Sunday, October 18, 1970

We remember the great Chuck Berry (1926-2017)

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Many of us learned of Chuck Berry when we heard The Beatles, Rolling Stones or other British bands record covers of his songs.  

I remember asking the question:  Who is that fellow Berry who wrote “Rock and roll music” or “Carol” or “Reeling and rocking”.

In 1972, I saw Chuck Berry in concert and I became a huge fan.

We remember Chuck Berry who was born in St. Louis on this day in 1926 .    He died in 2017
Elvis put rock on the radio but Chuck Berry invented the rock guitar and wrote the songs that every garage band played.    He was awesome and his songs belong in every rock collection.
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We remember Barbara Billingsley (1915-2010)


Like many of you, I grew up watching “Leave it to Beaver”.   I still love the reruns and watch them whenever I have the time.

Barbara Billingsley, the lady who played Mrs Cleaver or “Beaver’s mom”, was born on this day in 1915 and died after a long illness in October 2010.
Who didn’t love Mrs Cleaver?  She reminded me of my mom and every other mom that I came in touch with during those “growing up” years.
Thanks for all of those wonderful shows that generations will love forever!
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1469: Ferdinand married Isabella

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On this day in 1469, 20-year-old Ferdinand of Aragon married 18-year old Isabella of Castile.  On the surface, it sounds like another wedding between a couple of young royals.  In reality, it turned out to be one of the most consequential marriages in world history.

First, it united all of the dominions of Spain into what would become the world's foremost military power.

Years later, they sponsored Columbus's trip, and the rest is the good history we used to learn in school before the P.C. crowd decided to spoil our celebrations of Columbus Day.  The trips convinced the royal couple to encourage colonial activity in the New World, leading to a period of great prosperity and imperial supremacy for Spain. 

In 1492 — or, incredibly, the same year that Columbus departed on his trip, they ordered all Spanish Jews to convert to Christianity or face expulsion from Spain.  The Muslims were also driven out of Spain during their very consequential reign.

They were what we would call today a power couple, as Kathy Copeland Padden wrote:

They had an incredibly modern relationship in many ways, with Isabella on an equal par with her husband.  They enjoyed a profound love and mutual respect in their relationship, tirelessly working together to achieve their aims.

In Ferdinand and Isabella's estimation, their crowning achievement wasn't expanding their empire to include the New World, or uniting the various dominions that would become modern Spain.  They believed their greatest accomplishment was driving out all Muslims from their country.

They both died young:  Ferdinand died in 1516 and Isabella in 1504.


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