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    4th May - (1979) Margaret Thatcher sworn in as Britain’s first female prime minister

    Kitkat
    Kitkat

    4th May - (1979) Margaret Thatcher sworn in as Britain’s first female prime minister Empty 4th May - (1979) Margaret Thatcher sworn in as Britain’s first female prime minister

    Post by Kitkat Sun 03 May 2020, 13:10

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    Margaret Thatcher sworn in as Britain’s first female prime minister

    4th May - (1979) Margaret Thatcher sworn in as Britain’s first female prime minister 112px-Margaret_Thatcher_%281983%29

    Margaret Thatcher, leader of the Conservative Party, is sworn in as Britain’s first female prime minister. The Oxford-educated chemist and lawyer was sworn in the day after the Conservatives won a 44-seat majority in general parliamentary elections.  The conservative politician was the first female head of state in Europe. During her 11-year reign, her sweeping economic reforms polarized the British public and her toughness earning her the nickname The Iron Lady.  More...




    1999 - A tornado produces the highest wind speeds ever recorded
    The F5 tornado hitting parts of Oklahoma City caused the record wind speed of about 301 mph (484 km/h). 45 people were killed, 665 injured.

    1978 - The Digital Equipment Corporation sends the world's first spam email
    A representative sent out 600 emails and sold computers for $12 million. Unsolicited bulk emails have since become a scourge of the digital age as spammers attempt to achieve a similar success.

    1958 - Truman Capote's book Breakfast at Tiffany's is published
    The novella is one of the U.S. author's most popular works. he 1961 film of the same name starring Audrey Hepburn is classic in its genre.

    1913 - The first Indian full-length feature film is premiered
    The release of Raja Harishchandra marked the birth of the Indian film industry, the world's largest in terms of films produced and ticket sales.




    alien  Historic Trivia pick - The Orphan Trains Of 19th-Century America

    Adopting parents could "special order" children with the hair and eye color they wanted

    As the wheels of innovation propelled American cities into a new era of urban development, it would test the need for social services in its biggest civic centers. By 1850, nearly 30,000 orphans made up nearly five percent of New York City’s total population. With the troubles of the industrial revolution, however, also came the solution: the introduction of orphan trains.
    4th May - (1979) Margaret Thatcher sworn in as Britain’s first female prime minister Train-flyer

    During most of the 19th-century, there were few formal rules for adoption. Children who lost their parents for one reason or another were usually just raised by family or neighbors. Burgeoning cities, however, seemed to overwhelm this system of neighborly do-gooders. Children weren’t just homeless because their parents died in accidents, but were also turned to the streets because of poverty, addiction, or otherwise unfit parenting.

    To protect themselves, these children often formed street gangs, inventing ways to make a living, selling things like newspapers or matches. Charles Brace formed the Children’s Aid Society with the intention of helping children live more fulfilling lives. His first move was to form newsy bunkhouses that offered education and reduced rent while children sold newspapers.

    The bunkhouses alone weren’t enough. In the wake of the Civil War and reconstruction, displaced families were creating even more homeless children, and Brace decided to get creative. Just as the railroad allowed for American’s to conquer the Midwest, so to could it help tackle child homelessness.

    Beginning in 1853, the Children’s Aid Society orchestrated a mass migration of orphans out of the city. They gave each child new clothes and a bible, loaded them on a train, then exhibited them to prospective parents. Brace felt that America’s breadbasket was the perfect place for these children. Farmers were seen as morally upright and flush with enough food to easily feed an extra child. No legal adoptions took place on the journey, but parents did have to promise to raise them as if they were their own. Many of the children were already used to being liable for their own welfare and saw this more as a job opportunity than an adoption. Many children were promised wages, education, and even bonuses once they turned 21.

    Parents across the west seemed receptive to the orphan trains, offering a childless family the rare opportunity to adopt. Sometimes the adoptions were even pre-planned, with adopting parents able to place “special orders” ahead of time, dictating the age, sex, complexion, hair, and eye color of the child they wanted. Other times, the selection was much more free-form.

    In some cases, children were paraded from the train station to the local playhouse, where they went up on stage one by one performing songs and giving small speeches for prospective parents who prodded their bodies and checked their teeth. While many adoptions turned out to be good for the children, some experienced pretty transparent child slavery, working on farms with little to no pay.

    The orphan trains operated until 1929, bringing an estimated 250,000 parent-less children to the west. Today, states like Kansas and Oklahoma have begun tracing the lives of train orphans in an attempt to connect them with long-lost family.

      Current date/time is Fri 03 May 2024, 01:34