


General Benjamin Butler, Fort Monroe’s commander and a former lawyer, was sympathetic to the men’s plight. He came up with a clever circumvention to the law by declaring the escaped slaves “contraband” that might be used to support the rebel cause, effectively creating a path to asylum.Skip ahead some years, and the land where the Grand Contraband Camp stood was developed into part of the city of Hampton. An apartment complex there was torn down in 2012, giving the city an opportunity to excavate the area. All sorts of relics from the Civil War refugee community have been recovered. Read the story of the Grand Contraband Camp and other camps like it at mental_floss.
Word soon spread, and Fort Monroe received hundreds of slaves seeking protection under the new contraband policy. Thousands ultimately settled in nearby fields and burned-out Hampton homes as white residents fled and Confederate forces, fearing a Union takeover, torched the town. The site buried beneath the now-demolished apartment complex is believed part of what came to be known as the Grand Contraband Camp.


A loyal dog stood guard by its trapped friend for a week until the pair were found.
Tillie, a setter, and Phoebe, a basset hound, had been missing for a week when Vashon Island Pet Protectors in Washington state posted a desperate plea on Facebook last weekend in
a last ditch effort to help find the two much-loved pets.
VIPP received a phone call earlier this week from someone who said for
the last few days a "reddish" dog had come up to their property and then
dashed back into a nearby ravine.
"Heart sinking … we knew that meant Phoebe was inside the cistern and
every breath was held and every doggie prayer offered that the peek over
the rim would somehow find her safe.
And gratefully… this time we have a happy ending with dear Phoebe found
perched on some concrete rubble that held her out of the water.
For nearly a week Tillie stayed by her side with the exception of the
few minutes of each day when she went for help."
Both dogs were cold and hungry but are doing well.
Amy Carey with VIPP said that the remarkable discovery shows how
unbreakable pack-bonds are in dogs and that it's a good reminder for
owners never to give up searching for missing pets.
A wheezy sea otter in Seattle has been diagnosed with asthma and is
receiving a breathing boost from an inhaler.
The Seattle Aquarium in Washington said the sea otter Mishka started
having trouble breathing when wildfires moved closer to the aquarium.
| 1788 | After having been dissolved, the French Parliament of Paris reassembles in triumph. | |
| 1789 | Congress passes the Judiciary Act of 1789, establishing a strong federal court system with the powers it needs to ensure the supremacy of the Constitution and federal law. The new Supreme Court will have a chief justice and five associate justices. | |
| 1842 | Branwell Bronte, the brother of the Bronte sisters and the model for Hindley Earnshaw in Emily’s novel Wuthering Heights, dies of tuberculosis. Emily and Anne die the same year. | |
| 1862 | President Abraham Lincoln suspends the writ of habeas corpus against anyone suspected of being a Southern sympathizer. | |
| 1904 | Sixty-two die and 120 are injured in head-on train collision in Tennessee. | |
| 1914 | In the Alsace-Lorraine area between France and Germany, the German Army captures St. Mihiel. | |
| 1915 | Bulgaria mobilizes troops on the Serbian border. | |
| 1929 | The first flight using only instruments is completed by U.S. Army pilot James Doolittle. | |
| 1930 | Noel Coward’s comedy Private Lives opens in London starring Gertrude Lawrence and Coward himself. | |
| 1947 | The World Women’s Party meets for the first time since World War II. | |
| 1956 | The first transatlantic telephone cable system begins operation. | |
| 1957 | President Dwight D. Eisenhower sends federal troops into Little Rock, Arkansas, to protect nine black students entering its newly integrated high school. | |
| 1960 | The Enterprise, the first nuclear powered aircraft carrier, is launched. | |
| 1962 | The University of Mississippi agrees to admit James Meredith as the first black university student, sparking more rioting. | |
| 1969 | The "Chicago Eight," charged with conspiracy and crossing state lines with the intent to incite a riot, go on trial for their part in the mayhem during the 1968 Democratic Party National Convention in the "Windy City." | |
| 1970 | The Soviet Luna 16 lands, completing the first unmanned round trip to the moon. | |
| 1979 | CompuServe (CIS) offers one of the first online services to consumers; it will dominate among Internet service providers for consumers through the mid-1990s. | |
| 1993 | Sihanouk is reinstalled as king of Cambodia. | |
| 1996 | Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty signed by representatives of 71 nations at the UN; at present, five key nations have signed but not ratified it and three others have not signed. | |
| 2005 | Hurricane Rita, the 4th-most intense Atlantic hurricane ever recorded, comes ashore in Texas causing extensive damage there and in Louisiana, which had devastated by Hurricane Katrina less than a month earlier. | |
| 2009 | LRAD (Long Range Acoustic Device) "sonic cannon," a non-lethal device that utilizes intense sound, is used in the United States for the first time, to disperse protestors at the G20 summit in Pittsburgh, Penn. |




Stare harder into the hole, though, and the cop-doughnut relationship isn’t just a marriage of convenience—it’s deeper than that. In fact, we’ve officially stuffed the protecting-and-serving citizens of our country with sugary pastries since at least World War I, when the Salvation Army sent female volunteers to France to cook doughnuts and bring them to the front. The originator of this tradition, a young ensign named Helen Purviance, knelt before a potbelly stove to make the first batch in a frying pan. “There was also a prayer in my heart that somehow this home touch would do more for those who ate the doughnuts than satisfy a physical hunger,” she said later. For a while, U.S. soldiers were actually called “doughboys,” and though they may have originally gotten this nickname some other way, the millions of doughnuts certainly didn’t hurt.The history of doughnuts is entwined with the history of urban (and eventually, rural) police work. Altlas Obscura looks at the connection between police and doughnuts in depth.
Successful
startups — full-blown industries, even — have capitalized on our
predilection for moving our legs as little as possible, otherwise known
as laziness. Why walk across the street to pick up pad thai when you can
Seamless? Why hobble downstairs to hail a cab when you can Uber?
| 1553 | The Sadians defeat the last of their enemies and establish themselves as rulers of Morocco. | |
| 1561 | Philip II of Spain gives orders to halt colonizing efforts in Florida. | |
| 1577 | William of Orange makes his triumphant entry into Brussels, Belgium. | |
| 1667 | Slaves in Virginia are banned from obtaining their freedom by converting to christianity. | |
| 1739 | The Austrians sign the Treaty of Belgrade after having lost the city to the Turks. | |
| 1779 | The American navy under John Paul Jones, commanding from Bonhomme Richard, defeats and captures the British man-of-war Serapis. | |
| 1788 | Louis XVI of France declares the Parliament restored. | |
| 1795 | A national plebiscite approves the new French constitution, but so many voters sustain that the results are suspect. | |
| 1803 | British Major General Sir Arthur Wellesley defeats the Marathas at Assaye, India. | |
| 1805 | Lieutenant Zebulon Pike pays $2,000 to buy from the Sioux a 9-square-mile tract at the mouth of the Minnesota River that will be used to establish a military post, Fort Snelling. | |
| 1806 | The Lewis and Clark Expedition arrives back in St. Louis just over three years after its departure. | |
| 1864 | Confederate and Union forces clash at Mount Jackson, Front Royal and Woodstock in Virginia during the Valley campaign. | |
| 1911 | The Second International Aviation Meet opens in New York. | |
| 1912 | Mack Sennet’s first "Keystone Cop" film debuts, Cohen Collects a Debt. | |
| 1945 | The first American dies in Vietnam during the fall of Saigon to French forces. | |
| 1952 | Richard Nixon responds to charges of a secret slush fund during his ‘Checkers Speech.’ | |
| 1954 | East German police arrest 400 citizens as U.S. spies. | |
| 1967 | Soviets sign a pact to send more aid to Hanoi. | |
| 1973 | Juan Peron is re-elected president of Argentina after being overthrown in 1955. | |
| 1983 | Gerrie Coetzee (Gerhardus Coetzee), boxer from South Africa; first boxer from the African continent to win a world heavyweight tittle (World Boxing Association). | |
| 1983 | Gulf Air Flight 771 from Karachi, Pakistan, to Abu Dhabi, UAE, bombed; all 117 aboard die. | |
| 1992 | Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) detonates 3,700-lb. bomb in Belfast, completely destroying the Northern Ireland forensic laboratory, injuring 20 people and damaging 700 houses. | |
| 2002 | The first public version of Mozilla Firefox browser released; originally called Phoenix 0.1 its name was changed due to trademark issues with Phoenix Technologies. | |
| 2004 | Hurricane Jeanne causes severe flooding in Haiti; over 1,000 reported dead. |
A steakhouse in Watford, Hertfordshire, has been found guilty of
selling horse and venison meats as exotic zebra and wildebeest dishes.
Kunal Soni, 32, of Hemel Hempstead, was ordered to pay £3,860.78 costs
after pleading guilty to misinforming customers.
In April last year, two officers from Hertfordshire County Council’s
trading standards service attended The Steakhouse restaurant to carry
out a test purchase following a complaint about meat substitution at the
restaurant, which offers various exotic meats on the menu.
The officers, who were the only two customers in the restaurant, placed
their order with Mr Soni for one zebra and one wildebeest.