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April 14: A Shot in the Dark, A Pitch for the Ages, The Day the Sky Turned Black

Today, April 14th

April 14: A Shot in the Dark, A Pitch for the Ages, The Day the Sky Turned Black

April 14 has a way of arriving with force. It is the date on which a president went to the theater and did not come home, the date on which another president threw a baseball and started a tradition that has outlasted both of them, and the date on which the Great Plains sky turned the color of midnight at midday and a generation of Americans understood, viscerally and permanently, that the land they had broken could break them back. Three stories, three very different registers — tragedy, ceremony, catastrophe — bound together by the essential American question: what do we do when the ground shifts beneath us?
April 14: A Shot in the Dark, A Pitch for the Ages, The Day the Sky Turned Black

13 April

April 13: Born to Contradict, Blood on the Courthouse Steps, Wings Against the Wind

April 13: Born to Contradict, Blood on the Courthouse Steps, Wings Against the Wind A date of founding ideals and their brutal betrayal — and one crew of aviators who refused to let an ocean tell them no April 13 opens with a birth and closes with a flight, and between them sits a massacre that forces us to hold the first and third stories in honest tension. Thomas Jefferson's birthday is a celebration of the ideals that launched a nation; the Colfax Massacre, thirty years after his death, is a document of what those ideals cost the people they were never fully intended to include. The transatlantic flight of the Bremen belongs to a different register entirely — three aviators from three countries pointing a small plane into the unknown and bringing it home — but it too is about the refusal to accept the world's limits as final. Together, April 13 asks what we choose to remember, what we are obligated to remember, and why those are not always the same list. The Man America Cannot Resolve On April 13, 1743, Thomas Jefferson was born at Shadwell plantation in Albemarle County, Virginia, the son of a prosperous planter and surveyor. He would go on to write the most consequential sentence in American political history — "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness" — and to own, over the course of his lifetime, more than six hundred enslaved people. That contradiction is not a footnote to Jefferson's life. It is the central fact of it, and the central fact of the American founding he did more than almost anyone to articulate. He knew it. He wrote about it with apparent anguish, called slavery a moral and political depravity, and did almost nothing substantive to end it — not in the nation, and not on his own plantation. What remains, after the accounting, is both enormous and genuinely complicated. Jefferson's vision of a republic grounded in natural rights and popular sovereignty was radical in its time and became the philosophical engine of democratic movements around the world. His drafting of the Declaration of Independence, his authorship of the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom, his founding of the University of Virginia, his stewardship of the Louisiana Purchase — these were acts of political imagination on a scale that few individuals in history have matched. He was also, as the scholar Annette Gordon-Reed has argued, a man who made choices, not a passive prisoner of his era, and the choices he made about slavery were, by any moral measure, indefensible. His birthday is a useful occasion not for simple celebration or simple condemnation, but for the harder and more honest work of holding both things at once — which is, in the end, the work that American history has always required of its citizens.   A quill, a draft, and the most consequential sentence in American political history — written by a man whose life embodied the nation's deepest contradiction. Colfax, and the Cost of the Vote On April 13, 1873 — Easter Sunday — white supremacist paramilitary forces attacked a group of Black freedmen who had occupied the Grant Parish courthouse in Colfax, Louisiana, to defend the results of a disputed election in which Republican candidates, supported by the Black community, had prevailed. The freedmen had been holding the courthouse for weeks, organized and determined to protect a political outcome that represented everything Reconstruction had promised them: the right to vote, the right to hold office, the right to participate in the governance of the country they had built with their labor and their lives. The attacking force, armed with a cannon and rifles, outnumbered and outgunned them. After several hours of fighting, the courthouse was set on fire. Many of the defenders were killed as they fled or surrendered. Those who survived the initial assault were executed after the fact. The death toll among the Black defenders is estimated at between 60 and 150 men. The Colfax Massacre — the deadliest single incident of racial violence during the Reconstruction era — had consequences that extended far beyond Louisiana. Federal prosecutors charged more than ninety men; ultimately three were convicted under the Enforcement Acts, federal laws designed to protect Black civil rights. Those convictions were appealed to the Supreme Court, which ruled in United States v. Cruikshank (1876) that the federal government lacked the authority to prosecute private individuals for violating other citizens' constitutional rights — a decision that effectively gutted the Enforcement Acts and left Black Americans in the South without federal protection against exactly the kind of violence that had been perpetrated at Colfax. The decision accelerated the collapse of Reconstruction and opened the door to the era of Jim Crow. For nearly a century afterward, a marker at the Colfax site described the event as a "riot" and honored the white attackers. The full historical record, slowly and incompletely reclaimed, tells a different story: of men who stood for their rights and were killed for it, and of a legal system that looked away. A marker in rural Louisiana — the site of a massacre whose victims defended the right to vote and were abandoned by the courts that were supposed to protect them. ❦ The Wrong Way Across the Atlantic On April 13, 1928, a Junkers W33 monoplane named Bremen touched down on the ice-covered surface of Greenly Island, off the coast of Labrador, Canada, after thirty-six and a half hours in the air — completing the first nonstop east-to-west transatlantic flight in history. The crew was international by design and by happenstance: Captain Hermann Köhl of Germany, who had survived nearly four hundred combat missions in World War I and become an experienced long-distance aviator; Baron Ehrenfried Günther von Hünefeld, a German aviation enthusiast who had financed much of the venture despite being nearly blind in one eye and suffering from chronic illness; and Major James Fitzmaurice of Ireland, the last-minute addition whose skill as a navigator and pilot proved essential. They had lifted off from Baldonnel Aerodrome near Dublin on April 12, flying into headwinds that Charles Lindbergh had not faced on his celebrated eastward crossing the year before. The east-to-west crossing was, by nearly every measure, harder than Lindbergh's flight. The prevailing Atlantic winds blow west to east; flying against them meant burning more fuel, fighting for altitude and airspeed, and navigating in conditions that would have defeated a less determined crew. The Bremen carried no radio. Its compass, affected by the northern latitudes, was unreliable for the final hours of the journey, and the crew flew the last stretch largely by instinct and dead reckoning. They had aimed for New York but landed in Labrador — having traveled more than four thousand miles through fog, ice, and darkness to a runway they hadn't planned for. They were rescued, celebrated, and given a ticker-tape parade in New York City that rivaled Lindbergh's reception. Their names faded more quickly from popular memory than his, but the achievement did not: the Bremen's flight proved that the Atlantic could be crossed in both directions, and helped accelerate the development of transatlantic air routes that would, within a generation, shrink the ocean to a commute.   The Bremen somewhere over the North Atlantic — flying into the wind, without a radio, toward a continent they couldn't yet see.

13 April

April 13: The King of Augusta

The King of Augusta One year after the most emotional redemption story in modern golf, Rory McIlroy returned to Augusta National and made history all over again. On Sunday, April 12, 2026, Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland stood on the 18th green at Augusta National Golf Club and tapped in a winning bogey to claim his second consecutive Masters title — finishing 12-under par, one stroke ahead of world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler. In doing so, he joined Jack Nicklaus, Nick Faldo, and Tiger Woods as the only players in the tournament's 90-year history to win back-to-back green jackets. It was a performance that defied odds, logic, and a six-shot lead that had somehow nearly evaporated by Sunday morning. When the putt dropped, his parents — Gerry and Rosie McIlroy, who had watched his first Masters win from home in Northern Ireland a year ago — were waiting for him behind the 18th green. Fourteen Years, Two Jackets, One Legacy To understand what this back-to-back means, you have to go back further than last Sunday. You have to go back to April 2011, when a 21-year-old McIlroy held a four-shot lead entering the final round of the Masters and came apart — double-bogeying the 10th, walking off the course before the round was finished, leaving Augusta in tears. Over the next 14 years, he would return again and again, finishing in the top 10 six times, losing leads, missing putts, carrying what he himself called "the burden of the Grand Slam." Gene Sarazen had done it. Ben Hogan had done it. Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods. McIlroy had won the U.S. Open, The Open Championship, and the PGA Championship twice each — every major except the one played every April in Georgia. Augusta, for all its beauty, had become the place that defined his limits. Then came April 2025. He blew a lead again, missed a putt on the 72nd hole that would have won it outright, and went to a sudden-death playoff against Justin Rose — the same man he would battle again in 2026. On the first playoff hole, McIlroy hit the best shot of his life and made a three-foot birdie putt to complete the career Grand Slam, collapsing to the ground in tears. "What came out of me on that last green," he said afterward, "was at least 11 years, if not 14 years, of pent-up emotion." He became just the sixth player in history — and the first European — to hold all four major titles. Now, twelve months later, he has done something arguably even rarer: he came back to the place that haunted him for a decade and a half, and won again. His six major championships tie him with Faldo for the most ever by a European player in the modern era.   Rory McIlroy receives his second consecutive green jacket at Augusta National on April 12, 2026, joining Jack Nicklaus, Nick Faldo, and Tiger Woods as the only back-to-back Masters champions in history. In his victory speech, McIlroy thanked his wife Erica and daughter Poppy, then turned to his parents — who had to be convinced to make the journey from Northern Ireland after superstitiously crediting their absence with his 2025 win. "Mom and dad," he said, his voice breaking, "I owe everything to you." Augusta National has been producing moments like this for over nine decades, since the first Masters was played on these grounds in April 1934. It has broken legends and made them. It broke McIlroy in 2011, tested him again in 2025, and handed him two green jackets in as many years. At 36, Rory McIlroy is no longer the man Augusta tormented. He is the man who owns it.

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