Lex Anteinternet
Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Friday, April 17, 2026
Wednesday, April 17, 1946. Syria becomes independent. Protests in Japan.
Syria became fully independent.
Largescale protests in Japan broke out against the U.S. selected Prime Minister, Kijūrō Shidehara in favor of Ichirō Hatoyama, leader of the Liberal Party that won a majority in the April 10 election. The latter had been prohibited from taking office by the US on the basis of his having served the former wartime government.
Last edition:
Monday, April 15, 1946. Introductions.
Labels:
1940s,
1946,
French League of Nation Mandates,
Japan,
Occupation of Japan,
Syria
Saturday, April 17, 1926.
Last edition:
Saturday, April 10, 1926. "Big Business and State Socialism are very much alike, especially Big Business."
Labels: 1920s, 1926, Art, Card Games, Chesterton, Clothing, Education, Geology, Golf, Hawaii, Native Americans, Random snippets, The Press, Youth Organizations
Labels:
1920s,
1926,
Art,
baseball,
children,
Jazz,
Music,
The Jazz Age,
The relationship between men and women
Monday, April 17, 1911. Keel for the USS Texas laid.
Emiliano Zapata's forces occupied Izúcar de Matamoros. They would be driven out the following day.
The keel for the USS Texas was laid at Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company.
USS Texas. The only surviving dreadnought in the world. San Jacinto Battleground State Historic Site, Texas.
These are photographs of the USS Texas. The date stamp, fwiw, is in error. These were taken in October, 2016.
The Texas is the last Dreadnought on earth. One pre dreadnought battleship exists, a Japanese example, and several post dreadnought battleships. But these ships, which formed the backbone of every major fleet in the world in the early 20th Century, are down to this example. She was launched in 1912 and commissioned on 1914. A major ship in her day, while she served all the way through World War Two, and provided support to amphibious landings in Europe and the Pacific, she was already somewhat antiquated at the time of her commissioning. Super dreadnoughts, like the Arizona, were already being launched prior to her commissioning. Still, she was a ship of many firsts, including being the first US ship to mount anti aircraft guns.
San Jacinto Monument as viewed from the USS Texas.
Last Edition:
Saturday, April 15, 1911. The Factory Girl's Danger.
Labels:
1910s,
1911,
boats and ships,
Emiliano Zapata,
Mexican Revolution,
Mexico,
Texas
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