On this day in 1779, a group of American patriots holds off a contingent of British soldiers at the Burke County Jail in Georgia, despite being badly outnumbered.
By this point, the American Revolution had been raging for nearly four years, and the British were getting frustrated with their slow progress in the northern colonies. They decided to turn their attention to the South. A fair number of Loyalists lived there, and the British hoped to help these Loyalists regain control of the southern state governments. They’d establish a British base in the South and use it to crush the remaining rebellion in the North.
The strategy seemed to be working at first. The British won a victory in Savannah in late 1778. Their next target was Augusta.
Naturally, the Patriots weren’t going to roll over that easily. In mid-January, a group of them gathered at the Burke County Jail, just south of Augusta. They were planning their next move.
Unfortunately, the British heard of the meeting. They story continues here:
https://www.taraross.com/post/tdih-burke-county-jail
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On this day in 1943, a B-17 Flying Fortress completes its 25th combat mission without losing a member of its crew. Memphis Belle would return to the United States, embark on a war bond tour, and become one of the most famous bombers to emerge from World War II.
She was nearly sold for scrap metal after the war, but Memphis mayor Walter Chandler saved her for $350. Today, she’s been refurbished and sits at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force in Dayton, Ohio.
Memphis Belle’s survival was no small feat.
The story continues here: https://www.taraross.com/post/tdih-memphis-belle
On this day in 1868, votes are taken in President Andrew Johnson’s impeachment trial. Thirty-five Senators voted to convict, one vote shy of the 36 votes then needed to remove him from office.
That trial has since been labeled a “political circus” and “a contest for power.” Regardless, Johnson would survive the attempt against him.
Americans were then recovering from a brutal Civil War that had left hundreds of thousands dead or wounded. Johnson wasn’t supposed to be the President that got them through this trying period. He was President only because Abraham Lincoln had been killed just one month into his second term.
Needless to say, Johnson struggled.
The story continues here: https://www.taraross.com/post/tdih-johnson-impeached
On this day in 1918, the first official U.S. airmail flight departs from Washington, D.C. Such a flight is ordinary today, but in the early 20th century, the success of such an undertaking was far from certain.
“When airmail began in 1918,” a USPS publication explains, “airplanes were still a fairly new invention. Pilots flew in open cockpits in all kinds of weather . . . . [They] followed landmarks on the ground; in fog they flew blind. Unpredictable weather, unreliable equipment, and inexperience led to frequent crashes . . . .”
Some credit Otto Praeger, Second Assistant Postmaster General, with pushing airmail into existence. Praeger was all enthusiasm for the mail: He knew nothing about planes or their limitations.
The story continues here: https://www.taraross.com/post/tdih-airmail-service