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From: "Sally Rolls Pavia" <>
Subject: [GENEALOGYBITSANDPIECES] 28 October --TODAY IN HISTORY
Date: Sun, 28 Oct 2007 06:11:22 -0700
1775: British proclamation forbids residents from leaving Boston
The new commander in chief of the British army, Major General Sir William
Howe, issues a proclamation to the residents of Boston on this day in 1775.
Speaking from British headquarters in Boston, Howe forbade any person from
leaving the city and ordered citizens to organize into military companies in
order to "contribute all in his power for the preservation of order and good
government within the town of Boston."
Almost four months earlier, on July 3, 1775, George Washington had formally
taken command of the Continental Army. Washington, a prominent Virginia
planter and veteran of the French and Indian War, had been appointed
commander in chief by the Continental Congress two weeks before in an
attempt to turn the impromptu siege of Boston, instigated by New Englanders
enraged by the Battle of Lexington and Concord the previous April into a
congressionally organized inter-colonial revolt against parliamentary
oppression. The ad hoc siege of Boston enjoyed it greatest moment when New
Englanders under the command of Israel Putnam and William Prescott managed
to kill 226 and wound 838 members of the world-famous British army before
withdrawing their rag-tag force from Bunker Hill on June 17, 1775.
The newly minted General Washington was unimpressed upon meeting his
supposed army outside Boston a few weeks after their momentous success. Just
as the British had during the French and Indian War, he saw "stupidity"
among the enlisted men, who were used to the easy familiarity of being
commanded by neighbors in local militias with elected officers. Washington
promptly insisted that the officers behave with decorum and the enlisted men
with deference. Although he enjoyed some success with this original army,
the New Englanders went home to their farms at the end of 1775, and
Washington had to start fresh with new recruits in 1776.
The British did not leave Boston until March 27, 1776, after Washingtons
successful occupation of Dorchester Heights 13 days earlier, during which he
had turned the cannon captured from the British at Fort Ticonderoga on May
10, 1775 upon the British-held city. More afraid of their own cannon than
Patriot soldiers, the British departed, thus allowing Bostonians to move
freely in and out of their own city for the first time in six months.
1864: Second Battle of Fair Oaks concludes
Union forces withdraw from Fair Oaks, Virginia, after failing to breach the
Confederate defenses around Richmond. The assault was actually a diversion
to draw attention from a larger Union offensive around Petersburg.
The scene of one of the Seven Days' Battles in June 1862, Fair Oaks was
located on the defensive perimeter around the Confederate capital of
Richmond. General Robert E. Lee's army constructed five lines of trenches
that stretched 25 miles south to Petersburg. For five months, Lee's troops
had been under siege by the forces of Union General Ulysses S. Grant. The
monotony of the siege was broken only periodically by a Union attempt to
break Lee's lines. One such attack came at Hatcher's Run, southwest of
Petersburg, on October 27. At the same time, Grant ordered an attack at Fair
Oaks, about 24 miles from the assault at Hatcher's Run.
The Richmond defenses were formidable, so any direct assault was unlikely to
succeed. By attacking at Fair Oaks, Grant hoped to prevent Lee from shifting
any troops along the Richmond-Petersburg line to reinforce the lines at
Hatcher's Run. Troops from General Benjamin Butler's Tenth Corps moved north
of the James River and conducted a two-pronged offensive against Richmond on
October 27. Confederate General James Longstreet, in charge of the Richmond
section of the Confederate defenses, skillfully positioned troops to thwart
the Yankees. Union General Godfrey Weitzel, commander of part of the attack,
enjoyed some initial success but could not significantly penetrate the Rebel
trenches. On October 2, he determined that he had accomplished all that he
could, and he withdrew his troops.
Some 1100 Union men were killed, wounded, or captured during the attack,
while the Confederates lost just 450. The planned diversion did not work--at
the far end of the defenses, the Yankees failed to move around the end of
the Confederate line at Hatcher's Run.
1886: Grover Cleveland dedicates Statue of Liberty
On this day in 1886, President Grover Cleveland dedicates the Statue of
Liberty in New York Harbor.
The statues full name was Statue of Liberty Enlightening the World. It had
been a gift from French citizens to their American friends in recognition of
the two countries commitment to liberty and democracy and their alliance
during the American Revolutionary War, which had begun 110 years earlier.
The 151-foot copper statue was built in France and shipped to New York in
350 separate parts. It arrived in the city on June 17, 1886, and over the
next several months was reassembled while electricians worked to wire the
torch to light up at night.
As President Cleveland accepted the statue on behalf of American citizens,
he declared "we will not forget that liberty here made her home; nor shall
her chosen altar be neglected." The statue quickly became a symbol of
Americas humanitarianism and willingness to take in the worlds "tired,
poor and huddled masses"--in the words of the poem by Emma Lazarus inscribed
on the monuments pedestal--who yearned for freedom and a better life.
"Lady Liberty" was originally intended to work as a functional lighthouse
and, from 1886 to 1901, the statue was operated by the United States
Lighthouse Board. In 1901, the War Department took over its operation and
maintenance. The statue and the island on which it stands, now known as
Liberty Island, were together proclaimed a national monument by President
Calvin Coolidge on October 15, 1924, and, in 1933, the National Park Service
assumed oversight of the monument. In 1982, President Ronald Reagan
established a commission tasked with restoring the deteriorating Lady
Liberty in time for a centennial celebration in 1986. A joint
French-American preservation and rehabilitation group cleaned the statue and
replaced the glass and metal torch with gold leaf. The original torch is on
display in the statues lobby.
Today, the Statue of Liberty is a major tourist attraction, hosting as many
as 5 million people every year. Although access to the statues crown was
restricted following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, tourists can
still visit Liberty Island, and the statues pedestal observation deck and
museum.
1918: German sailors begin to mutiny
On this day in 1918, sailors in the German High Seas Fleet steadfastly
refuse to obey an order from the German Admiralty to go to sea to launch one
final attack on the mighty British navy, echoing the frustrated, despondent
mood of many on the side of the Central Powers during the last days of World
War I.
By the last week of October 1918, three of the Central PowersGermany,
Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empirewere at least in talks with the
Allies about reaching an armistice, while the fourth, Bulgaria, had already
concluded one at the end of September. With the end of the war seemingly in
sight, the German naval commandled by the Admiraltys chief of staff,
Reinhardt Scheerdecided to launch a last-ditch effort against the British
in the North Sea in a desperate attempt to restore the German navys
prestige. In the words of Reinhardt Scheer, chief of staff of the German
Admiralty, "An honorable battle by the fleeteven if it should be a fight to
the deathwill sow the seed of a new German fleet of the future. There can
be no future for a fleet fettered by a dishonorable peace." Choosing not to
inform the chancellor, Max von Baden, of its plans, the German Admiralty
issued the order to leave port on October 28.
The sailors themselves, however, believing the attack to be a suicide
mission, would have none of it. Though the order was given five times, each
time they resisted. In total, 1,000 mutineers were arrested, leaving the
Imperial Fleet immobilized. By October 30, the resistance had engulfed the
German naval base at Kiel, where sailors and industrial workers alike took
part in the rebellion; within a week, it had spread across the country, with
revolts in Hamburg, Bremen and Lubeck on November 4 and 5 and in Munich two
days later. This widespread discontent led Socialist members of the German
Reichstag, or parliament, to declare the country a republic on November 9,
followed swiftly by Kaiser Wilhelms abdication and finally, on November 11,
by the end of the First World War.
1940: Italy invades Greece
On this day in 1940, Mussolini's army, already occupying Albania, invades
Greece in what will prove to be a disastrous military campaign for the
Duce's forces.
Mussolini surprised everyone with this move against Greece; even his ally,
Adolf Hitler, was caught off-guard, especially since the Duce had led Hitler
to believe he had no such intention. Hitler denounced the move as a major
strategic blunder. According to Hitler, Mussolini should have concentrated
on North Africa, continuing the advance into Egypt. Even Mussolini's own
chief of army staff found out about the invasion only after the fact. But
despite being warned off an invasion of Greece by his own generals, despite
the lack of preparedness on the part of his military, despite that it would
mean getting bogged down in a mountainous country during the rainy season
against an army willing to fight tooth and nail to defend its autonomy,
Mussolini moved ahead out of sheer hubris, convinced he could defeat the
Greeks in a matter of days. He also knew a secret, that millions of lire had
been put aside to bribe Greek politicians and generals not to resist the
Italian invasion. Whether the money ever made it past the Italian fascist
agents delegated with the responsibility is unclear; if it did, it clearly
made no difference whatsoever-the Greeks succeeded in pushing the Italian
invaders back into Albania after just one week, and the Axis power spent the
next three months fighting for its life in a defensive battle. To make
matters worse, virtually half the Italian fleet at Taranto had been crippled
by a British carrier-based attack. Mussolini had been humiliated.
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