Thursday, July 9, 2020

Thinking, Seeing, Feelings, Doing, Steps To Take, Toward Changing, More Mountains, Left To Climb, What You Know, What You Want, Blue Oceans To Create.




Dances On The Sands Of Time, Pages To Write, Veterans To Date. Dances on the boats, yachts, ship, Peter Pan late again. On not, hard to say, , pages to books, recaps to do. Shots, Bumps In Road. Ships To Pass, Learning Lessons All The Time.Thinking, Seeing, Feelings, Doing, Steps To Take, Toward Changing, More Mountains, Left To Climb, What You Know, What You Want, Blue Oceans To Create. 
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They marched out of the swamp with their arms and opened fire upon the whites who were unarmed. In the meantime I, Mr. William E. Simmons, and several aides to white men had taken refuge in a brick house adjoining the church.  The Negro militia charged out of the swamp surrounded the brick house and tried to batter down the door.  


THESE BEGINNING-T0-END, SEQUENCED IMAGES ARE FROM THE LINKED TO VIDEO FOLLOWING THIS SCRIPT.  THE SCRIPT'S TEXT IS COMPLETE AND IS BROKEN DOWN TO MATCH TO THE IMAGE SHOWN WITH IT DURING THE VIDEO. - JS



"Act in the Living Present - The Life of Martin Robison Delany" - by Jim Surkamp 


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MD: “I leave you here and journey on and if I never more return, farewell”
NARRATOR: Martin Delany finally gave up on America.  

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His expulsion with two others from Harvard Medical School just because of skin color convinced him that the power of reason and merit alone did not in fact determine the country’s esteemed leaders.  So, scraping just a few hundred dollars, 

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he rented a crew and ship back to Africa, where his grandfather Shango had returned several generations before.

MRD.vid1.4 SHIP

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His critics including Frederick Douglass, were legion. "You must stay here and fight for freedom," they told him.

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He certainly reflected on his already long life: 

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the long road as one of five children in a freed family in Charles Town Virginia; 


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and after that fleeing because they illegally learned how to read, followed by the many years as a physician’s assistant in Pittsburgh,

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and then editing  two influential newspapers.  


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Most of all he remembered as he perhaps gazed at the sperm whales that 
wandered into those southern latitudes . . . Of the day he was walking

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the road to Pittsburgh in 1829 deciding - his head filled with 
books and images of pharoahs and Africa - of making this pilgrimage in reverse back to Africa.

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“Land Ho!"    

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NARRATOR: “The arrival of Martin Robison Delany in Liberia is an era in the history of African emigration, an event doubtless that will long be remembered by hundreds of thousands of Africa’s exiled children. 


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Persons from all parts of the country came to Monrovia to see this great man.” 

People cheering:
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Ridiculed and ignored in America for speaking - 

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embraced by the thousands here for speaking - how strange.

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MD: “The regeneration of the African race can only be effected by its own efforts, the efforts of its own self and whatever aid may come from other sources; and it must, in this venture succeed, as God leads the movement and His hand guides the way.”


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“Face thine accusers, scorn the rack and rod and, if thou hast truth to utter, 

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speak and leave the rest to God."

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But we pushed on to Abeokuta.


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Africa taught Martin Delany its mysteries. 
MD: “The principle markets to see all the wonders

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is in the evening. As the shades of evening deepen, 

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every woman lights her little lamp and, to the distant 

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observer, presents the beautiful appearance of innumerable stars.”

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“But in the entire Aku country one is struck by the beautiful country which continually spreads out in every direction.”

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Africa also taught him its nightmares. . .
I read August 13th in the West African Herald:

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“King Dahomey is about to make the great Custom in honor of the late King Gezo. 

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Determined to surpass all former monarchs, a great pit has been dug which is to 

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contain human blood enough to float a canoe. Two thousand persons will be sacrificed on this occasion. 

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The king has sent his army to make some excursions at the expense of some weaker tribes. The younger people will be sold into slavery. The older persons will be killed At the Grand Custom.”

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MD: “Whole villages are taken.”

“Farewell, farewell my loving friends, farewell. . .”

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The jasmine smells of Africa are tonight less fragrant than my scented memory of soft honey-suckled summer’s night breezes in Virginia long ago, and awaking to the mockingbird.

{MRD.5:37} END PART 1 TO BLACK

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NARRATOR: On April 10th, 1860 at Lagos, Martin Delany and Robert Campbell 

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boarded ship for London and Birmingham 

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to seek backers for a plan to build freedman’s cotton farms in the Niger 
Valley. 

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They would undersell, at the gold price of fourteen cents a pound, all the slave wrought cotton from the plantations back home. 


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To make bales of cotton rot on the docks of Charleston and New Orleans as it were.

 
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MD: When I was growing up in Pittsburgh, my children’s age – I worked hours and hours inscribing with a fine needle the Lord Prayer – 

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all of it – on the face of an English six pence like this one.

MRD.vid1.45 SHIP

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NARRATOR: Delany was not wanted in America because 

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of his radical political views. So he set sail for London and began preparing his report to his backers 

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on the promise of Africa. 


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MD: I noticed that. . . when I read, my eyes scan the page. . . back and forth. . . and up and down like a loom.

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I was so crazy about words, I was like Cervantes. I’d pick up every grimy scrap in the gutters of Charles Town

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to see if it had magic code to worlds beyond

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I read and broke bread with the ideas and dreams of Thomas Jefferson and Socrates And ancient pharaohs. 


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Then Grandma Graci at night would tell me about my grandfather Shango.
GRANDMA GRACI: "No more stories Martin." 
MD: And off to sleep and dreams about the greatest people who ever lived. 


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I wanted my child to accumulate great hopes. 


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If I ever set shoe leather on New York’s dock, President Buchanan himself would drop the noose around my despised neck, 


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since John Brown, who I knew, did rebel and killed, and was hanged, I didn’t reckon there would be much of a welcoming home party for me.


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NARRATOR: Dr. Delany’s most prestigious speaking invitation was before the International Statistical Society, 


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chaired by Queen Victoria’s husband, Prince Albert, and the most esteemed 
scientific body in the world on July 16th at 


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London’s Somerset House.  As the meeting was beginning at four, 


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Lord Brougham, who hated American slavery, addressed the body which included the delegation from the United States, 


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headed by Augustus Baldwin Longstreet


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The United States Ambassador George Mifflin Dallas was also seated on the dais. Both fervently believed as did their 

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President that those called slaves were technically, legally, and truly 


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three fifths human - just a notch above a good horse.
BROUGHAM: “I call to the attention of Mr. Dallas to the fact there is a Negro present, 

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and I hope he will feel no scruples on that account."

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MD: I was eye to eye with men who wished me dead. 


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So many memories engulfed me.
“I rise, your Royal Highness,


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to thank his Lordship, the unflinching friend of the Negro and for the remarks he has made to myself and to assure your Royal Highness and his Lordship that I AM a man.”


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NARRATOR: Withering amid what the London Times called the wildest shouts ever from so grave an assemblage, Longstreet jumped up and led the United States delegation out of the hall.

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Ambassador Dallas stayed seated on the dais. The proceedings ended. And Dr. Delany became an international sensation.


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Delany read the reactions to his actions from America. Even Frederick Douglass spoke well of him. A new President had been elected. His plans for Africa delayed by war there, and too many days of watching birthdays of his children go by from his cramped little room in London, 


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cold rain drizzling outside and streaking his window pane. He wrote that memories leapt to life and “pierced my heart like a golden spear and riddled my breast like precious stones."

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Memories, such as that of Lucinda Snow, the blind girl in the Ohio Asylum – who played for him Rose Bud on a piano 

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shortly after his own dearest daughter had just died. Nothing, Delany decided, could keep him from being home

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in Chatham, Ontario by Christmas. There was hope there. It was 1860 


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Doctor Delany joined his family in Chatham, Dec. 29th, 1860 to help a flood of escaped ex-slaves. South Carolina voted to secede nine days before. Slavery was being challenged in earnest.

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On January 9th, 1861, Confederate shore batteries fire upon Federal supply ships approaching Fort Sumter.

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President Lincoln at his March 4th Inauguration said: “Plainly the central idea of secession is the essence of anarchy.”

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Peacetime ends.


6 images of fort sumter shelling not counted
80-86

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Bull Run, July 21st, 1861

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Stonewall Jackson’s Shenandoah Valley Campaign, May-June, 1862

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Antietam, the bloodiest day in American military history, September 17, 1862

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Fredericksburg, Dec. 13, 1862

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Vicksburg, Dec. 1862 through May, 1863

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“All persons held as slaves shall thenceforward be forever free and such persons of suitable condition will be received into the armed services.” President Lincoln, January 1st, 1863

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179,000 men of color enlist. Three million remain enslaved.

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Confederate General Lee loses Gen. Jackson, his best, at Chancellorsville, May, 1863. 

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Lee Gambles


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Over 50,000 casualties at Gettysburg foresees the ultimate defeat of the Southern Cause, July, 1863.

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Days later, angry antidraft mobs in soldierless New York City burn a Negro orphan asylum.

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And lynch twelve innocent freed blacks.

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The 7th New York militia helps restore order.

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On July 18th, public opinion is reversed by extreme bravery of men in the 54th Massachusetts' Colored Regiment at Fort Wagner, South Carolina.


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“With silent tongue, clenched teeth, and steady eye, they have helped us on to this great consummation, while others have strove to hinder it.” A. Lincoln, April 26, 1864

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A ninety two per cent Republican vote by furloughed soldiers delivers big unexpected off-year wins  in Ohio and Pennsylvania for Lincoln and his party.


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Abolitionist Lew Tappan writes: “We are coming out of the slanderous valley for we have lived to have old opponents say to us: “We were wrong.”

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“The year has brought many changes I thought impossible, May God bless this Cause.”  Black recruit in Baltimore, MD.

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The U.S. Senate passes an amendment abolishing all slavery. The house still opposes. – April 9, 1864

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Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest orders the murder of mostly black prisoners at Fort Pillow, April 12, 1864.

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"(it is hoped) these facts will demonstrate that Negro soldiers cannot cope with Southerners.”

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“Whatever happens there will be no turning back” – a letter to President Lincoln from his new commander, Gen. Grant, April, 1864.

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The Battle of the Wilderness and Spotsylvania, May 5th through 12th, 1864.

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“These men are incomprehensible standing from daylight to dark killing and wounding each other, then making jokes and exchanging newspapers.” Col.Theodore Lyman.

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Gen. Grant of his Cold Harbor, Va. attack, June, 1864: “I regret this assault more than any other.”

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Equal pay for black troops is finally enacted, June, 1864.

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A teacher in the occupied South writes: “Their cry is for 'books' and 'When will school begin?'”

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Civilians become targets.

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Union Gen. Hunter torches “Leeland” and “Fountain Rock” in Shepherdstown, WV and VMI in July, 1864.


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General Jubal Early strikes back, levels Chambersburg, ransoms Hagerstown and Frederick, MD.


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“The valley is not fit for man or beast. I have destroyed 2,000 barns." – “Gen. Philip Sheridan


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Gen. William Sherman writes: “We cannot change the hearts of these people. But we can make it so terrible and make them so sick of war, they will not appeal to it again.”


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“I can make my men march and make Georgia howl.” Gen. Sherman while cutting a swath of destruction fifty miles wide to Savannah to the sea.

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Martin Delany sought roles and work for Gen. Sherman's thousands of "camp followers" 

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wagon freed blacks

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stagecoach


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Delany went to President Lincoln himself with an idea to make the South Carolina coastline a new Israel


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for freedmen and women who had been joining Sherman’s army marching across Georgia in the tens of thousands. First, Delany thought, they would be an army of 


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Africa of able black men, recruited, trained, and then themselves becoming liberating soldiers and, after the war, these same men would become able keepers of the land, 


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homecoming

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the same land Sherman had promised in South Carolina in January of that same year. Gen. Sherman tentatively gave, 


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subject to the approval of the President of course, tens of thousands of acres of land to the freedman.

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Each family, Sherman, would get forty acres – a place in the sun - and one army mule on loan

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If Abeokuta failed to be Martin Delany’s promised land, Carolina coastline would be his Israel.

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On a cold clammy damp morning at 8 AM on Feb. 8th, Delany was welcomed by President Lincoln into his study 


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at the White House. 


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Lincoln had followed Delany’s doings for years. He knew him. On entering 


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the executive chamber and being introduced to his excellency, a generous grasp of the hand brought me to a seat in front of him.

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AL: “What can I do for you, sir?”
MD: “Nothing, Mr. President, 

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but I’ve come to propose something to you, which I think will be 
beneficial to this nation in this critical hour of her peril.”

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AL: “Go on sir.”
Delany and Lincoln discussed the value of black leaders for freed black Americans, and how so many feared black leadership. 

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AL: “This is the very thing I’ve been looking for and hoping for; but nobody offered it. I have talked about it; I hoped and prayed for it. But up until now, it has never been proposed.


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“When I issued the Emancipation Proclamation, I had this thing in contemplation. I then gave them a chance by prohibiting any interference on the part of the army; but they did not embrace it.”


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MD: “But Mr. President, these poor people could not READ your proclamation.”

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While he spoke Lincoln was writing 


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on a piece of paper.
“Hon. E. M. Stanton:
“Don’t not fail to have a meeting with this most extraordinary and intelligent black man – 

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A. Lincoln.”

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AL: “Stanton is firing!
Listen. He is in his glory. Noble man!”
MD: “What is it? Mr. President”
AL: “Why don’t you know? Charleston’s ours.”  

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NARRATOR: Martin Delany later in April, caught a stage for the cradle of Southern animosities, 


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which turned by the magic stroke of a pen and the raising of a sword 

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into a new land of opportunity. 


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He was to report to Gen. Rufus Saxton, a strong protector of freedman who 
commanded the occupation forces in South Carolina.



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MD: “I entered the city which from earliest childhood and through life I had learned to contemplate with feelings of utmost abhorrence, where the sound of the lash at the whipping post, and the hammer of the auctioneer 


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were coordinate sounds in thrilling harmony, such as might well have vied for the infamous King of Dahomey.” 


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“For a moment, I found myself dashing in unmeasured strides through the city. Again I halted to look upon the shattered walls 


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of the once stately, but now deserted edifices. And but for the 
vigilance and fidelity 


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of the colored firemen, there would have been nothing left but a smoldering plain of runs in the place where Charleston once stood.”


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NARRATOR: Chief Justice Salmon Chase in Charleston said: “A great race numbering four million is suddenly brought in freedom. All the world is looking to see whether the prophecies of the enemies of that race will be fulfilled or falsified. It rests upon the men of that race to tell.” 


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Delany made it in time 


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to see the flags changed at Fort Sumter, with his son, a young private, also there. And his old friend 


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and comrade-in-arms William Lloyd Garrison who as he bade goodbye to a large adoring audience in Charleston said: GARRISON: “I have always advocated non-resistance; but this much I say to you, Come what 
may, never will you submit again to slavery. Do anything. Die first! 


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But don’t submit again to them, never again be slaves. Farewell.”


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NARRATOR: Major Delany, the first black field officer in the U.S. Army, 


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quickly organized schools, farms, 

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farmers, freedmen and tried to reason with disenfranchised plantation owners, 


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who were always trying to tie new freedman into enslaving contracts, exploiting their illiteracy.

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But Delany they loved. He was one of them and he told it to them straight.

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MD: “I came to talk to you in plain words so as you can understand how to open the gates of oppression and let the captive free. 

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In this state there are 200 thousand able, intelligent honorable Negroes, not an inferior race, mind you.”

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“I want to tell you one thing, do you know that if it was not for the black man, 

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this war never would have been brought to a close with success. 

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Do you know that? 

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Do you know that?”
 
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NARRATOR: But they would be asked to submit again - and soon.
From the moment a bullet penetrated the Great Liberator’s brain at Ford’s Theater, no such a grand promise of land and freedom would ever hold.
In May, just a month later, 


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the newly appointed President Johnson ordered all these lands – those not properly surveyed - returned 


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to some 300 plantation owners – even if 


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someone else’s crop was already growing in the field. One freedman wrote to Andrew Johnson himself: 


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“We have been ready to strike for liberty and humanity, yea to fight if need be, to preserve the glorious union.  And now, we are ready to pay for this land.


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‘Sign contracts with your old master and work their land as partners’ This was the plea to most freed blacks.  


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Throughout that long summer, Delany’s superiors Generals Howard and Saxton avoided Johnson’s order and eventually defied them outright until September 


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when they broke the news to the freedmen they loved so much. An Edisto Island freedman wrote his friend, 


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Gen. Howard:
“You ask us to forgive the landowners of our island. You only lost your right to arm in war and might forgive them. 



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The man who tied me to a tree and gave me thirty nine lashes, who stripped and flogged my mother and sister and who will not let me stay in his empty hut unless I do his planting – that man I cannot forgive. . . General we cannot remain here.”

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NARRATOR: Many left South Carolina. Some stayed and were beaten. 

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Delany fought:
MD: “Every species of infamy, however atrocious, private and public, bare-faced and in open daylight 


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is defiantly perpetrated under the direction and guidance of the despicable political leaders in the sacred name of ‘Republicanism’ and ’Radicalism.’

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“But these Yankees talk smooth to you. Oh yeh. Their tongues roll just like the drum. They don’t pay you enough.”


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I was told to stay out of politics.
NARRATOR: The forty acres and a mule promised to freedmen were already secretly being returned to the planters courtesy of the tireless machinations of Trescott and Williams in Washington.  


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They even got Gen. Sherman to write President Johnson. 
On the brink of being court-martialed for his opposition, 


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Gen. Howard wrote his superiors:
“The lands which have been taken possession by this bureau have been solemnly pledged to the freedman. Thousands of them are already located on tracts of forty acres each. 


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The love of the soil and desire to own farms amounts to a passion.

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It appears to be the dearest hope of their lives.”


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NARRATOR: Within two years, the Freedman Bureau had its main function of redistributing the lands to original owners and apologizing for it . . .


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Saxton was reassigned, Gen. Howard court-martialed, 


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but Col. Delany – a survivor – pressed on. He had made himself too valuable to too many people in a very short time.



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Republican politicians, like Christopher Columbus Bowen, who controlled the patronage at the Customs House, hated his dangerously incorruptible independence 


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and integrity, but like everyone, 


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bowed to his almost messianic hold on the freedmen – 


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this the long-awaited black leader.

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And on the other side, the old Southern aristocracy 

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saw Delany’s magic too. And planned to use him someday 


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for their own ends. As one old Southern editor put, in grudging admiration: “Martin Delany is a genuine Negro.”


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MD: “No one who knows me will doubt my African proclivities. I have possessions in Africa which I hope to enjoy.”
NARRATOR: The old Southern guard watched and waited.
They noticed Delany’s perceptibly growing disgust with corruption, greased palms and greed 




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that fueled his own Republican Party’s machine.
MD: The Freedman’s Bureau was allowed to continue to return those 63,000 acres to the planters. 


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I told freedman to get educated to see what was going on.
“Through two crop failures in 66 and 67, I told freedmen to rely on their muscles, 


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their faith, and the righteousness of their cause.”
1870 saw almost all of those 63,000 promised acres 

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were back in planters hands and some 90,000 of South Carolina’s freedmen 

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had left in disgust and desperation.  

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2,000 brothers and sisters set sail for my beloved Africa. The best of our people. Their hopes were gone before mine. Delany’s disgust deepened on a trip to New York City where he represented the state in a bond issue.
And he found out that Governor Chamberlain 



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had given his old college chum and roommate $750,000 in commissions.


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The Old Southern guard, watched and waited knowing that Martin Delany might be the key to regaining power.


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WADE HAMPTON: “We can control the Negroes if we act discreetly.”  
I would come to know people like Wade Hampton an embodiment of the old South who invited me to speak at barbecue gatherings.
HAMPTON: “If it means we can protect our state from destruction, I am willing to send Negroes to Congress. They will be better than anyone who can take the oath of loyalty and I should rather trust them than renegades or Yankees.
“My experience has been that when a Yankee can do a bit of rascality, the temptation to do it is almost irresistible.” 



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NARRATOR: No one, though, would be a more fateful associate in Martin Delany’s long and broad lifetime as Wade Hampton, the old cavalry general, aristocrat and front man for the South. Who  - yes, truly speaking personally for himself - wished for a better life for the freedman
because he and Delany both fervently lived and advocated personal honor and a regimen of book learning and practical skills as every freedman’s road to true permanent economic redemption.


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It was only a matter of time that these two stars would head on a one on one collision and one of those two stars would orbit around the other.
 

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If only there had been more than just one Wade Hampton and one Martin Delany. America’s working, educated electorate would have emerged sooner.
But the personal prestige, humanitarian and pragmatic ways of each man could only briefly capture the public imagination, 



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while, at all other times, whites, blacks, Democrats and Republicans slid disgracefully into the abyss where guns and bribes were constantly used as the preferred path to personal power and glory.


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Pressured out of the Freedman’s Bureau in 1869, Delany was retired from public life, selling real estate and editing his own newspaper, when Rev. Richard Cain came to him one day in 1872 and urged him to help elect Franklin Moses.


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He might even get – for his efforts – a decent job later to support his seamstress wife, Catherine, and their large family.


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Delany could deliver freedmen’s votes. Hoping to enhance his own political fortunes in this state with a majority of black voters, and hoping to get more homesteads for freedmen, Delany stumped vigorously for Moses.



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Moses had always given lip service to Delany’s plan to attract Northern money to be long-term, low-interest loans to help the freedmen to buy and develop their own homesteads. 


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Delany’s unvarnished truth-telling inspired the common people and irked those grubbing after filthy lucre.



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Wrote onetime governor B.F. Perry: “After mature reflection, I believe Col. Delany has exhibited in his speeches more wisdom and prudence, more honor and patriotism than any other Republican, white or black in South Carolina.”


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Delany wrote that, should the homeless become landowners, they would at once become proportionately interested in the affairs of state. Before either school house or church can be erected, he said the people themselves must be settled in homes of their own. 


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Freedmen were leaving the state, denied the once promised forty acres virtually all back in original hands, and their life savings deposited faithfully in the Freedman’s Savings and Trust Company, now gone form mismanagement.


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Delany knew his plan could work. In three years he organized white cotton wholesalers and freedmen farmers on Hilton Head Island into a peaceable alliance that grew and harvested the crop profitably. Moses was elected. 



MRD.vid1.223
So was “Honest John” who boasted he bought his seat in the U.S. Senate for 
$40,000.


MRD.vid1.224
But Governor Moses continued to drive even higher the state debt. 


MRD.vid1.225
It had already soared from one to over seventeen million dollars in the previous five years. Moses then raised taxes on freed holders to pay for all this.


MRD.vid1.226
And he lined his pockets with priced pardons sold to 503 imprisoned felons. And they were all released into this heavily armed, hate-filled powder keg land. And Governor Moses gave Delany no job.

MRD.vid1.227
Rev. Cain wrote Moses: 
“I had assured Mr. Delany that you would not break faith.  He has staked 
all on your word. For Heaven’s sake, do not cast him away.”     



MRD.vid1.228
Seeing Beaufort’s old St. Helena Church summed up a visitors’ feeling in 1873 about every South Carolina town he saw: 



MRD.vid1.229
it was one of complete prostration, dejection, 


MRD.vid1.230
stagnation.


MRD.vid1.231
VISITOR: “Utter stagnation marks its streets and everything is flavored with decay.  The mockingbird sings as if winter has no meaning for them, 



MRD.vid1.232
the old mansions are permeated with the air of desertion. The merry tinkling that proceeds from the closed shutters of one of them seems 
altogether dissonant with the surroundings.”


MRD.vid1.233
Bad crops, bad weather, a lost position in world cotton markets, a national depression – this all contributed.


MRD.vid1.234
So by 1874, all of South Carolina, including Delany’s beloved St. Helena Island, looked like an armed camp.


MRD.vid1.235
The Ku Klux Klan was forming almost three hundred rifle clubs that once beat two hundred freedmen and killed four more in nine months, in just one county. 



MRD.vid1.236
Freedmen either armed themselves,


MRD.vid1.237
Or prayed the Federal troops would never leave.


MRD.vid1.238
Some freedmen and their families slept in the swamps in the mild winter where the men in hoods and facemasks could not find them


MRD.vid1.239
Wrote the editor of the Edgefield Advertiser in one of the states’ most strife torn counties:
“Good people now look upon the entire electoral contest as a struggle between thieves and plunderers.”


MRD.vid1.240
And they worried:
“Among the whites is a class of men who hold human life of little value, 



MRD.vid1.241
and among the colored people there is a class who do not wish to labor and are known as habitual thieves or disturbers of the peace.   


MRD.vid1.242
Gen. Rufus Saxton wrote back his old friend Robert Smalls about these darkest of times in South Carolina: “I rejoiced when the right of suffrage came and I sorrowed when it was told that some had sold this precious birthright for a miserable mess of potage.”


MRD.vid1.243
A few years earlier, Delany heard the church bells ring when the Fourteenth Amendment had been passed; but it was a hollow sound. 



MRD.vid1.244
He saw freedmen unable to read show up at the Freedmen’s Bureau with great baskets. The word, “Registration” sounded not much different from that other word: “provisions.”

 
MRD.vid1.245
The Republicans’ vampire like bite into the state’s ebbing lifeblood blinded them to that emerging menace and giant, the old Southern Democrats 


MRD.vid1.246
and their gun-toting right wing rabble. Delany saw this disaster collision coming:
MD: Again and again I warned the majority Republicans to go easy on the white planters 


MRD.vid1.247
because one day the shoe would go over to their foot. And sure enough it did.


MRD.vid1.248
NARRATOR: Delany ran for lieutenant governor in 1874 on an independent reformed Republican ticket, getting 64,000 votes as corrupt Chamberlain won.   
MD: I lost my race but the planters got the shoe on their foot capturing the majority of seats in the statehouse.


MRD.vid1.249
NARRATOR: Delany was made justice of the peace in Charleston when, as the gubernatorial election drew near in 1876 was indicted, courtesy of Governor Chamberlain, for misusing the funds of a dirt poor black church. 


MRD.vid1.250
Hardly. The implicit threat was: do not support Wade Hampton who was now the official candidate against Chamberlain with all the wealth and smart men the Old South could muster squarely behind him.



MRD.vid1.251
Hampton and Delany always appealed to people’s desire for peaceful solutions based on reason and fair play.
HAMPTON: “I pledge myself solemnly in the presence of the people of South Carolina 


MRD.vid1.252
and in the presence of my God that, if the Democratic ticket is elected – not one single right enjoyed by the colored people today shall be taken from them.”

MRD.vid1.253
NARRATOR: As violence increased the extreme Democratic clubs secretly assigned one man to personally bribe or scare one freedman from voting, 



MRD.vid1.254
as Chamberlain’s campaign promises became more grotesque and desperate, Delany announced for Wade Hampton in September, 1876 


MRD.vid1.255
– immediately putting his life at risk. Delany fought hard and spoke forcefully for Hampton.
MD: Freedmen I told one and all were serving a new master now the radical Republican Carpetbaggers. I said the blackest truth out loud – a black man would not be allowed to lead, not just to live, but to lead.  I myself always dared to do what the white men ever dared and done – to pull on every lion’s tail a white man has pulled.


MRD.vid1.256
NARRATOR: On October 16th, C.C. Bowen promised me that our party of white and black Democrats could speak to freedmen on Edisto Island.  


MRD.vid1.257
Before the steamer left the Charleston wharf a number of Republican negroes gathered and they noisily demanded that they be permitted to take passage and threateningly declared that they wanted a chance to clean out those Democrats.


MRD.vid1.258
MD: The audience at the meeting of some 500 or 600 “African citizens” was by far the most uncouth, savage and uncivilized that I have ever seen.
The Republican Negroes started to beat their drums and left in a body.  They would listen to “De Damn Democrats. 



MRD.vid1.259
They marched off and the women crowded around the wagon with their 
bludgeons with threats, and curses.


MRD.vid1.260
MD: ”I rose to speak on the wagon. They interrupted me as I said:  “I had come to South Carolina with my sword drawn to fight for the freedom of the black man.”  





MRD.vid1.261
I said “I had warned you against trusting your money to the Freedman’s Bank; and that you had, to your sorrow, paid no heed to my warning.”

MRD.vid1.262
In violation of the agreement that neither party should carry guns or rifles to the place of meeting, 


MRD.vid1.263
the Negroes had brought their muskets and secreted them in a nearby swamp and in an old house near a church not far from the speaking ground.   



MRD.vid1.264
They marched out of the swamp with their arms and opened fire upon the whites who were unarmed. In the meantime I, Mr. William E. Simmons, and several aides to white men had taken refuge in a brick house adjoining the church.  The Negro militia charged out of the swamp surrounded the 
brick house and tried to batter down the door. 


MRD.vid1.265
Failing in this, they broke open the windows and pointed muskets at us.  We all escaped except for Mr. Simmons, who upon emerging from the 
door was knocked down and beaten to death.


MRD.vid1.266
Six white men were killed and sixteen whites wounded that day.  One black man was killed. The siege of Cainhoy continued for several days afterwards.  



MRD.vid1.267
White racists conducted similar assaults against blacks especially in Edgefield County.
NARRATOR: Wade Hampton did win by a fiercely contested 1100 vote margin, provided in part by an estimated 3,000 Republican blacks who followed Delany’s example.


MRD.vid1.268
MD: I had hurt the cause of my people beyond all imaginings.


MRD.vid1.269
NARRATOR: Then Wade Hampton made history.  With his election for governor still is dispute and the state in anarchy 


MRD.vid1.270
he met at the Willard Hotel with president-elect Rutherford B. Hayes, 


MRD.vid1.271
who held onto his election by one electoral vote.  To keep his single electoral vote lead, Hayes and Hampton agreed that Hayes would support and confirm Hampton’s election and as Hampton wrote Hayes:

MRD.vid1.272
HAMPTON: “If the Federal troops are withdrawn from the State House, there shall be on my part or that of my friends no resort to violence 

MRD.vid1.273
but we shall look for their maintenance solely to such peaceful remedies as the Constitution and laws of the State provide.”

MRD.vid1.274
MD: U.S. soldiers were removed from the South on Hampton’s pact with Hayes  - and I helped that.  One person called it the abandonment of the colored race.

MRD.vid1.275
Wade Hampton appointed me judge and I remained until he was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1879. 

MRD.vid1.276
But the secret all white Charleston County Democratic committee methodically organized the state, county-by-county and parish-by-parish 

MRD.vid1.277
to crush the Republican party and all spokesmen for Reconstruction.  

MRD.vid1.278
My son drowned in the Savannah River. His body was found in December, late 1879. My wife Catherine, who had carried our family during my long absences, needed me.


MRD.vid1.279
I was old. My children needed their college educations at Wilberforce.  The books that set my dreams afire long ago belonged to them now.


MRD.vid1.280
So I was there on the dock when a ship - the Azor - set sail for Liberia from Charleston harbor 


MRD.vid1.281
full of hopeful friends, with my fondest dreams on that distant shore.  



MRD.vid1.282
My torch had passed from me.


MRD.vid1.283
His loving admirers gave him the Liberian flag on that dock for his many years of inspiration 


MRD.vid1.284
to act on their dreams. 
"Almost all his many children became teachers. His name is misspelled on his tombstone.  His life’s work was lost when a library burned.
And the ancestors of those who left for Africa in his lifetime and with his blessing still turn the native soil.


MRD.vid1.285
MD: ”Act, act in the living present – but act.  Speak the truth and leave the rest to God.”
GRANDMA GRACI: No more stories, Martin.
End



THE VIDEO:

The video broken out into segments on Flickr below: 

Martin Delany was a Harvard-educated physician, explorer who led his own scientific expedition to Africa; co-editor of The North Star newspaper; novelist; political theorist, judge in South Carolina, the first black field officer in the U.S. Army and described by Abraham Lincoln in February, 1865 after meeting him as " an extraordinary and intelligent black man."


Martin Delany - Visionary - 1 
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DBbR4_XVL9A" rel="nofollow">www.youtube.com/watch?v=DBbR4_XVL9A</a>
TRT: 5:38


Martin Delany - Visionary - 2 
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_IKkeh-oAJw" rel="nofollow">www.youtube.com/watch?v=_IKkeh-oAJw</a>
TRT: 4:55


Martin Delany - Defiance - 3 
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=akOy0YTgveI" rel="nofollow">www.youtube.com/watch?v=akOy0YTgveI</a>
TRT: 4:32


Martin Delany - Wartime - 4 
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yoov745rJIQ" rel="nofollow">www.youtube.com/watch?v=yoov745rJIQ</a>
TRT: 7:22


Martin Delany - Meets Lincoln - 5 
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1FLy2e5k-lA" rel="nofollow">www.youtube.com/watch?v=1FLy2e5k-lA</a>
TRT: 6:34


Martin Delany - Major Delany - 6 
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kmsREGq81F4" rel="nofollow">www.youtube.com/watch?v=kmsREGq81F4</a>
TRT: 5:32


Martin Delany - Post-War - 7 
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yfr5btQPF8M" rel="nofollow">www.youtube.com/watch?v=yfr5btQPF8M</a>
TRT: 2:20



Martin Delany - Disillusioned - 8 
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8rdRT-_9mZE" rel="nofollow">www.youtube.com/watch?v=8rdRT-_9mZE</a>
TRT: 4:17



Martin Delany - Charleston - 9 
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PRmGweOo5A0" rel="nofollow">www.youtube.com/watch?v=PRmGweOo5A0</a>
TRT: 5:37


Martin Delany - Betrayed - 10 
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hdeCu7a4pww" rel="nofollow">www.youtube.com/watch?v=hdeCu7a4pww</a>
TRT: 6:01


Martin Delany - Going Home - 11 
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Hj9nWbIfIo" rel="nofollow">www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Hj9nWbIfIo</a>
TRT: 4:29



OTHER SOURCES:

Surkamp, James T. (1853). &quot;<a href="http://www.libraries.wvu.edu/delany/home.htm" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">To Be More Than Equal: The Many Lives of Martin R. Delany 1812-1885</a>. West Virginia University Libraries. 9 Nov. 1999. Web. 26 Dec. 2010.

Good Times, Family Affairs, Events By The Month, Trips To Other Places,Thinking, Seeing, Feelings, Doing, Steps To Take, Toward Changing, More Mountains, Left To Climb.

New hope in 2009
有段話我覺得不要翻成英文比較好,老美看了大概會不爽,這張圖我弄好後覺的很像黑人牙膏的mark說....TT我應該把它作成貼紙印出來的!以下就轉貼他的生平:
&quot;Barack&quot; and &quot;Obama&quot; redirect here. For other uses, see Barack (disambiguation) and Obama (disambiguation).
Barack Obama 

 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

44th President of the United States 
Incumbent 
Assumed office 
January 20, 2009 
Vice President Joe Biden 
Preceded by George W. Bush 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

United States Senator
from Illinois 
In office
January 3, 2005 – November 16, 2008 
Preceded by Peter Fitzgerald 
Succeeded by Roland Burris 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Member of the Illinois Senate
from the 13th district 
In office
January 8, 1997 – November 4, 2004 
Preceded by Alice Palmer 
Succeeded by Kwame Raoul 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Born August 4, 1961 (1961-08-04) (age 47)[1]
Honolulu, Hawaii, United States[2] 
Birth name Barack Hussein Obama II[2] 
Nationality American 
Political party Democratic 
Spouse Michelle Obama (m. 1992) 
Children Malia Ann (b. 1998)
Natasha (a.k.a. Sasha) (b. 2001) 
Residence Chicago, Illinois (private)
White House, Washington, D.C. (official) 
Alma mater Occidental College
Columbia University (B.A.)
Harvard Law School (J.D.) 
Profession Community organizer
Attorney
Author
Professor
Politician 
Religion Protestant Christian[3] 
Signature  
Website WhiteHouse.gov 
This article is part of a series about
Barack Obama
Background  · Illinois Senate  · U.S. Senate
Political positions  · Public image  · Family
2008 primaries · Obama–Biden campaign
Transition · Inauguration · US Presidency 
 
Barack Hussein Obama II (pronounced /bəˈrɑːk hʊˈseɪn oʊˈbɑːmə/; born August 4, 1961) is the 44th and current President of the United States. He is the first African American to hold the office. Obama was the junior United States Senator from Illinois from 2005 until he resigned following his 2008 election to the presidency. He was inaugurated as President on January 20, 2009.

Obama is a graduate of Columbia University and Harvard Law School, where he was the first African American president of the Harvard Law Review. He worked as a community organizer, and practiced as a civil rights attorney in Chicago before serving three terms in the Illinois Senate from 1997 to 2004. He also taught Constitutional Law at the University of Chicago Law School from 1992 to 2004. Following an unsuccessful bid for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives in 2000, Obama was elected to the Senate in November 2004. Obama delivered the keynote address at the Democratic National Convention in July 2004.

As a member of the Democratic minority in the 109th Congress, Obama helped create legislation to control conventional weapons and to promote greater public accountability in the use of federal funds. He also made official trips to Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. During the 110th Congress, he helped create legislation regarding lobbying and electoral fraud, climate change, nuclear terrorism, and care for U.S. military personnel returning from combat assignments in Iraq and Afghanistan
Early life and career
Main article: Early life and career of Barack Obama
Barack Obama was born at the Kapi'olani Medical Center for Women &amp; Children in Honolulu, Hawaii,[4][5] to Stanley Ann Dunham,[6] a White American from Wichita, Kansas,[7][8][9] and Barack Obama, Sr., a Luo from Nyang’oma Kogelo, Nyanza Province, Kenya. Obama's parents met in 1960 in a Russian language class at the University of Hawaii at Mānoa, where his father was a foreign student on scholarship.[10][11] The couple married on February 2, 1961.[12] Obama's parents separated when Obama was two years old, and they divorced in 1964.[11] Obama's father returned to Kenya and saw his son only once more before dying in an automobile accident in 1982.[13]

After her divorce, Dunham married Indonesian student Lolo Soetoro, who was attending college in Hawaii. When Soeharto, a military leader in Soetoro's home country, came to power in 1967, all students studying abroad were recalled and the family moved to Indonesia.[14] There Obama attended local schools in Jakarta, such as Besuki Public School and St. Francis of Assisi School, until he was ten years old.

He then returned to Honolulu to live with his maternal grandparents, Madelyn and Stanley Armour Dunham, while attending Punahou School from the fifth grade in 1971 until his graduation from high school in 1979.[15] Obama's mother returned to Hawaii in 1972 for five years, and then in 1977 went back to Indonesia, where she worked as an anthropological field worker. She stayed there most of the rest of her life, returning to Hawaii in 1994. She died of ovarian cancer in 1995.[16]

 
Right-to-left: Barack Obama and half-sister Maya Soetoro-Ng, with their mother Ann Dunham and grandfather Stanley Dunham, in Hawaii (early 1970s).Of his early childhood, Obama has recalled, &quot;That my father looked nothing like the people around me — that he was black as pitch, my mother white as milk — barely registered in my mind.&quot;[17] In his 1995 memoir, he described his struggles as a young adult to reconcile social perceptions of his multiracial heritage.[18] He wrote that he used alcohol, marijuana and cocaine during his teenage years to &quot;push questions of who I was out of my mind.&quot;[19] At the 2008 Civil Forum on the Presidency, Obama identified his high-school drug use as his &quot;greatest moral failure.&quot;[20]

Some of his fellow students at Punahou School later told the Honolulu Star-Bulletin that Obama was mature for his age, and that he sometimes attended college parties and other events in order to associate with African American students and military service people. Reflecting later on his formative years in Honolulu, Obama wrote: &quot;The opportunity that Hawaii offered — to experience a variety of cultures in a climate of mutual respect — became an integral part of my world view, and a basis for the values that I hold most dear.&quot;[21]

Following high school, Obama moved to Los Angeles, where he studied at Occidental College for two years.[22] He then transferred to Columbia University in New York City, where he majored in political science with a specialization in international relations.[23] Obama graduated with a B.A. from Columbia in 1983. He worked for a year at the Business International Corporation[24][25] and then at the New York Public Interest Research Group.[26][27]

After four years in New York City, Obama moved to Chicago, where he was hired as director of the Developing Communities Project (DCP), a church-based community organization originally comprising eight Catholic parishes in Greater Roseland (Roseland, West Pullman and Riverdale) on Chicago's far South Side. He worked there for three years from June 1985 to May 1988.[26][28] During his three years as the DCP's director, its staff grew from one to thirteen and its annual budget grew from $70,000 to $400,000. His achievements included helping set up a job training program, a college preparatory tutoring program, and a tenants' rights organization in Altgeld Gardens.[29] Obama also worked as a consultant and instructor for the Gamaliel Foundation, a community organizing institute.[30] In mid-1988, he traveled for the first time to Europe for three weeks and then for five weeks in Kenya, where he met many of his paternal relatives for the first time.[31]

Obama entered Harvard Law School in late 1988. He was selected as an editor of the Harvard Law Review at the end of his first year,[32] and president of the journal in his second year.[33] During his summers, he returned to Chicago where he worked as a summer associate at the law firms of Sidley &amp; Austin in 1989 and Hopkins &amp; Sutter in 1990.[34] After graduating with a Juris Doctor (J.D.) magna cum laude[35][36] from Harvard in 1991, he returned to Chicago.[32]

Obama's election as the first black president of the Harvard Law Review gained national media attention[33] and led to a publishing contract and advance for a book about race relations.[37] In an effort to recruit him to their faculty, the University of Chicago Law School provided Obama with a fellowship and an office to work on his book.[37] He originally planned to finish the book in one year, but it took much longer as the book evolved into a personal memoir. In order to work without interruptions, Obama and his wife, Michelle, traveled to Bali where he wrote for several months. The manuscript was finally published in mid-1995 as Dreams from My Father.[37]

From April to October 1992, Obama directed Illinois's Project Vote, a voter registration drive with a staff of ten and seven hundred volunteers; it achieved its goal of registering 150,000 of 400,000 unregistered African Americans in the state, and led to Crain's Chicago Business naming Obama to its 1993 list of &quot;40 under Forty&quot; powers to be.[38][39]

For twelve years, Obama served as a professor at the University of Chicago Law School teaching Constitutional Law. He was first classified as a Lecturer from 1992 to 1996 and then as a Senior Lecturer from 1996 to 2004.[40] He also joined Davis, Miner, Barnhill &amp; Galland, a twelve-attorney law firm specializing in civil rights litigation and neighborhood economic development, where he was an associate for three years from 1993 to 1996, then of counsel from 1996 to 2004, with his law license becoming inactive in 2002.[26][41][42]

Obama was a founding member of the board of directors of Public Allies in 1992, resigning before his wife, Michelle, became the founding executive director of Public Allies Chicago in early 1993.[26][43] He served from 1994 to 2002 on the board of directors of the Woods Fund of Chicago, which in 1985 had been the first foundation to fund the Developing Communities Project, and also from 1994 to 2002 on the board of directors of the Joyce Foundation.[26] Obama served on the board of directors of the Chicago Annenberg Challenge from 1995 to 2002, as founding president and chairman of the board of directors from 1995 to 1999.[26] He also served on the board of directors of the Chicago Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, the Center for Neighborhood Technology, and the Lugenia Burns Hope Center.[26]


Political career

State legislator: 1997–2004
Main article: Illinois Senate career of Barack Obama
Obama was elected to the Illinois Senate in 1996, succeeding State Senator Alice Palmer as Senator from Illinois's 13th District, which then spanned Chicago South Side neighborhoods from Hyde Park-Kenwood south to South Shore and west to Chicago Lawn.[44] Once elected, Obama gained bipartisan support for legislation reforming ethics and health care laws.[45] He sponsored a law increasing tax credits for low-income workers, negotiated welfare reform, and promoted increased subsidies for childcare.[46] In 2001, as co-chairman of the bipartisan Joint Committee on Administrative Rules, Obama supported Republican Governor Ryan's payday loan regulations and predatory mortgage lending regulations aimed at averting home foreclosures.[47]

Obama was reelected to the Illinois Senate in 1998, defeating Republican Yesse Yehudah in the General Election, and reelected again in 2002.[48] In 2000, he lost a Democratic primary run for the U.S. House of Representatives to four-term incumbent Bobby Rush by a margin of two to one.[49][50]

In January 2003, Obama became chairman of the Illinois Senate's Health and Human Services Committee when Democrats, after a decade in the minority, regained a majority.[51] He sponsored and led unanimous, bipartisan passage of legislation to monitor racial profiling by requiring police to record the race of drivers they detained and legislation making Illinois the first state to mandate videotaping of homicide interrogations.[46][52] During his 2004 general election campaign for U.S. Senate, police representatives credited Obama for his active engagement with police organizations in enacting death penalty reforms.[53] Obama resigned from the Illinois Senate in November 2004 following his election to the U.S. Senate.[54]


2004 U.S. Senate campaign
See also: United States Senate election in Illinois, 2004 
In mid-2002, Obama began considering a run for the U.S. Senate; he enlisted political strategist David Axelrod that fall and formally announced his candidacy in January 2003.[55] Decisions by Republican incumbent Peter Fitzgerald and his Democratic predecessor Carol Moseley Braun not to contest the race launched wide-open Democratic and Republican primary contests involving fifteen candidates.[56] Obama's candidacy was boosted by Axelrod's advertising campaign featuring images of the late Chicago Mayor Harold Washington and an endorsement by the daughter of the late Paul Simon, former U.S. Senator for Illinois.[57] He received over 52% of the vote in the March 2004 primary, emerging 29% ahead of his nearest Democratic rival.[58]

In July 2004, Obama wrote and delivered the keynote address at the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston, Massachusetts.[59] After describing his maternal grandfather's experiences as a World War II veteran and a beneficiary of the New Deal's FHA and G.I. Bill programs, Obama spoke about changing the U.S. government's economic and social priorities. He questioned the Bush administration's management of the Iraq War and highlighted America's obligations to its soldiers. Drawing examples from U.S. history, he criticized heavily partisan views of the electorate and asked Americans to find unity in diversity, saying, &quot;There is not a liberal America and a conservative America; there's the United States of America.&quot;[60] Though it was not televised by the three major broadcast news networks, a combined 9.1 million viewers watching on PBS, CNN, MSNBC, Fox News and C-SPAN saw Obama's speech, which was a highlight of the convention and confirmed his status as the Democratic Party's brightest new star.[61]

Obama's expected opponent in the general election, Republican primary winner Jack Ryan, withdrew from the race in June 2004.[62] Two months later and less than three months before Election Day, Alan Keyes accepted the Illinois Republican Party's nomination to replace Ryan.[63] A long-time resident of Maryland, Keyes established legal residency in Illinois with the nomination.[64] In the November 2004 general election, Obama received 70% of the vote to Keyes's 27%, the largest victory margin for a statewide race in Illinois history.[65]


U.S. Senator: 2005–2008
Main article: United States Senate career of Barack Obama
Obama was sworn in as a senator on January 4, 2005.[66] Obama was the fifth African-American Senator in U.S. history, and the third to have been popularly elected.[67] He was the only Senate member of the Congressional Black Caucus.[68] CQ Weekly, a nonpartisan publication, characterized him as a &quot;loyal Democrat&quot; based on analysis of all Senate votes in 2005–2007. The National Journal ranked him as the &quot;most liberal&quot; senator based on an assessment of selected votes during 2007; in 2005 he was ranked sixteenth most liberal, and in 2006 he was ranked tenth.[69][70] In 2008, Congress.org ranked him as the eleventh most powerful Senator.[71] Obama announced on November 13, 2008 that he would resign his senate seat on November 16, 2008, before the start of the lame-duck session, to focus on his transition period for the presidency.[72][73] This enabled him to avoid the conflict of dual roles as President-elect and Senator in the lame duck session of Congress, which no sitting member of Congress had faced since Warren Harding.[74]


Legislation
See also: List of bills sponsored by Barack Obama in the United States Senate 
 
Senate bill sponsors Tom Coburn (R-OK) and Obama discussing the Coburn–Obama Transparency Act.[75]Obama voted in favor of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 and cosponsored the Secure America and Orderly Immigration Act.[76] In September 2006, Obama supported a related bill, the Secure Fence Act.[77] Obama introduced two initiatives bearing his name: Lugar–Obama, which expanded the Nunn–Lugar cooperative threat reduction concept to conventional weapons,[78] and the Coburn–Obama Transparency Act, which authorized the establishment of USAspending.gov, a web search engine on federal spending.[79] On June 3, 2008, Senator Obama, along with Senators Thomas R. Carper, Tom Coburn, and John McCain, introduced follow-up legislation: Strengthening Transparency and Accountability in Federal Spending Act of 2008.[80]

Obama sponsored legislation that would have required nuclear plant owners to notify state and local authorities of radioactive leaks, but the bill failed to pass in the full Senate after being heavily modified in committee.[81] Obama is not hostile to Tort reform and voted for the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 and the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 which grants immunity from civil liability to telecommunications companies complicit with NSA warrantless wiretapping operations.[82]

In December 2006, President Bush signed into law the Democratic Republic of the Congo Relief, Security, and Democracy Promotion Act, marking the first federal legislation to be enacted with Obama as its primary sponsor.[83] In January 2007, Obama and Senator Feingold introduced a corporate jet provision to the Honest Leadership and Open Government Act, which was signed into law in September 2007.[84] Obama also introduced Deceptive Practices and Voter Intimidation Prevention Act, a bill to criminalize deceptive practices in federal elections[85] and the Iraq War De-Escalation Act of 2007,[86] neither of which have been signed into law.

 
Obama and U.S. Sen. Richard Lugar (R-IN) visit a Russian mobile launch missile dismantling facility in August 2005.[87]Later in 2007, Obama sponsored an amendment to the Defense Authorization Act adding safeguards for personality disorder military discharges.[88] This amendment passed the full Senate in the spring of 2008.[89] He sponsored the Iran Sanctions Enabling Act supporting divestment of state pension funds from Iran's oil and gas industry, which has not passed committee, and co-sponsored legislation to reduce risks of nuclear terrorism.[90][91] Obama also sponsored a Senate amendment to the State Children's Health Insurance Program providing one year of job protection for family members caring for soldiers with combat-related injuries.[92]


Committees
Obama held assignments on the Senate Committees for Foreign Relations, Environment and Public Works and Veterans' Affairs through December 2006.[93] In January 2007, he left the Environment and Public Works committee and took additional assignments with Health, Education, Labor and Pensions and Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.[94] He also became Chairman of the Senate's subcommittee on European Affairs.[95] As a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Obama made official trips to Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Central Asia and Africa. He met with Mahmoud Abbas before he became President of the Palestinian Authority, and gave a speech at the University of Nairobi condemning corruption in the Kenyan government.[96][97][98][99]


2008 Presidential campaign
Main articles: Barack Obama presidential primary campaign, 2008 and Barack Obama presidential campaign, 2008
 Wikinews has related news: Barack Obama elected 44th President of the United States 
On February 10, 2007, Obama announced his candidacy for President of the United States in front of the Old State Capitol building in Springfield, Illinois.[100][101] The choice of the announcement site was symbolic because it was also where Abraham Lincoln delivered his historic &quot;House Divided&quot; speech in 1858.[102] Throughout the campaign, Obama emphasized the issues of rapidly ending the Iraq War, increasing energy independence, and providing universal health care.[103]

 
Obama stands on stage with his wife and two daughters just before announcing his presidential candidacy in Springfield, Illinois, Feb. 10, 2007.During both the primary process and the general election, Obama's campaign set numerous fundraising records, particularly in the quantity of small donations.[104][105][106] On June 19, Obama became the first major-party presidential candidate to turn down public financing in the general election since the system was created in 1976.[107]

A large number of candidates initially entered the Democratic Party presidential primaries. After a few initial contests, the field narrowed to a contest between Obama and Senator Hillary Clinton, with each winning some states and the race remaining close throughout the primary process.[108][109][110][111] On May 31, the Democratic National Committee agreed to seat all of the disputed Michigan and Florida delegates at the national convention, each with a half-vote, narrowing Obama's delegate lead.[112] On June 3, with all states counted, Obama passed the threshold to become the presumptive nominee.[113][114] On that day, he gave a victory speech in St. Paul, Minnesota. Clinton suspended her campaign and endorsed him on June 7.[115] From that point on, he campaigned for the general election race against Senator John McCain, the Republican nominee.

On August 23, 2008, Obama announced that he had selected Delaware Senator Joe Biden as his vice presidential running mate.[116]

 
Obama delivers his presidential election victory speech.At the Democratic National Convention in Denver, Colorado, Obama's former rival Hillary Clinton gave a speech in support of Obama's candidacy and later called for Obama to be nominated by acclamation as the Democratic presidential candidate.[117][118] On August 28, Obama delivered a speech to 84,000 supporters in Denver. During the speech, which was viewed by over 38 million people worldwide, he accepted his party's nomination and presented his policy goals.[119][120]

After McCain was nominated as the Republican presidential candidate, there were three presidential debates between Obama and McCain in September and October 2008.[121][122] In November, Obama won the presidency with 53% of the popular vote and a wide electoral college margin. His election sparked street celebrations in numerous cities in the United States[123] and abroad.


Election victory
Main article: Presidential transition of Barack Obama
 
President-elect Obama meets with President George W. Bush in the Oval Office, November 10, 2008.On November 4, 2008, Barack Obama defeated John McCain in the general election with 365 electoral votes to McCain's 173[124] and became the first African American to be elected President of the United States.[125][126][127][128] In his victory speech, delivered before a crowd of hundreds of thousands of his supporters in Chicago's Grant Park, Obama proclaimed that &quot;change has come to America&quot;.[129]

On January 8, 2009, the joint session of the U.S. Congress met to certify the votes of the Electoral College for the 2008 presidential election. Based on the results of the electoral vote count, Barack Obama was declared to have been elected President of the United States and Joseph Biden was declared to have been elected Vice President of the United States.[130]


Presidency
Main article: Presidency of Barack Obama
The inauguration of Barack Obama as the forty-fourth President, and Joe Biden as Vice President, took place on January 20, 2009. The theme of the inauguration was &quot;A New Birth of Freedom,&quot; commemorating the 200th anniversary of the birth of Abraham Lincoln.[131]

In his first few days in office, Obama issued executive orders and presidential memoranda reversing President Bush's ban on federal funding to foreign establishments that allow abortions (known as the Global Gag Rule),[132] and changed procedures to promote disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act,[133] directing the U.S. military to develop plans to withdraw troops from Iraq,[134] and reducing the secrecy given to presidential records,[135] and closing Guantanamo Bay detention camp &quot;as soon as practicable and no later than&quot; January 2010, and &quot;Immediate Review of All Guantánamo Detentions&quot;.


Political positions
Main article: Political positions of Barack Obama
A method that some political scientists use for gauging ideology is to compare the annual ratings by the Americans for Democratic Action (ADA) with the ratings by the American Conservative Union (ACU).[136] Based on his years in Congress, Obama has a lifetime average conservative rating of 7.67% from the ACU,[137] and a lifetime average liberal rating of 90% from the ADA.[138]

 
Obama campaigning in Abington, Pennsylvania, October 2008.Obama was an early opponent of the Bush administration's policies on Iraq.[139] On October 2, 2002, the day President George W. Bush and Congress agreed on the joint resolution authorizing the Iraq War,[140] Obama addressed the first high-profile Chicago anti-Iraq War rally in Federal Plaza,[141] speaking out against the war.[142][143] On March 16, 2003, the day Bush issued his 48-hour ultimatum to Saddam Hussein to leave Iraq before the U.S. invasion of Iraq,[144] Obama addressed the largest Chicago anti-Iraq War rally to date in Daley Plaza and told the crowd that &quot;it's not too late&quot; to stop the war.[145] Although Obama had previously said he wanted all the U.S. troops out of Iraq within 16 months of becoming President, after he won the primary, he said he might &quot;refine&quot; that promise.[146]

Obama stated that if elected he would enact budget cuts in the range of tens of billions of dollars, stop investing in &quot;unproven&quot; missile defense systems, not &quot;weaponize&quot; space, &quot;slow development of Future Combat Systems,&quot; and work towards eliminating all nuclear weapons. Obama favors ending development of new nuclear weapons, reducing the current U.S. nuclear stockpile, enacting a global ban on production of fissile material, and seeking negotiations with Russia in order to take ICBMs off high alert status.[147]

In November 2006, Obama called for a &quot;phased redeployment of U.S. troops from Iraq&quot; and an opening of diplomatic dialogue with Syria and Iran.[148] In a March 2007 speech to AIPAC, a pro-Israel lobby, he said that the primary way to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons is through talks and diplomacy, although he did not rule out military action.[149] Obama has indicated that he would engage in &quot;direct presidential diplomacy&quot; with Iran without preconditions.[150][151][152] Detailing his strategy for fighting global terrorism in August 2007, Obama said &quot;it was a terrible mistake to fail to act&quot; against a 2005 meeting of al-Qaeda leaders that U.S. intelligence had confirmed to be taking place in Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas. He said that as president he would not miss a similar opportunity, even without the support of the Pakistani government.[153]

In a December 2005, Washington Post opinion column, and at the Save Darfur rally in April 2006, Obama called for more assertive action to oppose genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan.[154] He has divested $180,000 in personal holdings of Sudan-related stock, and has urged divestment from companies doing business in Iran.[155] In the July–August 2007 issue of Foreign Affairs, Obama called for an outward looking post-Iraq War foreign policy and the renewal of American military, diplomatic, and moral leadership in the world. Saying that &quot;we can neither retreat from the world nor try to bully it into submission,&quot; he called on Americans to &quot;lead the world, by deed and by example.&quot;[156]

 
Obama speaking at a rally at the University of Missouri in Columbia, Missouri.In economic affairs, in April 2005, he defended the New Deal social welfare policies of Franklin D. Roosevelt and opposed Republican proposals to establish private accounts for Social Security.[157] In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Obama spoke out against government indifference to growing economic class divisions, calling on both political parties to take action to restore the social safety net for the poor.[158] Shortly before announcing his presidential campaign, Obama said he supports universal health care in the United States.[159] Obama proposes to reward teachers for performance from traditional merit pay systems, assuring unions that changes would be pursued through the collective bargaining process.[160]

In September 2007, he blamed special interests for distorting the U.S. tax code.[161] His plan would eliminate taxes for senior citizens with incomes of less than $50,000 a year, repeal income tax cuts for those making over $250,000 as well as the capital gains and dividends tax cut,[162] close corporate tax loopholes, lift the income cap on Social Security taxes, restrict offshore tax havens, and simplify filing of income tax returns by pre-filling wage and bank information already collected by the IRS.[163] Announcing his presidential campaign's energy plan in October 2007, Obama proposed a cap and trade auction system to restrict carbon emissions and a ten year program of investments in new energy sources to reduce U.S. dependence on imported oil.[164] Obama proposed that all pollution credits must be auctioned, with no grandfathering of credits for oil and gas companies, and the spending of the revenue obtained on energy development and economic transition costs.[165]

Obama has encouraged Democrats to reach out to evangelicals and other religious groups.[166] In December 2006, he joined Sen. Sam Brownback (R-KS) at the &quot;Global Summit on AIDS and the Church&quot; organized by church leaders Kay and Rick Warren.[167] Together with Warren and Brownback, Obama took an HIV test, as he had done in Kenya less than four months earlier.[168] He encouraged &quot;others in public life to do the same&quot; and not be ashamed of it.[169] Addressing over 8,000 United Church of Christ members in June 2007, Obama challenged &quot;so-called leaders of the Christian Right&quot; for being &quot;all too eager to exploit what divides us.&quot;[170]


Family and personal life
Main articles: Early life and career of Barack Obama and Family of Barack Obama
 
Barack Obama and his wife Michelle Obama.In June 1989, Obama met Michelle Robinson, who later became his wife, when he was employed as a summer associate at the Chicago law firm of Sidley Austin.[171] Assigned for three months as Obama's adviser at the firm, Robinson joined him at group social functions, but declined his initial requests to date.[172] They began dating later that summer, became engaged in 1991, and were married on October 3, 1992.[173] The couple's first daughter, Malia Ann, was born in 1998,[174] followed by a second daughter, Natasha (&quot;Sasha&quot;), in 2001.[175] Because of Michelle Obama's employment with the University of Chicago, the Obama daughters attended the private University of Chicago Laboratory Schools. When they moved to Washington, D.C., in January 2009, the girls started at the private Sidwell Friends School.[176]

Obama was known as &quot;Barry&quot; in his youth, but asked to be addressed with his given name during his college years.[177]

Applying the proceeds of a book deal, in 2005 the family moved from a Hyde Park, Chicago condominium to their current $1.6 million house in neighboring Kenwood.[178] The purchase of an adjacent lot and sale of part of it to Obama by the wife of developer and friend Tony Rezko attracted media attention because of Rezko's indictment and subsequent conviction on political corruption charges that were unrelated to Obama.[179][180]

In December 2007, Money magazine estimated the Obama family's net worth at $1.3 million.[181] Their 2007 tax return showed a household income of $4.2 million—up from about $1 million in 2006 and $1.6 million in 2005—mostly from sales of his books.[182]

 
Obama playing basketball with U.S. military at Camp Lemonier, Djibouti in 2006.[183]In a 2006 interview, Obama highlighted the diversity of his extended family. &quot;Michelle will tell you that when we get together for Christmas or Thanksgiving, it's like a little mini-United Nations.&quot; he said. &quot;I've got relatives who look like Bernie Mac, and I've got relatives who look like Margaret Thatcher.&quot;[184] Obama has seven half-siblings from his Kenyan father's family, six of them living, and a half-sister with whom he was raised, Maya Soetoro-Ng, the daughter of his mother and her Indonesian second husband.[185] Obama's mother was survived by her Kansas-born mother, Madelyn Dunham[186] until her death on November 2, 2008, just before the presidential election.[187] In Dreams from My Father, Obama ties his mother's family history to possible Native American ancestors and distant relatives of Jefferson Davis, president of the southern Confederacy during the American Civil War.[188] Obama's maternal and paternal grandfathers fought in World War II. Obama's great-uncle served in the 89th Division that overran Ohrdruf,[189] the first Nazi camp liberated by U.S. troops.[190]

Obama plays basketball, a sport he participated in as a member of his high school's varsity team.[191] He is an avid sports fan. Obama follows the Chicago Bears, Chicago White Sox, Chicago Bulls and West Ham United F.C.[192][193][194][195] While he has never been a heavy smoker, Obama has tried to quit smoking several times, including a well-publicized and ongoing effort which he began before launching his presidential campaign.[196] Obama has said he will not smoke in the White House.[197]

Obama is a Protestant Christian whose religious views have evolved in his adult life. In The Audacity of Hope, Obama writes that he &quot;was not raised in a religious household.&quot; He describes his mother, raised by non-religious parents (whom Obama has specified elsewhere as &quot;non-practicing Methodists and Baptists&quot;) to be detached from religion, yet &quot;in many ways the most spiritually awakened person that I have ever known.&quot; He describes his father as &quot;raised a Muslim,&quot; but a &quot;confirmed atheist&quot; by the time his parents met, and his stepfather as &quot;a man who saw religion as not particularly useful.&quot; In the book, Obama explains how, through working with black churches as a community organizer while in his twenties, he came to understand &quot;the power of the African-American religious tradition to spur social change.&quot;[198][199] He was baptized at the Trinity United Church of Christ in 1988 and was an active member there for two decades.[200][201]

Besides his native English, Obama speaks Indonesian (Bahasa Indonesia), at least on a colloquial level, which he learned during his four childhood years in Jakarta.[202] After the APEC summit in November 2008, Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono related a telephone conversation with Obama in Indonesian to Indonesian media. Obama had told Yudhoyono that he missed Indonesian food like Nasi Goreng, Bakso or Rambutan.[203]


Cultural and political image
Main article: Public image of Barack Obama
With his black Kenyan father and white American mother, his upbringing in Honolulu and Jakarta, and his Ivy League education, Obama's early life experiences differ markedly from those of African-American politicians who launched their careers in the 1960s through participation in the civil rights movement.[204] Expressing puzzlement over questions about whether he is &quot;black enough&quot;, Obama told an August 2007 meeting of the National Association of Black Journalists that the debate is not about his physical appearance or his record on issues of concern to black voters. Obama said that &quot;we're still locked in this notion that if you appeal to white folks then there must be something wrong.&quot;[205]

Echoing the inaugural address of John F. Kennedy, Obama acknowledged his youthful image in an October 2007 campaign speech, saying: &quot;I wouldn't be here if, time and again, the torch had not been passed to a new generation.&quot;[206] A popular catch phrase distilled the concept: &quot;Rosa sat so Martin could walk; Martin walked so Obama could run; Obama is running so our children can fly.&quot;[207]

 
From left: Presidents George H. W. Bush, Barack Obama, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter meet in the Oval Office on January 7, 2009.Obama has been praised as a master of oratory on par with other renowned speakers in the past such as Martin Luther King, Jr.[208][209] His &quot;Yes We Can&quot; speech, which artists independently set to music in a video produced by Will.i.am, was viewed by 10 million people on YouTube in the first month,[210] and received an Emmy Award.[211] University of Virginia professor Jonathan Haidt researched the effectiveness of Obama's public speaking and concluded that part of his excellence is because the politician is adept at inspiring the emotion of elevation, the desire to act morally and do good for others.[212] Obama used these communication skills in a series of weekly internet video addresses during his pre-inauguration transition period;[213] he has suggested he will make a series of broadcast and internet addresses similar to Franklin D. Roosevelt's famous fireside chats throughout his term as president to explain his policies and actions.[214]

Many commentators mentioned Obama's international appeal as a defining factor for his public image.[215] Not only did several polls show strong support for him in other countries,[216] but Obama also established close relationships with prominent foreign politicians and elected officials even before his presidential candidacy, notably with then incumbent British Prime Minister Tony Blair, whom he met in London in 2005,[217] with Italy's Democratic Party leader and then Mayor of Rome Walter Veltroni, who visited Obama's Senate office in 2005,[218] and with French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who also visited him in Washington in 2006.[219]

Obama won Best Spoken Word Album Grammy Awards for abridged audiobook versions of both of his books; for Dreams from My Father in February 2006 and for The Audacity of Hope in February 2008.[220]

In December 2008, Time magazine named Barack Obama as its Person of the Year for his historic candidacy and election, which it described as &quot;the steady march of seemingly impossible accomplishments.&quot;[221]


Notes
^ &quot;President Barack Obama&quot;. <a href="http://www.whitehouse.gov">www.whitehouse.gov</a>. 
^ a b &quot;Birth Certificate of Barack Obama&quot;. Department of Health, Hawaii. PolitiFact.com (August 8, 1961). Retrieved on 2008-12-12. 
^ &quot;Obama's church choice likely to be scrutinized&quot;. Associated Press. msnbc.com (November 17, 2008). Retrieved on 2009-1-20. 
^ Maraniss, David (August 24, 2008). &quot;Though Obama Had to Leave to Find Himself, It Is Hawaii That Made His Rise Possible&quot;, Politics, Washington Post. Retrieved on 27 October 2008.  
^ Serafin, Peter (March 21, 2004). &quot;Punahou grad stirs up Illinois politics&quot; (Article), Special to the Star-Bulletin, Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved on November 30 2008.  
^ For Stanley Ann's first name, see Obama (1995, 2004), p. 19 
^ &quot;Born in the U.S.A.&quot;. FactCheck (August 21, 2008). Retrieved on October 24, 2008. 
^ Hutton, Brian (May 3, 2007). &quot;For sure, Obama's South Side Irish&quot;, Politics, The Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved on 23 November 2008.  
^ &quot;Tiny Irish Village Is Latest Place to Claim Obama as Its Own - washingtonpost.com&quot;. Washingtonpost.com. Retrieved on 2008-11-08. 
^ Obama (1995, 2004), pp. 9–10. For book excerpts, see &quot;Barack Obama: Creation of Tales&quot;, East African (2004-11-01). Retrieved on 13 April 2008. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007.  
^ a b Jones, Tim (2007-03-27). &quot;Obama's mom: Not just a girl from Kansas: Strong personalities shaped a future senator&quot;, Chicago Tribune, reprinted in The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved on 27 October 2008.  
^ Ripley, Amanda (2008-04-09). &quot;The Story of Barack Obama's Mother&quot;, Time. Retrieved on 9 April 2007.  
^ Merida, Kevin (2007-12-14). &quot;The Ghost of a Father&quot;, Washington Post. Retrieved on 24 June 2008.  See also: Ochieng, Philip (2004-11-01). &quot;From Home Squared to the US Senate: How Barack Obama Was Lost and Found&quot;, East African. Retrieved on 24 June 2008. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007.  In August 2006, Obama flew his wife and two daughters from Chicago to join him in a visit to his father's birthplace, a village near Kisumu in rural western Kenya. Gnecchi, Nico (2006-02-27). &quot;Obama Receives Hero's Welcome at His Family's Ancestral Village in Kenya&quot;, Voice of America. Retrieved on 24 June 2008.  
^ Obama (1995, 2004), pp. 44–45. 
^ Serafin, Peter (2004-03-21). &quot;Punahou Grad Stirs Up Illinois Politics&quot;, Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved on 13 April 2008.  See also: Obama (1995, 2004), Chapters 3 and 4. 
^ Ripley, Amanda (2008-04-09). &quot;The Story of Barack Obama's Mother&quot;, Time. Retrieved on 24 June 2008.  See also: Suryakusuma, Julia (2006-11-29). &quot;Obama for President... of Indonesia&quot;, Jakarta Post. Retrieved on 24 June 2008.  
^ Obama (1995), pp. 9–10. 
^ Obama (1995), Chapters 4 and 5. See also: Serrano, Richard A (March 11, 2007). &quot;Obama's Peers Didn't See His Angst&quot; (paid archive), Los Angeles Times. Retrieved on 4 January 2008.  
^ &quot;Obama Gets Blunt with N.H. Students&quot;, Associated Press, Boston Globe (November 21, 2007). Retrieved on 4 January 2008.  In Dreams from My Father, Obama writes: &quot;Pot had helped, and booze; maybe a little blow when you could afford it.&quot; Obama (1995), pp. 93–94. For analysis of the political impact of the quote and Obama's more recent admission that he smoked marijuana as a teenager (&quot;When I was a kid, I inhaled.&quot;), see: Romano, Lois (January 3, 2007). &quot;Effect of Obama's Candor Remains to Be Seen&quot;, Washington Post. Retrieved on 4 January 2008.  Seelye, Katharine Q (October 24, 2006). &quot;Obama Offers More Variations From the Norm&quot;, New York Times. Retrieved on 4 January 2008.  
^ Hornick, Ed (August 17, 2008). &quot;Obama, McCain talk issues at pastor's forum&quot;, CNN.com. Retrieved on 4 January 2009.  
^ Reyes, B. J (February 8, 2007). &quot;Punahou Left Lasting Impression on Obama&quot;, Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved on 4 January 2008.  &quot;As a teenager, Obama went to parties and sometimes sought out gatherings on military bases or at the University of Hawaii that were mostly attended by blacks.&quot; 
^ &quot;Oxy Remembers &quot;Barry&quot; Obama '83&quot;. Occidental College (2007-01-29). Retrieved on 2008-04-13. 
^ Boss-Bicak, Shira (January 2005). &quot;Barack Obama '83&quot;, Columbia College Today. Retrieved on 9 June 2008.  
^ &quot;Curriculum Vitae&quot;. The University of Chicago Law School. Archived from the original on 2001-05-09. Retrieved on 2008-11-03. 
^ Issenberg, Sasha (2008-08-06). &quot;Obama shows hints of his year in global finance: Tied markets to social aid&quot;, Boston Globe. Retrieved on 13 April 2008.  
^ a b c d e f g Chassie, Karen (ed.) (2007). Who's Who in America, 2008. New Providence, NJ: Marquis Who's Who. p. 3468. ISBN 9780837970110. <a href="http://www.marquiswhoswho.com/products/WAprodinfo.asp">www.marquiswhoswho.com/products/WAprodinfo.asp</a>. Retrieved on 2008-06-06.  
^ Scott, Janny (2007-10-30). &quot;Obama's Account of New York Years Often Differs from What Others Say&quot;, The New York Times. Retrieved on 13 April 2008.  Obama (1995, 2004), pp. 133–140; Mendell (2007), pp. 62–63. 
^ Secter, Bob; McCormick, John (2007-03-30). &quot;Portrait of a pragmatist&quot;, Chicago Tribune, p. 1. Retrieved on 6 June 2008. Archived from the original on 9 February 2008.  Lizza, Ryan (2007-03-19). &quot;The Agitator: Barack Obama's Unlikely Political Education&quot; (alternate link), New Republic. Retrieved on 13 April 2008.  Obama (1995, 2004), pp. 140–295; Mendell (2007), pp. 63–83. 
^ Matchan, Linda (1990-02-15). &quot;A Law Review breakthrough&quot; (paid archive), The Boston Globe, p. 29. Retrieved on 6 June 2008.  Corr, John (1990-02-27). &quot;From mean streets to hallowed halls&quot; (paid archive), The Philadelphia Inquirer, p. C01. Retrieved on 6 June 2008.  
^ Obama, Barack (August–September 1988). &quot;Why organize? Problems and promise in the inner city&quot;. Illinois Issues 14 (8–9): 40–42.  reprinted in: Knoepfle, Peg (ed.) (1990). After Alinsky: community organizing in Illinois. Springfield, IL: Sangamon State University. pp. 35–40. ISBN 0962087335.  Tayler, Letta; Herbert, Keith (2008-03-02). &quot;Obama forged path as Chicago community organizer&quot;, Newsday, p. A06. Retrieved on 6 June 2008.  
^ Obama (1995, 2004), pp. 299–437. 
^ a b Levenson, Michael; Saltzman, Jonathan (2007-01-28). &quot;At Harvard Law, a unifying voice&quot;, The Boston Globe. Retrieved on 15 June 2008.  Kantor, Jodi (2007-01-28). &quot;In law school, Obama found political voice&quot;, The New York Times, p. 1. Retrieved on 15 June 2008.  Kodama, Marie C (2007-01-19). &quot;Obama left mark on HLS&quot;, The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved on 15 June 2008.  Mundy, Liza (2007-08-12). &quot;A series of fortunate events&quot;, The Washington Post, p. W10. Retrieved on 15 June 2008.  Heilemann, John (2007-10-22). &quot;When they were young&quot;. New York 40 (37): 32–7, 132–3. <a href="http://www.printthis.clickability.com/pt/cpt?action=cpt&amp;title=When+They+Were+Young&amp;expire=&amp;urlID=24417790&amp;fb=Y&amp;url=http://nymag.com/news/features/39321/&amp;partnerID=73272">www.printthis.clickability.com/pt/cpt?action=cpt&amp;titl...</a>. Retrieved on 15 June 2008.  Mendell (2007), pp. 80–92. 
^ a b Butterfield, Fox (1990-02-06). &quot;First black elected to head Harvard's Law Review&quot;, The New York Times, p. A20. Retrieved on 15 June 2008.  Ybarra, Michael J (1990-02-07). &quot;Activist in Chicago now heads Harvard Law Review&quot; (paid archive), Chicago Tribune, p. 3. Retrieved on 15 June 2008.  Matchan, Linda (1990-02-15). &quot;A Law Review breakthrough&quot; (paid archive), The Boston Globe, p. 29. Retrieved on 15 June 2008.  Corr, John (1990-02-27). &quot;From mean streets to hallowed halls&quot; (paid archive), The Philadelphia Inquirer, p. C01. Retrieved on 15 June 2008.  Drummond, Tammerlin (1990-03-12). &quot;Barack Obama's Law; Harvard Law Review's first black president plans a life of public service&quot; (paid archive), Los Angeles Times, p. E1. Retrieved on 15 June 2008.  Evans, Gaynelle (1990-03-15). &quot;Opening another door: The saga of Harvard's Barack H. Obama&quot;, Black Issues in Higher Education, p. 5. Retrieved on 15 November 2008.  Pugh, Allison J. (Associated Press) (1990-04-18). &quot;Law Review's first black president aims to help poor&quot; (paid archive), The Miami Herald, p. C01. Retrieved on 15 June 2008.  
^ Aguilar, Louis (1990-07-11). &quot;Survey: Law firms slow to add minority partners&quot; (paid archive), Chicago Tribune, p. 1 (Business). Retrieved on 15 June 2008. &quot;Barack Obama, a summer associate at Hopkins &amp; Sutter in Chicago&quot;  
^ Adams, Richard (2007-05-09). &quot;Barack Obama&quot;, The Guardian. Retrieved on 26 October 2008.  
^ Mendell, David. &quot;Barack Obama (American politician)&quot;. Retrieved on 2008-10-26. 
^ a b c Scott, Janny (2008-05-18). &quot;The story of Obama, written by Obama&quot;, The New York Times, p. 1. Retrieved on 15 June 2008.  Obama (1995, 2004), pp. xiii–xvii. 
^ White, Jesse (ed.) (2000). Illinois Blue Book, 2000, Millennium ed.. Springfield, IL: Illinois Secretary of State. p. 83. OCLC 43923973. <a href="http://www.sos.state.il.us/bb/toc.html">www.sos.state.il.us/bb/toc.html</a>. Retrieved on 2008-06-06.  
^ Jarrett, Vernon (1992-08-11). &quot;'Project Vote' brings power to the people&quot; (paid archive), Chicago Sun-Times, p. 23. Retrieved on 6 June 2008.  Reynolds, Gretchen (January 1993). &quot;Vote of Confidence&quot;. Chicago 42 (1): 53–54. <a href="http://www.chicagomag.com/Chicago-Magazine/January-1993/Vote-of-Confidence/">www.chicagomag.com/Chicago-Magazine/January-1993/Vote-of-...</a>. Retrieved on 6 June 2008.  Anderson, Veronica (September 27–October 3 1993). &quot;40 under Forty: Barack Obama, Director, Illinois Project Vote&quot;. Crain's Chicago Business 16 (39): 43.  
^ University of Chicago Law School (2008-03-27). &quot;Statement regarding Barack Obama&quot;. University of Chicago Law School. Retrieved on 2008-06-10. Miller, Joe (2008-03-28). &quot;Was Barack Obama really a constitutional law professor?&quot;. FactCheck.org. Retrieved on 2008-06-10. Holan, Angie Drobnic (2008-03-07). &quot;Obama's 20 years of experience&quot;. PolitiFact.com. Retrieved on 2008-06-10.&lt; 
^ Robinson, Mike (Associated Press) (2007-02-10). &quot;Obama got start in civil rights practice&quot;, The Boston Globe. Retrieved on 15 June 2008.  Pallasch, Abdon M (2007-12-17). &quot;As lawyer, Obama was strong, silent type; He was 'smart, innovative, relentless,' and he mostly let other lawyers do the talking&quot;, Chicago Sun-Times, p. 4. Retrieved on 15 June 2008.  &quot;People&quot; (paid archive), Chicago Tribune (1993-06-27), p. 9 (Business). Retrieved on 15 June 2008.  &quot;Business appointments&quot; (paid archive), Chicago-Sun-Times (1993-07-05), p. 40. Retrieved on 15 June 2008.  Miner, Barnhill &amp; Galland (2008). &quot;About Us&quot;. Miner, Barnhill &amp; Galland – Chicago, Illinois. Retrieved on 2008-06-15. Obama (1995, 2004), pp. 438–439, Mendell (2007), pp. 104–106. 
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The Shining (1980)

<b>&quot;Here's Johnny&quot;</b>

A family heads to an isolated hotel for the winter where an evil and spiritual presence influences the father into violence, while his psychic son sees horrific forebodings from the past and of the future.

Director: Stanley Kubrick
Writers: Stephen King (novel)

<b>Filming Locations</b>

Stanley Kubrick’s very free adaptation of the Stephen King novel sees blocked writer Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) going barmy in a creepy snowbound hotel.

Although the film was shot almost entirely in the studio at Elstree Studios in Hertfordshire, England, where the hotel interior was constructed, the exterior of the ‘Overlook Hotel’ is the Timberline Lodge, Mount Hood in the Hood River area of Northern Oregon.

Built during the Depression, it’s 45 miles east of Portland, just east of Zig Zag on Route 26. There is no maze at the Timberline – this was built at the old MGM Borehamwood Studios, also in Hertfordshire.

The interior sets were partly based, not on the Timberline, but on the Ahwahnee Hotel, in Yosemite Park, California.

To complicate matters further, it’s sometimes claimed that the film was made at the Stanley Hotel, 333 East Wonderview Avenue, Estes Park in Colorado. This is the hotel in which King stayed in 1973, and which inspired the original story.

The writer detested the Kubrick adaptation, which junked most of his plot in favour of atmosphere, and sanctioned a TV movie remake, which did indeed use the Stanley. The hotel was also seen on-screen in Peter Farrelly’s 1994 Dumb and Dumber.

The opening helicopter shots, of Torrance driving to the Overlook, were filmed by a second unit on Going-to-the-Sun Road, running along the western shore of Saint Mary Lake in Glacier National Park, northeast of Kalispell, Montana. Some of this footage was tacked on to the original release of Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner to provide the ‘happy ending’. Going-To-The-Sun Road appears again (very briefly) during the cross-country run in Forrest Gump.

<b>THE SHINING ( filming video location )</b>

<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OQ9ngMA6nCA" rel="noreferrer nofollow">www.youtube.com/watch?v=OQ9ngMA6nCA</a>

<a href="https://www.movie-locations.com/movies/s/Shining-1980.php" rel="noreferrer nofollow">www.movie-locations.com/movies/s/Shining-1980.php</a>

<b>Film Facts</b>

Because Danny Lloyd was so young and since it was his first acting job, Stanley Kubrick was highly protective of the child. During the shooting of the movie, Lloyd was under the impression that the film he was making was a drama, not a horror movie. In fact, when Wendy carries Danny away while shouting at Jack in the Colorado Lounge, she is actually carrying a lifesize dummy so Lloyd would not have to be in the scene. He only realized the truth several years later, when he was shown a heavily edited version of the film. He did not see the uncut version of the film until he was 17 - eleven years after he had made it.

Both Jack Nicholson and Shelley Duvall have expressed open resentment against the reception of this film, feeling that critics and audiences credited Stanley Kubrick solely for the film's success without considering the efforts of the actors, crew or the strength of Stephen King's underlying material. Both Nicholson and Duvall have said that the film was one of the hardest of their careers; in fact, Nicholson considers Duvall's performance the most difficult role he's ever seen an actor take on. Duvall also considers her performance the hardest of her life.

At the time of release, it was the policy of the MPAA to not allow the portrayal of blood in trailers that would be approved for all audiences. Bizarrely, the trailer for The Shining consists entirely of the shot of blood pouring out of the elevator. Stanley Kubrick had convinced the board the blood flooding out of the elevator was actually rusty water.

For the scene in which Jack breaks down the bathroom door, the props department built a door that could be easily broken. However, Jack Nicholson had worked as a volunteer fire marshal and tore it apart far too easily. The props department were then forced to build a stronger door.

According to Shelley Duvall the infamous 'Heere's Johnny!' scene took 3 days to film and the use of 60 doors.

All of the interior rooms of the Overlook Hotel were filmed at Elstree Studios in England, including the Colorado Lounge, where Jack does his typing. Because of the intense heat generated from the lighting used to recreate window sunlight (the room took 700,000 watts of light per window to make it look like a snowy day outside), the lounge set caught fire. Fortunately all of the scenes had been completed there, so the set was rebuilt with a higher ceiling, and the same area was eventually used by Steven Spielberg as the snake-filled Well of the Souls tomb in Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981).

Tony Burton, who had a brief role as Larry Durkin the garage owner, arrived on set one day carrying a chess set in hopes of getting in a game with someone during a break from filming. Stanley Kubrick, an avid chess player who had in his youth played for money, noticed the chess set. Despite production being behind schedule, Kubrick proceeded to call off filming for the day and engage in a set of games with Burton. Burton only managed to win one game, but nevertheless the director thanked him, since it had been some time that he'd played against a challenging opponent.

There were so many changes to the script during shooting that Jack Nicholson claimed he stopped reading it. He would read only the new pages that were given to him each day.

Anjelica Huston lived with Jack Nicholson during the time of the shooting. She recalled that, due to the long hours on the set and Stanley Kubrick's trademark style of repetitive takes, Nicholson would often return from a day's shooting, walk straight to the bed, collapse onto it and would immediately fall asleep.

The script was constantly changing on set, sometimes several times a day. The cast got very irritated by this, especially Jack Nicholson. Whenever the production team would give the cast copies of the script to memorize, Jack Nicholson would throw his away without even looking at it, as he knew that it was only going to change again.

The throwing around of the tennis ball inside the Overlook Hotel was Jack Nicholson's idea. The script originally only specified that, &quot;Jack is not working&quot;.

Stephen King, the author of the book on which the movie was based, was quite disappointed in the final film. While admitting that Stanley Kubrick's visuals were stunning, he said that was surface and not substance. He often described the film as &quot;A fancy car without an engine.&quot;

Stanley Kubrick, known for his compulsiveness and numerous retakes, got the difficult shot of blood pouring from the elevators in only three takes. This would be remarkable if it weren't for the fact that the shot took nine days to set up; every time the doors opened and the blood poured out, Kubrick would say, &quot;It doesn't look like blood.&quot; In the end, the shot took approximately a year to get right.

Despite Stanley Kubrick's fierce demands on everyone, Jack Nicholson admitted to having a good working relationship with him. It was with Shelley Duvall that he was a completely different director. He allegedly picked on her more than anyone else, as seen in the documentaries Making 'The Shining' (1980) and Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures (2001). He would really lose his temper with her, even going so far as to say that she was wasting the time of everyone on the set. She later reflected that he was probably pushing her to her limits to get the best out of her, and that she wouldn't trade the experience for anything - but it was not something she ever wished to repeat.

Shelley Duvall suffered from nervous exhaustion throughout filming, including physical illness and hair loss.

On the DVD commentary track for Making 'The Shining' (1980), Vivian Kubrick reveals that Shelley Duvall received &quot;no sympathy at all&quot; from anyone on the set. This was apparently Stanley Kubrick's tactic in making her feel utterly hopeless. This is most evident in the documentary when he tells Vivian, &quot;Don't sympathize with Shelley.&quot; Kubrick then goes on to tell Duvall, &quot;It doesn't help you.&quot;.

The idea for Danny Lloyd to move his finger when he was talking as Tony was his own; he did it spontaneously during his very first audition.

Stanley Kubrick considered both Robert De Niro and Robin Williams for the role of Jack Torrance but decided against both of them. Kubrick did not think De Niro would suit the role after watching his performance in Taxi Driver (1976), as he deemed De Niro not psychotic enough for the role. He did not think Williams would suit the role after watching his performance on Mork &amp; Mindy (1978), as he deemed him too psychotic for the role. According to Stephen King, Kubrick also briefly considered Harrison Ford.

One of Stanley Kubrick's favorite films was Eraserhead (1977), directed by David Lynch. Kubrick cited the film as a creative influence during the making of The Shining and screened Eraserhead to put the cast and crew in the mood he wanted to achieve for the film.

For the scenes when we can hear Jack typing but we cannot see what he is typing, Stanley Kubrick recorded the sound of a typist actually typing the words &quot;All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy&quot;. Some people argue that each key on a typewriter sounds slightly different, and Kubrick wanted to ensure authenticity, so he insisted that the actual words be typed.

The scene where Jack is chasing Danny through the maze took over a month to shoot. During the shoot, crew-members often found themselves lost and had to walkie-talkie for assistance.

Jack Nicholson ad-libbed the &quot;little pigs&quot; dialog towards the end of the film. He also ad-libbed the famous line, &quot;Here's Johnny&quot;.

Stephen King did not know that &quot;redrum&quot; spelled murder backwards until he actually typed it. He loved the various connotations of the word. Red Rum was a famous racehorse in the 1970s.

Every time Jack talks to a &quot;ghost&quot;, there's a mirror in the scene, except in the food locker scene. This is because he talks to (an unseen) Grady through a shiny metal door.

Stanley Kubrick had envisioned Shelley Duvall as his more timid, dependent version of Wendy Torrance from the very beginning. However, Jack Nicholson after reading the novel, wanted Jessica Lange for the role of Wendy, and even recommended her to Kubrick, as he felt she fit Stephen King's version of the character. After explaining the changes he had made, Kubrick convinced him that Duvall was the correct choice, as she best suited the emotionally fragile Wendy he had in mind. Many years later, Nicholson told Empire magazine he thought Duvall was fantastic and called her work in the film, &quot;the toughest job that any actor that I've seen had&quot;.

Steadicam operator Garrett Brown accomplished many of the ultra-low tracking corridor sequences from a wheelchair on which his invention was mounted. Grips would either pull backward or push forward the wheelchair, depending on the requirement of the shot

To get Jack Nicholson in the right agitated mood, he was only fed cheese sandwiches - which he hates.

Much like the casting of the character Jack, Stephen King also disliked the casting of Shelley Duvall as Wendy. King said that he envisioned Wendy as being a blond former cheerleader type who never had to deal with any true problems in her life making her experience in the Overlook all the more terrifying. He felt that Duvall was too emotionally vulnerable and appeared to have gone through a lot in her life, basically the exact opposite of how he pictured the character.

The first of Stephen King's books to be banned from school libraries because of the theme of wicked parents.

According to Stephen King, the title is inspired by the refrain in the Plastic Ono Band's song, &quot;Instant Karma&quot; (by John Lennon), which features the chorus: &quot;We all shine on&quot;.

There is a great deal of confusion regarding this film and the number of retakes of certain scenes. According to the Guinness Book of Records, the scene where Wendy is backing up the stairs swinging the baseball bat was shot 127 times, which is a record for the most takes of a single scene. However, both Steadicam operator Garrett Brown and assistant editor Gordon Stainforth say this is inaccurate - the scene was shot about 35-45 times.

Stephen King was first approached by Stanley Kubrick about making a film version of The Shining via an early morning phone call (England is five hours ahead of Maine in time zones). King, suffering from a hangover, shaving and at first thinking one of his kids was injured, was shocked when his wife told him Kubrick was really on the phone. King recalled that the first thing Kubrick did was to immediately start talking about how optimistic ghost stories are, because they suggest that humans survive death. &quot;What about hell?&quot; King asked. Kubrick paused for several moments before finally replying, &quot;I don't believe in hell.&quot;. King replied stating that there are people who believe in hell, and that they fear it more than death itself. This was tremendously effective in helping Kubrick understand the feel of the story.

The color red is visible, either overtly or subtly, in nearly every shot of the film.

The scene towards the end of the film, where Wendy is running up the stairway carrying a knife, was shot 35 times; the equivalent of running up the Empire State Building.

The shot of the tennis ball rolling into Danny's toys took 50 takes to get right.

Stanley Kubrick decided that having the hedge animals come alive (as they do in the book) was unworkable due to restrictions in special effects, so he opted for a hedge maze instead.

Neither Lia Beldam (young woman in bath) nor Billie Gibson (old woman in bath) appeared in another movie before or after this one.

The &quot;snowy&quot; maze near the conclusion of the movie consisted of 900 tons of salt and crushed Styrofoam.

Prior to hiring Diane Johnson as his writing partner, director/producer Stanley Kubrick rejected a screenplay written by Stephen King himself. King's script was a much more literal adaptation of the novel, a much more traditional horror film than the film Kubrick would ultimately make. He was considering hiring Johnson because he admired her novel &quot;The Shadow Knows,&quot; but when he found out she was a Doctor of Gothic Studies, he became convinced she was the person for the job.

There was no air conditioning on the sets, meaning it would often become very hot. The hedge maze set was stifling; actors and crew would often strip off as much of the heavy clothing they were wearing as quickly as they could once a shot was finished.

Stephen King tried to talk Stanley Kubrick out of casting Jack Nicholson in the lead suggesting, instead, either Michael Moriarty or Jon Voight. King had felt that watching either of these normal-looking men gradually descend into madness, would have immensely improved the dramatic thrust of the storyline.

Stephen King got the idea for The Shining while his family were staying at the Stanley Hotel in Estes Park, Colorado. They were the last guests before it shut down for the Winter. He saw a group of nuns leaving the hotel, and it got him thinking that the place had suddenly become godless. The King family stayed in Room 217, the haunted room in the novel but Room 237 in the film; a fire hose also resembled a snake (which doesn't appear in the film but does in The Shining (1997) TV mini-series), and King had already been playing around with a story idea about a boy with ESP, so he combined the two plotlines.

Despite his reported abuse of Shelley Duvall on set, director Stanley Kubrick spoke very highly of her ability in interviews and found himself quite impressed by her performance in the finished film.

The Timberline Lodge on Mount Hood in Oregon was used for the front exterior, but all the interiors as well as the back of the hotel were specially built at Elstree Studios in London, England. The management of the Timberline requested that Stanley Kubrick not use 217 for a room number (as specified in the book), fearing that nobody would want to stay in that room ever again. Kubrick changed the script to use the nonexistent room number 237.

During filming, Stanley Kubrick made the cast watch Eraserhead (1977), Rosemary's Baby (1968) and The Exorcist (1973) to put them in the right frame of mind.

Outtakes of the shots of the Volkswagen Beetle traveling towards the Overlook Hotel at the start of the film were &quot;plundered&quot; by Ridley Scott (with Stanley Kubrick's permission) when he was forced to add the &quot;happy ending&quot; to the original release of Blade Runner (1982).

During the scene where Wendy brings Jack breakfast in bed, it can be seen in the reflection of the mirror that Jack's T-shirt says &quot;Stovington&quot; on it. While not mentioned in the film, this is the name of the school that Jack used to teach at in the Stephen King novel.

To construct the interiors of the Overlook Hotel, Stanley Kubrick and his production designer, Roy Walker purposely set out to make it look like an amalgamation of bits and pieces of real hotels, rather than giving it one single design ethic. Kubrick had sent many photographers around the country photographing hotel rooms and picking his favorite. For example, the red men's bathroom was modeled on a men's room in the Biltmore Hotel in Arizona designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, and the Colorado lounge was modeled on the lounge of the Ahwanee Hotel in the Yosemite Valley. Indeed, the chandeliers, windows and fireplace are nearly identical, so much so that people entering the Ahwahnee Hotel often ask if it's &quot;the Shining hotel&quot;.

The scrapbook that Jack finds in the novel makes a brief appearance next to his typewriter when Jack tells Wendy never to bother him while he's working.

Stanley Kubrick wanted to shoot the film in script order. This meant having all the relevant sets standing by at all times. In order to achieve this, every soundstage at Elstree Studios was used, with all the sets built, pre-lit and ready to go during the entire shoot at the studios.

The only shot in the film not achieved in-camera was the slow zoom in on the model of the maze, with the tiny figures of Danny and Wendy walking around at the center. To achieve this shot, a model of the maze was shot from six feet above. Then the small central section of the maze was built to scale next to an apartment complex. Actors Shelley Duvall and Danny Lloyd then walked about in the central section whilst the camera crew filmed it from the roof of the apartment building. The two shots were then simply composited together.

During the making of the movie, Stanley Kubrick would occasionally call Stephen King at 3:00 a.m. and ask him questions like &quot;Do you believe in God?&quot; Steven Spielberg had heard this story and asked Kubrick if it was true. Kubrick denied that it happened.

Most of the elaborate urban legends and conspiracy theories surrounding this film (ranging from it serving as a Holocaust metaphor to a confession that Kubrick helped fake the moon landings) were refuted by Stanley Kubrick during his lifetime or later by the surviving cast and crew. For example, the famous &quot;impossible corridors&quot; are a result of set logistics, Kubrick wanted to shoot Danny on his big wheel in unbroken takes, so the hallways had to connect and the only way the crew could construct them to fit Kubrick's vision meant mirroring the set to fit available sound stage space. The shadow of the helicopter in the opening shot was the result of a framing error.

After Barry Lyndon (1975), Stanley Kubrick started researching his next project by reading a lot of recent books. His secretary could hear him throwing rejected books at the wall in his office. One day, he started reading Stephen King's novel and, after a few hours, when his secretary hadn't heard the familiar sound of a book hitting the wall, she knew he had found his next project.

Jack Nicholson suggested Scatman Crothers for the film. Crothers had a tough time on &quot;The Shining&quot; with Stanley Kubrick making him do over 100 takes for one scene. Crothers' next film was Bronco Billy (1980), directed by Clint Eastwood who was famous for generally only going with one take. Crothers broke down in tears of gratitude on his first scene in the film when he realized he wouldn't have to do endless take after take again.

According to Variety magazine, the film took almost 200 days to shoot. However, according to assistant editor Gordon Stainforth, it took much more, nearly a year. The film was originally supposed to take 17 weeks, but it ultimately took 51. Because the film ran so long, Warren Beatty's Reds (1981) and Steven Spielberg's Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) were both delayed as they were both waiting to shoot in Elstree Studios.

The scene of Hallorann approaching the hotel in the snow-cat was shot in real snow approaching the real Timberline hotel in Oregon.

To achieve the smoothness of the opening shots, cameraman Greg MacGillivray secured a wide angle Arriflex camera to the front of a helicopter, then balanced the blades to remove any vibrations. Even the shot where the camera comes down behind the car, passes it out, and goes over the edge is done via the helicopter.

Scatman Crothers was friends with Jack Nicholson, and when he heard about the Halloran role, he asked Nicholson to talk to Stanley Kubrick about casting him.

During an interview for Britain's The 100 Greatest Scary Moments (2003), Shelley Duvall revealed that due to her role requiring her to be in an almost constant state of hysteria, she eventually ran out of tears from crying so hard. To overcome this, she kept bottles of water with her at all times on set to remain hydrated.

When Steadicam inventor/operator Garrett Brown was hired to work on the picture, he was assured that there was no way the shoot would run over six months, as he had to be back in the United States in six months time to shoot Rocky II (1979). Six months into the shoot, less than half the film had been shot, and for several months, Brown worked one week in London on The Shining, one week in Philadelphia on Rocky, commuting by Concorde every Sunday.

Jack tells Lloyd in the bar that Danny once messed around with his work papers. This mirrors an event in Stephen King's life, when his son once started playing around with his writing notes. He felt like killing him.

The scene where Wendy is running and sees a room where a man in a bear costume is having sex with the former hotel manager was never explained in the movie, leaving the audience very confused as to why it was there. In the book, during a year at the hotel the manager had a secret homosexual affair with a party guest dressed in a dog costume, which is the closest explanation.

Upon seeing the movie, Stephen King reportedly said &quot;I think he set out to make a film that hurts people&quot;.

Jack Nicholson claimed that the scene where Jack snaps at Wendy for interrupting his writing was the most difficult for him, as he was a writer in real-life and had gotten into similar arguments with his girlfriend. Being a Method actor he drew on his memories of those arguments and added the line &quot;Or if you come in here and you DON'T hear me typing, if I'm in here that means I'm working!&quot;

Despite receiving generally unfavorable reviews upon its initial release, the film is today regarded as one of the best horror movies ever made. In 2001, it was ranked 29th on AFI's '100 Years...100 Thrills' list. In 2003, Jack Torrance was named the 25th greatest villain on the AFI's '100 Years...100 Heroes and Villains' list. The film was named the scariest film of all time by Channel 4 in 2003, and Total Film had it as the 5th greatest horror film in 2004. Bravo TV placed it 6th on their list of the 100 Scariest Movie Moments in 2005. In addition, film critics Kim Newman and Jonathan Romney both placed it in their all-time top ten lists for the 2002 Sight and Sound poll.

The making-of documentary shot by Vivian Kubrick shows that the hedge maze set, while nowhere near as large as the maze in the film (which was mostly a matte painting), was still large and complex enough to require a detailed map. In the commentary for her documentary, she notes that many crew members really got lost in the maze, dryly noting that it now reminds her of the lost-backstage scene in This Is Spinal Tap (1984).

The role of Lloyd the Bartender was originally to have been played by Harry Dean Stanton, who was unable to take the role due to his commitment to Alien (1979).

In the British TV spot for the film, Jack can be seen tearing through the second door panel, a shot that was never used in the final cut.

Despite the critical success of the film, it was nominated for two Golden Raspberry Awards: Worst Actress for Shelley Duvall and Worst Director for Stanley Kubrick. It &quot;lost&quot; both awards.

Stanley Kubrick's first choice to play Danny Torrance was Cary Guffey, the young boy from Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977). Guffey's parents apparently turned down the offer due to the film's subject matter.

The Louisville Slugger baseball bat with which Wendy Torrance bludgeons Jack is signed by Carl Yastrzemski, Hall of Fame Red Sox player. Author Stephen King is a huge Red Sox fan.

This film was shot in the same film studio that was used for Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980). In fact, much of the same fake snow used for this film was used for the Hoth scenes. Stephen King visited the set of both films, and met director Irvin Kershner. This later became the basis for part of his book &quot;It&quot;. Kirshner had been nicknamed &quot;Kersh&quot;, and was directing the first Star Wars film to feature Yoda. In the Stephen King book &quot;It&quot;, there is a character named Mrs. Kersh, who is said to sound like Yoda when she talks. As well as countless other mentions of Star Wars in various King books.

One of the shots in the part where Jack is bouncing a ball against a wall took several days to film. This was because the shot entailed the ball bouncing from the wall onto the camera lens as it filmed. As Stanley Kubrick was so determined to get this precise shot, the camera kept rolling while the ball was continually hit against the wall in the hope of it bouncing back and hitting the lens. It took everyone on the entire unit having a go at it in between other shots before the shot was finally achieved after several days.

As he lived in England, Stanley Kubrick was not at all familiar with the &quot;Heeeeere's Johnny&quot; line (from The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (1962)) that Jack Nicholson improvised. He very nearly didn't use it.

Stanley Kubrick originally wanted Slim Pickens to play the part of Hallorann but Pickens wanted nothing to do with the director, following his experiences working with him on Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964).

When Jack uses an axe to break through the bathroom door, he shouts &quot;Here's Johnny&quot;. This is probably a reference to the catchphrase of chat-show host Johnny Carson. However an alternative explanation is that it is a reference to an incident that occurred in the 1960s when Johnny Cash used a fire axe to break a connecting &quot;doorway&quot; between two motel rooms that he and his band members were using while on tour, and then broke through one of the doors from the corridor to make it look as if a thief had broken in and trashed the rooms.

The maze was constructed on an airfield near Elstree Studios, by weaving branches to chicken wire mounted on empty plywood boxes. The maze was shot using an extremely short lens (a 9.8mm, which gives a horizontal viewing angle of 90 degrees) which was kept dead level at all times, to make the hedges seem much bigger and more imposing than they were in reality.

The famous opening scene was shot in Glacier National Park in Montana just north of St. Mary's Lake. The road seen in the scene, Going-to-the-Sun Road, does actually close down during winter and is only negotiable by snowcat. Kubrick initially sent a second unit to the Rockies in Colorado, but they reported back that the area wasn't very interesting. When Stanley Kubrick saw the footage they had shot, he was furious, and fired the entire unit. He then sent Greg MacGillivray, a noted helicopter cameraman, to Montana and it was McGillivray who shot the scene.

The film took over 5 years to complete.

Christopher Reeve and Leslie Nielsen were considered for the role of Jack Torrence.

Delbert Grady, the waiter/butler from 1921, spills Advocaat (a yellow liqueur) on Jack in the Gold Room, one of multiple instances where the color yellow gradually becomes more symbolically prevalent as the film moves closer to Jack's madness and the Overlook Hotel's resurrection.

In the party scene, Stanley Kubrick told the extras to mouth their words.

Approximately 5000 people auditioned for the role of Danny Torrance over a six-month period. The interviews were carried out in Chicago, Denver and Cincinnati by Stanley Kubrick's assistant Leon Vitali and his wife, Kersti Vitali. Aspiring actors were asked to send in photographs of themselves, and from the photographs, a list was made of the boys who looked right, who were then called in to interview. Vitali would then have the boys do some minor improvisation on camera, and Kubrick would review the footage, gradually narrowing the list down.

Stephen King has never understood why people find the film version of The Shining so scary.

The two Ray Noble and His Orchestra songs used were not actually from the 1920s: &quot;Midnight, the Stars and You&quot; (played in the ballroom) was recorded February 16, 1934, and &quot;It's All Forgotten Now&quot; (heard faintly when Grady is talking to Jack in the bathroom) was recorded July 11, 1934.

Saul Bass reportedly produced around 300 versions of the film's poster before Stanley Kubrick was satisfied.

Along with Bound for Glory (1976), Marathon Man (1976) and Rocky (1976), one of the first films to use the recently developed Steadicam.

Wendy Carlos and Rachel Elkind wrote and performed a full electronic score for the film, but Stanley Kubrick discarded most of it and used a soundtrack of mostly classical music. Only the adaptation of the &quot;Dies Irae&quot; (&quot;Day of Wrath&quot;) melody (from the traditional requiem mass) during the opening credits, the music during the family's drive to the hotel, and a few other brief moments (such as Halloran's plane trip) survive in the final version. Wendy Carlos once noted that she'd like to see the original score released on CD, but there were too many legal snags at the time. As of 2005, Carlos' score for the film has been remastered, and is a part of &quot;Rediscovering Lost Scores Volumes 1 and 2&quot;.

The movie's line &quot;Here's Johnny!&quot; was voted as the #68 movie quote by the American Film Institute (out of 100), and as the #36 of &quot;The 100 Greatest Movie Lines&quot; by Premiere magazine in 2007.

The film was released in the United States on star Scatman Crothers' 70th birthday.

The magazine that Jack reads in the lobby and tosses back onto the chair when arising to greet Stuart Ullman is the January 1978 issue of &quot;Playgirl&quot;.

Although a key point in the novel, the hotel boiler is only mentioned once in the film.

James Mason can be seen visiting the set of Stanley Kubrick's The Shining (1980) in Vivian Kubrick's TV documentary Making 'The Shining' (1980). Stanley Kubrick did not usually allow visitors to his set, but made an exception for Mason, who had memorably played Humbert Humbert for him in Lolita (1962).

This was voted the ninth scariest film of all time by Entertainment Weekly.

Shelley Duvall is the only actor/actress playing a member of the Torrance family whose character name is not the same as his/her real life name - Jack Nicholson plays a character named Jack and Danny Lloyd plays a character named Danny.

The outtakes link between this movie and Blade Runner (1982) was not the only element that connected the two. Actor Joe Turkel who plays Lloyd (the bartender who serves Jack), also played Dr. Eldon Tyrell in Blade Runner (1982). Outtakes aside, Turkel is the only other common cast/crew link between both films.

Knowing of his interest in the paranormal, Warner Brothers president John Calley sent Stanley Kubrick a galleys copy of &quot;The Shining&quot; novel.

In the novel, the Overlook burned to the ground because of the boiler that Jack Torrance neglected to dump, but in the film it's still standing by the end and Jack freezes to death in a hedge maze instead of going up with the hotel. The novel's ending was restored in the miniseries.

Danny's middle name in the novel is Anthony, perhaps where Tony derived from.

In he book, when Dick and Danny are talking about the Shining, Dick asks Danny to show him his power by giving him a blast, and it is in the miniseries, but not the film. Abra, a girl with the Shining does something similar to Danny in Doctor Sleep.

Music would often be played on set to help young Danny Lloyd get into the right spirit for each scene.

The film's aspect ratio has always been 1.35:1 full screen, if filmed or viewed in 1.85:1 wide-screen the viewer will only see empty space and/or in some cases set pieces and props that would never be allowed in the shot, it was never specified why Stanley Kubrick filmed in full screen but some theories range from an artistic reason; by cramming as much of the action in the center of the frame as possible to give a &quot;claustrophobic&quot; feeling and add to the tension,to a personal belief that the film would just be cropped anyway into 1.35:1 for broadcast on television and any important imagery or scenery would be lost forever after the theatrical release anyway,(home video was not widely available at the time and even after it became popular it wasn't until the advent of DVD format where films preserved in their original aspect ratio) this is why the back of the DVD release says &quot;full aspect ratio of the original camera negative,as Stanley Kubrick intended.&quot; as opposed to &quot;This film has been modified from its original version, it has been formatted to fit your TV&quot; it has never been formatted or modified at all.

Jack's typewriter is an Adler Eagle.

Stephen King first got the idea for Doctor Sleep in 1998 at a book signing when somebody asked him what happened to Danny. This was a question King had often asked himself as well as what would have happened to Jack Torrance had he found AA. King started thinking about how old Danny was and where was Wendy now and decided to find the answers with a sequel. But it was a tall order. He considered Doctor Sleep the true history of the Torrance family.

Wendy Torrance swings the baseball bat 41 times.

Jack Nicholson was Stanley Kubrick's first choice for the role of Jack Torrance.

John Williams was initially set to provide the score until Stanley Kubrick decided to go with a selection of music from different composers.

Bill Watson was the caretaker at the Overlook the rest of the year around in the novel; there is a &quot;Bill&quot; in Ullman's office at the start of the film so that's probably him.

When Stephen King wrote the book sequel, Doctor Sleep, he admitted he never knew how it would end, something he never knows.

Since Jack Nicholson and Shelley Duvall spoke in thick New Jersey and Texas accents respectively, Kubrick wanted the actor playing Danny to be from the Midwest as a compromise between the two, settling on Illinois born Danny Lloyd.

The snow began to bury the Overlook in the novel.

Wendy, at the breakfast scene in the beginning of the film, is reading &quot;The Catcher In The Rye&quot; by J.D. Salinger.

Released just two weeks after Friday the 13th (1980).

This was the first horror film starring Jack Nicholson since Roger Corman's The Terror (1963).

Billie Gibson, the old woman in the tub, is often confused with Ann Gibson, Mel Gibson's late mother.

Wendy smokes Virginia Slims Full-Flavor 120s in the scene where she and the Doctor are discussing Danny.

When Danny goes to explore Room 217 (Room 237) in the novel, there's also a scary fire hose outside that menaces Danny like a snake, but it's not in the film but it is in the miniseries.

The ghost of an injured guest says &quot;Great party, isn't it?&quot; In the book, the ghost of Horace Derwent, the late owner of the Overlook, says this to Wendy and Danny. The miniseries returns the line to Derwent. He reappears in Doctor Sleep and says the exact same thing and kills a member of The True Knot, a group of psychic vampires.

Room 237 (217 in the novel) continues a theme in Stephen King novels of rooms with numbers having significance.

The film poster art was designed by Saul Bass. In the film, a Continental Airlines jetliner is seen in the film with 1968-era jet stream logo, which Bass designed. Bass also designed the United Airlines tulip logo in 1973 - United merged with Continental Airlines in 2010 but retained the 1991-era globe logo (designed by the Lippincott Company). The average lifespan of a Bass-designed corporate logo is 34 years.

Stanley Kubrick also made casting decisions for dubbing actors in other countries. In Spain actors Joaquín Hinojosa and Verónica Forqué did the voices of Jack and Wendy Torrence. Both actors had little experience in dubbing. In Spain, this dubbing is consider one of the worst dubbing ever made, due to that casting choice.

In Doctor Sleep, Danny has learned to push unwanted thoughts into a mental lockbox but they can be reopened if need be.

Danny is one of several characters in Stephen King novels with mental powers. Others are Carrie, Firestarter and in the sequel to the Shining, Doctor Sleep.

The miniseries and the novel goes into more detail about Jack Torrance's relationship with his father than the film does; in fact it doesn't even come up.

Jack was supposed to mow the lawns (and trim the topiary in the novel) as part of his job.

The Donner Party was based on a true story.

When writing Doctor Sleep, Stephen King had to be reminded of things from The Shining he'd forgotten. It's one of the few sequels he's written in his career.

The Shining is considered one of the world's finest horror novels.

The two tracked vehicles in the movie are the Activ Fischer VW Powered 4 Speed Snow-Trak (referred to and labeled on the vehicle as a &quot;SnowCat&quot;) and a Thiokol Imp Snow-Cat (this is the vehicle Wendy and Danny escape in).

For a TV commercial in 2010 for Premier Inn hotels (UK), British comedian Lenny Henry reenacted Jack Nicholson's &quot;Heeere's Johnny&quot; scene (&quot;Heeere's Lenny&quot;) in which he demolished a hotel bathroom door with an axe. The commercial was later banned.

<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Cb3ik6zP2I" rel="noreferrer nofollow">www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Cb3ik6zP2I</a>
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Guenievre's IC History

Pre-F-List:

The Hoenn Chronicles - 


&quot;Every journey begins with a single step&quot;


Guenievre was originally a male ralts who lived on Route 102 near Petalburg City in the region of Hoen. At a young age, Guenievre as a ralts was very interested in travelling. With an interesting unnamed trainer seeking to become inducted into the Hoenn Hall of Fame by defeating all the gym leaders and the elite four; Guen decided to follow this trainer and grow with him/her. She would watch the human from the shadows, learn from him/her and the pokemon partners (s)he carried. By level 5, Guen had reached petalburg woods where it met a shroomish named 'Mishi'. The two continued following the trainer, learning as (s)he learned. This trainer defeated the first gym leader of the Hoenn Region, Roxanne in a pokemon battle using only one pokemon, an amazing feat (to Guen at least). By level 12, Guen had reached a small island with the town of Dewford on it. Here, she encountered the trainer again this time going against Brawly. Once more, the trainer defeated Brawly using only a single pokemon.


By level 15, the trainer had made it through cycling road and reached Mawvile city where a friendly Voltorb named 'Volt' joined the shroomish and ralts in peering over the trainer. This is when Guenievre learned the move 'thief'. Another trainer managed to spot her and sent a ralts to face off against her. Guenievre conjured the dark-type energy and managed to defeat this trainer's ralts, growing another level in the process. This battle caused Guen to miss the battle between this powerful trainer and the leader of the Mauville City gym, however - she believed that the same powerful pokemon that defeated Roxanne greatly contributed to the trainer's victory.


North of mount chimney, going through the ash-covered wild-lands, Guenievre encountered a spinda who mistook her for one of the trainer's pokemon and attacked. She defeated the wild spinda and in the process grew to level 20 causing her to evolve into Kirlia. Not knowing where to go, Guenievre the Kirlia went to Lavaridge town at the base of mount chimney. She got there in time to see a confident looking trainer emerging with two powerful pokemon on either side. Behind the human trainer, Guenievre could barely make out in the steam-filled haze a defeated red-head on her knees.


Not wanting to fall behind, Guenievre began to actively train herself in the psychic ways quickly gaining the most powerful psychic attack - Psychic at level 26. While she continued her personal training, the pokemon trainer she followed at a distance seemed to be continuing his onslaught on the pokemon gyms. Norman, leader of petalburg gym had fallen to an evolved Mishi (now a Breloom) and an Aron from Dewford Isle known simply as &quot;Aeris&quot;.


On the way to Fortree City, Guenievre achieved level 30, evolving once more into the form she currently still holds... the embrace pokemon Gardevoir. At the same time, a powerful electrical attack 'Shockwave' which can never miss with its ever-shifting bolts of lightning came to the Gardevoir. She learned this attack by watching 'Volt', now an electrode single-handedly decimate Winoa's entire team of bird-pokemon using a similar elemental attack.


Between the journey from Fortree City and Mossdeep city, the trainer whom Guen was following around the Hoenn region seemed to be flying around the world on the back of a powerful flying-type pokemon. Where (s)he went was unknown to the gardevoir but while she waited for the trainer's return, she honed her skills mastering the powerful psychic power of 'imprison'. This move sealed away any techniques shared by Guenievre and those around her. Unbeknownst to her, she accidentally sealed away the ability of Tate and Liza's pokemon to use their powerful psychic attacks during the battle between the trainer Guenievre was following and the twin psychic gym leaders.


The journey to Sootopolis City was much more engaging to the gardevoir as she read the mind of her travel companion allowing her to teleport to an undersea cavern where a large-scale battle was transpiring between the trainer and the forces of team Aqua. During this onslaught, Guenievre managed to catch sight of a legendary beast of the sea who she named '[i]the Leviathan[/i]'. Following his release from the deep-sea cavern, torrential rain and blistering heat followed as it seemed that [i]the behemoth[/i] of the land was also released from his slumber. The two were locked in a fierce battle which wreaked havoc on the landscape around them until the legendary 'high-sky' pokemon descended through a break in the clouds.


After this incident, Guenievre decided to temporarily join the trainer on his/her journey as she knew that if she did, she would eventually come into contact with these three legendary pokemon of the weather and be able to test her mettle against them. For this reason, the trainer used her against the gym leader of Sootopolis City's strongest pokemon, kingdra. The two had a fierce battle both maxing out their 'double team' abilities so it seemed as though two powerful armies were clashing against one another on the battle-field. Eventually, Guenievre's 'calm mind' which brought her latent psychic power to its maximum capacity was the deciding factor in the war between the illusions and the water-dragon pokemon was felled!


Guenievre and the mysterious trainer stood against the first of the elite four. Mishi, the fighting-grass mushroom pokemon decimated the entirety of the dark-type pokemon master's team leaving nothing in its wake but bitter tears. This match was over before anyone knew what had transpired.


The second trainer of the tropical elite fit the bill of an island girl but was surprising with her powerful ghost pokemon. Unfortunately, the ghosts were entirely ineffective against the fully evolved aggron that stood between them and the trainer they were supposed to defeat. This lead to a long battle of attrition which culminated in Guenievre's ability to use double-team and calm mind to raise her survivability, knocking out the second member of the Hoenn's pokemon league pokemon in a late vicious counter attack.


The combination of Mishi the breloom and Aeris the aggron proved fatal for the ice-type third member of the Hoenn elite four. Not many ice-pokemon live in the tropical region of Hoenn and so, the fight consisted in part of the two-some obliterating the same opposing pokemon until none stood before them.


Finally, the dragon-master of Hoenn stood before Guen and her mysterious partner, this powerful pokemon trainer. The dragon master had the fierce beasts under his command but a single pokemon stood against them. A mud-fish pokemon wielding the devastating power of 'ice beam'. This same pokemon had defeated Roxanne and Flannery but had mostly been kept away from the fighting for its powerful 'torrent' ability.


Once the entire elite four had been defeated, the mysterious trainer approached the champion, Wallace for a battle. The two went head to head though Volto, the electrode decimated most of the water-type expert's team early on in the match. When Whishcash came in hoping to be the end of the rampant electric pokemon's relentless assault, the mystery trainer switched into Mishi and the water/ground type only served as a tasty meal for the fungus pokemon's powerful 'giga-drain'. Finally, the match came down to Guenievre versus Milotic... Once more, Guenievre's powerful psychic defences shielded it from the damage of the beautiful water pokemon's attacks until an army of 'Guenievres' ended the match with a max-power psycho-kinetic assault.


Thus, the trainer was inducted into the Hoenn hall of fame. This wasn't to be the end of the journey however. There were still six pokemon to find as a promise to the psychic pokemon Guenievre.

----

Blue Silver Forge: A journey through Johto and Kanto

A journey from the traditional to the dynamic -


Guenievre began her journey through Johto at the intersection of its neighbouring region of Kanto at Tohjo falls. From here, she travelled west to the traditional region of Johto were legend and lore were interwoven with the landscape. The first town she came across was New Bark where she met a very familiar individual with whom she would take her journey through the lands of Johto. Wandering together, the two walked through Cherrygrove city deciding it would be better to come back to it after a trip to Azela town to pick up a certain 'item' that would assist them on their journey. Instead, they headed to 'Dark Cave' where an Onix by the name of 'Rocky' made its appearance. Stopping at the famous Violet city, Guenievre decided it would be best if she took up meditation with the fabled 'sages of the bellsprout' that made their residence on the outskirts of the city while her familiar acquaintance challenged the gym leader of Violet City, Falkner. With Guenievre's power, the psychic pokemon blasted through the worthy 'sages of the bellsprout way', decimating their bellsprouts and in the process learning abilities she never knew she could master before. It was here, Guenievre gained what could be called 'enlightenment' as her body's dazzling light could not light up the bleakest of darkness. The cost of 'enlightenment' was taxing on her body however and it reduced her abilities to next to naught. She was told by the sage that she would have to regain her former power, one ability at a time. Through patience and understanding, she would gain even more abilities she didn't have before. 


After travelling through a dank cavern where Rocky felt most at home, the trio (Rocky, Guen and the trainer) came upon the nestled town of Azalea where the legendary pokeball craftsman 'Kurt' made his residence. While the trainer and Rocky visited Kurt and inquired about the origins of pokeball manufacture, Guenievre paid a visit to Slowpoke well. Here, she came across a psychic pokemon who resonated with her if only for its simple mind and easy life. She stayed with the slowpoke for a night and was awakened the next morn by the trainer who caught the slowpoke, nicknaming it 'HokeyPokey' after some dance from a foreign region Guenievre had never visited. After these events it was off to the Azalea gym to challenge the gym leader. For the first time, Guenievre lay witness to the awesome might of 'Rocky' the onix as it lay waste to every bug pokemon of the Azalea gym including the leader of the gym's prized Scyther.


Through the Ilex forest, Guenievre met an exegcute by the name of Koko who would later join the trainer she was following on the journey through Johto. However, before the trainer captured the pokemon, Guenievre battled against it to weaken the egg pokemon for capture. Through this, she managed to learn one of the secrets the egg pokemon carried, namely how to erect psychic barriers against physical attacks. 


The next step of the journey was to go through the bustling Golden Rod City. It was here, at the Golden Rod City Gym that Guenievre saw the power of teamwork. Rocky, the Onix obliterated Whitney's first pokemon, Cleffairy with a series of piercing screeches to lower its defence to an abysmal state and a quick follow-up with a powerful 'headbutt'. The second pokemon was much more tricky to go against and the battle seemed like a showcase of two metapods fighting against one another only using harden. Koko the exegcute leech-seeded Whitney's Miltank before Rocky was once again sent out. Thanks to Rocky's beastly defences, it was incapable of being damaged by Whitney's final pokemon. However, Miltank managed to attract Rocky who refused to attack its would-be lover. And so the battle continued, Miltank would damage Rocky who would be healed in turn by Koko's leech-seed. Then, when Miltank grew weaker, it would use milk drink to heal itself. The cycle continued until finally, Miltank was unable to continue using milk drink having drained its udders dry. Only then did it fall to the sapping away of leech-seed. Guenievre estimated the entire match to have taken thirty minutes, far longer than any match she had seen with this trainer to date....


Guenievre continued following the trainer from Golden Rod City north to the very quaint town of Ekruteak. It was a town steeped in tradition and lore. The trainer almost immediately went to the Gym to challenge the gym leader there, Morty and his Ghost type pokemon. Guenievre on the other hand floated around the town until she heard a commotion at the dance theater in the middle of the town. Sailors visiting from the Unova region who had been in the port of Olivine to the west came to see the sensual dance of the kimono girls. However they were vastly disappointed by the 'lack of skin' shown throughout the affair and grew agitated by this. Their drunken ruckus drew the attention of other trainers who made Johto their home and a large battle ensued. Eventually, the fray was quelled by five powerful pokemon. A flareon, vaporeon, jolteon, umbreon and espeon entered the fray and managed to counter both sides without harming either side. It was unknown to all who wielded the power of these eeveelutions but it brought peace back to the dance theater. When the trainer emerged from the gym, there was nothing but an awestruck look upon Morty's face. A lone rattata strutted proudly. Did this lowly mouse really demolish Morty's entire team of ghosts by itself? Guen was truly curious about the battle she had missed between this trainer and the 'ghost master, Morty'.


The next stop on the journey was Olivine City where the sailors had come from. There, the trainer re-united with a powerful ally, the Electrode Volt who had accompanied them on their journey through Hoenn earlier. While in Olivine, the angry sailors from Ekruteak stormed the gym in Olivine City seeking Jasmine to aide in their retribution against the mysterious eevee trainers of the dance theater. Not wanting to get involved in the fray, the trainer opted to instead continue further west passed the Whirl Islands to a small island where a master of fighting pokemon made his home. The trainer fought against the gym leader Chuck and his powerful Poliwrath. It was a one on one battle and the trainer used a now evolved Koko the Exeggutor against the water/fighting pokemon. Early on, Koko managed to land a leech seed upon its adversary and then the fighter countered by beginning to continuously raise its evasion with the infamously frustrating 'Double Team' strategy. Unfortunately, Koko resisted all of Chuck's Poliwrath's attacks and its added screen defense, reflect proved to be too much of a hurdle to overcome. Koko remained strong, sapping Poliwrath's energy while conserving its own strength until finally, the fighting toad pokemon collapsed from exhaustion. The battle was once again long and Guenievre began to wonder if the trainer changed their strategy from 'raw power' to dwindling away an opponent's will to fight with drawn out battles from the last time they traveled together.


Sailing back to Olivine City, it seemed that the sailors had left for another port and the trainer was free to challenge Jasmine for the next badge of the Johto league. During the battle, Guen opted to instead head north to a Miltank farm where her psychic power and empathy told her of an ill miltank. She secretly visited the cow pokemon in the dead of night when the humans were asleep. The miltank seemed to need help and Guenievre had a plan. Using her teleport, she flashed herself back to her home in Hoenn where Oran berries were plentiful. Plucking several berries from the tropical trees, she teleported back to the farm in Johto and fed the ill miltank the berries she had gathered. Once the cow pokemon was well enough to produce milk again, Guenievre left again to go in search of the trainer she had left behind.


By the time Guenievre met the trainer again, the trainer was facing off against Pryce, the gym leader of Mahogany Town east of Ekruteak. The battle was significantly one sided with Rocky, now a Steelix (supposedly having received a metal coat from Jasmine) decimating all of Pryce's ice-type pokemon. The combination of 'rock polish' and iron tail was too much for the elderly baron of winter and he was forced to concede against the steel serpent pokemon that stood menacingly against him. The next stop on the journey was through the freezing 'Ice Path' and on to Black Thorn City, home of the Blackthorn family, the oldest lineage of dragon-masters this side of Unova. Guenievre did not know of the lore behind Black Thorn city but upon seeing the dragons around, the gardevoir was suddenly filled with a zeal to battle against them. Guenievre appeared to her long time companion and using telepathy communicated her intentions to battle against Claire's powerful dragon pokemon.


The battle came down to a near mirroring of what transpired in Sootopolis City. Guenievre stood her ground against the powerful Kingdra and the two continued using 'double team' to amass illusion armies with which to face one another down. Kingdra's powerful attacks, even in the rain could not pierce through the walls of clones that surrounded the real psychic pokemon. However, Guenievre's less powerful but homing 'magical leaf' managed to always hit its mark. The Kingdra took punishing blow after punishing blow, each time unable to land even a single attack on the powerful psychic pokemon. Finally, after its trainer ran out of hyper potions, the kingdra finally fell to Guenievre's onslaught leaving the trainer victorious and Claire utterly defeated.


With all eight badges, it left nothing between Guenievre, the mysterious trainer and Johto's &quot;Four Heavenly Kings&quot;....

----

F-List History:


[The First Date]

Guenievre arrived in the unnamed forest in the cold month of December. She knew not how she arrived in this world but found it stranger than any of the places she had been to. Unlike Hoenn, Johto, Kanto, Sinnoh and Unova this place had no name. More disturbing than this was how many of the pokemon here were akin to humans. They walked on hind limbs and wore clothes as the humans did. This disturbed the gardevoir however, with cautious curiosity she began to explore this new, unnamed region in search of answers. The first friend she made in this strange place was an umbreon by the name of Gaelstrom. He taught her that there was nothing to fear from these strange pokemon she met. Some called themselves 'anthro-pokemon' while others who were much more human-like in appearance and mannerisms referred to themselves as Gijinka. Whilst Guenievre understood neither of these terms, soon both became part of her vernacular. She could identify what was 'feral', what was 'anthro', what was 'gijinka' and what was 'human'. Of course, Guenievre herself didn't really fall into these broad categories. She may have been a 'feral' gardevoir but what was the difference between a humanoid 'feral' gardevoir and an 'anthro' gardevoir?


As time went on, Guenievre's interactions with Gael continued and eventually he became 'a good friend' however it seemed that he was fairly unhappy with this term. He wanted Guenievre's affections, but Guenievre's affections seemed to lay elsewhere. The first 'romantic interest' the psychic pokemon had was with a gijinka luxray. The two shared a camp fire in the cold December night and as they say 'one thing led to another'. It was a casual relationship at best and allowed both of them to 'see other people' as they saw fit. Something that a relationship with Gael may not have allowed Guenievre to partake in. This is what led Guenievre to have numerous 'casual interactions' with several other pokemon and humans. The psychic pokemon continued to meet many individuals through a group who would play a bizarre game involving an empty bottle. It was all good fun and for a time, Guenievre enjoyed herself.


Guenievre was still a 'fighting pokemon' at heart though, these peaceful days while pleasant would eventually need to come to an end. As all pokemon are drawn to face off against powerful opponents in contests of strength, will and ferocious combat, Guenievre was eventually being drawn into a world of blood-shed and death. If this was the time of Eden, then Guenievre was about to take a bite of the forbidden fruit and plunge into a 'fall' from which she would never recover in mind, soul or body.

----

Fight or Flight

Guenievre's first encounter with 'The Pokemon Fight Club' came after witnessing a battle transpire in the unnamed forest. A certain ghost type pokemon fought against a certain dragon type pokemon and many were caught in the cross fire. Such a thing caused the psychic pokemon to reflect upon her own 'mortality' and drove her to 'need' to become stronger. This 'need', this nagging reminder of her own mortality would eventually corrode Guenievre to her very soul. Guenievre's first encounter with 'The Pokemon Fight Club' was against a certain human male. She was warned by this man where this path to power would lead her but Guenievre did not care. The psychic human male demonstrated Guenievre's own weakness to her and warned her against walking the 'line of power'. There would come a time when 'the power to protect' would not be enough for her and she would [i]take[/i] power for the sole reason of [i]taking power[/i]. It could be said that Guenievre's own psychic premonitions knew of her 'fall' before it began - yet she could do nothing to change her own future and neither could those who blissfully continued on the journey with her.


The Pokemon Fight Club began to swell in popularity. Pokemon from all over the world felt the same drive that Guenievre did, the craving to fight against those with power for the sole purpose of fighting against those with power. The psychic pokemon proved her worth through toil, blood and battle. She felled many an opponent and became known as one of the 'elite' ranks of the pokemon fight club. When time came to choose amongst the warriors of the fight club who would be the representative gym leaders, Guenievre became part of the 'Lucky Seven' gym, one of three gym leaders who dominated any opponent who stood against them. Eventually, Guenievre would become the eighth gym leader and was even offered to become a part of the 'Elite Four' of the Fight Club. She graciously declined as she was much more comfortable as a gym leader than as some 'lofty' member of 'the four heavenly kings'. Such a blissful fighting experience would not last forever. Guenievre's 'corruption' continued with every fight she participated in, her drive to fight was turning into a blood lust, a drive to kill, maim, murder.


All this blood lust culminated in Guenievre's manufacture of 'the DNA splicer', a heinous device that allowed her to forcibly draw the power of others from their blood. Guenievre wanted to create 'the perfect type', a 'new type' that could devastate the dragon kind that dominated the battle field at the fight club. She didn't know how well she would succeed or the cost that would befall her for such a power. Her days of being a 'pure psychic' pokemon were long gone. She became 'psychic/ice', 'psychic/steel', 'psychic/fighting' and many other things by stealing away the power of other pokemon she came into contact with. With each power she gained, Guenievre took a step closer to losing her mind, to losing her 'self'.

----

[Psychosis]

The first type to fall into her grasp was the 'Ice' type. Known for their fragile strength but the power to lay waste to the dragon kin, Guenievre absorbed the essence of a Cryogonal and achieved a 'hollow-like mask' to use in combat with the properties of 'the ice type' locked within it. Soon after this, the ground type came from a fallen friend who 'loved her'. The flying type came from a Tornados, the only 'pure flying type' in existence after she did battle against the legendary genie pokemon. The 'normal' type fell into her hands after this, extracting 'data' from a Porygon Z in the most painful of ways. Soon enough, these types and the memories from whom they came began to manifest into an ethereal being who continued to lurk within Guenievre's mind. The more she lusted for power, the more 'types' she gained, the more powerful this ghostly being became.


Eventually, the dragon type fell to her, drawing blood from a haxorous, the water type from a Feralligator, the fire type from a rapidash, the grass type from a sceptile and so it continued. The ghost lurking within her mind gained a name, 'Natasha of the Grave'. On more than one occasion, Natasha 'wholly consumed' Guenievre's persona and puppeteer-ed her body about, attacking anything that stood in her way. Ever gaining more and more 'types', eventually Natasha was 'born' from the DNA Splicer as her own entity. In the process she changed the 'splicer' into the 'Odd Keystone' with which she could draw in the souls of others and consume them for her own nefarious purposes.


This process completely eroded the psychic pokemon's control over her vast power and rather than controlling her prowess with her mind, her psychic capabilities controlled her mind with its incredible power. She wanted little more than to destroy the 'dark' type and the 'dragon' type at this point. She attacked them whenever they drew near and relished in their destruction. Eventually, a group of unknown individuals came to take Guenievre away. They took her to a relaxing place on a mountain where she could be alone. A place where her power would dwindle back down to a manageable state. The serenity and calm state around her would hopefully quell the raging power of her emotionally-charged psychic powers.

----

[The Glass House]
(Coming Eventually)

----

[Fiore and the Fae]
Guenievre Fiore was born in the tropical Hoenn region but Fiore is not a Hoenn name. Fiore is a Kalos name. Fiore translates to 'flower' and is a name given to a noble lineage who served under the king of Kalos several millennia ago. The name reflected the king's fabled pokemon which he brought back using the power of many other pokemon and the name 'Fiore' was given to the 'Knights' of Kalos to protect the precious flower before it ultimately disappeared along with the king himself. The pokemon used by these nobles were known then as 'Sir Knight' but today we call them 'Gardevoir'. These pokemon, despite being psychic pokemon did not fear dark type pokemon as they brandished the light of justice to smite the darkness. These pokemon did not fear the mythical dragon pokemon of lore who gained fame in Unova and Johto with the latter having the infamous 'Blackthorn' lineage of dragon tamers. For they wielded the power of the fae, the power of the fairy-type that allowed them to battle against these 'dark' type pokemon and 'dragon' type pokemon on even ground.


After Guenievre had locked herself away from the world having separated into Natasha Bellegrave and Guenievre, she was afraid of 'the darkness' both in herself and in her fellow pokemon. She became a monster to protect herself and saw the tyrannical nature of those 'gifted with power'. The species of pokemon that were powerful by birth and flaunted their power. Guenievre sought a different way and she would find it in the lands of her ancestors in Kalos.


Guenievre arrived in the Kalos region on Parterre Way, a beautiful garden cared for by gardners. The fields were filled with red and yellow flowers where she first encountered a strange pokemon she had never seen before. This small pokemon was attached to a yellow flower. At first, Guenievre believed it to be a grass-type pokemon. But as she grew closer, she discovered that in actuality it was the 'fairy' type. Strangely, the little flower petal pokemon was attracted to Guenievre and seemed to believe they were of the same type. Whether these were the residual effects of the DNA splicer or not, Guenievre did not know. However, the new little fairy pokemon made her feel homely and at peace. From here, Guenievre began her journey through the lands of Kalos.


The psychic pokemon continued westward from where she came, eventually passing through Camphrier Town and heading to the Riverie Walk. Here, she met artists, painters and the like capturing not pokemon but the landscape on canvas. She met more flower petal pokemon, little flabebe that escorted her through the numerous fields of flowers. The psychic humanoid pokemon breathed in the atmosphere of this land of Kalos, it was a breath of fresh air to her compared to her previous experiences of human interactions. These fairy pokemon were quite playful, if a bit mischievous. While Guenievre did wonder why she felt very at peace with them, she didn't question it too much. Instead, she enjoyed the serenity of the pristine land around her.


Through the connecting cave, Guenievre made her way to the coastal scene of Cyllage City. Here, she witnessed a downhill race of cyclists and rollerbladers moving down steep slopes at breakneck speeds. Men, women, children and pokemon of all types were crowded around the streets to catch glimpses of the trainers as they made their way through the town as a series of blurs. One man, a dark skinned individual with glittering hair at the front of the pack caught her eye. The man radiated power and Guenievre's battling instincts to fight with this man began to surface. However, she managed to curb her bloodlust as a 'wild pokemon' and began to move northward. Crossing a small, quaint wooden bridge, the psychic took time to stop and smell the salt in the sea breeze and for the first time since she left Hoenn on her long journeys... she dipped herself in sea water. It was a most relaxing experience, one that made her quite nostalgic of her home region. It seemed many trainers drifting the seas even spoke with a 'Hoenn accent' when they did battle with passing trainers.


(More to come as I feel like writing it)


['Game' Statistics]


[b]Note[/b]: Yes, Guenievre's level fluctuates. The reasons for this include the following:


- Gardevoirs draw 'power' from the emotions. If their emotions are more geared to fighting, their psychic power becomes stronger and more sharply focussed. If their emotions are calmer then their psychic power is more lax.


- Pokemon (in the games and anime) fluctuate their levels all the time. From having 'set levels' in the frontier, battle subway and online play in the games to Pikachu going back to being beaten by starter pokemon used by novice trainers in the anime seemingly 'forgetting' everything it learned over the course of the last journey.


- Guenievre likes fighting people 'at their own level' and as much as possible she will try to remain at her opponent's level.


If you don't like these reasons, either assume she's level 100 or don't roleplay with her in a situation where level would come in to play. If it disturbs you that much for whatever reason, don't roleplay with her at all.


[i]Tropical Guen[/i] - (Guenievre as she was after her original journey through Hoenn)


Pokemon Species Name: Gardevoir
Pokemon Nickname: Guenievre
Gender: [?]
Level: 50
Nature: Modest
Personality: &quot;Highly curious&quot;
Often carries a lum berry


Ability: [i]Synchronize[/i] - Passes on status problems onto the opponent that caused the status problem


Hit Points (HP): 129
Attack (ATK): 63
Defense (DEF): 72
Special Attack (SPATK): 174
Special Defense (SPDEF): 122
Speed (SPD): 118


Moves:
- Thief
- Psychic
- Double Team
- Calm Mind


[i]Sir Knight[/i] - (Guenievre as she was after her journey through the Kalos region)


Pokemon Species Name: Gardevoir
Pokemon Nickname: Guenievre
Gender: [?]
Level: 79
Nature: Modest
Personality: &quot;Alerts to Sounds&quot;
Often carries Gardevoirite


[b]Ability[/b]: [i]Synchronize[/i] - Passes on status problems onto the opponent that caused the status problem.
[b]Mega-Evolution Ability[/b]: [i]Pixilate[/i] - Changes 'normal' type attacks to 'fairy' type.


Hit Points (HP): 220
Attack (ATK): 110
Defense (DEF): 123
Special Attack (SPATK): 299
Special Defense (SPDEF): 212
Speed (SPD): 191


Moves:
- Calm Mind
- Psychic
- Dazzling Gleam
- Thunderbolt


[i]Nurse Guen[/i] -


Pokemon Species Name: Gardevoir
Pokemon Nickname: Guenievre
Gender: [?]
Level: 35
Nature: Modest
Personality: &quot;Highly curious&quot;
Often carries a Revival Seed


Ability: [i]Synchronize[/i] - Passes on status problems onto the opponent that caused the status problem


Hit Points (HP): 103
Attack (ATK): 50
Defense (DEF): 57
Special Attack (SPATK): 137
Special Defense (SPDEF): 96
Speed (SPD): 93


Moves:
- Heal Bell
- Heal Pulse
- Ally Switch
- Disable


[i]Psycho Psychic[/i] -


Pokemon Species Name: Gardevoir
Pokemon Nickname: Guenievre
Gender: [?]
Level: 100
Nature: Modest
Personality: &quot;Highly curious&quot;
Often carries choice spectacles


Ability: [i]Trace[/i] - Copies the opponent's abilities


Hit Points (HP): 332
Attack (ATK): 206
Defense (DEF): 229
Special Attack (SPATK): 383
Special Defense (SPDEF): 329
Speed (SPD): 259


Moves:
- Shadow Ball
- Focus Blast / Signal Beam
- Thunderbolt
- Psychic / Psyshock


[i]Double Trouble; Para-Fusion[/i] -


Pokemon Species Name: Gardevoir
Pokemon Nickname: Guenievre
Gender: [?]
Level: 100
Nature: Modest
Personality: &quot;Highly curious&quot;
Often carries bright powder


Ability: [i]Trace[/i] - Copies the opponent's abilities


Hit Points (HP): 332
Attack (ATK): 206
Defense (DEF): 229
Special Attack (SPATK): 383
Special Defense (SPDEF): 329
Speed (SPD): 259


Moves:
- Double Team
- Thunder Wave
- Confuse Ray
- Psychic / Shadow Ball


[i]Guenievre God-Slayer[/i] - [Not limited to four moves; requires hitmonchan DNA splicer fusion]


Pokemon Species Name: Gardevoir/Hitmonchan fusion
Pokemon Nickname: Guenievre
Gender: [?]
Level: 100
Nature: [???]
Personality: [???]
Often carries reviver seed


Ability: [i]Synchronise[/i] - Passes on status problems onto the opponent that caused the status problem
Ability: [i]Iron Fist[/i] -  Powers up 'punching' attacks


Hit Points (HP): 332
Attack (ATK): 340
Defense (DEF): 260
Special Attack (SPATK): 383
Special Defense (SPDEF): 329
Speed (SPD): 259


Moves:
- [???]
[/collapse]


[collapse=How Guen learned her moves]
I have not experienced it for myself but I have seen in some people's profiles complaints that pokemon learn like every move available in their move-pool etc. etc. While I personally have no problem with this - if someone uses all the moves in their species move-pool so will I; I also understand the frustration some people might have. So, to clarify this situation I am going to present how Guenievre learned all of her moves and the order in which she learned them.


[b]Learned Naturally while growing up[/b]:


(It should be noted that all of these moves come from Gen III and [b]not[/b] Gen V (or VI soon). As a result, she did not have many of the 'new' moves that pokemon have today while she was growing up.)


[i][color=gray]Growl[/color][/i] - The first move that Guenievre started of knowing as a ralts. It wasn't used much though it did sound adorable coming from her mouth.


[i][color=pink]Confusion[/color][/i] - The first offensive move she ever had, she learned it when she was still a ralts, learned at level 6 - it was her primary form of attacking other pokemon.


[i][color=gray]Double Team[/color][/i] - Learned at level 10, she has found this move invaluable given her naturally weak physical defences. Others can't hurt you if they can't touch you she found out. After learning this, you could say she became something of a 'double-team n00b'.


[i][color=pink]Teleport[/color][/i] - One of the most useful and dynamic moves in her arsenal. Learned at level 12, she uses it to flee from danger and to visit the places she sees in the minds of others when she reads their thoughts.


[i][color=black]Thief[/color][/i] - A dark type attack learned at level 15. This move was taught to Guenievre as a ralts as a way of fighting against other ralts she came across for training purposes. While weak, the attack is capable of stealing away an opponent's item allowing Guenievre to use the item herself if possible.


[i][color=pink]Calm Mind[/color][/i] - Learned at level 21, it was the first move she learned after her evolution into Kirlia. While she has discovered that most of her species now do not learn Calm Mind until much later, several years ago when she was growing up in Hoenn, it was quite natural for a Kirlia's first move learned upon evolution to be Calm Mind to focus their psychic energies.


[i][color=pink]Psychic[/color][/i] - The most powerful move in her arsenal then and now, this move was learned at level 26 before her evolution into Gardevoir back in Hoenn. Back then since many of her pokemon friends were reluctant to battle she found little use for it and remained using Confusion which was much less powerful. Recently however, she has begun using this more powerful psychic attack much more frequently.


[i][color=yellow]Shockwave[/color][/i] - Learned at level 30, this electric attack uses bolts of lightning which rain down in every direction and perform an ever-changing pattern making it impossible to avoid even at the highest level of evasion. Guenievre learned this attack by watching an Electrode named 'Volt' decimate the team of a flying-type gym leader in Fortree City in her home region of Hoenn.


[i][color=pink]Imprison[/color][/i] - At level 33, in preparation to visit the psychic gym of Mossdeep city, Guenievre learned the [i]'Seal'[/i] ability. This attack creates a mental block upon those afflicted by it preventing them from recalling any move in their arsenal that Guenievre also knows. This seal has a semi-permanent to permanent nature and if used as a permanent seal, it must be removed either by another psychic pokemon with the Imprison ability or Guenievre herself. If used in its semi-permanent state it will last until the afflicted individual sleeps. Imprison prevents all memories associated with the techniques/moves sealed away to be 'locked' as well. 


[i][color=gray]Flash[/color][/i] - Learned during her journey through bellsprout tower, Guenievre meditated on the 'growth' she had seen in the small wavering grass pokemon around her. Despite the overwhelming odds of fighting against her power, the frail little bellsprout still stood against her and it was commendable. Using her psychic abilities, she could now generate a powerful, blinding light. With this ability, she could light up the bleakest of darkness in caverns and eradicate the 'darkness' in the minds of others.


[i][color=pink]Reflect[/color][/i] - In the Ilex forest, west of Azalea town, Guenievre met an intriguing exegcute with the capacity to erect psychic barriers to protect itself against assaults of the physical nature. Through mild 'convincing' Guenievre was able to learn from the grass/psychic pokemon how to manipulate her psychic energies to erect barriers of similar constitution to protect herself against physical attacks in much the same way. Given her frail physical form, this was greatly appreciated by the gardevoir. 


[i][color=pink]Light Screen[/color][/i] - The next stage of Guenievre's training was to focus her mind to erect barriers of psychic energy to protect herself against assaults of the non-physical nature. A wall of light that she mastered the control of was more than capable of reducing both psychic attacks and 'energy based' projectiles and beams by up to 50% of their original power. Given her already capable psychic defences against such attacks, with this screen, she only takes the bare minimum of damage from non-physical assaults on her form.


[i][color=gray]Attract[/color][/i] - This was learned after witnessing the battle between a specific trainer and Whitney, the leader of Golden Rod City's gym and guardian of the plain badge. In the match, Guenievre observed how pokemon used their charms and attractive bodies to attempt to out-wit the pokemon who the trainer who faced off against her was using. Unfortunately, while the attract worked, Whitney's pokemon was unable to do any considerable damage to the pokemon and so this led to her defeat. However, Guenievre did take these lessons on 'fatal attraction' to heart and is capable of using it in battle.


[i][color=gray]Lucky Chant[/color][/i] - A move learned upon entering the ghostly hallows of Ecruteak City. A group of misdreavus led by a mismagius seemed to be reciting peculiar chants. While some of these bestowed ill-will on those who they were targeted upon, some of the chants bestowed great luck and prosperity upon those who received them. Thus, Guenievre learned 'lucky chant'. Despite occasionally using the ability in battle when she first learned the technique, it has fallen into disuse as of late.


[i][color=green]Magical Leaf[/color][/i] - This is the second 'move that can never miss' in Guenievre's arsenal. She could have never learned this ability without losing all her power from fighting against the sages in Violet City. It was only when this attack came to her that she finally understood what the bellsprout sages meant when they said she would regain new abilities 'in place' of her old ones. Later in life she managed to reconcile these two potentials upon passing through the 'distortion world' after an event involving the ruby chains of fate in Sinnoh.


[b]Learned After arriving on F-List[/b]:


[i][color=purple]Shadow Ball[/color][/i] - The very first move she learned after arriving through the warp in space/time that brought her here. This move was learned after seeing a Ghost Type pokemon Psykhe. Upon their next meeting, Guenievre was attempting to replicate what she saw to which Psykhe commented, &quot;You have to actually practice that move?&quot;. Soon after this (and practice in the Pokefurs room) Guenievre mastered Shadow Ball.


[i][color=yellow]Thunderbolt[/color][/i] - This move was learned after numerous sessions of electro-stimulation sex with her lover Luxanna. Guenievre had become somewhat addicted to electro-sex at that point and attempted to replicate the electro-stimulation during one of her masturbation sessions. After several failed attempts (and shocking herself most uncomfortably), Guenievre learned to turn these dangerous electrical impulses into arcs and bolts of lightning. Thus, thunderbolt was born.


[i][color=yellow]Thunder Wave[/color][/i] - During her first time fighting using Thunderbolt, Guenievre managed to paralyse her opponent, slowing their movement and preventing them from attacking her. Wanting to refine this aspect of her thunderbolt attack, Guenievre practised specializing the volts of electricity to only interfere with movement and not commit to actual damaging the opposition. This was how she learned her Thunder Wave attack.


[i][color=black]Focus[/color] [color=orange]Blast[/color][/i] - This technique was learned out of necessity when Guenievre began meeting numerous dark-type pokemon. She practised this move in the anthro-poke park which was ironically owned by one of the dark pokemon she was training to defend herself against. While they are all close to her now, you never know when she would need to be able to defend herself against them.


[i][color=pink]Heal Pulse[/color][/i] - This move was taught to her by a Kirlia she had met named Kaila. The two shemale psychic pokemon taught one another moves with Guen teaching the young Kirlia how to use double-team more efficiently and in return the fellow emotion pokemon re-taught Guen this move that Gardevoirs now learn while they're supposed to be growing up as Kirlia but she never had the opportunity to learn. Thus, it became more like remembering a move she had forgotten (though she never remembered learning it) than actually learning a new move.


[i][color=pink]Heal Bell[/color][/i] - Guenievre learned Heal Bell right after Heal Pulse. During this time she was participating in the pokemon fight club and wanted to be a nurse in case people got injured during her fights with them. Since (as a lot of people know) Guenievre usually carried a lum berry on her person at all times, learning this move was a matter of studying the rejuvenating powers of the lum berry which allowed it to heal pokemon of their afflicted conditions. After several attempts, Guenievre mastered Heal Bell.


[i][color=purple]Confuse Ray[/color][/i] - During one of her random teleports, Guenievre somehow ended up in the dimension between dimensions - the distortion world. There she met the legendary pokemon of anti-matter, Giratina. This legendary dragon/ghost pokemon aided Guenievre in returning to her own world. Though, now that she has done it once - Guenievre can recreate the effects of the botched teleportation and go to the distortion world any time she pleases. Using her experiences in the confusing landscape of the distortion world which distorted her own senses (physical and psychic alike) Guenievre has mastered the art of inflicting this sensation of distortion on others resulting in Confuse Ray.


[i][color=red]Will-O-Wisp[/color][/i] - This move was learned after a fight in the Pokemon Fight Club with a certain Typhlosion. Having took his flamethrower attack, Guenievre wondered if she could replicate its secondary effects of burning on her own. Using the ghastly energies associated with shadow-ball and her recent trip to the distortion world as inspiration, Guenievre learned Will-O-Wisp.


[i][color=cyan]Ice Punch[/color][/i] - After having a battle with a Samurott who referred to himself as 'Atlantis', Guenievre noticed that the water-type pokemon used a very powerful Ice-type attack to quell the sandstorm within which they were fighting. After this incident, Guenievre became obsessed with recreating the attack that she saw that night. Ice Punch was her first fundamental attempt at doing this. By focussing her psychic energies - Guenievre managed to create a thermal 'dip' around her hand. This thermal dip began to cool the water vapour in the air around her hand resulting in icy blue crystals floating around her hand and arm. This technique was refined and eventually became 'Ice Punch'.


[i][color=cyan]Icy Wind[/color][/i] - This move was Guenievre's second attempt to recreate Atlantis' 'Blizzard' attack. After mastering the method of creating thermal dips in the air, Guenievre began experimenting with using it as an attack. Using her psycho-kinetic abilities, she could guide the thermal dips creating frigid winds when they moved passed certain areas. Though some practice was required, Guenievre became faster at initializing these thermal dips as well as making them cold enough for ice shards to begin forming within and around them. Once the thermal dips began to move, the freezing cold drafts that followed them guided the small flakes and shards of ice where she pleased. This move she called 'Icy Wind'. 


[i][color=blue]Rain Prayer[/color][/i] - A weather changing move performed by reciting the first half of the chant, &quot;First some wind, then some rain joined together to form a hurricane...&quot; After this, the psychic energies of the gardevoir manipulate the concentrations of water vapour to cause a torrential downpour. While practising this move, Guenievre got into an argument with a Lugia about the effects this sort of technique would have on the environment. This caused the psychic pokemon to wonder about her friend 'Humphery', a ground-type pokemon with the sandstream ability who creates sandstorms wherever she goes.


[i][color=red]Sunny Day[/color][/i] - Guenievre's second weather altering move, this one was taught to her by A certain nine-tailed fox who could use this ability. Being from the tropical climate of Hoenn and with prior knowledge of 'Rain Prayer' the psychic pokemon was easily able to channel the light of the sun into revealing itself whenever Guenievre desired. While the psychic pokemon is currently unsure what she will use this for, she believes it shall be useful later on in her journey.


[i][color=orange]Signal[/color] [color=green]Beam[/color][/i] - A bug-type attack learned through meditation in the anthro poke-park followed by concentrating the 'energy' of bugs into a concentrated pulse. Guenievre mastered this attack during her days as a referee at the Pokemon Fight Club. Originally, she could only summon a small swarm of multi-coloured butterflies created of psychic energy. This was later refined into allowing the butterflies of bug-type energy to swarm a stationery target and finally Guenievre managed to create her psychic butterflies and change them into a full onslaught of bug-type energy unleashed upon an unsuspecting opponent.


[i][color=gray]Mind Reader[/color][/i] - Ironically, this is not a 'psychic' attack but a 'normal' attack that allows Guenievre as a psychic pokemon to read the minds of those who would normally be immune to her psychic ability. When used in battle it allows Guenievre to predict the next movements her opponent will make based on their thoughts and ensure her next attack will hit them. It was learned from practising on two dark type pokemon over several months. Through continued practice she may use her 'mind reader' ability for other things as well.


[i][color=yellow]Thunder Punch[/color][/i] - This attack was learned almost entirely by accident during a sexual encounter with Luxia. Guenievre began growing more and more dominant as the two continued their encounter. This culminated in Guenievre beginning to spank the luxray gijinka over and over again. After some time, Guenievre began channelling electric current through her palm to give the naughty little slut 'electric' spankings. From this erotic encounter, Guenievre mastered the 'thunder punch' ability or perhaps in this case, 'lightning spank'.


[i][color=cyan]Ice Beam[/color][/i] - An attack taught to her by Tarkus Balder and Vann. The reason and method of learning this attack is unknown to the gardevoir at this point in time. There was simply an ice-cream party in a forest where they both happened to be with people using the attack to create their own ice-cream. Guenievre was forcibly taught this power to participate in the merriment.


[i][color=gray]Recover[/color][/i] - After having healed people using Heal Pulse for so long, Guenievre has discovered a way to 'cast' heal pulse inward and allow her to regenerate her own health rather than the health of others. She has become quite proficient at using this technique since she has been forbidden from participating in open conflict. However, she doesn't use the move often in actual battle unless pressed.


Thunder - The most powerful electric attack in existence was taught to her like thunderbolt before it by Tazer. Guenievre has mimicked the electric feline's 'rain dance + thunder' combination attack and has begun to perfect it. Now, with her power over weather, Guenievre continues to seek alternate ways of using powerful weather-based attacks. As of yet however, she has not witnessed any others.


Dazzling Gleam - This is the first Fairy type attack Guenievre has learned since rediscovering her heritage in the Kalos region. A powerful flash of light that damages all opponents within range of its blinding light of justice. As an area of effect attack, it damages all pokemon with malicious intent surrounding the user, however it will not damage any allies of the wielder.


Ability: Trace- Air Lock
Guenievre gained the permanent ability to use 'air lock' after it was given to her as a blessing from a Rayquaza. This was during a weather war where a garchomp attempted to sandstorm through a forest disrupting the other residents. Guenievre continuously stifled the storm through her own 'rain prayer' and sunny day abilities. However it wasn't until the arrival of the legendary 'sky high' pokemon that the weather war was quelled. Now, as a blessing of the Rayquaza, she is able to activate her 'trace' ability to mimic 'Air Lock' to prevent arduous weather effects from afflicting the environment.

Notes on Statistics:


- In normal RP circumstances, Guen will have access to all of her abilities (Synchronize, Trace &amp; Telepathy) as well as all the  moves in her move pools. This is solely for the sake of convenience in the role play. 


- In times of a 'serious conflict', if my opponent insists on using only four moves then one move-set and ability will be chosen. If my opponent has more than four moves then it can be assumed that Guen will have all of her abilities and moves available to her from all move pools.


Note on Guenievre and Natasha:


- Guenievre and Natasha live on two different parallel dimensional planes. In Natasha's dimension, Guenievre is dead. In Guenievre's dimension, Natasha is repelled back to the 'Ghost World'.
Dr. Joseph Mercola on how it targets cancer.Paths are chosen to tell the story of dreams, wishes, and desires, that happen to be prayers also, hope floats searching for a place to land, and these places with do nicely, if you believe in magic. In America today, the government does whatever it wants, says John W. Whitehead. Republicans Are To Blame. Dirt Balls.Monsters All the Way Down. Suspending the Constitution. What Keeps Them Up at Night.
Good Times, Family Affairs, Events By The Month, Trips To Other Places.Thinking, Seeing, Feelings, Doing, Steps To Take, Toward Changing, More Mountains, Left To Climb, What You Know, What You Want, Blue Oceans To Create. 
Good Times, Family Affairs, Events By The Month, Trips To Other Places,Thinking, Seeing, Feelings, Doing, Steps To Take, Toward Changing, More Mountains, Left To Climb.

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