Episodes Nearest to October 26, 1962 to October 27, 1962: 1 through 25 of 25
- Kennedy Hears from a Worried Soviet Premier
October 26, 1962 to October 27, 1962
Dist Columbia, District of Columbia
War, Foreign Politics, Diplomacy/InternationalBetween 6:00 and 9:00 PM on the night of Friday October 26, 1962, the tenth day of the Cuban Missile Crisis, the members of President John F. Kennedy’s Executive Committee of the National Security (ExCom) received sections of a long, emotional private message from Soviet Union Premier Nikita Khrushchev. Khrushchev revealed the underlying logic of the Cuban Missile Crisis when he wrote, “I...
- Winter Park Amtrak Station
1962
Orange, Florida
Winter Park, Florida, AmtrakThe Winter Park train station has existed almost as long as Rollins College has. Students have traveled in and out of Winter Park on trains that stop at the station. Before flying became popular, the train was the only practical way to go home or to travel anywhere. In this article, Rollins College attempted to use the train as a strategy to attract alumni to Winter Park for the 100th...
- Understanding A Letter From Birmingham Jail
April 16, 1963
Jefferson, Alabama
letter, Birmingham, AlabamaAfter being arrested in downtown Birmingham on a Good Friday, Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. wrote his famous letter, “A Letter From Birmingham Jail” responding to the criticism demonstrated by eight prominent white clergy man. This letter has been found important through out history because it expresses King’s feelings toward the unjust events and it is an example of a well-written...
- August Willich: No Ordinary General
September 1, 1963
Walker, Georgia
August Willich, 32nd Indiana Regiment, The Battle of ChickamaugaAll men may be created equal but they are remembered differently. In contrast to Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson, August Willich was not a celebrity of the Civil War. He was a Prussian political refugee and an aristocrat with an unapologetic communistic political leaning. Willch’s communistic nature generated his pre-war nickname, “Reddest of the Red.” Yet, his tremendous contributions...
- The Community Mental Health Act of 1963 and its Deinstitutionalizing Effect on Saint Elizabeth's Hospital
October 31, 1963
Dist Columbia, District of Columbia
Medicine, Hospital, Space, Health, Government, LawDue to a growing need for mental health services, Saint Elizabeth’s Hospital was built by the United States Congress as a result of the Civil and Diplomatic Appropriation Act of 1852. The Institution opened in Washington, DC in 1855 as the “Government Hospital for the Insane”. A prominent leader in the mental health field, Dorthea Dix, lobbied for the construction of the facility and founded...
- Stained-Glass Sally: The Memorializing of Captain Sally Tompkins
September 10, 1961
Henrico, Virginia
Reconstruction, Civil War, Women, Medicine/HealthWith the Angel of Mercy to guide and guard her, Captain Sally Tompkins gazes into the congregation of Saint James Episcopal Church located in Richmond, Virginia. This stained-glass window was installed on September 10, 1961 to honor Captain Tompkins for her extraordinary service to the Confederacy during the Civil War. The window features Captain Tompkins dressed in a conservative purple dress...
- From Agriculture to Technology
January 1, 1964
Alameda, California
nursery, Technology, Agriculture, Fremont, Silicon ValleyIn late 1964, the California Nursery Company was getting ready to celebrate the company’s 100th anniversary. The Vallejo Adobe had been moved onto the grounds of the nursery and was restored to be used as a meeting room. There were big plans to expand, and construction was beginning on a new section of the nursery. The California Nursery Company was one of the most successful and well-known...
- Bob Dylan Chooses a Name
1961
Richmond, New York
Bob Dlyan, DylanBorn Bobby Zimmerman, Bob Dylan escaped a life in small town Minnesota and eventually arrived in Greenwich Village, New York in 1961. Andrew Muchin, author of the article “Dylan’s Jewish Pilgrimage,” argues that Dylan’s arrival in New York gave him the chance to “reinvent himself as the musical heir to folk troubadour Woody Guthrie.” Zimmerman’s choice of names, given the prominence...
- Wernher Von Braun Advises the Vice-President on the Space Program
April 29, 1961
Madison, Alabama
Science/Technology, Cold WarWernher Von Braun stated in his letter to United States Vice President Lyndon Johnson, “we have an excellent chance of beating the Soviets to the first landing of a crew on the moon.” The letter discussed the strategic direction the United States should take to surpass of the Soviet Union in the space race. With the Cold War raging between the U.S. and the Soviet Union,...
- Pratt Street Riot Claims Four Soldiers
April 19, 1961
Baltimore, Maryland
Riot, Pratt Street, Sixth MassachusettsJust a week after the attack on Fort Sumter, tempers flared in Baltimore, Maryland. Secessionist and southern sympathizers in Baltimore orchestrated a riot against Union soldiers while they traveled through the city on their way to Washington D.C, that left four soldiers and twelve civilians dead. As stated in the Official Records of the War of the Rebellion, “A clash between pro-South civilians...
- Mississippi Burning
June, 1964 to 1964
Neshoba, Mississippi
Civil Rights, Mississippi, Civil Rights MurdersMississippi Burning
Murder is what it all boiled down to. In the dawn of the Civil Rights Movement, three civil rights workers were viciously slaughtered in Neshoba County, Mississippi. Mississippi Burning is a 1988 crime drama film depicting the events of the heinous crime.
In order to fully understand the weight...
- Leary, Metzner, and Alpert Instruct LSD Initiates on How to Achieve a Successful “Psychedelic Session”
1964
New York, New York
Psychology, Counterculture, Drug Culture, ReligionIn 1964, psychologists Timothy Leary, Ralph Metzner, and Richard Alpert published The Psychedelic Experience, a manual intended to prepare the users of psychedelic drugs for sessions. The authors had researched the therapeutic aspects of psychedelic substances, as well as their religious possibilities. The book is heavily influenced by the Tibetan Book of the Dead, (also known...
- A Nun’s Perspective on Civil Rights, and an Alternate Ending
March, 1965 to 1965
Dallas, Alabama
racial equality, Civil Rights MovementIn March of 1965, Sister Mary Paul of Detroit wrote a letter to the sisters of her Order describing her experiences while in Alabama as a hospital volunteer during the Civil Rights Movement. She states, “they probably could not have gone on if it had not been for the support of the North,” demonstrating the dire circumstances that led her to get involved in the first place. Being from the north,...
- Marie Foster: A Woman on a Mission
March, 1965 to 1965
Dallas, Alabama, Wilcox, Alabama
Selma, Voting Rights Act, Mary Foster, Civil RightsMarie Priscilla Martin was born on October 24, 1917 in Wilcox County, Alabama. From a poor family, Marie dropped out of high school to get married, and had three children. She eventually went to a junior college and became a dental hygienist. Foster became more involved in the voting rights movement because of her outrage over the racial inequality and injustice that she was constantly witnessing.
It’s...
- Nonviolence in Civil Rights: Is it Successful?
March, 1965 to 1965
Dallas, Alabama
Civil Rights, Martin Luther King Jr., Voting Rights Act of 1965On March 7, 1965 African Americans flooded the streets of Selma and headed west to Alabama’s capitol, Montgomery, to participate in a peaceful protest for racial equality. There was a lot of anticipation that led up to this march, as it was a long walk and a big mission. Although Dr. King was not able to attend, the people still assembled at Brown Chapel in Selma, Alabama with high hopes and a...
- Desegregating Schools
May 16, 1960
Orleans, Louisiana
New Orleans, DesegregationThe article "U.S. Court Orders New Orleans To Start Pupil Integration in Fall: Outlines Grade-a-Year Plan After Board's Refusal to Present Own Proposal INTEGRATION SET IN NEW ORLEANS was written by Claude Sittons and published on the New York Times on May 17, 1960. The article states thaton May 16, 1960 Federal District Judge J. Skelly Wright set September as the deadline for New Orleans...
- Alma College's Hogan Physical Education Center
1965
Gratiot, Michigan
Gym, Alma College, HoganIn 1923 Memorial Gym was constructed on the northwest end of campus. The gymnasium was named in honor of all of the local veterans who served in World War I. It was converted to the Clack Art Center after the college built a new gymnasium.
In 1969, Alma College built a new Physical Education Center, which included four racquet ball courts, a weight room, a 20ft deep, six-lane swimming pool,...
- Lieutenant Colonel Moore leads 7thCalvary into Ia Drang Valley
1965
Asia, Outside US
"Harold Moore", "Ia Drang Valley"Lieutenant Colonel Harold G. Moore, Jr., took command of one of the battalions of the 11th Air Assault Division in June, 1964. He trained and tested the officers and soldiers of his battalion for over a year. Upon completion of testing, the 11th Air Assault Division (Test) was redesignated the 1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile), and Lieutenant Colonel Moore's battalion was given the 1st Battalion,...
- “Fairmont’s Special Classes Help Handicapped Children”
January 14, 1960
Robeson, North Carolina
Special education, Children, EducationMost people only think of classes being extended to students who have some form of disability. In 1960, however, when these special education classes were just starting out, they served more purposes then simply serving the disabled. In 1960, schools in Fairmont, North Carolina started to provide classes for children with special educational needs, said The Robesonian. The curriculum in...
- Dr. Timothy Leary Defends Responsible Use of LSD
May, 1966 to 1966
Dist Columbia, District of Columbia
Counterculture, Drug Culture, Government, LawBy 1966, interest in LSD had proliferated in the public sphere to an enormous extent. The debate over the chemical’s risks and therapeutic possibilities led to Senate subcommittee hearings on its use. Acid, as LSD is commonly called, had been sensationalized by mass media publications and, although in its early years it had been extensively and responsibly studied by medical professionals, the...
- The 1966 Hough Riots
July 18, 1966 to July 24, 1966
Cuyahoga, Ohio
Race-Relations, Riot, ClevelandDuring the late night hours of July 18, 1966, 26-year-old Joyce Arnett walked through Cleveland’s Hough neighborhood with two friends. As they approached E. 83rd Street, police officers ushered them into the second floor of a nearby building. The police presence had recently arrived to disperse a large crowd that had gathered on the street. Mrs. Arnett, a mother of three who lived nearby,...
- Barbie: The Female's Icon
January 1, 1959
New York, New York
Barbie, Toys, Feminism, Femininity, Second Wave FeminismThe eyes of little girls widened everywhere, as they witnessed the TV debut of a beloved toy. Finally, there was a doll that resembled a “grown up girl” and not a baby. Already an icon of beauty by the time of her TV commercial, Mattel's marketing emphasized the dolls mature face and figure that had made her famous: “Barbie is small and so petite, her clothes and figure look so neat.[1]”...
- Canadian Involvement in NORAD.
December 12, 1958
Canada, Outside US
Canada, NORAD, USA, NuclearThe North American Air Defense Command (NORAD) was a joint partnership agreement between Canada and the United States over the defense of North America from Soviet long range bombers. Cooperation between the United States and Canada was vital to the success of NORAD, however. In a letter to the assistant Secretary of Defense for international security affairs, John M. Leddy expressed his concerns...
- Carmichael Calls for Black Militancy
September, 1966 to 1966
Bronx, New York
Race-Relations, African-AmericansMany African-Americans had become frustrated with the slow rate of racial progress in the 1960s. While Martin Luther King Jr. and others protested racial injustices in a nonviolent way, other African-American lost patience with the attitude of whites towards these movements. Stokely Carmichael, a one-time non-violence believer, became an advocate and leader of the “Black Power” movement. ...
- African Americans and Southern Labor Unions
1967
Jefferson, Alabama
Labor Unions, Race Relations, Civil Rights, african americans“The union wasn’t right by us,” was how James Manley summed up his experiences as an African American union member during an interview conducted by the Sloss Furnace Association. In 1984 Manley sat down in an interview with the goal of recording his thoughts on his career at Sloss Furnaces, a pig-iron producing blast furnace in Birmingham, Alabama. Manley spoke of being laid off in 1967 for...