Saturday, April 19, 2025

April 19, 1995: The Oklahoma City Bombing

April 19, 1995, 30 years ago: The Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma is destroyed by a car bomb, resulting in the deaths of 168 people. (The building was named for a federal judge from Oklahoma.)

The bombing was carried out at 9:02 AM, by Timothy McVeigh, a 27-year-old native of the Buffalo area, who had fallen in with right-wing extremist groups like the Michigan Militia.

He chose the date because it was the anniversary of the start of the American Revolution (by some people's reckoning), the Battle of Lexington and Concord in Massachusetts on April 19, 1775. But he had a 2nd reason: April 19 was also the anniversary of the end of the Waco Siege 2 years earlier, when the federal government moved in to arrest David Koresh for his crimes at Waco, Texas. He chose the location because he believed the order had come from the Murrah Federal Building.
The building before, from 1977 to 1995

McVeigh was captured 2 days later. He was convicted in 1997. On June 11, 2001, he became the 1st prisoner executed by the federal government since 1963.

He was assisted in the bombing by Terry Nichols, a 40-year-old Michigan native that he had met while in the U.S. Army. Nicholas was sentenced to life imprisonment at ADX Florence, the "supermax" federal prison in Colorado.

Three months after that, their act was no longer the greatest act of terrorism, or of mass murder, perpetrated in America. But it remains the greatest act of domestic terrorism.

And the perpetrators weren't black, or Hispanic, or Asian, or Arab: They were white. They weren't immigrants: They were native-born. They weren't Muslim: They identified as Christian. And they weren't Spanish speakers, or Arabic speakers: They spoke only English.

April 19, 1945: "Carousel" Premieres On Broadway

April 19, 1945, 80 years ago: The musical Carousel premieres at the Majestic Theatre, 245 West 44th Street in Midtown Manhattan, just off Broadway. It was based on Liliom, a play by Hungarian author Ferenc Molnár.

The music was written by Richard Rodgers, who later called it his favorite among all his musicals. Oscar Hammerstein II wrote the book and the lyrics.

The story begins in 1873, in a seaside community in Maine. Billy Bigelow is a carnival barker, and Julie Jordan is a millworker. Billy romances Julie while he's on the clock. Julie appreciates this, but his boss doesn't, and Billy is fired. Julie stays out late with Billy. Billy appreciates this, but her boss, who sees them, and presumes this means she won't be on time to work tomorrow morning, doesn't, and she's fired.

Billy and Julie get married. A month goes by, and Billy is offered a chance to make a lot of money -- in a robbery. He's not sure he should do it. Julie tells him she's pregnant. Now, he knows he needs the money, and goes in on the robbery. It goes sideways, and Billy dies. Julie is comforted by her cousin and best friend Nettie Fowler, leading to the musical's most familiar song, "You'll Never Walk Alone."

Billy arrives in Heaven, and is told that the good he's done in life is outweighed by the bad. He's told that as long as there's a person alive who remembers him with fondness, he can get into Heaven.

He's taken to the future, to see his now-grown daughter Louise. He makes himself visible to her, telling her not that he's her father, but that he was her father's friend. He offers her a gift: A star that he took from Heaven. She refuses it. He slaps her hand, seemingly ruining his chance at getting back to Heaven. Julie notices the star on the ground, picks it up, and seems to feel Billy's presence.

Invisible, Billy attends Louise's graduation. Dr. Seldon, the town doctor, who resembles the Starkeeper who has been advising Billy "Up There," tells the graduating class that they shouldn't rely on their parents' successes, but also shouldn't be held back by their failures. Still invisible, Billy whispers in Louise's ear, telling her to believe the doctor. Then he whispers to Julie, telling her that he loves her. Both his widow and his daughter join in singing "You'll Never Walk Alone," and Billy is taken to Heaven.

In the original Broadway production, Billy was played by John Raitt, father of rock legend Bonnie Raitt; Julie by Jan Clayton; Louise by Bambi Linn; Nettie by Christine Johnson; and the dual role of the Starkeeper and Dr. Seldon by Russell Collins.

It was made into a film in 1956. Gordon MacRae played Billy, Shirley Jones played Julie, Susan Luckey played Louise, Claramae Turner played Nettie, and Gene Lockhart played the Starkeeper and the doctor.

"You'll Never Walk Alone" became a standard. Jerry Lewis would use it to close his annual Labor Day telethon for research into muscular dystrophy and related conditions. Elvis Presley made it a mainstay of his live performances from his Las Vegas debut in 1969 until his death in 1977.

In 1963, Liverpool rock band Gerry & The Pacemakers recorded a version that hit Number 1 on the British charts. (It was not released as a single in the U.S.) In the 1960s, at Anfield, the home stadium of Liverpool F.C., games would be preceded by the public address system playing the Top 10 songs in the country. "You'll Never Walk Alone" seemed to stick with the fans, as they began to ask to have it played last every week, even after it began to drop from the charts, just before the team walked onto the pitch. This was done, and Liverpool, managed by Bill Shankly, won the Football League in 1964.

After that, in England, the song was irrevocably tied to the Mersey Reds. After the Hillsborough Disaster of 1989, the words of the song gave hope to a grieving city. The words "YOU'LL NEVER WALK ALONE" are now cast in iron atop the Shankly Gates leading into Anfield.

Most Liverpool fans don't even realize that the song debuted on Broadway, in New York, in America, during the waning days of World War II.

The Majestic Theatre would later premiere Rodgers & Hammerstein's South Pacific in 1949, and also The Music Man in 1957, Camelot in 1960, A Little Night Music in 1973, and The Wiz in 1975. From 1988 to 2023, it hosted The Phantom of the Opera, Broadway's longest-running musical. Currently, it is hosting a revival of Gypsy.

April 19, 1775: Paul Revere & the Battles of Lexington and Concord

Paul Revere

This coming Monday, April 21, the 6 New England States -- Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine -- will celebrate Patriot's Day, the 3rd Monday in April, a holiday in commemoration of the Battles of Lexington and Concord, which began the War of the American Revolution, on April 19, 1775.

The day is celebrated in Boston with the annual Boston Marathon. In order to reduce the effect on traffic -- and traffic in Boston is frequently ridiculous -- the Boston Red Sox always schedule an 11:00 AM (well, 11:10) hone game, Major League Baseball's only pre-noon (local time) game all season, so that Fenway Park will let out before the runners get to nearby Boylston Street, a block from Fenway. The Marathon's finish line is one mile east of the ballpark, across from the Central Library. 

The American Revolution is now 250 years old. A pity that we won't have a President who believes in democracy during the proceedings.

*

In 1860, with the Civil War inevitable, Boston-area poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was looking for an American hero that could only be claimed by the North, not the South. That let out such luminaries as Virginians, and slaveholders, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and Patrick Henry.

Massachusetts' John Adams, by his own admission, was "obnoxious." And Pennsylvania's Ben Franklin, well, let's just say he wasn't well-lined-up with Victorian morals, which America then shared with Britain. Same with Massachusetts' Samuel Adams and John Hancock, (the Boston Tea Party was basically a bunch of drunks pulling a prank) and New York's Alexander Hamilton (who was more affiliated with the post-Revolution, Constitution-establishing era, anyway).

Longfellow found another Massachusetts hero: Paul Revere. Born in 1735 in Boston, he was a metalsmith, and an artist: His woodcut of the Boston Massacre, of March 5, 1770, helped spark the Revolution. Longfellow began his poem:

Listen, my children, and you shall hear
Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere,
On the eighteenth of April, in Seventy-Five:
Hardly a man is now alive
Who remembers that famous day and year.

It had been 85 years. Such a man would have been at least 90 years old to have any clear memory of it. Longfellow went on:

He said to his friend, -- "If the British march
By land or sea from the town to-night,
Hang a lantern aloft in the belfry-arch
Of the North-Church-tower, as a signal-light, --
One if by land, and two if by sea;
And I on the opposite shore will be,
Ready to ride and spread the alarm
Through every Middlesex village and farm,
For the country-folk to be up and to arm."
Old North Church, with Revere's statue in front

As Joe Biden, not old enough to remember 1775 (though some have suggested otherwise), might say, "Longfellow, God love 'im, his heart was in the right place, but that poem is full of malarkey."

Robert Newman, the Sexton of the Old North Church, and John Pulling, a vestryman, hung the two lanterns in the steeple, just for a minute, just long enough for Revere to see, across the Charles River in Cambridge. But there was another man with Revere, Massachusetts militia officer William Dawes. Ever since, the joke has been that Longfellow used Revere's name, rather than Dawes', because it was easier to rhyme.
William Dawes

The image we have been given is of Revere riding through the night, yelling, "The British are coming! The British are coming!" And the poem does use the word "British." The Declaration of Independence was more than a year away, and no such declaration was even being considered. Revere, and every other "Patriot," still considered himself British. Part of the problem is that the Patriots thought that, back in London, Parliament had betrayed British values in oppressing their colonies in the Americas. And, certainly, Revere wouldn't have been yelling anything: It would have attracted too much attention.

Most of all, they wanted to reach John Hancock and Samuel Adams, Massachusetts' 2 biggest leaders of the Patriot cause, to get them to safety. So what did they actually say? "The regulars are out!" Regulars, as in "the regular army," not conscripts. These were professional soldiers, well-trained men who meant business, and were thus a threat to Hancock, Adams, and anybody else they could get their hands on.

Revere and Dawes got to Lexington, where Hancock and Adams were. They picked up a 3rd rider, Samuel Prescott, and the 3 of them rode to Concord. Between them, the 3 men knocked on the doors of 40 Patriots.

The poem doesn't mention that the riders got caught. A British patrol intercepted them in Lincoln. Prescott and Dawes got away, but Revere didn't. But he was lucky: They questioned him, and let him go. I guess they didn't know who, or what, they had. 

But the "Midnight Ride" got the "Minutemen" (said to be ready to fight at a minute's notice) ready for when the British attacked the next morning.

*

April 19, 1775, 250 years ago today: 

Lieutenant Colonel Francis Smith led 700 regulars, under orders to capture and destroy Colonial military supplies, believed to be stored by the Massachusetts Militia at Concord. 

About 80 militiamen stood on the Lexington Green, 11 miles northwest of downtown Boston. Their commander was Captain John Parker, a veteran of the French and Indian War, already stricken with tuberculosis.
Lexington Green

Parker told them, "Stand your ground. Don't fire unless fired upon. But if they mean to have a war, let it begin here." The line, "Don't shoot 'til you see the whites of their eyes," in order to conserve ammunition, is said to have originated 2 months later, at Bunker Hill, and that is also in dispute.

It was just after sunrise, around 6:00 AM. Both commanders told their men to hold their fire. Someone disobeyed, and fired what Ralph Waldo Emerson, in another poem based on the events, called "The Shot Heard 'Round the World." (That title would later be used to describe the Bobby Thomson home run of 1951.) Both sides generally agreed that the initial shot did not come from the men on the ground immediately facing each other. It may have been a Colonial from behind a hedge, or a Colonial from inside a tavern, or a mounted British officer; but no one has ever determined on which side the initial shooter was.

No British men were killed, and 8 Colonials were, before they dispersed. The idea of the Colonial men at Lexington was to stall the regulars, to buy time for the main force at Concord, 19 miles northwest of downtown Boston.

At North Bridge in Concord, it was the Colonials who had the advantage, 400 to 100. At about 11:00 AM, fire opened, and the British had to fall back, and head back toward Boston. They lost 73 men, while the Colonials lost 41.
North Bridge

A small force of barely-trained, barely-equipped men had knocked back the best army in the world -- at the least, the 2nd-best army, behind that of France. The War of the American Revolution was on.

John Parker fell victim to tuberculosis, and died on September 19, 1775. In 1900, a statue was erected at Lexington Green, sculpted by Henry Hudson Kitson, and known as The Lexington Minuteman. It has appeared on postage stamps, and on the back of Massachusetts' entry in the federal government's "State Quarters" series. It was not based on Parker's appearance, as no known likenesses of him survive today, and the figure is of a younger, healthy man, which Parker, at that point, was not. Nevertheless, it is said to depict Parker.
Francis Smith fought in several other battles in the war, rose to the rank of Major General, and lived util 1791.

History lost track of Samuel Prescott after the Midnight Ride. The best-known story says that he became a doctor in the Continental Army, was captured by the British, and died a prisoner of war in Halifax, Nova Scotia in 1777.

John Hancock became the President of the Continental Congress, including when the Declaration of Independence was approved. He was the only man who actually signed it on July 4, 1776 -- the rest of the Signers signed it later, most on August 2 -- and signed it so large that "John Hancock" has become slang for "signature" ever since. But the story that he signed it so large that, "George III can read that without his spectacles, and double the price on my head" is apocryphal.

When the Constitution of Massachusetts (written by John Adams) was approved in 1780, Hancock served as the 1st Governor. He served until 1785, returned to the post in 1787, and still held it when he died in 1793.

He was succeeded by Samuel Adams, John's cousin, who, like John, had also signed the Declaration. He served until 1797, and lived until 1803.

William Dawes never held public office, and lived until 1799. Paul Revere never served in public office, either, and lived on until 1818, making him one of the last surviving heroes of the American Revolution.

Thursday, April 17, 2025

Yankees Sweep Royals, Will "Host" Rays

For those of us who are Yankee Fans, and are old enough to remember the Playoff meetings of 1976, 1977, 1978 and 1980, we hate the Kansas City Royals, and have treated every win over them in a seemingly meaningless game as a great win.

So having beaten them in last season's Playoffs felt great. So did a sweep of them this week.

Carlos Carrasco started on Monday night, and he was terrific, going 5 innings, and allowing 1 run on 1 hit and 2 walks, striking out 4. Had it not been so early in the season, Aaron Boone -- or Brian Cashman -- probably would have let him go beyond 79 pitches, 49 of which were strikes.

The Yankees got solo home runs from Jazz Chisholm in the 4th inning, and 3 in the 5th inning: From Trent Grisham, Ben Rice and Austin Wells. Between them, Fernando Cruz, Tim Hill, Luke Weaver and Devin Williams pitched 4 shutout relief innings. It should not take 5 Yankee pitchers to hold the Royals to 1 run on 2 hits and 4 walks, but I can't argue with the results. Yankees 4, Royals 1.

Max Fried started on Tuesday night. So far, it's been the best start by a Yankee pitcher this season: 6 2/3rds innings, 2 runs on 5 hits and 2 walks, striking out 7. Weaver and Williams were perfect the rest of the way.

The Yankees only got 6 hits themselves. But 3 of them were from Jasson Domínguez. And, Cliché Alert: Walks can kill you. Aaron Judge led off the bottom of the 6th with a single. After Cody Bellinger and Paul Goldschmidt struck out, Chisholm and Anthony Volpe drew walks to load the bases, and Wells drew another to force a run home. Then Domínguez cleared the bases with a 3-run double. Yankees 4, Royals 2.

Clarke Schmidt came off the Injured List -- and Marcus Stroman went on, but it's still a net gain, because Stroman is awful -- and was a bit shaky last night. He went 5 2/3rds, allowing 3 runs on 4 hits and 2 walks. But Leiter finished the 6th and pitdhed the 7th, allowing no baserunners. Cruz pitched a scoreless 8th and 9th.

It was 1-0 K.C. in the bottom of the 3rd, when Volpe doubled home 2 runs. Bellinger doubled home a run in the 4th. The Royals tied it 3-3 in the 5th, but Judge led off the 7th with a homer. It was still only 4-3 Yankees in the top of the 9th, when Bellinger made a great catch of M.J. Melendez to win it.

After this sweep, the Yankees are in 1st place in the American League Eastern Division, half a game ahead of the Toronto Blue Jays, 2 ahead of the Boston Red Sox, 3 ahead of the Tampa Bay Rays, and 3 1/2 ahead of the Baltimore Orioles. Cliché Alert: In the all-important loss column, they are 1 ahead of the Jays, and 3 ahead of each of the other teams.

The Yankees now go on the road, to a weird situation: Because a hurricane tore the roof off Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg last Fall, the Rays are renting Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, the Yankees' Spring Training home, for at least this season.

For the 1st time, the Rays are playing home games not just in Tampa, but on the Tampa side of Tampa Bay. For the 1st time, they are playing home games under God's own sky, instead of that stupid roof. And, for the 1st time, they are playing home games on real grass. It seats just 11,026 people, but that's okay, because, last season, they averaged only 16,515.

It will be weird for the Yankees to be wearing their road grays at their own Spring Training home. But they will still be using their home clubhouse.

April 17, 1945: Pete Gray Makes His Major League Debut

April 17, 1945, 80 years ago: Pete Gray makes his major league debut. This would be a big deal for any player. But it was an especially big deal for Gray, since he only had one arm.

Peter James Wyshner was born on March 6, 1915 in Nanticoke, in the coal country of northeastern Pennsylvania. His brother became a boxer under the name Whitey Gray. Pete would take the name Gray as well.

The story of how Pete lost his right arm has varied over the years, even his age, 7 or 8. Supposedly, it was in a wagon accident. But he still wanted to play baseball, and he learned to bat and field one-handed, catching the ball in his glove and then quickly removing his glove and transferring the ball to his hand in one motion.

By the age of 19, he was playing semi-pro baseball. In 1942, he signed with Three Rivers of the Canadian-American League. His play there caught the attention of the Memphis Chicks of the Southern Association. In 1944, he batted .333, and led the SA with 68 stolen bases. He was awarded the league's Most Valuable Player award.

That season, for the only time in their history, the St. Louis Browns won the American League Pennant. It was largely "credited" to the manpower drain of World War II taking away the other teams' best players. But even the Browns were losing players to the military draft, and they signed Pete Gray for $20,000.

He made his major league debut on April 17, 1945, at Sportsman's Park in St. Louis, the Browns' season opener, against the Detroit Tigers. He was put in left field on this day, wearing Number 14, and batting 2nd. The opposing pitcher was Hal Newhouser, the previous year's AL MVP. Gray grounded to shortstop in the 1st inning, struck out in the 3rd, flew out to center in the 5th, and beat out an infield single to 2nd in the 7th. The Browns won the game, 7-1, as Sig Jakucki outpitched Newhouser.

Gray said his dream was to play at Yankee Stadium. It came true on May 20, with a doubleheader that the Browns swept, 10-1 and 5-1. He got 5 hits and had 2 RBIs. But, as it turned out, he couldn't hit breaking pitches, and with only one hand, he couldn't check his swing. He appeared in 77 games, batting just .218.

He was not appreciated by his teammates, either. They thought he was only on the team to sell tickets due to his disability. They thought he was holding them back from repeating as Pennant winners. It wasn't true: Their winning percentage in games he played was .600, and in games he didn't, .425. They finished 3rd. He was released after the season, with the veterans coming back, and, without him, the Browns fell back to 7th. They didn't have another winning season until 1960 -- their 7th as the Baltimore Orioles.

Gray played in the minor leagues over the next 4 years, but never returned to the majors. He returned to semi-pro ball, and played into the early 1950s. He developed addictions to alcohol and gambling, and resisted interview requests. In 1986, Keith Carradine starred in the ABC movie A Winner Never Quits: The Pete Gray Story. It renewed interest in him, and he became more receptive to publicity. He died on June 30, 2002 in Nanticoke, at age 87.

Tuesday, April 15, 2025

April 15, 1965: John Havlicek Steals the Ball

April 15, 1965, 60 years ago: Game 7 of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals, at the Boston Garden. The Boston Celtics led the Philadelphia 76ers 110-109, but a rare mistake by Russell gave the Sixers the ball with just a few seconds left on the clock.

If the Sixers could score, they would end (or, at least, interrupt) the Celtic dynasty, and head to the NBA Finals against the Los Angeles Lakers, who had wrapped up the Western Conference Championship 2 days earlier.

Hal Greer was getting ready to inbound the ball, and if the Sixers could get it to Wilt Chamberlain, that would probably be it. First, Greer saw Chet Walker (Number 25 in the photo above), and tried to get the ball to him.

John Havlicek had other ideas. Johnny Most had the call, on WHDH, 850 on the AM dial (now WEEI):

Greer is putting the ball in play. He gets it out deep, and Havlicek steals it! Over to Sam Jones! Havlicek stole the ball! It's all over! It's all over! Johnny Havlicek is being mobbed by the fans! It's all over! Johnny Havlicek stole the ball! Oh my, what a play by Havlicek at the end of this ball game!

"I knew he had 5 seconds to inbound," Havlicek said at the time. "So I started counting to myself: '1,001, 1,002, 1,003.' Usually, something has happened by then. So, by 1,003 and a half, I started to peek a little more."

The film always confused me. The player dribbling the ball up the court is clearly a black man, who, as Most pointed out, was Sam Jones. Havlicek was still playing when I was a little kid, so I knew he was white. If Havlicek was the one who stole the ball, why was he not the man dribbling up the court? The film shows him jumping and just tipping the ball with his hand, and Jones retrieving it. It's a "Blink and you'll miss it" play.

But it's become the most famous single play in NBA history -- due to Most doing for it what Russ Hodges did for Bobby Thomson's home run to win the New York Giants the 1951 National League Pennant, and, in each case, the moment did the same for the man -- and 2nd only to Willie Mays' catch in the 1954 World Series as the most famous defensive play in the history of sports.

The Celtics went on to beat the Lakers in the Finals, having already done so in 1959 (while the Lakers were still in Minneapolis), 1962 and 1963; and did so again in 1966, 1968 and 1969, with Chamberlain and the 76ers finally breaking through in 1967, beating the San Francisco (now Golden State) Warriors.

Havlicek would be a member of 8 NBA Championship teams with the Celtics, the last in 1976. The current version of the NBA Championship Trophy, now named for former Commissioner Larry O'Brien, was introduced the following year, so "Hondo" never won the trophy he's holding in this photo. The predecessor Trophy, and this trophy until O'Brien's retirement as Commissioner in 1984, was named for the Celtics' founder and owner, Walter Brown.
Havlicek was elected to the Basketball Hall of Fame, and named to the NBA's 50th and 75th Anniversary Teams. The Celtics retired his Number 17. He died in 2019. I don't know if he ever met Mays. 

April 15, 1955: McDonald's (As We Know It) Is Founded

April 15, 1955, 70 years ago: Ray Kroc opens the 1st franchised McDonald's restaurant, in the Chicago suburb of Des Plaines, Illinois. Food on planet Earth will never be the same.

Brothers Richard and Maurice McDonald, New Hampshire natives whose family had lived in California since the 1920s, opened a hamburger stand in San Bernardino, California in 1940. In 1948, they created the Speedee Service System to produce their meals, a method that became the standard for fast food.
They focused on a reduced menu, consisting of 9 items: Their 15-cent hamburger, a 20-cent cheeseburger, soft drinks, milk, coffee, potato chips, and a slice of pie. They were successful enough to begin franchising their system in 1953, with a restaurant in Phoenix.

In 1954, the brothers bought 8 Multi-Mixer machines for mixing milkshakes from Prince Castle. That caught the attention of the Prince Castle salesman who took the order, Ray Kroc. Kroc went to San Bernardino in 1954, and met the brothers. They hired him as their franchise agent. On April 15, 1955, Kroc opened his 1st McDonald's, in Des Plaines.
Kroc became frustrated with the McDonald brothers' desire to maintain a small number of restaurants. The brothers also consistently told Kroc he could not make changes to things such as the original blueprint. Finally, in 1961, Kroc bought the brothers out, for $2.7 million, calculated so as to ensure each brother received $1 million after taxes. (In 2022 money, that $2.7 million becomes $29.5 million.)

Maurice McDonald died in 1971, at the age of 69. Richard McDonald died in 1998, at 89. They got their million after taxes, and that was about it. Kroc became one of the richest men in the world, dying in 1984, with McDonald's having over 50 billion hamburgers served.