Archive for the 'HISTORY' Category

FIRST AMERICAN WOMAN TO REACH SUMMIT

Stacy Allison's “Beyond the Limits”: A Book by the First Female American to Summit  Everest – The Catalyst

Stacy Allison | Adventure And Leadership Speaker | MCP Talent

On this day in 1988, Stacy Allison of Portland, Oregon, became
the
first American woman to reach the summit of Mount Everest,
which at 29,035 feet above sea level is the highest point on earth.


Allison, a member of the Northwest American Everest Expedition, climbed the Himalayan peak using the southeast ridge route.

At least 168 climbers and support staff died in attempts to reach
the top of Everest in the
20th century.

Vintage 1988 Northwest American Everest Expedition Tee SZ L

First American woman to summit Everest discusses overcoming life's  challenges

September 29th - The Declaration

Steps to Success | Chattanooga Times Free Press

posted by Bob Karm in ANNIVERSARY,Expedition,HISTORY,Mountain climbing,Portland history,THEN AND NOW and have No Comments

SINGING COWBOY WAS BORN ON THIS DAY

Gene Autry - spclarke.comspclarke.com

Gene Autry And Champion--#102--1955--COMIC BOOK--Dell--VF | eBay
1955

Gene Autry, The Singing Cowboy - Legacy.com

Orvon Grover "Gene" Autry (September 29, 1907 – October
2, 1998)

Gene Autry, perhaps the greatest singing cowboy of all time, 
was born on September 29, 1907, in Tioga,
Texas.

While still a boy, Autry moved with his family to a ranch in
Oklahoma where he learned to play the guitar and sing.

The young Autry was quickly attracted to a new style of music
that was becoming popular at the time, which combined the
traditional cowboy music popular in Texas and Oklahoma and
the folk songs, ballads, and hymns of southern-style country
music.

Known as country-western, the new sound was popularized by musicians from the East Coast and the South who had never
been near a horse and couldn’t tell a stirrup from a lariat.

Donning cowboy hats and boots and affecting what they thought
were western drawls, hundreds of these newly minted “cowboys”
were soon crooning popular western ballads like “Tumbling
Tumble Weeds” all around the nation.

Gene Autry: More than just an owner. – LA Dodger Talk

Rim of the Canyon (1949) Gene Autry | Classic Western | Full Length Movie

CD Gene Autry Sings Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer

posted by Bob Karm in Actors,Album,BIRTHDAY,HISTORY,MUSIC,Musician,RADIO and have No Comments

REMEMBER THESE? THEY STILL WORK FINE

USGI P38 Can Opener

The P-38 is a foldable carbon steel can opener that was
issued with canned
United States military rations from
its introduction in 1942 to the end of canned ration
issuance in the 1980s.

Originally distributed in the K-ration, it was later included
in the
C-ration. A larger later variant is known as the P-51.

Genuine P38 Can Opener With Key Ring Military Issue US Shelby Co. Ships  Free | eBay

posted by Bob Karm in Blog Department,FOOD,HISTORY,Memorabillia,MILITARY,Remember these? and have No Comments

PAST EVENTS THAT MADE HISTORY

CBOHANNON        The Associated Press
CAMILLE BOHANNON

posted by Bob Karm in AIRCRAFT,ANNIVERSARY,Aviation record,Battle,DEATH,HISTORY,Leaders,Musician and have No Comments

LAST HOME RUN FOR TED WILLIAMS

First-hand memories of Ted Williams and his loud last at-bat, 60 years  later - The Athletic

For the first time ever, you can watch Ted Williams' final game in color |  MLB.com

Now in Living Color: Ted Williams's Last Game - The New York Times

On September 28, 1960, at Boston’s Fenway Park, Red Sox star
Ted Williams
hit a home run in the last at-bat of his 21-year
career.

Williams once said it was his goal in life to “walk down the
street [and have] folks say ‘there goes the greatest hitter
who ever lived.’”

He succeeded. Williams led the American League in batting
average six times, home runs four times and runs batted in
four times.

He was one of only two men ever to win baseball’s Triple
Crown twice, leading the league in home runs, runs batted
in and batting average in 1942 and again in 1947.

Perhaps most impressively, however, he hit .406 in 1941
(also on September 28)–he was the
last man ever to hit .
400
.

Ted Williams during his last public appearance on February 17, 2002. He  died less than 5 months later on July 5 of that year. : r/lastimages
Theodore Samuel Williams (1918 – 2002)

posted by Bob Karm in ANNIVERSARY,Baseball,HISTORY,Home runs and have No Comments