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This Day in History

May 17, 2004
First Gay Marriage in U.S.

Last week President Barack Obama came out in favor of gay marriage so it is important to note that only eight years ago this week the first same-sex marriage in the United States took place in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

May 18, 1896
Ruling in Plessy v. Ferguson

In 1896 the Supreme Court struck a major blow against integration, ruling that the Louisiana law that provided “equal but separate accommodations for the white and colored races” on railroad cars was constitutional. The ruling provided that long as equal accommodations were provided, segregation was not discrimination. The case was eventually used to justify segregating all public facilities, including railroad cars, restaurants, hospitals, and schools. Not until 1954 with Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka was Plessy v. Ferguson struck down.

 

Election Day: An American Holiday, An American History

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Almost Forgotten: The 1864 Battle That Saved Washington

Sometimes we lose in order to win.

This was very much the case with the Battle of Monocacy, fought just outside Frederick, Maryland on July 9, 1864. The Union soldiers went down in defeat, but they accomplished a bigger goal — they saved Washington.

In all the stories of the Civil War, the Battle of Monocacy has been less frequently told. The final decision to preserve the battlefield and to open it to the public so the Monocacy story could be shared was not realized until July of 1991, a full 127 years after the battle.

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Preservation of a 260-Year-Old Stove and Why It Matters

Earlier this month on my trip to Frederick, Maryland, the tourism board had organized wonderful days for me. Among the sites they planned for me to visit was Schifferstadt Museum. The house, now an architecture museum, was built by a German family in 1756 and is one of the oldest houses still standing in Frederick… continue reading ->

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Movies: Today the 3-D Experience is a Draw; Yesterday’s Audiences Also Came for an “Experience”

Hollywood is enjoying a resurgence in movie audiences. Box offices receipts for 2009, partly led by the allure of the 3-D experience, hit an all-time high. This is not the first time movies were “hot,” so I took a look back to one of the grand eras of film-going, the years from 1915-30. Crowds came… continue reading ->

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