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May 11: The Dust That Reached Washington, A President's Fateful Decision, The Music That Never Stopped

Today, May 11th

May 11: The Dust That Reached Washington, A President's Fateful Decision, The Music That Never Stopped

Some of history's most consequential moments arrive wearing the clothes of ordinary events — a weather report, a presidential memo, a hospital room in Miami. May 11 holds three of those moments across three decades: a dust storm so vast that it darkened the skies of the Eastern Seaboard and forced a government to reckon with what industrial agriculture had done to the American land; a quiet authorization that expanded a military advisory mission in Southeast Asia and set in motion a chain of decisions that would define a generation; and the death, at thirty-six, of a musician whose short life produced a body of work that has outlasted every government that was in power when he made it. Each story is about consequences that arrive far from where they started — dust from Oklahoma in the streets of Washington, a signature in Washington in the rice paddies of Vietnam, a voice from Kingston in the ears of a world that is still, decades later, paying attention.
May 11: The Dust That Reached Washington, A President's Fateful Decision, The Music That Never Stopped

10 May

May 10: The Golden Spike, Churchill Takes the Wheel, A Partial Reckoning in Beijing

May 10: The Golden Spike, Churchill Takes the Wheel, A Partial Reckoning in Beijing A nation knit together by steel, a democracy finding its voice in its darkest hour, and a government offering the minimum it thought the world would accept Leadership arrives in different forms on different May 10s: in the driving of a ceremonial spike into Utah ground, completing a railroad that stitched a continent into a nation; in the appointment of a sixty-five-year-old politician who had been warning of exactly this catastrophe for years and was finally being handed the tools to address it; and in the quiet release of 211 prisoners by a government that had imprisoned thousands, offering a gesture calibrated to satisfy international critics without acknowledging what it had done. Three kinds of historical action — monumental, defiant, and grudging — each one telling its own story about what leadership looks like when the stakes are highest, and what accountability looks like when a government would rather not provide it. Where the Rails Met On May 10, 1869, at Promontory Summit in the Utah Territory, the last spike was driven into the last tie connecting the Central Pacific Railroad, building east from Sacramento, with the Union Pacific Railroad, building west from Council Bluffs, Iowa — completing the first transcontinental railroad in American history. The ceremonial spike was gold; it was connected by telegraph wire to the transcontinental line so that the blow of a hammer would transmit the signal to both coasts simultaneously. When the signal arrived, church bells rang in San Francisco, a hundred-gun salute was fired in New York, and crowds gathered around telegraph offices in cities across the country to receive news of an achievement that had taken six years, approximately twenty thousand laborers, and a degree of engineering ambition that most people had considered reckless when the project began. The workforce that built it was overwhelmingly Chinese on the western side and Irish immigrant on the eastern, men who had driven stakes through mountain granite and desert alkali for wages and working conditions that were meager even by the standards of the time. The transcontinental railroad transformed the United States with a speed and completeness that few individual achievements in American history have matched. Travel time from New York to San Francisco dropped from six months by wagon or ship to approximately seven days by rail. Goods, mail, and people moved across the continent at a scale and velocity that made the pre-railroad economy look almost medieval by comparison. The railroad opened the Great Plains and the West to settlement — with consequences for the Indigenous nations already living there that were catastrophic and deliberate, as the government used the railroad as an instrument of dispossession and as a supply line for the military campaigns that accompanied it. The golden spike ceremony at Promontory Summit is a story of extraordinary national accomplishment that cannot be told honestly without also telling the story of the labor that built it and the communities that were destroyed to make the route possible. Both things happened. Both belong in the record.   Two locomotives meet at Promontory Summit — the moment a continent became a country you could cross in seven days. Blood, Toil, Tears, and Sweat On May 10, 1940, as German forces launched their invasion of France, Belgium, and the Netherlands in a sweeping offensive that would overwhelm Western Allied defenses in six weeks, Winston Churchill was summoned to Buckingham Palace and asked by King George VI to form a government. Neville Chamberlain had resigned that morning, his policy of appeasement in ruins following the failed Norwegian campaign. Churchill, at sixty-five, had spent the previous decade in the political wilderness — a backbencher widely regarded as an alarmist for his warnings about German rearmament and the dangers of accommodation with Hitler. He had been right about everything, had been largely ignored, and was now being given the job of dealing with the consequences of that ignoring. He accepted. Three days later, in his first address to the House of Commons as Prime Minister, Churchill offered his new government nothing but "blood, toil, tears, and sweat" — and defined the war's aim as victory, however long and hard the road. It was the beginning of a rhetorical and strategic partnership between Churchill and the British people that would sustain the country through the fall of France, the evacuation at Dunkirk, the Battle of Britain, the Blitz, and the years of grinding attritional warfare before American entry shifted the balance. Churchill was not a perfect war leader — his strategic judgments were sometimes disastrous, his imperial attitudes belonged to an earlier century, and the Bengal famine of 1943 stands as a permanent stain on his record. But the particular quality he possessed in May 1940 — the refusal to consider negotiated surrender at the moment when it seemed like the only rational option — was the quality the moment required. He had been warning that this would come. Now it had come, and he was, finally, the one who had to face it. 10 Downing Street on a wartime morning — where a man who had been right about everything was finally being asked to act on it. ❦ 211 On May 10, 1990, the Chinese government released 211 people who had been detained following the pro-democracy protests in Tiananmen Square in June 1989 — a crackdown in which the People's Liberation Army had deployed tanks and live ammunition against unarmed demonstrators in Beijing, killing an unknown number of people that the Chinese government has never acknowledged. Estimates from human rights organizations and foreign governments range from several hundred to several thousand dead. Thousands more were arrested in the weeks following the June 3–4 crackdown; the trials and sentences that followed were conducted largely in secret. The May 10 release of 211 prisoners was presented by the Chinese government as evidence of its commitment to the rule of law and as a response to international pressure. It was received by human rights organizations and foreign governments as exactly what it was: a minimum gesture designed to relieve diplomatic pressure without conceding anything of substance. The fuller reckoning that the May 10 release was meant to substitute for has never arrived. China has never acknowledged the death toll, released a comprehensive list of those detained, or permitted independent investigation of the crackdown. The photograph of the lone figure facing a column of tanks in Chang'an Avenue — Tank Man, taken on June 5, 1989 — became one of the most reproduced images in the history of photojournalism and one of the most censored in China, where it remains inaccessible on domestic internet platforms to this day. The students and workers who gathered in Tiananmen Square in the spring of 1989 were asking for accountability, transparency, and a meaningful role in the governance of their country. The government that imprisoned them in June 1989 and released 211 of them in May 1990 answered those questions with the same instrument it had used since: the careful management of information and the slow erosion of memory. The square itself was cleaned and reopened. The conversation the protesters had started was not.   Tiananmen Square at dawn — the plaza where a generation demanded accountability and a government answered with the minimum it thought the world would accept.

10 May

May 10: The Holiday She Tried to Kill

The Holiday She Tried to Kill Today is Mother's Day — the second Sunday in May, observed by millions across America. It was created by one woman, who spent the rest of her life trying to destroy it. Today, May 10, 2026, Americans will spend an estimated $35 billion on their mothers — on flowers, brunches, greeting cards, jewelry, spa days, and everything in between. It is the third-largest card-giving occasion of the year. Florists will sell roughly three-quarters of all celebrants their traditional bouquets. And somewhere in the history of all this commercial enthusiasm is a woman named Anna Jarvis, who never married, never had children, spent her entire personal fortune fighting this holiday she created, and died penniless in a sanitarium in Pennsylvania in 1948 — with her medical bills, according to legend, paid by the florists she had devoted her later years to destroying. The story of Mother's Day is one of the most bittersweet origin stories in American history: a daughter's pure act of love, transformed into exactly what she feared most, by the very forces she tried hardest to resist. A Daughter's Promise, and What Became of It Anna Jarvis was born in 1864 in Webster, West Virginia, the ninth of eleven children — seven of whom died in infancy. Her mother, Ann Reeves Jarvis, was a woman of extraordinary civic energy: in 1858, she had organized "Mothers' Day Work Clubs" across Appalachia to teach local women about hygiene, clean water, and infant care, at a time when typhoid and diphtheria swept through communities with devastating regularity. During the Civil War, Ann Jarvis nursed wounded soldiers on both sides and organized a Mother's Friendship Day to ease tensions between Union and Confederate families. When Ann died in 1905, her daughter Anna was devastated. She had heard her mother pray, years earlier, that "someone, sometime, will found a memorial mothers day." Anna resolved to answer that prayer. On May 10, 1908 — exactly 118 years before today — she organized the first official Mother's Day celebration at Andrews Methodist Episcopal Church in Grafton, West Virginia, sending 500 white carnations, her mother's favorite flower, for attendees to wear. Simultaneously, she addressed a gathering of 15,000 people at the Wanamaker's department store auditorium in Philadelphia. She then launched a relentless letter-writing campaign to politicians, ministers, newspaper editors, and business executives across the country. In 1914, President Woodrow Wilson designated the second Sunday of May a national holiday, dedicated, in his words, "to the best mother in the world, your mother." Anna Jarvis had won. The victory lasted approximately six years. By the early 1920s, florists were hoarding white carnations and jacking up prices every May. Greeting card companies discovered there was a fortune to be made in pre-printed sentiment. Candy makers, jewelers, and restaurateurs followed. Jarvis had conceived of Mother's Day as an intimate, personal occasion — she was fiercely specific even about grammar, insisting that "Mother's" be singular, meaning each person's own mother, not a collective celebration. She wanted handwritten letters, not purchased cards. "A printed card means nothing," she wrote, "except that you are too lazy to write to the woman who has done more for you than anyone in the world." By the 1920s, she was storming confectioners' conventions in Philadelphia to protest candy companies tying their sales to the holiday. She crashed an American War Mothers meeting and threw their carnations when she discovered they were selling flowers to raise funds. She was arrested for disturbing the peace. She sued organizations for using the phrase "Mother's Day" commercially, spending her personal fortune on litigation she almost never won. She publicly clashed with Eleanor Roosevelt for using Mother's Day to raise money for maternal mortality causes — causes that, in any other context, her own mother might have championed. In 1943, she began organizing a petition to have Mother's Day legally rescinded. Friends had her committed to a sanitarium before she could file it. She died there, in 1948, aged 84, with nothing left.   White carnations — Anna Jarvis's chosen symbol for Mother's Day, representing, in her words, "the truth, purity and broad-charity of a mother's love." By the 1920s, florists had begun substituting red and pink carnations when white ones sold out. Jarvis never forgave them. There is something in the Anna Jarvis story that seems worth holding onto today, on the 118th Mother's Day, as the brunch reservations fill and the flower deliveries arrive. Not to reject the flowers or the brunches — those are lovely — but to remember what the holiday was, at its origin, before any of it: a daughter who heard her mother pray for a day of recognition, and who spent the rest of her life making sure that prayer was answered, and then fighting to keep the answer honest. Ann Reeves Jarvis had organized mothers' clubs in Appalachia in 1858. She had nursed soldiers on both sides of a civil war. She had buried seven of her eleven children. She had prayed, in a Sunday school class, that someone would found a day in honor of what mothers do. Her daughter did — and then spent forty years defending the integrity of that day with a ferocity that broke her. Whatever you do today for the mother in your life, Anna Jarvis's actual wish was simple: that you take the time to write it down yourself, in your own words, from the heart. The florists will survive without a little more business. The words are the thing.

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