Our Daily Bleed...
— Percy Bysshe Shelley
VICTORIA WOODHULL
Proponent of Free Love. Spiritual leader. First woman to run for US presidency (with Frederick Douglass). Member of the First International (until expelled by Beloved & Respected Comrade Leader Marx).
Chibcha, Columbia: FEAST OF CHUKEM, Deity of Footraces.
Maori, New Zealand: FESTIVAL OF PAPA, the wife of Rangi.
FEAST OF THE MILLENNIUM.
http://web.archive.org...pacifier.com/~dkossy/kooksmus.html
1800 -- US: Educator William H. McGuffey lives near Claysville, Pennsylvania. His Eclectic Readers sell, in various editions, 122 million copies.
1806 -- Meriweather ("Don't ever call me Mary!") Lewis & William Clark return to St. Louis, Missouri, from the first overland journey across North America to the Pacific Coast, with a wealth of information about the largely unexplored region. Freeways were not as congested then as now, & the trip only took two-&-a-half years. One of the longest transcontinental journeys ever recorded until the traffic congestion of the 1990s.
1818 -- Percy Bysshe Shelley's Mask of Anarchy is published.'Rise like Lions after slumber
In unvanquishable number —
Shake your chains to earth like dew
Which in sleep had fallen on you —
Ye are many — they are few.'http://www.artofeurope.com/shelley/she5.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percy_Shelley
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upeUeOpLAPA
1838 -- US: Victoria Woodhull lives, Homer, Ohio. Woodhull & her sister, Tennessee Claflin, invaded male territory as Wall Street brokers & publishers of Woodhull & Claflin's Weekly. Woodhull & Clafin spoke for free love, abortion, divorce, legalized prostitution & women's voting rights.
1846 -- German astronomer Johann Gottfried Galle discovers planet Neptune.Eighth planet from the sun, it was postulated by French astronomer Urbain Leverrier, who calculated the approximate location of the planet by studying gravity-induced disturbances in the motions of the planets. A few days after Leverrier announced his findings, Galle discovered the blue gas giant.
1850 -- Eugene Field lives. Poet, journalist, humorist.
1856 -- Author William Archer lives.
1862 -- Russia: Whose Counting?: Count Leo Tolstoy (author / christian / anarchist / pacifist), 34, marries Sophie Andreyevna Behrs, 18. They have 13 children in 17 years.
"I'm not going to get into the ring with Tolstoy."
— Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)
"Hemingway was a jerk."
— Harold Robbins
1864 -- Poland: During the London solidarity meeting with Polish "January Uprising" the International Workers Association is founded.
1865 -- Hungarian-born British novelist, Emmuska Orczy, lives, Tarnaörs. Child of Baron Felix Orczy, a noted composer/conductor, she becomes famous with the 1905 publication of The Scarlet Pimpernel.
1867 -- John Lomax lives (d.1948), Goodman, Mississippi . Folk singer, music producer, author, folklorist who collected folk songs & tales, documenter of musical heritage (year of birth uncertain; some say 1875). Amassed some 10,000 recordings for the Library of Congress. Father of Alan Lomax.
http://www.pbs.org/americanrootsmusic/pbs_arm_saa_lomax.html
http://www.sbgmusic.com/html/teacher/reference/composers/lomax.html
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~1930s/RADIO/c_w/cw-front.html
http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/flo07
1868 -- Puerto Rico: Several hundred women & men revolt against Spain for Puerto Rican independence; the event took place in Lares & is better known as the Cry of Lares ("Grito de Lares").
1868 -- US: The first installment of The Other Side, by Martin A. Foran, president of the Coopers' International Union, was printed in the Workingman's Advocate of Chicago. This is the first novel by a trade union leader, & probably the first working-class novel ever published in the US.
1870 -- French dramatist & short story master, Prosper Mérimée, dies in Cannes. His work was a return to the classical style during a romantic age.
1871 -- Bohemia: František Kupka lives (1871-1957), Opocno. Czech Abstract painter, anarchist, satirist, book & magazine illustrator.http://www.moma.org/collection/artist.php?artist_id=3302
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franti%C5%A1ek_Kupka
1878 -- Puerto Rico: Proclamation of the Republic, in revolt against Spanish rule: "Grito de Lares."
http://welcome.topuertorico.org/history.shtml
1880 -- Gaston Coute, French anarchiste songster, lives (1880-1911).
http://gastoncoute.free.fr/
http://www.poesie.net/coute3.htm
1881 -- Spain: Founding Congress of the Federación de Trabajadores de la Región Española (FTRE; Spanish Regional Workers’ Federation), Sept. 23-26, in Barcelona.
1891 -- Author John Masefield, 13, goes down to the sea for the first time to serve as an apprentice aboard the training ship Conway.
She was returned from Philadelphia to New York on September 9, & placed in confinement.
On September 11, Emma pleads not guilty & is released on bail Sept. 14.
1895 --
France: 23-28 septembre.- VIIe congrès national corporatif, founding Congress of the CGT, held in Limoges. Le cheminot A. Lagailse premier secrétaire général.
Un mois après le congrès de Limoges, Fernand Pelloutier publie un article manifeste dans lequel il défend le développement des idées anarchistes dans les syndicats.
Cette influence libertaire aidera la jeune CGTà maintenir son indépendance, par rapport à l'État d'abord et par rapport aux partis politique ensuite. Cette indépendance sera codifiée et fortement réaffirmée onze ans plus tard lors du congrès d'Amiens en octobre 1906.
1896 -- George Bernard Shaw advises Ellen Terry on how to perform Shakespeare: "Play to the lines, through the lines, but never between the lines. There simply isn't time for it."
http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/goldman/socsig/shawintro.html
1897 -- Paul Delvaux lives (1897-1994). Painter, Belgiumese, dreamlike depictions of skeletons, trains & nudes makes him a master of surrealism.
http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/delvaux_paul.html
1899 -- Louise Nevelson lives (some say 1900). Sculptor, artist.
http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/nevelson_louise.html
1899 -- US: Emma Goldman addresses 13 meetings in Pittsburgh & surrounding cities, including West Newton, McDonald, & Roscoe, Pa., September 23-October 10.
1900 --
France: Paris Congress of the Second International convenes, 23rd-27th. Participants include Pablo Iglesias representing the PSOE & Antonio García Quejido for the UGT.
The Second International is the first international body to recognize Irish nationhood. England, not to be outdone, is still working on it in 2007.Source: [Congressos Obrers]
1901 -- Jaroslav Seifert lives. Poet/journalist who, in 1984, is the first Czech to win the Nobel Prize for Literature."If a writer is silent, he is lying."
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/jseifert.htm
1908 -- US: Giant Fred ("Bonehead") Merkle fails to touch 2nd, causes 3rd out in 9th & disallows winning run (baseball game ends tied; Cubs win replay & pennant).
1911 -- MANIFESTO of September 23rd 1911This Manifesto is issued by the Junta of the Mexican Liberal Party today. It is broadcast & republished in its official paper, Regeneracion (bilingual anarquista newspaper published by Ricardo Flores Magón & Anselmo Figueroa, two of the major figures of the Partido Liberal), January 20, 1912.
http://libcom.org/library/manifesto-magnon
http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/5views/5views5h75.htm
http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/bright/magon/works/regen/
1912 -- First Keystone Kops film comedy released.
1916 -- Warren Billings, labor activist, goes on trial in San Francisco. See Daily Bleed, 22 July:
http://recollectionbooks.com/bleed/0722.htm#WarrenBillings
1923 -- Japanese-American author John Okada lives, Seattle, Washington in 1923. Served in the US Army in World War II, wrote one novel — No-No Boy — about the aftermath of the Japanese-American internment. Okada died in obscurity, of a heart attack at the age of 47, believing Asian America had rejected his work.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Okada
1926 -- John Coltrane, brilliant jazz saxophonist/composer considered the father of avant-garde jazz, lives, Hamlet, North Carolina.
http://www.johncoltrane.com/
1928 -- US: 12-year-old Barbara Griffith disappears, Massena, NY.
1930 -- Ray Charles lives, Albany, Georgia. Blind by the age of six, he studies music & forms his own band at the age of 24. A recorded performance at the Newport Jazz Festival in 1958 establishes his career as one of the premier soul singers in the US.
http://raycharles.com/
1934 -- Per Olov Enquist lives. Swedish novelist, playwright, & journalist, who gained international fame with his "documentary-style" fiction. Influenced by the French nouveau roman (Alain Robbe-Grillet, Claude Simon, Nathalie Sarraute, Michel Butor, Marguerite Duras). Wrote the script for the Jan Troell film Hamsun (1996), depicting the late years of the writer, shadowed by accusations of Nazi sympathies.
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/enquist.htm
1936 -- France: Robert Capa’s photographs of the militia at Cerro Muriano during the Spanish Revolution appear in today's issue of the magazine Vu..
1939 -- Id He Gone Yet?: Psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud dies.
1948 -- Gregory d'Alessio, then secretary of the New York Classic Guitar Society, hears a stranger's voice on the telephone:'I hope the guitar gang is free tonight. If so, what are the chances of getting together? This is Carl Sandburg.'
1949 -- Bruce Springsteen lives, Freehold, New Jersey. Composer/singer, rock star for 80s.
1950 -- US: Congress overrides Beloved & Respected Comrade Leader President Truman's veto & passes the McCarran Internal Security Act, requiring registration of members of groups the Attorney General determines to be Communist fronts, & establishing of emergency concentration camps. Truman called the act "the greatest danger to freedom of speech, press & assembly since the Alien & Sedition Laws of 1798."
http://www.writing.upenn.edu/~afilreis/50s/mccarran-act-intro.html
1952 -- US: Beloved & Respected Comrade Leader US Vice Presidential hopeful Dick M Nixon plays "Checkers" on TV.Been There, Done That?: "The American people deserve to know whether or not their vice-president is a crook. Well, I've made mistakes but, I'm no crook."
"I was just floored," said Ethel Blubmeister of Chappaquiddatrickydick, Mass. "I mean, isn't he dead?"http://www.writing.upenn.edu/~afilreis/50s/checkers.html
http://vi.uh.edu/pages/buzzmat/book.htm
1952 -- Rocky Marciano becomes world heavyweight boxing champ. The only one to go undefeated, with a pro record of 49 bouts & 49 victories, including 43 by knockout.
1954 -- Playwright George C. Wolfe lives, & raised in pre-civil rights, segregated Frankfort, Kentucky. Critically acclaimed for the controversial plays The Colored Museum; Jelly's Last Jam; Spunk.
1954 -- Japan: Lucky Dragon fisherman dies from nuclear test radiation.
1955 -- US: I.D. Please?: Jury in Sumner, Mississippi, acquits Roy Bryant & J.W. Milam of murdering 14-year-old African American Emmett Till. The two admitted kidnapping the youth. But the jury based its verdict on a claim that the slain boy's body was too decomposed for positive identification. (see 31 August; 9 November).
1957 -- US: Nine black students at Little Rock Central High School in Arkansas are forced to withdraw because a white mob had formed outside.
1959 -- George Padmore dies (1902-1959). Sometimes called the 'Father of African emancipation'. Early Communist Party member who quit in 1953, remained a leftist militant communist, anti-colonialist, & friend of C.L.R. James. He groomed the young Kwame Nkrumah ("He is not very bright, but do what you can for him," his brother James wrote George) & later became Nkrumah's adviser on African affairs when Nkrumah became President of Ghana.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Padmore
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C._L._R._James
1961 -- US: First movie to become a TV series debuts — How to Marry a Millionaire.
1963 -- Margarethe Faas-Hardegger (1882-1963) dies. Studied law, & in touch with Munich bohemian & Berlin anarchist circles. Anti-fascist & a peace militant. Preached & practiced free love, & lovers with the anarchist writers Gustav Landauer & Erich Mühsam.Friend of Fritz Brupbacher & pacifist Gertrud Woker.
Established an anarchist-communist agricultural community in Minusio. In 1912 she was imprisoned because of false evidence given in a legal action against artist Ernst Frick. She lived with Hans Brunner in a socialist commune in Herrliberg, & at Monte Verità.
[Details / context]
1966 -- The Jefferson Airplane opens at Winterland.
1967 -- Radio Malta stops testing.
1967 -- The Airplane & Muddy Waters at Winterland, Post & Steiner streets, Frisco, California.
http://www.muddywaters.com/
1973 --
1973 | Chilean poet & communist cultural hero Pablo Neruda dies, in Santiago.
His most widely read work remains the 1924 Veinte poemas de amor y una canción desesperada (Twenty Love Poems & a Song of Despair). |
1974 -- Robbie McIntosh, drummer for the Average White Band, dies in his North Hollywood hotel room, of a heroin overdose. He inhaled a white powder thought to be cocaine but was actually pure heroin.
1977 -- Cheryl Ladd replaces Farrah Fawcett on Charlie's Angels.
1978 -- Italy: To protest the development of maximum security prisons, inmates break down the walls dividing their cells at Asinara jail.
Source: [Calendar Riots]
1979 -- US: Jane Fonda & 200,000 attend anti-nuke rally in Battery Park, NYC.
1979 -- Africa: First anti-riot vehicle which plays DISCO to soothe nerves of troublemakers is sold to a black nation. Also armed with water cannon & tear gas in case protesters can't dance to the tunes.
http://web.archive.org...expage.com/page/supersoakersofmine
1982 -- US: "New" extra-strength Tylenol creates new headaches in Chicago.
1983 -- US: National Kidney Foundation president Dr David Ogden decries as "immoral & unethical" a plan by Virginia doctor H. Barry Jacobs to buy kidneys from poor people — among them, residents of Third World nations — & sell them to wealthier people who need kidney transplants.
1983 -- Brazil:"More than 500 women looted a grocery store in Brazil's drought-ravaged northeastern region, taking seven tons of food, a local government spokesman said."
— San Francisco Chronicle, Sept. 23, 1983
Source: No Middle Ground #2, Fall 1983
1984 --
"Anyone that's ever had their kitchen done over knows that it never gets done as soon as you wish it would."
— President Ronnie Reagan justifying the incomplete security measures at the US embassy annex in Beirut, where an iron gate was lying on the ground awaiting installation"Anyone that's ever had their kitchen done over knows that the process is nothing at all like trying to stop somebody from driving a truckload of explosives into your house."
— Columnist Russell Bakerhttp://www.hometime.com/projects/howto/kitchen/pc2kit02.htm
1988 -- US: Jose Canseco becomes baseball's first to steal 40 bases & hit 40 HRs. Seattle Mariners shortstop Alex Rodriquez (A-Rod) matches it September 1998.
1994 -- Writer Robert Bloch dies after a long battle with cancer. American crime & suspense writer, famed for stories about psychopaths.Best known is Psycho, the basis for Alfred Hitchcock's stunning film (1960). Bloch also wrote humorous fantasy, science fiction, short stories, screenplays & radio plays.
1997 -- "Tubthumper" album by the anarchist group Chumbawamba is released.Chumbawamba would like to overthrow the government &, really, who wouldn't?
Beats taking the kids to Disneyland...
http://www.chumba.com/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chumbawamba
2000 -- US: Leonard Peltier Clemency March & Rally, Olympia, Washington, Sylvester Park, rally at the State Capital.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard_Peltier
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