently liberated city of Thessaloniki.
1914 - White Wolf gang beats government army in Jingdezhen China
1915 - Failed British attack in Dardanelles
1915 - French battleship Bouvet explodes, 640 killed
1918 - Soccer team SON OF Meerssen forms
1918 - Socialist Youth AJC organizes in Amsterdam
1919 - Order of DeMolay forms in Kansas City
1920 - Greece adopts the Gregorian calendar
1921 - 2nd Peace of Riga, Poland enlarged
1921 - Steamer "Hong Koh" runs aground off Swatow China killing 1,000
1922 - 1st intercollegiate indoor polo championship (Princeton vs Yale)1922 - Princeton and Yale played the first intercollegiate indoor polo championship. 

Pacifist and Spiritual Leader Mahatma GandhiPacifist and Spiritual Leader Mahatma Gandhi 


Statue of Gandhi in State Parliament Square, London, UK

1922 - Mohandas K. Gandhi was sentenced to six years in prison for civil disobedience in India. He served only 2 years of the sentence.   
1922 - British magistrates in India sentence Mahatma Gandhi to 6 years imprisonment for disobedience





1922 - WBT-AM in Charlotte NC begins radio transmissions
1922 - The first public celebration of Bat mitzvah, for the daughter of Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan, is held in New York City.
1925 - (8) 60-MPH tornadoes speed Mo, In, Il, Ky, & Tn kills 689
1929 - Dmitri Shostakovitch' "The new Babylon," premieres in Leningrad
1930 - Boston Bruins win record 20th NHL home game
1931 - 1st electric shavers go on sale in US (Schick)
1931 - Juan Bautista Aznar becomes premier of Spain

 On this day in 1932, Pulitzer Prize-winning author John Updike was born in the small town of Shillington, Pennsylvania. The only child of a math teacher father and aspiring writer mother, Updike developed an early love for reading and drawing and won a scholarship to Harvard. He became editor of the famous Harvard Lampoon and married as an undergraduate.  After graduating in 1953, Updike went to England for a year to study art. In England, he met New Yorker writers and editors E.B. and Katherine White, who offered him a job.  Updike worked on staff for the illustrious magazine until 1957, when he quit and moved to Ipswich, Massachusetts, to concentrate on fiction and poetry. He supported his wife and children with contributions to the New Yorker and in 1958 published his first novel, The Poorhouse Fair, to favorable reviews. Two years later, he published Rabbit, Run, considered one of his best novels, about a former high school basketball star named Harry "Rabbit" Angstrom. He wrote a sequel, Rabbit Redux, in 1971 and won Pulitzer Prizes for Rabbit Is Rich (1981) and Rabbit at Rest (1990). Updike's 1968 novel, Couples, detailing the sexual high-jinx of married couples in a small town, topped the bestseller chart for several weeks.  The prolific Updike published some 60 books during his lengthy career, including novels, children's books, poetry, short story collections and non-fiction. He also wrote frequently for magazines. He died of lung cancer on January 29, 2009, at age 76.

1933 - Radio Clube de Mocambique's, 1st radio transmission

1937 - Gas explosion in school in New London Texas: 294 die
1937 - The human-powered aircraft, Pedaliante, flies 1 kilometre (0.62 miles) outside Milan.


 1938 - Mexico takes control of foreign-owned oil properties
1938 - NY 1st requires serological blood tests of pregnant women
 1938 - Pres Cardena of Mexico nationalizes US & British oil companies
Italian Dictator Benito MussoliniItalian Dictator Benito Mussolini 



 1940 - Benito Mussolini joins Hitler in Germany's war against France & Britain  1940 - Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini held a meeting at the Brenner Pass. The Italian dictator agreed to join in Germany's war against France and Britain during the meeting. 


1942 - Illegal Free Netherlands announces boycott of theaters
1942 - 2 black players, Jackie Robinson & Nate Moreland, request a tryout with the Chicago White Sox, they are allowed to work out


 The War Relocation Authority was established in United States on this day in 1942.  On this day, the War Relocation Authority is created to "Take all people of Japanese descent into custody, surround them with troops, prevent them from buying land, and return them to their former homes at the close of the war."  Anger toward and fear of Japanese Americans began in Hawaii shortly after the bombing of Pearl Harbor; everyone of Japanese ancestry, old and young, prosperous and poor, was suspected of espionage. This suspicion quickly broke out on the mainland; as early as February 19, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered that German, Italian, and Japanese nationals—as well as Japanese Americans—be barred from certain areas deemed sensitive militarily. California, which had a significant number of Japanese and Japanese Americans, saw a particularly virulent form of anti-Japanese sentiment, with the state's attorney general, Earl Warren (who would go on to be the chief justice of the United States), claiming that a lack of evidence of sabotage among the Japanese population proved nothing, as they were merely biding their time.  While roughly 2,000 people of German and Italian ancestry were interned during this period, Americans of Japanese ancestry suffered most egregiously. The War Relocation Authority, established on March 18, 1942, was aimed at them specifically: 120,000 men, women, and children were rounded up on the West Coast. Three categories of internees were created: Nisei (native U.S. citizens of Japanese immigrant parents), Issei (Japanese immigrants), and Kibei (native U.S. citizens educated largely in Japan). The internees were transported to one of 10 relocation centers in California, Utah, Arkansas, Arizona, Idaho, Colorado, and Wyoming.  The quality of life in a relocation center was only marginally better than prison: Families were sardined into 20- by 25-foot rooms and forced to use communal bathrooms. No razors, scissors, or radios were allowed. Children attended War Relocation Authority schools.  One Japanese American, Gordon Hirabayashi, fought internment all the way to the Supreme Court. He argued that the Army, responsible for effecting the relocations, had violated his rights as a U.S. citizen. The court ruled against him, citing the nation's right to protect itself against sabotage and invasion as sufficient justification for curtailing his and other Japanese Americans' constitutional rights.  In 1943, Japanese Americans who had not been interned were finally allowed to join the U.S. military and fight in the war. More than 17,000 Japanese Americans fought; the all-Nisei 442nd Regiment, which fought in the Italian campaign, became the single most decorated unit in U.S. history. The regiment won 4,667 medals, awards, and citations, including 1 Medal of Honor, 52 Distinguished Service Crosses, and 560 Silver Stars. Many of these soldiers, when writing home, were writing to relocation centers.  In 1990, reparations were made to surviving internees and their heirs in the form of a formal apology by the U.S. government and a check for $20,000.


1943 - James Oglethorpe (US) & Terkolei (Neth), torpedoed & sinks
1943 - Red Army evacuates Belgorod
1944 - Nazi Germany occupies Hungary
1944 - 2,500 women trample guards & floorwalkers to purchase 1,500 alarm clocks announced for sale in a Chicago Illinois dept store
1945 - 1,250 US bombers attacks Berlin
1945 - Maurice "Rocket" Richard becomes the 1st NHLer to score 50 goals
1945 - US Task Force 58 attacks targets on Kiushu




1948 - France & Great Britain & Benelux sign Treaty of Brussels


1948 - Philips begin experimental TV broadcasting
1948 - Soviet consultants have left Yugoslavia in first sign of Tito-Stalin split.
1949 - NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Org) ratified
1949 - WGAL TV channel 8 in Lancaster, PA (NBC) begins broadcasting
Soviet Union Premier Joseph StalinSoviet Union Premier Joseph Stalin 1950 - "Touch & Go" closes at Broadhurst Theater NYC after 176 performances
1950 - CCNY beats Bradley 69-61 for the NIT championship


 In 1950 on this day, military forces of the Nationalist Chinese government on Taiwan invaded communist (PRC) People's Republic of China (mainland) China in a surprise raid and capture the town of Sungmen. Because the United States supported the attack, it resulted in even deeper tensions and animosities between the U.S. and the PRC.  In October 1949, the leader of the communist revolution in China, Mao Zedong, declared victory against the Nationalist government of China and formally established the People's Republic of China. Nationalist troops, politicians, and supporters fled the country and many ended up on Taiwan, an island off the Chinese coast. Once there, they declared themselves the real Chinese government and were immediately recognized as such by the United States. Officials from the United States refused to have anything to do with the PRC government and adamantly refused to grant it diplomatic recognition.  Nationalist Chinese leader Chiang Kai-Shek bombarded the mainland with propaganda broadcasts and pamphlets dropped from aircraft signaling his intention of invading the PRC and removing what he referred to as the "Soviet aggressors." In the weeks preceding the March 18, 1950 raid, Chiang had been particularly vocal, charging that the Soviets were supplying the PRC with military advisors and an imposing arsenal of weapons. On March 18, thousands of Nationalist troops, supported by air and sea units, attacked the coast of the PRC, capturing the town of Sungmen that lay about 200 miles south of Shanghai. The Nationalists reported that they killed over 2,500 communist troops. Battles between the raiding group and communist forces continued for weeks, but eventually the Nationalist forces were defeated and driven back to Taiwan.  Perhaps more important than the military encounter was the war of words between the United States and the PRC. Communist officials immediately charged that the United States was behind the raid, and even suggested that American pilots and advisors accompanied the attackers. (No evidence has surfaced to support those charges.) American officials were cautiously supportive of the Nationalist attack, though what they hoped it would accomplish beyond minor irritation to the PRC remains unknown. Just eight months later, military forces from the PRC and the United States met on the battlefield in Korea. Despite suggestions from some officials, including the commander of U.S. troops Gen. Douglas MacArthur, that the United States "unleash" the Nationalist armies against mainland China, President Harry S. Truman refrained from this action, fearing that it would escalate into World War III.


1951 - Pat O'Sullivan wins LPGA Titleholders Golf Championship
1952 - 1st plastic lens for cataract patients fitted (Phila)


 1952 - Communist offensive in Korea


1953 - 15th NCAA Men's Basketball Championship: Indiana beats Kansas 69-68
1953 - Boston Braves move to Milwaukee
1953 - Earthquake strikes West Turkey, 250 die
1953 - KGNC (now KAMR) TV channel 4 in Amarillo, TX (NBC) begins broadcasting
1953 - NL approves Boston Braves move to Milwaukee (1st shift since 1903)
1955 - I Hatojama recognized as premier of Japan
1957 - WTWV (now WTVA) TV channel 9 in Tupelo-Columbus, MS (NBC) begins
1958 - Dodgers announces mascot/clown Emmett Kelly will not perform in 1958
1959 - Boston Celtic's Bill Sharman begins record of 56 straight free-throws




General Dwight Eisenhower, 34th President of the United States

 1959 - President Dwight D Eisenhower signs Hawaii statehood bill



1961 - Poppin' Fresh Pillsbury Dough Boy introduced






Flag of Algeria

 On this day in 1962, there was a French-Algerian truce ending the war that had lasted for  7½ years, and saw over a quarter of a million people killed.    On March 18, 1962, France and the leaders of the Front de Liberation Nationale (FLN) sign a peace agreement to end the seven-year Algerian War, signaling the end of 130 years of colonial French rule in Algeria.  In late October 1954, a faction of young Algerian Muslims established the Front de Liberation Nationale (FLN) as a guerrilla organization dedicated to winning independence from France. They staged several bloody uprisings during the next year, and by 1956 the FLN was threatening to overrun the colonial cities, home to Algeria's sizable European settler population. In France, a new administration, led by Guy Mollet, promised to quell the Muslim rebellion and sent 500,000 French troops to Algeria to crush the FLN.  To isolate the rebels and their area of operations, France granted Tunisia and Morocco independence, and their borders with Algeria were militarized with barbed wire and electric fencing. When FLN leaders attempted to travel to Tunisia in October 1956 to discuss the Algerian War, French forces diverted their plane and jailed the men. In response, the FLN launched a new campaign of terrorism in the colonial capital of Algiers. General Jacques Massu, head of France's crack parachute unit, was given extraordinary powers to act in the city, and through torture and assassination the FLN presence in Algiers was destroyed. By the end of 1957, the rebels had been pushed back into rural areas, and it seemed the tide had turned in the Algerian War.  However, in May 1958, a new crisis began when European Algerians launched massive demonstrations calling for the integration of Algeria with France and for the return of Charles de Gaulle to power. In France, the Algerian War had seriously polarized public opinion, and many feared the country was on the brink of army revolt or civil war. On June 1, de Gaulle, who had served as leader of France after World War II, was appointed prime minister by the National Assembly and authorized to write a new national constitution.  Days after returning to power, de Gaulle visited Algiers, and though he was warmly welcomed by the European Algerians he did not share their enthusiasm for Algerian integration. Instead, he granted Muslims the full rights of French citizenship and in 1959 declared publicly that Algerians had the right to determine their own future. During the next two years, the worst violence in Algeria was perpetrated by European Algerians rather than the FLN, but scattered revolts and terrorism did not prevent the opening of peace negotiations between France and the FLN-led provisional government of the Algerian Republic in 1961.  On March 16, 1962, a peace agreement was signed at Evian-les-Bains, France, promising independence for Algeria pending a national referendum on the issue. French aid would continue, and Europeans could return to their native countries, remain as foreigners in Algeria, or take Algerian citizenship. On July 1, 1962, Algerians overwhelmingly approved the agreement, and most of the one million Europeans in Algeria poured out of the country. More than 100,000 Muslim and 10,000 French soldiers were killed in the seven-year Algerian War, along with thousands of Muslim civilians and hundreds of European colonists.

1962 - Dmitri Shostakovitch becomes member of Supreme Soviet of USSR
1963 - "Tovarich" opens at Broadway Theater NYC for 264 performances
1963 - France performs underground nuclear test at Ecker Algeria

1963 - The U.S. Supreme Court handed down the Miranda decision concerning legal council for defendants.  

1965 - Rolling Stones fined £5 each for public urination


1965 - USSR launches Voshkod 2; Alexei Leonov makes 1st spacewalk (20 mins)
1965 - Cosmonaut Aleksei Leonov, leaving his spacecraft Voskhod 2 for 12 minutes, becomes the first person to walk in space.
1966 - "Pousse Cafe" opens at 46th St Theater NYC for 3 performances
1966 - General Suharto forms government in Indonesia
1966 - Scott Paper begins selling paper dresses for $1




    

• On this day in 1967, the Beatles' "Penny Lane" single went up to #1.




1967 - Oil tanker Torrey Canyon hits a rock & spills oil
1968 - Congress repeals requirement for a gold reserve

1970 - -25) US Postal begins strike


• 1970 - Cambodia military coup under Gen Lon Nol, prince Sihanuk flees


1970 - Mail service paralyzed by 1st major postal strike
1970 - NFL selects Wilson as official football & scoreboard as official time
1971 - 200 die in landslide into Lake Yanahuani, Chungar Peru
1972 - AIAW 1st basketball champs, Immaculata beats West Chester State 52-48
1972 - China PR performs nuclear test at Lop Nor PRC

1974 - Most Arab oil producing nations end embargo against US
1975 - Kurds end fight against Iraqi army


• 1977 - Clash releases their 1st recording "White Riot"

• 1977 - US restricts citizens from visiting Cuba, Vietnam, N Korea & Cambodia





• 1977 - Vietnam hands over MIA to US
1978 - 250,000 attend rock concert California Jam II in Ontario Calif
1978 - Pakistani former premier Ali Bhutto sentenced to death
1979 - "On the 20th Century" closes at St James Theater NYC after 460 perfs


• 1979 - Battles between Kurds & Iranians break in Sananday Iran
1979 - Joanne Carner wins LPGA Honda Civic Golf Classic
1980 - Vostok rocket exploded on launch pad while being refueled, killing 50
1981 - Buffalo Sabres sets NHL record of 9 goals in 1 period (vs Toronto)
1982 - Singer Teddy Pendergrass' spinal cord severed in a car accident
1984 - Chris Johnson wins LPGA Tucson Conquistadores Golf Open
1985 - Capital Cities Communications Inc acquires ABC
1985 - Commissioner Peter Ueberroth reinstates Willie Mays & Mickey Mantle
1986 - Exciting draw in final gives NSW the Sheffield Shield over Qld
1986 - Treasury Dept announces plans to alter paper money
1987 - Gerber survey find most popular names for newborns (Jessica & Matthew)
1987 - US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site



• 1989 - 27th space shuttle mission, STS-29 (Discovery 8), returns to Earth


1989 - California Quake amusement ride opens at Universal Studios
1989 - Dino Ciccarelli sets Wash Cap record of 7 pts in a game
1989 - In Egypt, a 4,400-year-old mummy is found in the Pyramid of Cheops.
1990 - Largest ever art robbery at Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston. 13 works valued over $500 million are stolen




Flag of the German Democratic Republic (GDR), better known as East Germany

• On this day in 1990, the first free elections were held in East Germany, in which Conservatives defeated the Communists.



1990 - 32-day lockout by baseball owners ends
1990 - A Tampa little leaguer, dies, after being struck by a pitch
1990 - Colleen Walker wins Circle K Tucson LPGA Golf Open
Heavyweight Boxing Champion Mike TysonHeavyweight Boxing Champion Mike Tyson 1991 - Mike Tyson beats Razor Ruddock in the 7th round
1991 - Phila '76ers retires Wilt Chamberlain's #13 jersey
1991 - Reggie Miller (Indiana) ends NBA free throw streak of 52 games
1992 - "4 Baboons Adoring the Sun" opens at Beaumont Theater NYC for 38 perf
1992 - Donna Summer gets a star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame
1992 - Leona Helmsley sentence to 4 years for tax evasion


1992 - White South Africans voted for constitutional reforms that would give legal equality to blacks. 


1992 - Zimbabwe beat England by 9 runs in World Cup at Albury
1993 - "Sisters Rosensweig" opens at Barrymore Theater NYC for 556 perfs
1993 - Amsterdam stock exchange hits record Ÿ12.2 billion
1993 - Sri Lanka beat England in Test match by 5 wickets





Flag of South Africa during the apartheid era

• 1994 - South Africa Goldstone committee reveals existence of secret police



• 1994 - Space shuttle STS-62 (Columbia 16), lands


1994 - Zsa Zsa Gabor files for bankruptcy
1995 - Michael Jordan announces he is ending his 17 month NBA retirement


• 1995 - STS 67 (Endeavour 8) lands after 16½ days


Basketball Superstar Michael JordanBasketball Superstar Michael Jordan 1996 - 50,000 swimmers raise 15 million for charity during BT's Swimathon '96
1996 - A nightclub fire in Quezon City, Philippines kills 162.
1997 - Russian AN-24 plane crashes in Turkey, 50 die


The flag of the People's Republic of China

• 2003 - China's new president, Hu Jintao, announced that his country must deepen reforms and raise living standards of workers and farmers.



2003 - FBI agents raid the corporate headquarters of HealthSouth Corporation in Birmingham, Alabama on suspicion of massive corporate fraud led by the company's top executives.
2003 - British Sign Language is recognised as an official British language.
2005 - Terri Schiavo's feeding tube is removed at the request of her husband.
2012 - Superleague Greece football match between Olympiacos and Panathinaikos is abandoned after fans set fire to Athens' Olympic Stadium
2012 - Joachim Gauck elected President of the Federal republic of Germany by the Federal Assembly
2013 - Explosions kill 25 people at a bus park in Kano, Nigeria
2013 - A car bombing kills 10 people and injures 20 in Mogadishu, Somalia
2013 - 98 people are killed and 248 are injured across Iraq from a series of bombings and shootings



 0037 - The Roman Senate annuls Tiberius’ will and proclaims Caligula emperor.   1123 - The first Latern Council (9th ecumenical council) opened in Rome.   1190 - Crusaders killed 57 Jews in Bury St. Edmonds England.   1532 - The English parliament banned payments by English church to Rome.   1541 - Hernando de Soto observed the first recorded flood of the Mississippi River.   1583 - Dutch States General & Anjou signed a treaty.   1673 - Lord Berkley sold his half of New Jersey to the Quakers.   1692 - William Penn was deprived of his governing powers.   1766 - Britain repealed the Stamp Act.   1813 - David Melville patented the gas streetlight.   1818 - The U.S. Congress approved the first pensions for government service.   1834 - The first railroad tunnel in the U.S. was completed. The work was in Pennsylvania.   1835 - Charles Darwin left Santiago Chile on his way to Portillo Pass.   1850 - Henry Wells & William Fargo founded American Express.   1874 - Hawaii signed a treaty giving exclusive trading rights with the islands to the U.S.   1881 - Barnum and Bailey's Greatest Show on Earth opened in Madison Square Gardens.   1891 - Britain became linked to the continent of Europe by telephone.   1899 - Phoebe, a moon of the planet Saturn, was discovered.   1900 - Ajax (Amsterdam Football Club) was formed.   1902 - In Turkey, the Sultan granted a German syndicate the first concession to access Baghdad by rail.   1903 - France dissolved the Catholic religious orders.   1905 - Franklin Roosevelt and Eleanor Roosevelt were married.   1906 - In Morocco, it was reported that France and Germany were in a deadlock at the Algeciras Conference.   1909 - Einar Dessau of Denmark used a short wave transmitter to become the first person to broadcast as a "ham" operator.   1910 - The first opera by a U.S. composer performed at the Met in New York City.   1911 - Theodore Roosevelt opened the Roosevelt Dam in Arizona. It was the largest dam in the U.S. at the time.   1911 - North Dakota enacted a hail insurance law.   1913 - Greek King George I was killed by an assassin. Constantine I succeeded him.   1916 - Russia countered the Verdun assault with an attack at Lake Naroch. The Russians lost 100,000 men and the Germans lost 20,000.   1917 - The Germans sank the U.S. ships, City of Memphis, Vigilante and the Illinois, without any warning.   1919 - The Order of DeMolay was established in Kansas City.   1920 - Greece adopted the Gregorian calendar.   1921 - Poland was enlarged with the second Peace of Riga.   1921 - The steamer "Hong Koh" ran aground off of Swatow China. Over 1,000 people were killed.    1931 - Schick Inc. displayed the first electric shaver.   1937 - More than 400 people, mostly children, were killed in a gas explosion at a school in New London, TX.   1938 - Mexico took control of all foreign-owned oil properties on its soil.   1938 - New York first required serological blood tests of pregnant women.   1940 - The soap opera "Light of the World" was first heard on NBC radio.    1942 - The third military draft began in the U.S. because of World War II.   1943 - The Reich called off its offensive in Caucasus.   1943 - American forces took Gafsa in Tunisia.   1944 - The Russians reached the Rumanian border in the Balkans during World War II.   1945 - 1,250 U.S. bombers attacked Berlin.   1945 - Maurice "Rocket" Richard became the first National Hockey League (NHL) player to score 50 goals.   1948 - France, Great Britain, and Benelux signed the Treaty of Brussels.   1949 - The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) was ratified.   1950 - Nationalist troops landed on the mainland of China and capture Communist held Sungmen.   1952 - In Philadelphia, PA, the first plastic lenses were fitted for a cataract patient.   1953 - An earthquake hit West Turkey killing 250 people.   1954 - RKO Pictures was sold for $23,489,478. It became the first motion picture studio to be owned by an individual. The person was Howard Hughes.   1959 - U.S. President Eisenhower signed the Hawaii statehood bill.   1962 - French and Algerian rebels agreed to a truce.   1963 - "Tovarich" opened at the Broadway Theater in New York City for 264 performances.   1963 - France performed an underground nuclear test at Ecker Algeria.     1965 - Cosmonaut Alexei Leonov became the first man to spacewalk when he left the Voskhod II space capsule while in orbit around the Earth. He was outside the spacecraft for about 20 minutes.   1966 - The government of Indonesia was formed by General Suharto.   1966 - Scott Paper began selling paper dresses for $1.   1968 - The U.S. Congress repealed the requirement for a gold reserve.   1969 - U.S. President Nixon authorizes Operation Menue. It was the ‘secret’ bombing of Cambodia.   1970 - The U.S. Postal Service experienced the first postal strike.   1970 - The NFL selected Wilson to be the official football and scoreboard as official time.   1971 - U.S. helicopters airlifted 1,000 South Vietnamese soldiers out of Laos.   1971 - A landslide in Lake Yanahuani, Chungar Peru, killed 200.   1974 - Most of the Arab oil-producing nations ended their five-month embargo against the United States, Europe and Japan.   1975 - Saigon abandoned most of the Central Highlands of Vietnam to Hanoi.   1975 - The Kurds ended their fight against Iraq.   1977 - Vietnam turned over an MIA to a U.S. delegation.   1979 - Iranian authorities detained American feminist Kate Millett. The next day she was deported.   1980 - The Vostok rocket exploded on the launch pad killing 50.   1981 - The U.S. disclosed that there were biological weapons tested in Texas in 1966.   1986 - Buckingham Palace announced the engagement of Prince Andrew to Sarah Ferguson.   1986 - The U.S. Treasury Department announced that a clear, polyester thread was to be woven into bills in an effort to thwart counterfeiters.   1987 - The U.S. performed nuclear tests at a Nevada test site.   1990 - Thirteen paintings were stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston. The value was $100 million making it the largest art robbery in history.   1989 - A 4,400-year-old mummy was discovered at the Pyramid of Cheops in Egypt.      1990 - The 32-day lockout of baseball players ended.   1990 - In Tampa, FL, a little league player was killed after being hit with a pitch.   1992 - Leona Hemsly was sentenced to 4 years in prison for tax evasion.    1994 - Zsa Zsa Gabor filed for bankruptcy.   1997 - A Russian AN-24 crashed killing 50 people.   



1584 Russian czar Ivan IV, or Ivan “The Terrible,” died at age 53. 1766 After months of American protests, Britain repealed the Stamp Act. 1925 The most violent single tornado in U.S. history, the “Tri-State Tornado,” hit Missouri, Indiana, and Illinois, killing 689 people and injuring 13,000 others. 1963 The Supreme Court held in Gideon v. Wainwright that public defenders must be provided for indigent defendants in felony cases. 1965 Soviet cosmonaut Aleksei Leonov made the first spacewalk. 1967 The oil tanker Torrey Canyon was wrecked off the Cornish coast of England, spilling 919,000 barrels of oil into the sea. 1990 The biggest art theft in U.S. history occurs at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston. The works, including pieces by Vermeer and Rembrandt, were never recovered. 2004 A small asteroid made the closest approach to Earth ever recorded, only about 26,500 miles away. 2005 After a long legal battle, Terry Schiavo's feeding tube was removed. She died 13 days later.

The following links are to web sites that were used to complete this blog entry:

http://www.historyorb.com/today/events.php

http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/mar18.htm


http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

March 17th: This Day in History

 


Once again, it should be reiterated, that this does not pretend to be a very extensive history of what happened on this day (nor is it the most original - the links can be found down below). If you know something that I am missing, by all means, shoot me an email or leave a comment, and let me know!


Flag of Ireland

St. Patrick's Day     


Saint Patrick was a Christian missionary, bishop and apostle of Ireland. He was born in the late 4th century.   Patrick began his first mission to Ireland in 432.   

On March 17, 461 A.D., St. Patrick died at Saul, Downpatrick, Ireland.   

On March 17, 1762, in New York City, the first St. Patrick's Day parade took place. The parade was held by Irish soldiers serving in the British army.   

Today March 17 is a day of international celebration.   

http://www.on-this-day.com/publications/days/st-patricks-day.html




http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history

Mar 17, 461: Saint Patrick dies

On this day in 461 A.D., Saint Patrick, Christian missionary, bishop and apostle of Ireland, dies at Saul, Downpatrick, Ireland.  

Much of what is known about Patrick's legendary life comes from the Confessio, a book he wrote during his last years. Born in Great Britain, probably in Scotland, to a well-to-do Christian family of Roman citizenship, Patrick was captured and enslaved at age 16 by Irish marauders. For the next six years, he worked as a herder in Ireland, turning to a deepening religious faith for comfort. Following the counsel of a voice he heard in a dream one night, he escaped and found passage on a ship to Britain, where he was eventually reunited with his family.  

According to the Confessio, in Britain Patrick had another dream, in which an individual named Victoricus gave him a letter, entitled "The Voice of the Irish." As he read it, Patrick seemed to hear the voices of Irishmen pleading him to return to their country and walk among them once more. After studying for the priesthood, Patrick was ordained a bishop. He arrived in Ireland in 433 and began preaching the Gospel, converting many thousands of Irish and building churches around the country. After 40 years of living in poverty, teaching, traveling and working tirelessly, Patrick died on March 17, 461 in Saul, where he had built his first church.  

Since that time, countless legends have grown up around Patrick. Made the patron saint of Ireland, he is said to have baptized hundreds of people on a single day, and to have used a three-leaf clover--the famous shamrock--to describe the Holy Trinity. In art, he is often portrayed trampling on snakes, in accordance with the belief that he drove those reptiles out of Ireland. For thousands of years, the Irish have observed the day of Saint Patrick's death as a religious holiday, attending church in the morning and celebrating with food and drink in the afternoon. The first St. Patrick's Day parade, though, took place not in Ireland, but the United States, when Irish soldiers serving in the English military marched through New York City in 1762. As the years went on, the parades became a show of unity and strength for persecuted Irish-American immigrants, and then a popular celebration of Irish-American heritage. The party went global in 1995, when the Irish government began a large-scale campaign to market St. Patrick's Day as a way of driving tourism and showcasing Ireland's many charms to the rest of the world. Today, March 17 is a day of international celebration, as millions of people around the globe put on their best green clothing to drink beer, watch parades and toast the luck of the Irish.


461 St. Patrick dies HISTORY.com Editors  Getty Images Published: November 24, 2009 Last Updated: March 10, 2026:

https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/march-17/saint-patrick-dies






On this day in 45 BCE, in what proved to be his last victory, Julius Caesar defeated the Pompeian forces of Titus Labienus and Pompey the Younger in the Battle of Munda. In 180 on this day, Marcus Aurelius died. Commodus is now the only emperor of the Roman Empire. St Patrick, a bishop, was carried off to Ireland as a slave on this day in 432. On this day in 455, Roman Senator Petronius Maximus became Emperor. French King Francois I was freed from Spain on this day in 1526. In 1766 on this day, Great Britain repealed the Stamp Act. On this day in 1776 during the Revolutionary War, the British evacuated Boston and headed to Nova Scotia. In 1847 on this day, Shakespeare's "Macbeth" opera premiered in Florence (modern day Italy). In 1917 on this day, while there was major fighting during the Great War (World War I) there was a major shakeup in French government as Prime Minister Aristide Briand was forced to resign. Spain & Brazil prevented Germany from joining the League of Nations on this day in 1926. On this day in 1961, the white minority government of South Africa during the days of apartheid left the British Commonwealth. On this day in 1990, Lithuania rejected the Soviet demand to renounce its recently declared independence. In 1992 on this day, South Africa President FW De Klerk won a whites only referendum which encouraged him to continue with the reform process to end apartheid in South Africa. White South Africans overwhelmingly approved DeKlerk's pursuit of constitutional reforms to give legal equality to blacks. I believe that it was the last "whites only" national election in South Africa.


Here's a more detailed look at events that transpired on this date throughout history:

 On this day in 45 BCE, in what proved to be his last victory, Julius Caesar defeated the Pompeian forces of Titus Labienus and Pompey the Younger in the Battle of Munda.

 In 180 on this day, Marcus Aurelius died. Commodus is now the only emperor of the Roman Empire.

  St Patrick, a bishop, was carried off to Ireland as a slave on this day in 432.

 On this day in 455, Roman Senator Petronius Maximus became Emperor

 1190 - Crusades complete massacre of Jews of York England

 1337 - Edward, the Black Prince is made Duke of Cornwall, the first Duchy made in England.

 1521 - Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan reaches the Philippines



Royal France

 French King Francois I was freed from Spain on this day in 1526.



 1537 - French troops invade Flanders

 1580 - Prince Willem of Orange welcomed in Amsterdam

 1658 - Pro-Charles II plot in England discovered

 1672 - England declares war on Netherlands

 1722 - Willem KH Friso appointed mayor of Drente

  1753 - First official St Patrick's Day

 1755 - Transylvania Land Co buys Kentucky for $50,000 from a Cherokee chief

  1756 - St Patrick's Day 1st celebrated in NYC at Crown & Thistle Tavern

 1757 - Prince Mas Saïd of Mataram surrenders to Mangkubumi in Java




  1762 - First St Patrick's Day parade in NYC

Mar 17, 1762: First St. Patrick's Day parade

In New York City, the first parade honoring the Catholic feast day of St. Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland, is held by Irish soldiers serving in the British army.  

Saint Patrick, who was born in the late 4th century, was one of the most successful Christian missionaries in history. Born in Britain to a Christian family of Roman citizenship, he was taken prisoner at the age of 16 by a group of Irish raiders who attacked his family's estate. They transported him to Ireland, and he spent six years in captivity before escaping back to Britain. Believing he had been called by God to Christianize Ireland, he joined the Catholic Church and studied for 15 years before being consecrated as the church's second missionary to Ireland. Patrick began his mission to Ireland in 432, and by his death in 461, the island was almost entirely Christian.  

Early Irish settlers to the American colonies, many of whom were indentured servants, brought the Irish tradition of celebrating St. Patrick's feast day to America. The first recorded St. Patrick's Day parade was held not in Ireland but in New York City in 1762, and with the dramatic increase of Irish immigrants to the United States in the mid-19th century, the March 17th celebration became widespread. Today, across the United States, millions of Americans of Irish ancestry celebrate their cultural identity and history by enjoying St. Patrick's Day parades and engaging in general revelry.


 In 1766 on this day, Great Britain repealed the Stamp Act.




Statue of a Continental Soldier of the American Revolutionary War of Independence in Trenton, New Jersey

 On this day in 1776 during the Revolutionary War, the British evacuated Boston and headed to Nova Scotia.  On this day in 1776, British forces are forced to evacuate Boston following General George Washington's successful placement of fortifications and cannons on Dorchester Heights, which overlooks the city from the south.    During the evening of March 4, American Brigadier General John Thomas, under orders from Washington, secretly led a force of 800 soldiers and 1,200 workers to Dorchester Heights and began fortifying the area. To cover the sound of the construction, American cannons, besieging Boston from another location, began a noisy bombardment of the outskirts of the city. By the morning, more than a dozen cannons from Fort Ticonderoga had been brought within the Dorchester Heights fortifications. British General Sir William Howe hoped to use the British ships in Boston Harbor to destroy the American position, but a storm set in, giving the Americans ample time to complete the fortifications and set up their artillery. Realizing their position was now indefensible, 11,000 British troops and some 1,000 Loyalists departed Boston by ship on March 17, sailing to the safety of Halifax, Nova Scotia.    The bloodless liberation of Boston by the Patriots brought an end to a hated eight-year British occupation of the city, known for such infamous events as the "Boston Massacre," in which five colonists were shot and killed by British soldiers. The British fleet had first entered Boston Harbor on October 2, 1768, carrying 1,000 soldiers. Having soldiers living among them in tents on Boston Common--a standing army in 18th-century parlance--infuriated Bostonians.    For the victory, General Washington, commander of the Continental Army, was presented with the first medal ever awarded by the Continental Congress.



1800 - English warship Queen Charlotte catches fire; 700 die
1804 - Friedrich Schiller's play "Wilhelm Tell" premieres
1824 - England & Netherlands sign a trade agreement
1833 - Phoenix Society forms (NY)


 1836 - Texas abolishes slavery

1842 - Indians land in Ohio, a 12 square mile area in Upper Sandusky
1845 - Bristol man, Henry Jones, patents self-raising flour
1845 - Rubber band patented by Stephen Perry of London








 In 1847 on this day, Shakespeare's "Macbeth" opera premiered in Florence (modern day Italy)


1854 - 1st park land purchased by a US city, Worcester, Mass
1860 - Japanese embassy arrives aboard Candinmarruh [sic]
1861 - Italy declares independence; Kingdom of Italy proclaimed
1863 - Battle of Kelly's Ford, VA (211 casualities)
1868 - Postage stamp canceling machine patent issued
1870 - Mass legislature authorizes incorporation of Wellesley Female Seminary
1871 - National Association of Professional Base-Ball players organized
1876 - 1st record high jump over 6' (Marshall Jones Brooks)
1876 - Gen Crook destroy Cheyennes & Oglala-Sioux indian camps
1877 - Bill Midwinter completes Test Crickets' 1st 5-wkt haul, 5-78 v Eng
1884 - John Joseph Montgomery makes 1st glider flight, Otay, Calif
1886 - Carrollton Massacre, (Mississippi) 20 African Americans killed
1891 - British Steamer "Utopia" sinks off Gibraltar killing 574
1894 - US & China sign treaty preventing Chinese laborers from entering US
1897 - Bob Fitzsimmons KOs James J Corbett in 14 for heavyweight boxing title
1898 - 1st practical submarine 1st submerges, NYC (for 1 hour 40 minutes)
1899 - Windsor luxury hotel in NYC catches fire, 92 die
1900 - Stanley Cup: Montreal Shamrocks sweep Halifax Crescents in 2
1901 - Free thinking-Democratic Union forms in Netherlands







 1901 - A showing of seventy-one Vincent van Gogh paintings in Paris, 11 years after his death, creates a sensation.


1902 - Stanley Cup: Montreal AAA beat Winnipeg Victorias, 2 games to 1
26th US President Theodore Roosevelt26th US President Theodore Roosevelt 1906 - Pres Theodore Roosevelt uses term "muckrake"
1906 - Stanley Cup: Montreal Wanderers beat Ottawa Silver 7, although both winning a game, Montreal outscores Ottawa 12-10
1906 - The Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity is founded at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio.
1908 - Quickest world heavyweight title fight (Burns KOs Roche in 88 seconds)
1908 - Tommy Burns KOs Jem Roche in 1 for heavyweight boxing title
1910 - DHC soccer team forms in Delft Neth
1912 - Camp Fire Girls organization announced by Mrs Luther Halsey Gulick
1913 - The Uruguayan Air Force is founded.
1917 - 1st exclusively women's bowling tournament begins in St Louis
1917 - Tsar Nicholas II of Russia abdicates the throne [NS]
1917 - Delta Phi Epsilon is founded at New York University Law School.

 In 1917 on this day, while there was major fighting during the Great War (World War I) there was a major shakeup in French government as Prime Minister Aristide Briand was forced to resign.   In the midst of Allied plans for a major spring offensive on the Western Front, the French government suffers a series of crises in its leadership, including the forced resignation, on March 17, 1917, of Prime Minister Aristide Briand.    Horrified by the brutal events at Verdun and the Somme in 1916, the French Chamber of Deputies had already met in secret to condemn the leadership of France's senior military leader, Joseph Joffre, and engineer his dismissal. Prime Minister Briand oversaw Joffre's replacement by Robert Nivelle, who believed an aggressive offensive along the River Aisne in central France was the key to a much-needed breakthrough on the Western Front. Building upon the tactics he had earlier employed in successful counter-attacks at Verdun, Nivelle believed he would achieve this breakthrough within two days; then, as he claimed, the ground will be open to go where one wants, to the Belgian coast or to the capital, on the Meuse or on the Rhine.    The principal power over French military strategy, however, had moved with Joffre's departure to a ministerial war committee who answered not to the commander in chief, Nivelle, but to the minister of war, Louis Lyautey, a former colonial administrator in Morocco appointed by Briand in December 1916, around the same time as Joffre's dismissal. Lyautey loudly and publicly derided the Nivelle scheme, insisting (correctly as it turned out) that it would meet with failure. He was not the only member of Briand's cabinet who opposed the offensive, but the prime minister continued to support Nivelle, desperately needing a major French victory to restore confidence in his leadership. On March 14, Lyautey resigned. This embarrassing public disagreement with his ministers brought Briand down as well, forcing his resignation on March 17.    French President Raymond Poincare's next choice for prime minister, Alexandre Ribot, appointed Paul Painleve as his minister of war. Also hesitant to fully support Nivelle's plan, Painleve and the rest of the Ribot government were finally pressured to do so by the need to counteract the German resumption of unrestricted submarine warfare (announced in February 1917) and by Nivelle's threat that he would resign if the offensive did not proceed as planned. The so-called Nivelle Offensive, begun on April 16, 1917, was a disaster: the German positions along the Aisne, built up since the fall of 1914, proved to be too much for the Allies. Almost all the French tanks, introduced into battle for the first time, had been destroyed or had become bogged down by the end of the first day; within a week 96,000 soldiers had been wounded. The battle was called off on April 20, and Nivelle was replaced by the more cautious Philippe Petain five days later.


1918 - US Ladies Figure Skating championship won by Rosemary Beresford
1918 - US Mens Figure Skating championship won by Nathaniel Niles
1919 - Dutch steel workers strike for 8 hr day & minimum wages
1921 - Dr Marie Stopes opens Britain's 1st birth control clinic (London)
Marxist Revolutionary and Russian Leader Vladimir LeninMarxist Revolutionary and Russian Leader Vladimir Lenin 


 1921 - Lenin proclaims New Economic Politics


1921 - Sailors revolt in Kronstadt (thousands die)
1921 - The Second Republic of Poland adopts the March Constitution.
1924 - Eugene O'Neill's "Welded," premieres in NYC
1924 - Netherlands & USSR begin talks over USSR recognition
1924 - Sweden & USSR exchange diplomats
1926 - Dutch Calvinists oust Rev J G Geelkerken over Genesis 3
1926 - Richard Rodgers & L Hart's musical "Girl Friend," premieres in NYC


 Spain & Brazil prevented Germany from joining the League of Nations on this day in 1926.

1927 - US government doesn't sign league of Nations disarmament treaty
1929 - General Motors acquires German auto manufacturer Adam Opel


 1929 - Spanish dictator Primo de Rivera closes university of Madrid

 1931 - Stalin throws Krupskaya Lenin out of Central Committee

 1932 - German police raid Hitler's nazi-headquarter
1934 - Dollfuss, Mussolini & Gombos sign Donau Pact (protocols of Rome)
Italian Dictator Benito MussoliniItalian Dictator Benito Mussolini 1935 - KSO-AM in Des Moines Iowa call sign is given to KWCR


 1939 - Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945): The Battle of Nanchang between the Kuomintang and the Japanese breaks out. 





Franklin D. Roosevelt Memorial in Washington, D.C.

 1941 - The National Gallery of Art was officially opened by U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt in Washington, DC. 




1942 - Belzec Concentration Camp opens-30,000 Lublin Polish Jews transported

 1942 - Gen Doug MacArthur arrives in Australia to become supreme commander

1943 - Aldemarin (Ned) & Fort Cedar Lake (US) torpedoed & sinks

1943 - F Hugh Herbert's "Kiss & Tell," premieres in NYC
1945 - Allied ships bomb North-Sumatra
1950 - Belgian government of Eyskens resigns


1950 - Scientists at the University of California at Berkeley announced that they had created a new radioactive element. They named it "californium".
1950 - Element 98 (Californium) announced



1951 - Government of Drees takes power
1951 - Test Cricket debut of Brian Statham, England v NZ Christchurch
1953 - Bill Veeck says he will sell his 80% of St Louis Browns for $2,475M
1953 - US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site
1953 - WBAY TV channel 2 in Green Bay, WI (CBS) begins broadcasting
1953 - WWLP TV channel 22 in Springfield, MA (NBC) begins broadcasting
WW2 General Douglas MacArthurWW2 General Douglas MacArthur 






Les Canadiens de Montréal


 1955 - Maurice "Rocket" Richard suspended, sparks 7 hour riot in Montréal




1956 - 8th Emmy Awards: Ed Sullivan Show, Phil Silvers Show & Lucy Ball
1957 - Dutch ban on Sunday driving lifted
1957 - Ramon Magsaysay, president of Philipines dies in a plane crash


 1958 - Navy launches Vanguard 1 into orbit (2nd US), measures Earth shape


1959 - Australia & USSR restore diplomatic relations


 1959 - Dalai Lama flees Tibet for India




General Dwight Eisenhower, 34th President of the United States

 1960 - Eisenhower forms anti-Castro-exile army under the CIA



1960 - WSLA (now WAKA) TV channel 8 in Selma, AL (CBS) begins broadcasting
1961 - NY DA arrests professional gamblers who implicate Seton Hall players









Flag of South Africa during the apartheid era

 On this day in 1961, the white minority government of South Africa during apartheid left the British Commonwealth.


 1961 - The U.S. increased military aid and technicians to Laos. 


 1962 - Moscow asked the U.S. to pull out of South Vietnam.


1963 - Bob Cousy plays his last NBA game
1963 - Elizabeth Ann Seton of NY beatified (canonized in 1975)
1963 - Eruptions of Mount Agung Bali, kills 1,900 Balinese



    

 1965 - Beatles announce their film is named "8 Arms to Hold on to You" (Help)



 1966 - South Africa government bans Defense & Aid Fund


1966 - US sub locates missing H-bomb in Mediterranean
1968 - 2-tiered gold price negotiated in Wash DC by US & 6 European nations
1968 - Kathie Whitworth wins LPGA St Petersburg Orange Blossom Golf Open
1969 - Golda Meir becomes Israel's 4th PM
1969 - Kathy Whitworth wins LPGA Orange Blossom Golf Open
1970 - Peter O'Malley becomes CEO of LA Dodgers



 1970 - US casts their 1st UN Security Council veto (Support England)


 1970 - The U.S. Army charged 14 officers with suppression of facts in the My Lai massacre case.   

 1972 - U.S. President Nixon asked Congress to halt busing in order to achieve desegregation.   



  

This picture was taken, and recently cropped, by me. Taken from the Ringo Starr and His All-Starr Band show in Worcester, Massachusetts, June 11, 2016




This picture was taken, and recently cropped, by me for the Ringo Starr In Conversation at Strands Bookstore - October 26, 2015


 1972 - Ringo releases "Back off Bugaloo" in UK




 1973 - Twenty were killed in Cambodia when a bomb went off that was meant for the Cambodian President Lon Nol.   

 1973 - The first American prisoners of war (POWs) were released from the "Hanoi Hilton" in Hanoi, North Vietnam.   




Queen of the United Kingdom Elizabeth IIQueen of the United Kingdom Elizabeth II 1973 - Queen Elizabeth II opens new London Bridge
1973 - St Patrick Day marchers carry 14 coffins commemorating Bloody Sunday
1974 - Jane Blalock wins LPGA Bing Crosby Golf Classic International
1975 - Valeri Muratov skates world record 1000m (1:16.92)
1976 - Malikov skates world record 1000m (1:15.76)
1976 - Rubin "Hurricane" Carter is retried
1976 - US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site
1977 - Australia wins cricket Centenary Test by 45 runs, same result as 1877
1978 - Amoco Cadiz tanker spills 1.6 mil gallons of oil off French coast
1978 - Ligeti's opera "Le Grand Macabre," premieres in Stockholm
1978 - Reds don green uniforms for St Patricks Day
1979 - Ice Dance Championship at Vienna won by N Linichuk & G Karponosov USSR
1979 - Ice Pairs Championship at Vienna won by Tai Babilonia & R Gardner USA
1979 - Men's Figure Skating Champ in Vienna won by Vladimir Kovalev (USSR)
1979 - Worlds Ladies Figure Skating Champ in Vienna won by Linda Fratianne
1979 - The Penmanshiel Tunnel collapses during engineering works, killing two workers.
1981 - FC Lisse, Dutch soccer team forms
1982 - 4 Dutch TV crew members shot dead in El Salvador


 1982 - In El Salvador, four Dutch television crewmembers were killed by government troops.   

 1985 - U.S. President Reagan agreed to a joint study with Canada on acid rain.   



1985 - Matti Nykanen of Finland set a world ski jump record of 623'
1986 - Haemers gang robs gold transport in Belgium of 35 million BF
1987 - IBM releases PC-DOS version 3.3
1987 - Sunil Gavaskar ends his Test career with an innings of 96 v Pak
1988 - "Les Miserables," opens at Det Norske Teatret, Oslo
1988 - Highest scoring NCAA basketball game; Loyola-Marymont 119, Wyoming 115


 1988 - Iran says Iraq uses poison gas



 1989 - A series of solar flares caused a violent magnetic storm that brought power outages over large regions of Canada.


1989 - "Chu Chem" opens at Ritz Theater NYC for 44 performances
1989 - Dorothy Cudahy is 1st female grand marshal of St Patrick Day Parade
1990 - PBA National Championship Won by Jim Pencak




The flag of Lithuania

 On this day in 1990, Lithuania rejected the Soviet demand to renounce its recently declared independence. The former Soviet Socialist Republic of Lithuania steadfastly rejects a demand from the Soviet Union that it renounce its declaration of independence. The situation in Lithuania quickly became a sore spot in U.S.-Soviet relations.    The Soviet Union had seized the Baltic state of Lithuania in 1939. Lithuanians complained long and loud about this absorption into the Soviet empire, but to no avail. Following World War II, Soviet forces did not withdraw and the United States made little effort to support Lithuanian independence. There matters stood until 1985 and the rise of Mikhail Gorbachev as leader of the Soviet Union. In 1989, as part of his policy of loosening political repression in the Soviet empire and improving relations with the West, Gorbachev repudiated the Brezhnev Doctrine of 1968, which stated that the Soviet Union was justified in using force to preserve already existing communist governments. Lithuanian nationalists took the repudiation of the Brezhnev Doctrine as a signal that a declaration of independence might be accepted.    On March 11, 1990, Lithuania declared that it was an independent nation, the first of the Soviet republics to do so. It had, however, overestimated Gorbachev's intentions. The Soviet leader was willing to let communist governments in its eastern European satellites fall to democratic movements, but this policy did not apply to the republics of the Soviet Union. The Soviet government responded harshly to the Lithuanian declaration of independence and issued an ultimatum: renounce independence or face the consequences. On March 17, the Lithuanians gave their answer, rejecting the Soviet demand and asking that "democratic nations" grant them diplomatic recognition.    The Soviets had not been bluffing. The Soviet government insisted that it still controlled Lithuania, Gorbachev issued economic sanctions against the rebellious nation, and Soviet troops occupied sections of the capital city of Vilnius. In January 1991, the Soviets launched a larger-scale military operation against Lithuania. Many in the United States were horrified, and the U.S. Congress acted quickly to end economic assistance to the Soviet Union. Gorbachev was incensed by this action, but his powers in the Soviet Union were quickly eroding. In December 1991, 11 of the 12 Soviet Socialist Republics proclaimed their independence and established the Commonwealth of Independent States. Just a few days after this action, Gorbachev resigned as president and what was left of the Soviet Union ceased to exist.



1991 - 9 of 15 Soviet reps officially approve new union treaty
1991 - Irish Lesbians & Gays march in St Patrick Day parade
1991 - John Robin Baitz' "Substance of Fire," premieres in NYC


 1991 - NJ raises turnpike tolls 70%


1991 - Penny Hammel wins Desert Inn LPGA Golf International
1992 - "Death & the Maiden" opens at Brooks Atkinson NYC for 159 perfs
1992 - 18th People's Choice Awards: Garth Brooks & Reba McEntire
1992 - 28 killed in truck bombing of Israeli embassy in Buenos Aires, Arg




This was a picture (which I have since cropped) of the new South Africa flag of the post-apartheid era. I actually took this one at the apartheid museum, as this was the final display, if you will, of the museum, the symbol of the emergence of a "new South Africa."


FW DeKlerk

 In 1992 on this day, South Africa President FW De Klerk won a whites only referendum which encouraged him to continue with the reform process to end apartheid in South Africa. White South Africans overwhelmingly approved DeKlerk's pursuit of constitutional reforms to give legal equality to blacks. I believe that it was the last "whites only" national election in South Africa.






 1992 - Islamic Jihad truck bombs Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires killing 29

1992 - Russian manned space craft TM-14, launches into orbit
1993 - 86 killed by bomb attack in Calcutta
1994 - "Little More Magic" opens at Belasco Theater NYC for 30 performances


 1994 - Iran transport aircraft crashes in Azerbaijan (32 killed)
1994 - It is announced there is no smoking in Cleve Indians new ballpark
1995 - British pound hits 2.4545 to Dutch guilder (record)


 1995 - Sinn-Fein leader Gerry Adams visits White House

1995 - USt approves 1st chicken pox vaccine, Varivax by Merck & Co
1996 - "Bus Stop" closes at Circle in Sq Theater NYC after 29 performances
1996 - "Getting Away With Murder" opens at Broadhurst NYC for 17 perfs
1996 - Aravinda De Silva gets 107* & 3-42 in cricket World Cup victory
1996 - Liselotte Neumann wins LPGA Ping/Welch's Golf Championship
1996 - Montreal Canadian's 1st game in their new arena
1996 - Sri Lanka beat Australia by 7 wickets to win the World Cup
1997 - CNN begins spanish broadcasts




Flag of the Olympics

 1999 - The International Olympic Committee expelled six of its members in the wake of a bribery scandal.  




Flag of Uganda

 2000 - The 800+ deaths of members of the Ugandan cult Movement for the Restoration of the Ten Commandments of God is considered to be a mass murder and suicide orchestrated by leaders of the cult. 2000 - In Kanungu, Uganda, a fire at a church linked to the cult known as the Movement for the Restoration of the Ten Commandments killed more than 530. On March 31, officials set the number of deaths linked to the cult at more than 900 after authorities subsequently found mass graves at various sites linked to the cult. 





2003 - British Cabinet Minister Robin Cook, resigns over government plans for the war with Iraq.
2004 - Unrest in Kosovo results in more than 22 killed, 200 wounded, and the destruction of 35 Serb Orthodox shrines in Kosovo and two mosques in Belgrade and Nis.
2008 - New York State Governor Eliot Spitzer resigns after a scandal involving a high-end prostitute. David Paterson becomes acting New York State governor.
2012 - Bolton Wanderer footballer Fabrice Muamba collapses and is rushed to hospital during a live football match against Tottenham Hotspur
2012 - Wales defeat France to record their eleventh Grand Slam in the Six Nation's Championship
2012 - John Demjanjuk, convicted Nazi war criminal, dies from natural causes at 91
2013 - 10 people are killed by a car bombing in Basra, Iraq
2013 - Toyo Ito wins the 2013 Pritzker Architecture Prize


 2013 - Pope Francis delivers his first Angelus prayer and blessing




 0461 - Bishop Patrick, St. Patrick, died in Saul. Ireland celebrates this day in his honor. (More about St. Patrick's Day)   1756 - St. Patrick's Day was celebrated in New York City for the first time. The event took place at the Crown and Thistle Tavern.   1766 - Britain repealed the Stamp Act that had caused resentment in the North American colonies.   1776 - British forces evacuated Boston to Nova Scotia during the Revolutionary War.   1868 - Postage stamp canceling machine patent was issued.   1870 - Wellesley College was incorporated by the Massachusetts legislature under its first name, Wellesley Female Seminary.   1884 - In Otay, California, John Joseph Montgomery made the first manned, controlled, heavier-than-air glider flight in the United States.   1886 - 20 Blacks were killed in the Carrollton Massacre in Mississippi.   1891 - The British steamer Utopia sank off the coast of Gibraltar.   1901 - In Paris, Vincent Van Gogh's paintings were shown at the Bernheim Gallery.   1909 - In France, the communications industry was paralyzed by strikes.   1910 - The Camp Fire Girls organization was founded by Luther and Charlotte Gulick. It was formally presented to the public exactly 2 years later.   1914 - Russia increased the number of active duty military from 460,000 to 1,700,000.   1917 - America’s first bowling tournament for ladies began in St. Louis, MO. Almost 100 women participated in the event.   1930 - Al Capone was released from jail.     1942 - Douglas MacArthur became the Supreme Commander of the Allied forces in the Southwestern Pacific.   1944 - During World War II, the U.S. bombed Vienna.    1958 - The Vanguard 1 satellite was launched by the U.S.   1959 - The Dalai Lama (Lhama Dhondrub, Tenzin Gyatso) fled Tibet and went to India.       1966 - A U.S. submarine found a missing H-bomb in the Mediterranean off of Spain.   1967 - Snoopy and Charlie Brown of "Peanuts" were on the cover of "LIFE" magazine.   1969 - Golda Meir was sworn in as the fourth premier of Israel.     1992 - In Buenos Aires, 10 people were killed in a suicide car-bomb attack against the Israeli embassy.    1995 - Gerry Adams became the first leader of Sinn Fein to be received at the White House.   1998 - Washington Mutual announced it had agreed to buy H.F. Ahmanson and Co. for $9.9 billion dollars. The deal created the nation's seventh-largest banking company.   1999 - A panel of medical experts concluded that marijuana had medical benefits for people suffering from cancer and AIDS.    2000 - In Norway, Jens Stotenberg and the Labour Party took office as Prime Minister. The coalition government of Kjell Magne Bondevik resigned on March 9 as a result of an environmental dispute.    2007 - Mike Modano (Dallas Stars) scored his 502nd and 503rd career goals making him the all-time U.S. leader in goal-scoring.   2009 - The iTunes Music Store reached 800 million applications downloaded.




1762 The first St. Patrick's Day parade was held in New York City. 1776 British forces evacuated Boston during the Revolutionary War. 1870 Wellesley Female Seminary (later Wellesley College) received its charter from the Massachusetts legislature. 1942 Gen. Douglas MacArthur became supreme commander of Allied forces in the southwest Pacific theater during World War II. 1963 Mount Agung on Bali erupted, killing 1,184 people. 1969 Golda Meir was sworn in as prime minister of Israel. 2003 President Bush delivered an ultimatum to Saddam Hussein: leave Iraq within 48 hours or face an attack.   Read more: This Day in History: March 17 | Infoplease.com http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory/March-17#ixzz2uFjgBKDz


The following links are to web sites that were used to complete this blog entry:

http://www.historyorb.com/today/events.php

http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/mar17.htm

http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory