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Posted on 8/25/23 at 6:56 am
Posted on 8/25/23 at 6:56 am

Today in History: August 25
0357
Julian Caesar defeats the Alamanni at Strasbourg in Gaul.
1830
The "Tom Thumb" steam locomotive runs its famous race with a horse-drawn car. The horse wins because the engine, which had been ahead, breaks down.
1862
Union and Confederate troops skirmish at Waterloo Bridge, Virginia, during the Second Bull Run Campaign.
1916
The National Park Service is established as part of the Department of the Interior.
1921
The United States, which never ratified the Versailles Treaty ending World War I, finally signs a peace treaty with Germany.
1944
Paris is liberated from German occupation by Free French Forces under General Jacques LeClerc.
1950
President Harry Truman orders the U.S. Army to seize control of the nation's railroads to avert a strike.
1991
Belarus gains independence from the USSR.
2019
NASA investigates possibly the 1st crime in space over astronaut Anne McClain illegally accessing bank a/c from space
Today in History: Born on August 25
1930
Sean Connery, Scottish actor famous for playing the character James Bond in the Ian Flemming movie series.
1949
John Savage, actor (The Deer Hunter).
1949
Gene Simmons, singer, songwriter; member of the band Kiss, one of the top-selling bands of all time.
1954
Elvis Costello, Grammy Award–winning singer, songwriter ("Watching the Detectives").
1964
Blair Underwood, actor, director (L.A. Law TV series, The Second Coming); won Grammy for Best Spoken Word Album, An Inconvenient Truth.
1968
Rachel Ray, chef, author, TV host.
JOTD
"I'm groping the balls of the storm."
The manager hesitated for a moment on the phone. "I'm sorry, can you repeat that?" he asked the newly hired immigrant worker.
"I...rub the storm...balls?" the man said, coughing.
Before he could ask again, the manager heard a little commotion on the line, followed by a younger voice.
"I'm so sorry, my father has been learning English. He won't be making it into work today because he's feeling sick."
"Oh! That's perfectly fine, but...what was the part about rubbing...storm balls...?"
The kid laughed. "We were working on popular English idioms this week. He was trying to say he's feeling under the weather."

Posted on 8/25/23 at 11:31 am to Armymann50
quote:
Paris is liberated from German occupation by Free French Forces under General Jacques LeClerc.
This caused some ill will among the allies. Even though they had tentatively said a French division would liberate Paris they did not want to divert LeClerc's armored division for the task. At that time, with the German army in full retreat, they wanted every armored division involved in the pursuit.
A US division was already on the outskirts of Paris and if anything the Allies weren't sold on capturing Paris at all. Adding Paris and all it's civilians to an already over stretched supply chain was asking for trouble. DeGaulle, however, threw an absolute fit.
Rather than risking a major diplomatic rift and complicating post war relations Eisenhower authorized LeClerc's division to take the city. Hitler had decried that Paris be held as a fortress city and that every major cultural landmark in the city be destroyed. The German commander agreed to carry out Hitler's orders... and then quietly made sure that nothing of the sort would happen.
So when the Free French first began to enter the city they were greeted with a raucous crowd... waving US flags. The Parisians knew a US division was right outside the city, they assumed they would be the liberators. A full fledged city wide party started and DeGaulle, who ensured he was at the head of the division effectively sealed his future as being the President of post war France.
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