Category Archives: Historical

Racism in the Legal System

Have you ever heard of the legal case Batson vs. Kentucky? Few people have.  Yet this was a major legal landmark in the legal system; this case determined that a prosecutor cannot use peremptory challenges to remove a juror from a jury pool based on race. A bit of explanation — potential jurors are examined

Read More

Pearl Harbor and Virtual Reality

Today is December 7th, Pearl Harbor Day, the “Day That Will Live in Infamy”.    I’ve just learned of a new way to remember how we entered World War II.  There is a virtual reality app, Remembering Pearl Harbor, being advertised by Life VR.  My technical expertise is pretty limited, so all I can tell you

Read More

What Was the First Thanksgiving Like?

Sometimes we assume holidays have always been the way we experience them, but Thanksgiving is a good example of how you can’t view historical events through a contemporary lens.  I took time out from eating and football-watching to check my email, and I found details about that first celebration on today’s Time magazine News Brief. 

Read More

What Caused London’s Killer Fog?

In  December, 1952, a  dense fog descended over London, England, and suddenly people began dying.  Over the course of five days, at least 4,000 people, and as many of 12,000, succumbed to breathing problems and approximately 150,000 were hospitalized.  Thousands of animals also died.  This disaster led to the Clean Air Act of 1956, but

Read More

Half-Peace in Our Time?

Just before World War II, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain talked about “peace in our time.”  He was wrong, of course.  But maybe now we’re halfway there. August 29, 2016 was the official start of a ceasefire in Colombia between the government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, better known as the FARC.  Thus

Read More

A Good-News Story About Refugees

I’ve been reading  a book entitled The Greatest War Stories Never Told by Rick Beyer and I came across something worth sharing. In September, 1943, Adolf Hitler ordered Denmark’s Jewish population to be deported to the death camps.  The logistics were put in place and more than a thousand German police and Gestapo moved into

Read More