What to remember about October 9th…
- 1635 Religious dissident Roger Williams is banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony; he and his followers go on to found Rhode Island and the 1st Baptist church in America
- 1701 Collegiate School of Connecticut is chartered in Old Saybrook; later renamed later as Yale University
- 1888 Washington Monument opens to the public for the 1st time; construction began in 1848
- 1936 Hoover Dam begins generating electricity for California
- 1967 Communist rebel and murderer Ernesto “Che” Guevara de la Serna is executed by the Bolivian army
- 2001 Second mailing of letters in the Anthrax Attacks
- 2009 Awards committee announces that President Barack Hussein Obama has won the Nobel Peace Prize

UPDATE: Due to popular demand, the above pic is now available as a shirt, hat, or button to make it easier to torment the commie-loving hipsters in your life. Go to cafepress.com to check it out.
What to remember about October 8th…
- 1861 Fires break out in Chicago, IL, Peshtigo, WI, Holland, MI, and Manistee, MI; hundreds die in Great Chicago Fire; over 1000 in Peshtigo
- 1862 Confederate invasion of Kentucky is halted by Union troops
- 1868 Former President Franklin Pierce dies at home in Concord, New Hampshire
- 1918 U.S. Army Corporal Alvin C. York kills more than 20 German soldiers and captures an additional 132; he will be awarded the Medal of Honor
- 1919 1st transcontinental air race in the United States begins
- 1920 American author and futurist Frank Patrick Herbert, Jr. is born; creator of the Dune saga
- 1967 Cold-blooded murderer and Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara is captured by Bolivian army; he will be executed the next day
- 1969 The Weatherman branch of Students for a Democratic Society stage “Days of Rage” demonstrations; 3 days of violent riots in Chicago
- 1998 U.S. house of Representatives votes to proceed on impeachment charges against President Clinton for perjury and obstruction of justice
- 2001 Office of Homeland Security begins operations with former Governor Tom Ridge as director

Psychopath. Murderer. Torturer. Communist. Putting his picture on your clothes is like wearing a swastika.
Posted in History, Lost and Found
Tagged Aviation, Bill Clinton, Che Guevara, Civil War, Communism, Congress, corruption, Franklin Pierce, Heroism, history, Medal of Honor, WWI
What to remember about October 9th…
- 1635 Religious dissident Roger Williams is banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony; he and his followers go on to found Rhode Island and the 1st Baptist church in America
- 1701 Collegiate School of Connecticut is chartered in Old Saybrook; later renamed later as Yale University
- 1888 Washington Monument opens to the public for the 1st time; construction began in 1848
- 1936 Hoover Dam begins generating electricity for California
- 1967 Communist rebel and murderer Ernesto “Che” Guevara de la Serna is executed by the Bolivian army
- 2001 Second mailing of letters in the Anthrax Attacks
- 2009 Awards committee announces that President Barack Hussein Obama has won the Nobel Peace Prize

UPDATE: Due to popular demand, the above pic is now available as a shirt, hat, or button to make it easier to torment the commie-loving hipsters in your life. Go to cafepress.com to check it out.
Posted in History, Lost and Found
Tagged anthrax, Barack Hussein Obama, Che Guevara, Christianity, Communism, George Washington, Herbert Hoover, history, Nobel Prize, Rhode Island, Terrorism
What to remember about October 8th…
- 1861 Fires break out in Chicago, IL, Peshtigo, WI, Holland, MI, and Manistee, MI; hundreds die in Great Chicago Fire; over 1000 in Peshtigo
- 1862 Confederate invasion of Kentucky is halted by Union troops
- 1868 Former 14th President of the United States Franklin Pierce dies at home in Concord, New Hampshire (b. 1804)
- 1918 U.S. Army Corporal Alvin C. York kills more than 20 German soldiers and captures an additional 132; he will be awarded the Medal of Honor
- 1919 1st transcontinental air race in the United States begins
- 1920 American author and futurist Frank Patrick Herbert, Jr. is born; creator of the Dune saga (d. 1986)
- 1967 Cold-blooded murderer and Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara is captured by Bolivian army; he will be executed the next day
- 1969 The Weatherman branch of Students for a Democratic Society stage “Days of Rage” demonstrations; 3 days of violent riots in Chicago
- 1998 U.S. house of Representatives votes to proceed on impeachment charges against President Clinton for perjury and obstruction of justice
- 2001 Office of Homeland Security begins operations with former Governor Tom Ridge as director
- 2014 Thomas Eric Duncan, the man that brought Ebola to America, dies at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas, TX. 2 of the nurses treating him have contracted the deadly disease.

Psychopath. Murderer. Torturer. Communist. Putting his picture on your clothes is like wearing a swastika.
Posted in History, Lost and Found
Tagged Aviation, Bill Clinton, Che Guevara, Civil War, Communism, Congress, Department of Homeland Security, Ebola, Franklin Pierce, Heroism, history, Medal of Honor, riots, science fiction, Terrorism
What to remember about October 8th…
- 1861 Fires break out in Chicago, IL, Peshtigo, WI, Holland, MI, and Manistee, MI; hundreds die in Great Chicago Fire; over 1000 in Peshtigo
- 1862 Confederate invasion of Kentucky is halted by Union troops
- 1868 Former 14th President of the United States Franklin Pierce dies at home in Concord, New Hampshire (b. 1804)
- 1918 U.S. Army Corporal Alvin C. York kills more than 20 German soldiers and captures an additional 132; he will be awarded the Medal of Honor
- 1919 1st transcontinental air race in the United States begins
- 1920 American author and futurist Frank Patrick Herbert, Jr. is born; creator of the Dune saga (d. 1986)
- 1967 Cold-blooded murderer and Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara is captured by Bolivian army; he will be executed the next day
- 1969 The Weatherman branch of Students for a Democratic Society stage “Days of Rage” demonstrations; 3 days of violent riots in Chicago
- 1998 U.S. house of Representatives votes to proceed on impeachment charges against President Clinton for perjury and obstruction of justice
- 2001 Office of Homeland Security begins operations with former Governor Tom Ridge as director
- 2014 Thomas Eric Duncan, the man that brought Ebola to America, dies at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas, TX. 2 of the nurses treating him have contracted the deadly disease.

Psychopath. Murderer. Torturer. Communist. Putting his picture on your clothes is like wearing a swastika.
Posted in History, Lost and Found
Tagged Aviation, Bill Clinton, Che Guevara, Civil War, Communism, Congress, Department of Homeland Security, Ebola, Franklin Pierce, Heroism, history, Medal of Honor, riots, science fiction, Terrorism
What to remember about October 9th…
- 1635 Religious dissident Roger Williams is banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony; he and his followers go on to found Rhode Island and the 1st Baptist church in America
- 1701 Collegiate School of Connecticut is chartered in Old Saybrook; later renamed later as Yale University
- 1888 Washington Monument opens to the public for the 1st time; construction began in 1848
- 1936 Hoover Dam begins generating electricity for California
- 1967 Communist rebel and murderer Ernesto “Che” Guevara de la Serna is executed by the Bolivian army
- 2001 Second mailing of letters in the Anthrax Attacks
- 2009 Awards committee announces that President Barack Hussein Obama has won the Nobel Peace Prize

UPDATE: Due to popular demand, the above pic is now available as a shirt, hat, or button to make it easier to torment the commie-loving hipsters in your life. Go to cafepress.com to check it out.
Posted in History, Lost and Found
Tagged anthrax, Barack Hussein Obama, Che Guevara, Christianity, Communism, George Washington, Herbert Hoover, history, Nobel Prize, Rhode Island, Terrorism
What to remember about October 8th…
- 1861 Fires break out in Chicago, IL, Peshtigo, WI, Holland, MI, and Manistee, MI; hundreds die in Great Chicago Fire; over 1000 in Peshtigo
- 1862 Confederate invasion of Kentucky is halted by Union troops
- 1868 Former 14th President of the United States Franklin Pierce dies at home in Concord, New Hampshire (b. 1804)
- 1918 U.S. Army Corporal Alvin C. York kills more than 20 German soldiers and captures an additional 132; he will be awarded the Medal of Honor
- 1919 1st transcontinental air race in the United States begins
- 1920 American author and futurist Frank Patrick Herbert, Jr. is born; creator of the Dune saga (d. 1986)
- 1967 Cold-blooded murderer and Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara is captured by Bolivian army; he will be executed the next day
- 1969 The Weatherman branch of Students for a Democratic Society stage “Days of Rage” demonstrations; 3 days of violent riots in Chicago
- 1998 U.S. house of Representatives votes to proceed on impeachment charges against President Clinton for perjury and obstruction of justice
- 2001 Office of Homeland Security begins operations with former Governor Tom Ridge as director

Psychopath. Murderer. Torturer. Communist. Putting his picture on your clothes is like wearing a swastika.
Posted in History, Lost and Found
Tagged Aviation, Bill Clinton, Che Guevara, Civil War, Communism, Congress, Department of Homeland Security, Franklin Pierce, Heroism, history, Medal of Honor, riots, science fiction, Terrorism
What to remember about October 9th…
- 1635 Religious dissident Roger Williams is banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony; he and his followers go on to found Rhode Island and the 1st Baptist church in America
- 1701 Collegiate School of Connecticut is chartered in Old Saybrook; later renamed later as Yale University
- 1888 Washington Monument opens to the public for the 1st time; construction began in 1848
- 1936 Hoover Dam begins generating electricity for California
- 1967 Communist rebel and murderer Ernesto “Che” Guevara de la Serna is executed by the Bolivian army
- 2001 Second mailing of letters in the Anthrax Attacks
- 2009 Awards committee announces that President Barack Hussein Obama has won the Nobel Peace Prize

UPDATE: Due to popular demand, the above pic is now available as a shirt, hat, or button to make it easier to torment the commie-loving hipsters in your life. Go to cafepress.com to check it out.
What to remember about October 8th…
- 1861 Fires break out in Chicago, IL, Peshtigo, WI, Holland, MI, and Manistee, MI; hundreds die in Great Chicago Fire; over 1000 in Peshtigo
- 1862 Confederate invasion of Kentucky is halted by Union troops
- 1868 Former 14th President of the United States Franklin Pierce dies at home in Concord, New Hampshire (b. 1804)
- 1918 U.S. Army Corporal Alvin C. York kills more than 20 German soldiers and captures an additional 132; he will be awarded the Medal of Honor
- 1919 1st transcontinental air race in the United States begins
- 1920 American author and futurist Frank Patrick Herbert, Jr. is born; creator of the Dune saga (d. 1986)
- 1967 Cold-blooded murderer and Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara is captured by Bolivian army; he will be executed the next day
- 1969 The Weatherman branch of Students for a Democratic Society stage “Days of Rage” demonstrations; 3 days of violent riots in Chicago
- 1998 U.S. house of Representatives votes to proceed on impeachment charges against President Clinton for perjury and obstruction of justice
- 2001 Office of Homeland Security begins operations with former Governor Tom Ridge as director

Psychopath. Murderer. Torturer. Communist. Putting his picture on your clothes is like wearing a swastika.
Posted in History, Lost and Found
Tagged Aviation, Bill Clinton, Che Guevara, Civil War, Communism, Congress, Department of Homeland Security, Franklin Pierce, history, Medal of Honor, Terrorism
What to remember about October 9th…
- 1635 Religious dissident Roger Williams is banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony; he and his followers go on to found Rhode Island and the 1st Baptist church in America
- 1701 Collegiate School of Connecticut is chartered in Old Saybrook; later renamed later as Yale University
- 1888 Washington Monument opens to the public for the 1st time; construction began in 1848
- 1936 Hoover Dam begins generating electricity for California
- 1967 Communist rebel and murderer Ernesto “Che” Guevara de la Serna is executed by the Bolivian army
- 2001 Second mailing of letters in the Anthrax Attacks
- 2009 Awards committee announces that President Barack Hussein Obama has won the Nobel Peace Prize

UPDATE: Due to popular demand, the above pic is now available as a shirt, hat, or button to make it easier to torment the commie-loving hipsters in your life. Go to cafepress.com to check it out.