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Our Daily Bleed...
They shall rise up heroes, there will be many,
None will prevail against them at last.
They go saying each: "I am one of many";
Their hands empty save for history.
They die at bridges, bridge gates, & drawbridges...— Kenneth Rexroth,
"From the Paris Commune to the Kronstadt Rebellion" (1936),
(To be continued . . .)

From her probable slave origins through her leadership of mass demonstrations in the 1920's, "Dark Lucy" was — in the words of Chicago cops — "more dangerous than a thousand rioters."
Wife of Haymarket martyr Albert Parsons.
Ancient Greece: End of ANTHESTERIA, with elaborate representations of the death & resurrection of Dionysus.
The Hindu World: FESTIVAL OF RAMA.
322 -- [BC] Aristotle dies.
1785 -- Italian poet/novelist Alessandro Manzoni lives, Milan. His novel I Promessi Sposi (The Betrothed) had immense patriotic appeal for Italians & is generally ranked among the masterpieces of world literature. Verdi dedicated his Requiem to Manzoni's memory.
1799 -- US: Hold the Fries?: John Fries launches a rebellion in Pennsylvania against the imposition of the "direct tax" enacted by Congress 1 July 1798, on lands, houses & slaves. Fries' mob was dispersed by the Militia after a march on Bethlehem. Fries was arrested & sentenced to be hanged for treason, before being pardoned by the President.
1849 -- Luther Burbank lives, on Arbor Day.
1860 -- US: Last Things First? 6,000 shoemakers joined by 20,000 other New England workers in Lynn, Massachusetts strike.During the great New England shoemakers strike, about 1,000 women workers in Lynn, Massachusetts, strike for a union & against wage cuts. Marching through a blizzard, the women carry signs proclaiming: "American Ladies Will Not Be Slaves."
In 10 days, a procession of 10,000 workers marches through Lynn in the largest labor protest prior to the Civil War. Within a month, shoe manufacturers offer higher wages to bring strikers back to the factories. But the companies refuse to recognize a union.
1862 -- US: McGeneral Bar? Battle of Elkhorn Tavern, Day 2, Generals McCulloch & McIntosh killed.
1867 -- US: The Knights of St. Crispin, a national organization for shoemakers, organizes in Milwaukee.
http://www.history.umd.edu/Gompers/newtime1.html
1870 -- Thomas Hardy meets Emma Lavinia Gifford, his first wife. After her death in 1912, Hardy turns his desk calendar to this day & leaves it thus until his own death in 1928.
1872 -- Piet Mondrian lives, Holland. Abstract painter famous for geometric pictures of black lines & colored rectangles on white backgrounds.
1875 -- Maurice Ravel tunes in. Composer & freelance musician."I've so much music in my head."
— Maurice Ravel, shortly before his death.
1876 -- US: Alexander Graham Bell gets patent for the first telephone.
1878 --Italy: Carlo Frigerio lives (d.1966) Italian militant & writer, a principal collaborator, along with Camillo Berneri, Luigi Fabbri & Carlo Molaschi, on "Pensiero e volontà" (Thought & Will; directed by Malatesta, it began publishing in Rome in January 1924).
3 «Q http://bloc.balearweb.net/rss.php?blogId=13107
1880 -- After serving for three years as Minister to Spain, James Russell Lowell arrives in London to assume his duties as Ambassador to the Court of St. James.
1885 -- Stith Thompson lives (1885-1976), Bloomfield, Kentucky. One of the world's leading authorities on folklore. Best known for his work on the classification of motifs in folk tales. His six-volume Motif-Index of Folk-Literature (1932-37) is considered the international key to traditional material, & it is said that Thompson was responsible for putting the study of folklore in the US on a solid, scholarly basis. Grandfather of Sue Letsinger & great-grandfather of BleedMeister's Nummer 1 Son, Brandon.
http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/TT/fth26.html
1885 --
France:
Premier issue of the weekly magazine “L'Audace”, in Paris, organe communiste-anarchiste, which follows upon the newspaper "Terre et Liberté" (whose manager Antoine Rieffel was imprisoned for two years).
Three numbers only will appear, the last on red paper in commemoration of the Paris Commune of 1871.
“L'Audace” sports two epigraphs from the French Révolution, quoting Danton's celebrated phrase (on what is needed win) & also Marat:
“Audacity, always audacity, still more audacity”
“Die if necessary but speak the truth”
http://ytak.club.fr/mars07.html
1887 -- US: Helen Parkhurst, founder of the Dalton Plan of Education, lives, Durand, Wisconsin.
1905 -- Russia: Noble Cause? Beginning of the Russian peasant rebellion, during which the peasants burn many castles of the nobility.
1907 -- Norwegian poet Rolf Jacobsen lives, Oslo.
1909 --Charles Perrone (b.1837) dies. Swiss-born anarchist, militant of the First International, propagandiste bakouniniste & cartographer.
http://ytak.club.fr/decembre06.html#perron
1911 -- US: 20,000 troops sent to the Mexican border to "protect US interests."
1913 -- Spain: Ramón "Ramonín" Álvarez Palomo lives (1913-2003). Asturian militant anarcho-syndicalist, CNT militant involved in the insurrection of 1934 & imprisoned with Durruti before taking refuge in France. Fought in Spanish Revolution. Publisher of "Acción Libertaria" until 1994. Writer & historian with a number of books to his credit.[Details / context]
1917 -- US: Original Dixieland jazz band records first jazz record.
- THE FIRST JAZZ RECORD goes on sale on this
day in 1917. The Victor Company released a tune
called "The Dixieland Jazz Band One-Step"
recorded by Nick La Rocca & his Original
Dixieland Jazz Band who had traveled all the way
from New Orleans to New York to make the record.


In a discussion Voline (known as the "dynamiter of the Bolshevik myth") had with Trotsky in 1919, at the height of the Russian Civil War, they had the following exchange:
Trotsky: "One can't make an omelette without breaking eggs."
Voline: "I see the broken eggs — now where's this omelette of yours?"
Reminiscences of Voline by his son Leo at Kate Sharpley Library, http://flag.blackened.net/ksl/bullet12.htm#Voline
[Details / context]
1921 -- US: Man Ray (1890-1976), artist, chess player/designer, anarchist & photographer, between today & the 26th, while in Philadelphia, wins $10 for Portrait of a Sculptor Berenice Abbott in John Wanamaker's competition "15th Annual Exhibition of Photographs." Man Ray also makes a movie with Marcel Duchamp; Elsa, Baroness von Freytag-Loringhoven, shaves her pubic hair.
http://www.manray-photo.com/
1921 --Russia: As Trotsky orders the artillery bombardment of Krondstadt, Emma Goldman & Alexander Berkman, feeling that their last tie to the Bolsheviks has been broken, decide to leave Russia & alert the world to what they have witnessed.
Alex writes his book, The Bolshevik Myth, & helps Emma with her book, published as My Disillusionment in Russia (1923) (the publisher unilaterally dropped the last chapter).
http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/bright/berkman/bmyth/bmtoc.html
http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/goldman/disillusion/toc.html
1923 -- Robert Frost's poem, "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening," is published in the "New Republic" magazine. Proud of the poem, he said the lines, "Whose woods these are, I think I know, his house is in the village though..." contained everything he ever knew about how to write.
http://writersalmanac.publicradio.org/programs/2006/03/06/
1924 -- Kobe Abe (1924-1993) lives, Tokyo, Japan. Avant-garde author of such bizarre & allegorical situations as Suna no onna (The Woman in the Dunes, 1963) & Hako otoko (The Boxman, 1973) Graduated from medical schoolbut wrote instead.
http://www.ibiblio.org/abekobo/
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/koboabe.htm
1929 -- South African-born novelist/short-story writer, Dan Jacobson lives, Johannesburg. Writes with humor & pathos of his troubled land of birth in such novels as The Trap (1955), & The Price of Diamonds (1957). Much of his best work is his short stories.
1932 -- US: Police kill striking workers at Ford's Dearborn, Michigan plant.River Rouge Massacre when workers demonstrate at Ford's plant demanding jobs.
3,000 jobless men march on the shut-down Ford plants at River Rouge in Dearborn.
They start out peacefully, but are met at the gates by Dearborn cops who order them back & fire tear-gas bombs. Members of the crowd begin to throw rocks & pieces of ice.
In response the Ford Company fire department now unleashes tons of high-pressure icy cold water on the marchers from fire hoses. The police open fire with pistols, rifles & machine guns. Four are killed, 25 wounded.
Henry Ford fortifies his home with machine gun emplacements & stockpiles teargas & ammunition at the Rouge.
1932 --Germany: During this month, at its last regional Congress, held in Erfurt, the Freie Arbeiter-Union Deutschlands (FAUD, anarchosyndicalist union) decides that, in the event of the Nazis taking power, its federal bureau in Berlin will shut down & be replaced by an underground directorate & that there would have to be a general strike by way of reply. The latter decision proves impracticable: for one thing, the FAUD all across Germany is decimated by a wave of arrests.
http://flag.blackened.net/ksl/bullet5.htm#FAUD
http://www.galeon.com/ateneosant/Ateneo/Historia/SigloXX_1/sxx-faud.htm
1933 -- US: MONOPOLY is invented, appearing at the height of the Great Depression & is a big hit because each player gets $1,500 & tries to bankrupt the others by buying, selling, & trading properties & by charging exorbitant rent — just like real businesses & land owners. Only one company is allowed to make the game.US: Charles Darrow invents the game of "Monopoly," Philadelphia — this is probably the date on his patent or patent application.
’Robert Braunwart’
1936 -- Gorg Prc livs. Frnch writr, calld th gratst innovator of form of his gnration. Bst known for his 1969 novl, La Disparition (A Void), writtn ntirly without using th lttr " ". Daily Bld Saint, Jun 9.George Perec http://www.themodernword.com/scriptorium/perec.html
1936 -- Germany: Hitler's government remilitarizes the Rhineland in direct contravention of the Treaty of Versailles.FROM A PEACE MUSEUM TO A HITLER BARRACKS
Ernst Friedrich (1894-1967), an anarchist, founded the first international anti-war museum in Berlin (1923) as a testament to the German anti-militarist movement & to demolish nationalist lies. The horrors of the war, on the front & at home, were overwhelmingly portrayed.
When the Nazis took power, they seized the Museum, burned the exhibits & books & transformed the place into an SA-Heim (storm troopers' barracks) They could not wait for the necessary alterations to be made & overnight painted out the word "Anti" from the fascia & posted a guarded on the door.
1937 --England: Disappointed by the financial failure of the Spanish exhibition that opened February 20th, this month Emma Goldman begins organizing a benefit performance in London for the refugee women & children in Spain.
1942 -- US: IWW founder, anarchist labor organizer Lucy Parsons dies, Chicago, Illinois. Aka Lucy Ella Gonzales Parsons, she often went by Lucy Gonzales & denying her African American roots.
http://www.lucyparsonsproject.org/about_lucyparsons.html
http://flag.blackened.net/liberty/parsonsl-bio.html
In French, see l'éphéméride Anarchiste,
http://ytak.club.fr/mars07.html
1954 -- ¶ During this month Beatster Jack Kerouac moves into the Cameo Hotel in San Francisco; friends with Al Sublette. Begins writing San Francisco Blues poems. Begins Book of Dreams.

1965 -- First US "combat" troops sent to Vietnam. (As opposed to "advisers" & troops who are in a defensive roll.)The Johnson administration tries to hide this policy change & denies rumors, but a State Department spokesman "mistakenly" spills the beans a couple months later.
http://distefano.com/
1965 -- US: Selma, Alabama: 67+ marchers injured by police violence against attempted Civil Rights march to Montgomery.
1967 -- Jim Morrison & The Doors performs at the Matrix in Frisco.
http://www.sfmuseum.org/hist1/rock.html
http://www.seattlehempfest.com/
1972 -- US: Urban Indians form the National American Indians Council. Omaha, Nebraska.
1974 -- US: Commenting on the on the SLA's ransom demand of free food for the poor, California's Acting Beloved & Respected Comrade Leader Acting Governor & Acting Humanitarian Ronnie Reagan (no terrorist he!) says,"It's just too bad we can't have an epidemic of botulism."
1975 -- Russia: Mikhail Bakhtin dies in Moscow. Cultural theorist of carnival & rebellion. Especially remembered for his work on Dostoevsky, where he expressed his belief in a mutual relation between meaning & context, involving the author, the work, & the reader, each constantly affecting & influencing the others, & the whole mediated by existing political/social forces.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mikhail_Bakhtin
1981 -- US: Disneyland's first homicide: an 18-year-old is stabbed to death in Tomorrowland.
1983 -- Turkey: After a fire in a coal mine in northern Turkey, miners are ordered back in before the flames are completely extinguished; two subsequent explosions kill 98 workers.
http://www.roadsideamerica.com/map/wv.html
1988 -- Divine (Harris Glenn Milstead), film actor, dies at age 43. 300-pound transvestite Divine, is pure joy for John Waters connoisseurs, fans of "unrefined" humor.
http://www.dreamlandnews.com/divine/
http://www.filmvault.com/filmvault/austin/d/divinetrash1.html
1988 -- US: Sign Me Up? Federal Court rules that a peace group must have the same access to students at high school career days as military recruiters.
1988 -- US: Activists sit in to protest refusal of the Albany (New York) City Council to pass legislation prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.
1995 -- US: Despite decades of opposition, state of New York reinstates the death penalty.
1996 -- Guatemala: 500 women march on the National Palace in a commemoration of state violence against women. Guatemala City.
1996 -- A crowd of 3000 destroy Freeport copper mine facilities in Tamika, Irian Jaya / West Papua, after a Dani clansman is run over by company security. The mine is closed as community organisations prepare a list of demands protesting human rights violations, eco-terrorism & cultural genocide. Overnight, the world price of copper jumps from US$15 to US$2580 a ton.
Source: 'Calendar Riots'
1998 -- US: Little Black Cloud? Anarchist Jack (Yankel) Frager (1903-1998) dies, New York. He was last arrested at age 88 during a Hiroshima Day protest, for painting the shadows of bomb victims on sidewalks in New York City.The rains came...
The rain washed away the evidence, so the charges were dropped. The War Resisters' League & the Libertarian Book Club co-sponsored a memorial tribute to Jack on June 9th at the Brecht Forum.
http://flag.blackened.net/ksl/bullet21.htm#Frager
1999 --Alexander Andrews III, whose exploits in a crippled WW II B-17 bomber inspired the John Hersey novel The War Lover dies at 86, Raleigh, NC.
2000 -- England: Nicolas Walter (1924-2000), dies. British journalist, philosopher, atheist, anarchist.His passion for accuracy & a loathing of waffle led him to fire off vast numbers of letters to the press; a few years ago, he estimated that he had had over 2,000 published.
Walter was a founding member of the Committee of 100, & Spies for Peace. A founder of the Vietnam Action Group, he was imprisoned for two months for interrupting Prime Minister Harold Wilson, who was reading the lesson at a Brighton church in 1966.
Nicolas Walter was active despite contracting cancer at age 30; he managed a demanding paraplegic life in central London, daring motorists to ignore his manual wheelchair as he shot across busy roads.
See the Tribute by Donald Rooum,
http://www.ethicalsoc.org.uk/record/nicolaspage.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicolas_Walter
http://newhumanist.org.uk/541
http://www.geocities.com/~johngray/joelane.htm
2005 -- American Surrealist poet Philip Lamantia dies.
http://www.litkicks.com/PhilipLamantia
http://www.citylights.com/
http://www.rooknet.com/beatpage/writers/lamantia.html
http://info.interactivist.net/node/4259
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Lamantia
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