Lt. John R. Fox ordered the US airmen above him to fire a strike at his exact coordinates on a December 26th morning during WWII.
He knew the strike he just ordered would kill him...but it didn't matter.
He made the call anyways.
Lt. Fox was a hero.
His story👇:
We start in the 1930s.
John Robert Fox from Cincinnati was a young man studying engineering at (The) Ohio State University.
But after only a few semesters, Fox was forced to move 60 miles west on I-71, where he'd transfer to another Ohio school:
Wilberforce University.
Why transfer, you ask?
Well, Fox had an interest in military service and wanted to enroll in the ROTC: a program that prepares students to become US Military officers.
The issue?
Ohio State - like nearly every other school at the time - didn't let black students join the ROTC.
And so after transferring to Wilberforce, a historically black college, Fox graduated in 1941 at the age of 26 with his engineering degree...and even better?
He was now a 2nd Lieutenant in the US Army.
But even as the US formally entered the European Theatre of WWII later that year, Fox, just like so many other African-American officers in the Army, was kept on the sidelines.
No, not because he was unskilled…or untrained…or unprepared.
It was because he was black.
You see, back then, the Army wasn't shy about implementing absurdly racist policies.
Not only were black soldiers forced to stay home whilst white soldiers fought abroad, but they were also required to serve in their own segregated unit.
Its name?
The 92nd Infantry Division.
So in 1942, 1943, and much of 1944, whilst white soldiers were scattered throughout Europe fighting in WWII, the 92nd was stuck in Arizona in what seemed like an eternal training.
But that would all change in July of 1944, when the 92nd would - finally - be deployed.
To Italy.
Think Fox and the 92nd received a warm welcome from their superior officers when they arrived in Europe?
Think again.
"I did NOT send for you," Major General Edward Almond told the 92nd once they arrived in Italy.
Wait...it gets worse:
"Your Negro newspapers, Negro politicians, and white friends have insisted on your seeing combat, and I shall see that you get combat AND your share of the casualties."
Imagine: you’re sent overseas to fight for your country…and that’s the type of "pep talk" you receive.
In any event, shortly thereafter, Lt. Fox and the 92nd found themselves in Sommocolonia, Italy.
Despite it being Christmas, Lt. Fox volunteered to be a "forward observer", where he’d be responsible for serving on the front lines and calling in artillery strikes.
And just one day after Christmas, on December 26th, 1944, Lt. Fox and his men were under attack.
And it was bad.
Real bad.
With the Germans arriving in droves, and Sommocolonia under heavy gunfire, Lt. Fox had no choice:
He ordered his men to retreat.
But not Fox himself…no.
As forward observer, Lt. Fox courageously stood his ground, sitting in the second floor of a house under fire.
He radioed in coordinates for US airmen in the sky to bomb.
Each barrage of strikes helped deter enemy forces and protect his men in retreat.
And as Lt. Fox continued to give coordinates that were closer and closer to the house from which he was coordinating the defense, he radioed in:
"Bring it in 60 yards!"
But bringing the artillery in 60 yards, the soldier carefully warned, would leave Fox no chance to survive...
For Lt. Fox? It didn't matter.
"Fire it!" Fox yelled.
"There’s more of them than there are of us!"
"Give them hell!"
-
The American bombardment ensued.
Lt. Fox was killed.
By his own order. By his own airmen.
"Give them hell!" was the last command Lt. Fox would ever make.
Lt. John Robert Fox, in every sense of the word, sacrificed himself.
By ordering the Americans to strike at his very own coordinates, Lt. Fox slowed the enemy attack and allowed countless Allied troops and Italian civilians to escape.
He saved their lives.
The strike also slowed down enemy forces so much that the Americans had time to organize a counterattack.
It worked.
The Americans recaptured Sommocolonia six days later, on New Year’s Day, 1945.
Surely, Lt. Fox would - at the very least - receive some sort of recognition from his superiors…or the US Government following his sacrifice, right?
Well…no.
In the aftermaths of both WWI and WWII, many African-Americans’ acts of bravery and heroism went completely unnoticed.
It wasn’t until 1982 – 38 years after his death – that he would posthumously receive the Distinguished Service Cross.
And 15 years later, in 1997, President Clinton upgraded Lt. Fox’s Distinguished Service Cross to the most prestigious recognition there is:
The Medal of Honor.
"We never needed any medals," the late Arlene Fox, Lt. Fox’s wife said in 1997.
"John just felt that we were as good as anybody else, and he was going to prove it, and he did."
But John wasn't just as good as anybody else...no.
He was better.
Enjoy Lt. Fox’s inspiring story? Learn something new today?
1/4: Pakistan's agriculture industry is a $60-$100 BILLION industry.
And because the farm to table supply chain in Pakistan is so damn inefficient (and inequitable), it's become... ripe for disruption.
Pun intended.
Watch the video below to learn more:
2/4: By harnessing the power of technology, @Tazahtech (who just closed Pakistan's biggest pre-seed raise EVER) is connecting the country's farmers with the country's retailers.
A result?
Farmers earn more...less food is wasted...and end consumers pay less at the grocery store.
3/4: With over 8 million farmers and nearly 2 million food retailers throughout Pakistan, it's safe to say that Tazah's TAM is...pretty, pretty huge.
Well, if you did, then you'd be the first in the world to crack this indecipherable code...a code that would reveal the whereabouts of $80 million worth of buried treasure.
Fact? Fiction?
To this date...no one knows.
Time for a story👇:
We start with some history.
It was the early 1800s.
Thomas Beale and 30 of his adventure-seeking friends headed west from Virginia on a boys' trip to go hunt some buffalo.
But buffalo wasn't the only thing they'd find.
They'd find gold. And silver.
Shitloads of it.
So Beale and his friends?
They started digging. And before they knew it, they had themselves a stack of precious metals.
Beale wrote:
"Every one was diligently at work with such tools and appliances as they had improvised, and quite a little pile had already accumulated."
If you were at war, you'd take things like a helmet, a radio, and a rifle, right?
Well, not if you were British Major Digby Tatham-Warter.
He took things like a bowler hat, a bugle, and an UMBRELLA.
Get ready for a story about WWII's most courageous and eccentric major:
👇👇
Digby Tatham-Warter. Oh man. Where to begin?
I suppose we can start in 1937, when Digby graduated from Britain's Royal Military College, Sandhurst.
After graduating, Digby was immediately sent to serve in India, but the post was quite...chill.
As an avid tiger hunter, Digby spent more time in India shooting tigers than he did enemy soldiers.
But when his brother was killed in action during WWII in 1942, Digby requested a transfer, and by 1943, Digby was already leading Britain's "A" Company in the European theatre.
I spent half of 2021 tweeting important and hard-to-believe stories...stories you were probably never taught in school.
And now, they’re all available in one place...for you to read and share with your friends.
The collection:
Before we dive into this seemingly eternal rabbit hole, let's take a look at the Table of Contents:
I. ANTHROPOLOGY: 8 Stories About People
II. HISTORY: 8 Hard-To-Believe Historical Events
III. GEOGRAPHY: 13 Fascinating Places Around the World
Ready?
Let's get started:
ANTHROPOLOGY: Stories About People (1/8)
Who: Henry Johnson and the Harlem Hellfighters
Why it's important: It's a story of the worst and best of humankind; an African-American soldier shows heroic bravery in the face of both peril and hate during WWI:
And it'd take a team of elite snipers, ruthless aerial assaults, and multi-million-dollar tracking technology in order to find and kill the enemy.
But who was the enemy, you ask?
Goats.
200,000 of them.
A thread on the "Goat War" of the Galápagos:
We start in the 1830s.
Charles Darwin shocked the world with his theories on evolution upon studying South American finches.
That is, Darwin saw 18 distinct types of finch throughout the Galápagos Islands, arguing each species had to evolve in order to survive its environment.
For Darwin, with the Galápagos Islands full of such unique and beautiful biodiversity, the archipelago was a "little world within itself."
A little world that boasts some of the universe's most stunning creatures, like the Marine Iguana...