Well, I thank you both. Now, calculate how long I've REALLY been on the Watch. Which means going back through my old posts and determining when I was here to stay as opposed to the few weeks I was here followed by a year or so of silence on my side.
Life is a waste of time
Time is a waste of life
So get wasted all of the time
And you'll have the time of your life
"Persevera, per severa, per se vera." Persist through difficulties, even though it is hard.
Proud Member of THOOOTP.
Buy my best friend's fantastic fantasy book! Pulse is also available here.
Cameraman Jenn wrote:740. aTOMic, can you prove you posted each and every single one of those days?
Excellent question Jenn. The quick answer is Nope!
I'm 100% sure I didn't come close which is a truly embarrassing thing to admit.
Things break down something like this....(these are estimates only)
1875 Days as an activated member.
1751 Days logged on and reading posts but not necessarily posting anything.
1427 Days Posting at least once.
Now if pressed into service I'm betting Vain could come up with exact numbers and I wouldn't be surprised if they were radically different than my guesses, except for the number of days I've been a member of course.
"If you can't tell the difference, what difference does it make?"
February 22 - Johns Hopkins University is founded in Baltimore, Maryland.
Spring - Vast numbers of Indians move north to an encampment of the Sioux chief Sitting Bull in the region of the Little Bighorn River, creating the last great gathering of native peoples on the Great Plains.
March 7 - Alexander Graham Bell is granted a patent for an invention he calls the telephone (patent #174,466).
March 10 - Alexander Graham Bell makes the first successful call by saying "Mr. Watson, come here, I want you."
April - June
April 16 - The Bulgarian April uprising occurs.
May 1
Queen Victoria takes the title Empress of India.
The Settle-Carlisle Railway in England is opened to passenger traffic.
May 10 - The Centennial Exposition begins in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
May 11 - May 12 - Berlin Memorandum: Germany, Russia and Austria-Hungary propose an armistice between Turkey and its insurgents.
May 16 - British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli rejects the Berlin Memorandum.
May 18 - Wyatt Earp starts work in Dodge City, Kansas, serving under Marshal Larry Deger.
June 4 - The Transcontinental Express arrives in San Francisco, California via the First Transcontinental Railroad, 83 hours and 39 minutes after having left New York City.
June 17 - Indian Wars - Battle of the Rosebud: 1,500 Sioux and Cheyenne led by Crazy Horse beat back General George Crook's forces at Rosebud Creek in Montana Territory.
June 25 - Indian Wars - Battle of the Little Bighorn: 300 men of the U.S. 7th Cavalry Regiment under Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer are wiped out by 5,000 Lakota, Cheyenne and Arapaho led by Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse.
July - September
Punch cartoon from June 17. Russia preparing to let slip the Balkan "Dogs of War" to attack Turkey, while policeman John Bull (Britain) warns Russia to take care. The Balkans would attack Turkey two weeks later.July 1 - Serbia declares war on Turkey.
July 2 - Montenegro declares war on Turkey.
July 4 - The United States celebrates its centennial.
July 8 - Reichstadt Agreement: Russia and Austria-Hungary agree on partitioning the Balkan peninsula.
July 13 - The prosecution of Arthur Tooth, an Anglican clergyman, for using ritualist practices begins.
August 1 - Colorado is admitted as the 38th U.S. state.
August 8 - Thomas Edison receives a patent for his mimeograph.
August 31 - Murat V, sultan of the Ottoman Empire is deposed and succeeded by his brother Abdul Hamid II.
September 5 - Gladstone publishes his Bulgarian Horrors pamphlet.
September 7 - In Northfield, Minnesota, Jesse James and the James-Younger Gang attempt to rob the town's bank but are surrounded by an angry mob and are nearly wiped out.
October - December
October 4 - Texas A&M University opens for classes.
October 31 - A catastrophic cyclone strikes the east coast of India, killing 200,000.
November 2 - A giant squid, 6.1 meters long, washes ashore at Thimble Tickle Bay in Newfoundland.
November 7 - U.S. presidential election, 1876: After long and heated disputes, Rutherford Birchard Hayes is eventually declared the winner over Samuel Jones Tilden.
November 10 - The Centennial Exposition ends in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
November 23 - Corrupt Tammany Hall leader William Marcy Tweed (better known as Boss Tweed) is delivered to authorities in New York City after being captured in Spain.
November 25 - Indian Wars: In retaliation for the dramatic American defeat at the Battle of the Little Bighorn, United States Army troops under General Ranald S. Mackenzie sack Chief Dull Knife's sleeping Cheyenne village at the headwaters of the Powder River (the soldiers destroy all of the villagers' winter food and clothing, and then slash their ponies' throats).
November 29 - Porfirio Díaz becomes President of Mexico.
December 5 - A Brooklyn, New York theater fire kills more than 300.
December 6 - The first cremation in the United States takes place in a crematory built by Francis Julius LeMoyne.
December 29 - The Ashtabula River Railroad bridge disaster occurs, leaving 92 dead.
Undated
Charles Wells opens his brewery based in Bedford, England.
Lyford House, by Richardson Bay, Tiburon, California is constructed.
Construction of Spandau Prison is completed.
The four-stroke cycle internal combustion engine is invented by Nikolaus Otto.
Samurai are banned from carrying swords in Japan.
The samurai's stipends are replaced by one-time grants of income bearings bonds.
Japan brings a fleet to Inchon, the port of Seoul. The Japanese force the Korean government to sign an unequal treaty, open 3 ports to Japanese trade and cease considering itself a tributary of China. On China's urging Korea also signs treaties with the European powers in effort to counterbalance Japan.
The Harvard Lampoon is founded.
The Conchological Society of Great Britain & Ireland is founded.
Lars Magnus Ericsson and Carl Johan Andersson start a small mechanical workshop in Stockholm, Sweden, dealing with telegraphy equipment, which grows into the worldwide company Ericsson.
Friends Academy is founded by Gideon Frost.
Mark Twain's The Adventures of Tom Sawyer is first published.
Adolphus Busch's brewery, Anheuser Bush, first markets Budweiser, a pale lager, as a nationally sold beer.
Tanzimat ends in the Ottoman Empire.
The Clontarf Cricket Club is established. The 2008 2nd XI calls their assault on all Senior II competitions "Operation 1876" in honour of this fantastic year.
Births
January - June
January 5 - Konrad Adenauer, Chancellor of Germany (d. 1967)
January 12
Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari, Italian composer (d. 1948)
Jack London, American author (d. 1916)
January 20 - Józef Hofmann, Polish pianist (d. 1967)
January 23 - Otto Diels, German chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1954)
January 29 - Havergal Brian, British composer (d. 1972)
February 12 - Thubten Gyatso, 13th Dalai Lama (d. 1933)
February 16
Mack Swain, American actor (d. 1935)
G.M. Trevelyan, British historian (d. 1962)
February 19 - Constantin Brancusi, Romanian sculptor (d. 1957)
March 1 - Henri de Baillet-Latour, Belgian International Olympic Committee president (d. 1942)
March 2 - Pope Pius XII (d. 1958)
March 4
Léon-Paul Fargue, French poet (d. 1947)
Theodore Hardeen, magician and stunt performer, founder of the Magician's Guild (d. 1945)
March 11 - Carl Ruggles, American composer (d. 1971)
March 21 - John Tewksbury, American athlete (d. 1968)
March 26 - Prince William of Wied, sovereign Prince of Albania (d. 1945)
March 31 - Borisav "Bora" Stanković, Serbian writer (d. 1927)
April 3 - Margaret Anglin, Canadian stage actress (d. 1958)
April 4 - Maurice de Vlaminck, French painter and poet (d. 1958)
April 11 - Paul Henry, Irish artist (d. 1958)
April 22 - Robert Bárány, Hungarian physician, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (d. 1936)
May 10 - Ivan Cankar, Slovenian writer (d. 1918)
May 18 - Hermann Müller, Chancellor of Germany (d. 1931)
June 5 - Tony Jackson, American jazz musician (d. 1920)
June 13 - William Sealy Gosset, English chemist (d. 1937)
July - December
July 2 - Wilhelm Cuno, Chancellor of Germany (d. 1933)
July 12 - Max Jacob, French poet (d. 1944)
July 16 - Alfred Stock, German chemist (d. 1946)
July 19 - Joseph Fielding Smith, president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (d. 1972)
August 7 - Mata Hari, exotic dancer and spy (d. 1917)
August 25 - Eglantyne Jebb, co-founder of the Save the Children Fund and champion of children's human rights (d. 1928)
September 1 - Harriet Shaw Weaver, English political activist (d. 1961)
September 6 - John James Richard Macleod, Scottish-born physician and physiologist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1935)
September 15 - Bruno Walter, German conductor (d. 1962)
September 16 - Marvin Hart, American boxer (d. 1931)
September 18 - James Scullin, ninth Prime Minister of Australia (d. 1953)
September 26 - Edith Abbott, American social worker, educator, and author (d. 1957)
October 13 - Rube Waddell, baseball player (d. 1914)
November 2 - William Haywood, British architect (d. 1957)
November 7
Charlie Townsend, English cricketer (d. 1958)
Culbert Olson, Governor of California (d. 1962)
November 17 - August Sander, German photographer (d. 1964)
November 23 - Manuel de Falla, Spanish composer (d. 1946)
November 24 - Walter Burley Griffin, American architect (d. 1937)
December 9 - Berton Churchill, Canadian actor (d. 1940)
December 12 - Alvin Kraenzlein, American athlete (d. 1928)
December 21 - Jack Lang, Australian politician (d. 1975)
December 25
Muhammad Ali Jinnah, first prime minister of Pakistan (d. 1948)
Adolf Otto Reinhold Windaus, German chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1959)
December 29 - Pablo Casals, Catalan cellist (d. 1973)
date unknown
Alfred S. Alschuler, American architect (d. 1940)
Anton Boisen, founder of the Clinical Pastoral Education movement (d. 1965)
Deaths
January - June
January 3 - Pierre Larousse, grammarian (b. 1817)
January 10 - Gordon Granger, American General (b. 1822)
February 18 - Charlotte Cushman, American actress (b. 1816)
April 9 - Charles Goodyear, American politician (b. 1804)
May 7 - William Buell Sprague, American clergyman and author (b. 1795)
May 8 - Truganini, the last Tasmanian Aboriginal (b. c. 1812)
May 24 - Henry Kingsley, English novelist (b. 1830)
May 26 - František Palacký, Czech historian and politician (b. 1798)
June 4 - Abdülâziz, Ottoman Sultan (b. 1830)
June 6 - Auguste Casimir-Perier, French diplomat (b. 1811)
June 7 - Josephine of Leuchtenberg, Queen of Sweden and Norway (b. 1807)
June 21 - Antonio López de Santa Anna, President of Mexico (b. 1794)
June 25 - George Armstrong Custer, U.S. Army officer (in battle) (b. 1839)
July - December
July 1 - Mikhail Bakunin, Russian revolutionary and anarchist (b. 1814)
August 2 - Wild Bill Hickok, American gunfighter and entertainer (b. 1837)
October 1 - James Lick, American land baron (b. 1796)
November 18 - Narcisse Virgilio Díaz, painter (b. 1807)
December 29 - Titus Salt, British businessman and philanthropist (b. 1803)
"If you can't tell the difference, what difference does it make?"
Cameraman Jenn wrote:aTOMic... I think you have entirely too much time on your hands...
Nah. I just copied and pasted all that from Wiki. Now if I compiled all that data just for posting to this thread...whew...time to call the guys in the white suits and the straight jacket.
"If you can't tell the difference, what difference does it make?"