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Imagine what would be, if history had occurred a bit differently. Who says it didn't, somewhere? These fictional news items explore that possibility.

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August 17



Todayinah Editor Editor says, what if Macedonia had never recovered from the assassination of Philip II? Please note that the opinions expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s). This story was published in the August 2012 edition of Changing the Times Magazine.

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In 335 BC, Alexander III's bid for Greek hegemon was ruined by a poor decision to execute Demosthenes (pictured) and other anti-Macedonian agitators in the Athenian assembly.

The Execution of DemosthenesAlthough they had urged Greece to revolt, and even gone so far as to write to Persian Generals for support, their speeches were merely antaganonisms that his father had the good sense to ignore. Nevertheless Philip II had been assassinated, and his dreams of invading Asia Minor were left to his overbold son Alexander III to realise. Such a conquest would have required not only Greek unity, but the acquiescence of the Greek cities in Asia Minor. And the real trouble was that the once mighty Persian Empire had collapsed into satraps, such that the Greek Cities enjoyed a surprisingly large amount of freedom inhibited only be the occasional payment of taxes. By striking so overtly at Athenian democracy, Alexander had demonstrated that the real threat to Greek Civilization was his aspiration to megalomania.


Entry posted by Todayinah Editor Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Alternate Historian, 2004-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Politicians Source: Wikipedia Labels: Alexander the Great, Philip II, Macedonia, Greece, Demosthenes.

Todayinah Editor Editor says, in reality Demosthenes managed to argue his way out of the situation. In authoring this post, we have repurposed content from Wikipedia.


Google+ Comments Comment from John E. Bredehoft on Google+: Of course, if Alexander hadn't conquered anything, no one would call him a megalomaniac. I will change the narrative to aspirational megalomaniac The long term effects of this "what if" are extremely fascinating, since they affect Israel, Egypt, Rome, and Persia, among other places.?

Readers Comment Eric Oppen commented on 2012-08-25 06:29:09 ~ This could have aborted the "Hellenistic" period---IOW, no Greco-Bactrian kingdoms, no Seleucids, no Ptolemies in Egypt...with unimaginable consequences for history. At the same time, Greece was a backwater at this time, and Persia was showing serious signs of termites in the foundation. Alex might just have gone on ahead and invaded, without the Greeks.

Readers Comment Eric Lipps commented on 2012-08-25 14:46:18 ~ A good case can be made that without Alexander's empire, Western civilization as we know it would simply never have existed. Christianity, for one thing, has strong Hellenistic roots If one compares the life story of Jesus recounted in the Gospels with that of Heracles/Hefcules, for instance, there are fascinating and suggestive parallels, and Greek-speakers were among the earliest non-Jews to convert to the new faith in significant numbers. Then there was the Library of Alexandria, which would not have existed at all iof not for Alexander. The world today might be two or three hundred years behind what we're familiar with in terms of technology, and the world map would be largely unrecognizable.

Readers Comment Jackie Rose commented on 2012-08-26 16:38:06 ~ Just to take one small example of Alexander's incredible influence...if he had never conquered anything, the most popular Jewish holiday of Hanukkah would not exist. While he was very tolerant and popular of the Jews, his sccuessors tried to force them to adopt Hellenistic ways, including the worship of Greek gods in their Temple. The result the successful Maccabee revolt, which Hanukkah celebrates to this day. It includes the song: "Hear! At this time of year in days of yore, Maccabees the temple did restore..."

Readers Comment Jeff Provine commented on 2012-08-27 17:58:36 ~ We'd still have Rome and Carthage growing up in the West. Without Hellenism, however, the Roman Empire would be a very different culture.


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Todayinah Editor Editor says, what if Basil II had been killed at the pass of Trajan's Gate? Please note that the opinions expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s). This story was published in the August 2012 edition of Changing the Times Magazine.

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In 986, on this day the Byzantine emperor Basil the Young was killed in the pass of the Gate of Trajan after his army was overwhelmed by the forces of Tsar Samuil of Bulgaria.

Basil the Young dies at the Battle of the Gates of TrajanThe Byzantine army retreated from the Sofia Valley towards Ihtiman where it stopped for the night. The rumours that the Bulgarians had barred the nearby mountain routes stirred commotion among the soldiers and on the following day the retreat continued in growing disorder. When the Bulgarians saw that, they rushed to the enemy camp and the retreat turned to flight. Only the Byzantine advance guard managed to squeeze through slopes which were not yet taken by the Bulgarian attackers. The rest of the army was surrounded by the Bulgarians. The elite Armenian unit from the infantry attempted to break out with heavy casualties and to lead their Emperor to safety through secondary routes, but they were captured along with the Imperial insignia.

Enormous numbers of Byzantine soldiers perished in the Pass. Battlefield commanders Comitopuli Samuel and Aron were now the undisputed masters of the Balkans. Because just fifteen years after the fall of their capital Preslav, an unbroken string of successes had elevated the Bulgarian Empire to the now dominant power in the region. Worse was to come, the nobility in Asia Minor, led by the general Bardas Phokas rose in rebellion, and the very future of the Byzantine Empire hung in the balance.


Entry posted by Todayinah Editor Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Alternate Historian, 2004-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Generals Source: Wikipedia Labels: Gates of Trajan, Trajan's Gate, Bulgar, Basil II, Byzant.

Todayinah Editor Editor says, in reality Basil narrowly escaped and reversed the defeat at the Battle of Spercheios. In authoring this post, we have repurposed content from Wikipedia.


Readers Comment Eric Oppen commented on 2012-08-17 03:19:01 ~ This would have been a game-changer, for sure. IIRC Basil had a co-emperor,but the guy was a waste of space and air. Likely one of the Asia Minor nobility would take the throne, and the Bulgars might or might not consolidate their gains.

Readers Comment Jeff Provine commented on 2012-08-17 15:34:26 ~ A continued golden age for Bulgars might stave off slavicization for a while more. The earlier end to the Byzantines, however, would be the real change up in this TL.

Readers Comment H. Torrance Griffin commented on 2012-08-17 15:45:18 ~ Things would have to roll extremely poorly for the Bulgars to take Constantinople, and whats-his-face might end up half competent if he had to step up to the plate as sole emperor this early. However the revitilization of the Theme System and reconquest of the Balkans are probably off the table.


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Todayinah Editor Editor says, what if France had retained Quebec? muses Chris Oakley reflecting on an article in the New Statesman magazine. Please note that the opinions expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s).

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In 1779, the Revolutionary War ended with the final surrender of British forces to the Continental Army at Yorktown, Virginia.

Double Jeopardy Part 13
Battle of Yorktown
For the American colonials this moment represented the triumphant conclusion of their four-year-long struggle for freedom from British rule; for the British themselves it was the ultimate grim evidence of their failure to tame the North American continent; and for the citizens of the Quebec Republic it meant a chance to further secure their own independence.


Ironically, the rise of Napoleon's dictatorship in France during the early 19th century would spark the establishment of an unlikely U.S.-Quebec-U.K. coaltion to stop Napoleon's quest for a global empire. In the Great European War of 1914-17, all three nations would side with France against Kaiser Wilhelm's Germany.
Read the whole thread.


Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Double Jeopardy Source: New Statesman Magazine Labels: Plains of Abraham, Quebec, Canada, America, Britain.

Todayinah Editor Editor says, inspired by inspired by one of Dominic Sandbrook's articles in New Statesman


Readers Comment Jeff Provine commented on 2011-08-12 00:21:52 ~ Interesting use of Quebec as a swing vote to bring the US onto the UK's side. 1812 was a close thing in the first place with French as well as English raiding American ships.

Readers Comment Eric Oppen commented on 2011-08-12 01:02:27 ~ As I understand it, the French Revolution was _not_ popular in Quebec at all...the Quebeckers tended to be conservative and church-loving, and a lot of the shenanigans the Revolutionaries got up to offended and horrified them.


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Todayinah Editor Editor says, what if the 1837 rebellion had established an independent Canada? Please note that the opinions expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s). This story was published in the July 2011 edition of Changing the Times Magazine.

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In 1940, on this day Mackenzie King (pictured) and Franklin D. Roosevelt met at Ogdensburg the little border town in New York State just across the St. Lawrence River from Prescott, Ontario.

Canadian Heroes 1The negotiation of the so-called Ogdensburg Agreement was to set up the Canada-US Permant Joint Board of Defence. But a serious problem arose over the proposed exchange of American destroyers for British colonial bases.

The dismantlement of the British Empire was a privately declared war aim of Roosevelt. But King had a bigger issue at stake: the 1837 hanging of his grandfather William Lyon Mackenzie, a leading proponent of the Responsible Government movement that had delivered an Independent Canada in 1867.


Entry posted by Todayinah Editor Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Alternate Historian, 2004-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Generals Source: Wikipedia Labels: Canada, America, World War 2, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Mackenzie King.

Todayinah Editor Editor says, Grandfather William Lyon Mackenzie (March 12, 1795 - August 28, 1861) was a Scottish born American and Canadian journalist, politician, and rebellion leader. He served as the first mayor of the city of Toronto (1834) and was an important leader during the 1837 Upper Canada Rebellion.
The rebel leaders were allowed to escape to the United States, with Mackenzie arriving in Buffalo, New York on December 11, 1837. On December 12, he delivered an address to the largest public meeting in the history of Buffalo, describing Upper Canada's desire for liberty and their oppression at the hands of the British, and asking for their help. The meeting ended with wild "cheers for Mackenzie, Papineau, and Rolph!" and Mackenzie thus began a recruiting campaign. On December 13, he declared himself the head of a provisional government, entitled the "Republic of Canada".


Readers Comment Stan Brin commented on 2011-07-11 04:53:13 ~ But was he related to Alexander Mackenzie or to Sir Alexander MacKenzie, or to Mackenzie River? Or to Mackenzie Reed, my cousin?

Readers Comment Eric Oppen commented on 2011-07-11 05:14:08 ~ If Canada was more independent of the UK, would it have gone to war in 1914 or 1939? Yes dodged that point but in this article I am suggesting US-Canada Defense Pact still goes ahead

Readers Comment Jeff Provine commented on 2011-07-12 00:16:40 ~ Watch out for American Imperialism! That NAFTA will get ya.


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Todayinah Editor Editor says, can President "Davy" Crockett survive a second and infinitely more deadly war with Mexico? Please note that the opinions expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s). This story was published in the May 2011 edition of Changing the Times Magazine.

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In 1786, on this day the ninth President of the United States David ("Davy") Crockett (pictured) was born in Greene County, Tennessee, close to the Nolichucky River and near the community of Limestone.

Davy Crockett
9th President of the United States
March 4, 1844 - 1852
At the time of his birth, however, the surrounding area was part of the autonomous territory known as the State of Franklin. He was named after his paternal grandfather, who was killed in 1777 at his home near today's Rogersville, Tennessee, by Indians led by Dragging Canoe. Crockett's father was one of the Overmountain Men who fought in the Battle of Kings Mountain during the American Revolutionary War.

Between 1811 and 1813 Crockett fought under General Andrew Jackson in the Creek War. After years as a Democratic Jacksonian, Crockett broke ties with Jackson in 1828 and became a Whig for the remainder of his political career. Ironically for a man so accustomed to death, Crockett was to witness President Jackson's assassination at the hands of Richard Lawrence in 1935.

Based upon an original idea by Robbie TaylorHero of the successful battle of Texican forces at the Alamo, Crockett returned to Tennessee and American politics in 1838 by winning the governorship of his home state. The Whigs nominated him for president in 1840, but he lost by a narrow margin to Martin Van Buren, who was widely considered one of the worst presidents America has ever elected.

Crockett was nominated again in 1844, and this time he won on a platform of small government asking voters to: "Remember that a government big enough to give you everything you want is also big enough to take away everything you have".

During his second term that principle would be pushed to the breaking point by his fellow Whigs. Seeking to expand the Union westwards at the expense of Mexico and Great Britain, those expansionist forces were about to push those two belligerent nations into a powerful alliance.


Entry posted by Todayinah Editor Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Alternate Historian, 2004-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Politicians Source: Wikipedia Labels: Davy Crockett, Andrew Jackson, Alamo, United States, Presidency.

Todayinah Editor Editor says, in Robbie Taylor's original thread, Crockett gets elected but dies before taking office.


Readers Comment Eric Oppen commented on 2011-05-03 05:59:49 ~ He'd have been an...interesting...president. Eat your heart out, Teddy Roosevelt!

Readers Comment Robbie Taylor commented on 2011-05-03 10:35:06 ~ Mexico considered his election a slap in the face, and began arming themselves as soon as he took the oath of office...

Readers Comment Eric Lipps commented on 2011-05-03 11:28:15 ~ The quote about government, lifted from Ronald Reagan, is inappropriate from President Crockett, given that the U.S. government simply wasn't that big in the 1840s. With income taxes still deemed unconstitutional (that wouldn't change until the passage of the Sixteenth Amendment in 1913), the federal government got a dribble of money from tariffs--in effect, taxes on imported goods, which at that time tended to be suerior to their American counterparts. And Washington didn't do much with the money, either, beyond maintaining an army smaller than Switzerland's, a postal service and diplomatic services; even Congress only met for part of the year--between poor sanitation and the absence of air conditioning in a capital built on a swamp, Washington was all but uninhabitable in the summer.

Readers Comment Kirk Edwards commented on 2011-05-03 13:49:44 ~ Eric,A.L.,gave the U.S it's first income tax.To finance the C.W. Yes,a crocket presidency would be interesting.

Readers Comment Jeff Provine commented on 2011-05-03 22:13:42 ~ Crockett might not even stop with just the Southwest, but scoop up as much of western Mexico itself for pioneering, if it were just Mexico. US vs. Britain would not end well for the US.


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Todayinah Editor Editor says, what if Harold Wilson really a spy and this disclosure ultimately caused a second civil war in the Soviet Union? Please note that the opinions expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s).

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In 1985, on this day Ethiopian dictator Mengistu Haile Miriam was assassinated while reviewing a military parade in Addis Ababa.

Miriam AssassinatedAccording to a UPI reporter who was covering the parade at the time, Mengistu was shot six times by a gunman riding a Soviet-made motorcycle; the first two shots, however, were enough to kill him as the first bullet ripped through his brain just above the left eye and the second pierced the center of his heart. It would later be determined that the assassination had been carried out by three Eritrean separatists who bitterly resented the Mengistu regime's suppression of Eritrea's independence movement. The gunman himself managed to escape to neighboring Somalia(where he would later fight in that nation's civil war), but his two co-conspirators were seized by Ethiopian security forces within days and tortured to death less than two weeks after the assassination.


For the Marxist oligarchy that had ruled Ethiopia since Emperor Haile Selassie was ousted in 1974, the assassination was a fatal blow: even before Mengistu's death his government had been on shaky ground as the result of a famine which had been plaguing Ethiopia since mid-1984 and a steady decline in Soviet economic aid as the PLM's anti-Communist guerrilla war continued to rage on. Mengistu's assassination triggered a chain reaction which culminated in the violent overthrow of Ethiopia's ruling Marxist junta less than six weeks after Mengistu was killed. The end of the Mengistu regime in Ethiopia marked the beginning of a two-year span in which Communist regimes and political factions throughout Africa collapsed like a house of cards, stripping the Soviet Union of much of what little influence it still had left in the Third World. Only Libya, which boasted one of the world's largest oil industries and was capable of sustaining itself economically and militarily regardless of what happened to the U.S.S.R., managed to buck this trend.


Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Necessary Evil Source: New Statesman Magazine Labels: Harold Wilson, Ronald Reagan, Great Britain, Soviet Union, 1970 Election.



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Todayinah Editor Editor says, what if the Union had backed down at Fort Sumter? muses Eric Lipps Please note that the opinions expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s).

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In 1863, Fort Sumter in Charleston, South Carolina, hosted the president and vice-president of the independent Confederate States of America, Jefferson Davis and Alexander Stephens, in a day-long celebration.

Confederate Celebrations at Fort SumterIn April 1861 Fort Sumter had been the site of the first armed confrontation between Confederate forces and those of the United States, when a U.S. naval vessel, Star of the West, had been fired upon by CSA ships while attempting to relieve the besieged federal fort. Military conflict had quickly escalated, extending into the diplomatic realm when on November 8 of that year the USS San Jacinto intercepted the British mail packet Trent and seized diplomatic envoys James Mason and John Slidell.

A new story by Eric LippsThe Lincoln administration released the two after several weeks of escalating tension and disavowed the actions of the San Jacinto's captain, Charles Wilkes. President Lincoln's efforts proved fruitless, however, as British public and governmental opinion was inflamed by telegraphic reports that Wilkes was being treated as a hero throughout the USA. When Mason and Slidell were permitted to resume their travels, they found receptive audiences not only in London but in Paris, Slidell's destination, where the Emperor Napoleon III was interested in gaining influence in troubled Mexico and saw the new Confederacy as easier to persuade in the matter than the United States. The result of the two diplomats' mission was overt support of the CSA by both London and Paris.

And with both Britain and France on Richmond's side, the British openly arming the CSA while harassing Union shipping and sending thousands of additional troops to Canada for what looked like a possible land assault while the French intrigued to entice the Mexican Republic into attacking the U.S. with promises of restoration of the territories lost in the U.S.-Mexican war of the 1840s - promises Napoleon had neither the means nor the intention of fulfilling, but that the struggling President Benito Juarez saw as offering a possible way out of national bankruptcy - President Lincoln had been forced to capitulate in April of 1863.

That decision had led to his impeachment, elevating Vice-President Hannibal Hamlin to the U.S. presidency just as that office, in Hamlin's bitter words, seemed to have "shriveled like a corpse in the desert". Civil unrest on a massive scale had followed the end of U.S./CSA hostilities, and on the very day of the Sumter celebration a huge riot was raging in New York City in which hundreds of blacks, whose race was widely blamed for "causing" the war and defeat, would be killed.


Entry posted by Guest Historian Eric Lipps Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Eric Lipps,2007-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Generals Source: Wikipedia Labels: Fort Sumter, Alexander Stephens, Jefferson Davis, Abraham Lincoln, Hannibal Hamlin .

Todayinah Editor Editor says, in our history, on that date Union forces bombarded Confederate-held Fort Sumter. The riots described as taking place are based on our timeline's draft riots of July 1863; here, it is assumed a prolonged period of repeated outbursts of mob violence followed the Union defeat.


Readers Comment David Atwell commented on 2010-08-20 02:22:33 ~ There's a little problem here called slavery ;)

Readers Comment Eric Oppen commented on 2010-08-20 04:02:20 ~ The UK did not want to back slavery, which was what the CSA was all about; _Uncle Tom's Cabin_ had been as big a hit there as in the Northern states of the US. And France wouldn't move without the UK. If Mexico had attacked, they'd have wanted Texas back as well, which would have dragged the CSA into the US-Mexican war quickly; you could have had a three-sided war. Also, Juarez was under no illusions whatsoever about Mexico's chances in a rematch with the US.

Readers Comment Eric Lipps commented on 2010-08-20 11:46:49 ~ The UK didn't support slavery, but many in its government were willing to turn a blind eye to that issue if they could give a bloody nose to the USA. *After* the war, of course, one would expect the British to have stepped up pressure on the CSA to abolish the institution--but at the time of this event, the war hasn't been over that long. As for Juarez, while I agree he wasn't foolish enough to think Mexico could take on the USA alone, in this scenario he might have thought he could count on support from France and perhaps Britain--*provided* he left the issue of Texas alone. Under those circumstances, he might have been willing to do so.

Readers Comment Scott Palter commented on 2010-08-20 13:22:36 ~ UK arming Dixie would not have mattered. South did not lose battles for lack of munitions. The problems were food and fodder which in turn were brought on by an abysmal rail net and an idiot as Commissary General who Davis stubbornly refused to fire. short form version of a Dixie + UK v US war = Dixie independence + US merchant fleet + most of border states lost versus US takes most of Canada and US privateers slag down the British merchant marine worldwide. British may take the West Coast but I doubt once we finish the transcontinental RR they can hold it.

Readers Comment Jeff Provine commented on 2010-08-20 17:18:08 ~ Forcing Abe Lincoln to capitulate... that would be one heck of an impeachment hearing. Lots of good quotes in this time line, I'll bet.


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Todayinah Editor Editor says, what if Sir Cyril Radcliffe adopted a different approach towards the territorial re-organisation of the British Raj? muses Jeff Provine on This Day in Alternate History Please note that the opinions expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s).

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In 1947, the subcontinent of India, ruled for nearly a century by the British Crown, was broken into its many states following its independence just two days before. The Punjab, a term denoting the area rich in diversity with Muslims, Hindus, and Sikhs, was to be broken into West Pakistan for the Muslim population and India for the Hindu population.

Radcliffe Cloud UnveiledAs the British Raj was preparing to leave (Parliament had declared on July 15 that its government would end in a months' time), Sir Cyril Radcliffe was appointed as chair of committees to draw this line as well as another for the separation of Bengal to become East Pakistan (now Bangladesh).

A new story by Jeff ProvineIt was hoped that Radcliffe, who had never been to India, could serve as a fair and impartial decider. The Muslim League and the India National Congress had many of their own ideas to submit, but voting was so balanced that the final decision belonged to Radcliffe. Behind secrecy to avoid political pressures, speculation, and reprisals before the publication of the decision, Radcliffe worked with haste to determine an objective border that would grant proper transport, communication, and waterways to both sides while keeping both sides toward their majority population. At the same time, he worked to develop another line to demarcate India, East Pakistan, and Burma.

Upon hearing of the Buddhist majority in the Chittagong Hills, yet another people-group to recognize, Radcliffe suffered something of a breakdown. No matter what he did to draw boundaries, no one would be completely satisfied. The pressure of coming up with at least something workable in five weeks had pushed him, and Radcliffe made the decision to have the people vote for themselves.

On August 15, Independence Day, Radcliffe gave his plan with the new government and left the country. With political turmoil slowing down publication, it was not until the 17th that Radcliffe's plan became published. He had drawn intense and complicated borders through states, creating mini-states within populated sectors. He recommended that special elections held by the people would establish whether these countries would go toward Pakistan, India, Burma, or even strike out on their own. The "Radcliffe Cloud" was born.

A cry went out that Radcliffe had overstepped his powers to create new countries, but, via telegraph from his ship, he assured governments and peoples alike that he had simply drawn the borders. Without the peoples' agreement in the first place, there would be no government. A commission through the winter would investigate Radcliffe, but in the end he would exonerated and, in many circles, applauded.

Elections, well guarded by the Punjab Boundary Force, carried through the rest of August. The hills above Chittagong, now in East Pakistan, voted to stay with India, despite the inaccessibility (which would be later solved by a massive bridge and highway project). Several new small states that had been split by Radcliffe's many lines divided into India and Pakistan. A few states tried for independence, but most were absorbed within the end of the decade after facing budgetary constraints. Only the nations of Kashmir, Sikkim, and South Pakistan (now Hyderabad) stand as independent to this day.

Not everyone was content, however, and fighting broke out sporadically after the separation. Businessmen and farmers complained about water rights in certain areas, and legal issues have caused minor conflicts. There have been several border altercations since, such as 1971 when India became involved in the Pakistani Dissolution that gave independence to Hyderabad and Bangladesh, but no wars of international importance have come out of the balkanized Indian Subcontinent to this day.


Entry posted by Guest Historian Jeff Provine Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Jeff Provine, 2010-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Jeff Provine Blog Source: Jeff Provine’s Blog Labels: India, Pakistan, Cyril Radcliffe, Raj, British Empire.

Todayinah Editor Editor says, in reality, Radcliffe drew his borders as quickly and fairly as he could to complete his task and give foundation to the new countries. The line of separation divided villages, heavily populated areas, private land, and even homes. This rapid demarcation caused the largest migration in human history: 14 million people displaced as Muslims moved to Pakistan and Hindus to India. Thousands would be killed in the chaos as the mere 50,000 men of the Punjab Boundary Army could not begin to police the area. Radcliffe himself left on the Independence Day of August 15, burning all of his papers as he went, and the new nations had to govern themselves. Since then, several wars and in-country police actions have come over the nations as they worked bloodily to sort themselves out.


Readers Comment Scott Palter commented on 2010-08-17 09:45:40 ~ IMO a collection of ministates and future elections would have seen even more war and death. Some situations do not have nice answers.

Readers Comment H. Torrance Griffin commented on 2010-08-17 16:29:17 ~ Best bet would have been to find some way to talk Jinnah into backing a unified India, but after WWII it was probably too late for that.

Readers Comment Eric Oppen commented on 2010-08-17 19:57:27 ~ I'd have had Jinnah quietly whacked, but that's just me. Or I'd have blandly told the Indians that the British were handing power straight back to the princes, _as their own treaties required,_ and let Gandhi and the Congressmen deal with the rajahs.

Readers Comment Jeff Provine commented on 2010-08-18 03:56:38 ~ Gandhi vs. the Princes. Now THAT would be a good alternate history!


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In 1896, gold was discovered in Alaska, starting a rush of prospectors which led to mounting tensions between Russia and the United States ad ultimately to war between those countries the following year.

Gold Rush by Eric LippsRussia had explored selling the distant and thinly-settled region to the U.S. in the 1860s, but in the bitter aftermath of the War of the States Washington was in no position to accept any such offer. Too much of its gold was committed to the war reparations to which British mediators had forced the Hamlin administration to agree after the collapse of the Union war effort had led to President Abraham Lincoln's (pictured) defeat for renomination by the Republican Party in 1864 and his subsequent resignation. Nor had the McClellan administration which followed been in any better spot. The payment of reparations to the newly independent Confederate States of America would not end until 1876. By then, enthusiasm for the sale had cooled in St. Petersburg, thanks in no small part to skilled diplomacy on the part of Great Britain, which also coveted Alaska and which had a connection with the Russian Empire, through the blood relationship between Russia's and Britain's ruling families, which the USA could not equal.


Entry posted by Guest Historian Eric Lipps Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Eric Lipps,2007-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Goldrush Source: Wikipedia Labels: Gold Rush, America, Russia, Great Britain, Abraham Lincoln.



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In 1960, on this day New York City suffered the worst storm in its history as a hurricane that by today's standards would be graded Category 4 hit just after 12:30 PM; dubbed "the Jamaica Bay hurricane" because it made landfall near the Jamaica Bay section of Queens, the storm flooded large sections of Queens and Brooklyn and also devastated much of Manhattan and the Bronx. Many of New York's most famous landmarks were heavily damaged or destroyed by the hurricane, which also brought the city's mass transit systems to a screeching halt as flood waters blocked subway tunnels and overran most of the city's major bus routes. Jamaica Bay Hurricane by Chris Oakley

The hurricane also trashed much of Boston and dumped heavy rains on the White Mountains region of New Hampshire before it finally dissipated off the Maine coast. In its death throes the storm even briefly touched parts of Canada, battering several villages in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia with high winds. The storm left behind more than fifty thousand New Yorkers dead or missing and an estimated 125 million USD in property damage in metropolitan New York alone. And it wasn't just the city's trains and buses that were knocked out by the storm; Idlewild Airport would effectively be out of commission for six weeks.

The U.S. Coast Guard received more than a hundred and fifty SOS calls and seventy missing craft reports related to the Jamaica Bay hurricane.

The Yankees, who had been leading the American League standings by one and a half games before the storm, saw their team morale take a shattering blow when manager Casey Stengel suffered a fatal heart attack from the shock of learning that Yankee Stadium had been among the buildings leveled by the hurricane. Deprived of his leadership at a time when it was urgently needed, fell into a protracted slump and would finish the 1960 season nine and a half games behind the eventual AL champion Baltimore Orioles. And having to play their remaining home games at an unfamiliar park across the Hudson in New Jersey didn't help matters much.

One of the biggest casualties of the Jamaica Bay hurricane was the administration of then-mayor Robert F. Wagner, which had been caught largely unawares by the storm and drew intense criticism for its handling of post-storm recovery efforts; by early October, Wagner would resign from office and City Council president Abe Stark would be appointed to serve out the remainder of Wagner's term. 1960 Republican presidential candidate Richard Nixon, who was also Dwight Eisenhower's vice-president, would see his own political ambitions dealt a serious blow; as point man for the federal response to the Jamaica Bay hurricane, Nixon would bear the brunt of most of the criticism of that response; in the November general elections he would lose 34 of 50 states to Democratic presidential challenger John F. Kennedy.


The Jamaica Bay hurricane was the kind of mega-storm America hadn't seen since the New England hurricane of 1938 - and wouldn't see again until Hurricane Katrina ravaged New Orleans 45 years later.


Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Jamaica Bay Source: Wikipedia Labels: New York, Hurricane, America, 1948, Disaster.

Readers Comment Zach Timmons commented on 2009-03-01 01:32:36 ~ "The Jamaica Bay hurricane was the kind of mega-storm America hadn't seen since the New England hurricane of 1938 - and wouldn't see again until Hurricane Katrina ravaged New Orleans 45 years later." What about Andrew, in 1992? Until Katrina, it was the largest natural disaster to strike the U.S.

Readers Comment Eric Oppen commented on 2009-03-01 07:21:09 ~ I don't know if hurricanes can be that far north, but it's an interesting and unusual AH. If the NYC subway system flooded, that alone would kill thousands of people and throw the city into chaos.

Readers Comment Eric Lipps commented on 2009-03-02 22:07:49 ~ Hurricanes certainly can strike that far north. There was a famous one in 1938, and in 1985 Hurrican gloria hit the Northeast (I was in massachusetts at the time, farther north than New York City, and the hurricane passed over my town).

Readers Comment Chris Oakley commented on 2009-03-03 18:33:40 ~ Thanks to everyone for their comments. To answer Zach's question, when I created the Jamaica Bay Hurricane thread I based it partly on the premise that Hurricane Andrew was less destructive in this altered timeline than in OTL.


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In 2008, on this day a Virginia resident was arrested on forgery charges after state and federal investigations found that documents in his house which he claimed would prove the United States was still under British control were in fact out-and-out fakes he had doctored up himself as part of an elaborate con game reminiscent of the "Hitler diaries" fraud twenty-five years earlier. Fakes by Chris Oakley

The forger was also webmaster of an online conspiracy theory magazine which he used to bilk unwary believers out of thousands of dollars and fund his high-rolling lifestyle.


Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
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Ed Koch

In 1985, as part of ceremonies marking the 25th anniversary of the Jamaica Bay Hurricane, then-New York City mayor Ed Koch broke ground for the construction of a museum commemorating the events of the storm and those who died during its rampage through the New York area.

Ed Koch - NYC Mayor
NYC Mayor

The museum would open six years later under the administration of Koch's successor David Dinkins and undergo a multi-million dollar expansion and renovation during the mayoral tenure of Dinkins' own successor, Rudolph Giuliani.


Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Jamaica Bay Source: Wikipedia Labels: New York, Hurricane, America, 1948, Disaster.



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On this day in 2002, an American diplomatic team arrived in Baghdad to choose a site for the new U.S. embassy in Iraq.                                                                                              

US Embassy
US Embassy - In Iraq
In Iraq

Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: MN15 Iraq Source: Wikipedia Labels: Asteroid 2002 MN 15, Iraq, Saddam Hussein, Asteriod, Strike.



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Coat of Arms

In 1610, British occupation troops in southern Spain joined forces with Spanish Protestant militias in crushing a Spanish Catholic uprising in Sevilla; it was the first major military engagement between the British and the King of Spain's loyalists since the Armada Storm.

Coat of Arms - Sevilla
Sevilla

The commanding general of the British troops at Sevilla was later knighted for his actions.


Variant entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site original content has been repurposed to celebrate the author's genius © Chris Oakley,2008-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Ill Wind Source: Wikipedia Labels: Duke of Parma, Spanish Fleet, Armada, Britain, Elizabeth.



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On this day in 1944, French resistance troops arrested and summarily executed Vichy puppet ruler Pierre Laval for treason. Legend has it that Charles de Gaulle, longtime head of the Free French movement and future president of postwar France, reacted to the news by telling one of his aides: "I wish I'd shot the worthless dog myself".

 - Charles de Gaulle
Charles de Gaulle

Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
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GB Prime Minister

On this day in 1971, British prime minister Edward Heath declared a nationwide state of emergency after the first cases of the China virus were detected in London.

GB Prime Minister - Ted Heath
Ted Heath

Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Omega71 Source: Wikipedia Labels: Charlton Heston, Ted Heath, Bioweapon, America, Cold War.

Readers Comment Steven Fisher commented on 2011-08-17 23:58:04 ~ I really wish I knew what the China Virus was. But it does sound pretty bad, and almost makes me think of that movie called Contagion coming out, although I know it couldn't be the same virus.


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On this day in 1944, Allied troops in Belgium liberated Mons and started pushing towards Namur.

 -

Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
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In 1798, inventor Robert Fulton demonstrates a primitive submarine, the Nautilus, modelled on Thomas Bushnell's Revolutionary War-era creation, the Turtle. Fulton's vessel carries sail for surface propulsion and is driven by a hand-cranked screw propeller while submerged. It carries a primitive explosive device called a 'torpedo' as its only armament.

 - Robert Fulton
Robert Fulton

Improved versions will be developed over the next several years, and in the War of 1812, Fulton's submersibles will prove valuable in confrontations between the American navy and its British counterpart on the Mississippi River and the Great Lakes. It will not be un til the 1840s, however, that a seagoing version will be practical, and even then, the early models will be incapable of crossing the Atlantic entirely underwater.


Entry posted by Guest Historian Eric Lipps Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Eric Lipps,2007-.
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On this day in 1941, the sarcophagus containing the body of Communist founding father Vladimir Lenin was smuggled out of Moscow as German artillery and tanks started to bombard the Russian village of Kuvsinovo.

 - Lenin
Lenin

Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
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On this day in 1953, Soviet troops began arriving in China to assist the Chou En-Lai government in restoring order after the assassination of Mao Zedong.                        

 - Chou En-Lai
Chou En-Lai

Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
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In 1967, Clement Attlee, Churchill''s former right-hand man, was found dead in Spandau Prison. The body of Attlee, 84 was found in the grounds of Spandau Prison in west Berlin, where he had been held since his conviction in 1946 at the Nuremberg war crimes trial. There are unconfirmed reports that he may have committed suicide.

Stub Entry posted by Alternate Historian Robbie Taylor



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In 1998, the Womangate Crisis intensified in hetrophonic America as President of the United States, Bill Clinton, admitted having an inappropriate relationship with former White House intern Monica Lewinsky. Neither First Man Al Gore, not their dog Buddy are on speaking terms with 'Bill'. Clinton once explained 'If you want a friend in Washington you have to get a dog.'

Stub Entry posted by Todayinah Editor



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In 4687, the Yang Gao colony of China in the Tchou star system makes contact with the alien species the Y'T'T'li, a race of robotic individuals. Prince Zeng-Hou of Yang Gao, in negotiations with the Y'T'T'li, finds them easily manipulated, and eager to please their new friends.

Entry posted by Alternate Historian Robbie Taylor Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Robbie Taylor, 2004-
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In 1274, Menelik II became King of Ethiopa, the unconquered country. As the only Christian nation within Islam, Ethiopa maintained its place by strength of arms, and Menelik ensured that his nation need not fear during his reign - he traded with the Chinese for the new firearms they had invented, and was feared across Africa for the skill his warriors displayed with them.

Stub Entry posted by Alternate Historian Robbie Taylor



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In 1786, statesman David Crockett was born in Tennessee. Woodsman, legislator and hero of the successful battle of Texican forces at the Alamo, Crockett returned to Tennessee and American politics in 1838 by winning the governorship of his home state. The Whigs nominated him for president in 1840, but he lost by a narrow margin to Martin Van Buren, who was widely considered one of the worst presidents America has ever elected. Crockett was nominated again in 1844, and won, but died before taking office. His vice-president, John Tyler, took office in his place.

Stub Entry posted by Alternate Historian Robbie Taylor



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Old Blood and Guts

On August 17, 1943, General F.A. Blesse, the Chief Surgeon at AFHQ brought to General Patton a letter from Eisenhower which read ~

"I am attaching a report which is exemplary in its description of your personal conduct as a commanding officer. I am well aware of the necessity for hardness and toughness on the battle field. I clearly understand that firm and drastic measures are at times necessary in order to secure the desired objectives".

Old Blood and Guts - George S. Patton
George S. Patton

Entry posted by Todayinah Editor Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Today in Alternate History, 2004-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Slapping Incident Source: Wikipedia Labels: George Patton, Eisenhower, Sicily, President Patton, Old Blood and Guts.

Todayinah Editor Editor says, The slapping incident occurred on August 3, 1943 nearly ending Patton's career. The matter became known after newspaper columnist Drew Pearson revealed it on his November 21 radio program, reporting that General Patton had been 'severely reprimanded' as a result. Allied Headquarters denied that Patton had been reprimanded, but confirmed that Patton had slapped a soldier. According to witnesses, General Patton was visiting patients at a military hospital in Sicily, and came upon a 24-year old soldier who was weeping. Patton asked What's the matter with you? and the soldier replied, It's my nerves, I guess. I cant stand shelling. Patton thereupon burst into a rage and employing much profanity, he called the soldier a coward and ordered him back to the front. As a crowd gathered, including the hospital's commanding officer, the doctor who had admitted the soldier, and a nurse, Patton then struck the youth in the rear of the head with the back of his hand. Reportedly, the nurse made a dive toward Patton, but was pulled back by a doctor and the commander intervened. Patton went to other patients, then returned and berated the soldier again




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In 1914, the Imperial German army enters Brussels and is celebrated by Flemish civilians as liberators.

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Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: 1916 Year of Peace Source: Althistory Wikia Labels: World War 1, 1914, Belgium, Flemish, Walloon.



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In 1948, Alger Hiss denies being a fascist spy in front of Congress. In spite of his strong denial, and profession of loyalty to Communist ideals, Congress finds him guilty of un-American activities, and orders him jailed. Ironically, when the reactionary intelligence networks open their books at the end of the Cold War, Hiss is vindicated; he had never been employed by any of the capitalist nations.

Stub Entry posted by Alternate Historian Robbie Taylor



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Kevin Knight's alarming discovery in 1994 had been a matter of intense debate at the Second Ecumenical Council of the Vatican, or Vatican II, the twenty-first Ecumenical Council of the Roman Catholic Church. It opened under Pope John XXIII in 1962 and closed under Pope Paul VI in 1965. Four future pontiffs took part in the council's opening session: Cardinal Giovanni Battista Montini, who on succeeding Pope John XXIII took the name of Paul VI; Bishop Albino Luciani, the future Pope John Paul I; Bishop Karol Wojty?a, who became Pope John Paul II; and 35-year-old Father Joseph Ratzinger, present as a theological consultant, who more than forty years later became the current Pope Benedict XVI.

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In 1945, on this day 'The Dawn of Liberation' was published, containing Churchill's 1944 speeches on the road to victory, from 'Preparation, Effort in Resolve' to 'Hope for Victory' as part of the three volume definitive edition, 'The War Speeches'. The events of 'Churchill's Last Stand' are described in some detail. Churchill pinpoints the key moment as the creation of the State of Israel from the British Mandate in Palestine, an act which forged the alliance with Moshe Dayan's Hagannah forces. Heavily supported by Indian and Australian divisions, Bernard Montgomery created the first truly multinational army which triumphed over the Axis powers over the course of the next two glorious years.

Entry posted by Todayinah Editor Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Today in Alternate History, 2004-.
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In 1991, on this day Robert K Massie published U Boat: Britain, Germany, and the Coming of the Great War. Massie begins with the birth of Queen Victoria, and follows the chronology of the royal families of Europe, culminating in the unification of Germany by Bismarck and the crowning of Kaiser William II. With the stage set, Massie describes the series of people and events that contributed to the ultimate outbreak of war, including Alfred von Tirpitz and his ultimately successful plan to starve the British into defeat by sinking their convoys.

Entry posted by Todayinah Editor Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Today in Alternate History, 2004-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Generals Source: Wikipedia Labels: Dreadnoughts, Robert K. Massie, World War 1, Arms Race, British Empire.



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August 16



Todayinah Editor Editor says, what if the French had won the Battle of the Spurs? Please note that the opinions expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s). This story was published in the August 2012 edition of Changing the Times Magazine.

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In 1513, at Guinegate in the Pas-de-Calais department of the Nord-Pas-de-Calais region, a body of French cavalry under Jacques de La Palice managed to survive a surprise attack by English and Imperial troops under Henry VIII and Maximilian I.

Battle of the SpursFending off a ferious attack by English and Burgundian cavalry, the French horse held the field in a famous rearguard action that became known to history as the "Battle of the Spurs". Subsequently, La Palice was able to relieve the besieged town of Therouanne, preventing it falling into the hands of Henry VIII of England. One of the most notable fatalities was the captain of the Kings bodyguard, Sir Henry Bourchier, 2nd Earl of Essex. A veteran of the Italian Wars, he was being groomed for the position of Chief Captain of the King's forces. Another loss was the reputation of Mother Shipton, the English soothsayer who had confidently predicted a famous victory for Henry.


Entry posted by Todayinah Editor Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Alternate Historian, 2004-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Generals Source: Wikipedia Labels: Guinegate, Jacques de La Palice, Henry VIII, Holy League, Maximilian I.

Todayinah Editor Editor says, in reality the French Cavalry were surprised and routed. In authoring this post, we have repurposed content from Wikipedia.




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Todayinah Editor Editor says, what if Dief had toppled the USG? Please note that the opinions expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s). This story was published in the August 2012 edition of Changing the Times Magazine.

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In 1979, on this day the ultra-nationalist Canadian Tory prime minister John George Diefenbaker died in Ottawa, Ontario. He was eighty-three years old.

Death of architect of Diefenbaker PlanHis term of office was shaped by the dramatic events of October 1962; the often unilateral judgements he took, and the heavy-handed way he communicated those decisions to his colleagues and allies. In his diaries, he rejected these charges, claiming that President Kennedy told him bluntly that, "When I tell Canada to do something, I expect her to do it!". What is indisputed is that on the 22nd, his Defense Minister Douglas Harkness advised him that Kennedy had approved an escalation of the NORAD measurement from two (peace) to three (enhanced awareness) on the way to five (war) without consulting Ottawa even though Canada was supposedly an equal partner to America in NORAD.

Two days later, World War Three broke out and the boot was on the other foot. American Cities were devastated by Soviet nuclear missiles. Under the Dieffenbaker Plan, the Canadian Government laid claim to territory possessed by the United States in order to rehabilitate that land "back to a standard of civilization".
This is an installemend from the Cuba 62 - Canada thread.


Entry posted by Todayinah Editor Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Alternate Historian, 2004-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Cuba62 Canada Source: Wikipedia Labels: John Diefenbaker, Kennedy, Cuba, NORAD, Cold War.

Todayinah Editor Editor says, in reality the Cuban Missiles Crisis was resolved, World War Three did not break although it has been conjectured that Kennedy toppled Dieffenbaker's Government.


Readers Comment Eric Oppen commented on 2012-08-16 18:53:46 ~ Even with our cities smashed (unlikely given the state of the art in 1962) I doubt that we'd be so weakened as to need Canada to take us over...and the Sovs would have had no problems with hitting Canada.

Readers Comment Stan Brin commented on 2012-08-16 19:11:50 ~ Yeah, uh-huh, like this would have happened.

Readers Comment Jackie Rose commented on 2012-08-16 19:17:05 ~ So JFK would no longer be president...and therefore he would not be driving through Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. Perhaps he would become a movie star instead. Works for me!

Readers Comment Jeff Provine commented on 2012-08-16 20:38:39 ~ Maybe a land "back to a standard of civilization" wouldn't have a Hollywood ;)

Readers Comment Jackie Rose commented on 2012-08-17 11:55:52 ~ Well then...perhaps the Kennedy Brothers would return to their ancestral Ireland and lead the IRA against their ancient enemies the British, including the people of Canada. A settlement could lead to JFK becoming President of Ireland, RFK being attorney general and Edward getting elected to the Senate. They would have a precedent, since de Valera became the first president of the Ireland after coming back from America to join in the Easter Week revolt.


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Todayinah Editor Editor says, what if President John Tyler signed a New Charter for Third Bank of the United States? muses Jeff Provine on This Day in Alternate History Please note that the opinions expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s).

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In 1841, the Bank of the United States had a troubled past. The First Bank had begun in 1791 to aid in the central government of the young nation. Its charter had run out in 1811, and Congress chose not to grant a new one.

Tyler Signs New Charter for Third Bank of the United StatesOverall, the bank had done much good in loans to the growing country and its citizens, but it had also served as a haven for speculators. In 1816, the Second Bank gained a twenty-year charter, and it served much like the first, keeping down inflation caused by the War of 1812.

A new story by Jeff ProvineNational banks, however, were terribly unpopular with the Democrats and, especially, Andrew Jackson. He and many others held that the bank was built for the rich and offered no real aid to the poor, only taking its money in taxation. While in office, Jackson worked to hobble the bank by giving an executive order not to deposit government funds there. John Tyler (pictured), a Whig, agreed with Jackson about banking policies despite the rest of his party being staunch supporters of improving the business environment.

In 1836, the Second Bank's charter expired, and it was not renewed. Despite efforts of Whigs and anti-Jacksonians, they could not override Jackson's veto during his presidency. The Bank became private, surviving only five years. After the Panic of 1837, Henry Clay and his Whig allies attempted a new charter, but it became obvious that Tyler would be against it as he had already vetoed much of the Whigs' agenda.

Swallowing his pride, Clay sat down with the president and the two talked for more than seven hours, finally working out a plan for a new kind of bank. Rather than a single national bank against the many state banks that stood around the country, this bank would serve as a link between the state and federal level, operating to moderate speculation but also supply good loans to growing areas. There was not precedent for it in the Constitution, but it could be enacted as a bill from Congress. At last, Tyler agreed.

The Third Bank of the United States was given a twenty-year charter like the former two and served with success. Scholars noted investment money from the South flow northward and then back again, creating a tie between wealthy Southerners and the growing industrial class in the North. With loans available in the South during bad growing seasons, farmers were able to float their harvests and maintain a booming agricultural environment. As the crisis over slavery loomed, it was decided that the economy was strong enough to put forth an effort to "buy out" the slaves from Southern owners, a bill put forth by Democrat Senator Jefferson Davis of Mississippi and signed by Republican Abraham Lincoln.

With a large available workforce and a system of loans, the South became heavily industrialized through the later half of the nineteenth century. It was estimated that the government made more than its money back through taxation for purchasing freedom for the former slaves. With its titan economy, the United States entered the world scene in the early days of the twentieth century, which it would dominate despite dark days of a southern communist rebellion in the 1930s.


Entry posted by Guest Historian Jeff Provine Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Jeff Provine, 2010-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Jeff Provine Blog Source: Jeff Provine’s Blog Labels: Tyler, Jackson, Lincoln, David, Bank.

Todayinah Editor Editor says, in reality, Tyler vetoed the bill. Henry Clay was not a man to swallow his pride, and he began to make increasing political threats against the president. At the veto, the most violent protest on the grounds of the White House to this day took place as Whigs treated Tyler as a traitor. After a second veto in September, Clay led Whigs in resigning from the cabinet, which would cause Tyler great difficulty in replacing over the rest of his administration. Clay even pushed the Whigs to remove Tyler from their ranks formally. Still, Tyler did not waver.
Abandoned by the Whigs, Tyler turned to the Democrats. The increased party politicking caused regional recognition to take over, making the South more "Democrat" and the North more "Whig". Over the next two decades, the regional separation would spark the Civil War, costing the lives of some 600,000 Americans.


Readers Comment Scott Palter commented on 2010-08-16 09:54:48 ~ Tyler was always more of a disaffected Jacksonian Democrat than a true Whig. Party lines were still somewhat fluid in this period and indeed would be in somewhat of a state of flux until the current structure sorted itself out n the post-USCW period. So the best chance of getting Tyler to agree was a quid pro quo omnibus bill that gave the Whigs the 3rd Bank, their internal improvements and some of their lesser measures and gave Tyler and Dixie Texas annexation and the Western fort string Tyler wanted. IMO. YMMV.

Readers Comment Eric Lipps commented on 2010-08-16 12:31:05 ~ The pre-Civil War South would not have willingly become "heavily industrialized." Its leadership was terrified that industrialization would lead, as it had in the North, to abolition of slavery, and slavery had become not merely an economic crutch but an emptional one as well to Southerners. The rich could own solaves who would do without pay all the scutwork for which they might ptherwise have to pay free white laborers, while poor whites could consle themselves that at least slaves were lower on the totem pole than they were. Southerners even resisted using black slaves in the factories they did have, for fear it wou;ld turn out they were capable of the sort of complex work supposedly beyond their race, thus undercutting paternalistic rationalkizations for slavery.

Readers Comment Jeff Provine commented on 2010-08-16 18:59:50 ~ Southern social upheaval is definitely glossed over toward the end, and it would've been a mess. Even with monetary emancipation (and perhaps all the more because of it), Jim Crow's ugly head would be seen all over the South and larger cities in the North. Vicious racism probably permeates this timeline. I like the idea of a quid pro quo omnibus bill. (Of course, I'm a fan of most things that break down party barriers.) ;-}

Readers Comment Eric Oppen commented on 2010-08-17 03:50:44 ~ I've never really understood the antipathy that the Democrats had for banks---any banks.


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Todayinah Editor Editor says, what if France had retained Quebec? muses Chris Oakley reflecting on an article in the New Statesman magazine. Please note that the opinions expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s).

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In 1773, on this day the Brotherhood of Liberty carried out its most dramatic pre-Revolutionary War act of defianace against British rule: the Boston Tea Party.

Double Jeopardy Part 6
Boston Tea Party
Just after 7:00 PM that evening Brotherhood members stormed three British merchant ships docked in Boston Harbor and threw hundreds of tea chests overboard in protest of the increasingly heavy taxes American colonists were being forced to pay to the British crown. Most of the participants in the Tea Party would go on to fight in the Revolutionary War, with some of them playing a significant role in the liberation of Boston by the Continental Army in 1775.

Despite British colonial authorities' most diligent efforts to locate and arrest the Tea Party's organizers, no one was ever caught; in fact one Brotherhood partisan actually suceeded in infiltrating the very British Army regiment deployed to apprehend him. In the post-Revolution era the tavern where the Tea Party plan had first been conceived would become a shrine to the struggle for American independence; around 1900 the U.S. Department of the Interior would declare it a national historic landmark.

In the early 21st century the phrase "Tea Party" would come into vogue as a metaphor for the emergence of a political movement sparked by what some Americans considered excessive spending and taxation by their government.


Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Double Jeopardy Source: New Statesman Magazine Labels: Plains of Abraham, Quebec, Canada, America, Britain.

Todayinah Editor Editor says, inspired by inspired by one of Dominic Sandbrook's articles in New Statesman




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Todayinah Editor Editor says, what if the swine flu turned American policy inward at a critical time for the Middle East? We're grateful to Chris Oakley, Eric Oppen and David Atwell for their contributions to the development of this post. Please note that the opinions expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s).

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In 2009, on this day President Shimon Peres asked Avigdor Lieberman (pictured) to form a new government following the assassination of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Cometh the hour, cometh the manDuring Netanyahu's first administration Mr Lieberman (born Evet Lvovich Liberman) served as Chief of Staff, gaining the full trust of the now demised Prime Minister. After the 1999 election, Lieberman formed the ultra-right wing Yisrael Beiteinu Party, issuing a number of extreme policy proposals.

"The exchange of territories and populations will help us form a Jewish, homogeneous state. We promised to establish a Palestinian state free of Jews, but in the meanwhile, we ourselves are turning into a bi-national state with a minority of more than 20% Arabs"After the fall of the Labour Government in 2001, Lieberman since served in numerous roles in the government, including as Minister of National Infrastructure, Minister of Transportation, Minister of Strategic Affairs, Deputy Prime Minister, and Foreign Affairs Minister.

As the leader of the incoming Israel Government, it remains only for us to see which of his plans he will actualize to deal with these perceived threat. Moderates fear many of these policy fears will be recast as opportunities with America fighting the H1N1 epidemic following President Obama's death from swine flu after a visit to Mexico in April.


Entry posted by Todayinah Editor Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Today in Alternate History, 2008-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Beasts Source: Wikipedia Labels: Avigdor_Lieberman, Israel, Gaza, 2009, Barack Obama.

Readers Comment Eric Oppen commented on 2009-08-19 02:51:52 ~ The "who is a Jew?" stuff would drive a big wedge between the Israeli government and American Jews, most of whom are not Orthodox themselves.

Readers Comment H. Torrance Griffin commented on 2009-08-19 09:49:16 ~ This is likely to end up with Israel going the North Korea road by burning bridges with all the West.


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In 1604, the British navy began anti-piracy patrols off the coast of Florida, a former Spanish colony in the New World which had been annexed by Britain in the mid-1590s.

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Variant entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site original content has been repurposed to celebrate the author's genius © Chris Oakley,2008-.
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Todayinah Editor Editor says, inspired by the 1932 novel by Philip Gordon Wylie and Edwin Balmer.

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In 1951, on this day a young attorney and University of Havana law school graduate named Fidel Castro Ruz was executed for treason after attempting to incite an uprising against then-Cuban president Carlos Prio; Castro, a dedicated Marxist, had been arrested four days earlier after government agents were tipped off to his insurrection plans.

 - Fidel Castro
Fidel Castro

Castro hatched the revolt scheme in response to popular anger over the Cuban government's mishandling of disaster relief efforts in Cienfuegos and Guantanamo following the Bellus-Zyra collision.


Variant entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site original content has been repurposed to celebrate the author's genius © "When World's Collide" (1932), Philip Gordon Wylie and Edwin Balmer
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On this day in 1920, former White Sox infielder Arnold "Chick" Gandil, by then a utility player with the Cleveland Indians, was fatally injured during a game against the New York Yankees when a fastball by Yankees pitcher Carl Mays slammed into his temple and fractured his skull; Gandil died that evening at Columbia University Hospital.

Arnold "Chuck"
Arnold "Chuck" - Gandil
Gandil

At the time of the deadly accident Gandil had been pinch-hitting for Cleveland's regular shortstop Ray Chapman; less than a month after Gandil's death, a severely traumatized Chapman committed suicide.


Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: white sox Source: Wikipedia Labels: Ban Johnson , Chicago White Sox, 1919, Sports, Baseball.



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Swede

On this day in 1919, the White Sox fell two games behind Detroit in the American League standings after a 9-0 loss to the Red Sox during which Chicago infielders Eddie Collins and Charles 'Swede' Risberg collided with each other while diving for the same ground ball.

Swede - Charles Risberg
Charles Risberg

Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
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On this day in 1982, Minnesota native Rick Rude and former Stampede Wrestling brawler Allen Coage (a.k.a. Bad News Allen) were introduced on NWA World Championship Wrestling by Jim Cornette as the newest members of the Enforcers; Cornette said he was grooming Rude and Allen to take the NWA United States tag team titles from Barry Windham and Terry Funk.

Manager
Manager - Jim Cornette
Jim Cornette

Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
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Todayinah Editor Editor says, Stampede Wrestling is a Calgary-based promotion and Canada's largest independent wrestling organization




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On this day in 1947, the Roswell city council unanimously approved a resolution declaring July 6th an annual civic holiday to remember those killed in the asteroid strike.

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Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
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In 1976, the Republican national convention opens in the Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Missouri.

The GOP nomination is hotly contested between President Nelson Rockefeller and insurgent candidate Ronald Reagan, who has mounted a powerful challenge to the incumbent. A former governor of California, Reagan is the favorite of the party's right wing, and especially of conservative Southerners and Westerners, who loathe the 'Eastern establishment' represented by the President.

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Rockefeller's strong pro-defense and anti-crime stances have done nothing to win them over; they had even tried, unsuccessfully, to persuade Vice President Paul Laxalt to run against him. On Aug. 19, President Nelson Rockefeller secures the Republican nomination. He will be running against former Georgia governor James Earl Carter, nominated at a bitterly divided Democratic convention in mid-July.


Entry posted by Guest Historian Eric Lipps Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Eric Lipps,2007-.
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On this day in 1969, Jay Sebring committed his fourth murder, using a homemade bomb to kill immigrant grocer's wife Rosemary LaBianca.

At a press conference outside his office, then-Los Angeles County prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi announced that the LAPD was offering a USD 1,000,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of the perpetrator of the murders of Mrs. LaBianca, Sharon Tate, Roman Polanski, and Charles Manson.

 - Charles Manson
Charles Manson

Entry posted by Guest Historian Chris Oakley Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Chris Oakley,2008-.
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In 1948, the United States of America, after a national referendum on the subject, was renamed the Soviet States of America, to reflect the deep connection of the nation with its workers and people. The move was denounced by Socialists and other right-wingers as part of the Communist agenda to turn America into a one-party state, but those reactionaries were ignored in the general celebrations.

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In 1913, Menachem Begin was born in BrestLitovsk, Russia. When the Greater Zionist Resistance took BrestLitovsk in 1925, Begin joined the movement and proved an able leader. In 1935, when Astrid Pflaume was assassinated, he assumed leadership of the GZR.

Entry posted by Alternate Historian Robbie Taylor Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Robbie Taylor, 2004-
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In 1914, a protest of Flemish civilians against Wallon officers in the Belgium army results in violence between civilians and the military police in Flemish cities and Brussels.

Entry posted by Guest Historian H2O et al. Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © Althistory Wikia
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In 2003, the former British Viceroy of Uganda, Idi Amin, has died in exile in London. He had been in a coma at the Queen Elizabeth II Hospital since 18 July. A hospital spokesman said he died of multiple organ failure. There is some dispute over his actual age, but most sources say he was 80 years old. Idi Amin presided over one of the most difficult periods in African history. An illustrious career in the King's African Rifles during the Mau-Mau crisis enabled Amin to advanced to the rank of Major General and then Commander of the Ugandan Army. Upon his appointment as the first indigenous Viceroy in any British Colony, Amin ruled Uganda from 1971 until 1979, when he was forced from power by Tanzanian troops and Ugandan exiles. Up to 400,000 people are believed to have been killed under his rule. Many more were imprisoned and tortured. Amin was initially welcomed both within Uganda and by the international community. In an internal memo, the British Foreign Office described him as 'a splendid type and a good football player'.

Stub Entry posted by Todayinah Editor



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In 1977, Elvis Presley faked his death at his Graceland mansion in Tennessee. Disappearing for a few months, he got himself back in shape, had a little plastic surgery, and reappeared in public as Reverend Jesse Garon. He spread the word of the gospel all across the south, drawing money from a secret account he had set up years before for this eventuality.

Stub Entry posted by Alternate Historian Robbie Taylor



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In 1948, Herman Ruth, greatest player in the history of Town Ball, died in New York. Ruth left behind a legacy of home runs that wouldn't be broken for decades. In his own lifetime, was such an impact on the game that other Town Ballers in his own time couldn't even approach the half-way mark of his home runs.

Stub Entry posted by Alternate Historian Robbie Taylor



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© Today in Alternate History, 2013-. All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.