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#1st Arkansas (Union) Battery
clairebeauchampfan · 4 years
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The Wereth 11
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Yesterday I wrote a post suggesting that instead of pulling down statues, it was time people put up new ones, specifically in memory of the Black soldiers who fought so gallantly against Nazis and other Fascists and Militarists in the two World Wars. In the course of my research I came across stories from the Battle of the Bulge about the 333rd Field Artillery Battalion and the 969th Field Artillery Battalion, the latter being award a Presidential Unit Citation for their heroic efforts to save Bastogne from the Nazi panzers. Two batteries of the 33rd were overrun  in the initial surprise attack. I had heard of the Malmedy massacre; being a Brit, I’d never heard of the Wereth 11. I’ll leave it to Wiki to describe what happened
“On 17 December, Battery C was flanked and overrun. Most of the men were killed or captured. Eleven soldiers became separated from the unit after it was overrun early on the second day of the battle. They tried to find the American lines but were unable to do so. When they reached the hamlet of Wereth, Belgium, farmer Mathias Langer offered them shelter.[4] The area they were in had been part of Germany for hundreds of years, until it was annexed by Belgium after World War I, and three of the nine families in the village were known to be still loyal to Germany. The wife of a German soldier who lived in Wereth told members of the notorious 1st SS Division that black American soldiers were hiding in her village. The SS troops quickly moved to capture the Americans, who surrendered without resistance. The SS men then marched their prisoners to a nearby field, where they were beaten, tortured, and finally shot.
The frozen bodies of the victims were discovered six weeks later, when the Allies re-captured the area. The SS troops had battered the black soldiers' faces, broken their legs with rifle butts, cut off fingers, stabbed some with bayonets, and had shot at least one soldier while he was bandaging a comrade's wounds.
The survivors of the 333rd Field Artillery Battalion were ordered to Bastogne, where they were incorporated into the 969th Field Artillery Battalion. Both battalions had provided fire support for the 101st Airborne Division during the Siege of Bastogne, for which they received the Presidential Unit Citation, the Army's highest unit award.
Because it had been overrun, the 333rd Field Artillery Battalion suffered more casualties during the Battle of the Bulge than any other artillery unit in the VIII Corps. Six officers (including the commander) and 222 enlisted men had been either killed or become prisoners of war. The 333rd Field Artillery Group subsequently served in the Central Europe campaign to the end of the war, while the 333rd Field Artillery Battalion took part in the Rhineland Campaign.”
but if you’ve a stronger stomach, read this
https://eu.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/11/07/wereth-black-soldiers-battle-of-bulge-army-world-war-ii-history/3465059/ and 
https://warfarehistorynetwork.com/2019/03/07/a-hidden-massacre-in-belgium/
I’m glad to say that on the site there is now a memorial, 
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and also one in Massachusetts
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The 11 soldiers massacred, known as the “Wereth 11”, were: Curtis Adams of South Carolina; Mager Bradley of Mississippi, George Davis Jr. of Alabama; Thomas Forte of Mississippi; Robert Green of Georgia; James Leatherwood of Mississippi; Nathaniel Moss of Texas; George Motten of Texas; William Pritchett of Alabama; James Stewart of West Virginia; and Due Turner of Arkansas. ALL except one from the South. 
And now, maybe you’ll understand why I’ve been so absolutely pissed off when some  ‘activists’, totally ignorant of the sacrifices - and yes, the evils- necessary to defeat Naziism, did this to Winston Churchill’s statue
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and this to the RAF Bomber Command statues (and yes, I know about Dresden, just like you know about Warsaw, Rotterdam, Coventry, London...)
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or tries to burn the Union flag on the National War Memorial, the Cenotaph
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and when an ‘art conservator’ trumpets her credentials among the virtuous by suggesting how to destroy bronze statues, and forty thousand righteous Tumblr readers cheer her on. Books, paintings and buildings next, people. I read today that  Princeton ‘University’ (do they know the meaning of the word?)  has now  ‘cancelled’ Woodrow Wilson, and John Wayne airport, Orange County, will be renamed. Racist, hompohobic bastards that they were, back then in the 20th Century. Probably transphobic too, if they knew the meaning of the word.  A la lanterne with the lot of them. 
 Savonarola, thou should’st be living at this hour
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#The evil that men do lives after them;The good is oft interred with their bones. 
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deltaculturalcenter · 3 years
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Sad Saga of Edwin Bancroft
Edwin Bancroft came to Arkansas as a soldier during the Civil War and chose to make the state his home. He was a newspaperman and one of the participants in the Brooks-Baxter War. Edwin was born in West Stockbridge, Massachusetts on February 18, 1840. In 1854, he attended Knox College in Illinois where he worked on a farm to pay his board and tuition. It was in Illinois where young Edwin first got involved in politics. He supported Stephen Douglas against Abraham Lincoln in the 1858 election. In the 1860 U.S. Census, Edwin is living in the household of R.T. Pollock of Galesburg, Illinois and identifies his occupation as student. 
With the outbreak of war, Edwin Bancroft joins Battery B of the 1st Illinois Light Artillery as a private. He is mustered into service July 16, 1861 at Cairo, Illinois. Edwin is described as having light colored hair with gray eyes. It was at this point he will meet several other young men who would have an impact on the course of his life.  Those men were Jonas Lembke, James Porter, John Hadlock and Harmon Chappel. All of them would eventually serve in Battery E of the Second Regiment, United States Colored Light Artillery as officers. However, that was in the future. In 1861, these young men were part of the famed Chicago Light Artillery. Battery B would see action at Belmont, Fort Henry, Fort Donelson, Shiloh, Corinth, Chickasaw Bayou, Arkansas Post and the Vicksburg campaign. After the surrender of Vicksburg, the battery was moved to Memphis before eventually joining Federal forces in Georgia. It was at Memphis that Edwin and his friends accepted an offer for promotion. The U.S. government was enlisting African American men into the army. These units would be commanded by white officers though, so the above named friends decided to volunteer. 
Edwin Bancroft mustered out of the 1st Illinois Light Artillery on November 30, 1863 to accept a promotion in a new battery being organized at Helena, Arkansas. He arrived in Helena as a new First Lieutenant. Other officers in the battery were Captain Jonas Lembke and Second Lieutenant John C. Hadlock. James Porter and Harmon Chappel would join the battery in 1864. This new unit was first referred to as the 3rd Battery Louisiana Artillery, African Descent. The name would be changed to Battery C and later Battery E of the 2nd Regiment, United States Colored Light Artillery. Captain Lembke and his two lieutenants worked hard over the next few months getting their battery organized. It was composed of two sections. On July 26, 1864, one section of the battery participated in the engagement at Wallace’s Ferry under Captain Lembke. First Lieutenant Bancroft was left in charge of the remaining section at Helena. It was at this hard fought battle that Captain Lembke was killed
Check out the following link about the Battle of Wallace’s Ferry.
.https://fb.watch/3CqisJal7b/
With the death of it’s commander, the battery needed a new leader. Edwin Bancroft was promoted to Captain on August 15, 1864. Edwin worked on drilling his new command and improving their efficiency. In March 1864, the size of the battery was increased to six guns by adding a new section. Captain Bancroft’s battery spent the remaining months of the war guarding Helena, going out on patrols and protecting plantations under Union control. It was not glamourous work, but it was dangerous and several men were lost in their encounters with Confederates. The battery mustered out of Federal service at Helena on September 25, 1865. 
Instead of returning home though, Edwin decided to remain in Arkansas. On August 1, 1865, Edwin had married Cora Lee-May in Phillips County, Arkansas. He moved to Prairie County as a plantation owner with his new wife. Bancroft also started a Republican leaning newspaper. Edwin worked as a lawyer and traveled frequently across the state espousing Republican ideals. By 1874, the Bancroft family was living in Texarkana, Arkansas. He was also a strong supporter of Joseph Brooks in his conflict with Elisha Baxter over who would be governor. Edwin then became county judge during this time. Sadly, his wife passed away in 1880 and this led Judge Bancroft into depression and alcohol abuse. On September 3, 1883, he was declared insane and committed to the asylum at Little Rock. Edwin Bancroft passed away in December 1883. The Galveston Daily News on December 12, 1883 reported the following story from Texarkana. 
“Judge Edwin Bancroft, an old citizen and the first county and probate judge of Miller county, and who, some two or three months ago, was sent to the asylum, died there on Saturday last.  The judge was at one time one of the leading lawyers and journalists of the State, but like many others, succumbed to the blighting effects of dissipation.”
Sources:
Ancestry.com : Edwin Bancroft
FOLD3 Records: “Compiled Military Service Records of Volunteer Union Soldiers who served with the United States Colored Troops: Artillery Organizations.” National Archives and Records Administration. Washington D.C. 1998. 
Daily Arkansas Gazette (Little Rock, Arkansas) 28 November 1874, Saturday. Page 1
Daily Arkansas Gazette (Little Rock, Arkansas) 9, September 1883, Sunday Page 1
The Galveston Daily News (Galveston, Texas) 12 December 1883, Wednesday Page 1
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paulbenedictblog · 4 years
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%news%
New Post has been published on %http://paulbenedictsgeneralstore.com%
Usa today Turtle Derby, cleaner subways, Zoom meeting hacked: News from around our 50 states
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Usa today
Usa today Alabama
Bernard Law 1st viscount montgomery of alamein: The Democratic chief in the voice Residence of Representatives entreated lawmakers to wait until summer to pass voice budgets to present time to assess the affect of the coronavirus outbreak. Residence Minority Chief Anthony Daniels said in a recordsdata conference that it is hard to craft a budget when the voice is aloof trying to assess the pandemic’s affect on income, little companies, faculties, unemployment and diversified factors. “Transferring forward when there are more questions than answers isn’t ultimate illogical, it’s fiscally irresponsible and it’s ultimate sinful public policy,” Daniels said. Legislative leaders opinion to resume the session on Could maybe maybe furthermore 4. They said the precedence would maybe be passing the two voice budgets for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1. Daniels said it would be better to wait until profits tax collections are obtained in July so the voice isn’t “budgeting in the the blind.”
Usa today Alaska
Anchorage: Four Alaska oil field provider corporations private alerted voice officers that they're going to lay off workers at their North Slope operations after oil costs crashed and drilling exercise declined due to coronavirus pandemic. The job cuts include 63 layoffs at Baker Hughes Co., 81 at Schlumberger Skills Corp., about 80 at Halliburton Vitality Products and providers Inc. and greater than 50 at the Top Oilfield Service Co., Alaska’s Vitality Desk reported Wednesday.The firms sent the layoff notices to the voice officers over the last month and maybe the most most up-to-date stare develop into once filed Monday. The layoffs include heavy tools operators, engineers, technicians and mechanics, the notices said. Corporations providing oil field products and providers and tools nationwide are chopping jobs and bracing for financial raze filings because the pandemic delivers a devastating blow to the oil and gasoline industry. Baker Hughes, Schlumberger and Halliburton private brushed aside workers and slashed spending at operations across the globe.
Usa today Arizona
Tucson: Three truckloads carrying hundreds of pounds of diversified fruits and greens made their map Wednesday from the U.S.-Mexico border to a couple of Indian communities in northern Arizona to support feed households struggling all the blueprint by technique of the COVID-19 pandemic. Arizona National Guard contributors loaded the donated produce Wednesday morning from a warehouse in Nogales, then drove the three refrigerated trucks up north. The trio develop into once destined for the Navajo, Hopi and White Mountain Apache tribes in northeastern Arizona. Bruce Bracker, chairman of the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors in Nogales, said it’s an example of Arizona rural communities looking after every other all the blueprint by technique of a trying time. Distributors of imported Mexican produce in Nogales donated the meals, storage role and the refrigerated trucks to earn the offers to a couple of the communities hardest hit by the pandemic. The Navajo Nation, notably, has been hit laborious by the pandemic. As of Wednesday afternoon, the tribe reported at the least 1,873 particular cases and 60 deaths. Even supposing the reservation spans four states, tribal recordsdata reveals that the massive majority of the cases are in Arizona. Jesse Thompson, chairman of the Navajo County Board of Supervisors, expressed his gratitude. He said the donated produce would form a in actual fact perfect difference to contributors of the three tribal communities in his county.
Usa today Arkansas
City: Arkansas restaurants can reopen their eating rooms initiating Could maybe maybe furthermore 11, Gov. Asa Hutchinson said as he began lifting commercial restrictions imposed due to coronavirus pandemic. Hutchinson said restaurants, which private biggest been allowed to sell meals by technique of carryout, curbside and offer since March 20, would maybe be exiguous to 33% occupancy and will face diversified social distancing restrictions. “That’s where we want to launch at this particular time,” Hutchinson said. The Republican governor said the voice will later expand the skill restrict to 67%. Hutchinson furthermore launched a $15 million grant program that will relief restaurants and diversified companies follow recent coronavirus restrictions by paying for protective tools, sanitizer and diversified costs. By Wednesday evening, the voice had stopped taking applications for the grants after receiving more requests than funding accessible. Arkansas develop into once one in every of a handful of states that didn’t issue a mammoth defend-at-home reveal, nonetheless it had diversified restrictions in location. Hutchinson has eased diversified limits in most up-to-date days, including a ban on elective surgeries and overnight tenting in voice parks.
Usa today California
Woodland: A homeless man accused of stealing a coronavirus test sample from a Northern California hospital has been rearrested days after he develop into once released from penal complex below COVID-19 bail changes, authorities said. Shaun Lamar Moore, 40, of Davis develop into once support in court Wednesday in Yolo County to face recent costs of petty theft and misdemeanor sexual battery. Moderately than the zero-bail amount he obtained the closing time, the court space Moore’s bail at $10,000 and he remained jailed, the county district lawyer’s office said. Moore develop into once charged with attempted possession of a restricted organic agent, housebreaking and petty theft by false pretenses. It wasn’t obvious whether Moore had an lawyer who could maybe maybe presumably focus on on his behalf. Prosecutors contend that on April 11, Moore pretended to be a Centers for Illness Management and Prevention employee who develop into once deciding on up a organic sample believed to possess COVID-19 from Sutter Davis Sanatorium in Davis. The sample develop into once ready for checking out and a California Department of Public Properly being courier arrived biggest minutes after Moore left, prosecutors said. The sealed sample develop into once chanced on hours later in a browsing cart at a pharmacy. It hadn’t been tampered with and develop into once returned to the hospital, authorities said. Moore develop into once arrested nonetheless then released with out bail until a Could maybe maybe furthermore listening to, despite the indisputable truth that he had to wear a GPS computer screen. On April 20, he develop into once rearrested on suspicion of committing a petty theft in West Sacramento and sexual battery in Woodland, authorities said.
Usa today Colorado
Denver: Colorado’s largest penal complex has develop into the positioning of the voice’s largest coronavirus outbreak, with 252 of us checking out particular as of Wednesday at the Sterling Correctional Facility. Knowledge up to this level weekly by the voice health division confirmed that 241 inmates and 11 workers contributors were confirmed to private COVID-19 at the penal complex with about 2,500 inmates on the voice’s northeastern plains. Four of the inmates were hospitalized, Colorado Department of Corrections spokeswoman Annie Skinner said. The penal complex examined 472 inmates closing week in reveal to isolate of us that had the disease and decrease its unfold. Prisoners were saved in quarantine of their cells since April 14. Meals are delivered and they're biggest allowed out to make exhaust of restrooms and showers, based entirely on the division. Michelle Pemberton of the Northeast Colorado Properly being Department told The Denver Publish that steps taken to offer protection to penal complex workers were efficient. She said Sterling Regional MedCenter has a surge opinion in location nonetheless has had no uncommon predicament in regards to the effects it can probably maybe maybe presumably stare because the outbreak at the penal complex. The 2nd-largest outbreak in the voice involves the JBS USA crimson meat plant in Greeley, where 245 cases and 5 deaths were reported.
Usa today Connecticut
Hartford: The voice’s largest instructor’s union has entreated Gov. Ned Lamont to be cautious earlier than deciding whether to reopen faculties this spring. Jeff Leake, the president of the Connecticut Education Association, wrote Thursday that the voice must no longer bow to the rigidity to reopen public faculties and companies upfront. “Easing up on social distancing too rapid would maybe be deadly,” he wrote. Sooner than opening the colleges, Leake said, the voice must produce recent protocols designed to defend college students and teachers stable. He said those must aloof include staggering launch times, enforcing recent seating formats and altering the map college students stroll down the halls between periods. The governor’s govt reveal retains faculties closed by technique of Could maybe maybe furthermore 20. He has said he'll form a call internal 10 days. “Let’s defend the route and continue to flatten the curve, saving the lives of our relatives, guests, and neighbors,” Leake wrote. “It’s better to be stable than sorry.”
Usa today Delaware
Dover: A Zoom assembly that integrated voice lawmakers from Delaware to boot to contributors of Congress develop into once hacked. The Delaware Deliver News reported that the hacker displayed a racial slur to boot to pornography. The digital conference call develop into once enraged about helping shadowy-owned companies and organizations that glean federal money. The assembly develop into once hosted by the Delaware Legislative Dark Caucus, which is an informal panel of eight voice lawmakers. The hacker scribbled a racist term and drew a swastika on the disguise. U.S. Ranking. Lisa Blunt took over and entreated participants no longer to let it bother them. “We rebuke abominate, we know that there’s a greater opinion right here, and it’s all about fancy and caring for every diversified as half of a big neighborhood,” she said. A sexually explicit list furthermore appeared onscreen. The call hosts regained regulate of the choice, which ended a couple of minutes later.
Usa today District of Columbia
Washington: Mayor Muriel Bowser said the District will earn two recent hospitals to “carry equity to D.C.’s health care arrangement.” The mayor signed recent funding agreements that will include the event of the hospitals, a 136-bed facility at St. Elizabeth’s East in Ward 8, and a 225-bed Howard College Sanatorium on Georgia Avenue NW in Ward 1. Funding of $306–million is on the market for the St. Elizabeth’s hospital, which is anticipated to launch in 2024. Thru a $225 million tax abatement supplied by the District, Howard College and its recent running associate Adventist Healthcare, envision a $450 million trauma and academic instructing hospital, with plans to be total by 2026.
Usa today Florida
Key Largo: A bus driver develop into once jailed after deputies said he chased a rider down the boulevard and swung a metallic pole at him because the rider had pulled down his coronavirus cowl. The Monroe County Sheriff’s Office said a 21-year-feeble man boarded Denys Santos’ bus in Key Largo on Wednesday evening, took a seat and pulled down his cowl to chat on the phone. The actual person told deputies that as he develop into once exiting, Santos feeble a metallic pole to tap a signal pronouncing masks are significant on the bus. After a quick argument, the particular person said he left the bus and develop into once strolling away when Santos began chasing him and swinging the pole at him. A mediate about confirmed his epic, deputies said. Deputies pulled over Santos’ bus and chanced on the pole. He develop into once charged with felony aggravated assault and develop into once being held Thursday at the Monroe County Jail. Court recordsdata arrangement no longer disguise if he has an lawyer.
Usa today Georgia
Atlanta: Gov. Brian Kemp allowed his statewide shelter-in-location reveal to bustle out in the darkish Thursday nonetheless is extending his emergency powers to June 12 and telling the aged and medically fragile to defend at home until then. The first-term Republican governor had carved sizable loopholes in his reveal that utilized to all 10 million Georgians and signaled it would pause when he allowed some companies to reopen closing week and Monday. Social distancing requirements and bans on gigantic gatherings remain in location. Kemp told the Connected Press in a Thursday interview that he has been happy with how his effort to reopen some companies – among the many most aggressive in the nation – has gone in the face of a persevering with COVID-19 pandemic that has sickened 26,000 of us in the voice and killed greater than 1,100. Last week, Kemp allowed elective medical procedures to resume, and barbers, hair stylists, rub down therapists, tattoo artists and bowling alleys to return to work foundation Friday. Restaurants were allowed to launch serving diners on-space again on Monday. They and diversified companies are running below restrictions supposed to retard virus transmission by technique of Could maybe maybe furthermore 13. But Kemp’s moves drew keen criticism from internal the voice and nationwide, including more than one public rebukes from President Donald Trump.
Usa today Hawaii
Honolulu: Mayor Kirk Caldwell said Wednesday some companies would maybe be allowed to restart operations foundation Friday because the town eases its emergency orders aimed at slowing the unfold of the coronavirus. Public and private golf programs would maybe be allowed to reopen, as lengthy as patrons behold social distancing requirements. Vehicle dealers could maybe maybe presumably be allowed to resume operations by appointment. Pet groomers who provide provider on a mobile foundation and arrangement no longer have interaction with human customers can furthermore restart. The reveal will remain in pause by technique of Could maybe maybe furthermore 18. Caldwell said the town, the governor and the diversified county mayors were working to settle how one can defend everybody stable. The mayor made his announcement after Gov. David Ige licensed the rule changes. Ige told a recordsdata conference that officers were discussing allowing hair salons to resume operations nonetheless famed it’s a commercial with a high diploma of contact between of us and thus carries a high possibility of spreading the disease.
Usa today Idaho
Boise: A committee helping oversee Idaho’s $1.25 billion portion of the federal government’s $2.2 trillion coronavirus rescue kit on Wednesday voted to distribute money to local governments in accordance to inhabitants. The Coronavirus Financial Advisory Committee furthermore unanimously licensed caps on how worthy voice companies will glean. The suggestions that add up to about $150 million now dawdle to Republican Gov. Brad Little for his consideration. Little earlier this month formed the 14-member committee that’s headed by his budget chief, Alex Adams. The committee is planning to satisfy Friday to gape at providing financial enhance for little companies. “You’ll stare us transfer rapid on that,” Adams said. It furthermore is looking at the exhaust of one of the money to toughen broadband infrastructure to support faculties with distance finding out, to boot to companies which private staff working from home. Committee member Seth Grigg, govt director of the Idaho Association of Counties, said counties were delighted with the inhabitants-based entirely map. “Cities are on board to boot,” said committee member John Evans, the mayor of Backyard City.
Usa today Illinois
Chicago: Police officers said they're going to issue a citation in connection with a wedding earn together at a North Aspect space closing week that spilled into the boulevard in violation of efforts to fight the unfold of the recent coronavirus. The Chicago Tribune reported a video of the April 23 earn together confirmed a couple of dozen revelers, all white with some wearing masks, dancing to loud music earlier than officers enforcing Illinois’ defend-at-home orders broke up the crowd. No citation develop into once issued at the time. The announcement that a citation could maybe maybe presumably be issued came two days after police ticketed the proprietor of the northwest aspect home where they broke up a big gathering of young blacks over the weekend. Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Wednesday both incidents should be treated “precisely the identical.” “We're going to’t tolerate it wherever. It’s no longer ultimate the shadowy millennials,” Lightfoot said. ”It’s a predicament wherever it rears its head.” Police didn’t affirm why it develop into once taking longer to issue a citation for the North Aspect earn together than for the weekend match. “While officers are equipped with enforcement discretion in obvious sides, enforcement of the statewide defend-at-home reveal is anticipated to be well-liked, regardless of neighborhood, neighborhood or district,” said Chicago police spokesman Luis Agostini. Janeal Wright, 26, who threw the weekend earn together captured on Fb dwell and prompting the ire of politicians and others, issued an apology Wednesday. He said the earn together develop into once thrown to honor two guests killed in gun violence in 2018.
Usa today Indiana
Indianapolis: A series of flyovers by the Indiana Air National Guard’s 122nd Fighter Cruise in a couple of central Indiana cities has been postponed to Saturday due to weather. The flyovers by four A-10 Thunderbolts are intended to salute hospitals and to decide on morale all the blueprint by technique of the coronavirus pandemic, officers said. The flyovers now are scheduled for downtown Terre Haute at 11: 35 a.m., the Johnson Armory advance Franklin at 11: 50, then, minutes later, Neighborhood Sanatorium East, St. Vincent Sanatorium in Carmel, the VA Sanatorium and College Sanatorium in downtown Indianapolis, the Lawrence Armory, downtown Anderson at 12: 05 p.m., then downtown Muncie, and the Marion VA hospital.
Usa today Iowa
Des Moines: The Iowa Legislative Council voted unanimously Wednesday to continue the suspension of the legislative session until at the least Could maybe maybe furthermore 15. Assembly by phone, the 24-member council agreed to reconvene at 10 a.m. Could maybe maybe furthermore 15 unless it meets and devices a explicit date earlier than then. The council, which makes suggestions when the legislative body is just not any longer in session, has suspended the session since March. Residence Speaker Pat Grassley and Senate Majority Chief Jack Whitver faced questions by Democratic senators in regards to the factors they’re the exhaust of to evaluate whether it’s stable for lawmakers to advance support to the Capitol and the blueprint the public would maybe be in a position to decide on half given the persisted concerns in regards to the virus. Whitver said leaders are talking with Gov. Kim Reynolds and voice health officers to ensure it’s stable to return. Even supposing Iowa coronavirus cases continue to upward thrust and the voice hasn’t yet reached a peak, Reynolds has begun to permit some companies in some counties to reopen. Democratic leaders private requested that everyone those coming into the Capitol endure a health screening, exhaust face coverings and hand sanitizer earlier than coming into the chamber and that social distancing be enforced. Whitver and Grassley didn't commit to those requests nonetheless said safety choices were below dialogue.
Usa today Kansas
Wichita: Spirit AeroSystems is providing voluntary layoffs to all of its union-lined technical and skilled workers in Wichita because the corporate continues to respond to the grounding of the Boeing 737 MAX and the coronavirus pandemic. It wasn’t at once obvious what number of jobs would maybe be tormented by the transfer, which develop into once launched in an electronic mail to staff Wednesday evening, The Wichita Eagle reported. The final day of work for folks that opt the buyout would maybe be no later than Could maybe maybe furthermore 14. Last year, the staff’ union, the Society of Professional Engineering Employees in Aerospace, represented greater than 1,600 technical and skilled workers at Spirit, nonetheless the corporate has since launched a couple of layoffs, early retirement offers and furloughs. The announcement came after Boeing said Wednesday it would lower its crew by 10% because the query for recent airplanes continues to drop all the blueprint by technique of the pandemic. Spirit spirit furthermore is struggling because it makes about 70% of the Boeing 737 MAX, which develop into once grounded closing spring after two deadly crashes. The recent voluntary layoffs are a “first step” in the corporate’s plans to deal with Boeing’s announcement, based entirely on the electronic mail from Spirit CEO Tom Gentile.
Usa today Kentucky
Louisville: The first Saturday in Could maybe maybe furthermore has yielded to the legs of a bunch of slowpokes: Seattle Late headlines a field of turtles will bustle in the Kentucky Turtle Derby. With Old-well-liked Forester bourbon signed on as a sponsor, Saturday’s bustle will bustle at 7 p.m. on YouTube.com/OldForester. The sounds could maybe maybe presumably be familiar for Derby followers: Triple Crown announcer Larry Collmus is looking the bustle and bugler Steve Buttleman will serenade viewers earlier than the turtles opt off. The bustle is sweet one more offbeat sport that has had a 2nd all the blueprint by technique of the coronvirus pandemic. The Derby, The USA’s longest constantly held wearing match, had been scheduled for Could maybe maybe furthermore 2. This could maybe maybe maybe now be bustle Sept. 5, kicking off Labor Day weekend. It’s the fundamental time the Derby obtained’t be held on its well-liked first Saturday in Could maybe maybe furthermore since 1945, when it develop into once bustle June 9. The federal government suspended horse racing nationwide for a variety of the fundamental half of of the year earlier than World War II led to early Could maybe maybe furthermore, nonetheless no longer in time to defend the fundamental leg of the Triple Crown that month. Seeking to earn a slower replace, the fundamental Kentucky Turtle Derby develop into once hatched. The match went down like this: 20 turtles were herded into seven qualifying races and the winners went on to compete in a 20-foot finale. The Kentucky Derby Museum reported that Broken Spring paid $2.50 on his victory and $8,000 develop into once raised to enhance a neighborhood formative years’s health charity.
Usa today Louisiana
Central: A Louisiana police division has been bombarded by callers looking to direct their enhance of a pastor who develop into once accused of trying to hit any individual along with his church bus while violating a ban on mass gatherings all the blueprint by technique of the coronavirus pandemic, police said Wednesday. In a Fb post, police in the Baton Rouge suburb of Central apologized to residents who couldn’t earn by technique of to the company. Officers said a sizable amount of calls supporting Existence Tabernacle Church Pastor Tony Spell private tied up the phone lines. Central Police Chief Roger Corcoran said Spell’s mother, Magi, shared the division’s phone number on social media and encouraged of us to inundate the line with calls. Corcoran said the phone number is the division’s biggest line and residents need it to seek recordsdata from assistance. He told residents to defend calling in the event that they need relief or, in the match of an emergency, to call 911. Spell develop into once arrested April 21 and charged with assault after he admitted to riding his church bus toward a particular person protesting Spell’s decision to defend mass gatherings in defiance of public health orders all the blueprint by technique of the coronavirus pandemic. Spell develop into once placed on home arrest and on Sunday violated both orders by again maintaining a church provider. District Lawyer Hillar Moore III said his office didn’t opinion to pursue the matter.
Usa today Maine
Portland: A Maine company that makes specialised swabs for coronavirus checking out is teaming with construction company Cianbro and Navy shipbuilder Bath Iron Works to double manufacturing, officers said Thursday. The Trump administration is providing $75.5 million to Guilford-based entirely Puritan Clinical Products by technique of the Defense Manufacturing Act to enhance manufacturing of the swabs, which could maybe maybe presumably be significant to ramp up checking out. Cianbro is providing a building in Pittsfield and relief setting up the manufacturing line, and Bath Iron Works is making 30 machines Puritan needs to form greater manufacturing, company officers said. Puritan’s manufacturing will double to 40 million of the swabs monthly by technique of the partnership, said U.S. Sen. Susan Collins. The effort will form as many as 150 jobs in Pittsfield on high of the 300 to 500 workers already employed by Puritan in Guilford, officers said. The swabs that are produced by Puritan for coronavirus checking out are longer than most swabs and private a synthetic cloth on the pause. They’re feeble for nasal swabs for checks for the coronoavirus. Puritan is one in every of two producers on this planet that form the specialised swabs in gigantic numbers. The diversified is in Italy.
Usa today Maryland
Baltimore: Several pounds of free frozen rooster were delivered Wednesday to residents of Baltimore’s west aspect by boulevard distributors who fundamentally sell produce from horse-drawn carts. Baltimore-based entirely distributor Holly Poultry donated 2,000 pounds of rooster to the College of Maryland-Baltimore’s Neighborhood Engagement Middle to support residents for whom it can probably maybe maybe presumably be fundamental to transfer to a meals market amid the coronavirus pandemic. The center partnered with the Southwest Baltimore’s Arabber Preservation Society to carry the rooster door-to-door. Anthony Savoy wore blue disposable gloves and a face cowl as he pulled his horse-drawn cart along streets in West Baltimore. Very like his mumble when promoting fruits and greens, Savoy’s mumble cried “free rooster.” Residents at one intersection ran up to a cart and lined up while one other Arabber handed out a get of frozen rooster and a get of sizzling canines buns to every particular person. He modified into away a girl who develop into once no longer wearing a cowl or gloves and told the crowd everybody significant to be protected. The girl returned and chased the cart while inserting on her gloves and cowl earlier than receiving the meals. The college estimated the distributor’s donation will relief 900 households.
Usa today Massachusetts
Boston: A lot of the protective face masks dispensed by the Massachusetts Emergency Management Company in the fight against the recent coronavirus were deficient, based entirely on a broadcast report. The voice closing week began notifying police departments, nursing properties and diversified recipients that most up-to-date checks by Massachusetts Institute of Skills scientists published that one of the masks provide little safety, The Boston Globe reported Thursday. Even supposing the checks confirmed one of the masks filtered out greater than 90% of airborne particles, none conducted to boot to the U.S. industry well-liked N95 cowl, which filters out at the least 95% of airborne particles, based entirely on the publicly posted results. One form of cowl dispensed by the voice filtered biggest about 28% of airborne particles, based entirely on the effects. In accordance with voice recordsdata, all of the respirator masks dispensed to public safety entities were from China and flown to the U.S. on the Fresh England Patriots’ airplane in early April. The MIT checks were conducted on all China-made masks, said Sharon Torgerson, a spokeswoman for the voice’s COVID-19 Response Repeat Middle.
Usa today Michigan
Detroit: A handful of relatives in a chapel on Detroit’s west aspect and heaps of of mourners participating online said goodbye Thursday to the daughter of a police officer and firefighter who is Michigan’s youngest victim in the coronavirus pandemic to this level. The reality of the public health disaster that has claimed the lives of greater than 1,000 Detroit residents develop into once obvious in the livestreamed provider for 5-year-feeble Skylar Herbert, who died April 19 after complications from the virus. In diversified times, her household’s church would were packed with mourners bidding Skylar farewell. But biggest a couple of dozen relatives would maybe be considered in the fundamental two pews at the James H. Cole funeral home. Social distancing guidelines refrained from more from attending, and every mourner wore a cowl, as did the funeral home workers, the pastor and the line of flower bearers. About 800 of us viewed the livestream of Skylar’s funeral because the eulogy develop into once be taught. Two video monitors conducted a montage of photos of the girl and her household to gospel music. A bouquet of crimson flowers spelled out her title. After Skylar’s loss of life, Mayor Mike Duggan called her “a exact daughter of the town of Detroit.” Skylar’s mother, LaVondria Herbert, has been a Detroit police officer for 25 years, and Skylar’s father, Ebbie, a firefighter of 18 years.
Usa today Minnesota
Minneapolis: Coronavirus cases, hospitalizations and deaths continue to climb in Minnesota, nonetheless the voice is making development toward more checking out, recent figures Thursday from the Minnesota Department of Properly being confirmed. The division reported 24 recent deaths to decide on Minnesota’s loss of life toll to 343. A brand recent one-day high of 492 confirmed cases pushed the voice’s total to 5,136. And a day to day high of 3,532 recent checks introduced the overall to 70,276. Officers private warned that the case depend will swell as checking out speeds up. Gov. Tim Walz closing week launched a partnership with the College of Minnesota and Mayo Sanatorium to form greater the voice’s checking out skill to 20,000 day to day internal a couple of weeks. The division furthermore reported that 365 of us were hospitalized with COVID-19 as of Thursday, up 45 from Wednesday, and 130 of them were in intensive care, up 11 from the day earlier than. Properly being officers said the exact number of Minnesotans contaminated with the coronavirus is likely worthy greater because most of us don’t earn examined, and reviews rapid that of us would maybe be contaminated with out feeling sick
Usa today Mississippi
Jackson: Gov. Tate Reeves said he'll inquire voice lawmakers to provide correct safety for companies that could maybe maybe presumably be sued in the event that they reopen and customers or staff develop into sick with COVID-19. Reeves said he would no longer mediate he could maybe maybe presumably provide liability safety by technique of an govt reveal. The Legislature is scheduled to return to the Capitol on Could maybe maybe furthermore 18 to restart its session that develop into once place aside on defend in mid-March due to pandemic. Reeves develop into once furthermore requested Wednesday whether Mississippi will lower off unemployment payments for folks that opt no longer to return to work because they're concerned about contracting the extremely contagious virus. The governor said he strongly encourages of us to return to their jobs when probably. He famed that a federal enhance to unemployment payments due to virus expires at the pause of July. Reeves said his “safer at home” reveal, in pause until the morning of Could maybe maybe furthermore 11, requires of us that are medically at possibility of remain home. He said that class of of us, and of us 65 or older, “private to work with their employer and opt a gape at to arrangement the correct part” about deciding when to return to work.
Usa today Missouri
Columbia: Advocates for voice workers on Thursday called on Gov. Mike Parson to arrangement more to offer protection to staff from the recent coronavirus. Union leaders, Democratic voice lawmakers and diversified advocates for employee rights desire no-strings-hooked up top charge pay for workers, more N95 masks and the chance for more staff to form money working from home. Danny Homan, president of the American Federation of Deliver, County and Municipal Employees for Missouri, Kansas and Iowa, said many workers are getting biggest fabric face masks at veterans properties and psychological health facilities where of us private examined particular for COVID-19. “No public employee must private to present up their existence to provide the provider that is essential to the voters of Missouri, or any voice. Duration,” Homan said. “Ranking the PPE tools to of us that need it, and quit calling a dumb fabric cowl private protective tools.” A seek recordsdata from for comment to Parson’s spokeswoman wasn’t at once returned Thursday. Parson’s administration is providing voice staff who disguise up for work at areas where any individual has examined particular for the coronavirus a further $250 per paycheck as lengthy as they don’t omit any days. But Democratic Ranking. Keri Ingle of Lee’s Summit called that “a gesture at most efficient.” Ingle said that policy encourages of us to advance to work sick. She said all voice workers should be getting top charge pay, and any workers who contract the virus must aloof earn two weeks of paid dawdle away with out penalty. Missouri NAACP President Rod Chapel furthermore said voice staff must aloof earn free COVID-19 checking out earlier than they return to work and contributors of the public must private their temperatures checked earlier than coming face-to-face with voice workers.
Usa today Montana
Wide Falls: The Wide Falls Public Colleges Board of Trustees would maybe be assembly at midday on Friday to form its final choices on reopening faculties, graduation and focus on about diversified COVID-19-connected board policies. The assembly develop into once in the foundation scheduled for 5: 30 p.m. Monday. Friday’s assembly could maybe maybe no longer be launch for in-particular person public participation, nonetheless would maybe be livestreamed on the GFPS Fb page. Public comment would maybe be sent by technique of electronic mail to [email protected] and must include the title and deal with of the submitter to be be taught and added to the public epic. The total board assembly agenda would maybe be chanced on online at gfps.okay12.mt.us/school-board. Earlier this week, the board mentioned the issue of reopening faculties earlier than the pause of the college year. The district invited company to weigh in on what steps would must be taken in reveal to launch faculties based entirely on suggestions outlined by Gov. Steve Bullock closing week. Following Bullock’s announcement of the phased reopening of the voice, the college district requested fogeys for feedback in regards to the college district reopening earlier than the pause of the college year. In accordance with Superintendent Tom Moore, 5,433 fogeys replied to the ogle and 71% indicated that they'd defend their youngster at home and 29% said they'd ship their youngster to highschool. Trisha Gardner, the Cascade City-County Properly being Department’s health officer, told board contributors that Bullock’s opinion recommends health screenings be conducted on everybody coming into faculties and that college students and workers wear face masks for the length of the day.
Usa today Nebraska
Dakota City: Tyson Meals said Thursday that it develop into once rapid suspending operations at a Nebraska crimson meat processing plant that serves because the largest employer for neighboring Sioux City, Iowa, after a surge of coronavirus cases in the role. Tyson launched in a recordsdata free up that it would shut the Dakota City plant Friday by technique of Monday to form a deep cleaning of the power. Deliver health officers in most up-to-date days private reported heaps of of most up-to-date coronavirus cases in Dakota County, where the plant is found, and Woodbury County in Iowa, where Sioux City is found. Tyson beforehand disclosed that some workers at the plant had examined particular for the virus, nonetheless it has no longer said what number of. The Arkansas-based entirely company said it develop into once screening Dakota City staff for the virus this week with the support of the Nebraska National Guard. The Dakota City facility is one in every of the largest crimson meat processing plants in the country, the exhaust of about 4,300 of us. The transfer follows most up-to-date closures of diversified meat processing facilities across the country due to virus, which spreads snappily among workers who fundamentally stand shoulder-to-shoulder on manufacturing lines.
Usa today Nevada
Las Vegas: Gov. Steve Sisolak is extending his directive asking of us to defend at home to restrict the unfold of coronavirus until Could maybe maybe furthermore 15. But he'll ease restrictions on diversified exterior actions and a few companies initiating Friday. Sisolak’s office said Wednesday evening that he would allow initiating Could maybe maybe furthermore 1 retail companies and marijuana dispensaries to give curbside pickup, as restaurants were doing. He will furthermore allow force-in church and diversified non secular products and providers, as lengthy participants defend of their autos and defend at the least 6 feet of distance from those exterior their household. The governor said he develop into once furthermore again allowing golf programs, pickleball and tennis courts to launch Friday, as lengthy as they can arrangement so safely. Frustrated Republican lawmakers sent a letter to Sisolak’s office Wednesday morning looking out out definitive timelines for more financial exercise to resume and a bipartisan assignment force to advance up with a reopening approach. They furthermore desire more workers hired and shifting of existing government workers to address the crush of unemployment claims.
Usa today Fresh Hampshire
Harmony: A cargo airplane carrying greater than 110,000 pounds of private protective tools to Fresh Hampshire entails 4.5 million masks the voice purchased for VA hospitals nationwide, Gov. Chris Sununu said Thursday. The shipment left Shanghai, China, on Wednesday and is anticipated to reach Thursday afternoon. The masks would maybe be sent to the VA for his or her distribution, said Sununu, a Republican. The VA will reimburse the voice. “When VA Secretary Robert Wilkie reached out to me I knew this develop into once a mission Fresh Hampshire could maybe maybe presumably opt on,” Sununu said in a recordsdata free up Thursday. “We owe those on the entrance lines taking care of our veterans the protection they deserve.” Wilkie said his division is proud to work with the voice “as half of our ongoing effort to ensure our hospitals private earn entry to to the tools they've to deal with our nation’s veterans.” The suggestions free up said the shipment develop into once secured with the support of inventor Dean Kamen and others. Kamen had assisted with a earlier cargo of PPE for Fresh Hampshire.
Usa today Fresh Jersey
Atlantic City: Town’s casinos are teaming with a hospital arrangement to seek the advice of on protocols and most efficient practices relating to the recent coronavirus earlier than the casinos reopen. No date has been space for the nine casinos to reopen. But The Casino Association of Fresh Jersey said Wednesday it is working with AtlantiCare to portion recordsdata on the virus and form suggestions, including lessons the health care arrangement has realized in its private hospitals. Neither aspect gave specifics about things the casinos will arrangement to offer protection to company and workers from the virus, nonetheless on line casino executives across the country are smitten by diversified measures including having everybody wear masks, staggering slot machines, more frequent cleaning and presumably the exhaust of plexiglass barriers to position into designate separation on the on line casino ground.
Usa today Fresh Mexico
Albuquerque: The voice’s largest Catholic diocese has filed a criticism against the U.S. Exiguous Industry Administration over its lack of skill to exhaust for federal support supposed to support companies tormented by the coronavirus outbreak. The Archdiocese of Santa Fe claimed the low-hobby loan applications that entities must total voice those companies enraged about financial raze court cases could maybe maybe no longer be licensed. The archdiocese filed for financial raze in 2018 in the wake of clergy sex abuse lawsuits that began decades earlier. The archdiocese said it’s struggling to form payroll because parishes haven’t been in a position to earn collections all the blueprint by technique of Mass since Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham issued a public health reveal prohibiting gatherings. Church officers said most of their income comes from collections, especially all the blueprint by technique of Holy Week and Easter Sunday. Archdiocese spokeswoman Celine Radigan said in a observation that the pandemic and its unknown trajectory is having a fundamental pause on the organization’s mission to “safeguard the sanctity of existence and provide pastoral care and serious resources” to greater than 90 parishes, 226 missions and 16 Catholic faculties. Without earn entry to to the low-hobby loans and federal support, the archdiocese said it can probably maybe maybe presumably be pressured to furlough significant staff. Aloof, Archbishop John C. Wester develop into once telling parishioners to “defend the route” and assign the advice of medical and public health experts.
Usa today Fresh York
Fresh York City: Town will shut down subway provider on a typical foundation from 1 a.m. to 5 a.m. to form greater cleaning of trains and stations all the blueprint by technique of the coronavirus disaster, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Thursday. The announcement came two days after he called stipulations in the arrangement “disgusting.” Subway trains, which had been disinfected at the least once every 72 hours, would maybe be cleaned once every 24 hours initiating Could maybe maybe furthermore 6, Cuomo said. Buses, trucks and diversified various transportation would maybe be supplied at no charge for significant workers to earn around while the arrangement is closed, he said. Cuomo said the elevated cleaning is a “daunting predicament,” nonetheless significant to keeping the subways stable as it is quiet a location of high density while worthy of the relaxation of society practices social distancing. Images posted on social media in most up-to-date weeks private confirmed packed subway autos. Dozens of transit staff private died of the recent coronavirus and the arrangement has turn staunch into a haven for homeless of us all the blueprint by technique of the disaster. Subway ridership has plunged by 92% since the launch of the pandemic, and the general public commuting are health care workers, first responders and diversified entrance-line workers who’ve been keeping the town running. The cleaning shutdown impacts the slowest half of the day for the subway arrangement, by map of ridership. Around 10,000 of us trot the arrangement all the blueprint by technique of that length of time, Cuomo said. Commuter trains serving Lengthy Island and the town’s northern suburbs will furthermore be disinfected every 24 hours, he said.
Usa today North Carolina
Raleigh: College college students in North Carolina are suing universities in hopes of getting reimbursements for tuition and charges after campuses shut down and moved lessons online all the blueprint by technique of the coronavirus pandemic. The Raleigh News & Observer reported Tuesday that the institutions that are being sued include faculties in the College of North Carolina arrangement. College students said in the lawsuits that universities made the correct decision to shut down lessons. But they suppose that they were deprived of a college skills that entails in-particular person instruction, earn entry to to campus facilities and pupil actions. East Carolina College and UNC-Asheville said they're acutely aware in regards to the criticism and declined to touch upon pending litigation. UNC Scheme spokesman Josh Ellis and a UNC-Charlotte spokesperson furthermore declined to comment. The UNC Scheme has began to distribute prorated reimbursements for unused housing and eating products and providers.
Usa today North Dakota
Bismarck: The North Dakota Highway Patrol said this is able to maybe maybe simply form greater patrols to decide on intoxicated drivers after most restrictions are lifted on bars, restaurants and diversified companies. Troopers said in a observation the elevated patrols would bustle Friday by technique of Sunday and are being performed “to put off impaired drivers from the road.” Gov Doug Burgum intends to decide on restrictions on most companies foundation Friday, pronouncing the voice has made predominant development to possess the unfold of the coronavirus.
Usa today Ohio
Columbus: Two penal complex staff and 27 Ohio penal complex inmates private died from COVID-19, based entirely on the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction. A total of 3,890 inmates private examined particular, nonetheless the prisons company has biggest conducted well-liked checking out at three facilities to this level, leaving true particular cases up in the air. Correctional officers are being pushed to the brink, working more than one stretches of 16-hour shifts with many colleagues out sick and getting by with the bare minimal of private protective tools, especially masks, said Brian Miller, a guard at laborious-hit Marion Correctional Institution who is out recuperating from COVID-19. The prisons company has two medical devices in Columbus, including one at the Ohio Deliver medical middle, and guards there are overwhelmed as their numbers shrink even because the ranks of sick inmates needing remedy flit, said Michael Rider, a guard at the Ohio Deliver facility and the Franklin Clinical Middle. Prisons director Annette Chambers-Smith said the arrangement started planning for an epidemic after the H1N1 outbreak in 2009, when she develop into once the division’s health director. Once the coronavirus hit, the arrangement prohibited penal complex company early on, stopped circulation between prisons, took measures to provide and bag private protective tools, and stepped up sanitation measures, among many efforts.
Usa today Oklahoma
Oklahoma City: Some Oklahoma companies remain closed out of fright of being exposed to the recent coronavirus, despite being allowed to reopen. Corporations equivalent to barber shops, hair and nail salons, and spas began reopening April 24 in many cities. Gov. Kevin Stitt said they'll simply resume commercial as lengthy as they adopted social distancing and sanitation guidelines. But rub down therapist Syd Lowery in Norman said she will be able to remain closed. “It’s quite hideous to be correct. I work for myself, I dawdle to peoples’ properties. … I don’t mediate we’re in a position to reopen,” Lowery said, including that rub down remedy is “the reverse of social distancing.” In Oklahoma City, Zio’s Italian Kitchen will reopen it’s in-home provider on Friday, based entirely on the governor’s guidelines, said Jennifer Holliday, a manager at the venue. Holliday said she has no fright of being exposed by technique of contact with customers. She believes she had the virus in February, despite the indisputable truth that it develop into once no longer confirmed. “I speak perchance I’ve got some antibodies built up … nonetheless it’s my job, I’ve got to arrangement it,” Holliday said.
Usa today Oregon
Eugene: College of Oregon President Michael Schill said leaders are making plans to carry college students support to campus after spring and summer phrases are conducted online to sluggish the unfold of the coronavirus, the Register-Guard reported. “I private to intend prospects are you'll maybe maybe presumably all know that we entirely intend and are currently planning to be launch for in-particular person, on-campus instruction this drop,” Schill said. He famed there remain many variables to COVID-19 exterior of faculty regulate, nonetheless leaders are making changes with the guidance of public health officers. The plans furthermore will follow Gov. Kate Brown’s framework for reopening establishments all the blueprint by technique of Oregon, Schill said. Deans and diversified administrators of faculties and faculties are smitten by changes equivalent to altering class schedules, decreasing class sizes, altering room assignments for more distance and expanding online lessons. Schill furthermore famed areas of monetary predicament for the college, including early projections of low enrollment, and the blueprint COVID-19 can private an designate on voice funding for universities. Some suggestions already circulated include a temporary pay reduction program for workers, which is willing to continue to be mentioned with employee teams, Schill said.
Usa today Pennsylvania
Harrisburg: Bigger than 30 Pennsylvania hospitals got $324 million in emergency voice support to support enhance all of them the blueprint by technique of the early phases of the pandemic, the Gov. Tom Wolf’s administration said Thursday. Hospitals lost income as they canceled elective surgeries and appointments, while furthermore spending tremendously to earn ready for a surge in coronavirus patients.The voice’s Sanatorium Emergency Loan Program, or HELP, is providing hospitals with short-term low-hobby support diverted from unused funds in the foundation space aside for water and sewer infrastructure projects. The money is anticipated to be repaid, with hobby, by the pause of September after hospitals glean federal support licensed in regulations signed a month ago by President Donald Trump.
Usa today Rhode Island
Windfall: Rhode Island’s infamous Wide Blue Bug has donned a face cowl to pay tribute to health care workers and others on the entrance lines of the coronavirus pandemic. The painted cowl on Nibbles Woodaway, the broad blue termite that overlooks Interstate 95 in Windfall and serves because the mascot of pest regulate company Wide Blue Bug Choices, is furthermore a reminder for everybody to wear a cowl in public, company officers said. “This is our map of thanking the good work being performed each day by entrance-line workers of all kinds, turning in items and products and providers, keeping us well, and inserting their lives on the line each day for us,” CEO Brian Goldman said in a recordsdata free up.
Usa today South Carolina
Columbia: As sides of the voice launch to reopen to commerce and game, U.S. Sen. Tim Scott is praising Gov. Henry McMaster’s response to the coronavirus outbreak, measures which were met with criticism from all sides of the political aisle. “I mediate his sluggish development in trying to earn a map to launch South Carolina’s economy is in step with the president’s,” Scott said Thursday all the blueprint by technique of a Fb dwell dialog in regards to the voice’s commercial neighborhood. “I mediate the governor has handled this total disaster finally well.” Since foundation a stair-step financial shutdown because the recent coronavirus unfold in March, McMaster has many times careworn his desire for a swift, yet stable, monetary reopening, noting the severe toll the outbreak has had on particular particular person workers and companies. Inns can launch reopening Friday, and the Myrtle Seashore City Council handed suggestions prohibiting greater than one particular person or household to an elevator and requiring the cleaning of fundamentally touched surfaces like stair rails and doorknobs once an hour. The voice’s most visited sea scoot will biggest allow resorts to honor beforehand made reservations until Could maybe maybe furthermore 15, when they can launch accepting recent reservations. Last week, McMaster launched his plans to launch scaling South Carolina’s economy support up, convening a job force space up to converse him on subsequent steps and allowing companies beforehand deemed nonessential – shops, flea markets, florists, bookstores and music shops – to reopen.
Usa today South Dakota
Sioux Falls: Several organizations representing South Dakota meatpacking plant workers private signed onto a letter asking Gov. Kristi Noem to satisfy with representatives of plant workers earlier than Smithfield Meals reopens its Sioux Falls plant. Noem mentioned the meatpacking plant’s role in South Dakota, its shutdown and CDC suggestions with Smithfield officers over the closing month as a coronavirus outbreak of greater than 800 workers occurred at the plant, which has been closed for two weeks. President Donald Trump ordered crimson meat, pork and poultry processing plants to dwell launch on Tuesday below the Defense Manufacturing Act. The transfer came amid worries of a national meat shortage triggered by plants shutting down across the country due to coronavirus outbreaks. The letter, which develop into once sent to Noem’s office on Thursday, requested Noem to satisfy with representatives of the immigrants and refugee neighborhood, to boot to workers at Smithfield, earlier than the plant reopens. Representatives said they've to chat about workers’ concerns about “bad working stipulations” internal the plant and the blueprint one can offer protection to workers all the blueprint by technique of the pandemic. The letter develop into once signed by 10 organizations and 43 folks, including voice representatives from Like a flash City, Pierre and Dell Rapids. Noem said she has considered the letter and is looking into how one can facilitate the seek recordsdata from.
Usa today Tennessee
Nashville: Williamson Clinical Middle launched plans to resume performing elective surgeries on Could maybe maybe furthermore 4. The announcement is based entirely on Gov. Invoice Lee’s decision to decide on the suspension of elective surgeries beforehand in location to conserve resources all the blueprint by technique of the COVID-19 pandemic. Optional procedures will reopen in accordance to guidelines supplied by the Tennessee Sanatorium Association. To decrease publicity to the virus, the hospital will disguise all elective surgical treatment patients preoperatively. If patients are exhibiting symptoms in step with COVID-19, they're going to be requested to reschedule their route of. Any significant caregiver accompanying a affected person will furthermore endure the screening route of. The hospital said will continue it’s no-visitor policy with exiguous exceptions particular on a case-by-case foundation and will furthermore continue to evaluate all who enter the hospital.
Usa today Texas
Houston: Oil field products and providers huge Halliburton has closed down two sites in Texas and laid off 240 staff in Oklahoma based entirely on reduced customer exercise due to plummeting oil costs. Halliburton closed its Elmendorf facility and is relocating operations to field camps in southern Texas. The Houston-based entirely company is furthermore closing a Kilgore middle and transferring operations to Bossier City, Louisiana. The number of of us laid off at the Elmendorf role develop into once no longer at once accessible. But a Texas Team Commission stare said 233 workers were laid off at the Kilgore facility. The closures and layoffs are the result of the coronavirus pandemic, which has lower global query for oil and gasoline marking a historical industry downturn. On Tuesday, Halliburton laid off 240 staff from a provider middle in Duncan, Oklahoma, based entirely on the Oklahoma Office of Team Kind. The corporate laid off 350 personnel at the identical facility earlier this month. Halliburton reported shedding $1 billion all the blueprint by technique of the fundamental quarter and laying off 5,000 of us. The corporate has laid off nearly 1,500 staff from Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado and Louisiana in April, filings with voice officers disguise.
Usa today Utah
Salt Lake City: A federal resolve ordered a Utah man to discontinuance promoting silver products marketed as therapies for the recent coronavirus. U.S. District Think David Barlow issued a temporary restraining reveal Wednesday against 60-year-feeble Gordon Pedersen and his corporations, My Doctor Suggests LLC and GP Silver LLC, The Deseret News reported. U.S. Lawyer for Utah John Huber filed a civil criticism against Pedersen on Monday, pronouncing he fraudulently markets silver products as a remedy for COVID-19. “The defendants private made an enormous chance of false and misleading claims touting silver products as a preventative for COVID-19,” a observation from Huber’s office said. The misrepresentations include claims that “having silver in the bloodstream will ‘usher’ any coronavirus out of the body and that ‘it has been proven that alkaline structured silver will homicide all forms of viruses, (and) this is able to maybe maybe simply offer protection to of us from the coronavirus,’ ” the observation said. Pedersen and his corporations private promoted silver products as a remedy for diversified ailments including arthritis, diabetes, influenza, and pneumonia since about 2014, the civil criticism said. Prosecutors said in court paperwork that costs on the My Doctor Suggests net space dawdle up to $299.95 for a gallon of the silver resolution, a mixture of water, extract from silver wire and sodium bicarbonate, most regularly called baking soda. Court paperwork didn't listing an lawyer for Pederson and he didn't at once return an electronic mail message from the Connected Press looking out out comment.
Usa today Vermont
Montpelier: The voice will continue monitoring some web utter online visitors at its borders to gape what number of out-of-voice autos are coming into the voice amid the coronavirus outbreak, despite the indisputable truth that it is scaling support the distress. The monitoring started on April 1, with 38 high-precedence border crossings staffed, the Bennington Banner reported. As of Tuesday, the number had dropped to 30 monitored border crossings with Canada, Fresh Hampshire, Fresh York and Massachusetts. Before every little thing, Vermont Department of Transportation staff were monitoring web utter online visitors 24 hours a day, in 12-hour shifts, said Bonnie Davis, one in every of those workers. The shifts were reduced to seven hours, she said this week. The suggestions accrued would maybe be feeble to support settle the pause of measures to sluggish the unfold of the virus, Gov. Phil Scott said. A “number of of us” had complained that out-of-voice travelers were flooding Vermont, Scott said. Since the monitoring started, the voice has considered consistent crawl patterns, and nothing to indicated upticks or less compliance with the defend-home reveal or the crawl advisory, Scott’s spokeswoman Rebecca Kelley said in an electronic mail on Thursday. That led the governor to scale support this technique, she said.
Usa today Virginia
Falls Church: A resolve rejected a petition from a gym proprietor who sought to reopen his facilities despite an govt reveal requiring the closure of fitness facilities and diversified nonessential companies. At a listening to conducted by phone, Circuit Court Think Claude Worrell said Virginia law provides the governor mammoth authority to issue govt orders all the blueprint by technique of a public health emergency like the one triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic. Merrill Corridor, who owns a chain of Gold’s Gym franchises and diversified gyms, sued Gov. Ralph Northam in Culpeper County Circuit Court. He said the governor exceeded his authority and that the closures private him getting in a position to monetary raze. Virginia Solicitor Fashioned Toby Heytens argued that Northam’s orders are sensible smitten by the public health menace, and that greater than 40 diversified states private acted equally with regard to fitness facilities. Lawyer Fashioned Save Herring, whose office defended the governor in the case, said he'll continue to enhance “the Governor’s focused, efficient measures to sluggish the unfold of the virus.” The case is one in every of a couple of in most up-to-date weeks annoying diversified sides of Northam’s govt orders shutting down exercise in the voice to sluggish the unfold of the virus.
Usa today Washington
Wallula: A Tyson Fresh Meats crimson meat plant advance the Tri-Cities will remain closed for some time longer as county health officers await test results on all of the approximately 1,400 workers. Walla Walla County health officers reported Wednesday afternoon the coronavirus test results are aloof pending. “Once the test results are obtained, particular cases would maybe be handled by the county wherein the employee resides,” said the company, based entirely on the Tri-City Herald. As of Wednesday, 130 of us – staff and others linked to the plant outbreak – private examined particular. They include 120 residents of Benton or Franklin counties, nine in Walla Walla County and one in Umatilla County in Oregon. One Tyson employee, a 60-year-feeble butcher who lived in the Tri-Cities, has died
Usa today West Virginia
Charleston: Gov. Jim Justice on Thursday said he is lifting the statewide defend-home reveal subsequent week as half of his opinion to ease coronavirus restrictions. The Republican said a recent rule will dawdle into pause Monday encouraging of us to defend home nonetheless no longer requiring them to arrangement so. The transfer coincides with the reopening of little companies, exterior eating at restaurants and barbers on Monday. The governor is urgent forward with an aggressive reopening opinion unveiled earlier this week, despite the indisputable truth that he has loosened his checking out benchmark with out rationalization. Justice has based entirely his opinion on having the voice remain below a 3% particular test charge for three days, reversing a earlier perform of having recent cases decline for two straight weeks. Clay Marsh, a West Virginia College legitimate leading the voice’s virus response, has said he wished the two-week benchmark. A White Residence guiding opinion for states furthermore pushed a two-week criteria.
Usa today Wisconsin
Madison: Wisconsin’s extremely efficient chamber of commerce entreated legislators Thursday to undertake its commercial reopening opinion, telling an Assembly committee that Gov. Tony Evers’ defend-at-home reveal is crushing the economy and that the voice has the coronavirus below regulate. Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce Executive Vice President Scott Manley told the Assembly’s Republican-managed voice affairs committee that unemployment is skyrocketing and hospitals haven’t skilled an anticipated surge in coronavirus patients. Some areas of northern Wisconsin haven’t considered any infections. “The commercial affect of shutting down our economy and keeping it shut down has been entirely devastating, and it’s getting worse each day,” Manley said. Committee Democrats complained that Republicans orchestrated the listening to, extending invites to talk biggest to commercial representatives and ignoring workers and health care officers. Ranking. Christine Sinicki of Milwaukee said the opinion appears designed to diminish unemployment rolls by giving of us jobs fascinating they obtained’t dawdle to work because they’re too paralyzed of the virus. Evers’ defend-at-home reveal is space to bustle out on Could maybe maybe furthermore 26 nonetheless Republicans are rising impatient because the economy flounders. They’ve requested the voice Supreme Court to strike the reveal down; a ruling that will advance any day.
Usa today Wyoming
Casper: Lope and tourism experts in Wyoming private estimated a $1 million loss in lodging tax income by the pause of subsequent year because the coronavirus pandemic shuttered crawl plans across the country. The Natrona County Lope and Tourism Board develop into once supplied the estimate as one in every of three predictions for the county’s future tourism industry in accordance to earlier years recordsdata, the Casper Neatly-known particular person-Tribune reported. Brook Kaufman, who leads Search the advice of with Casper, the marketing and promotion entity of the board, supplied the board a worst, a sensible and a most efficient-case scenario for the next fiscal year. In the worst-case model, the tourism company could maybe maybe presumably stare a $1 million shortfall with a median resort occupancy of no greater than 40% earlier than Could maybe maybe furthermore 2021, at the least 25% lower than is considered for a well-liked summer, Kaufman said. In maybe the most efficient-case model, the county would lose $500,000.
Read or Part this epic: https://www.usatoday.com/epic/recordsdata/50-states/2020/04/30/turtle-derby-cleaner-subways-zoom-assembly-hacked-recordsdata-around-states/111646856/
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SECOND INDIAN CAVALRY BRIGADE As the Civil War progressed in Indian Territory, in late 1863 and early 1864 Maj. Gen. Samuel Bell Maxey, commander of the District of Indian Territory, recruited additional regiments, sought new sources of resupply, and reorganized his Confederate command into two brigades (a third was planned but never effected). The Second Indian Brigade, under Col. Tandy Walker, comprised primarily veteran soldiers drawn from numerous Choctaw and Chickasaw units. In late 1864, for example, it contained the Second Choctaw Regiment, led by Col. Simpson N. Folsom, the First Chickasaw Battalion, under Lt. Col. Lemuel N. Reynolds, the First Choctaw Battalion, commanded by Lt. Col. Jackson McCurtain, the First Choctaw and Chickasaw Battalion, under Lt. Col. James Riley, and Capt. George Washington's Reserve Squadron. The brigade participated in the Camden campaign in Arkansas and was commended for its performance at the Battle of Poison Spring in April 1864. During that engagement about 680 members of the command spearheaded an assault against the Union escort of a large supply train. The Federal troops were routed, an artillery battery was overrun, and about two hundred wagons captured. The assault began with shouting of the Indian rebel yell and an aggressive advance. Officers were concerned that the undersupplied and hungry Choctaw soldiers would halt to pillage the captured supplies, but they continued to fight until Texas units moved past them in pursuit of the fleeing Union forces. During the battle the Choctaws also visited retribution on black Union soldiers, whom they had faced with less success the previous summer at the Battle of Honey Springs. After the return of the Second Brigade to Indian Territory and a furlough of its members, the Choctaw troops reaffirmed their loyalty to the Confederacy and reenlisted for the duration of the war on June 23 at Camp Green in the Choctaw Nation. The Confederate supreme commander at Trans-Mississippi Department headquarters had the reenlistment resolutions printed and circulated to inspire loyalty among other Indian peoples in the region. In July the brigade participated in aggressive operations near Fort Smith and were present at the capture of a Union outpost at Massard Prairie on July 27. Offensive activity thereafter was limited until the early fall, when runners were dispatched to bring in all absentees and have them report to their regiments. Once mobilized, however, the command to some extent was still inadequately prepared to enter the field. An ordnance officer's report concluded that the troops were poorly armed and had few guns that were "entirely serviceable." The First Choctaw Regiment was armed with an assortment of weapons, but most members carried Texas rifles. The report complained that these latter firearms "are nothing more than a cheat, badly put together and very unreliable, being liable, a great number, to burst." Other soldiers carried sporting rifles in ill repair, short-range, double-barreled shotguns, or antiquated muskets. During the Second Battle of Cabin Creek in September 1864, Walker's brigade advanced to the Canadian River to cover the extraction of Watie's and Gano's commands from north of the Arkansas River after their successful expedition. Little activity occurred afterwards until the spring of the next year. Finally, in May 1865 the brigade was called one last time into camp. Scouting parties were dispatched to monitor river crossings, and other details spent time bringing in cattle from surrounding areas for use as subsistence for military personnel and for civilian refugees clustered in camps along the Red River. The Second Indian Brigade dissipated shortly thereafter, following the signing of a temporary treaty with U.S. officials by Choctaw principal chief Peter Pitchlynn. Info courtesy: Oklahoma Historical Society Photo of Cherokee Braves flag courtesy Wilson's Creek National Battlefield, National Park Service, Springfield, Mo. About the photo:   This flag was carried by Colonel Stand Watie’s Cherokee Mounted Rifles; the body of the flag is the First National pattern flag of the Confederate States; the canton is blue with eleven white stars in a circle, surrounding five red stars representing the Five Civilized Tribes (Cherokee, Creek, Choctaw, Chickasaw and Seminole); the large red star in the center represents the Cherokee Nation. “Cherokee Braves” is lettered in red in the center of the white stripe. The 1st Cherokee Mounted Rifles was organized in July 1861, under the command of Colonel John Drew, and consisted of full-blood Cherokees. The 2nd Cherokee Mounted Rifles was organized under the command of Colonel Stand Waite, and consisted of Cherokees of mixed blood. Due to the wording of the constitution of the Confederate States of America, a military unit could only be commissioned in one of the states that was part of the Confederacy. Arkansas being the closet to the Indian Territory, the units were formed under the State of Arkansas. The 1st Cherokee Mounted Rifles was first formed as the 1st Arkansas Mounted Volunteers [Rifles]. A portion of Drew’s regiment deserted in late 1861; the majority of the remainder deserted following the Confederate defeat at the Battle of Fort Wayne in October 1862. The remaining members of Drew’s regiment combined with Waite’s and were reorganized as the 1st Regiment Cherokee Mounted Rifles; during the Civil War Waite’s regiment participated in twenty-seven major engagements and numerous skirmishes. Most of his activities utilized guerilla warfare tactics. The flag was one of two captured by Lieutenant David Whittaker of Company B, 10th Regiment Kansas Volunteer Infantry at Locust Grove, Cherokee Nation, Indian Territory, on July 3, 1862.
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AN ANGEL OF MERCY BECOMES THE WIDOW OF THE SOUTH                                                                                                                                                          I just returned in December from visiting the historic Carnton Plantation in Franklin Tennessee. While only one spot on the bloody battlefield of Franklin Tennessee on November 30th 1864, the story of that one bloody night is so incredibly horrific, that it defies the imagination. After the five hours of intense carnage and desperate hand to hand combat their would be roughly 10000 souls who were either killed, wounded or captured.                                                                                                                                                                                              Sarah North Martin was a resident of nearby Columbia, Tennessee just south of Franklin in November 1864 as both the Union and Confederate armies swept through the town during Southern General John Bell Hood’s “invasion” of Tennessee. Sarah, the wife of prominent local judge, William P. Martin, was taken by surprise on November 24, 1864 when two brigades of Union infantry under Brigadier General Jacob Dolson Cox Jr. commandeered ground on the Mount Pleasant Road. Before they were in position Union cavalrymen came hastily down the gravel road, fleeing from the brigades of Lieutenant General Nathan Bedford Forrest’s Confederate cavalry. Cox had three artillery batteries along with his troops on both sides of the road. More Confederate troops later arrived and sought to displace the Yankees. Sarah Martin’s thoughts as she and her family escaped, are part of a remarkable letter she sent to a relative:
   The fighting commenced at our house, which is situated about 50 yards from the road on a high hill. I dare not write the particulars. Suffice it to say the Yankees had possession of our home & forced us to leave. We went to Mr. Martin’s fathers’ [i.e. George M. Martin], about 800 yards nearer town, taking with us the bedding of three beds & most of our wearing apparel. We were between the fires of the two contending parties for two days, & five shells struck [his] father’s house while [we] were in it, until we had to go down to a brick milk cellar in the yard, the minie balls falling on the roof like hail. The wounded Yankees [kept] passing through the yard, bleeding & screaming with pain. We could hear the yells of the Rebels as they charged & drove the Yankees toward town. At last, when the fight was evidently beyond us, I ran out quickly to avoid the sharpshooters, & entering the [George M. Martin] house, found Gen. [Colonel Edmund Winchester] Rucker’s staff, who showed us every courtesy. Each officer took charge of one of us, & led us in the line of the house, over to [our] home; procured an ambulance and sent us down to Gen. Pillow’s. [this was “Clifton,” four miles west of Columbia, the home of Brigadier General Gideon Johnson Pillow, who was married to her husband’s sister (Mary Martin Pillow)] Gen. [Brigadier General Stephen Dill] Lee had possession of our house, & artillery was planted in several places on the hill. The Yankees [had] sacked our house, & set fire to it, but Forrest came in time to extinguish the flames, before any serious damage was done. They [Yankees] threw our wheat into the pond, burned piles of bed clothes & books, & threw our china all over the yard, took the most of twenty-two hogs, and killed nineteen shoats, took all our horses, etc. In short I cannot enumerate our loss, or tell you how the Yankees treated us. We have ever since been living on biscuit[s] & milk, without a parcel of meat, for we have no money to buy with. You can have no conception of the oppression, & we dare not murmur. Even yesterday they came & took the only animal we had, a mule. Judge M. [i.e. her husband Judge William P. Martin] walked to town to day in the rain to try to get it back, but was unsuccessful, & now we have nothing to plow with, or to haul wood, for we had been driven to hauling wood in a cart. We are very anxious to sell & move to Texas… All our negroes ran off during the fight, & went with the Yankees in their retreat to Nashville. Some of them want to come back, but we will not receive them. The Lord has mercifully preserved our health, & I hope will bring us safely through these troubled times.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     Just six days later both armies raced towards Nashville for a final bloody showdown. The Union Army was delayed in Franklin due to the swollen Harpeth River. They were ordered to hold their position and dig defensive fortifications as a purely protective measure until they received pontoons from Nashville to move men and equipment across. They did not believe that a major battle would ensue their. But Confederate Lt. General John Bell Hood had other ideas. Seeing the Union Army split and penned against the swollen stream, he decided to launch an all out offensive. General Jacob Dolson on this day would awake Fountain Branch Carter at 4:30 AM to inform him that his home was being commandeered. As the likely spectre of a major battle grew more likely, the town residents hunkered down to bear a fear and horror no human being should ever have to experience. The following are a list of eyewitness accounts of that cold terrible November evening in 1864:                                                                                                                                               "The Men seemed to realize that our charge on the works would attend with heavy slaughter, and several of them came to me bringing watches, jewelry, letters and photographs, asking me to take charge of them and send them to their families if they were killed. I had to decline as I was going with them and would be exposed to the same danger. I was vividly recalled to me the next morning, for I believe every one who made this request of me was killed." Chaplain James H. M'Neilly Quarles Brigade                                                                                                                                                                                                       "When Conrads brigade took up its advanced postion we all supposed it would be only temporary, but soon an orderly came along the line with instructions for the company commanders, and he told me that the orders were to hold the postion to the last man, and to have my sergeants fix bayonets and to instruct my company that any man, not wounded, who should attempt to leave the line without orders, would be shot or bayonetted by the sergeants." Capt John K. Shellenberger 64th Ohio Inf.                                                                                                                                                                                                                   "When I regained consciousness I was laying in the ditch . . of running water and could feel the loose dirt fall in on me when Yankee bullets would strike the top of the ditch . . I became thirsty but had fallen on my canteen but could not get to it... I drank the water in the ditch and it was cold and good. I knew my sight was destroyed. I placed my hands under my forehead to keep my face from above water .. and fell asleep" Lt. Mintz 5th Arkansas, Govans Brigade                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   I saw a Confederate soldier, close to me thrust one of our men through with a bayonet and before he could draw his weapon from the ghastly wound his brains were scattered on all of us that stood near, by the butt of a musket swung with terrific force by some big fellow whom I could not recognize in the grim dirt and smoke.. As I glanced hurredly around and heard the dull thuds, I turned from the sickening sight and glad to hide the vision in work with a hatchet for I had broken my sword. Col Wolf 64th Ohio Conrad's Brigade                                                                                                                                                                         "The slaughtering could be seen down the line as far as the Columbia and Franklin Pike, and where the works crossed the pike . . . Our troops were killed by whole platoons, Our front line of battle seemed to have been cut down by the first discharge for in many places they were lying on their faces in almost as good order as if they had lain down on purpose; but no such order prevailed among the dead who fell in making the attempt to surmount the Cheval-de-frise, for hanging on the long spikes of this obstruction could be seen the mangled and torn remains of many of our soldiers who had been pierced by hundreds of minie balls and grape shot ... The ditch was full of dead men and we had to stand and sit upon them. The bottom of it from side to side was covered with blood to the depth of shoe soles" James M. Copley 49th Tennessee Quarles' Brigade                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                " as evening came on the neighboors began to come in . . and we went down in the cellar. Grandpa had already put rolls of rope in the windows. . to keep the bullets out. The negroes crouched down in the dining room, and all the children & grand children and neighbors in the hall cellar, and granpa walked back and forth and watched out the window." "The first sound of the firing and the booming of cannons, we children all sat around our mothers and cried." Alice M. Nichol age 8 Tod Carters neice                                                                                                                                                                                                   "The mangled bodies of the dead rebels weere piled up as high as the mouth of the embrasure and the gunners said that repeatedly when the lanyard was pulled the embrasure was filled with men crowding forward to get in who were literally blown from the mouth of the cannon. Only one rebel got past the muzzle of the gun and one of the gunners snatched up a pick and killed him with that. the ditch was piled promiscuously with the dead and badly wounded and heads arms and legs were sticking out in almost every conceivable manner. The ground near the ditch was filled with the moans of the wounded and the pleadings of some of those who saw me for water and for help were heartrending." Capt John K. Shellenberger 64th Ohio Inf. Conrad's Brigade                                                                                                                                                                                                                                "Nothing could be heard but the wails of the wounded and the dying, some calling for their friends, some praying to be relieved of their awful suffering and thousands in the deep agonizing throes of death filled the air with mouthful sounds and dying groans" Capt. Hickey 1st Missouri Cockrells Brigade                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                "I could hear the wounded calling for help in every direction. I again wanted water and thought I would again drink from the water in the ditch, biut this time it tasted of blood and I managed to get my canteen from under me and drank from it." Lt. Mintz 5th Arkansas, Govans Brigade (who has been blinded)                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            "I stood on the parapet just before midnight and saw all that could be seen. I saw and heard all that the eyes, or my rent soul contemplate in such an awful environment. It was a spectacle to chill the stoutest heart...the wounded shivering in the chilled November air; the heartrending cries of the desperately wounded and the prayers of the dying filled me with an anguish that language cannot describe. From that hour I have hated war. Colonel Isaac Sherwoood 111th Ohio Infantry                                                                                                                                                                                                                   "I remember seeing one poor fellow, sitting up and leaning back against something whose lower jaw had been cut off by a grape shot, and his tongue and under lip were hanging down on his breast. I knelt down and asked if I could do anything for him. He had a little piece of paper and an envelope. He wrote: No, John Bell Hood will be in New York before three weeks." Teenager Hardin Figuers, Franklin resident moments after he emerged from shelter.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            "God forgive me for ever wanting to see or hear a battle! You had to look twice as you picked your way among the bodies to see which were dead and which were alive and often a dead man would be lying partly on a live one, or the reverse. And the groans, the sickening smell of blood! I noticed while wandering along the earthworks that all or nearly all of the Union soldiers were shot in the forehead. In front, the ground was covered with bodies and pools of blood. the cotton in the old cotton gin was shot out all over the ground. Our Union soldiers had been stripped of everything but their shirts and drawers, but the Confederate soldiers could not be blamed much for that, for they were half clothed, half barefoot and many of them bareheaded." Carrie Snyder; a Union sympathizer who happen to be visitig friends in Franklin at the time.                                                                                                                                        "In this yard and in that garden, I could walk from fence to fence on bodies, mostly those of Confederates. In trying to clean up, I scraped together a half a bushel of brains right around the house, and the whole place was dyed in blood. Nothing in the shape of horse, mule, jack, nor jinny was left in this neighborhood. In fact I remember it was not untilChristmas, twenty five days afterwards, that I was enabled to borrow a yoke of oxen, and I spent the whole of that Christmas Day hauling seventeen dead horses from this yard." Moscow Carter: Brother of Captain Tod Carter recalling what he saw upon emerging from The Carter House root cellar.                                                                                                                                                                                                 "Amid the hundreds of dead and wounded Confederates who lay thickly scattered over the field in our front....there was one lying in front of my company, only a few distant feet crying "Mother you were right, you'll never see your boy again. I'm dying out here in the dark....I'm bleeding to death. "The boy's voice became gradually weaker and weaker until we heard it no more......One of the company's new recruits, a mere boy in years, was crying as though his heart was broken. He too was the only son of a widowed mother.": An unknown officer of the 63rd Indiana.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  The carnage was so great throughout the town that any available structure was used as a hospital. To put this into proper perspective, for every single resident who resided in Franklin Tennessee (pop. approx. 900) there were 7 casualties. The Carnton house quickly became a field hospital for Confederate wounded. It was a ghastly scene of pain , torment, and suffering. The McGavocks tended for as many as 300 soldiers inside Carnton alone, though at least 150 died the first night. John and Carrie McGavock and their 9 yr old daughter Hattie and 5 yr old son Winder helped tend the over 300 men who lay throughout the home. Soon the outbuildings were filled with hundreds more until the only place to lay them were in the yard. After the battle, on December 1, Union forces under Maj. Gen. John M. Schofield evacuated toward Nashville, leaving their dead, including several hundred Union soldiers, and their wounded who were unable to walk. The residents of Franklin were then faced with the task of burying over 2,500 soldiers, most being Confederates.The following are some of the first hand accounts of the nightmarish eve at Carnton:                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             "Every room was filled, every bed had two poor, bleeding fellows, every spare space, niche, and corner under the stairs, in the hall, everywhere -0 but one room for her own family. Our Doctors were deficient in bandages, and she began by giving her old linen, then her towels, amd napkins, then her sheets and table clothes, then her husband's shirts and her own undergarment. During all this time the surgeons plied their deadful work amid the sighs and moans and death rattle. Yet amid it all, this nobel woman. . . was very active and constantly at work. During all the night neither she nor any of the household slept, but dispensed tea and coffee and such stimulants as she had and that two with her own hands.. she walked from room to room from man to man her very skirt stained with blood." Capt. William D. Gale - Lt. Gen Alexander P. Stewart's staff                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    "Give me forty grains of morphine' he called out all through the night. 'Give me forty grains of morphine and let me die!' 'Oh Can't' I Die?' ' My Poor Wife and Child!'' My Poor Wife and Child!' "OMG ! Can you get the surgeons to administer some drug that will relieve me of this torture" I did try through my appeals were in vain. " Cold presperation gathered in knots on his brow and of course (he) knew that death was inevitable. . . "I went down the steps and far beneath the silence of the stars to escape his piteous prayers." C. E. Merrill Adjutant General , Brig. Gem Scott's Staff                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  All of the Confederate dead were buried as nearly as possible by states, close to where they fell, and wooden headboards were placed at each grave with the name, company and regiment painted or written on them." Many of the Union soldiers would later be re-interred in 1865 at the Stones River National Cemetery in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. Over the next eighteen months many of the markers either rotted or were used for firewood, and the writing was disappearing. To preserve the graves, John and Carrie McGavock donated 2 acres of their property to be designated as an area for the Confederate dead to be re-interred. The citizens of Franklin raised the funding and the soldiers were exhumed and reburied in the McGavock Confederate Cemetery for the sum of $5.00 per soldier. A team led by George Cuppett took responsibility for the reburial of 1,481 soldiers. The names and identities of the soldiers were recorded in a cemetery record book by Cuppett, which soon fell into the care of Carrie McGavock. It is said that for years following the war visitors would knock on her door requesting the book to see if they could find closure from the loss of a loved whom they never knew of their fate. Carrie never failed to fulfill those requests. Carrie McGavock spent nearly 40 years of her life maintaining the McGavock Confederate Cemetery. In her later years she also would help to raise orphaned children, many of which were created by that bloody war. It was the most sincere expression of the heart and compassion she personified for so many years. Carrie died in 1905 and rests beside her husband, John, within sight of the nearly 1,500 Confederate soldiers who they protected and watched over for so many years.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    The mere thought of young children having to witness so much blood and suffering should draw deep emotions from even the coldest of souls. This was truly an experience where nightmares were born. Harriet (Hattie), Young McGavock was only nine-years-old on the day of the Battle of Franklin. That afternoon and night, she and her younger brother, five year old Winder, and their parents, John and Carrie, watched as their home became a hospital and mortuary. Hattie and Winder worked alongside their parents throughout the night, helping where they could as the battered bodies poured in to the house. The next morning, the bodies of four Confederate generals, who had been killed in the fighting, were brought to the McGavock home and laid side-by-side on the back porch. They were Patrick Cleburne, John Adams, Hiram Granbury, and Otho Strahl.
In Hattie McGavock Cowan's own words over 50 years later:
I can still sense the odor of smoke and blood. I recall how the startled cattle came home from the pastures, how restless they became, sniffing and excitedly running about the place, bewildered by the smell of the battlefield. I can still see swarms of soldiers coming with their dead comrades and lying them down by the hundreds under our spacious shade trees and all about the grounds. I shall carry those awful pictures in my mind down to the day of my death. I was only nine-years-old then, but it is all as vivid and as real as if it happened only yesterday. I overheard a man at Carnton that night say he estimated over 300 wounded were crammed in to our home. There we were in this ocean of suffering — mother, father, Winder and me — going from man-to-man doing what we could. Mother ordered the bed sheets and linens torn into bandages. Those ran out so, she told the medical attendants to use her tablecloths, towels, and father’s shirts. At one point, she used her own undergarments, put to use mending the myriad of wounds. Those who saw her were awestruck by her selfless actions. Mother never ceased in her work that long and dreadful night. She handed out tea and coffee and went from room to room making sure there was nothing else she could do. William D. Gale, of Gen. A.P. Stewart’s staff, said mother was so involved in affairs that her skirt was “stained in blood.” I remember it vividly. Some of the soldiers recuperated at our home until June, nearly seven months after the battle. There was a lot of bad, but there was a lot of good. You sometimes see the best in people under these circumstances. We just went to work and did what we could. I stuck by my mother. Chaplains, doctors, and agents of the U.S. Christian commission showed up over the coming weeks and months.
What happened to Hattie McGavock Cowan?
She married a Confederate veteran named George Cowan at Carnton on January 3, 1884. They lived in close proximity to Carnton for many years in a home known as Windermere. George died in 1919. Hattie lived until 1931 and for many old Franklin residents she was the last living connection to the Battle of Franklin. She is buried with George at Mt. Hope Cemetery in Franklin. Winder Mcgavock took over Carnton after his mother's death in 1905. He died just two years later.                                                                                While touring Carnton (which would cost over 10 million in modern day currency) visitors can still see the blood stains in the wooden floors from over 150 years ago. The operating table used by surgeons was set up "rather ironically" in the nursery. It consisted of two saw horses and a barn door. It is still on display their today. Hattie Mcgowan quite vividly retold of her memories of that bloody night in an interview she gave shortly before her death in 1931 recalling the smell of blood and powder smoke and the sounds of the intense suffering of the wounded. One can only imagine the nightmares these two children experienced for years afterwards.
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markerhunter · 7 years
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Summary Statement, 2nd Quarter, 1863 – Missing batteries
Earlier this week, I finished the transcription of the second quarter, 1863 summary statements with a pair of entries for California under the “Miscellaneous” heading.  In the past, I’ve given my own “miscellaneous” listing to cover batteries which were not mentioned in the summary. But since the clerks of 1863 have secured that heading, I’ll have to consider other options.
For this quarter, with…
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civilwarren · 7 years
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SEPTEMBER 15, 1864 -- TWO CONFEDERATE GENERALS AND THEIR RAGTAG FORCE CONTINUE THEIR QUEST FOR THE WAGON TRAIN
The Confederates successfully cross the Arkansas River about six miles from the Creek Agency. The river was so swollen from recent rains that it became necessary to pack over all of the artillery ammunition by hand and on horseback. It was difficult work. It took more than six hours for the Confederate force to finally cross the river after the men had to deal with high water and quicksand.
A lone Union scout approached the river and observed the large rebel force at the ford. He was seen by the Confederates and fired upon, but escaped.
Speed was now imperative. Within a few hours, the Union commander at Fort Gibson would know the Southern force was north of the Arkansas River. The Confederate force makes camp just 11 miles north and west of Fort Gibson at a site Stand Watie called in his report, "Camp Pleasant."
Gen. Watie has under his command the 1st and 2nd Cherokee, the 1st and Second Creek regiments, plus a battalion of Seminoles under the command of Col. John Jumper. Gen. Gano has the 29th, 30th and 31st Texas Cavalry, plus Martin's regiment. He also has Capt. Sylvanus Howell's Texas Battery with six guns -- two of them are rifled parrots.
The two generals have more than 2,000 men just itching for a fight.
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