

This is our daily post that is shared across Twitter & Telegram and published first on here with Kindness & Love XX on peace-truth.com/
#AceNewsRoom With ‘Kindness & Wisdom’ July.17, 2022 @acehistorynews

Follow Our Breaking & Daily News Here As It Happens:
#AceHistoryDesk – Today in History – During the American Revolution, the college was closed, but when peace was declared, it reopened under a new name, Columbia College, in honor of the new nation. Over time, other special colleges and professional schools developed in connection with Columbia College.
The College of Physicians and Surgeons, the first American school to confer the M.D., was established in 1767. Barnard College for women, “sister” to the all-male Columbia College, was established in 1889. Melvil Dewey founded the School of Library Economy, the world’s first institution for training librarians, at Columbia in 1887, though it moved to Albany to become the State Library School the following year. In 1898, Teachers College, which had been founded in 1887, became affiliated with Columbia as a professional school for training teachers. In his will, Joseph Pulitzerendowed the Columbia Journalism School (1912).
The Spanish Civil War began on July 17, 1936 as a series of right-wing insurrections within the military, staged against the constitutional government of the five-year-old Second Spanish Republic. Because it was the first major military contest between left-wing forces and fascists, and attracted international involvement on both sides, the Spanish Civil War has sometimes been called the first chapter of World War II.

The rebels, or Nationalists as they came to be known, were backed by a spectrum of political and social conservatives including the Catholic Church, the fascist Falange Party, and those who wished to restore the Spanish monarchy. They received aid in the form of troops, tanks, and planes from Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany, and Germany field-tested some of its most important artillery in Spain. With the rise of General Francisco Franco as leader of the Nationalist coalition, the threat of fascism’s spread across Europe visibly deepened.


The Republicans were backed by Spanish labor unions and a range of anti-fascist political groups, from communists and anarchists to Catalonian separatists to centrist supporters of liberal democracy. The Republicans received aid from the Soviet Union and from Mexico, but their most likely European allies signed a joint agreement of nonintervention. The most visible international aid came in the form of volunteers. Estimates vary, but as many as 60,000 individuals from more than fifty countries joined the International Brigades to fight for the cause of the Spanish Republic. Between two and three thousand of these volunteers were men and women from the United States—most served with the Abraham Lincoln Brigade.
The Spanish Civil War posed a major threat to international political equilibrium, and Americans watched closely the events of the conflict. The brutality of the situation also forced many Americans to question the United States’ post-World War I non-interventionist policies. Between 500,000 and 1 million Spaniards, both soldiers and civilians, died from war or war-engendered disease and starvation, and thousands more became displaced refugees.

In an interview conducted with members of El Club Español (The Spanish Club) in Barre, Vermont, John (née Juan) Bavine puzzled:
I do not understand it… The Spain I knew years ago was a quiet country, she love’ peace. Her farmers work’ the rich fields. Her artists were proud to make beautiful our big cities an’ cathedrals. We were 22,000,000 people who want only to be left alone – an’ now what. You see beautiful cathedrals all smash’ an’ buried; the cities in ruin. A friend of mine, he say the other day that one Spaniard he is killed every nine minutes. Every nine minutes. God, that is terrible! More than one million of them lay dead from this war.
[Memorandum to Dr. Botkin] [Men Against Granite]. Mary Tomasi, interviewer, July 29, 1940. American Life Histories: Manuscripts from the Federal Writers’ Project, 1936 to 1940. Manuscript Divisionnone
The Spanish Civil War, especially the anti-fascist side, became a cause célèbre in the United States. Writers and artists including novelist Ernest Hemingway; poets Muriel Rukeyser, Pablo Neruda, and Langston Hughes; and painters Pablo Picasso and Robert Motherwell paid homage to the struggling Republic in their work. Baritone Paul Robeson sang for the international brigades. The anarchist Emma Goldman led an English-language publicity campaign. Fictional character Rick Blaine, protagonist of the 1942 film classic Casablanca, struggled against fascism in Spain, as did Robert Jordan, the hero of Hemingway’s 1940 novel For Whom the Bell Tolls.

The Spanish Civil War continued until March 28, 1939, when Nationalist troops led by Franco overcame the Republic’s forces and entered Madrid. Just months after the Spanish Civil War ended, Germany invaded Poland and World War II began. Faced with the devastation of his country, Franco declared Spain at first a neutral and then a nonbelligerent nation during World War II, though his sympathies clearly lay with Axis powers.
Francisco Franco sustained a military dictatorship for almost forty years, until his death in 1975. Almost immediately, Spain began a peaceful transformation away from dictatorship; its present democratic constitution was formalized in 1978.
Learn More
- Use terms such as Barcelona, Madrid, or international to search Posters: Spanish Civil War Posters. Browse approximately 120 posters showing multiple viewpoints on the causes, conduct, and consequences of the war. In addition, read collection overviews and browse the collections for Visual Materials Relating to the Spanish Civil War and David Seymour (CHIM) Photograph Collection.
- Learn more about innovations in journalism and the arts that emerged from international involvement with the Spanish Civil War. Read blog posts about photojournalist David Seymour (CHIM) and poet and biographerMurial Rukeyser, both with collections at the Library of Congress. Then, view The Visual Front: Posters of the Spanish Civil War and Shots of War: Photojournalism During the Spanish Civil War, two online exhibitions drawn from the Southworth Collection of the Mandeville Special Collections Library, University of California, San Diego.
- Search on Madrid in American Life Histories: Manuscripts from the Federal Writers’ Project, 1936 to 1940 for additional references to the Spanish Civil War.
- Learn more about Spain from the online country study, one of a series of area handbooks prepared by the Library of Congress’ Federal Research Division. Spain: A Country Study describes and analyzes that nation’s political, economic, national security, and social systems, and contains a section on the Spanish Civil War and a useful bibliography.
- See the international collection Parallel Histories/Historias Paralelas, which deals with Spain, the United States, and the American Frontier, a presentation developed by the Library of Congress in partnership with the National Library of Spain. View additional items from the National Library of Spain included in the World Digital Library.
Editor says …Sterling Publishing & Media Service Agency is not responsible for the content of external site or from any reports, posts or links, and can also be found here on Telegram: https://t.me/acenewsdaily and all wordpress and live posts and links here: https://acenewsroom.wordpress.com/ and thanks for following as always appreciate every like, reblog or retweet and free help and guidance tips on your PC software or need help & guidance from our experts AcePCHelp.WordPress.Com




You must be logged in to post a comment.