Tuesday, January 9, 2018

Invading 'Bama!



Hearty congratulations to Alabama on their 26 to 23 victory over Georgia in the NCAA College Championship game!  The unusual tag team of Quarterbacks Hurts and Tagovailoa prevailed over the scrappy Bulldogs.  Coach Saban, with six national titles, deserves enormous credit for his winning strategy.

The game was played at the Mercedes Benz Stadium in Atlanta Georgia giving home field advantage to the Bulldogs.  So 'Bama had to "invade" Georgia to win the title.  Has Alabama itself been invaded?  We answered this question in our most recent book America Invaded (www.americainvaded.com).

In honor of the Tide here is the Alabama chapter of America Invaded: A State by State Guide to Fighting on American Soil...



"Sweet home Alabama has been invaded and fought in many times over its history.

Humans  first arrived in the area we know today as Alabama many thousands of years ago. Bows and arrows were introduced in the woodland era, from 300 BCE to AD 1000.  The Mississippian culture, which began around AD 700, featured mound builders.

The Alabama, Choctaw, Cherokee, Chickasaw, and Creek (or Muscogee) were the principal tribes of Alabama. Alabama is a Muscogee word meaning campsite.

 The  first Europeans to explore the area were the Spanish. For instance, as early as 1519, Alonzo Álvarez de Pineda was venturing into Mobile Bay.  The Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto entered Alabama in 1540. It wasn’t an entirely auspicious start to European settlement in Alabama. At the Battle of Mabila, located somewhere in what is now Alabama, de Soto found himself outwitted and forced to  flee from an ambush by warriors under the command of the local ruler, Chief Tuskaloosa.

Other Spanish would follow him, but they too had little success in attempts to settle in the area. And then the French would arrive.

In 1702, the Le Moyne brothers—Pierre Le Moyne d’Iberville and Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville—founded Fort Louis de la Louisiane and its adjacent settlement, La Mobile, as the capital of New France in the Louisiana territory. In 1711, after a flood inundated Fort Louis, Bienville moved Mobile to its current location.

However, while the French were trying to establish themselves in the region, the English had their own plans for the area, and English traders began to be active there.

The French would control Alabama until the conclusion of the Seven Years’ War in 1763, when the territory passed to the British. Mobile brie y became the capital of British West Florida, thereby becoming part of the fourteenth British colony in the New World.

In January 1780, Captain William Pickles (great name!) of the Continental Navy rendezvoused with Spanish General Bernardo de Gálvez, who was leading over 750 Spanish troops.  Their object was to attack the British outpost at Fort Charlotte in Mobile.  The two-week siege lasted from March 2–14 and ended with British surrender.  e city of Galveston, Texas, would later be named in honor of the Spanish general.

After the American Revolution, the southern half of what is now Alabama would form part of the Mississippi Territory. However, the section of Alabama that included the port of Mobile remained in Spanish hands.

The advance of American power in Alabama brought with it the usual process of pressuring Native Americans to relinquish control of their lands. Already, for instance, in 1805–6, lands were being opened up to settlers in large parts of western and northern Alabama, land that was held by Native American tribes such as the Muscogee and the Cherokee.

Tecumseh
1768 - 1813
In 1811, Tecumseh, a Shawnee chief born in present-day Ohio, came down to Alabama in an effort to unite the Indian tribes against the encroachments of the American settlers. Most of the tribes ignored Tecumseh, but a portion of the Creek Nation known as the Upper Creeks did not.  They allowed him to address their general meeting at Tukabatchee in what is today Elmore County. Tecumseh is reputed to have said:

Brush from your eyelids the sleep of slavery; once more strike for vengeance; once more for your country. The red men have fallen as the leaves now fall. I hear their voices in those aged pines.  Their tears drop from the weeping skies.  Their bones bleach the hills of Georgia. Will no son of those brave men strike the pale face and quiet these complaining ghosts? Let the white race perish!  They seize your land; they corrupt your women; they trample on the bones of your dead! Back whence they came, upon a trail of blood, they must be driven!

The Creeks who were sympathetic to his message became known as the Red Sticks because of their red painted war clubs.  The great comet of 1811 was seen by some as a portent for an uprising in the south; Tecumseh’s name in Shawnee meant shooting star.

Tecumseh would align himself and the tribes of the Great Lakes with Britain against the Americans in the War of 1812.

The Creek War broke out in southern Alabama on July 27, 1813, with the Battle of Burnt Corn Creek. Colonel James Caller of the Alabama militia attacked a party of about two hundred Red Sticks led by Peter McQueen.  The Alabama militia had some initial success, but the Red Sticks launched a counterattack, driving the militia from the  field.

Fort Mims Massacre

One of the deadliest attacks ever launched by Native Americans on settlers took place in Alabama during the Creek War.  The Fort Mims Massacre, a reprisal for the Battle of Burnt Corn Creek, was fought on August 30, 1813. William Weatherford, known as Red Eagle, led thousands of Red Stick warriors against Fort Mims on the Alabama River. Around  five hundred men, women, and children were killed that day with only about thirty of the settlers managing to escape the carnage. Fort Mims Park, featuring a partial reconstruction of the fort, is operated today by the Alabama Historical Commission.

On November 12, 1813, the small but memorable Canoe Fight occurred along Randon’s Creek. Four Americans, led by Captain Sam Dale, fought and killed a canoe full of eleven Red Stick warriors. Among the Americans was a black man named Caesar, who paddled the boat through the hand-to-hand struggle.

 The Battle of Holy Ground was fought on December 23, 1813, between the US militia and Weatherford’s Red Sticks. Weatherford managed to escape by jumping, with his horse Arrow, off  a  fifteen-foot bluff.

The scale of the Fort Mims Massacre shocked Americans and drew national attention to Alabama. Andrew Jackson led a force of Tennessee militia south to  fight the Creeks in Alabama. General John Floyd led elements of the Georgia militia west against the Creeks.

Andrew Jackson

Andrew Jackson was a complicated man. He demonstrated both surprising compassion and horri c cruelty during the course of the Creek War. On November 3, 1813, Jackson oversaw a massacre of Red Sticks at the Battle of Tallushatchee. Nearly two hundred Red Sticks were killed in the space of a half hour. Jackson showed compassion on the  eld of battle by adopting an orphaned Creek boy and raising him as his own son, Lyncoya. Sadly, Lyncoya died of tuberculosis at age seventeen. Jackson and his wife Rachel had been planning to educate him at West Point.

On November 9, 1813, Jackson won a significant victory at the Battle of Talladega. Over three hundred Red Stick warriors were slain.

Andrew Jackson had another decisive victory over the Red Sticks on March 27, 1814, at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend. It must be noted that around six hundred Native American warriors from the Cherokee and Lower Creek tribes fought alongside Jackson against the Red Sticks. Approximately nine hundred Red Sticks were killed; Jackson’s forces lost fewer than eighty men.

Jackson ordered the cutting off of nose tips after the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in order to count the bodies. Old Hickory became known to the Creeks as Sharp Knife for this harsh approach.
After the Battle of Horseshoe Bend, Weatherford, who was half Scottish and half Creek, walked into the American camp and surrendered. He declared to Jackson, “I am in your power.” Sharp Knife chose to pardon Red Eagle, who lived peacefully in Alabama until his death in 1824.

The Americans strongly suspected the Europeans of encouraging the Red Sticks in the Creek War. American forces discovered correspondence between the Creeks and officials in Spanish Florida. Major General James Wilkinson was ordered to seize Spanish-occupied Mobile. On April 14, 1813, Wilkinson landed with four hundred American troops.  The outnumbered Spanish garrison surrendered the next day. By the terms of the Treaty of Ghent, Mobile was the only territorial gain of the War of 1812.

In September of 1814, British forces under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Edward Nicolls landed in Alabama in an attempt to seize Fort Bowyer near Mobile.  The attack was repelled. On December 5, 1814, British Admiral Alexander Cochrane penned a letter to the Creeks that was an attempt to fan the  re ignited by Tecumseh.

The Great King George, our beloved Father, has long wished to assuage the sorrows of his warlike Indian Children, and to assist them in regaining their rights and Possessions from their base and perfidious oppressors. ... If you want arms and ammunition to defend yourselves against your oppressors—come to us and we will provide you. ... And what think you we ask in return for this bounty of our Great Father, which we his chosen Warriors have so much pleasure in offering to you? Nothing more than that you should assist us manfully in regaining your lost lands,—the lands of your forefathers,—from the common enemy, the wicked People of the United States; and that you should hand down those lands to your children hereafter, as we hope we shall now be able to deliver them up to you, their lawful owners.

Even after Jackson’s decisive American victory at the Battle of New Orleans, the British did not abandon hope. In February 1815, British troops landed in Alabama and assaulted Fort Bowyer a second time, capturing the fort on February 11, 1815.  The British would soon withdraw from Alabama after learning that the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the War of 1812, had been signed on December 24, 1814.

In 1819, Alabama became the twenty-second state to join the Union.

In the following decades, more Native American land was ceded to settlers.  e years 1836–1837 saw the Second Creek War, which culminated in 1837 with the Battle of Hobdy’s Bridge, the last battle against Native Americans that took place in Alabama. In 1838, Native Americans were sent westward on the Trail of Tears.

Alabama, a slave state, joined the Confederacy in February 1861. Montgomery briefly became the  first capital of the Confederacy, from February until May of 1861, when she was succeeded by Richmond, Virginia. Around 120,000 Alabamians would serve in the gray armies of the Confederacy. Alabama was also a center of iron manufacturing, contributing much-needed artillery to the rebel cause.  e state itself, however, was mostly on the periphery of military action during the Civil War.
However, some  fighting did take place there.

In February 1862, Union gunboats moved up the Tennessee River to Florence. And the Union established a stronghold in parts of northern Alabama.

In April 1863, Colonel Abel Streight led Union forces on a raid on Confederate communication lines. Despite a Union victory in the Battle of Day’s Gap, the raid turned into a disaster for Streight’s men, who eventually were forced to surrender to Confederate troops.

In July 1864, Major General Harrison Lovell Rousseau led a Union raid on Confederate targets in north and east-central Alabama, disrupting Confederate communications and destroying supplies.
 e year 1864 also saw Union land victories in the Battle of Athens and the Battle of Decatur.
 e naval Battle of Mobile Bay was fought o  the Alabama coast on August 5, 1864. At the battle’s crisis, Rear Admiral David G. Farragut, the Union leader, famously exclaimed something like, “Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead.”  is Union victory contributed to Lincoln’s reelection in November of 1864.

The CSS Alabama, built near Liverpool, was the most famous Confederate commerce raider of the US Civil War. Her captain, Raphael Semmes, was born in Maryland but later adopted Alabama as his home. Under her bold captain, the Alabama terrorized Union shipping from the Atlantic to the Paci c for two years, capturing and burning sixty-five vessels. She was  finally sunk on June 19, 1864, in the English Channel off Cherbourg by the armored Union ship Kearsarge.

In 1865, the war would hit Alabama even more severely. In March, Union Major General James H. Wilson launched a cavalry raid deep into Alabama, defeating Confederate forces and taking Selma before heading for Montgomery.

In April, after the Battle of Spanish Fort and the Battle of Fort Blakely, Mobile itself—one of the Confederacy’s last deep-water ports—finally fell to the Union.

On May 4, 1865, General Richard Taylor, commanding the last major Confederate force in Alabama, surrendered at Citronelle.

USS Alabama, Mobile, AL

The USS Alabama is a South Dakota-class battleship that was launched in 1942 and supported the liberation of the Philippines in World War II. She can be found today at the Battleship Memorial Park in Mobile.

The training of African-American airmen at Tuskegee is also a note- worthy feature of Alabama’s war effort during World War II. In March of 1941, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt was a passenger in a plane  own by an African-American pilot over Alabama.

German U-boats operated in the Gulf of Mexico in 1942 and 1943. During the month of May in 1942, they sank forty-one merchant ships in the Gulf."



Signed copies of America Invaded: A State by State Guide to Fighting on American Soil can now be found here...www.americainvaded.com

We are proudly donating 5 percent of all sales of America Invaded to the Indigenous Institute...www.theindigenousinstitute.org

Regular copies may be purchased from Amazon...www.amzn.com/0692902406

Or on Kindle...www.amzn.com/B073RJQ8PK



Friday, January 5, 2018

History Will Judge Trump!



Prior to the 2016 election a friend passed on to me an open letter written by a group identifying themselves as "Historians Against Trump".  It was signed by hundreds of American historians denouncing the candidacy of Donald Trump.  My immediate reaction was that they should have modified their group to call itself "Historians Against Trump Eternally" in order to give themselves the perfect acronym.

At the end of the day a Historians' view of Trump is simply another political opinion -- no better and no worse.  It is really NOT an historical opinion at all.  Why do I make this claim?



In the Introduction to my 2014 book America Invades (www.americainvades.com) I wrote this...

"In writing history about the recent past, there is something I like to call the “Bletchley effect.” Imagine that you were an objective fair-minded historian in the year 1970 attempting to write a history of World War II. Your account would necessarily suffer from an unawareness of the extraordinary impact of Bletchley Park and other Allied decoding efforts on the conduct of the war; these disclosures did not emerge until the mid-1970s, or thirty years after the war’s conclusion. In fact, the UK government to this day maintains some documents relating to Rudolf Hess’s  flight to Britain in 1941 on classified basis. Time must pass to allow political passions to cool, memoirs to be published, and secrets to be declassified—without this, history cannot be brought to light. In writing about recent American campaigns, our account—and those found in other sources—can be no more than a provisional judgment. Therefore, our accounts of the last thirty years or so are as much journalism as history."

Today we see the launch of Michael Wolff's best-selling book Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House.  It has catapulted to Amazon's #1 best-selling book on the heels of massive free publicity by the Trump-hating media.  Tony Blair and Anna Wintour have already suggested that Wolff's book misrepresents them (http://www.businessinsider.com/michael-wolff-note-says-he-doesnt-know-if-trump-book-is-all-true-2018-1).  The book is highly controversial with its accuracy called into question.

Obama was the best gun seller in America (see...www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=4122629330054677829#editor/target=post;postID=6812362780498158699;onPublishedMenu=allposts;onClosedMenu=allposts;postNum=3;src=link) while Trump has now emerged as the greatest book seller in America!

What we know for certain, however, is that Fire and Fury is NOT the verdict of History.  His work is a provisional judgement, a piece of journalism.  And the gulf between journalism and History is a vast yawning chasm.  According to accurate journalism of 1860, for example, Ulysses S. Grant was a drunk and a forgettable failure but, according to History (Ron Chernow, etc.), Grant was the greatest commander of the US Civil War.

History will indeed judge Donald Trump.  But not today.


Signed copies of America Invaded: A State by State Guide to Fighting on American Soil can now be found here...www.americainvaded.com

We are proudly donating 5 percent of all sales of America Invaded to the Indigenous Institute...www.theindigenousinstitute.org

Regular copies may be purchased from Amazon...www.amzn.com/0692902406

Or on Kindle...www.amzn.com/B073RJQ8PK




Friday, December 15, 2017

Doc Martin



Doc Martens are shoes but Doc Martin is a British comic television series produced for ITV. And a pretty good series it is.  Set in beautiful Cornwall, Doc Martin (Martin Clunes) is a bit like Basil Fawlty with a stethoscope.  Martin is the Doc with no bedside manners.  He constantly insults his patients.  He is incapable of the polite dissembling that is part of our everyday interactions.  But he is a magnificently qualified diagnosing physician.  Moreover, he is a rarity in the modern world -- a man with a code.  He has a "duty of care" with regard to his patients which he takes with utmost seriousness.

His on-again off again romance with Louisa (Caroline Catz) is central to the charm of this series.  When they first meet by chance on an airplane he quickly diagnoses that she suffers from glaucoma.

The series is blessedly apolitical.  That said, there is an hysterically funny episode that skewers a couple of looney academic liberals who fail to discipline their child and grill badgers on their barbecue.

Doc Martin has won numerous honors in Britain.  It has been adapted into a series in several countries and now a co-creator of Friends is apparently adapting it for American television.  Sigourney Weaver of Aliens fame has guest starred in a handful of episodes.

Doc Martin is funny, intelligent and humane.  A brilliant combination!

You can find Doc Martin on Amazon...www.amzn.com/B06XFWM26Z


Friday, November 17, 2017

Pearl Harbor 2018

Japanese Zero
Flying Heritage Collection, Everett WA

On Sunday December 7, 1941, seventy-seven years ago, planes of the Imperial Japanese Navy streaked over Pearl Harbor bombing and torpedoing the American fleet at anchor.  Over 2,400 Americans were killed that day.  President Roosevelt quickly called it a “Day of Infamy."

George H.W. Bush Airport / Houston
 That attack changed the life of the late George H.W. Bush who became the youngest naval aviator to serve in the US Navy.  It also altered the lives of millions of his fellow Americans. 

The “Day of Infamy” was followed by several months of fear – particularly on the West coast of the United States.  Japanese submarines prowled off the West coast.  The 1942 Rose Bowl was initially cancelled but then moved to Chapel Hill, North Carolina where Oregon State beat Duke, 20 to 16.

In February  of 1942 a Japanese submarine shelled the Ellwood oil refinery near Santa Barbara with its 140mm deck guns.  In June of that year Fort Stephens in Oregon was bombarded by the deck guns of a Japanese submarine.  That same month two remote Aleutian islands, Attu and Kiska, were invaded and occupied by Japanese troops.  Dutch Harbor in Alaska was bombed.

Panic swept the West coast.  Japanese-Americans were shipped to internment camps and denied their constitutional rights.  This was a gross overreaction by the US government but the threat and the danger from Japan were real.

Seventy-six years ago the threat came from Imperial Japan.  Today the threat comes from a blustering dictator in North Korea.

We Americans often assume that we are invulnerable to invasion and attack.  Are we not protected by the great moats of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans?  We tend to forget that these “moats” have also been highways for invasion and attack.

Successive waves of invasions have shaped our country in countless ways.  The English founded Jamestown while the Spanish held Florida and the French tried to establish settlements in Texas and Louisiana (“Nouvelle Orleans”).  The Russians colonized Alaska and even built Fort Ross in Northern California near what is now called the “Russian River”.  They occupied Fort Ross for thirty years from 1812 to 1842 attempting to grow crops that would sustain their Alaskan possession.

Nor is Kim Jung Un’s threat to attack the US with intercontinental weapons without historic precedent.  In the last two years of World War II Japan launched thousands of Fu-Go balloon bombs carrying incendiary explosives.  They hoped to set American forests ablaze.  The Jet stream transported these devices to at least fifteen America states including Wyoming and Iowa.  In May 1945 six people were killed in Oregon by a Japanese balloon bomb.

In 2003 the US went to war in Iraq largely over concern with weapons of mass destruction.  Today we know that Kim Jung Un is already capable of exploding crude atomic devices.  Two North Korean missiles have been fired through Japanese airspace.


Pearl Harbor famously united public opinion in the United States.  “Remember Pearl Harbor” became a rallying cry.  A nation that was woefully unprepared on December 7, 1941 was rapidly transformed into a vast arsenal of democracy.

Seventy-six years have changed the tempo and potential devastation of modern warfare.  Kim Jung Un’s grandfather launched the Korean War in 1950 with a devastating invasion of the south.  His grandson has the capacity to launch multiple Hiroshimas.  While the 2018 meeting between President Trump and Kim Jung Un was encouraging it seems that North Korea continues to develop nuclear weapons.

Surveying the threat matrix for future Pearl Harbor-style attacks, we must continue to be vigilant about North Korea and other outside powers.  Isis, though- severely weakened, has announced its intention to launch sniper attacks in New York City.

Surveying the political landscape today, our nation seems more divided than ever.  Will we have the wisdom to recognize the threats which face us, to remain vigilant and to preserve peace in a world troubled by murderous dictators?  Will our leaders have the wisdom to meet bluster, not with more bluster but with strength?

Thanks Denton Record Chronicle...http://www.dentonrc.com/opinion/columns/2017/12/07/christopher-kellypearl-harbor-offers-strong-lessons-today

Thanks Detroit News...http://www.detroitnews.com/story/opinion/2017/12/07/pearl-harbor-lessons-legacy/108380300/

Thanks Inquirer.net...http://usa.inquirer.net/byline/christopher-kelly

Thanks Military History Now...https://militaryhistorynow.com/2017/12/05/day-of-infamy-the-lessons-and-legacy-of-pearl-harbor/

Thanks Montgomery Advertiser...http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/story/opinion/columnists/2017/12/07/day-infamy-lessons-and-legacy-pearl-harbor-day/929236001/

Thanks Oakland Press...http://www.theoaklandpress.com/article/OP/20171207/NEWS/171209763

Thanks Odessa American...http://www.oaoa.com/editorial/columns/guest_columns/article_d8c20e20-db76-11e7-b76b-1b93be8fe591.html

Thanks Richland Source...http://www.richlandsource.com/opinion/day-of-infamy-lessons-and-legacy-of-pearl-harbor-day/article_2b530170-d3bc-11e7-82d2-b7fb55bd6593.html

Thanks Troy Daily News...http://www.tdn-net.com/opinion/columns/32011/the-lessons-and-legacy-of-pearl-harbor

Thanks again War History Online...www.warhistoryonline.com/instant-articles/day-infamy-lessons-legacy-pearl-harbor-day.html

Thanks Western Free Press...http://westernfreepress.com/2017/11/17/pearl-harbor-2017/

You'll find my interview with the Conservative Commandos 32 minutes in here...www.spreaker.com/user/conservativecommandos/conservative-commandos-lauren-fix-christ






Sunday, October 22, 2017

Military History and Race

George Armstrong Custer
Lest We Forget

History teaches us that all races have fought in wars and that all have won and lost wars at various times.  The lie of White (or European) supremacy was thoroughly discredited at the battles of Little Big Horn (1876),  Adwa (1896), Tsushima Strait (1905), Pearl Harbor (1941) and, finally, on 9/11 (2001).

Crazy Horse
Victor at Little Big Horn
At Little Big Horn in eastern Montana Custer's 7th Cavalry was destroyed by a Sioux Army led by Crazy Horse that outnumbered his by about three to one.  Custer, who had graduated at the bottom of his class from West Point, had declined to bring a gatling gun as it would only slow him down.

In 1896 the forces of Ethiopian Emperor Menelik II decisively defeated Italian Colonial forces at the Battle of Adwa.  Ethiopian independence was preserved.  Adwa inspired many subsequent African anti-colonial struggles but it also inspired a thirst for vengeance with Mussolini who brutally invaded Ethiopia in 1936 and erected a statue of himself on the Adwa battlefield.

At Tsushima Strait in 1905 a Japanese fleet annihilated a Russian fleet that had sailed halfway around the world from Europe to Asia in order to confront the Japanese.  Two thirds of the Russian ships were sunk.  A peace, brokered by Teddy Roosevelt, ended the Russo-Japanese war shortly afterwards.  TR became the first American President to win a Nobel Peace prize.

At Pearl Harbor in December 1941 the Imperial Japanese navy achieved strategic surprise catching the US fleet while it was anchored at Battleship Row in Hawaii.  Over 2,400 Americans were killed that day.  There were initial, and entirely false, reports that German pilots were flying planes marked with the Rising Sun that day.

On 9/11 nineteen al-Qaeda terrorists from the Middle East managed to hijack four domestic US airliners and crash them into the Twin towers and the Pentagon.  All four commercial planes were fueled for cross country flights making them hugely dangerous missiles.  The hijackers used knives and box cutters to terrorize the crew and capture the cockpits within a narrow time window that morning.  Commercial airline cockpits were, at the time, lightly secured and airline crews were trained to accede to hijacker demands in hopes of getting the planes safely back to an airport.  Nearly three thousand were killed on that day of horror.

Here Crispus Attucks fell
March 5, 1770
Today the United States has, without question, the strongest military in the world.  Ethnic diversity has been a key ingredient for American military success from the very founding of our nation.  Crispus Attucks, of African and Wampanoag heritage, has been hailed as the first casualty of the American Revolution when he was killed by British troops in the Boston Massacre on March 5, 1770.  Nearly five percent of the Continental Army were black.  Hundreds of thousands of blacks would serve in the Union Army during the Civil War.  More would serve as Buffalo soldiers in the Indian Wars on the western frontier.  Even in the segregated Army of World War II blacks distinguished themselves in units such as the Tuskegee airmen and the 555th Parachute Infantry Battalion ("Triple Nickels").
Robert Gould Shaw
Boston Common

Over and over again minorities that have faced discrimination and persecution in the United States have proven themselves on the battlefield by fighting valiantly for a country that sometimes despised them.  In the 19th century Irish immigrants to the US faced a strong nativist backlash epitomized by "No Irishmen need apply" and the Know Nothing movement.  They responded by forming the Irish Brigade ("Fighting 69th"), led by General Thomas Meagher, that won battle honors at Antietam and Gettysburg.

Faced with actual imprisonment after Pearl Harbor, around 14,000 Japanese-Americans would form the 442nd Infantry Regiment which earned nearly 9,500 Purple hearts fighting mainly in the Italian campaign.  The most decorated unit in the US Army in World War II had a simple motto: "Go For Broke".

Native Americans have been fighting alongside and in the US Armed forces since the Oneida and Tuscarora joined the Patriot cause during the American Revolution.  Today a disproportionate number of Native Americans serve in the US Armed forces.

President George W. Bush recently said that "bigotry and white supremacy, in any form, is blasphemy against the American creed".  Bigotry and white supremacy, aside from being terrible policy, are also symptoms of historical ignorance.


Thanks KONK Life...http://konknet.com/honoring-the-diversity-of-our-troops-throughout-history/

Thanks Western Free Press...http://westernfreepress.com/2017/10/22/military-history-and-race/



Signed copies of America Invaded: A State by State Guide to Fighting on American Soil can now be found here...www.americainvaded.com

We are proudly donating 5 percent of all sales of America Invaded to the Indigenous Institute...www.theindigenousinstitute.org

Regular copies may be purchased from Amazon...www.amzn.com/0692902406

Or on Kindle...www.amzn.com/B073RJQ8PK




Sunday, October 15, 2017

Ken Burns' Vietnam: A Quagmire within a Quagmire



Put me down as a Ken Burns fan.  I loved his documentary The Civil War (www.amzn.com/B0189I11EI).  I admired his film The War which dealt with World War II (wwwamzn.com/B0759GLFT2).

History is far too important to be left to academic historians.  I was delighted to see that Burns would be taking his documentary film-making technique to the thorny topic of the Vietnam War.  His treatment was bound to ruffle some academic feathers.

But what a disappointment The Vietnam War has proven to be!  The film seems to be a quagmire within a quagmire.

Just consider the problems in the first episode which purports to cover the conflict in Vietnam from 1858 to 1962.

First, Burns / Novick claim to have tried to attempted to shed light on Vietnam by interviewing those on all sides of the conflict -- South Vietnamese, North Vietnamese, Americans, etc..  This would be highly commendable if it were true.  The first episode of his Vietnam deals largely with the French Imperial Project in Vietnam.  But something is missing.  There was not a single interview with any French man or woman.  This is a glaring oversight.  The French Imperial Project is summarily dismissed without any attempt to make any real assessment of the effects of European Imperialism.  Throw us a baguette, Ken!

Second, the editing in this documentary is chronologically jerky and highly annoying.  In an episode which is ostensibly treating the period from 1858 to 1962 Burns inserts a number of flash forwards to the 1960s American experience of the war.  This seems to be a highly patronizing move on Burns part.  He seems to assume that an American audience cannot handle a historic chronology without being a helping of the 1960s Vietnam experience that is more familiar to American viewers.

Eisenhower
Grosvenor Square, London
Third, the Burns / Novick documentary fundamentally gets Eisenhower wrong.  His film suggests that Ike was elected President in 1952 because he would be more tough on Communism.  This is misleading at best.  Ike was elected in 1952 to deal with the trauma of the Korean War from which he swiftly extracted the US and winning an uneasy peace on the peninsula.  Of all Americans Presidents who dealt with Vietnam from 1952 to 1974 Eisenhower had BY FAR the most military and strategic experience.  Nor is it a coincidence that among all US Presidents from 1952 to 1974 Eisenhower did the least to deepen our involvement in Vietnam.  Nor does Burns even bother to mention that Ike flatly turned down the suggestion by his Joint Chiefs to drop atomic bombs on the Viet Minh in 1954 in support of the beleaguered French at Dien Bien Phu.  Dismissing the desperate pleas of the French who had been close wartime allies of the US in World War II could not have been easy for Ike but it was the right call to make.

Fourth, Burns / Novick give short shrift to the appalling devastation caused in Vietnam by the Japanese occupation of the country in World War II.  Vietnam sustained 1 to 2 million deaths  (mainly due to starvation) during the 1940 to 1945 occupation of their country by the Japanese quite possibly more than ALL of the casualties of the Vietnam on ALL sides (about 1.3 million from 1965 to 1974). The horrendous trauma of the wartime famine explains much about how the ground for Ho Chi Minh's Revolution was laid.

The Vietnam War was a worthy subject poorly handled by the Burns / Novick collaboration.






Wednesday, October 11, 2017

Invading Texas

The author with Travis and Crockett
San Antonio, TX


In an excerpt from the Texas chapter of America Invaded: A State by State Guide to Fighting on American Soil (www.americainvaded.com) we discussed the Texas Revolution of 1836...

Invading Texas 2017

"By 1821...New Spain was overthrown with the Mexican Revolution. Texas would be governed, for a while, by Mexico City rather than Madrid, although it remained a desolate land with few settlers. The Mexicans launched a campaign to bring more people to Texas by offering generous land grants. The only catch was that new settlers had to convert to Catholicism and that slavery was illegal. This brought many Americans, mostly from the Southern states, to Texas. Stephen Austin of Virginia was an American impresario in the Texas territory who actually changed his first name to Estaban.

In 1826, the short-lived Fredonian Rebellion, led by Haden Edwards, briefly declared an independent state in Texas before it was crushed by Mexican forces.

Mexican attempts to control further Anglo immigration into Texas created tensions that would lead to violence. Already in 1832, Texas insurgents rose against the Mexican authorities, and more was to come.

The wide-open spaces of Texas seemed to promise almost unlimited opportunity for those adventuresome souls who dared to make the trek to the western frontier. Texas drew an assortment of adventurers.

Jim Bowie
1796 - 1836

There was, for example, Jim Bowie, a forger and land swindler from Kentucky who was wanted in several US states. He had also invented the Bowie knife.

Texas also attracted William Travis, an Alabama schoolteacher who abandoned his pregnant wife and child to make his way to Texas. The Alamo would be the twenty-six-year-old’s first command.

Davy Crockett
1786 - 1836
Texas drew David Crockett, a legendary frontiersman from Tennessee. He was elected to Congress in 1826, but lost his reelection bid in 1834. Crockett responded to his defeat with: “I told the people of my district that I would serve them as faithfully as I had done; but if not, they might go to hell, and I would go to Texas.”

Texas was also a magnet for Antonio de Padua María Severino López de Santa Anna y Pérez de Lebrón, who is better known to us simply as Santa Anna. In 1836, he was the president and dictator of Mexico. He also styled himself the “Napoleon of the West.” With Texas beginning to stir into open rebellion, Santa Anna led what would prove to be one of the most fateful invasions of Texas and, indeed, American territory.

By 1836, the Anglo population of Texas outnumbered the Mexicans by more than three to one. On March 2, 1836, Texas declared its independence from Mexico. General Sam Houston was selected to lead the military forces of the newly created Republic of Texas.

But as Texas declared its independence, General Santa Anna and an army of over 3,000 men were laying siege to the Alamo.
William Travis
1809 - 1836

On February 28, 1836, William Travis wrote this famous letter from the Alamo:

To the People of Texas & All Americans in the World— Fellow citizens & compatriots—
I am besieged, by a thousand or more of the Mexicans under Santa Anna — I have sustained a continual Bombardment & cannonade for 24 hours & have not lost a man — The enemy has demanded a surrender at discretion, otherwise, the garrison are to be put to the sword, if the fort is taken — I have answered the demand with a cannon shot, & our flag still waves proudly from the walls — I shall never surrender or retreat. Then, I call on you in the name of Liberty, of patriotism & everything dear to the American character, to come to our aid, with all dispatch — The enemy is receiving reinforcements daily & will no doubt increase to three or four thousand in four or five days. If this call is neglected, I am determined to sustain myself as long as possible & die like a soldier who never forgets what is due to his own honor & that of his country —
Victory or Death.

On March 6, the presidio was stormed, and all 187 defenders, including Travis, Bowie, and Crockett, were slain. “Remember the Alamo” would become the rallying cry of the new Texas Republic.

Even worse atrocities, though, would soon follow the fall of the Alamo.

Mexican forces won the Battle of Coleto Creek on March 19–20, 1836. Colonel James Fannin was compelled to surrender his force of about three hundred Texans. The Mexican Congress had ordered captured rebels to be treated as pirates. On March 27, over 340 Texans were summarily executed in what became known as the Goliad massacre.

Sam Houston
1793 - 1863

In 1836, Sam Houston was a hard-drinking politician with limited military experience. He had failed to come to the relief of William Travis and the defenders of the Alamo. He was powerless to prevent the Goliad Massacre. But he would succeed spectacularly at San Jacinto.
San Jacinto Monument
La Porte, TX
Sam Houston was opposed by Santa Anna, and Santa Anna’s forces outnumbered the Texans by about 1,300 to 900. Santa Anna, however, had violated two of the cardinal rules of military strategy: he had divided his forces, and he had camped his army with its back to a swampy river.  Finally, Santa Anna had neglected to post pickets around the Mexican encampment, and that allowed the Texans to launch a surprise attack. On April 21, 1836, Sam Houston decisively defeated Santa Anna at the Battle of San Jacinto, which was near the town of La Porte. The battle lasted only eighteen minutes and resulted in the deaths of 630 and the capture of 730 Mexican troops, along with Santa Anna himself. Only nine Texans were killed in the engagement. Santa Anna would be ransomed back to Mexico in exchange for the independence of Texas."

With Jim Hooper in front of The Alamo
San Antonio, TX
For much more on Texas and all the other states please pick up a copy of America Invaded (www.americainvaded.com).



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Sunday, October 1, 2017

Bourbon and...Burgoyne

Blanton's Bourbon Whiskey
Buffalo Trace Distillery
Frankfort, KY

Have you enjoyed a Manhattan lately?  This simple cocktail made from Bourbon (preferably Blanton's), sweet Vermouth and a cherry is an elegant way to approach the evening.  Bourbon, always made from over 50% corn, is the quintessential native American spirit.  The Manhattan is the ultimate New York power cocktail, but it has a backbone made in Kentucky ("Ninety-five percent of the world's bourbon is made in Kentucky." Mitenbuler, Bourbon Empire, www.amzn.com/014310814X).  Bourbon's name, however, can trace its roots to events that took place in the Empire state.

How exactly did Bourbon get its name?  You might be surprised to learn that the story involves Invasions of American territory that goes back to the American Revolution.  The man who deserves more credit for giving Bourbon its name is "Gentleman" Johnny Burgoyne -- an English general who led an ill-fated invasion of New York in 1777.

In the New York chapter of America Invaded: A State by State Guide to Fighting on American Soil we wrote...

"The next year, 1777, became known as the year of the hangman due to the similar appearance of the number 7 and a gibbet. This year featured an invasion of New York that was, quite possibly, the most consequential in the area’s history.
Gentleman Johnny Burgoyne
Museum of the American Revolution
“Gentleman Johnny” Burgoyne, an amateur playwright, led an invading army of over 7,000 troops from Canada that was made up of British, German, Canadian, and loyalist forces. George III personally ordered the use of Indian forces to supplement his Redcoats hoping that they would terrorize the Americans into submission.  British gold subsidized the Native Americans, who were paid $8 a head for rebel prisoners or scalps. Burgoyne’s aim was to drive south toward British-occupied Manhattan, cutting New England off from the rest of the rebellious colonies.
Burgoyne’s complicated plan relied on coordinated British action, with around 1,600 troops led by General St. Leger striking from the St. Lawrence into western New York. Lord Howe, with 16,000 men, would march north from Manhattan to rendezvous with Burgoyne at Albany.

American Soldier
Fort Ticonderoga, NY
All went well for Burgoyne at first. His forces scouted the crest of Mount Defiance, which looked down upon Fort Ticonderoga. His artilleryman, General Phillips, declared, “Where a goat can go, a man can go; and where a man can go, he can drag a gun.” General St. Clair, who commanded around 2,500 outnumbered and outgunned American defenders at Ticonderoga, was compelled to withdraw without a fight. General Phillip Schuyler, St. Clair’s superior and the commander of the Northern Department, was subsequently sacked by the Continental Congress and replaced by Horatio Gates. At this point, it seemed America’s founding fathers truly might be hanged on a gibbet, as Burgoyne and George III intended.
Bennington Monument
Bennington, VT
Even before Gates assumed command of the Northern Department, however, the tide began to turn. A reconnaissance into Vermont, led by Lieutenant Colonel Friedrich Baum and his Brunswickers, ended disastrously at the battle of Bennington on August 15. Troops from New Hampshire, led by General John Stark, earned a crucial victory in a battle that was fought in New York but is commemorated today in Vermont...
Cannon Saratoga
But the most decisive actions of 1777 would be fought in September in the woods near Saratoga. On September 19, Burgoyne’s advance toward Albany was halted by American rebels, led by Benedict Arnold and Horatio Gates, at Freeman’s Farm on the Hudson River.  Burgoyne’s forces were repulsed again at Bemis Heights on October 7. Benedict Arnold, under the influence of rum, demonstrated conspicuous courage, and was wounded in the leg that day. Lord Howe, preoccupied with the capture of Philadelphia, had not left Sir Henry Clinton in New York City with enough troops to advance north to Albany. On October 17, 1777, Burgoyne, with many of his troops close to starvation due to their stretched supply lines from Canada, surrendered his army of 5,895.

Schuyler Mansion
Burgoyne was a prisoner here in 1777
Albany, NY
Burgoyne himself was briefly held prisoner at General Schuyler’s (another NY ancestor by marriage!  CRK) mansion in Albany. This decisive American victory was the turning point of the American Revolution, as it gave instant credibility to the rebel movement. Louis XVI’s France abandoned its neutrality and joined the war as an American ally directly as a result of the battles of Saratoga."(Source: www.americainvaded.com)

The French supported the American Patriot cause with troops, ships and financial support that would be critically important in the Yorktown campaign of 1781.  Cornwallis surrender at Yorktown elevated American independence from a dream to a reality.
The author with Manhattan
But what has any of this got to do with how Bourbon got its name?

Americans, grateful for the support of Louis XVI, began naming towns and counties on the western frontier.  Kentucky became an American state in 1792.  One city in the state became known as "Louisville" while a certain county was named in honor of the French king...Bourbon.

Bottoms up!
Bourbon Barrel
Note on sources:  I am grateful to Reid Mitenbuler's very entertaining Bourbon Empire, 2015, (www.amzn.com/014310814X).  Also to the Buffalo Trace distillery which makes Blanton's (www.buffalotracedistillery.com/).


Signed copies of America Invaded: A State by State Guide to Fighting on American Soil can now be found here...www.americainvaded.com

Regular copies may be purchased from Amazon...www.amzn.com/0692902406

Or on Kindle...www.amzn.com/B073RJQ8PK