November 28 – December 4The Week in Indiana History |
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“I write as the birds sing, because I must, and usually from the same source of inspiration.” Gene Stratton-Porter (1863 – 1924) Gene Stratton-Porter was an author, nature photographer, and naturalist. Her most famous novels are Freckles, and Girl of the Limberlost. Â
Did You Know?   During World War II, the United States Office of Price Administration had the authority to ration the sale of gasoline.  Each car was assigned a sticker which identified the vehicle’s fuel allotment. The most common sticker was “A.” It was issued to the general public and authorized the holder to purchase four gallons of gas per week. The “B” sticker was provided to business owners and allowed eight gallons each week. A “C” sticker was given to physicians, nurses, dentists, clergy members, and construction workers. In most cases, the “C” sticker permitted the purchase of eight gallons of gasoline per week. ANSWERS: 1. B    2. D    3. C    4. A
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HOOSIER HISTORY HIGHLIGHTS: The State’s First College
NOVEMBER-2021 BIRTHDAYS
DEBBIE HINES
TRACY HARMES BEDWELL
JENNIFER SCHMITT
JENNIFER WHITAKER
KENT GREATHOUSE
JENNIFER SCHMITT
SIDDHRTH TRIVEDI
JANA LAMBERT RABERÂ
MANDY STAUP DOUBLER
JESSE STORY
DONNIE WINKER
WRENNA LONG
MARTI HALL
RHETT SCHREIBER
DAVID BURKE
FRED SKEELS
BETHANY HALL
JOE NOTTER
KERRY ADAMS CORUM
JESSICA NUFFER
BEN TROCKMAN
CHARMAINE MALICOAT
LAURA FRITZ
CAROL SEGER FRITZ
MIKE ORTH
MARCIA STREANS
GARY MOSLEY
JENNIFER HIRCH CLAUSHEIDE
RHONDA BITTEL RAMSEY
TAYOR REGLIS
KATHY FRANK
BARBARA HELM HOBBS
CLAARK FIELDÂ
RON BEACON
AUDREY ANDERSONÂ
SAMANTHA DICKINSON
DAVE GONNERMAN
KRISTA JACKSON
LISA NEMEC
MISTY LINDSEY HART
ANGELA KOEHLER LINDSY
MARILYNN SCHMIDT HESS
JAMES BRAKER
JOHN DEE BROWN
TOM GROVES
CATHY MYERS
TOMMY JOHNNY
CHAD SCHAUSS
CHARLEEN NEWMAN WILLIAMSON
RUSTY ROBINSON
MARY L. GRACEÂ
RANDY SCHULZ
ROBIN D. MAJOR
VICKI KAVANAUGH BROWNÂ
JEFFREY C. JACKSON
BOSCOE JESSICA FRANCE
KEN KILLEBREW
JACINDA STRATTON-CLEMENTS
BRANDON BARTLETT
JAN F. SCHIFF
JEFF JAMES
CINDY BOWMANÂ
JOSH NEIDIG
MIKE REEDER
EILEEN JANIGAÂ
DOLLARMAN JACKSON
MATTSTURGEON
KEN ELLSPERMAN
MIKE FRENCH
KYLE ASHBY
SHANE CAREY
JEFF HOWERTON
JILL CAPE
KYLE ASHBY
SHANE CAREY
JEFF HOWERTON
JILL CAPE
CARON LEADER
CARL UNDERWOODÂ
COREY ELDRIDGE
TRINA CONNER
ANDY DILLOW
BRIAN REVEILLE
DICK HARRISON
ERIC WILLIAMS
JARED HOZEY
HADLIE DRAKE-SCHEIBER
DEREK MASTERSON
JAN SCHIFF
JEFF WOLF
MICHAEL A CASSELL
MISTY HART
KRYSTLE SPAHN
CHARLIE SELZTERS
BRIAN REVELLE
STACEYÂ SPANKS
WENDELL LANCE
HOT JOBS
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KAI EDMONDS, THUNDERBOLTS SHUT OUT MAYHEM 3-0Â
Macon, Ga.: After nearly getting the shutout on Saturday against Roanoke, Kai Edmonds came through on his second attempt, stopping all 18 shots as Evansville opened the weekend series in Macon with a 3-0 victory. The Thunderbolts next home game will be on Saturday, December 4th at 7:00pm CT as they host the Birmingham Bulls. For tickets, call (812)422-BOLT (2658), buy online at EvansvilleThunderbolts.com, or buy tickets in person at the Ford Center Box Office.
Peter De Coppi opened the scoring for Evansville at 15:12 of the first period, assisted by TJ Dockery and Mike Ferraro. In the second period, Macon’s Brett Menton would get into penalty trouble by dropping the gloves against an unwilling Evansville player, and as a result was ejected from the game and set up a major power play for Evansville. Zane Jones converted on the power play, scoring at 18:20 from Hayden Hulton and Brandon Lubin to extend the Thunderbolts lead to 2-0. Late in regulation, Macon pulled goaltender Michael Stiliadis, but Tanner Butler was able to score into the empty net with 36 seconds remaining to finish off the scoring, 3-0 for Evansville.
De Coppi, Jones and Butler scored the Evansville goals, while Dockery, Ferraro, Hulton, and Lubin tallied an assist each. Edmonds made 18 saves on 18 shots, tallying his first professional shutout and his 2nd win of the season. It also marked the third Thunderbolts shutout win of the season, setting a new franchise single-season record. The Thunderbolts next face the Mayhem in Macon on Saturday, November 27th at 5:30pm CT.
The Thunderbolts are currently competing in their fifth season in the SPHL (Southern Professional Hockey League). Season tickets are less than $9 per game. To order your tickets for this season, call 812-422-BOLT(2658).
Salvation Army Aims To Make Christmas Merrier For Those Who Goes Without
Red kettles have been catching donations for poverty-stricken families for over 100 years.
It started in 1891 in San Francisco, when Salvation Army Capt. Joseph McFee was concerned by the number of families who would be going hungry on Christmas. He thought back to when he was a sailor in England and donations for the poor would be put in a large kettle pot.
McFee re-created it, in cherry red, for the holiday season. With all the money he raised in that kettle, he was able to host a communal dinner for the needy in his city.
The Salvation Army has kept this tradition alive all across the world—and especially in Indiana. This year, central Indiana’s Salvation Army hopes to raise $3.3 million through its “Hope Marches On†campaign. The organization will be collecting money in those same iconic red kettles that McFee used in 1891.
Maj. Marc Johnson, divisional commander of the Salvation Army Indiana Division, said that along with the kettle the tradition of helping local communities also carries on.
“People can be assured that what they are giving at their local location is staying to help their neighbors who need the help,†Johnson said.
The Salvation Army annually helps more than 23 million Americans overcome poverty through a range of social services that expand beyond the kettle.
It offers its Angel Tree Program during the holiday season as well. The purpose of the program is to provide presents for parents who might not be able to fill underneath the tree otherwise. Families will provide donors with a Christmas list, and donors will go out and shop and leave the presents with the Salvation Army to distribute.
“We’ve been having this program for over 40 years now, and it’s always been just tremendous feedback,†Johnson said. “It really helps people know that, you know, there are people who care about you.â€
Johnson says that all this work could not be done without the loyal volunteers and donors the Salvation Army has. The organization is still taking volunteers for those who want to get involved, especially during the holiday season. It even still has slots open to ring the bell next to those iconic kettles.
“The Salvation Army helps connect people,†Johnson said, “especially at Christmas time.â€
KAI EDMONDS, THUNDERBOLTS SHUT OUT MAYHEM 3-0Â
KAI EDMONDS, THUNDERBOLTS SHUT OUT MAYHEM 3-0Â
Macon, Ga.: After nearly getting the shutout on Saturday against Roanoke, Kai Edmonds came through on his second attempt, stopping all 18 shots as Evansville opened the weekend series in Macon with a 3-0 victory. The Thunderbolts next home game will be on Saturday, December 4that 7:00pm CT as they host the Birmingham Bulls. For tickets, call (812)422-BOLT (2658), buy online at EvansvilleThunderbolts.com, or buy tickets in person at the Ford Center Box Office.
Peter De Coppi opened the scoring for Evansville at 15:12 of the first period, assisted by TJ Dockery and Mike Ferraro. In the second period, Macon’s Brett Menton would get into penalty trouble by dropping the gloves against an unwilling Evansville player, and as a result was ejected from the game and set up a major power play for Evansville. Zane Jones converted on the power play, scoring at 18:20 from Hayden Hulton and Brandon Lubin to extend the Thunderbolts lead to 2-0. Late in regulation, Macon pulled goaltender Michael Stiliadis, but Tanner Butler was able to score into the empty net with 36 seconds remaining to finish off the scoring, 3-0 for Evansville.
De Coppi, Jones and Butler scored the Evansville goals, while Dockery, Ferraro, Hulton, and Lubin tallied an assist each. Edmonds made 18 saves on 18 shots, tallying his first professional shutout and his 2nd win of the season. It also marked the third Thunderbolts shutout win of the season, setting a new franchise single-season record. The Thunderbolts next face the Mayhem in Macon on Saturday, November 27th at 5:30pm CT.
The Thunderbolts are currently competing in their fifth season in the SPHL (Southern Professional Hockey League). Season tickets are less than $9 per game. To order your tickets for this season, call 812-422-BOLT(2658).
FOOTNOTE: About Evansville Thunderbolts: The Evansville Thunderbolts is the area’s only professional  hockey team. The Thunderbolts are a proud member of the Southern Professional Hockey  League (SPHL). The team is owned and operated by VW Sports, L.L.C, a subsidiary of VenuWorks, Inc. www.evansvillethunderbolts.comÂ
HOT LEAD OR COLD WATER HOT LEAD OR COLD WATER
HOT LEAD OR COLD WATER
GAVEL GAMUTÂ By Jim Redwine
Charles Brill’s account of the November 27, 1868 incident between Black Kettle’s Cheyenne tribe and U.S. 7th Cavalry troops led by Lt. Col. George Custer is entitled, Conquest of the Southern Plains: Uncensored Narrative of the Washita and Custer’s Southern Campaign. Brill’s 1938 publication relied on eyewitness accounts from aged Indian survivors of the conflict. Brill personally took Cheyennes Magpie and Little Beaver and Arapaho Left Hand along with government interpreter John Otterby, a.k.a. Lean Elk, to the site of the attack. This article relies on the 2001 republication of Brill’s accounts by the University of Oklahoma Press re-titled Custer, Black Kettle, and the Fight on the Washita.
The fertile Washita River valley area on the western edge of Indian Territory (Oklahoma) had been a common peaceful wintering ground for numerous Indian tribes for countless years before 1868. There was an abundance of water, game, shelter and vegetation. It was also an area set aside for the Indians in several treaties with the United States between Black Kettle’s Cheyenne and other tribes. On the bitterly cold, snow-covered morning of November 27, 1868 the Indians’ only concerns were keeping warm and tending to their horses. Then Custer’s seven hundred mounted soldiers came charging at the sleepy Indians from all sides with rifles blazing and sabers slashing.
Black Kettle was alerted by a woman who had been tending to the horses and first saw the approaching soldiers. When she yelled out “Soldiers, soldiers!â€, Black Kettle fired a warning shot with his rifle to awaken the camp. Then Black Kettle drew his wife, Medicine Woman, up behind him on his pony and attempted to flee as he and Medicine Woman shouted warnings to the camp. He and Medicine Woman were then shot and killed. Magpie, one of the eyewitnesses Brill relied upon, heard Black Kettles’ warning shot and exited his lodge just as he heard a trumpet blast from the nearby trees and then saw the mounted soldiers charging into the village from all sides. Magpie was shot in the leg but managed to escape death by entering the freezing water and hiding in the brush along the banks.
As reported by Brill at page 159:
“From every side came the heavy report of carbines. Occasionally an Indian rifle answered. But these were notable for their infrequency. So sudden had been the attack, only a few of the red men had opportunity to arm themselves. Most of those who did so had only bows and arrows. They were powerless to offer serious resistance. Flight was their only objective.
Those villagers whose tepees stood nearest the stream fared better than their friends in the center and on the south side of the camp. First to dash through the icy waters of the Washita and scramble up the opposite bank found themselves running into scouts and sharpshooters who had deployed in the timber there. They also encountered troopers, mounted and dismounted. Seeing escape shut off in that direction, the fugitives accepted the only avenue left open to them, the channel itself. It was misery to wade its ice-fringed waters, but it was either that or bullets.
Women and children, as well as braves, plunged into the stream. Most of them were scantily clad. Many were without moccasins on their feet. Frequently the water reached to the armpits of adults who had to carry the children through these deep pools to prevent their drowning. Desperately they splashed their way beyond the lines of their enemies.â€
Sometimes the fog of history eventually is pierced by uncomfortable facts. The Washita massacre was originally reported as a great military victory over savage foes by courageous heroes. Those reports originated from the “heroesâ€. The facts managed to slowly ooze out over a great deal of time. Those facts established the betrayal of morality and violations of treaties. They do not tell us, “Why?†The reasons may be explained by Pawnee attorney and scholar of law and history Walter R. Echo-Hawk in his book on bad court cases involving Native American treatment by the dominant white culture.Â
In the Courts of the Conquerors, The 10 Worst Indian Law Cases Ever Decided contemplates the roots of the doctrine of Manifest Destiny and its raison d’être, The White Man’s Burden:
“A popular justification for colonialism among the colonizing nations was the white man’s burden. Originally coined by Rudyard Kipling, the term is a euphemism for imperialism based upon the presumed responsibility of white people to exercise hegemony over nonwhite people, to impart Christianity and European values, thereby uplifting the inferior and uncivilized peoples of the world. In this ethnocentric view, non-European cultures are seen as childlike, barbaric, or otherwise inferior and in need of European guidance for their own good. As thus viewed from European eyes, colonization became a noble undertaking done charitably for the benefit of peoples of color.â€
See p. 16
The concept of exterminating Native American culture as justified because it was replaced with the blessings of Christianity and civilization is hardly a new idea. The Romans by force of arms visited their supposed superior culture on “lesser†peoples as have many dominate societies for thousands of years. The germ of “destroying a culture to save it†is easily discovered by any powerful society that wants to take what some weaker society has. However, that there was ample precedent for the massacre at the Washita does not expiate Custer’s assault and does not obviate the moral imperative to remember it.
For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com
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1885   The body of United States Vice President Thomas Hendricks lay in state in the Marion County Courthouse in Indianapolis. The funeral procession had started at the Hendricks home at Tennessee and Ohio Streets and traveled across Washington Street, where every building was draped in black. Hendricks, Vice President under Grover Cleveland, had also served as Governor of Indiana. Pictured: The statue of Hendricks on the south lawn of the Indiana Statehouse.
1923   Frank Reynolds was born in East Chicago. He attended Bishop Noll Institute in Hammond and went on to graduate from Wabash College. He was awarded a Purple Heart in World War II. Beginning a broadcasting career at WWCA Radio in Gary, he moved into television where he rose to the anchor position on ABC’s “World News Tonight.”
1942   Gas rationing went into effect across the nation. President Franklin D. Roosevelt asked Americans to conserve fuel and rubber for use in World War II. Drivers were issued stickers to place on windshields to indicate how much gasoline they were authorized to purchase.




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