Clip of the Day
The Redwood Trees - World Tallest Trees
Americana
The Zapruder Film | JFK is Assassinated in Dallas, Texas
This copy was made before Life magazine damaged frames in their copy.
Kennedy vs. Nixon | 1960 | First National Televised Debate (short clip)
John F. Kennedy Defeats Richard Nixon in the First Presidential Debate in 1960
November 9, 1960
In a tumultuous campaign that was highlighted by the first televised presidential debate, John F. Kennedy a wealthy Democratic Senator from Massachusetts narrowly defeated Richard M. Nixon by 118,000 votes to become the thirty fifth president of the United States.
A crucial factor and turning point in this election was the first ever televised presidential debate. Nixon felt poorly, he injured his knee on the way to the studio, and refused television makeup. He expected to win voters with his foreign-policy expertise, but people only saw a sickly man sweating profusely and wearing a gray suit that blended into the scenery. On the other hand his rival, Kennedy, looked great. The television audience gave the win to Kennedy.
Top Ten United States Population Cities in 1800 | Source : US Bureau of the Census
Top Ten Population Cities in 1800
Source : US Bureau of the Census
New York city, NY 60,515
Philadelphia city, PA 41,220
Baltimore city, MD 26,514
Boston town, MA 24,937
Charleston city, SC 18,824
Northern Liberties township, PA 10,718
Southwark district, PA 9,621
Salem town, MA 9,457
Providence town, RI 7,614
Norfolk borough, VA 6,926
Explore America
The music scene in Athens, Georgia
Nixon Resigns and Departs Washington
On August 9, 1974, President Richard Nixon of the United States prepares to board the Presidential helicopter to leave the White House for the last time after delivering his resignation speech following the Watergate scandal.
The Boston Busing Crisis… Beginning in 1974 and lasting until 1988
In 1965, Massachusetts passed the Racial Imbalance Act, which ordered school districts to desegregate or risk losing state educational funding. The first law of its kind was controversial and was opposed fiercely in Boston, especially in low socio-economic white ethnic areas, such as the Irish-American district in South Boston.
Beginning in 1974 and lasting until 1988, a series of protests and riots occurred in Boston, Massachusetts when Judge W. Arthur Garrity Jr. of the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts, found the schools were unconstitutionally segregated. As a remedy, he used a busing plan developed by the Massachusetts State Board of Education to implement the state's Racial Imbalance Law. The plan was to bus white kids to predominantly black schools and vice-versa.
The legislation provoked outrage from white Bostonians and led to widespread violent protests and resulted in some fatalities. In one incident, a white teenager was nearly stabbed to death by a black teenager at South Boston High School. White residents in the area mobbed the school, trapping the black students inside. The school was forced to close for a month after the stabbing. When South Boston High re-opened, it was guarded by 500 police officers and attended by 400 students. It was also the first school to make use of metal detectors.
The conflict lasted for over a decade and led many white families to enroll their children in private schools. Attendance in the effected districts fell from 100,000 to 57,000 and even 20 years later in 2008, the students in Boston Public Schools were 76% black and Hispanic, and only 14% White, a lingering effect of a very sad and violent period in our history.
New England Moments
Documentary of the Day
Redwood Logging | The Giant Redwood Lumber Industry in California | 1946
Collectible Editions
You have a choice of three versions of our collectible edition to select from. 52-pages, 100-pages (special oversized edition) and our 104-page version (hard cover). Enjoy your stroll down memory lane!
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