Showing posts with label Army. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Army. Show all posts

Saturday, April 4, 2026

New UW President chosen.

Today In Wyoming's History: April 2:   2026  Brig. Gen. Shane Reeves, currently the dean of the Academic Board at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, New York, was offered a contract by a vote of the UW Board of Trustees.  He accepted.

He beat out finalist  Kelly Crane, who has served as dean of the College of Agriculture, Life Sciences, and Natural Resources since 2024.  Crane served UW Extension as an area educator and range specialist from 1994-2002. He was the principal consultant for Frontier Natural Resource Consulting until 2008, when he accepted the position of assistant professor/range extension specialist at the University of Idaho, which he held from 2008-2011. He came back to UW in 2011 as associate director for UW Extension. In 2019, he was appointed associate dean and director of UW Extension.

Reeves was a 1996 graduate of the U.S. Military Academy.  He went on to get a law degree from William and Mary in 2003 and is admitted to the Virginia bar.  He's been serving as the Dean of the Military Academy.  He's originally from Sweetwater County, but obviously hasn't lived there for 30 years.

Hmmm. . .

I think they made the wrong choice.

Anyhow, a news story sets out his early priorities.

Incoming University Of Wyoming President Wants To Build Bridges, Dissolve Drama


Friday, April 3, 2026

CliffsNotes of the Zeitgeist, 123rd Edition, The Holy Thursday Massacre

Trump sycophant Pam Bondi is out, her reputation solidified as a toady, and her legal career wrecked.  Sycophant Todd Blanche is now in, at least temporarily.


Former Fox News Commentator, current Secretary of  Defense, right wing Evangelical Protestant radical Pete Hegseth, and Secretary of the Army Daniel P. Driscoll.  I have no reason to believe that Driscoll is a shining beacon of light in the Trump Administration, but it's getting increasingly clear he doesn't get along with Hegseth and its becoming additionally clear the Army thinks the war against Iran is a mistake.

But that's not what we refer to.

Gen. Randy George, who is 61 years of age  and highly decorated.  62 is the current Army retirement age, up from 60 when I was a Guardsman, and it's 64 for general officers.

Yesterday, the full-scale war between the Secretary of the Army Daniel P. Driscoll and the Secretary of Defense burst into the open with Hegseth firing Secretary of the Army loyalist and remaining solid generals including  Army chief of staff, Gen. Randy George.  Chief of chaplains, Maj. Gen. William Green, and the commanding general of Army Transformation and Training Command, David Hodne were also fired.

Gen. Hodne, age 56.  Like George, he has the Combat Infantryman's Badge and an Air Assault Badge, as well as a master jump badge.

The reason for Hegseth's discontent is not openly known, although he's been at war with Driscoll for some time, but senior officers have been reportedly upset with Hegseth due to his monkeying with the promotion list.  Recently two black and two female officers were reported removed from the list and there were comments that Trump would not wish to stand next to a black female officer.

Maj. Gen. William Green.  It's harder to learn information about Green, but he served originally as an enlisted artilleryman and based on what data there is, he would be about 60.

If that is the reason, it's worse than the other potential reason, which is disagreement over the direction of the war.  Notably, Maj. Gen. Green is also black, and so far I've seen no reason why he was removed.  In light of Hegseth's membership in an Evangelical church that holds views that the overwhelming majority of Christians do not, there could certainly be other reaons.

Hegseth, as is well known, has consistently been a sort of reactionary force in the military, but since the war started he's been a zealot for a sort of Evangelical Protestant crusade.  There's some evidence he may have helped talk Trump into the war, which he may see in that light.  

He's also had consistent disputes with some of the military brass, while also taking on interesting social issue matters.  For example, he just determined to prohibit chaplains from wearing their insignia of rank.

Rumor has it that Driscoll is targeted for firing.  My guess is that Driscoll and Hegseth are both targets, with it being the case that one of them or the other will get the boot.  Trump can't be happy with Hegseth, who likely promised a quick and easy victory which isn't happening and isn't going to.

But it doesn't end there.  It's also being reliably reported that the increasingly desperate Trump may be considering firing  Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, Intelligence Chief Tulsi Gabbard and FBI Director Kash Patel.  I don't know anything about Chavez-DeRemer, but all the rest of these people should be fired.

Of course, Trump should be fried as he's bat shit crazy.  With all of these people in the crosshairs, maybe they have some incentive to invoke the 25th Amendment.

If any of these firings are going to happen, they'll happen quickly.

Last edition:

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Wednesday, March 29, 1911. The adoption of the M1911.

In 2024 we noted this:


The Colt M1911 is a John Browning designed semi-automatic pistol that can legitimately be regarded s the greatest handgun ever made, although there are, or perhaps more accurately were, a few other contenders.  Other than the mostly John Browning Designed Hi Power, none of the other contenders remain in service somewhere however and the M1911 has by far the longest period of service.

Adopted by the U.S. on March 29, 1911, in 1923 the handgun received some minor modifications, the most significant of which is a curved spring housing which changed the profile of the grip.  The trigger was also shortened.  In 1924 the modified design started to ship, this month, from Colt.  The M1911A1 designation came in 1926.  

When we posted this, we actually thought we might have noted the adoption of the M1911 when the centennial of the pistols adoption came up, in 2011, but we didn't.  We covered a fair amount of ground regarding it in the thread above, but not really it's whole history.

Of course, that would require a book.

Given the ostensible purpose of this blog, however, we really ought to cover this.

Lex Anteinternet?


The Consolidated Royalty Building, where I work, back when it was new.

What the heck is this blog about?

The intent of this blog is to try to explore and learn a few things about the practice of law prior to the current era. That is, prior to the internet, prior to easy roads, and the like. How did it work, how regional was it, how did lawyers perceive their roles, and how were they perceived?

Part of the reason for this, quite frankly, has something to do with minor research for a very slow moving book I've been pondering. And part of it is just because I'm curious. Hopefully it'll generate enough minor interest so that anyone who stops by might find something of interest, once it begins to develop a bit.

The 1911 is part of the history we're covering, and moreover, it was a brand new pistol in that period.

Vast amounts have been written about the M1911 over its century plus history.  Most of that starts right around 1900, when the very first tests of semi automatic pistols took place.  But in order to really grasp the M1911 you need to start earlier. . . in 1873.

1873 was the year that the Army officially adopted its first cartridge using revolver, the legendary Colt Single Action Army Revolver.  The M1873 replaced a series of cap and ball revolvers that had been the standard sidearms dating back to 1846.  We won't get into those, but Colt managed to pioneer really effective revolvers with this series which were widely used by civilians as well, and very well liked.  When cartridges started to come in, particularly during the Civil War, it was obvious that soon revolvers would be adapted to take them, and very soon after the war Colt introduced what would become and remain the premier single action revolver, chambered in .44-40. The cartridge closely approximated the black powder load taken by the earlier cap and ball revolvers.  The M1873 did have competitors, even in military service, with the primary one being the Smith & Wesson No. 3, which had the advantage of being a break open design allowing for more rapid reloading, but nothing really challenged the Cold Peacemaker for dominance in the U.S. Army, or for that matter, the civilian market.

What was a challenge, however, was that it became pretty clear in the last quarter of the 19th Century that double actions had arrived.  Indeed, double action cap and ball revolvers had been produced and used during the Civil War, albeit not in large numbers.  The fact that the Army didn't go straight to a double action revealed its real conservatism after the Civil War, which also showed itself in the long arms that it adopted.

By the 1890s black powder was being replaced by smokeless powder, which also yielded higher pressures and therefore higher velocities.  As this occurred, a movement towards smaller projectiles occurred, with the thought that the same or better lethality could be achieved with a lighter cartridge.  In rifles, this proved to be quite true.  Pistols, however, are another matter.



This led to the military adopting the Colt M1892 "New Army" in that year, which was a very well designed double action revolver.  The basic design would be used by Colt for decades.  Slight improvements to the design would occur over time, leading to the Models 1892, 1894, 1896, 1901, and 1903 for the Army, the Model 1895 for the Navy and the Model 1905 for the Marine Corps, although they were all very similar.  Manufacture of the basic design for civilian shooters as well as policemen, in various cartridges, would continue until at least the 1950s, although the original New Army pattern went out of production in 1908..

What the problem would prove to be was the cartridge.

The M1892 took the .38 Long Colt cartridge.

The new handgun was first used in the Spanish American War where there were no complaints regarding it.  Soon thereafter, however, it was sent with U.S. troops to the Philippines where it proved to be pretty much completely inadequate.  In the hardscrabble guerilla wars that followed U.S. troops landing there, the pistol simply lacked stopping power.

This lead to a series of emergency responses by the Army, part of which was to reissue M1873s, often with barrels refitted to the 5.5" length.  The M1873s immediately proved successful, and as a result the Army adopted the Colt New Service civilian double action revolver, a massive .45 Long Colt, as the M1909.  Like the New Army, the New Service was a very well designed modern double action revolver, and it was produced for military and civilian use over its long life, with production ceasing in 1946.

As good as the New Service revolver was, it was a stop gap when adopted.  The Army was already looking for a semi automatic pistol.  Trials had started in 1900 with John Browning's Model 1900, Mauser's C96, and Mannlicher's weird M1894 having been purchased for evaluation. The Browning design was by far the best, and in 1906 it came back in a new version, the Model 1905, to compete against submissions by Bergmann, Deutsche Waffen und Munitionsfabriken (DWM), Savage Arms, Knoble, Webley, and White-Merrill. Some of  the new pistols, such as DWM's Luger and Savage's John Pederson designed automatic were very good indeed.  The Colt 1905, hwoever, wa the best.  Browning improved the M1905 and came out with the M1910, and the M1910 and the Savage went on to the final test.

The M1911, the final Colt design, was adopted on this day in 1911.  The Navy, and hence the Marine Corps, would not adopt the pistol until 1913.

A fire broke out at the library of the New York State Capitol in Albany at 2:00 am, hours after legislators had adjourned for the night destroying more than 600,000 books, and manuscripts, many of them irreplaceable.  A night watchman was killed in the fire.


Last edition:

Tuesday, March 28, 1911. The Lost Patrol

Thursday, March 26, 2026

Changes in Army Enlistment Program.

 


The most interesting one is allowing enlistments up to age 42, which must mean retirements are now at 62.

Friday, March 26, 1926. First tomb guard.

The first guard, during daylight hours only, was posted on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.

More on that:

Tomb of the Unknown Soldier Centennial: 100 Years Since the First Military Guard Posted March 26, 1926: This feature commemorates the centennial of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier guard, marking 100 years since the first sentinel was posted March 26, 1926. The story traces the origins of the Unknown Soldier of World War I, the expansion of the tradition to honor unidentified service members from World War II, the Korean War and Vietnam, and the enduring mission of the Soldiers who maintain an unbroken vigil at Arlington National Cemetery.

Coolidge gave a press conference.

Date: March 26, 1926

Location: Washington, D.C.

I haven’t very much information about the proposal for the settlement of the Alien Property and German War Claims, or rather the return of the Alien Property and settlement of the German War Claims. I know that the Treasury is working on some plan. I think they have substantially worked out a plan and are trying to draw a bill to put it into operation. There is quite a difference between those two things. Before I can make much of any comment on it, I should want to see what the bill involved.

It is true that the United States has undertaken to extend its good offices to Chile and Peru to settle the Tacna and Arica boundry matter or disposition of the territory in those provinces. That doesn’t mean that the proceedings will be abandoned for the plebecite. It only means that they will be suspended and an attempt made to close up the matter by negotiation, rather than by carrying out for the present the provisions of the Arbitrator. I have several questions in relation to that.

I don’t know whether Captain Andrews will take part in the Geneva Conference. I think his name has been mentioned. I understood that the Navy Department would take several men with Admirals Long and Jones. Is it Jones?

Press: Yes.

I have had several conferences in relation to the dam on the Colorado River, usually known as the Bowlder Canyon project. I think that the Interior Department has worked out a plan for legislation which would give relief especially to Southern California that is very much in need of an opportunity to secure the use of the water, and which would also provide flood control for the Colorado River. The details of the hill I think are familiar to the members of the press or can be made so, if they want to read the bill that is before the Committee, so I wont undertake any analysis of it. I consider that a very important project and very much hope that some legislation can be passed at the present session of the Congress. The plan as it is contemplated will be a bill passed now, authorizing the Secretary of the Interior to negotiate with the localities interested for the sale of the water and power, subject to the approval of those contracts by the Congress. That would provide a method of financing and meeting the payments of interest and principal on the initial outlay of capital that would be necessary to complete the works.

I hadn’t thought anything about what would be done with the farm at Plymouth. I suppose I shall keep it. That isn’t the place where my grandfather’s grandfather, Captain John Coolidge, settled when he went to Plymouth, but it is one of the five farms he owned when he died and it is my understanding that he died there. It has always been in the family, ever since. I expect it will remain in my possession. I am undertaking to provide for it to be carried on as a farm for the next year. I have already spoken of the Bowlder Canyon.

I haven’t enough information about the proposal in Virginia for a National Park in the Shenandoah region to make any helpful comment about it. It is a recognized policy of our Government to establish National Parks in suitable regions. I have been interested in the project of establishing a National Park in that region, but about the details of it I haven’t enough information to give intelligent comment.

I am not familiar with the Pepper bill providing Government aid for shipping, by that designation. This is an inquiry from Mr. Montgomery. Just what is the bill?

Montgomery: That is a bill in which the Government makes refunds on the tariffs –

President: I don’t know enough about the provisions of that bill to comment on it. I should like to have legislation relative to the Shipping Board as soon as possible.

I think I have stated several times the only position that I can take in relation to retirement legislation. I thought that it was desirable to pass some legislation in relation to retirement, but I have been waiting before wanting to pass an opinion on the present pending bill to secure from the experts and the actuaries an estimate of what the expenditures would be. It has been represented to me that that would be ready in the very near future. Then we can pass some judgment on the desirability of legislation.

I haven’t any definite recollection about what Commissioner Fenning and myself said in relation to his outside activities at the time of his appointment. It was only very general, as I recall it. The salary of the Commissioner is small – what is it, $5,000?

Press: $7,500.

President: And I think something was said about that salary, and think I said that I didn’t see any reason why if a Commissioner had time that isn’t required in the discharge of his duties he couldn’t engage in some other business. I don’t know what the practice has been about that. I don’t know what the statute is. Sometimes the statute provides that when a person receives a specific appointment he shall not have any other position. I don’t know any such statute in relation to this position. My own desire in appointing Mr. Fenning was to get a very excellent man, which I thought he was, and at the same time have him make as small a personal sacrifice as would be necessary.

Last edition:

Saturday, March 20, 1926. Coup in China.

Sunday, March 26, 1876. Big Horn Expedition returns.

The Big Horn Expedition returned to Ft. Fetterman.  It was a failure.

The commander of the expedition, Joseph J. Reynolds, would be court martialed for failures associated with the campaign and was convicted on all three charges.  He retired in 1877.  He died in 1899 at age 77.

Last edition:

Friday, March 17, 1876. Battle of Powder River

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Friday, March 22, 1946. First U.S. rocket to escape the atmosphere.

The U.S. Army made the first successful out of atmosphere rocket launch by the U.S.

The rocket, a Bumper-WAC was a two staged rocked based on the German V-2.


Transjordan and the UK signed the Treaty of London giving Transjordan its independence with the UK retaining military bases in the country.

Cardinal Clemens von Galen, the great Catholic German cleric, died at age 68 from appendicitis.  He had only been made a cardinal the prior month.  He had been a fearless opponent of the Nazis.  To some degree, it's hard not to put him in the category of men who died shortly after World War Two after having struggled so mightily during it.

Von Galen is sort of a model of our own time.  He was very German but loyal to higher things.  He came from German nobility but served the Church, and he wasn't afraid to confront the barbarity of the Nazi regime.

Last edition:

Thursday, March 21, 1946. The Strategic and Tactical Air Commands created.

Saturday, March 21, 2026

Thursday, March 21, 1946. The Strategic and Tactical Air Commands created.

The Strategic Air Command and the Tactical Air Command were created.

Shoulder patch of the United States Army Air Forces Strategic Air Command.

SAC therefore predates the Air Force as an independent branch of the military.



And so does TAC, which has been inactive since 1992, when it was merged into SAC.

I've been meaning to do a post on reorganization of the U.S. military, which the illegal war on Venezuela and King Donny's War shows to be a desperate need, but I haven't gotten around to it.

The Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure went into effect.

French forces engaged in the The Battle of Thakhek in Laos, allowing the French to reestablish themselves in that portion of French Indochina.

Kenny Washington became the first African American to sign with a professional football team since 1933.

Last edition:

Wednesday, March 20, 1946. Tule Lake closes but its residents struggles continue.


Friday, March 20, 2026

Two Weapons stories as the US heads towards ground troops deploying, again, in the middle east.

The Marine Corps, which insists on avoiding equipment adopted first by the Army, looked at the M7,and said, nah. . . 

M7 Rifle.


Marines not interested in switching from M27 to Army’s M7 anytime soon

Chances are good, I'd rate them as overwhelming, that the USMC will be using M27s within a week or two in Iran.  This will be the modified HK416's first major combat use, maybe its first use at all.

M27 Automatic Rifle.

It's a mistake, the M7 is definitely the better rifle with better ammunition.  But the Marines, if allowed to have a different rifle, will always do so.

Marines in China with M1895 Navy Lee, at the time at which the Army was using the Krag.  They didn't use it long.

And there's now drone killing ammunition:

U.S. Military Unveils "Drone Killer" Rifle Cartridges | An Official Journal Of The NRA

The pelletized ammunition sort of resembles "snake shot" for pistols used by outdoorsmen in the summer months.  It was developed by the Navy.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Friday, March 17, 1876. Battle of Powder River

Colonel Joseph J. Reynolds of the 2nd Cavalry opened the Great Sioux War with an attack on a Northern Cheyenne and Oglala Lakota village near the location of present day Broadus.

Much native property was destroyed by the attack was poorly executed and the inhabitants of the village largely escaped.  Reynolds was accused of dereliction of duty for failing to properly support the first charge with his entire command; for burning the captured supplies, food, blankets, buffalo robes, and ammunition instead of keeping them for army use; and for losing hundreds of the captured horses. 

When I was a student in Laramie I lived for a time on Reynolds Street, named after Col. Reynolds.

Last edition:

Tuesday, March 14, 1876. The draft of the Colorado Constitution.

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Monday, March 16, 2026

Tuesday, March 16, 1926. Sgt. Stubby crosses the Rainbow Bridge.

Boston Terrier Sgt. Stubby, mascot of the mascot of the 102nd Infantry Regiment, died at age 10.  He'd served for 18 months in France in the Great War, participating in 100 battles and four offensives.  He provided warnings of attacks and of the use of mustard gas, and captured a German soldier by holding him by the seat of his pants.

He was a genuinely heroic dog.

The Casper recaptured fugitives indicated that they'd left Casper by rail.


I posted this page for the bus schedule.  I have a detailed thread coming up on trains, and then noted this.  I wasn't aware that there was a bus by 1926.


A closer look.


What isn't clear is how long the bus trip took.

There is bus service from Casper today.  Greyhound.  We'll take a look at that in some future post.

Apparently unrestrained immigration was worrying some.  Others were worrying about Wyoming's oilfield population leaving for Texas.




Robert Goddard launched the first liquid fuel rocket in the United States at his Aunt Effie's farm in Auburn, Massachusetts.

Rocketry, like aviation, advanced like crazy.  By World War Two rockets would be in use as ground weapons, air to air weapons, and of course, with the first ballistic missiles.

Last edition: