Posts Tagged ‘History’

History of New York

May 21st, 2011

History of New York

The history of the New York City began in the year 1524, when an Italian, Giovanni da Verrazano, discovered it for the first time and met the natives. However, it was Henry Hudson, the first Englishmen, who set foot on this land in 1609.  Then in 1624 the Dutch founded the first trading post here and in 1626 the first governor was appointed. Within the next 20 years many Dutch came to this place and settled here, and made a small town on the southern tip of Manhattan Island called New Amsterdam. In addition to the Dutch, French, English also came to this city to settle. Finally, in 1654 the first of the Jews set foot in this city. However, before all these immigrants the black slaves came to this city in 1628 and played an important role in making the colony. In 1653 the population of the New Amsterdam grew and the first wooden wall was built all around the city to prevent it from attacks from the other settlers. Dutch continued to settle until the first British, who arrived in 1664 and captured the island.

British rule started from 1664 and lasted till 1783 before they left the city. During this period many incidents took place. In 1712, a group of slaves set up a fire to a company due to some disagreement between them and the owner. Then in 1741 a series of fire broke out throughout the city. Riots like these continued, now and then. When the British left, 6 years after that in 1789, George Washington got elected and made the City of New York the capital of the country. However, after one year the capital was moved to another city. During the 18th century, the condition of the city improve, in 1725 the first news paper was published, in 1732 the first theater in the city opened.

In the early 1825 the first Eerie Canal was completed providing a way to boats to great lakes. As a result the economy boomed as good could easily be transported now. However, a fire in 1835 nearly burned down the entire city. The mid-1800s were plagued by disease, intense immigration, political corruption, and a weak economy. The Civil War further worsened the condition of the city. The city was the focal point of the Draft Riots of 1863, in which young men were drafted into the military. The 1900s were considered as a golden year of the city, as economy grew once again, riots were seizes, wars ended and new technology and industrialization took place, along with that skyscrapers and other magnificent building started to be constructed. However, by the end of 1900s the crime was on the rise again, with robberies and murders the most common of the cases.

Then in 2001 the destruction of the World Trade Center took place, killing over 2000 people, it really changed the environment of the city. However, the economy still continued to rise even after such a huge loss. New York City is home to some of the most powerful politicians, lawyers and civilians of the world. Moreover, the city continues to grow, promising a bright future to those, who entangle themselves with the city.

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Celebrate and See History on New Years Eve Washington DC Weekend

May 13th, 2011

Celebrate and See History on New Years Eve Washington DC Weekend

You haven’t experienced an incredible New Year’s Eve experience until you’ve been to New Years Eve Washington DC. We know that D.C. is known for being political and powerful, but we bet you didn’t know that it’s also known for throwing some of the best holiday parties too.

 

washington d.c. new years eve is one night that won’t slip from your memory. Luxurious parties are everywhere and New Years is no exception to the rule of excellence in partying. Begin your night by tasting some of the most scrumptious food and sipping on some of the finest champagne. After your stomach is filled, take a spin on the dance floor. Any dance will do, because we have it all. You can salsa, rumba, or swing the night away with your dance partner and have a blast doing it! We also have amazing clubs and lounges where you can dance to the latest tunes by some of the best DJs in the country.

 

Not only do we know how to party, D.C. is also one of the most popular tourist destinations in the country so come spend the weekend here. We have some of the most unique locations spread throughout the city, all-accessible by our user- friendly Metro Rail system. Take in all of those breathtaking sites that you’ve only seen on TV. Stroll through Georgetown and dine is some great restaurants while doing some shopping, and then walk through The Mall and see the Washington Monument and the many memorials that surround it. New Years Eve Washington DC will be a trip that will hopefully bring you back again and again.

 

Make history on New Years Eve in DC and party like we know you can. It’ll be remembered for the rest of your life as being the best New Years you’ve ever had.

 

Plan your trip today and start putting your party clothes on. We’ve got a lot to live up to but we’re not worried because we top every party each year. Let us help you make this holiday go down in your history books and plan to have the time of your life on New Years Eve Washington DC.

 


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Just the Facts: U.S. History : History and Functions of The Senate

April 10th, 2011

Just the Facts: U.S. History : History and Functions of The Senate

The History and Function series exams how politics and honor have co-existed to strengthen our government. Over time and across years, changes in the spirit and practice of government offices have moved from development and cohesion to enlightenment and understanding. The preservation of balances has long been pursued in the course of evolving offices. This program begins with the Declaration of Independence, which proclaimed freedom for the people in the United States of America. Many exciting facts in this program document the trials and tribulations of this young country. From the defeat of the British, to the Constitutional Convention and into today’s headlines, this production shows how Congress, the President, and Judicial System work together to form our government. Learn how the Senate works to pass bills and create laws.

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Manual of the Senate House of Delegates Virginia 197
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Very Washington DC: A Celebration of the History and Culture of America’s Capital City Reviews

March 27th, 2011

Very Washington DC: A Celebration of the History and Culture of America’s Capital City

  • ISBN13: 9781565125827
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A travel guide with character, this fact-filled keepsake offers all the history, beauty, charm, and culture of our nation’s capital city. In eye-catching watercolors and detailed sketches, artist Diana Gessler captures the allure that makes Washington DC one of the most visited destinations in the country. In addition to the national landmarks, stirring memorials, and vibrant neighborhoods, there’s the Cherry Blossom Festival, the Twilight Tattoo (a military pageant featuring the Old Guard Fife and Drum Corps and the U.S. Army Drill Team), colorful row houses, famous hotels and restaurants, and more museums than you’ll be able to visit in just one trip.

Gessler covers the city’s most popular attractions but also heads off the beaten path to share hidden gems, like the quirky Albert Einstein Memorial and Eastern Market, where you can dine on bluebucks and browse for flea market finds. Also included are an index of sites and a useful appendix of addresses, Web sites, Metro stops, and phone numbers.

Very Washington DC is a picture-perfect guidebook—a one-of-a-kind memento for tourists and a cherished reminder of the city’s riches for those who have always lived in America’s hometown.

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The Real History Of Nirvana

March 21st, 2011

The Real History Of Nirvana

No band develops in a vacuum; every band starts out thinking, at least a bit, of other musicians that they want to take after or rebel against. But Nirvana was the first great band of actual music snobs: record fiends who wanted to make it very clear exactly what they listened to. They all loved Led Zep and Aerosmith and CCR and Black Sabbath and Kiss and then some more Led Zep on top of that. Mostly, though, Kurt Cobain and Krist Novoselic had grown up as Pacific Northwest punk rock kids. They hung out with the Melvins in Aberdeen, Washington, were required by circumstance to define their position with respect to K Records and the Olympia scene and carried Flipper and Bad Brains records like shields to ward off poseurs. (Dave Grohl had a roughly equivalent experience growing up in the DC area.) When they hit the big time, they covered their favorite bands, got them to open for Nirvana, wore their T-shirts every chance they got. Kurt even oversaw reissues of his beloved Raincoats’ lost work.

In case there was any ambiguity left about who Nirvana considered their ancestors, it’s all laid out in Kurt’s Journals — the scribblings of an inveterate listmaker who clearly loved even writing the names of his favorite records, like talismans of good luck and good punk rock karma. Certain discs turn up again and again in Kurt’s pantheons of music: some are multiplatinum warhorses (Meet the Beatles, Aerosmith’s Rocks), others are hopelessly obscure (Fang’s Land Shark, the self-titled Tales of Terror album). Most of them, though, are remarkable American indie-rock and hardcore albums from the ’80s, with a few artier European post-punk records and the inevitable Leadbelly album thrown in. They’re worth investigating for anyone who loves Nirvana: these are not just the raw materials Cobain and Novoselic and Grohl transmuted into gold, they’re what the band aspired to.

The Best Of Leadbelly
Artist: Lead Belly
Release Date: 2003

When Nirvana played their wrenching cover of Leadbelly’s “Where Did You Sleep Last Night?” (a.k.a. “In the Pines”) on MTV Unplugged, it looked like an unexpected gesture toward the blues blood that still courses so powerfully through rock’s veins. Actually, though, Kurt doesn’t seem to have been so into vintage blues in general — he just loved Leadbelly obsessively (and had previously recorded four Leadbelly songs with Screaming Trees’ Mark Lanegan). This collection is a solid introduction to the “King of the Twelve-String Guitar,” a roaring ex-con who miraculously pulled joyful music out of his personal horrors.

Surfer Rosa / Come On Pilgrim
Artist: The Pixies
Release Date: 1988

Kurt called this 1988 album “a die-cast metal fossil from a spacecraft,” and some of the Pixies’ favorite tricks — endlessly looping riffs that had never quite been used before, tense clean-toned verses that bloom into explosive, distorted choruses — showed up on Nevermind a few years later. Steve Albini’s drumstick-to-your-skull engineering work here pretty obviously inspired Nirvana to hire him for In Utero, too. But most of what Nirvana got from the Pixies was an attitude: the sense of being off-balance and screaming while keeping one foot in tightly controlled structure.

Over The Edge
Artist: Wipers
Release Date: 1983

Kurt’s “Top 50″ list ultimately included three albums by Portland, Oregon’s Wipers: Is This Real?, Youth of America and 1983′s Over the Edge. Singer-guitar monster Greg Sage’s band was ferociously chugging and deeply into its own alienation — and operated independently of the music-business machine — years before anyone else in the Pacific Northwest caught on to their techniques. Nirvana and Hole both eventually covered Wipers songs; “So Young,” from this album, could very easily be mistaken for a Cobain original.

Singles 1-12
Artist: Melvins
Release Date: 1997

If you were a punk rock kid in Aberdeen, Washington in the mid-’80s, the Melvins were IT: they spiked their hardcore with brutal metal, they could play scorchingly fast or tortuously slow, they got to play in Olympia and Seattle and their practice space was the locus of the local punk scene. They also had a knack for doing screwed-up things on their recordings, and the 1996 series of singles collected here is classic Melvins — tributes to the Germs, Flipper and Butthole Surfers, corrosive audio experiments and straight-up blasts of the grunge style they helped to invent.

Jamboree
Artist: Beat Happening
Release Date: 1988

In some ways, Kurt never quite fit in with Olympia’s K Records, their flagship band Beat Happening and the “love-rock” scene around them — too much tummy-rubbing, not enough gut-punch — but he loved it enough that he got the K logo tattooed on his left arm, and its fascination with childhood fed his own. 1988′s Jamboree, evidently his favorite Beat Happening record, is half pastel nostalgia, half savage dread, a la-la pop album that collapses into a puddle of screeching noise at the end.

Bayou Country
Artist: Creedence Clearwater Revival
Release Date: 1969
Like a lot of other punk bands, Nirvana adored classic rock; unlike most of their peers, they embraced it — one of Cobain and Novoselic’s first attempts to play music together was a Creedence cover band. Kurt cited this 1969 album as a favorite of his, and you can hear a lot of John Fogerty’s throaty bellow on “Born on the Bayou” in the way he taught himself to sing; you can also hear how Creedence’s sturdy chording and simple melodies resurfaced in Nirvana’s music. What Nirvana might also have picked up from Creedence, though, was the art of self-reinvention and presentation: remember, Fogerty’s really a Cali kid, not a bayou native.

LiliPUT
Artist: Kleenex / LiliPUT
Release Date: 2003

“Anything by Kleenex” was the way Kurt usually put it on his lists of favorite records. The young Swiss women who recorded first as Kleenex and then as LiLiPUT between 1978 and 1983 had a garbled discography, and this compilation of everything by them didn’t appear in the US until 2001. So start with their delirious, glorious singles “Split,” “Ain’t You” and “Eisiger Wind,” full of shrieks and chirps, and powered by the rhythms of people who are determined to play their way and nobody else’s.

Kill Rock Stars
Artist: Various Artists – Kill Rock Stars
Release Date: 2003

In the summer of 1991, Nirvana were just another well-loved Washington band, and the other bands compiled here — on the anthology that launched the label of the same name — were their contemporaries and scenemates: their old pals the Melvins, Bikini Kill (featuring Kurt’s ex-girlfriend Tobi Vail), label owner Slim Moon’s band Witchypoo, Steve Fisk (who’d recorded the Blew EP), Heavens to Betsy (with a very young Corin Tucker, later of Sleater-Kinney) and a duo of Lois Maffeo and Pat Maley that went by the name of Courtney Love — no relation… or almost none.

Extended Play
Artist: The Raincoats
Release Date: 1995

In the liner notes of Incesticide, Kurt told the story of how he’d tracked down “that wonderfully classic scripture,” the Raincoats’ 1979 debut album, in England. Songwriters Ana da Silva and Gina Birch reformed the group in 1994 to open for Nirvana on the tour that never happened. They did, however, tour America, and recorded this EP for a BBC radio session: two new songs and two early favorites, performed with the sure-footed power and fresh-minded re-conception of the proper language, subject and sound for pop songs that had drawn Cobain to them in the first place.

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Complete History, Volume Two

March 8th, 2011

Complete History, Volume Two

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A Visual History of the United States Senate

February 5th, 2011

A Visual History of the United States Senate

  • Depicts the progression in political ideology of every Senate seat from 1789 to 2010
  • Easily trace the history of each state’s two seats over time, and track party leadership and control as new states enter the Union
  • Highlights include a timeline of over 100 major legislative enactments and significant developments in Senate history, and visual summaries of party control and ideological distribution of the House and Senate in each Congress
  • Ideal for home, office, and university classrooms
  • Perfect gift for policymakers, students, lawyers, educators, and history buffs

This large-scale (32?x48?) print is like nothing else available on the history of the U.S. Senate. A Visual History of the U.S. Senate is packed with information and is not intended to be absorbed at a glance, but rather visited and revisited over time.

A Visual History of the U.S. Senate represents the culmination of many months of careful research, design, and consultation with experts. Because we take pride in our work, we are pleased to offer our customers a premium product: the Timeplot is printed on highest-quality 100-lb archival paper and measures a full 48×32 inches, much larger than a standard wall poster.

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A History Lesson About Internet Radio

February 3rd, 2011

A History Lesson About Internet Radio

One of the greatest, if not the greatest, inventions of our lifetime is the Internet. It is a way to bring together millions of people from across the world to connect and share information. The Internet offers the user social networking, file sharing, music, and a plethora of information about every subject you want to know about. Radio stations have had to readapt the way they operate since the invention and technology of the Internet. Traditional radio has had a long history and now Internet radio is the current story being written. The history of radio online dates back less than twenty years and is considered modern history.

Online radio stations were first broadcasted in the early 1990s and did not take off right away. The stations, or websites, had to invent themselves and be presented to reach their target audience. Some radio stations were streaming broadcasts of music, talk shows, and some Internet radio is also considered to be a music library of songs found online. Unlike traditional radio, online radio can be accessed anywhere in the world, and in turn anyone in the world can listen to music from another city, state, country, or continent.

Originally, the Internet was a medium for communication, education, and government purposes. As the popularity of the World Wide Web grew, Congress approved the Internet to be used for commercial purposes. The first radio program to be broadcasted online was in 1993, and it was a talk show about computers and the Internet. A year later, the music industry would start to utilize the medium. The Rolling Stones broadcasted their concert live on the Internet. After that, radio stations followed their act and started to stream their shows online.

As the music hype started to spread via the Internet, music file sharing and downloading spread like wild fire. There were a lot of controversies from artists and listeners because the music industry took a hit from decreased record sales and royalties. It was not until 1998 that President Bill Clinton signed the Digital Millennium Copyright Act which included laws to protect musicians and copyrighted material. This means that Internet radio stations have to also pay royalties for music. This also meant that music found online was not free and had to be paid for.

By the late 90s, there were thousands, and still are, of Internet Radio programs. Radio stations online stream live talk show programs and music stations. There are sites that are genre specific, play a mix of different music, and other that play artists that are unsigned by record labels. Having Internet radio has changed the culture and way that people listen to and find music. Bands can gain popularity through the Internet. It is easier to be heard and get heard.

Jeff Bachmeier is owner of 977music.com, an online music and online radio station network providing live streaming Internet Radio channels with music from the 50′s thru Today. Users can also choose to create their own customized on demand playlist through their own social media profile. For more information please visit http://www.977music.com.


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Where is Internet radio heading, according to the folks at CES 2001? This broadcast live from the International Consumer Electronics Show in 2001. This originally aired in 2001 on TechTV’s TechTV News.

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History on Foot Walking Tour at Ford’s Theatre: A Free Black Woman Elizabeth Keckly

February 2nd, 2011

Buy Tickets Here: fords.org A Free Black Woman: Elizabeth Keckly written by Jennifer Nelson Danielle A. Drakes as Elizabeth Keckly Join Elizabeth Keckly, free black woman, and confidante to Mrs. Lincoln, as she tells the story of her friendship with the Lincoln family and of her efforts to help former slaves find their way in the newly free city of Washington. This tour lasts approximately 90 minutes and the distance walked is about 1.5 miles. Wear comfortable shoes. Fine Print Please note: History on Foot tours do not include entrance into Fords Theatre. For information on touring Fords Theatre, click here. Filming is not permitted but photography is encouraged. All tours begin promptly. Latecomers may not be accommodated. Tours will take place rain or shine. If you have a question regarding the status of the tour, please call the Box Office at (202) 347-4833.
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Go see The Germs movie”What We Do Is Secret” @ The following theaters Upcoming Screenings Aug 22 2008 7:00P Nuart Theatre West Los Angeles California|5 Aug 22 2008 7:00P Edwards University Town Center 6 Irvine California|5 Aug 22 2008 7:00P Kendall Square Cinema Cambridge Massachusetts|22 Aug 29 2008 7:00P Lumiere Theatre San Francisco California|5 Aug 29 2008 7:00P Shattuck Cinemas Berkeley California|5 Aug 29 2008 7:00P Gateway Theater Columbus Ohio|36 Aug 29 2008 7:00P Ritz at the Bourse Philadelphia Pennsylvania|39 Aug 29 2008 7:00P E Street Cinema Washington Washington DC|9 Sep 5 2008 7:00P Ken Cinema San Diego California|5 Sep 12 2008 7:15P Starz Film Center Denver Colorado|6 Sep 26 2008 7:00P Midtown Art Cinema Atlanta Georgia|11 Sep 12 2008 7:00P Tivoli Theatre St. Louis Missouri|26 Oct 10 2008 7:00P Varsity Theatre Seattle Washington|48 Sep 26 2008 7:00P Uptown or Lagoon Minneapolis Minnesota|24 Oct 10 2008 7:00P Alamo Drafthouse Austin Texas|44 Sep 19 2008 7:00P Zeitgeist Multi-Disciplinary Arts Center New Orleans Louisiana|19

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The History Channel Presents Washington the Warrior

January 11th, 2011

The History Channel Presents Washington the Warrior

  • WASHINGTON THE WARRIOR

As one of the nation’s most recognizable faces, he appears in every American history textbook and graces the dollar bill. Yet although he acts as the iconic figurehead of America, little is known about the man behind the myth. Before George Washington became America’s first president and an enduring national symbol, he was a soldier. In this landmark release, THE HISTORY CHANNEL® presents an intimate chronicle of Washington’s little-known military life. Follow him from his first officer’s commission in the Virginia militia through the difficult lessons of his youth and his 17-year retirement. Witness his reemergence as the soul of the American Revolution and see how he transformed a ragtag band of men into an army that could battle–and beat–the greatest military in the world. Featuring stunning location footage, gripping re-enactments, and candid interviews with historical and military experts, WASHINGTON THE WARRIOR narrates one man’s epic journey to greatness–and the birth of a nation. DVD Features: Behind-the-Scenes “History in the Making”; Interactive Menus; Scene SelectionHe was “first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen,” and Washington the Warrior puts the emphasis on the beginning of that equation. The military career of George Washington is the well-chosen focus of this History Channel documentary, which will probably surprise the casual history buff. It gives the fascinating story of Washington’s youthful ride into the Ohio territory to deliver a message to the French, a defining moment (and one that made Washington a celebrity after his diary of the journey was published). The film strongly suggests that the young Washington was in over his head in the early battles that followed, and that his career might well have ended after he led a British debacle at Fort Necessity, a stumble at the start of the French and Indian War. Glossing lightly over GW’s years as a gentleman farmer, the doc picks up again with Washington’s takeover of the Revolutionary army (he showed up at the Second Continental Congress dressed in his military uniform, leaving little question about his intentions) and the tenacious years that followed. The approach here is basically an illustrated lecture, with Stacy Keach intoning the story of Washington, and experts (mostly sounding enthralled with Washington’s life) providing context. Meanwhile, armies of reenactors march through their paces in pretend battles. Jackson Bolt plays the mature Washington, with Shea Patrick as the younger version–and how refreshing to see the carved-in-marble George Washington as a guy in his twenties. CGI effects are a big boost here, and the location work is often flavorful. The re-creations have the flat, unconvincing quality of many such things–nobody ever gets their uniforms dirty–but the life being described is an important one, and the approach is foursquare. –Robert Horton

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