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Last Updated 07:00 AM EDT May 15, 2009


Henry Hudson.

On September 3, 1609, Henry Hudson and the English and Dutch men on the 80-ton Halve Maen (Half Moon) came within sight of the coastline where New York meets New Jersey today. The view of the sandy white beach backed by forest must have appeared Edenic to the perhaps 20 gaunt and exhausted men, who had endured most of the past five months crammed inside the 85-foot vessel, savaged by storms, frigid weather, and an oppressive diet.

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The lure of white sand beaches, citrus groves, and the glitter of Disney World and Miami, has often diverted the spotlight from Florida’s rich historical heritage.

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On the Web: Editors? Picks

Jefferson's retirement retreat restored

Statue of Liberty's crown to re-open July 4

123-year-old scandal still resonates today

DNA test could shed light on Lincoln's last days, doctor says

New York, Vermont events mark Champlain's 1609 explorations

Debated Civil War re-enactment by Fox Cities students proves a hit

Fishkill land confirmed to be Revolutionary War gravesite


Blog
 
 Why History?
Posted by John F. Ross at 12:00 AM  EST
April 22, 2009

This is the first entry by American Heritage Executive Editor and author John F. Ross in a new blog about the trials,...


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Jimmy Carter Missed the Point
Posted by American Heritage Staff at 07:00 AM  EST
April 14, 2009

I have just finished reading my first copy of your wonderful Winter 2009 issue of American Heritage. I particularly enjoyed...


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M1From Bazookas to RPGS

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John Doy (seated) and his son Charles (in plaid jacket) pose with fellow abolitionists who broke them out of jail in 1859 after a pro-slaver posse stopped them at gunpoint from taking freed African Americans out of Kansas toward safety in Iowa. Civil War Chronicles: Abolitionist John Doy

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Actors Shelley Duvall and Danny Lloyd flee through 900 tons of dairy salt passing for snow on the set of Stanley Kubrick?s 1980 film, The Shining, a scene filmed with the new and revolutionary Steadicam by its inventor, Garrett Brown.Of Steadicams and Skycams

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The Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) logged more than 60,000,000 miles in the service of their country.Flight of the WASP

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Bernard MadoffWall Street’s 10 Most Notorious Stock Traders

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Picture of the Day
Navy gunners fire a 40 mm. cannon in honor of the governor of Florida at the commissioning ceremony for the USS Momsen, Panama City, Florida, August 2004.
Navy gunners fire a 40 mm. cannon in honor of the governor of Florida at the commissioning ceremony for the USS Momsen, Panama City, Florida, August 2004.
 
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Today in History
May 15

1972: Governor George C. Wallace is shot by Arthur Bremer while campaigning for the presidential nomination in Laurel, Maryland.

1970: Two students at Jackson State University, in Mississippi, are killed when police open fire during student protests.

1940: DuPont begins selling nylon stockings across the country; five million pairs are sold on the first day.

1911: The Supreme Court orders the dissolution of the Standard Oil Company.

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Which of these Wall Street Rogues is the Most Vile?
William Duer, precipitated a giant crash in bank stock values, ruining himself and his business partners in the process
Ferdinand Ward, cheated gullible investors, including former president U. S. Grant
Ivan Boesky, ratted out peers to the SEC, who allowed him to pocket millions earned from insider trading
Bernard Madoff, bankrupted thousands in a nefarious international Ponzi scheme
Other


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Quote of the Day
May 15

“Art is anything you can get away with.”

Andy Warhol (1928-1987)


     
 
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