Showing posts with label Revolution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Revolution. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

What are some amusing historical facts?

In 1958, 17 year old Robert G. Heft designed a 50 star flag for a school project. He received a B- on it, but his teacher made a deal that if he got it approved by Congress he would bump his grade up. A year later, when Alaska and Hawaii were granted statehood, his flag design was chosen and he got an A.

US President Coolidge used to prank his bodyguards by ringing for them and then hiding under his desk.

Gabriel de Clieu brought the first coffee seedlings to the New World to the island of Martinique in 1720. Over the next fifty years there were 18,680 coffee trees and it eventually spread to other parts of Latin America. Of the top 10 coffee producing country 6 are from Latin America, all because of those first little seeds.

Both John Adams and Thomas Jefferson died on the same day, July 4, 1826. Jefferson’s last words were, “Is it the Fourth?” and Adams were, “Thomas Jefferson survives.”, not knowing that Jefferson died several hours earlier.

During World War II, in order to fool Germany into thinking the invasion would come from somewhere else, the 23rd Headquarters Special Troops or Ghost Army used inflatable tanks, sound trucks, and fake radio transmission.

The Three Hundred and Thirty Five Years' War was fought between the Isle of Scilly and the Netherlands from March 30 1651 to April 17 1986. The total casualties resulted in zero for each sides due to the Netherlands declaring war on the Royalist forces holding the island right before they would surrender to the Parliamentarians ending the English Civil war, but there was never an official declaration of peace so the war just continued until Jonkheer Rein Huydecoper signed a peace treaty.

Should the US have assisted France during the French Revolution? Why?

 

Only fair, right?

After all, the French helped the US gain independence from those bloody Brits.

But, it's not that simple.

See, the French Revolution wasn't exactly a walk in the park. It was a bloodbath, a mess of shifting alliances, radical ideologies, and heads rolling quite literally.

The Reign of Terror wasn't just a catchy name; it was a period of state-sanctioned paranoia and violence.

You have the US, a fledgling nation still finding its feet, they could ill afford to get entangled in such a volatile situation.

Remember, this was a time when the US was still establishing its own government and dealing with domestic issues like westward expansion and Native American relations.

Secondly, the French Revolution was a complex beast with conflicting factions vying for power.

The Girondins, Jacobins, Montagnards – it was a dizzying array of political groups with differing visions for France's future.

The US, with its own delicate balance of federalists and anti-federalists, could easily have been drawn into these internal struggles, potentially destabilizing its own fragile political system.

Imagine the US throwing its weight behind one faction, only to see it fall from power and be replaced by a hostile regime.

Not a pretty picture, is it?

The US had its own fish to fry back home.

While the French were busy chopping off heads and singing revolutionary songs, the US was focused on building its own nation.

The Louisiana Purchase, the War of 1812, the Monroe Doctrine – these were all critical events that shaped the future of the US.

Getting involved in the French Revolution would have been a costly distraction, both in terms of resources and political capital.

The US simply couldn't afford to squander its energy on a foreign conflict when it had so much to accomplish at home. 

The US was still a young nation with a small military and limited resources. Sending troops across the Atlantic to fight in a bloody European conflict would have been a logistical nightmare.

And even if the US had somehow managed to win, what then?

Occupying and governing a country as large and complex as France would have been an insurmountable challenge.

The US simply wasn't equipped to deal with the aftermath of a successful intervention.

So, while it might seem "only fair" to repay the French for their assistance during the American Revolution, the reality is that the US made the right call by staying out of the French Revolution.