User:Blue Danube
Table representing the changing identifications of the flag raisers in Rosenthal's photo Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima
[edit]
| Position no. | Initial identifications (April 8, 1945) |
del Valle Board corrections (January 1947) |
Huly Panel corrections (June 23, 2016) |
Bowers Board corrections (October 2019) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sgt. "Hank" Hansen † | Cpl. Harlon H. Block † | Cpl. Harlon H. Block † | Cpl. Harlon H. Block † |
| 2 | Pfc. Rene Gagnon | Pfc. Rene Gagnon | Pfc. Rene Gagnon | Pfc. Harold Keller |
| 3 | PhM2c. John Bradley | PhM2c. John Bradley | Pfc. Franklin R. Sousley † | Pfc. Franklin R. Sousley † |
| 4 | Sgt. Michael Strank † | Sgt. Michael Strank † | Sgt. Michael Strank † | Sgt. Michael Strank † |
| 5 | Pfc. Ira Hayes | Pfc. Franklin R. Sousley † | Pfc. Harold H. Schultz | Pfc. Harold H. Schultz |
| 6 | Pfc. Franklin R. Sousley † | Pfc. Ira Hayes | Pfc. Ira Hayes | Pfc. Ira Hayes |
- Key:
- Bold indicates a name which correctly corresponds to the Marine in the specified position
- Underline indicates a Marine who does appear in the photo but was misidentified in this position
- Italics indicates a person who does not appear in the photo at all
Overall observations
[edit]- Position #4 is the only one that was never corrected. In other words, Sgt. Strank is the only Marine who was never "moved" in the photo.
- Position #5 was the most-corrected position, with 3 different names being associated with it over the years.
- Pfc. Franklin R. Sousley was "moved" the most in the photo, having been assigned to three total positions throughout the years.
marines
[edit]E Company - First lieutenant Harold G. Schrier; First Sergeant John A. Daskalakis
- Easy Company - Captain Dave Severance
Random lists
[edit]- Aius Locutius
- Impasto vs. Chiaroscuro
- Konrad von Marburg
- Oriel window
- The Anarchy: "Christ and his saints were asleep"
- Battle of Evesham: "the murder of Evesham, for battle it was none"
- Boustrophedon
- Alexander Pechersky
- Carolingian minuscule
- William Stewart Halsted
- Fritz Bauer
- Phenomenology (philosophy)
- Air-to-air combat losses between the Soviet Union and the United States - Cold War not so cold, eh?
- Áed Findliath
- positronium
- Basiliscus: sealed with wife and son in a dry cistern by Zeno after being promised their blood would not be shed
- Isaac Komnenos of Cyprus: confined with shackles made of silver by Richard I of England after being promised he would not be kept in "irons"
- Damsel of Cyprus
- HMS Brazen (1798): last vessel of Valentine Joyce
- Siege of Cawnpore
- Al Bowlly: Midnight, the Stars and You
- Passenger pigeon; Carolina parakeet; Rocky Mountain locust; Xerces blue; St. John's water dog
- Amadeo Barletta Barletta, arrested by Trujillo, Mussolini threatens to shell the capital in return
- Yvan Laracque (corpse propped in a garden chair by airport of Port-au-Prince, Haiti)
- St. Elmo Brady
- Charles Dickinson (historical figure) duelist
- Teresa, Contessa Guiccioli
- Gaston Bussière 1862 – 1928
- Paris Peace Accords // Anna Chennault
- wicket gate
- Tadeusz Kościuszko: Polish–Lithuanian-born, colonel in the Continental Army
- Eradication of dracunculiasis
- Adermatoglyphia - no finger prints
- Mark 14 torpedo - the torpedo that didn't explode
- Augustus Saint-Gaudens double eagle - Teddy Roosevelt to L. M. Shaw: “I think our coinage is artistically of atrocious hideousness”
- Serapis flag of John Paul Jones at Texel in September 1779
- Tom Neil flew a Hawker Hurricane, led by Fairey Fulmar, toward the Siege of Malta (World War II), interviewed for Spitfire (2018 film)
20 Black leaders at the Savannah Colloquy
[edit]On January 12, 1865, at the Green–Meldrim House Sherman and Secretary of War Edwin Stanton met with 20 Black Baptist and Methodist ministers—including Garrison Frazier, Ulysses L. Houston, William Gaines, and James D. Lynch—in what would later be called the "Savannah Colloquy" at the house. Their discussion directly led to Sherman's Special Field Orders No. 15, which included the famous Forty acres and a mule land allotment.[1]
- William J. Campbell, aged 51 years, born in Savannah, slave until 1849, and then liberated by will of his mistress, Mrs. May Maxwell. For ten years pastor of the 1st Baptist Church of Savannah, numbering about 1,800 members. Average congregation, 1,900. The church property belonging to the congregation. Trustees white. Worth $18,000.
- John Cox, aged fifty-eight years, born in Savannah; slave until 1849, when he bought his freedom for $1,100. Pastor of the 2d African Baptist Church. In the ministry fifteen years. Congregation 1,222 persons. Church property worth $10,000, belonging to the congregation.
- Ulysses L. Houston, aged forty-one years, born in Grahamsville, S.C.; slave until the Union army entered Savannah. Owned by Moses Henderson, Savannah, and pastor of Third African Baptist Church. Congregation numbering 400. Church property worth $5,000; belongs to congregation. In the ministry about eight years.
- William Bentley, aged 72 years, born in Savannah, slave until 25 years of age, when his master, John Waters, emancipated him by will. Pastor of Andrew's Chapel, Methodist Episcopal Church–only one of that denomination in Savannah; congregation numbering 360 members; church property worth about $20,000, and is owned by the congregation; been in the ministry about twenty years; a member of Georgia Conference.
- Charles Bradwell, aged 40 years, born in Liberty County, Ga.; slave until 1851; emancipated by will of his master, J. L. Bradwell. Local preacher in charge of the Methodist Episcopal congregation (Andrew's Chapel) in the absence of the minister; in the ministry 10 years.
- William Gaines, aged 41 years; born in Wills Co., Ga. Slave until the Union forces freed me. Owned by Robert Toombs, formerly United States Senator, and his brother, Gabriel Toombs, local preacher of the M.E. Church (Andrew's Chapel.) In the ministry 16 years.
- James Hill, aged 52 years; born in Bryan Co., Ga. Slave up to the time the Union army came in. Owned by H. F. Willings, of Savannah. In the ministry 16 years.
- Glasgon Taylor, aged 72 years, born in Wilkes County, Ga. Slave until the Union army came; owned by A. P. Wetter. Is a local preacher of the M.E. Church (Andrew's Chapel.) In the ministry 35 years.
- Garrison Frazier, aged 67 years, born in Granville County, N.C. Slave until eight years ago, when he bought himself and wife, paying $1,000 in gold and silver. Is an ordained minister in the Baptist Church, but, his health failing, has now charge of no congregation. Has been in the ministry 35 years.
- James Mills, aged 56 years, born in Savannah; free-born, and is a licensed preacher of the first Baptist Church. Has been eight years in the ministry.
- Abraham Burke, aged 48 years, born in Bryan County, Ga. Slave until 20 years ago, when he bought himself for $800. Has been in the ministry about 10 years.
- Arthur Wardell, aged 44 years, born in Liberty County, Ga. Slave until freed by the Union army. Owned by A. A. Solomons, Savannah, and is a licensed minister in the Baptist Church. Has been in the ministry 6 years.
- Alexander Harris, aged 47 years, born in Savannah; free born. Licensed minister of Third African Baptist Church. Licensed about one month ago.
- Andrew Neal, aged 61 years, born in Savannah, slave until the Union army liberated him. Owned by Mr. Wm. Gibbons, and has been deacon in the Third Baptist Church for 10 years.
- Jas. Porter, aged 39 years, born in Charleston, South Carolina; free-born, his mother having purchased her freedom. Is lay-reader and president of the board of wardens and vestry of St. Stephen's Protestant Episcopal Colored Church in Savannah. Has been in communion 9 years. The congregation numbers about 200 persons. The church property is worth about $10,000, and is owned by the congregation.
- Adolphus Delmotte, aged 28 years, born in Savannah; free born. Is a licensed minister of the Missionary Baptist Church of Milledgeville. Congregation numbering about 300 or 400 persons. Has been in the ministry about two years.
- Jacob Godfrey, aged 57 years, born in Marion, S.C. Slave until the Union army freed me; owned by James E. Godfrey–Methodist preacher now in the Rebel army. Is a class-leader and steward of Andrew's Chapel since 1836.
- John Johnson, aged 51 years, born in Bryan County, Georgia. Slave up to the time the Union army came here; owned by W. W. Lincoln of Savannah. Is class-leader and treasurer of Andrew's Chapel for sixteen years.
- Robt. N. Taylor, aged 51 years, born in Wilkes Co., Ga. Slave to the time the Union army came. Was owned by Augustus P. Welter, Savannah, and is class-leader in Andrew's Chapel for nine years.
- Jas. Lynch, aged 26 years, born in Baltimore, Md.; free-born. Is presiding elder of the M.E. Church and missionary to the department of the South. Has been seven years in the ministry and two years in the South.
- William C. Davidon
- Bonnie Raines (née Muir)
- John C. Raines
- Keith Forsyth
- Robert Williamson
- Judi Feingold (identified in the first edition of The Burglary as "Janet Fessenden")
- Ralph Daniel (identified in The Burglary as "Ron Durst", revealed his identity on 50th anniversary)
- Sara Shumer (identified in The Burglary as "Susan Smith")
- Peter, the "ninth" man (left the group right before burglary)
- The philosophy professor (turned down the original invitation, only to help twice, later)
- David Kairys, the group's "no fee retainer" attorney
- Ann Morrissett (Davidon's wife, who knew but refused to participate)
Gandhi's assassins
[edit]- Nathuram Godse: hanged
- Narayan Apte: hanged
- Gopal Godse: imprisoned +15 years
- Vishnu Ramkrishna Karkare: imprisoned +15 years
- Madan Lal Pahwa: imprisoned ~15 years 8 months
- Dattatraya Parchure: sentenced to life but acquitted by the High Court
- Shankar Kistaiya: sentenced to life but acquitted by the High Court (servant of Digambar Badge)
- Vinayak Damodar Savarkar: acquitted
- Digambar Badge: pardoned, turned state's evidence
Lincoln assassination conspiracy
[edit]- John Wilkes Booth
- Lewis Powell
- David Herold
- George Atzerodt
- Mary Surratt
- ? John M. Lloyd
- ? Michael O'Laughlen
- ? Samuel Mudd
- ? Samuel Arnold
- ?? John Surratt
- ??? Louis J. Weichmann
- ??? Edmund Spangler
Ancient sea voyage tales
[edit]- Homer's Odyssey: Odysseus
- Apollonius Rhodius's Argonautica: Jason & the Argonauts
- Virgil's Aeneid: Aeneas
- Ireland's Máel Dúin
- Baghdad's Sinbad the Sailor
French kings who died after hitting their heads on door frames
[edit]Mythic symbols
[edit]Memorable
[edit]Temeraire, John Ruskin
[edit]"And this particular ship, crowned in the Trafalgar hour of trial with chief victory — prevailing over the fatal vessel that had given Nelson death — surely, if ever anything without a soul deserved honour or affection, we owed them here. Those sails that strained so full bent into the battle, that broad bow that struck the surf aside, enlarging silently in steadfast haste full front to the shot, those triple ports whose choirs of flame rang forth in their courses, into the fierce avenging monotone, which, when it died away, left no answering voice to rise any more upon the sea against the strength of England, those sides that were wet with the long runlets of English life-blood, like press-planks at vintage, gleaming goodly crimson down to the cast and clash of the washing foam, those pale masts that stayed themselves up against the war-ruin, shaking out their ensigns through the thunder, till sail and ensign drooped, steeped in the death-stilled pause of Andalusian air, burning with its witness clouds of human souls at rest—surely for these some sacred care might have been left in our thoughts, some quiet resting place amidst the lapse of English waters? Nay, not so, we have stern keepers to trust her glory to, the fire and the worm. Never more shall sunset lay golden robe on her, nor starlight tremble on the waves that part at her gliding. Perhaps, where the gate opens to some cottage garden, the tired traveller may ask, idly, why the moss grows so green on its rugged wood; and even the sailor's child may not answer nor know, that the night-dew lies deep in the war-rents of the wood of the old Temeraire." -- John Ruskin
- ^ Lawton, Laura (2015). Legendary Locals of Savannah. Arcadia Publishing. p. 62. ISBN 9781467101981.