Posted on 04/13/2005 9:19:41 PM PDT by SAMWolf
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are acknowledged, affirmed and commemorated.
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Our Mission: The FReeper Foxhole is dedicated to Veterans of our Nation's military forces and to others who are affected in their relationships with Veterans. In the FReeper Foxhole, Veterans or their family members should feel free to address their specific circumstances or whatever issues concern them in an atmosphere of peace, understanding, brotherhood and support. The FReeper Foxhole hopes to share with it's readers an open forum where we can learn about and discuss military history, military news and other topics of concern or interest to our readers be they Veteran's, Current Duty or anyone interested in what we have to offer. If the Foxhole makes someone appreciate, even a little, what others have sacrificed for us, then it has accomplished one of it's missions. We hope the Foxhole in some small way helps us to remember and honor those who came before us.
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In 1859, the United States and Great Britain confronted each other in the San Juan Islands of the Pacific Northwest, nearly engaging in armed conflict over disputed territory and a dead pig. The American army officer knew that the odds against him were overwhelming. The three warships set at anchor in the bay below his camp mounted a total of 61 guns and carried nearly a thousand men, including a contingent of Royal Marines. Manned by just 66 soldiers, his own recently occupied position was fortified by earthworks and protected only by a single six-pounder gun and two mountain howitzers. The orders that Captain George Edward Pickett of the U.S. Army had received from his commanding general had been clear, however, and he was determined to hold his position. Pickett had served with valor in the Mexican War right after his graduation from the United States Military Academy at West Point, and he had subsequently seen duty at several frontier posts. Now, on August 3, 1859, the man whose name would be forever linked to the most famous of all Civil War charges was the American commander on the scene as the United States and Great Britain again stood on the brink of war. The issue dividing the two countries this time was the ownership of the often fog-shrouded San Juan Islands that dot the strait between what is today the state of Washington and British Columbia's Vancouver Island.* Captain George Pickett The San Juan Islands constituted the last bit of disputed territory along the border between the United States and the British colonies to the north--today's Canada. An 1818 treaty had extended the international border westward along the forty-ninth parallel, from Lake of the Woods, at what is today the far western tip of the province of Ontario, as far as the Rocky Mountains. Beyond that lay a vast, little-explored region between Spanish California to the south and Russian Alaska to the north, which was vaguely referred to as the "Oregon Country." By failing to agree on the partitioning of the territory, the two countries had left it open to exploration and occupation by nationals of both. But on June 15, 1846, after many years of conflicting claims, the United States and Great Britain signed the Oregon Treaty, establishing the boundary at the forty-ninth parallel west from the Rocky Mountains "to the middle of the channel which separates the continent from Vancouver's Island and thence southerly through the middle of the said channel and of Fuca's Straits to the Pacific Ocean." Remaining to be resolved was the exact location of the boundary through that channel, in the middle of which lay the San Juan Islands. The Haro Strait to their west separated the islands from Vancouver's Island; it was this channel that the Americans claimed as the boundary. For its part, Britain insisted that the international boundary ran down the eastern, Rosario Strait, and that the San Juan Islands therefore belonged to the Crown. Because its territory north of the forty-ninth parallel and west of the Rockies had not yet attracted an abundance of permanent settlers, the British government in 1849 leased all of Vancouver's Island to the Hudson's Bay Company for seven shillings a year, with the proviso that the company take over efforts at colonization. In 1851, James Douglas, formerly chief factor of the Hudson's Bay Company on Vancouver's Island, was appointed governor of that colony. Griffin Bay and San Juan Town. By the end of 1853, the British presence on the 24-mile-long and 8-mile-wide San Juan Island itself included a Hudson's Bay Company's fishing station and Bellevue Farm, a 4,500-head sheep ranch. The following year, a United States customs collector, Isaac N. Ebey, landed on San Juan Island with his deputy, Henry Webber, and attempted to collect duties from the farm manager, who swore out a warrant for the deputy's arrest for trespassing on British soil. Nothing further came of this incident, and the dispute was allowed to simmer. In March 1855, American sheriff Ellis Barnes of Whatcom County, the northernmost county in Washington Territory,** supported by a party of ten armed men, rounded up 35 sheep belonging to the Hudson's Bay Company, intending to sell them as payment for back taxes. This action generated protests from Governor Douglas to his counterpart, Governor Isaac I. Stevens of Washington, and to the British Colonial Office and led to the submission of a claim for $15,000 in damages by the Hudson's Bay Company. Royal Marines on parade at English Camp. The main barracks, cookhouse and combination mess/barracks are located just behind the formation. The library, sergeants' mess and carpentry shop are on the hillock beyond. NPS photo. * The mainland west of the Rocky Mountains, from the forty-ninth parallel to Alaska, was known as New Caledonia until 1858, when it became the colony of British Columbia. Vancouver Island--until 1861 known as "Vancouver's Island"--was a separate British colony. The two former colonies together joined the Canadian confederation as the province of British Columbia in 1871. ** The United States divided the Oregon Territory in 1853. The northern portion became known as the Washington Territory. The San Juan Islands were considered by the U.S. to be part of that territory's Whatcom County. The southern section of the former Oregon Territory was admitted into the Union as the state of Oregon in 1859.
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Poor Pickett - San Juan Island to Gettysburg to Five Forks.
Spent my birthday yesterday using our alternate web browser MSN Explorer for web surfing. It was year ago this month that our computer got hit with adware after visiting Newsmax which I've since unbookmarked. Using the other webbroswer, I only got 2 pop-ups and that was when I went to Drudge Report.
It's always good to have two web browsers. That way if one becomes basterdized you can use the other.
Nice weather here today. Forecast high low 70's rain forecast for later in the week.
How's it going, Snippy?
Good Morning, Foxhole.
Good lyrics, and good tag line, too. The dems are doing to Delay the same as what they did to Gingrich and Packwood. They want no part of anyone doing their job, and they do their best to eliminate them.
Thanks, Tom...yes, the DemonRATS are showing their true colors yet again!! But now we can see them coming a mile away...and their efforts to smear Tom Delay will fail miserably, imho...MUD
Heh heh heh...SUUUUUUUUUE-EEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!
LOL...MUD
On This Day In History
Birthdates which occurred on April 14:
1578 Philip III king of Spain & Portugal (1598-1621)
1629 Christiaan Huygens Holland, astronomer (discovered Saturn's rings)
1676 Ernst Chreistian Hesse composer
1797 Adolphe Thiers 1st President of 3rd French Republic (1871-77)
1813 Junius S Morgan US, merchant/philanthropist (Metropolitan Museum of Art)
1820 Harry Thompson Hays Brigadier General (Confederate Army), died in 1876
1832 James Hewett Ledlie Brigadier General (Union volunteers), died in 1882
1866 Anne Mansfield Sullivan US, educated Helen Keller
1889 Arnold Toynbee England, historian (A Study of History)
1902 Menachem A Schneerson rebee (head of Lubavitcher Jews)
1904 Sir John Gielgud London England, actor (Arthur, Ages of Man)
1906 Faisal ibn Abd al-Aziz King Saudi-Arabia (1964-75)
1907 François "Doc" Duvalier dictator of Haiti
1920 John Paul Stevens Supreme Court Justice
1925 Rod Steiger West Hampton NY, actor (Illustrated Man, Pawnbroker, Chosen)
1928 Robert Mugabe President/dictator/scumbag (Zimbabwe, 1988- )
1929 William Edgar Thornton Faison NC, MD/astronaut (STS-8, 51-B, sk:49)
1933 Buddy Knox Happy TX, rock vocalist (Party Doll, Lovey Dovey)
1935 Loretta Lynn Butcher's Hollow KY, country singer (Coal Miner's Daughter)
1940 George Takei actor (Hikaru Sulu-Star Trek)
1941 Julie Christie Assam India, actress (Dr Zhivago)
1941 Pete Rose Cincinnati OH, baseball player/manager (Cincinnati Reds, Charlie hustle, most hits in majors)
1941 Anatoli Pavlocich Fyodorov cosmonaut
1941 Ryan O'Neal actor (Love Story, Paper Moon)
1942 Valentin Vitaliyevich Lebedev cosmonaut (Soyuz 13, 35, T-5)
1945 Steve Martin Waco TX, writer/actor (Jerk, Housesitter)
1966 David Justice baseball player/husband of Halle Barry
1966 Greg Maddux San Angelo TX, pitcher
1977 Sarah Michelle Gellar actress (Kendall-All My Children, Buffy)
I've gotten a lot packed and ready to move this week. Now I'm just waiting for some friends to come over after work tonight and help me load up the trailor.
Bless ya'll all today!
Now there is a pig we could pay the British to take!!! but it wouldn't be a very nice thing to do to our allies right now.
Howdy!
Happy belated birthday!!! :-)
((HUGS))Thanks.
free dixie HUGS,duckie/sw
Hey there WN. How are things your way?
Elf-boy has Strep Throat. Even though he feels better today, he can't go to school. We are at mom's att. He is on the couch, I'm Freeping, and Bittygirl is checking everything out.
mmmm, lunch is ready. better feed the kiddos.
Morning Mayor.
Morning tomball.
Local display?
Nice!. At first glance I thought it was some kind of static display
Morning GailA.
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