Odd, Amusing & Little Known Incidents in American History
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                        animefreak_usa wrote...
you know why santa red and white... 
Anyone else thinking the Mushrooms from Super Mario
'
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                        animefreak_usa
                                                    Child of Samael
                                            
                    
                    
                    
                EmiyaKiritsugu wrote...
animefreak_usa wrote...
you know why santa red and white... 
Spoiler:
Would you eat one?
AND CONTRIBUTE MOAR!
i ate too many magic mario bros shrooms in my life.
the constitution, bill of rights and declaration of independent's all written on hemp paper.
the first President of the united states wasn't Washington.. his name was John Hanson. http://www.marshallhall.org/hanson.html also Elias Boudinot was the first black president also our second prez too.
How many states are there 50 plus five states that wasn't adopted.
Jefferson,Jackson, Franklin, state of north california and Canada.
there been three different time a part of the country tried to secede for the union
south, key west and new england.
We don't elect the president.
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                        Waar
                                                    FAKKU Moderator
                                            
                    
                    
                    
                
                        John Hanson (April 14 [O.S. April 3] 1721 – November 22, 1783) was a merchant and public official from Maryland  during the era of the American Revolution. After serving in a variety of roles for the Patriot cause in Maryland, in 1779 Hanson was elected as a delegate to the Continental Congress. He signed the Articles of Confederation in 1781 after Maryland finally joined the other states in ratifying them. In November 1781, he became the first President of Congress  to be elected under the terms of the Articles of Confederation.[1]  Because of this, some people claimed that he was the first President of the United States.
Because Hanson was the first president under the Articles of Confederation, one of his grandsons later promoted him as the first President of the United States. This ultimately resulted in Hanson's statue being one of two representing Maryland in Statuary Hall in the U.S. Capitol, even though, according to historian Gregory Stiverson, Hanson was not one of Maryland's foremost leaders of the Revolutionary era.[1] The claim that Hanson was the forgotten first President of the United States was further promoted in an 1932 biography of Hanson by journalist Seymour Wemyss Smith.[9] Smith's book, which contained no footnotes or references, made expansive claims about Hanson's role, asserting that the American Revolution had two primary leaders: George Washington in the military sphere, and John Hanson in politics.[10]
The myth was revived in the age of the Internet, sometimes with a new claim that Hanson was actually a black man. Some Internet sites use a photograph of Senator John Hanson of Liberia to support the claim.[11]
Elias Boudinot was not black.
                Because Hanson was the first president under the Articles of Confederation, one of his grandsons later promoted him as the first President of the United States. This ultimately resulted in Hanson's statue being one of two representing Maryland in Statuary Hall in the U.S. Capitol, even though, according to historian Gregory Stiverson, Hanson was not one of Maryland's foremost leaders of the Revolutionary era.[1] The claim that Hanson was the forgotten first President of the United States was further promoted in an 1932 biography of Hanson by journalist Seymour Wemyss Smith.[9] Smith's book, which contained no footnotes or references, made expansive claims about Hanson's role, asserting that the American Revolution had two primary leaders: George Washington in the military sphere, and John Hanson in politics.[10]
The myth was revived in the age of the Internet, sometimes with a new claim that Hanson was actually a black man. Some Internet sites use a photograph of Senator John Hanson of Liberia to support the claim.[11]
Elias Boudinot was not black.
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                        animefreak_usa
                                                    Child of Samael
                                            
                    
                    
                    
                Waar wrote...
The myth was revived in the age of the Internet, sometimes with a new claim that Hanson was actually a black man. Some Internet sites use a photograph of Senator John Hanson of Liberia to support the claim.[11]
Elias Boudinot was not black.
Ok i got confused on which one was a mulatto. eight grade history fact.
yes he was the president of the colonies during the short time when we are a Confederacy and not a Federation. I was saying before Washington was the first president there was couple of other with the same title. Oh yeah obama isn't black, he mixed race.
More facts..
British are coming the British are coming that Paul Revere right... no. the legend of Paul Revere is not true... yes he rode and warned people about the British landing, but he rode from Boston to Cambridge which is like 15 miles, now Israel Bissell rode from outside of Boston to philly. Although Paul Revere is better known due to the epic poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Bissell was the subject of the less well known "Ride, Israel, Ride," an epic poem by Marie Rockwood of Stockbridge.
Boston massacre wasn't one, the patriots baited the soldiers to shoot them with rocks and rope clubs(stick to beat rope with). They were acquitted by the courts due to their lawyer the future second president John Adams.
A random sampling of dollar bills from major U.S. cities found that more than 70 percent tested positive for the virus that causes genital warts.
The game of hopscotch originated as a mockery of the Catholic funeral procession.
Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the telephone, was also the target of the first federal wiretap.
The U.S. military spends more money on condoms than bullets for U.S. troops stationed in South Korea.
In 2003, after a visit to the American Southwest, the Crown Prince of Dubai had a Texas-shaped swimming pool constructed at his royal palace.
Bruce Lee was a third cousin of one of the Watergate burglars.
Arnold Schwarzenegger was instrumental in the formation of the WNBA.
English Heritage, the body that oversees Stonehenge, considered selling the site to a Japanese conglomerate during a budget crisis in the 1980s.
There is no word for "yesterday" in the Eskimo language.
An ounce of pickled ginger can temporarily raise your IQ by as many as 10 points.
Famed architect Frank Lloyd Wright was secretly commissioned to design key portions of the Pentagon.
The signature mixed drink served on board the Hindenburg was called the "Flaming Drop."
One module of the International Space Station is devoted exclusively to the manufacture of synthetic diamonds.
Andy Warhol painted his last will and testament on a 55-gallon drum of formaldehyde.
The first duct (or 'duck') tape, created for the U.S. military during World War II, could be boiled and eaten as an emergency ration.
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                        animefreak_usa
                                                    Child of Samael
                                            
                    
                    
                    
                
                        Columbus didn't discovered america, but he made a hella of a salami Or salame in my native tongue.
                    
                Spoiler:
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                        animefreak_usa wrote...
Columbus didn't discovered america, but he made a hella of a salami Or salame in my native tongue.Spoiler:
Before Columbus came over, the Chinese found America (supposedly). Before them were the vikings and before them where the hunter gatherers that crossed the frozen Bearing Straight.
Also, America was named after Amerigo Vespucci.
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                        Mmmmm. salame....
Some striking quotations from Benjamin Franklin's Poor Richard's Almanack:
-He that lies down with Dogs, shall rise up with fleas.
-Men and Melons are hard to know.
-God works wonders now and then; Behold! a Lawyer, an honest Man!
-Three may keep a Secret, if two of them are dead.
-Fish and visitors stink in three days.
-He that lives upon Hope, dies farting.
-Keep your eyes wide open before marriage, half shut afterwards.
-At age twelve Richard Nixon told his mother, "I will be an old-fashioned kind of lawyer, a lawyer who can't be bought."
-As an anxious senior at Duke university Law School, Nixon broke into the office of the dean to find out his class standing. He discovered he was at the top of his class. He was not punished.
-While touring Caracas, Venezuela, in 1958, Nixon was spat on by a protester. Secret Service agents grabbed the man and the then vice-president planted a healthy kick in his shins. In Six Crises, Nixon recalled that "nothing I did all day made me feel better."
-Despite his boast that writing Six Crises was a maturing experience, Richard Nixon did not author the book. All of it was ghosted by Alvin Moscow, except the final chapter on the 1960 campaign.
-Speaking to reporters about his health, President Nixon once claimed that he never had a headache during his whole life.
-To an injured policeman waiting for an ambulance, Nixon remarked, "How do you like your job?"
-During the funeral of French president Georges Pompidou, Nixon declared: "This is a great day for France."
-One day a man was invited to the Oval Office to give President Nixon a chair made completely from a single piece of wood. The President sat in the chair, and it immediately collapsed. As he picked himself up from the floor, Nixon said nothing, bu then asked, "Well, how do you go about doing this kind of work?"
Source: Douglas Hallet, "A Low-Level Memoir of the Nixon White House," The New York Times Magazine, October 20, 1974, p. 52.
At a Gridiron Dinner in 1958, Senator Kennedy told the correspondents about a dream he had had concerning the presidency: "I dreamed about 1960 myself the other night and I told Stuart Symington and Lyndon Johnson about it in the cloakroom yesterday. I told them how the Lord came into my bedroom, anointed my head, and said, 'John Kennedy, I hereby appoint you President of the United States.' Stuart Symington said, 'That's strange, Jack, because I too had a similar dream last night in which the Lord anointed me and declared me, Stuart Symington, President of the United States and Outer Space.' Lyndon Johnson said, 'That's very interesting, gentlemen, becuase I too had a similar dream last night and I don't remember annoiting either of you.'"
Source: Leon A. Harris, The Fine Art of Political Wit (New York: Dutton, 1964), p. 261.
                -As Poor Richard Says...-
Some striking quotations from Benjamin Franklin's Poor Richard's Almanack:
-He that lies down with Dogs, shall rise up with fleas.
-Men and Melons are hard to know.
-God works wonders now and then; Behold! a Lawyer, an honest Man!
-Three may keep a Secret, if two of them are dead.
-Fish and visitors stink in three days.
-He that lives upon Hope, dies farting.
-Keep your eyes wide open before marriage, half shut afterwards.
-Nixon Collage-
-At age twelve Richard Nixon told his mother, "I will be an old-fashioned kind of lawyer, a lawyer who can't be bought."
-As an anxious senior at Duke university Law School, Nixon broke into the office of the dean to find out his class standing. He discovered he was at the top of his class. He was not punished.
-While touring Caracas, Venezuela, in 1958, Nixon was spat on by a protester. Secret Service agents grabbed the man and the then vice-president planted a healthy kick in his shins. In Six Crises, Nixon recalled that "nothing I did all day made me feel better."
-Despite his boast that writing Six Crises was a maturing experience, Richard Nixon did not author the book. All of it was ghosted by Alvin Moscow, except the final chapter on the 1960 campaign.
-Speaking to reporters about his health, President Nixon once claimed that he never had a headache during his whole life.
-Nixonisms-
-To an injured policeman waiting for an ambulance, Nixon remarked, "How do you like your job?"
-During the funeral of French president Georges Pompidou, Nixon declared: "This is a great day for France."
-One day a man was invited to the Oval Office to give President Nixon a chair made completely from a single piece of wood. The President sat in the chair, and it immediately collapsed. As he picked himself up from the floor, Nixon said nothing, bu then asked, "Well, how do you go about doing this kind of work?"
Source: Douglas Hallet, "A Low-Level Memoir of the Nixon White House," The New York Times Magazine, October 20, 1974, p. 52.
-JFK Pokes Fun at LBJ-
At a Gridiron Dinner in 1958, Senator Kennedy told the correspondents about a dream he had had concerning the presidency: "I dreamed about 1960 myself the other night and I told Stuart Symington and Lyndon Johnson about it in the cloakroom yesterday. I told them how the Lord came into my bedroom, anointed my head, and said, 'John Kennedy, I hereby appoint you President of the United States.' Stuart Symington said, 'That's strange, Jack, because I too had a similar dream last night in which the Lord anointed me and declared me, Stuart Symington, President of the United States and Outer Space.' Lyndon Johnson said, 'That's very interesting, gentlemen, becuase I too had a similar dream last night and I don't remember annoiting either of you.'"
Source: Leon A. Harris, The Fine Art of Political Wit (New York: Dutton, 1964), p. 261.
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                        animefreak_usa
                                                    Child of Samael
                                            
                    
                    
                    
                Zero_Hour wrote...
animefreak_usa wrote...
Columbus didn't discovered america, but he made a hella of a salami Or salame in my native tongue.Spoiler:
Before Columbus came over, the Chinese found America (supposedly). Before them were the vikings and before them where the hunter gatherers that crossed the frozen Bearing Straight.
Also, America was named after Amerigo Vespucci.
I watched a show on the history channel that said the jamon tribe from japan was the first non native people to land in americans in peru... something about a style of pottery, the reminds of a virus found in the bones of the dead that only found on the island of Kyūshū where it still is there, and the genes of the people of the coast of peru are simliar in nature... who knows.
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                        Here's one of my favorites:
A reporter told President Calvin Coolidge that he made a bet with another reporter that he can get Calvin to say more than three words, Calvin's response?
"You lose."
                A reporter told President Calvin Coolidge that he made a bet with another reporter that he can get Calvin to say more than three words, Calvin's response?
"You lose."
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                        Lughost
                                                    the Lugoat
                                            
                    
                    
                    
                
                        I don't know if anyone's already said these but it's still legal to be executed by hanging in New York and recently a man was executed in Utah by a firing squad.                    
                
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                        animefreak_usa
                                                    Child of Samael
                                            
                    
                    
                    
                
                        Micheal Jackson is really black.
60% of the gold in Ft. Knox was mined in california and now is own by the Chinese, which is funny because it was the chinese who labor the most in the mines.
                60% of the gold in Ft. Knox was mined in california and now is own by the Chinese, which is funny because it was the chinese who labor the most in the mines.
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                        Grenouille88 wrote...
I don't know if anyone's already said these but it's still legal to be executed by hanging in New York and recently a man was executed in Utah by a firing squad.didn't know that about New York, but I knew Utah is the only state with the firing squad as death penalty. Another fun fact is if you survive the death penalty, you just live life in prison.
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                        Zero_Hour wrote...
Also, America was named after Amerigo Vespucci.That's not necessarily true: countries were almost always named after a person's surname - the Cook Islands, Columbia, Bolivia - with the only notable exceptions those of Kings and Queens. It's more likely that it was named after one Richard Amerike, a Welsh merchant who sponsored the voyages to 'Newfoundland' and whose name (it is believed) was thus printed on an early map.
I could fire off facts until my brain explodes, but that isn't really what the thread is about. :|
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                        doswillrule wrote...
Zero_Hour wrote...
Also, America was named after Amerigo Vespucci.That's not necessarily true: countries were almost always named after a person's surname - the Cook Islands, Columbia, Bolivia - with the only notable exceptions those of Kings and Queens. It's more likely that it was named after one Richard Amerike, a Welsh merchant who sponsored the voyages to 'Newfoundland' and whose name (it is believed) was thus printed on an early map.
I could fire off facts until my brain explodes, but that isn't really what the thread is about. :|
Perhaps, but nothing is certain about anything, really. But Vespucci is widely believed to be the person whom the Americans is named after. Rather, its the most popular theory.
The California Grizzly was extinct even before it was named state mascot.
The time and place of the current Liberty Bell crack is unknown
Martin Van Buren is the first president born in America
According to the U.S. Geological Survey, there are 140 towns and cities in the U.S.
that have the word "Christmas" in their names.
Grand Canyon of the Snake River, Idaho, is deeper than
the Grand Canyon in Arizona.
The 33rd president was Harry S. Truman. What is his
middle name? His parents were going to give him the name
Shippe or Solomon, the names of his grandfathers. They
could not agree, so they gave him just an initial, "S.
The tomato was put "on trial" on September 25, 1820 in Salem,
New Jersey. In front of a courthouse, Robert Johnson ate
a basket of tomatoes to prove they were not poisonous.
The crowd waited for him to keel over dead. He never did.
