Saturday, December 31, 2022

General Motors First Billion Dollars On This Day in History


This Day In History: General Motors became the first U.S. corporation to make over US$1 billion in a year on this day in 1955. GM was founded in 1908 so it took them 47 years to get to that point. It took Disney 69 years to make its first billion and IBM needed 79 years to accomplish that same goal. On the flip-side, Booking Holdings (which owns Booking.com and Kayak) were the fastest to make their first $1 billion; they did it in just in three years. It took Google and Amazon 5 years. According to Forbes, the chances of building a billion dollar business are .00006%.

As of December 2021, there are five companies that are worth a trillion dollars: Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet (Google), Amazon and Tesla. 

General Motors is now the 32nd largest company by revenue. 




Friday, December 30, 2022

The Unkillable Grigori Rasputin on This Day in History

 

Today in History: Russian mystic and self-proclaimed holy man Grigori Rasputin was assassinated on this day in 1916. Rasputin was a man who insinuated himself inside the Russian royal family, the Romanovs, and in time was able to gain some power and influence. Many did not like that. While seen by some Russians as a mystic, visionary, and prophet, others viewed him as a charlatan. 

In 1916, members of the nobility lured him to the Yusupov Palace with promises of a wild party. He was driven to the site of his execution in a 1913 Rolls Royce Landaulet. At first they tried to poison him. It is said that Rasputin was fed poisoned cakes and wines and that he gorged down enough cyanide to kill an elephant. But no amount of poison would hurt him. Instead, Rasputin kept asking for more.

When that didn't work they shot him in the heart. When his killers went to dispose of his body, Rasputin leapt to his feet, foaming at the mouth. They then took more shots. That didn't work, until someone shot him in the head. However, one of the conspirators saw Rasputin move, even after the shot to the skull. So they then wrapped his body in linen and threw him over the bridge into the water. 

Some reports say that he was also found mutilated...or so the legend goes.

Rasputin joins Hitler, Blackbeard pirate Edward Teach, Ned Kelly, Ferdinand Magellan and Pablo Escobar as the hardest people to kill.

Thursday, December 29, 2022

The Burdensome OSHA on This Day in History


This Day in History: U.S. President Richard Nixon signed the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA) into law on this day in 1970.

From Raymond J. Keating:

How could anyone find fault with a government agency whose stated mission is “to assure so far as possible every working man and woman in the nation safe and healthful working conditions and to preserve our human resources”?[1]

As is typical with government agencies brandishing impossible missions, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has become a burdensome regulatory body, seemingly more concerned with pushing paper and imposing fines rather than in establishing safer working environments. Indeed, since OSHA’s first month in existence in 1970, when it instituted 4,400 job safety and health rules, the agency has played the role of adversary to American business.[2]

In reality, the private sector possesses every incentive to maintain a safe and healthy working environment for employees. Indeed, beyond a commonly held concern for one’s employees, the financial incentives are substantial. That is, after factoring into the equation lost production and productivity costs, health-care costs, insurance costs, possible lawsuits, and so on, it is clear that safety pays.

Unsafe workplaces have always been and remain the exception rather than the rule. Of course, OSHA acts under the opposite assumption, thereby imposing significant and unnecessary costs on business and the economy. Such costs translate into less entrepreneurship, slower economic growth, and fewer jobs.

There is substantial evidence that OSHA has strayed far from its much-touted educational, advisory, and cooperative relationship with business. Indeed, OSHA’s concern for real safety is lost in a bureaucratic and regulatory haze of citation quotas, tax collection, and remarkably inane regulations. For example:

•       OSHA imposes an incredible paperwork burden on U.S. business. In 1994, seven of the top ten most frequent OSHA citations were related to paperwork. OSHA has perfected the government “make-work” scheme—generate a paper blizzard of regulations and then fine businesses for not complying.

•       In 1976, 95 percent of OSHA citations were classified as “nonserious,” while in recent years 70 percent of citations have been classified as “serious.”[3] It remains difficult to fathom that “serious” violations have grown so much, especially considering the general decline in workplace deaths and injuries. More likely, a considerable, ongoing redefinition of OSHA violations has been undertaken. Such a development reflects the arbitrary and subjective nature of OSHA citations.

•       With the 1990 budget deal, OSHA stepped up its role as a revenue collector for the federal government. OSHA’s maximum allowable penalties were increased seven-fold, and $900 million in additional revenues were expected over five years.

OSHA’s maximum penalties range from $7,000 per violation—for “serious” and “other than serious” classifications—to $70,000 for the “willful and repeat” classification. These are dollar levels that can put many small- and medium-sized businesses out of business. OSHA can levy an “egregious penalty,” where fines can be arbitrarily increased by counting each employee possibly exposed as a separate violation—another example of the arbitrary nature of OSHA citations.

The current administration’s so-called plan to “reinvent” OSHA noted a few examples of ridiculous OSHA regulations:

•       Plastic gas cans can be used on manufacturing work sites, but not on construction sites, even if they have been approved by local fire marshals.

•       OSHA only allows for radiation signs with purple letters on a yellow background, while the Department of Transportation calls for black on yellow.

•       OSHA requires that work-site first-aid kits be approved by a physician.

Unfortunately, in the midst of all the talk about government “reinvention,” OSHA has been busily preparing additional regulations. The federal budget offers program statistics for each agency. “Standards promulgated” (i.e., regulations imposed) are estimated at 12 annually for 1995 and 1996 by OSHA—a kind of regulation quota. OSHA has committed substantial resources to three particular areas in recent years—indoor air quality, ergonomics, and mandatory workplace safety commissions. Scientific evidence pertaining to indoor air quality and ergonomics is weak, if not non-existent, while mandatory worker safety commissions amount to nothing more than a sop to labor unions. If implemented, such regulations will cost tens of billions of dollars annually—translating into fewer resources for investment, employee compensation, and job creation.

Another glaring problem with government regulation and inspections of any industry or workplace is that most, if not all, regulators lack expertise in particular industries. If such individuals were experts, they would hold productive, private sector jobs. They are government bureaucrats. Bureaucrats know paperwork. Hence, the most cited violations by OSHA are paperwork related. The phenomenon was noted by Mr. Vitas M. Plioplys—safety services manager at R.R. Donnelly & Sons Company, the world’s largest commercial printer—before the U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on Workforce Protections of the Committee on Economic and Educational Opportunities:

Any time an OSHA inspector comes into one of our facilities, it is probably the first time they have ever seen a large commercial printing press. In our plants where the presses are 100 feet long and three stories high, the OSHA inspector doesn’t know where to start. In every case the inspector will invariably find a guard off, or some other minor, readily apparent violation, but will pass by process equipment which, if it failed, could blow up our facility. Because they are not experts in the industry they cannot know the critical issues we deal with on a daily basis. . . . Our informal conferences end up being training sessions on safety in the printing industry to the local OSHA offices. They do not know our industry, yet try to cite us as if they do.

Even after noting the many OSHA horror stories, regulations, paperwork burdens, and costs, some still claim that OSHA’s benefits outweigh its costs. In a May 16, 1995, speech President Clinton linked OSHA with reduced workplace deaths: “The Occupational Safety and Health Administration has been at work in this cause since it was created with bipartisan support in 1970. Since that time, workplace deaths have been cut in half.”

Of course, workplace deaths were on the decline for decades before OSHA was created. Fewer workplace deaths reflect many changes in our economy—greater automation, shift in employment from manufacturing to the service sector, leaps in technology, enhanced knowledge, et al. There exists no clear and substantial evidence that OSHA has played any significant role in preventing workplace injuries or death.

The incentives for the private sector to maintain safe working conditions are clear. As already mentioned, many factors make safety and good health a priority for employers. Indeed, as many business owners and operators will tell you, maintaining a safe working environment and complying with OSHA regulations are quite often separate endeavors.

OSHA deregulation efforts are underway in Congress, and should be applauded. However, OSHA eventually should be scrapped altogether—“disinvented” if you will.

Private industry—with technological advancements, expanded knowledge, and proper incentives—has steadily improved the working conditions of employees. Regulatory efforts, have been largely incidental to such developments. Indeed, as noted above, regulations often simply create additional costs with few benefits.

Workplace safety can be and is ensured by individuals—employers, employees, and insurance companies—and if necessary, the courts. If the U.S. economy is to compete and succeed in the years ahead, government’s heavy hand of regulation must be lifted.


1.   The Occupational Safety and Health Act as quoted in Congressional Quarterly’s Federal Regulatory Directory, Seventh Edition, Congressional Quarterly Inc., Washington, D.C., 1994, p. 394.

2.   Ibid., p. 394.

3.   Information provided by U.S. Representative Cass Ballenger’s office.

Raymond J. Keating
Raymond J. Keating

Raymond J. Keating is an author and serves as Chief Economist with the Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council.

This article was originally published on FEE.org. Read the original article.

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Exorcist Author William Peter Blatty on this Day in History

 

This Day in History: American writer, director and producer William Peter Blatty was born on this day (January 7) in 1928.  He is best known for his 1971 novel, The Exorcist, and for his 1974 screenplay for the film adaptation of the same name. Blatty won an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for The Exorcist, and was nominated for Best Picture as its producer. 

The Exorcist is the story of a twelve-year-old girl possessed by a powerful demon, that topped The New York Times Best Seller list for 17 weeks and remained on the list for 57 consecutive weeks. The book sold more than 13 million copies in the United States alone and was translated into over a dozen languages. He later adapted it with director William Friedkin into the film version. Blatty went on to win an Academy Award for his Exorcist screenplay, as well as Golden Globes for Best Picture and Best Writing. 

It also became the first horror film ever to be nominated for the best picture Oscar.

"The movie was marketed as 'based on a true story', but many just believed it to be a marketing gimmick, which in fact, was not true. William Blatty, the writer of the book was actually inspired by exorcisms that happened in real life.
William Blatty came to know about a secret journal kept by the assistant to a Priest who performed exorcisms. He set out to track it down and obtain it.
He had a hard time obtaining it as the Priest who held the journal denied accessing it from anyone else. Eventually, he was able to obtain and read it. It wowed him when he went through the journal, as it told about the real story of a young boy from Maryland and his battle with what his parents believed to be demonic possession. Although Blatty changed several aspects in his novel, such as the age and gender of the child who was possessed." Source


The Mystery of the Grimes Sisters on This Day in History

 

This Day in History: Barbara and Patricia Grimes—aged 15 and 12, disappeared on this day in 1956. The two sisters went to see the Elvis Presley film Love Me Tender at the Brighton Park theater at around 7:30 p.m. They were big Elvis fans so they stayed for the second screening of Love Me Tender, which meant that they would be getting back home at around 11:45 p.m.

"They disappeared while traveling from the Brighton park movie theater to their home at McKinley park which was about a mile and a half in distance. Their disappearance initiated one of the largest missing persons investigations in the history of Chicago. A city wide search was in place for these 2 girls. Rivers and canals were searched, door-to-door searches, and flyers were being put out looking for these young girls. Many teenagers said that they saw the 2 girls get in a car driven by a young man that looked like Elvis Presley." Source

The girls' nude bodies were discovered alongside a deserted road in Willow Springs on January 22, 1957.

Although the sisters' autopsy reports concluded they had been murdered within five hours of their last confirmed sighting, and that both girls had died of secondary shock, numerous individuals attested to having seen the girls alive in the weeks between the night of December 28 and the subsequent discovery of their bodies.

The murder of the Grimes sisters has been described by authors as a crime that "shattered the innocence" of Chicago. This case is also acknowledged as one of the most labor-intensive missing person and murder investigations in Cook County, and remains one of Chicago's most infamous cold cases.


Tuesday, December 27, 2022

A Stolen Holy Relic On This Day in History

 

On this day in 1963, an important Islamic holy relic for Muslims in India, a 600-year old strand of hair from the prophet Muhammad, was stolen from the Hazratbal Shrine in Srinagar, the summer capital of India's Jammu & Kashmir state, leading to riots throughout the city and the deaths of two rioters. State Premier Khwaja Shams-ud-Din announced a $21,000 reward and a $105 annual stipend for the recovery of the relic, referred to as the "Mu-i-Mubarak, which had been brought to the Hazratbal in 1699. 

The relic— a brown hair, encased in a small glass tube, in a green bag in a silver box that had been locked inside the shrine— would reappear just as mysteriously on January 4.

Another strand of hair from Muhammad's beard was stolen in Turkey in 2016.

Monday, December 26, 2022

The Nullarbor Nymph on This Day in History

 

This Day in History: The first reported sighting of the so-called Nullarbor Nymph was made on this day in 1971.

This report was by professional kangaroo shooters from Eucla in Western Australia, near the border with South Australia. They claimed to have seen a blond, white woman amongst some kangaroos, and backed their story with grainy amateur film showing a woman wearing kangaroo skins and holding a kangaroo by the tail. After further sightings were claimed, the story was reported around the world, and journalists descended upon the town of Eucla which had a population of 8 people at the time.

The incident was eventually revealed as a hoax, initiated as a publicity stunt. The girl on the film turned out to be a 17-year-old model named Janice Beeby. She did appear in a photograph taken later, as an evidence of the Nullarbor Nymph, but the woman in the original photograph used by the media to disseminate the hoax was Geneice Brooker, the partner of Laurie Scott, one of the kangaroo-shooter hoaxers. Scott admitted to Murray Nicoll of The News that the hoax was created by a publicist Geoff Pearce, of Melbourne, who happened to be in the Eucla Hotel and had contacts within the media.

However, "the world was captivated with her story and more and more legends grew around her. People wanted to know who she was and what caused her to live a feral lifestyle. People put up statues in her honor, and you have to know they made a movie about her in 1994." Source

Sunday, December 25, 2022

Christmas Coronations on This Day in History

 

This Day in History: This day saw the coronation of Charlemagne as Holy Roman Emperor, in Rome in 800 AD.

King Edmund of East Anglia was crowned king on this day in 855.

Mieszko II Lambert was coronated as king of Poland on this day in 1025.

Henry III was crowned Holy Roman Emperor by Pope Clement II on this day in 1046.

William the Conqueror, Duke of Normandy was crowned king of England, at Westminster Abbey, London on this day in 1066.

The Coronation of BolesÅ‚aw II the Generous as king of Poland happened on this day in 1076. 

Baldwin of Boulogne was crowned the first King of Jerusalem in the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem on this day in 1100.

"It is extremely likely that these kings, or the people who wrote their legends, consciously chose to the crowned on Christmas Day. Those who celebrated their coronations on 25 December would also be celebrating the birth of Christ, the saviour and King of Kings. This would have added a sense of Divine favour to their rule, and secured their claim to that particular title. The sacred significance of this would not have been lost on the audience of these ceremonies, those who recorded them, and those who read about them throughout history." Source

Saturday, December 24, 2022

Bad Pope Boniface VIII on This Day in History

 

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Boniface VIII was elected pope on this day in 1294, replacing St. Celestine V, who had resigned. He is considered on the eight Bad Popes in Russell Chamberlin's book of the same name. Bonifacio VIII imprisoned his predecessor Celestine V, who died in captivity. Accused by his contemporaries of such wrongdoings as violating confessional secrets, Boniface VIII was himself imprisoned, and died soon after of a violent fever.

The pope is said to have been short-tempered, kicking an envoy in the face on one occasion, and on another, throwing ashes in the eyes of an archbishop who was kneeling to receive them as a blessing atop his head.

Also: "A famous and horrifying quote of Boniface VIII was that paedophilia was no more problematic than 'rubbing one hand against the other.' Elected in 1294, Boniface VIII established a string of statues all around the city and even destroyed the city Palestrina over a personal feud. He had a reputation for stubbornness and a knack for starting fights." Source

Boniface was so hated that posthumous trial for heresy was planned but eventually abandoned.

The pope was so bad that Dante, in his Inferno portrayed Boniface VIII as destined for hell for the offence of buying and selling offices of the church (simony). Boniface's eventual destiny is revealed to Dante by Pope Nicholas III, whom he meets. A bit later in the Inferno, Dante recalls the pontiff's feud with the Colonna family, which led him to demolish the city of Palestrina, killing 6,000 citizens and destroying both the home of Julius Caesar and a shrine to Mary. Boniface's ultimate fate is confirmed by Beatrice when Dante visits Heaven. It is notable that he does not adopt Guillaume de Nogaret's aspersion that Boniface VIII was a 'sodomite', however, and does not assign him to that circle of hell (although simony was placed in the eighth circle of fraud, below sodomy, in the seventh circle of violence, designating it as a worse offense and taking precedence above activities of sodomy).

He is also mentioned in François Rabelais's Gargantua and Pantagruel. In the chapter that Epistemos lists the inhabitants of hell and their occupations, he says that Boniface was (in one translation) "skimming the scum off soup pots".

Friday, December 23, 2022

Surviving a Fall Without a Parachute on This Day in History


This Day in History: Vesna Vulović died on this day in 2016. Vulović was a Serbian flight attendant who held the Guinness world record for surviving the highest fall without a parachute: 33,330 ft, or 6.31 miles. She was the sole survivor after a briefcase bomb exploded in the baggage compartment of JAT Flight 367 on 26 January 1972, causing it to crash near Srbská Kamenice, Czechoslovakia. 

Following the bombing, Vulović spent days in a coma and was hospitalised for several months. She suffered a fractured skull, three broken vertebrae, broken legs, broken ribs, and a fractured pelvis. These injuries resulted in her being temporarily paralyzed from the waist down. Vulović made an almost complete recovery but continued to walk with a limp. She had no memory of the incident and had no qualms about flying in the aftermath of the crash. Despite her willingness to resume work as a flight attendant, Jat Airways (JAT) gave her a desk job negotiating freight contracts, feeling her presence on flights would attract too much publicity. Vulović became a celebrity in Yugoslavia and was deemed a national hero.

Her final years were spent in seclusion and she struggled with survivor guilt. Having divorced, Vulović lived alone in her Belgrade apartment on a small pension until her death in 2016.

Thursday, December 22, 2022

The .22 Caliber Killers on This Day in History

 

This Day in History: Thaddeus Lewingdon was born on this day in 1936. He, along with his brother Gary Lewingdon, were American serial killers who committed a series of ten murders in different Ohio counties from December 1977 to December 1978 while committing robbery. As a murder weapon, the criminals used .22 caliber pistols, due to which they received the nickname The .22 Caliber Killers. In 1979, both brothers were sentenced to several terms of life imprisonment.

The Lewingdon brothers chose strangers as their targets, away from their homes. The killings were particularly cruel; ten to seventeen shots fired at each victim. The murder spree began on December 10, 1977, when the brothers attacked 38-year-old Joyce Vermillion and 33-year-old Karen Dodrill at a bar in Newark, during which they robbed and shot at them. No witnesses were present at the crime scene, and Dodrill died afterwards, on her 34th birthday.

On February 13, 1978, the brothers broke into the property of an entrepreneur, 52-year-old Robert McCann, who owned a nightclub in Franklin County. During the robbery, they shot McCann, his 77-year-old mother Dorothy and his girlfriend, 26-year-old Christine Hardman, with several shots to the heads. On April 8, 1978, the killers arrived in the city of Granville, Licking County, where they attacked 77-year-old Jenkins Jones, shooting him and his four dogs before stealing money and valuables from the house. The Lewingdons' next victim was a priest, 35-year-old Gerald Fields, who was killed on April 30 in Fairfield County.

On May 22, 1978, the brothers committed a double murder. In northeast Columbus, where 47-year-old Jerry Martin, vice president and general manager of "Perma-stone", lived. Before stealing all valuables, the brothers shot Martin and his wife Martha through the window screen, after which they left the crime scene without leaving any clues for the investigators. In the course of a forensic ballistic examination of the bullets pulled from the bodies and casings found on the scene, it was established at the end of May 1978 that all the victims were killed with the same pistol. It was also found that another .22 caliber pistol was used in the spouses' murder, which established that there were two criminals present.

In the fall of 1978, a conflict occurred between the two brothers, with Thaddeus refusing to participate in further joint criminal activities. As a result, Gary, having financial difficulties for the upcoming Christmas Day, attacked 56-year-old Joseph Ennik on December 4, 1978, robbing and subsequently killing him. On December 8, while trying to pay off Ennik's stolen credit card, Gary Lewingdon was arrested by the store security service and was taken to the police station. During the interrogation, he began to cooperate with the investigation and confessed to the crimes, on the basis of which Thaddeus was arrested on December 11, 1978. Three days later, both brothers were charged with murder.

Wednesday, December 21, 2022

Disney's Snow White on This Day in History


This Day In History: Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the world's first full-length animated feature, premiered on this day in 1937. The film had many fans: Charlie Chaplin, Frank Capra, even Hitler loved the movie. 

The Disney film is a however a sanitized version of the original story. In an older version, the Queen actually asks the Huntsman for Snow White’s liver and lungs – which were to be served for dinner that night. The Grimm version also has a wedding for Snow White where the Queen was forced to dance to her death: “They put a pair of iron shoes into burning coals. They were brought forth with tongs and placed before her. She was forced to step into the red-hot shoes and dance until she fell down dead.”

Many fairy tales have been repurposed and cleaned up. For instance, in “Cinderella” the evil stepsisters cut off their toes in order to make the slipper fit, and later have their eyes pecked out by birds. 

In “The Six Swans” an evil mother-in-law is burned at the stake. 

In “The Goose Maid” a girl is stripped naked, thrown into a barrel filled with nails and dragged through the streets.

“Sleeping Beauty" was actually raped.

Pinocchio was hanged.

The queen in Snow White was actually a cannibal. 

In the Frog Prince the frog is turned back into human form by having its head cut off, or by being slammed into a wall.

See also: The Origin of Nursery Tales in Mythology by Charles De B. Mills 1889
https://thebookshelf2015.blogspot.com/2016/04/the-origin-of-nursery-tales-in.html

The Grimmest & Darkest Original Fairy Tales - 50 Books to download
https://thebookshelf2015.blogspot.com/2015/08/the-grimmest-darkest-original-fairy.html

Tuesday, December 20, 2022

The Longest Prison Sentence on This Day in History

 

This Day in History. Richard Honeck, 84, who had served the longest prison sentence in American history, was granted parole on this day in 1963, from the Southern Illinois Penitentiary after serving 64 years incarceration. He had been incarcerated since September 2, 1899, for the brutal murder of schoolteacher Walter F. Koeller and had been eligible for parole since 1945, but had not been released because his immediate relatives had all died. On August 25, 1963, an article by Associated Press reporter Bob Poos brought the case to national attention. One of the people who read the article, Mrs. Clara Orth of San Leandro, California, agreed to take her 84-year old uncle into her home. Honeck would survive 13 more years, dying on December 28, 1976, in a nursing home at the age of 97. 

The time served by Richard Honeck has been exceeded since his release in at least three cases.

Johnson Van Dyke Grigsby (1886–1987) served 66 years and 123 days at Indiana State Prison from 1908 to 1974 after stabbing a man in 1907 during a poker game/bar fight.

Joseph Ligon (1938-present) served 68 years at the State Correctional Institution – Phoenix and was at one time the oldest juvenile lifer in the US, Ligon at age 15 was sentenced in 1953 to life without parole for murder, a mandatory sentence at the time. Ligon first rejected a resentencing and parole offer in 2016. Ligon was again resentenced in 2017 and immediately eligible for parole but refused it, pending his appeal. Ligon contends that he should be resentenced to "time served" and released, so he can cut all ties to the justice system. He was released in 2021, after serving 68 years in prison. 

Paul Geidel, (1894–1987) who was convicted of second-degree murder in 1911, served 68 years and 245 days in various New York state prisons. He was released on May 7, 1980, at the age of 86. Geidel's case differed from Honeck's in several key respects. First, he was initially sentenced not to life imprisonment but to twenty years to life, but was later declared insane and was incarcerated in a psychiatric hospital. Secondly, Geidel was offered parole at an earlier date than was Honeck – in 1974, when he had served only 63 years. By this time, Geidel had become institutionalized and declined release, voluntarily choosing to remain confined for an additional six years.

William Heirens, (1928–2012) the "Lipstick Killer," confessed and plead guilty to three murders in Chicago in 1946, sentenced to three life terms, and imprisoned 5 September 1946. He exceeded Honeck's record of time served in August 2010. Heirens died still incarcerated on March 5, 2012.

Monday, December 19, 2022

Killed by a Turnip on This Day in History

 

This Day in History: "On 19 December 1881 the former Conservative MP for Thirsk, Sir William Payne Gallwey, died following an accident while out shooting on his estate at Thirkleby Park, near Thirsk. He was not the only MP to die while pursuing this hobby: James Platt, Liberal MP for Oldham, died after the mayor of Oldham discharged his gun accidentally while they were out with a shooting party on the moors near Saddleworth. Platt was hit in the lower leg and suffered extensive blood loss, expiring just over an hour later.

In Gallwey’s case, however, it was not a firearm which caused his demise, but a turnip. As the Northern Echo reported, he ‘was out shooting in the parish of Bagby, and in crossing a turnip field fell with his body on to a turnip, sustaining severe internal injuries’. Although ‘all that medical aid could do was done’, Gallwey, who was 73 years old, was already in failing health and did not recover. He died at his home at Thirkleby Park and was buried in the local parish church three days later." Source

This however was not the last "death by turnip." In 1989, Leslie Merry, 56, was fatally injured after being hit by a turnip that was thrown from a passing car. "The attack apparently was carried out by a gang who toss vegetables at random at passers-by. Another man suffered stomach injuries in April after being hit by a cabbage, police said. Leslie Merry died...nine days after he was hit in the back by a turnip that knocked him to the ground as he walked near his home in London’s East End, Scotland Yard said. He had a broken rib and ruptured spleen and died from respiratory problems." Source

Sunday, December 18, 2022

Starvation Doctor Linda Hazzard on This Day in History

 

 American quack, swindler and convicted serial killer Linda Hazzard was born on this day in 1867. 

"Widely considered to be Washington state's first serial killer, Hazzard was not a stereotypical murderer who relied on weapons or poisons. Rather, she managed to gain complete psychological control over her victims. Hazzard accomplished this by using quack science that was popular in the late 19th century to suggest that extreme fasting was a way to cure all ailments. Using a combination of fake science and personal manipulation, the so-called doctor managed to convince her patients to slowly starve themselves to death while they resided at her luxurious retreat. During the fasting period, Hazzard would often gain control of her clients' finances and engage in fraud in what was called 'financial starvation' at her murder trial, per Smithsonian." Source

Hazzard established a "sanitarium" called Wilderness Heights, located in Olalla, Washington, where inpatients fasted for days, weeks, or months on a diet consisting of small amounts of tomato, asparagus juice, and occasionally orange juice. While some patients survived and publicly endorsed Hazzard's methods, dozens died under her care. Hazzard claimed that the deceased had succumbed to undisclosed or hitherto undiagnosed illnesses such as cancer or cirrhosis of the liver. Her opponents claimed that they all died of starvation; local residents in Olalla referred to the sanitarium as "Starvation Heights".

In 1912, Hazzard was convicted of manslaughter for the death of Claire Williamson, a wealthy British woman, who weighed less than fifty pounds at the time of her death. At the trial, it was proven that Hazzard had forged Williamson's will and stolen most of her valuables. Williamson's sister, Dorothea, also took the treatment, and, it is alleged, only survived because a family friend showed up in time to remove her from Wilderness Heights. It is suggested that one of the sisters managed to smuggle a telegram to alert their governess, who lived in Australia; however, by the time of arrival, Claire had already died. Dorothea was too weak to leave on her own, weighing less than sixty pounds. She later testified against Hazzard at trial.

Hazzard was sentenced to 2 to 20 years in prison, which she served in the Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla. She was released on parole on December 26, 1915, after serving two years, and the following year Governor Ernest Lister gave her a full pardon. Hazzard and her husband, Samuel Chrisman Hazzard (1869–1946), moved to New Zealand, where she practiced as a dietitian and osteopath until 1920.

Linda Hazzard died of starvation in 1938 while attempting a fasting cure.

Saturday, December 17, 2022

The Curious Case of Kaspar Hauser on This Day in History


This Day in History: Kaspar Houser was killed on this day in 1833. 

"Kaspar Hauser emerged at the Haller Gate in the city of Nuremberg, Bavaria, on May 26,1828, shrouded in mystery and greatly romanticized. A 17-year-old dwarfed male, with a blank mind and without language, he exhibited a spurt of growth and intellectual and social development, becoming a highly peculiar and limited young man whose origin remained enigmatic when he was assassinated on December 14,1833. His story became the sensation of the day throughout Europe and has been enshrined in literature through the present." Source

The following article appeared in Chamber's Journal 1879

On the evening of Whitmonday some fifty years ago, a citizen of Nuremberg happened to be loitering near his door in an unfrequented part of the town, when he observed a short distance off an ungainly looking young man standing in a singular posture, having the appearance of one intoxicated, and apparently making attempts to move forward without having the power either to stand upright or to control the movement of his limbs.

The citizen approached the stranger, who immediately thrust into his hands a letter — a letter addressed to the captain of one of the regiments then quartered in Nuremberg. The citizen attempted to question the strange youth; but in reply to his queries could only elicit a repetition of some unintelligible jargon, and therefore conducted him to the guard-room of the regiment. Here the captain's orderly took charge of the unknown, and led him to his master's house. The captain happened to be from home at the time; and as the stranger could give no account of himself in answer to the numerous questions with which he was assailed, and as he did not appear to understand anything that was said to him, he was taken for a kind of savage; and after much consultation on the part of the servants as to his disposal, he was shut up in a stable, to await the return of the captain. The contents of his pockets created the greatest surprise. They consisted of coloured rags, a key, a paper of gold sand, a small horn rosary, and a few religious tracts.

The poor fellow was so much fatigued that his attempts to walk resulted in an unsteady stagger; his feet were bruised and bleeding; and he appeared to be suffering intensely from the effects of hunger and thirst. Some meat was offered to him; but on tasting it he immediately spat it out in disgust. Beer too was given him; but on tasting a few drops of it he rejected it as he had done the meat. Some bread and a glass of water, however, afforded him much satisfaction, and he swallowed them eagerly. After refreshing himself in this manner, he threw himself on some straw in the stable, and almost instantly fell into a deep sleep. He was still asleep when the captain returned home, although several hours had elapsed. Attempts were made to awaken him, but for some time without success. They lifted him from the ground and tried to place him upon his feet; but in spite of all their exertions, the youth slept on, and seemed more like one dead or in a trance, than a living being merely asleep. At last, however, "his eyes slowly opened, and as if struck with the glittering colour of the captain's uniform, he immediately commenced to utter the same jargon he had used to the bewilderment of the good citizen who had discovered him.

The captain knew nothing of the stranger, and no particulars could be ascertained from the letter of which he was the bearer. This letter did not give any clue to the name or previous home of the youth. It was not even addressed to any person by name, and from its style and orthography, seemed to have been intended to pass for the production of some illiterate peasant. The writer merely stated that he was a poor workman with a large family, which he could ill support; that the mother of the stranger had placed him under his care when quite young; that the boy wished to be a soldier, as his father had been. No name was signed at the end of the letter, which closed with this inhuman sentence: 'If you do not keep him, you may kill him or hang him up in the chimney.'

The captain was in a great dilemma with regard to the disposal of the charge that had been imposed upon him in so sudden and unexpected a manner; but at last, when every attempt at questioning had failed, the unknown was taken to the police station. Here they could make nothing of him. The usual interrogations as to who he was, whence he came, what was his business, &c., elicited no intelligible answer, and the authorities were much perplexed to know what to do with him. His tears, the state of his feet, and his childish and apparently harmless demeanour, excited the pity of those who saw him. Opinions as to his real nature were divided. Some considered him an idiot, others thought him a savage. Not a few affected to believe that under this appearance of simplicity some cunning deceit might be concealed.

At the suggestion of one of the officials, pen, ink, and paper were put before him, and signs were made that he should use them. At this the stranger manifested considerable pleasure; and taking up the pen, to the infinite astonishment it must be confessed of all present, he wrote in bold legible characters the words 'Kaspar Hauser.' Here, however, he stopped. All attempts to make him understand that they wanted him to write down the name of the place whence he came, failed; and as a last resource, he was committed to the prison where rogues and vagabonds were usually confined. On being conducted to his cell, he immediately sank on his straw-bed in a deep sleep. Such was Kaspar Hausert first introduction to the world.

At this time, Kaspar was about sixteen or seventeen years old, and four feet nine inches in height His chin and lips were thinly covered with down; his wisdom-teeth, as they are called, had not yet come, nor did they make their appearance until about three years later. His hair, which was a light-brown colour, was very fine, and curled in ringlets. The structure of his body, which was stout and broad-shouldered, showed perfect symmetry without any visible defect His hands were small aud beautifully shaped. The soles of his feet were as soft as the palms of his hands, and from their appearance, had never before either been used for walking or confined in a shoe. His face, particularly when in a state of tranquillity, was almost without any expression whatever. He appeared to have little or no idea of the use of his limbs. His attempts at walking were most ludicrous, for they resembled the first toddlings of an infant. He was wholly destitute of words and ideas, and shewed a complete ignorance of the most common objects of nature and the ordinary usages of daily life. In fact, the whole of the circumstances connected with the unfortunate youth were for some considerable time a dark mystery, that baffled even the wisest in their attempts to fathom. He appeared to resemble an inhabitant of some other planet, miraculously and suddenly transferred to the earth, rather than one belonging to the same race of men who now exist.

The only food he could be prevailed upon to take was bread and water. For all other kinds of meat and drink he showed the greatest aversion. Even the smell of them was sufficient to make him shudder; and the least drop of wine, or tea, or coffee occasioned him cold sweats, or caused him to be seized with vomiting or violent headache. Among the few intelligible words, to most of which he appeared to attach no meaning whatever, that now and then escaped his lips, the one most frequently used was 'Ross' (horse); from this circumstance the idea of bringing him a wooden toy-horse occurred to some of the police officials. At the sight of this plaything Kaspar, who hitherto had treated everything and every one with stolid indifference, suddenly roused up. He seated himself on the ground by the side of his toy, stroked it, patted it, kept his eyes continually fixed on it, and finally endeavoured to decorate it with all the various trifling presents which benevolent visitors from time to time had given him. For hours he would sit by the side of his horse playing with it, taking no notice of anything that was going on around him. Several toy-horses were now given to him, and for each of them he manifested the same affection he had shown for the first one he received. Even at meal-time he would not be separated from his favourites; and before eating his bread or drinking his water, he tried hard to induce his horses to partake. His plan was to hold his bread to the mouth of each horse in turn, and after that to dip the mouth of each horse in the water. One of the horses happened to be made of plaster of Paris, and the constant wetting had the effect of softening the lips, and by degrees part of the mouth crumbled off. This circumstance caused Kaspar the most intense sorrow, nor would he be comforted until one of the officials had mended his toy for him.

In a very short time after his arrival at the prison, Kaspar was no longer considered as an ordinary prisoner, but rather as a forsaken and neglected child, who needed only care and education to render him like other human beings. The governor of the prison admitted him to his family table, where, although he would not yet eat the same food as the others had, he still learned to sit properly, and in some measure to conform to the ordinary rules of decent society. Kaspar was pleased to have the governor's children as playmates, while they on their part were delighted at the idea of having a playfellow bigger than themselves, and yet with the gentleness and simplicity of a child.

About a fortnight after Kaspar's arrival in Nuremberg, he was providentially favoured with a visit from a certain Professor Daumer, an intelligent young scholar, who forthwith devoted himself to the peculiar and most interesting task of training the virgin mind of the unfortunate youth. The Burgomaster, Herr Binder, also took a very deep interest in Kaspar, and frequently had him brought to his house, where he was encouraged and assisted in his attempts to learn to converse; and where, by carefully avoiding all the puzzling restrictions of legal forms and questionings, the young man was by degrees, as he advanced in his knowledge of words, induced to try and recall some of the incidents in his early life. At the same time the police were still busy with their investigations; but the clue they had to work upon being so slight, they made but slow progress in unravelling the tangled thread of the mystery which surrounded this strange specimen of humanity.



Little by little, however, Kaspar's mind became enlightened, and as his power of expression and his vocabulary increased, he began putting together, bit by bit as it were, those of the incidents of his past life which struck him most forcibly. The account he gave of himself was as follows: 'He neither knows who he is nor where his home is. It was only at Nuremberg that he came into the world. Here he learned for the first time that besides himself and one man who had always had the care of him, there existed other men or other creatures. As long as he could recollect, he had lived in a hole (or small low room, which he sometimes calls a cage), where he had always sat upon the ground, with bare feet, and clothed only in a shirt and a pair of trousers. In his apartment he had never heard a sound, whether produced by a man, by an animal, or by anything else. He never saw the heavens, nor did there ever appear a brightening (daylight) such as at Nuremberg. Whenever he awoke from sleep he found a loaf of bread and a pitcher of water beside him. Sometimes this water had a bad taste; and whenever this was the case, he could no longer keep his eyes open, but was compelled to fall asleep. When he awoke he found that he had a clean shirt on and that his nails had been cut. He never saw the face of the man who brought him his bread and water. In his room he had two wooden horses and some ribbons. With these he always amused himself as long as he was awake. How long he lived in this state he knew not, for he had no knowledge of time. The man who acted as his keeper had, while he was in his little room, taught him to write, standing behind him during each lesson, in order that the face of the teacher might not be seen, and guiding his hand. In this manner he learned to write his name, and also some of the usual words and copies that are used in elementary instruction. After a time his keeper taught him to stand upright The method employed for this purpose was very singular. The keeper caught him firmly round the breast from behind, placed his own feet behind his (Kaspar's) feet and lifted them as in stepping forward. Finally the man appeared once again, placed his (Kaspar's) hands over his shoulders, tied them fast, and carried him on his back out of the room. The journey must have lasted several days at least, for he remembered having eaten and slept several times. He never saw the face of his keeper even now, for as he either led or carried him along, the man directed him (Kaspar) to keep his face directed towards the ground. During this time the keeper attempted to teach him to walk, and also instructed him to say the same jargon he had used when he was first observed hy the citizen of Nuremberg. Not long before he was discovered the keeper put on him the clothes in which he was found. Then suddenly thrusting the letter into his hands, the keeper vanished. After this the citizen found him almost immediately, and conducted him to the guard-room.'

This account, given almost in Kaspar's own words, will go far towards explaining how it happened that the youth's mind was in such a dark state; but it helps very little to show who Kaspar Hauser really was, or whence he came, or in fact any real particulars of his actual history. That a great crime had been committed by some one, was very evident. Many conjectures were hazarded, and it was only after very considerable and protracted search that it was possible to arrive at any satisfactory conclusions. Link by link the chain of evidence-—circumstantial only, it must be admitted-—was put together; and finally it was on all sides generally believed that Kaspar Hauser was the product of an illicit alliance. A priest, who was said to be his father, took charge of the child from the moment of his birth, and in time shut him up in some out-of-the-way subterranean vault in the convent where he resided. Here it was that Kaspar, totally secluded from all human observation and knowledge save that of the priest, passed seventeen long years; and here probably he would have remained, had not circumstances compelled the priest to leave the convent; when, having no other convenient place of concealment available, he released the poor fellow and left him to his fate.

The incident mentioned by Kaspar in his account of himself relating to the bad taste in his water, which caused him to fall into a deep sleep, was explained a short time after he had given the narrative to his friends. It occurred to one of them that the priest might have mixed a drop or two of laudanum with the water, with the view of inducing a stupor while the boy's clothes were being changed. One day a small dose of laudanum was put in his glass of water without Kaspar's knowledge. On tasting the water, he recognised the flavour at once, and unhesitatingly affirmed that the glass contained some of the stuff he used to have given him during his imprisonment when a change of clothes became necessary. This circumstance clearly proved the truth of the conjecture.

The accounts that are recorded of the growth of Kaspar's mind are most interesting. Incidents that to an ordinary person would appear of no moment, had a strange and inexplicable effect on him. For instance, as an experiment he was brought into contact with a female somnambulist. Her presence affected him in the most extraordinary manner. He was seized with violent pain and sudden disgust. He describes the interview in his own words as follows: 'As I came into the room and the door of the diseased person was opened, I felt a sudden dragging on both sides of my breast, as if some one wished to pull me into the room. As I went in and proceeded towards the sick person, a very strong breath blew upon me, and when I had her at my back it blew upon me from behind, and the pulling I felt before in my breast I now felt in my shoulders. The sick person seated herself and said that she was ill. I also said that I was unwell, and that I mostly sit down. Now a violent beating of my heart came on me, and there was a heat in all my body. This condition lasted until the next morning, then I had a headache again and a twittering in all my limbs, still not so violent.' The somnambulist, curiously enough, was affected almost in the same manner.

On another occasion a spider let itself down from the ceiling on Kaspar's head. Directly it touched him he felt a chill and an excessive degree of cold on his forehead, without knowing the cause. Suddenly putting up his hand to his face, he crushed the spider on his under-lip. 'Hereupon he felt, for more than a quarter of an hour, a burning pain, which passed away with a tremor. When he retired to bed the burning sensation returned. During the night the lip swelled, and there rose on it several small bladders, out of which there was a discharge of white matter in the morning. The chill occasioned by the spider was of long continuance.

But it was not only by the sight of and contact with living creatures that Kaspar was visibly affected; for we are told that one day he happened to see a particularly fine flower, and on his attempting to pluck it, the same feeling as that caused by the spider came upon him. On another occasion, after eating a ripe grape he immediately became strangely affected, and was compelled to sleep off the effects of the, to him, potent juice.

Although for a long time Kaspar's body was considerably in advance of his mind, yet by degrees he began to overcome many of his peculiarities. Still he could never forget the hardships he had suffered, and the fact of his being inclined to brood over them tended to retard his mental progress.

About four years after his first appearance in Nuremberg, Kaspar was fortunate enough to come under the notice of Lord Stanhope. This nobleman conceived the idea of adopting the strange youth, and having prevailed upon the inhabitants of Nuremberg, who looked upon Kaspar as their adopted son, to give him up, he placed him under a tutor at Auspach previous to removing him to England. But unhappily these benevolent intentions were frustrated, for the same mystery which shrouded his birth hung over his death. On the 14th of December 1833, Kaspar Hauser, while returning from his official duties at mid-day, was accosted in the streets by a person who promised to impart to him the secret of his origin, if he would meet him in the park of Auspach Castle. Without informing his protectors of this circumstance, Hauser imprudently kept the appointment. The stranger was at his post; he took Kaspar aside, and, without speaking a word, plunged a dagger into his breast, and instantly disappeared. Hauser had sufficient strength left to reach the residence of his new tutor, into whose apartment he rushed, and had just breath enough to utter two or three indistinct words, when he immediately fainted, and, after relating the circumstances of his assassination, died on the 17th of the same month. Every expedient which the police could invent was adopted to discover the murderer, but without success. The secret, which it cost so much crime to preserve, has never been divulged.

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Friday, December 16, 2022

Kentucky Fried Chicken on This Day in History

 

This Day In History: Colonel Sanders died on this day in 1980. He is best known for founding the fast food chicken restaurant chain Kentucky Fried Chicken (eventually shortened to KFC) and later acting as the company's brand ambassador and symbol. His name and image are still symbols of the company. However, the KFC story did not start until he retired in 1955 and received a measly pension check for $105. He knew he had to do something. His first answer was, "Well, I have this chicken, recipe, everyone seems to love! What if I sold my chicken recipe to restaurants? Could I make money doing that?" Then he immediately thought, "That's ridiculous. Selling my recipe won't even pay the rent." And he got a new idea: "What if I not only sold them my recipe but also showed them how to cook the chicken properly? What if the chicken was so good that it increased their business? If more people come to see them and they make more chicken sales, maybe they will give me a percentage of those additional sales."

And he was persistent. In trying to sell his chicken, he was refused 1,009 times before he heard his first yes. He spent two years driving across America in his old, beat-up car, sleeping in the back seat, getting up each day eager to share his idea with someone new. Later on, KFC was one of the first fast food chains to expand internationally, opening outlets in Canada and later in the UK, Mexico and Jamaica by the mid-1960s. Sanders obtained a patent protecting his method of pressure frying chicken in 1962, and trademarked the phrase "It's Finger Lickin' Good" in 1963.

Oh, and the signature recipe of "11 herbs and spices" are:

2/3 tablespoon salt
1/2 tablespoon thyme
1/2 tablespoon basil
1/3 tablespoon oregano
1 tablespoon celery salt
1 tablespoon black pepper
1 tablespoon dry mustard
4 tablespoons paprika
2 tablespoons garlic salt
1 tablespoon ground ginger
3 tablespoons white pepper

You mix this with 2 cups white flour