On This Day in 1875, Carolina Reopens: This Date in History

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What I remebered about Hardee's was that back in the day it was the preferred stop when dining out of town on a school or church trip. Armed with two quarters, you could get: (a) a burger, fries, and a Pepsi or (b) a burger and a milkshake. Two quarters would NOT get you a burger, fries, and a milkshake. That took two quarters and either a dime or a nickle, but I was never given (or had) more than two quarters.
 
Jerry Richardson and his partner, Charlie Bradshaw, got involved with Hardee’s very early and launched Spartan Foods, here in Spartanburg. They owned a whole bunch of the fast food restaurants and then Quincy’s steakhouses.

Richardson, of course, went on to bring the NFL to the Carolinas.

He also gave his alma mater, Wofford College, a pile of money, including for the Jerry Richardson Indoor Stadium, one of the finest mid-major basketball venues around. It was cool to see UNC play there in 2018.
 
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On November 22, 1963 President Kennedy was shot and killed. I was 5 and I remember the funeral. It was broadcast live on TV. As I watched while seated on the floor of our #Bonlee den, the young African American woman that cared for me - her name was Luby Degraffenreaidt - ironed clothes and wept. This I remember. The funeral parade included a flag-draped casson followed by an unruly riderless horse. A pair of high boots were turned backwards in the stirrups. Luby ‘watched’ after me in those days. She was small even to little me and I cared for her and her tears distressed me. Soon afterward she left #DeepChatham — for Philadelphia I was always told. She was part of The Great Migration out of The South by some 6 million African Americans that took place during the middle third of the 20th century. John F. Kennedy was inspiring evidently - I’ve heard his voice - I must have heard it as a child. The effect on the adults and world around me of his violent death clearly made a lifelong impression on me.

In the years afterward assassins played a prominent role in my perception of the world. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. And Bobby Kennedy both fell to the bullets of mad men. George Wallace was shot and survived, though he continued to spread hate from a wheelchair thereafter (some suggest a late life epiphany and divergence from that path - I know what he stood for in the 1960s). In those days I did not know of the many other assassinations of men who challenged the status quo like Medgar Evers and Malcolm X. We’ll likely never truly know how many murders actually occurred then, or since, assassinations of a kind, of men and women that stood against, and resisted, power and The Powerful.

Of course the assassination of Abraham Lincoln hangs over our nation still. Losing his vision in the closing days of our Civil War and being without it in the aftermath doubtless assured that those crucial historic moments would be badly bungled with repercussions down to the present. In September of 1975, within the span of 18 days there were two attempts at murdering President Gerald Ford. Our first, (and thus far only) unelected President, Ford followed the crimes and disgrace of Nixon. He pardoned Nixon as well, depriving the people of justice and setting a sorry precedent of elected criminals paying inadequate penance for deadly blows struck against the Constitution and the body politic. In an editorial, ‘The New York Times’ called the Nixon pardon a “profoundly unwise, divisive and unjust act" that also destroyed the new president's "credibility as a man of judgment, candor and competence.” Nixon damaged and sullied the office, lowering the bar to a subterranean level. Ford was apparently a good man with bad vision who took an expedient path for which we currently pay. When the opportunity presented itself to raise that bar back up he failed.

Perhaps the violence done before Nixon and Ford, depriving us of leadership in crucial times, has contributed to fostering an environment in which service is seen as coming at too big a price, making it far too attractive to few but those deeply driven by flawed ways of seeing, or worse still, the greedy men-without-a-country that only find the unfettered pursuit of profit to be the only worthy motivation. Granted, there are, at least I believe, people that serve who bring strong, essentially good, ideals to the table. Still, when bullets tore through aspiring heroes in the ‘60s it seems that the fabric of our national soul was also shot through with holes. Ethics have been the loser all around. When Luby Degraffenreaidt shed those tears with so many other Americans back in 1963 it seems a foretelling of the struggle ahead. And make no mistake, we are in the fight of our lives right here, right now. We go the way of the bullet and the pardon or we can tune in to justice. That time appears upon us. It may even have passed us by. [Originally composed in 2022 - Still, sadly, true]

#OTD (September 5) in 1975, Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme attempted to assassinate President Ford in Sacramento, California. Remarks to Reporters Following Assassination Attempt in Sacramento | The American Presidency Project
 
From the account of President George T. Winston:

"The University had been closed for several years, the Campus was grown up in weeds, the buildings were without proper 'roofs, and much exposed not only to the weather but to all sorts of depredations; the libraries had been plundered of many valuable books, and the apparatus essential to the proper equipment of the scientific departments was largely ruined or stolen. The institution was without friends and heavy debts hung over it. lts revival seemed almost impossible. Our people bad not recovered from the effects of the war and a financial panic was adding distress to poverty. "Nothing daunted by these evils and inspired by a lifetime love of the University, Mr. Battle set vigorously to work and canvassed the State for funds. No other man would have undertaken the task, and certainly no other man could have accomplished it. He appealed to the alumni and to patriotic men not alumni, through the press, by letter and by personal interview. The result was $20,000 and the revival of the University." But funds were lacking for support of the institution as well as for its equipment. The faculty had to be paid and the laboratories provided with apparatus. The tuition fees were entirely inadequate to meet these expenses. With wise foresight, Mr. Battle had provided for this emergency. Upon his representation of the needs of the University, the General Assembly appropriated for its annual support $7,500, being the interest on the Land Scrip Fund of $125,000 donated to the State by the National Government." These two funds, both secured by Mr. Battle, enabled the institution to open its doors September 6, 1875 .. During the hundred years of its existence the University had never received more loving service nor more valuable aid than was rendered in 1875 by the Honorable Kemp P. Battle."

This is excerpted from Chapter 11 of The Battle Book: https://www.thebattlebook.com/Battl...Book_Chapter11_PresidentKempPlummerBattle.pdf

The entire Battle Book is here: The Battle Book Online
 
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