Archive for March 16th, 2025

MILITARY ACADEMY ESTABLISHED IN 1802

     
   
‘Duty, Honor, Country’ dropped from West Point military academy mission statement | The Post ...

The United States Military Academy—the first military school
in the United States, was founded by Congress for the purpose
of educating and training young men in the theory and practice
of military science. Located at West Point, New York, the U.S.
Military Academy is often simply known as West Point.

Usma West Point Logo


posted by Bob Karm in Academy,ANNIVERSARY,CURRENT EVENTS,Established,HISTORY,MILITARY and have No Comments

JOURNALIST KIDNAPPED ON THIS DAY IN 1985

Terry Anderson Was a Pawn in a Nasty Game, and a Hero for Journalists –  Mother Jones

In Beirut, Lebanon, Islamic militants kidnapped American journalist
Terry Anderson
and take him to the southern suburbs of the war-
torn city, where other Western hostages are being held in scattered dungeons under ruined buildings.

Before his abduction, Anderson covered the Lebanese Civil War for
The Associated Press and also served as the AP’s Beirut bureau
chief.

In 1993, Anderson published Den of Lions, a memoir of his time in captivity. In 2002, he won a lawsuit against the Iranian government
and was granted a multi-million dollar settlement.

US journalist Terry Anderson held hostage in Lebanon for years dies at 76

Terry A Anderson - Alchetron, The Free Social Encyclopedia

Terry Anderson, AP Journalist Held Captive In Lebanon For Years, Dies At 76 - i24NEWS

posted by Bob Karm in ANNIVERSARY,HISTORY,Journalist,Kidnap and have No Comments

‘’FATHER OF THE CONSTITUTION WAS BORN

James Sharples | JAMES MADISON | MutualArt

James Madison - White House Historical Association


March 16, 1751, James Madison, drafter of the Constitution,
recorder of the Constitutional Convention, author of the
Federalist Papers and fourth president of the United States,
was born on a plantation in Virginia.       

Madison first distinguished himself as a student at the College
of New Jersey (now Princeton University), where he successfully completed a four-year course of study in two years and, in 1769,
helped found the American Whig Society, the second literary and
debate society at Princeton (and the world), to rival the previously established Cliosophic Society.

After retiring from official political positions, Madison served
Thomas Jefferson’s beloved University of Virginia first as a
member of the board of visitors and then as rector. In 1938,
the State Teachers College at Harrisonburg, Virginia, was
renamed in Madison’s honor as Madison College; in 1976,
it became James Madison University.

image source Link to the full text of the Federalist Papers #38
The constitutional convention in Virginia. 

In the name of James Madison - POLITICO

posted by Bob Karm in BIRTHDAY,Constitution,Founding Fathers,HISTORY,POLITICAL,President and have No Comments