Friday, August 3, 2012

today selected history

Stephen Trigg (c. 1744 – August 19, 1782) was an American pioneer and
soldier from Virginia. He was killed ten months after the surrender of
Cornwallis at Yorktown in one of the last battles of the American
Revolution while leading the Lincoln County, Virginia, militia unit at
the Battle of Blue Licks in present-day Kentucky. Trigg, who mainly
worked as a public servant and militia officer, was one of the
wealthiest men on the frontier at the time. He was a delegate to the
first Virginia Revolutionary conventions and was a member of the
Fincastle Committee of Safety that drafted the Fincastle Resolutions,
which was the precursor for the Declaration of Independence. He was also
elected to the Virginia House of Delegates. In 1782, Shawnee Indians led
by British officers attacked Bryan Station, Kentucky, but were driven
off. Kentucky militia companies joined forces to pursue the hostiles.
Trigg commanded one wing, Daniel Boone the other. Despite Boone's
warnings, the militiamen charged into an ambush at Blue Licks. Trigg and
many others, including Boone's youngest son Israel, were among those
killed. Trigg's body was later found cut into pieces. In recognition of
his role in the formation of Kentucky, Trigg County, Kentucky was named
in honor of Stephen Trigg.


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Today's selected anniversaries:

1658:

Having defeating his brothers in a war of succession, Aurangzeb
was crowned the sixth Mughal Emperor.


1777:

The Second Continental Congress passed a resolution allowing
French nobleman Marquis de Lafayette to enter the American revolutionary
forces as a Major General.


1954:

A team of Italian climbers led by Ardito Desio reaches the
summit of K2 (pictured), the world's second-highest mountain.


1972:

The Troubles: Free Derry, an autonomous self-declared area of
Derry, Northern Ireland, was brought to an end by the British Army's
Operation Motorman.


2002:

Hamas detonated a bomb at the Mount Scopus campus of the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem, killing nine students and injuring about 100
more.
 
  word of the day:
coppice:
A grove of small growth; a thicket of brushwood; a wood cut at certain
times for fuel or other purposes, typically managed to promote growth
and ensure a reliable supply of time
 
 quote de jour
 
 In countries and epochs in which communication is impeded, soon all
other liberties wither; discussion dies by inanition, ignorance of the
opinion of others becomes rampant, imposed opinions triumph. …
Intolerance is inclined to censor, and censorship promotes ignorance of
the arguments of others and thus intolerance itself: a rigid, vicious
circle that is hard to break.
  --Primo Levi
 
..................keep fighting the good fight, with your minds as weapons......
.........................kosmicsebris............ 

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