1975, Klan Information Director on Campus: This Date in History

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"On January 4, 1969, conjoined twins Daisy and Violet Hilton were found dead in their home in Charlotte. The 60-year-old women most likely died of complications of the Hong Kong flu. Born in Brighton, England in 1908, the twins were unofficially adopted by their biological mother’s midwife, Mary Hilton, when the mother rejected the children. From the time that they were infants, they were exhibited by Hilton and her daughter. Soon Hilton’s son-in-law, Myer Myers, became their agent and exhibited them in the United States. They were kept in insolation when not being exhibited on midways across the country.

By 1931, the sisters had enough and sued for independence and damages. They won a settlement of $100,000, a fraction of what they had earned. They performed in vaudeville productions and, in 1932, they appeared in the film Freaks. They published their autobiography The Lives and Loves of the Hilton Sisters in 1942. After World War II, the popularity of sideshows diminished, and they toured drive-in theaters in support of the film Chained for Life in which they acted in 1950. Their manager abandoned them in Charlotte, where they settled and worked as produce clerks in a local grocery store."


It’s interesting that there were two sets of famous conjoined twins who eventually called NC home. Cheng and Eng Bunker being the others. Cheng and Eng also died n January.

Cheng and Eng had a very fascinating life. Despite their physical condition, nationality, and race— all things that one would think would have people view them as second-class citizens or even less than human in the mid-19th century— they went on to become very wealthy and prominent citizens in Wilkes and Surry Counties. I was shocked to learn that they owned a number of slaves.
 
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Crime paid in this case: #OTD in 1975 David ‘Carbine’ Williams (b.1900-Cumberland) died. Convicted of 2-degree murder, in prison workshop he designed guns & drew the attention of Colt. Pardoned by the Governor in ‘29, in ‘40 he created M-1 Carbine-8 Million Allies carried the gun in WW2. Williams became a rich man through his inventions. “Carbine” Williams, Inventor and Inmate
 
Not really linked to this date but an interesting story about a woman who just died: in 1935, she was a Jewish baby in Austria and someone entered a photo of her in an Aryan baby contest. Her photo won and her parents were in fear of discovery. They kept it secret for years.

 
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Crime paid in this case: #OTD in 1975 David ‘Carbine’ Williams (b.1900-Cumberland) died. Convicted of 2-degree murder, in prison workshop he designed guns & drew the attention of Colt. Pardoned by the Governor in ‘29, in ‘40 he created M-1 Carbine-8 Million Allies carried the gun in WW2. Williams became a rich man through his inventions. “Carbine” Williams, Inventor and Inmate
The standard issue rifle for the US in WWII was the M1 Garand. The M1 Carbine was issued to NC0’s officers and support personnel. The Carbine did not have the range of the Garand, so it was not the weapon of choice for the average infantry soldier. Still, the Carbine played a significant role in our victory in the war.
 
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Until 2015 I had a subscription to ‘The Progressive Farmer Magazine.’ My father held one until he died and my mother continued the subscription until she passed in 2012. She also carried The Progressive Farmer’s much more successful companion publication for women, ‘Southern Living.’ I’m pretty sure that my Grandpa Dunn kept ‘TPF’ most of his life as well, certainly his elder years. I loved it as a boy for the beautiful glossy photographs of cows, horses, and oh-so-familiar scenes of the southern countryside. It mirrored the life I was living in very attractive and alluring imagery.

Deddy surely gained from the articles about feed, fencing, and farm futures. It was only many years later that I learned that there had once been a political side to the magazine. It was a bit of a ‘doh’ Moment frankly - after all, right there it was in the title - Progressive. The politics carried by ‘TPF’ was not progressive in 100% modern terms. Yes, it stood for education, healthcare, science, good roads, and investment in infrastructure, but there was also at times a Boll Weevil Democrat side to the promoted policies. It was, for the time it took political stands, essentially segregationist for years with a transition to ‘gradualist’ on issues of race.

Clarence Poe was the ‘Progressive Farmer’s’ editor from 1899 until 1954. I believe that sometime in the late 1950s the political edge receded and the magazine backed away from that early 20th century Southern Democrat worldview. Indeed, at that time it left behind the political altogether. Whether ideology was in play or not I suspect there was a little homeland of my birth partisanship in the love of the magazine in #DeepChatham. You see, Poe, who became the editor at 18 and owner at 22, was from Chatham County. Born and raised near Gulf, Poe began working on the ‘PF’ at 16. He turned down a scholarship to Wake Forest College at 18 to run the magazine.

For over half a century Poe, self-taught and a natural writer, was one of the most influential voices in the region. Imagine for a moment that he promoted cooperative marketing, much in the mold of the old Southern Farmer’s Alliance, and the label of Progressive is more understandable. Indeed historical context is important to understanding how the working class of the South found New Deal policies, also cooperative and collectivist in so many facets, attractive.

I think on what might have been had white people in the region not been hoodwinked into the continuing embrace of racism against their own best working class interests. But that’s an old, old song sung very effectively by Southern elites from the antebellum period of enslavement and beyond. Sadly that tune resonates far too loudly for far too many white workers to this day so they fall for the Populist message of a New York City millionaire like a bale of hay.

Poe also wrote books. His sense of humor was wry and quite rural southern — evidenced by the title of his autobiography, ‘My First 80 Years.’ His growing-up environment was a key part of his identity and approach to understanding the world. He also penned, ‘Southerner in Europe: being chiefly some old world lessons for new world needs as set forth in fourteen letters of foreign travel,’ True Tales of the South at War,’ and “Where Half the World Is Waking Up.”

It was #OnThisDay (Jan.10) in 1881 that Clarence Poe, the epitome of what author Rob Christiansen has dubbed, ‘The Paradox of Tar Heel Politics’ was born. https://www.ncdcr.gov/.../editor-of-the-progressive...
 
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January 15, 1929 is the actual day of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s birth. Yes, he’d be 96 years old today if an assassin’s bullet had not struck him down in 1968. Let's visit with the Historical Record. Fan of Jesse Helms now or ever? Then here are the words of the senator from Monroe: "I think most Americans would feel that the participation of Marxists in the planning and direction of any movement taints that movement at the outset . . . . Others may argue that Dr. King's thought may have been merely Marxist in its orientation. But the trouble with that is that Marxism-Leninism, the official philosophy of communism, is an action-oriented revolutionary doctrine. And Dr. King's action-oriented Marxism, about which he was cautioned by the leaders of this country, including the president at that time, is not compatible with the concepts of this country." Helms spoke those words on the floor of the United States Senate on October 3, 1983 as he spoke in opposition to the creation of a holiday to honor Dr. King.

Asked before television cameras to say whether he considered King a "Marxist-Leninist," as he had suggested earlier, Helms at first demurred, then said, "But the old saying--if it has webbed feet, if it has feathers and it quacks, it's a you-know-what." Asked again later if he considered King a Marxist, Helms said, "I don't think there is any question about that."

When asked if his attack on King would cause him political trouble in North Carolina, where he faced a tough race for reelection in the coming year, Helms said bluntly, "I'm not going to get any black votes, period." https://www.washingtonpost.com/.../helms_stalls_kings_day...

There is considerable more context and fact at the link, including news of Robert Dole and Arlen Spector’s opposition to Helms’ words and actions. Dole and Spector, like Helms, Republican Senators, very openly disagreed with North Carolina’s “Senator No” on this occasion. The bill had already passed in The House of Representatives by a 338-90 tally. The Day of Commemoration for King eventually passed 78-22 in the Senate and it was signed into law (this was a veto-proof margin but Reagan had, by then, abandoned his objections). It should be remembered that both those vote counts (House and Senate) included bipartisan resistance to the holiday. The bill had also been voted down on multiple occasions in Congress since soon after Dr. King’s assassination in 1968.

One has to wonder if a bill honoring Dr. King would pass today? To be sure there is a great deal of re-writing and sanitizing of the story of the obstacles thrown up by Conservatives to honoring Dr. King and in truth, Senator Helms was right to find Dr. King’s message as one that threatened his Rightist worldview. What is unclear is whether or not there are MORE Helms-Like hearts and minds in the GOP today, or less. Is it unclear to you?
 
The standard issue rifle for the US in WWII was the M1 Garand. The M1 Carbine was issued to NC0’s officers and support personnel. The Carbine did not have the range of the Garand, so it was not the weapon of choice for the average infantry soldier. Still, the Carbine played a significant role in our victory in the war.
My Dad, a WW2 vet, said of the M1 Carbine, that you were better off throwing it at someone than shooting it at someone. But take that with a grain of salt, as he also praised the virtues of a
1903 Springfield bolt action rifle over a M1 Garand rifle. He bragged about shooting at and hitting targets at 1,000 yards on the shooting range with the 1903 Springfield. But when pressed, he admitted that it was uncommon to engage targets at 1,000 yards on South Pacific Islands.
 
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#OnThisDay (January 16) in 1975 UNC Students prevented Knights of the Ku Klux Klan “Information Director” David Duke from speaking at a Union Forum event in Memorial Hall. Three hundred (approx) majority African American demonstrators lined the outer aisles and chanted, booed, and clapped for an hour until Duke relinquished the podium mainly unheard. “Power to the People” and the repurposed standard, “Go to Hell Duke” were among the cheers hurled in the professional racist and white supremacist’s direction. Outside Memorial Hall about 20 persons supporting The United Farmworkers picketed the event. Student Body President Marcus Williams, along with university officials, among them Dean Donald Boulton, attempted to convince the opposition crowd to permit Duke to speak unmolested. They harkened to a history of free speech on campus. The legal term “Hate Speech” would not enter our discourse over the First Amendment right for another decade at least. Of course today “Hate Speech” has become normalized and deployed by an entire segment of our political scheme.

Duke was but 24 years old in 1975 and only beginning his national campaign to promote ‘organized racism.’ He spoke later that same night to some 30 students invited ‘by application’ at a reception in the Morehead Building. While professing his support of free speech Duke added that on other campuses where he had spoken unbothered, an admission price had been charged. His message in Morehead was anti-Israel, and claimed a Jewish manipulation of the media that threatened the ideals of “Western Christian Civilization.”

Duke, now 75, was once “America’s most well-known racist,” a title now eclipsed by a trump administration official with whom there is a different kind of Duke connection. Indeed, looking back 51 years to this day at Carolina it is with a heavy-heart that we must admit the degree to which the Klan and David Duke’s dream of reconstructing white supremacy and raising up anti-semitism, xenophobia, Protestant nationalism, and emboldening racist acts and turning his message into public policy has succeeded despite the loud outcry from those 1970s Cassandras assembled on a chilly Thursday evening in January in “The Southern Part of Heaven.”
 
My Dad, a WW2 vet, said of the M1 Carbine, that you were better off throwing it at someone than shooting it at someone. But take that with a grain of salt, as he also praised the virtues of a
1903 Springfield bolt action rifle over a M1 Garand rifle. He bragged about shooting at and hitting targets at 1,000 yards on the shooting range with the 1903 Springfield. But when pressed, he admitted that it was uncommon to engage targets at 1,000 yards on South Pacific Islands.
My grandpa, who just passed away Dec 28th at 100yrs old, was a WWII vet and he was given 5 (I think) M1 Carbines at the end of the war by the Army. Several years ago he gave the very last one he had to my oldest son who is now a Marine. Everything is orignial and in pristine condition including the instruction booklet, 2 mags, rifle bag/case, and the brass casings for the rounds to be refilled. I shot it a year or two ago and it was awesome! After that I cleaned it and put it back into the display case I bought for it.
 
Dolley Madison of the Gate City.
Back when I was a student at Guilford College there was a bar called Dolley’s (obviously named after Dolley Madison) on the other side Friendly Avenue that we Guilford students would frequent. We loved the Tuesday specials of $2 pitchers of Red Wolf and all-you-can-eat tacos. At the time, the clientele was an interesting combination of college kids and blue collar folks.

It was at Dolley’s where I witnessed Dean Smith pick up his 877th win to become college basketball’s all-time winningest coach in an NCAAT win against Chauncey Billups and the Colorado Buffaloes. The game was played just down the road in Lawrence Joel Coliseum. The morning before, the Tar Heel basketball team actually came to the Guilford College gym for practice. Several fellow students who were working out at the time caught some of the practice and they said Vince Carter put on a show.

When I watched that NCAAT game at Dolley’s I was actually on a lunch break during a workshop we had that day for class taught by Pat Callair. Despite being in the middle of a work shop, a friend and I still drank a pitcher of beer with lunch as we watched the game.

As an aside, I liked Pat Callair a lot. She actually wrote one of my letters of recommendation when I applied to law school. One person who did not like her was Adam Lucas (of goheels.com fame). He was in one of the classes I had with her, and on the first day he got into an argument with her after taking offense to something she said. He was stewing for the rest of the class and left the class very agitated. He dropped the class after the first day.
 
Back when I was a student at Guilford College there was a bar called Dolley’s (obviously named after Dolley Madison) on the other side Friendly Avenue that we Guilford students would frequent. We loved the Tuesday specials of $2 pitchers of Red Wolf and all-you-can-eat tacos. At the time, the clientele was an interesting combination of college kids and blue collar folks.

It was at Dolley’s where I witnessed Dean Smith pick up his 877th win to become college basketball’s all-time winningest coach in an NCAAT win against Chauncey Billups and the Colorado Buffaloes. The game was played just down the road in Lawrence Joel Coliseum. The morning before, the Tar Heel basketball team actually came to the Guilford College gym for practice. Several fellow students who were working out at the time caught some of the practice and they said Vince Carter put on a show.

When I watched that NCAAT game at Dolley’s I was actually on a lunch break during a workshop we had that day for class taught by Pat Callair. Despite being in the middle of a work shop, a friend and I still drank a pitcher of beer with lunch as we watched the game.

As an aside, I liked Pat Callair a lot. She actually wrote one of my letters of recommendation when I applied to law school. One person who did not like her was Adam Lucas (of goheels.com fame). He was in one of the classes I had with her, and on the first day he got into an argument with her after taking offense to something she said. He was stewing for the rest of the class and left the class very agitated. He dropped the class after the first day.


I went to Dolley's a few times in the early 1980s when I was dating a woman at Guilford. She actually arranged for me to give a talk there about the wars in Central America as well. Were you there at that time?
 
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